Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Slashback: ITunes, Debian, ATMs 122

Slashback tonight brings some clarifications and updates to previous Slashdot stories, including: iTunes 7.0, Wal-Mart threatens studios over iTunes sales, debate over a proposal to fund Debian, and Googling for ATM master passwords. Read on for details.

Apple Announces iTunes 7, Movies, Set-Top Box. This evening Apple released iTunes 7.0.1, which "addresses stability and performance issues with Cover Flow, CD importing, iPod syncing, and more." iTunes users, especially those on Windows, have been complaining loudly about iTunes 7.0 since its release.

Wal-Mart threatens studios over iTunes sales. camperslo writes, "Playlist reported that Walt Disney President and CEO Robert Iger said that 125,000 downloadable movies had been purchased in the week since Apple's debut of movies on the iTunes Store. That sales level generated $1 million in revenue for Disney, which works out to $8 per movie. They also state that 'Iger told attendees of an investment conference in New York on Tuesday that Disney anticipates seeing about $50 million in revenue from the venture during its first year.'"

Proposal to fund Debian sparks debate. lisah writes, "Debian Project Leader Anthony Towns is now facing a recall vote over his involvement with Dunc-Tank, something Towns himself is willing to explore. Not everyone agrees that such a move is necessary, or even acceptable, and fur is beginning to fly as one community member asks, 'So, just to be clear, you want to punish a Debian developer for their activities outside of Debian? Now that we're in crazy-as-batshit land, who do you want to bring up on charges next?'"

Googling for ATM master passwords. bagsc writes, "Kevin Poulsen of Wired.com strikes fear into another ATM manufacturer. This time, Triton ATMs had their super-secret master codes revealed by simple Google searches. Tranax was the most recent company with this problem, but probably not the last."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Slashback: ITunes, Debian, ATMs

Comments Filter:
  • Dupe (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:07PM (#16222689)
    Googling for ATM master passwords. bagsc writes, "Kevin Poulsen of Wired.com strikes fear into another ATM manufacturer. This time, Triton ATMs had their super-secret master codes revealed by simple Google searches. Tranax was the most recent company with this problem, but probably not the last."

    Seems he also wrote that two days ago [slashdot.org].
  • iTunes (Score:2, Informative)

    by FuturePastNow ( 836765 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:12PM (#16222731)
    I guess I'm the only person who didn't have any problems with iTunes 7 (on either Windows or Mac). Good job to Apple for updating it quickly, though. Maybe a little more testing nest time, eh?
  • by billstewart ( 78916 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:22PM (#16222829) Journal
    My Windows XP machine runs multiple users - I only log in as "root" when I need admin privileges, typically to install software, and log in as "me" when I don't. iTunes was the first Apple product I've used that didn't "just work" - it had trouble coping with the concept that there were multiple users on the machine, kept separate music libraries for root and me, and I had to do a bunch of annoying configuration work to consolidate them.


    When I installed the iTunes 7 the other week, this appears to have all broken. I found it out by trying to download new music to my iPod Shuffle, found that only two songs were on it (the freebies-of-the-week I'd just downloaded from the Apple Store), and gradually realized that the reason all my music was listed in gray wasn't Apple's latest cool aesthetic designs, it was indicating that iTunes didn't know where my music was any more. [expletive deleted!] Now I've got to go haggle with it to rebuild a consolidated music library again, and hope it does it correctly as opposed to things like having two directory entries per tune, one working and one empty, or some similar bogosity.


    It was especially annoying, because I'd recently discovered that an iPod Shuffle *can* survive being dropped into hot coffee, if you rinse it off quickly and let it dry for a few days :-)

  • by Moridineas ( 213502 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:31PM (#16222937) Journal
    Annoying for me ..maybe this can help.

    itunes by default stores stuff in a folder called "iTunes" under your user "My Music" folder, and th library itself in "iTunes Music" which is a folder under the iTunes directory.

    You can make your "My Music" folder be the same for all your accounts, and then you don't have to worry about different libraries. use TweakUI to change the default location of your "My Music" folder.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:42PM (#16223027)
    Do you really think it just doesn't work, or maybe it's just a specific problem or even user error on your part?

