Comment Re:PC analogy (Score 1) 278
it's not negatively harming others
In the case of geohot and the PS3 hacking, Sony might argue that it is harming their business. Because corporations are people, after all.
it's not negatively harming others
In the case of geohot and the PS3 hacking, Sony might argue that it is harming their business. Because corporations are people, after all.
The only downside is extensions
I've been loving Firefox for years, but this fast release schedule is driving me nuts. Every time a new "major" version comes out now, at least one or two of my extensions break. The first one to go (on FF4) was Ubiquity, which still isn't fixed, and the stupid thing about that is Ubiquity is a Mozilla Labs extension. It's pretty sad when their own damn extensions can't even keep up, let alone 3rd party stuff.
So, back to your point about extensions being the only downside, honestly, do we use Firefox for any other reason? I could have ditched FF for Chrome or even IE9 (shudder) but it's the extensions that make Firefox so awesome, and that's what's suffering the most with this bullshit release schedule.
but whenever I hear yet another parrot this exact same asinine statement, I can't help but roll my eyes.
Amen brother. Although the parent didn't really make that specific argument, it sounded like they just wanted to get their Zerg on.
You know, there are some legitimate things one could moan and complain about regarding SC2
I'd like to throw something out there. In SC1 I always wanted the ability to zoom OUT and see more of the battlefield at once. With the ability to select more than 12 units at a time this would have been a great feature for SC2. But what did they do instead? They added the ability to zoom IN. What the fuck is the point of that? I don't need to see how graphically detailed these units are. And with all of the things going on in the game, who has time to admire the scenery?
As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein