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Comment Ouch! (Score 1) 5

Haven't owned any Bosch stuff, so can't comment on their reliability. Also, I don't know how tough Hungary's consumer legislation is regarding repairs under warranty. Might be worth brushing up on what the rules are, and finding the address of Bosch's head office in Hungary, as well as their European central office. I'd be writing them an angry letter, and threatening to tell everyone I know how shoddy their service was. Might not achieve anything other than stress relief, but on the other hand it might shock them into sorting this out and working to keep your custom.

Comment Re:Here we go again... (Score 1) 170

WTF is Schemer? Even the god damn article doesn't tell me and if I don't know WTF it is, how does anyone else? Just another effen Google tool that nobody was told about being shut down because nobody used it. Chicken and Egg Issue. You don't tell folks about it so nobody fucking uses it. Shut it down.

If it's any consolation, I suspect quite a few people (myself included) wondered that when Schemer first launched in 2011. And never bothered to go back.

[Just checked, yes I deleted my Schemer account.]

Comment Re:Ars Tech link (Score 1) 470

Thanks for the link!

Most surprising graph on that page (for me, anyway) was the one for desktop browsers - hardly any movement at all. Most depressing one, needless to say, has to be the one for Internet Explorer - looks like IE8 and earlier versions are going to stick around for a while yet.

Comment Re:"Windows 8 is a piece of shit !" (Score 1) 470

Strangely enough, I found out that my scanner wasn't supported anymore after I got a new machine with W8 on it. It worked just perfectly under XP, but under W8 the only choice is to throw it away (again: throw away a fully functional piece of hardware) and buy a newer one.

This problem dates back to Vista - Microsoft completely rejigged the hardware driver architecture, making XP drivers unusable. Sadly, note all hardware makers chose to issue updated drivers for older products, or only produced drivers for the 32-bit versions of Windows, ignoring the fact that the 64-bit version was the one being installed on most new PCs. My parents had to ditch their working Canon flatbed scanner as a result.

Comment Re:I bet they don't count... (Score 1) 470

They do count you. As a Windows 7 user.

Good for you, since you had the option to do that. I suspect things are going to get interesting for people buying new machines who want to ditch Windows 8.x, since Microsoft is now moving to purge Windows 7 from the retail channel, and only offering downgrade options to its business customers...

Comment Re:Upgrade path part of the problem (Score 1) 470

I can understand why an in-place upgrade would be problematic - particularly if you wanted to move from 32-bit XP to the 64-bit version of Windows 7/8 - but it baffles me that Microsoft didn't at least try to make it easier to transfer user's data. The only explanation I can think of is that doing so would have meant posting marginally less-than-stellar profits.

Comment What's driving uptick in Windows 7 numbers? (Score 1) 470

I'm guessing that companies rolling out pre-planned upgrades might account for some of that - but I have to wonder if the remainder is either downgrade options being exercised by those who've bought that option, or people wiping their systems and reinstalling Windows 7 after trying out Windows 8.

FWIW, I was one of those who tried Windows 8 at the end of last year - the desktop environment was OK, but Modern UI drove me nuts, and I ended up going back to Windows 7. I'm considering whether to give Windows 8.1 a chance...

Comment Generational thing? (Score 1) 3

Maybe it's down to not seeing the point of having separate devices for each person, and instead sharing the computer as a 'family' device to be used by everyone.

That's the way my parents use their computer.

It's not necessarily a bad thing, as long as everyone understands the arrangement.

It probably helps that I don't wear my sysadmin hat when I'm at home. (Tech-guy hat is permanently affixed, however...)

Comment On the subject of Mac... (Score 1) 9

I've been using Macs for work since the early 2000s, and have been the owner of an iMac since 2012.

The move to Intel processors has definitely improved the Mac in some ways - not only is it possible to run Windows on it, either as a separate OS using Boot Camp or in a virtual machine like Parallels Desktop, but the Mac now works and plays much better in a Windows environment. Sadly, this was not true of earlier versions of OSX or the PowerPC-based Macs. Of course, the flip-side of this is that OSX appears to have gained some of the bad habits of Windows, particularly with regard to security vulnerabilities. Contrary to what a lot of Mac users may claim, I think installing anti-virus software is a must, even if it's just to spare the embarrassment of passing on Windows malware.

I will agree with you about the price premium - it would be great if Apple could bring back something along the lines of the old plastic Macbooks and luggable iMacs. The main reason I went with an iMac was because I'd been burned by two different PCs failing on me in the space of just over a year, plus a desire to investigate iOS development. In my case, it helped that most of the software I use is cross-platform, so transitioning was pretty painless. I was very happy to get one of the 2011 iMacs - I can still use CDs and DVDs, plus I can easily upgrade the memory myself. Sadly, the subsequent redesigns have traded features for elegance. Also, I'm still on Mountain Lion for the moment, as there have been problems reported with Mavericks and some of the software that I rely on.

Submission + - Target is likely a target of credit card data theft (krebsonsecurity.com)

PieEye writes: From Brian Krebs' site: 'Nationwide retail giant Target is investigating a data breach potentially involving millions of customer credit and debit card records, multiple reliable sources tell KrebsOnSecurity. The sources said the breach appears to have begun on or around Black Friday 2013 — by far the busiest shopping day the year.' It's likely there's going to be a lot more information everywhere soon.

Submission + - Why Charles Stross Wants Bitcoin to Die in a Fire

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes: SF writer Charles Stross writes on his blog that like all currency systems, Bitcoin comes with an implicit political agenda attached and although our current global system is pretty crap, Bitcoin is worse. For starters, BtC is inherently deflationary. There is an upper limit on the number of bitcoins that can ever be created so the cost of generating new Bitcoins rises over time, and the value of Bitcoins rise relative to the available goods and services in the market. Libertarians love it because it pushes the same buttons as their gold fetish and it doesn't look like a "Fiat currency". You can visualize it as some kind of scarce precious data resource, sort of a digital equivalent of gold. However there are a number of huge down-sides to Bitcoin says Stross: Mining BtC has a carbon footprint from hell as they get more computationally expensive to generate, electricity consumption soars; Bitcoin mining software is now being distributed as malware because using someone else's computer to mine BitCoins is easier than buying a farm of your own mining hardware; Bitcoin's utter lack of regulation permits really hideous markets to emerge, in commodities like assassination and drugs and child pornography; and finally Bitcoin is inherently damaging to the fabric of civil society because it is pretty much designed for tax evasion. "BitCoin looks like it was designed as a weapon intended to damage central banking and money issuing banks, with a Libertarian political agenda in mind—to damage states ability to collect tax and monitor their citizens financial transactions," concludes Stross. "The current banking industry and late-period capitalism may suck, but replacing it with Bitcoin would be like swapping out a hangnail for Fournier's gangrene."

Comment Re:Windows 7? (Score 1) 408

That was going to be my suggestion as well. Has the added benefit that, unlike Vista, it will still be supported by Microsoft for years to come.

I still wince when I remember being the only person in my old workplace still stuck with an ageing PC running Windows 2000, long past when Microsoft had stopped supporting it and many newer applications required XP or later. Don't go there - it ain't a fun place.

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