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Comment Re:Microsoft Research (Score -1, Troll) 111

Troll much? Given Microsoft's track record - don't deny it, it's carefully documented, there's no way I'd consider letting them have any input in an election.

Sure, they may have a great idea - but their history is clear and it's not going to go away. They missed their chance to be the "company that everyone trusts" a long, long time ago.

Comment Sounds good - but so did Cairo (Score 0) 306

Microsoft has a long history of promoting all the fancy new features their upcoming version of Windows will have - and then leaving most if not all of them out of the final product.

Don't get excited about their announcements, wait until the shipping version is ready and see what they've really got.

Comment Re:The Apple effect (Score 1) 270

I evaluated those for use by a major transportation company. They were almost completely useless; Windows "tablet edition" had too many gotchas where you needed to use a keyboard to proceed. The battery life was short; 90 minutes if you used it lightly.

And the construction; thin plastic casing with easy-break flaps and port covers. Incredibly fragile - but still heavy and a little too bulky.

They offered much and delivered too little. HP is still trying to play that game and failing at it to this day.

Comment Maybe, but I doubt it. (Score 1) 126

HP's problems are much worse than that. They've been driving customers away for years now - and those customers won't be coming back.

I gave them the benefit of the doubt a few times, but the DV2000 laptop was end of my relationship with HP. It had that bad Nvidia chip; HP knew those chips were bad and they had a warehouse full of laptops with bad chips in them. What did they do about it? Yup, they sold those laptops knowing they'd fail.

What did HP do about it? My experience was that their "customer service" hung up on me twice and the email response to my request for help amounted to little more than "go F yourself".

I guess fraud is OK when a corporation does it. I'll never forget, though - and I will NEVER buy any HP product again. I'll advise my friends and family to avoid them.

It'd be better to keep them out of open source; they'd screw up a wet dream.

Comment You folks have no idea what you're getting into (Score 1) 301

Each time you let a corporation or the government have information about what you do or where you go, you're building the fascist society that you so vehemently deny is coming.

You may have no problem today with having someone else know that you parked in spot a-33 at the mall at 4:33, then you bought dinner for two at the Cheesecake Factory (per your debit / credit) card, then left the parking lot at 5.24. You arrived at the No-tell-hotel at 6:12 and checked into room 163 with your friend and spent 1.2 hours there.

Here's the thing that you never consider: the only reason that law enforcement collects information is to further an investigation. If some hooker bought it at the No-tell-hotel at 6:30, you'll be one of the prime suspects. If someone who stayed there on that day is busted for possession, they'll be coming to ask you a few questions.

This stuff doesn't make the law enforcement people smarter, it just makes them lazier. They can look at all of the nifty data and find someone to pin the crime on without ever setting their donut down.

Sure, quote that line about "if you've done nothing wrong then you've got nothing to worry about". And then consider that what you think is wrong and what someone else thinks is wrong (MADD for example) are two very different things. Maybe your parking data will show up in a criminal trial; maybe it'll show up in your divorce proceedings. But rest assured, it'll never show up in any place where it does YOU any good.

Comment Re:Evidence (Score 2) 372

This sounds great if you're going on a fishing expedition. Heck, we don't know what kind of evidence you might have or if you'll dispose of it, so let's come kick your door in and search through your possessions. If you've done nothing wrong, you won't have anything to worry about, right?

There are specific rules for gathering evidence. The constitution may be tattered, but it still is the law of the land and it speaks to this particular issue.

I'm still trying to find a way to justify that "she only paid $60 so she knew it was stolen" stuff. If she'd paid less than $100 for a new HP TouchPad would that prove it was stolen? Did anyone consider the value of a used laptop in a buyer's market? $60 may have been the fair market value of that item, not proof that she knew it was stolen.

Maybe, just maybe - she bought that laptop in good faith at a reasonable price. The previous owner left some monitoring software on it and things went downhill from there. Now the monitoring company has been caught sharing her personal information with the public so they're going to toss up all the plausible deniability they can to escape legal liability for their acts. It's cheaper to pay off that previous owner to say what they want than to pay their lawyers, you know.

Comment Re:Biggest tight wad of all time (Score 1) 324

There's another answer to the accusation: it's almost never a good idea to give gifts to charity under your name.

Once you're identified as someone who gives to the less fortunate, you'll have fundraisers and grifters of all kinds crawling out of the woodwork looking to get some for themselves.

By giving anonymously, you can do good deeds and move on to doing other good deeds without interference.

Try this educational experiment: give $5 each to three or four famous charities; United Way, Salvation Army, etc. Give them your name, address and phone number and see what happens. After a year you'll be much wiser and you'll be able to imagine what it'd be like if you were known to be super rich.

Heck, don't give them your address or phone number and they'll still find you. Of course, you'd probably already know this if you're someone who gives to those less fortunate than yourself.

Comment Re:The Telcos... (Score 1) 77

There's a great big world full of people that exists outside of the borders of the US, you know.

GSM phones are inexpensive and easy to find - and there's billions of people living in remote areas who don't have cell service. Like most of China, for example - you only hear about the "good" parts of that country, not the real China where people are called "peasants"

Inexpensive cell towers like described here could change their world - there's no entrenched monopoly to compete with and there's not enough profit to justify building a corporate cell tower. A few of these working in a mesh network would be cost effective and bring communication to a greater portion of the world's population.

Comment Re:This is a sad day for the tech world (Score 1) 1027

That was clearly written by someone who doesn't own and has never used an "iDevice".

I have an iPad - and it's full of MP3 tunes and EPUB books. None of them were purchased from iTunes and none of them have DRM or were "blessed" by Apple.

I didn't have to "hack" or "jailbreak" my iPad to do this; iTunes will happily load your iDevice with all the questionably obtained content you could want. You can use open source replacements for iTunes if you insist - but you probably won't gain any functionality.

As long as you keep yelling about how locked-down the iDevices are and insisting that you'd rather have a locked-down Android device, you'll never understand why Apple sells millions and millions of their products.

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