    I know exactly what you describe about needed good control over what gets copied, and guess what, it works just fine.
    I've got my base nano playlist that is always synced, which is about 300 songs. Then to top it off, I sync a few smart playlists that contain a portion from recently added, recently played, top rated but not heard recently, most played, etc... as well as a dozen or so of the latest podcasts.

    Works just FINE. Ask for help cause you must be doing something wrong.
  • by kubrick ( 27291 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:50PM (#16223093)
    iTunes 7 has an "Album Artist" tag, so you can set that to, e.g. "Various Artists" (or the name of the primary artist of the soundtrack) and still set the artist tag differently for the individual tracks, and it will group the album correctly.
  • by kfg ( 145172 ) * on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @09:22PM (#16223377)
    Where in that article or the associated links is anything regarding WalMart threatening lawsuits?

    Where in the blurb does it say anything about lawsuits? There's actually more ways to threaten someone (or something) than with a court case. Hard to believe, but it's true.

    Just click on the link to the original story (this is a Slashback, ya know expanding on a previous story. Kinda like a dupe, only different) at the bottom of the blurb.

    KFG
  • by asuffield ( 111848 ) <asuffield@suffields.me.uk> on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @10:28PM (#16223841)
    'So, just to be clear, you want to punish a Debian developer for their activities outside of Debian? Now that we're in crazy-as-batshit land, who do you want to bring up on charges next?'


    Since the story submitter decided to display only one side of the argument here, I should point out that this objection is somewhat irrational. Several Debian developers have been forcibly kicked out of the project for actions that had no direct connection with the project. The details of names and events are usually considered private, but to pick one example that's already public knowledge - at one point a developer was an operator on the Freenode IRC network (then called OPN), abused this privilege in some fairly juvenile prank, and was promptly kicked out of Debian on the basis that they coudn't be trusted.

    It is already expected that Debian developers will conduct themselves appropriately in all circumstances, not just ones relating to Debian. This is interpreted fairly liberally (the project doesn't care if you're an arse, it's primarily only interested in abuse of powers), but it is apparent that the current complaint is of this nature. Whether or not it is upheld by the project is for them to decide, but there's plenty of established precedent for this sort of thing. They're currently arguing about whether or not to uphold it; there appears to be little question as to whether developers should be held accountable in this manner.

    ObBio: I'm an ex-developer who quit for personal reasons that had nothing to do with the project.
  • by Pausanias ( 681077 ) <pausaniasxNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @11:36PM (#16224329)
    I upgraded to iTunes 7 (which runs on my PowerMac). Then I noticed that rhythmbox (the default GNOME music player) running on my laptop would no longer recognize my shared iTunes Library. It was doing so just fine before with iTunes 6. And it's not just rhythmbox: closed source software [rokulabs.com] is having problems with this as well. And not just with DAAP sharing, either [volumelogic.com].

    So I downgraded to iTunes 6 immediately. Apple penalizes you for doing so: iTunes 6 cannot read iTunes 7 shares (but iTunes 7 can read iTunes 6 shares). Talk about a forced upgrade. It seems that the change to DAAP was fairly trivial and avoidable, which brings up the question of whether they did it with the sole intention of breaking compatibility with the other software out there that reads the v6 DAAP protocol.

    It's just a music player, but now I'm getting a little taste of what Richard Stallman means when he tells you to refrain from using closed source software. Even when you think a closed source vendor has good intentions, there's always a chance that they'll turn on you and slap you with an upgrade that breaks compatibility with your other software.
  • by SilentChris ( 452960 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @11:39PM (#16224337) Homepage
    Uh... no. You're wrong. A bunch of people are having problems specifically with smart playlists using dates. The update has not fixed anything.

    See http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID= 642774&tstart=0 [apple.com] for other examples. They screwed up the code, plain and simple.
  • by TheoMurpse ( 729043 ) on Thursday September 28, 2006 @12:36AM (#16224731) Homepage
    So I finally cleared up enough HD space to upgrade to 7.0 (ripping Futurama off my DVDs left no space for a while, and iTunes refused to install w/o clearing up some space); I installed it tonight, and lo and behold!!! 7.0.1 BREAKS MYFAIRTUNES AGAIN! Oh well, it'll be broken again in a couple days, since Igor just has to find the new memory offsets, but just letting everyone know that if you upgrade to the new iTunes, it borks the fair use enabling software.

I'm always looking for a new idea that will be more productive than its cost. -- David Rockefeller

Working...