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Comment The difference between Apple and others is trivial (Score 1) 336

So it's nearly identical to all other secure payment systems on the market. You still have the payment processor is the bank - who is a VISA/MC/AMEX 3rd party vendor who tracks and sells your information - instead of a non-bank corporate VISA/MC/AMEX 3rd party vendor who tracks and sells your information. No other secure system uses your CC, expiration date, or CVV code as part of a transaction either - not your smart-chip credit card, not google wallet, not the wireless providers.

The only difference here is that there is that Apple isn't privy to your transaction data at the register - though the merchant, the bank, and VISA/MC/AMEX still are. That and they have you transmit a photo of your credit card (and photos are unhackable, just ask the stars who took nude selfies) instead putting the onerous task of entering twenty two digits *all by yourself* into another payment processor's web/app form. I mean, that's 15 seconds you'll never get back.

Comment Re:i like idea, but likely prohibitively expensive (Score 1) 139

Everything has a price, and if the buyer and seller come to an agreement then it's worth it. If you're a lawyer making $350/hr and you decide that it's worth $20 to have someone hand deliver your lunch instead of you going out and getting it, is that okay? If you're a driver getting 5 of those orders and hour and are grossing $100/hr, is that okay? What if you're just having a shitty day and $20 means getting a meal you *really* want without having to go out in the rain. You don't have to be rich to be lazy every once in a while.

Comment Re:Screw Uber (a rant) (Score 1) 139

To be fair, both Uber and Amazon don't *want* to have people working for them in absolutely horrible conditions for little pay. On the contrary, they'd like to eliminate those positions entirely and automate everything. Which really doesn't bode any better for local service people.

OTOH, this shouldn't be a surprise. The computer geeks have already put many, many typists, calculators (people, not boxes), secretaries, drafters, and similar people out of business just as the industrial revolution put many laborers out of a job. Do you really think that self-checkouts and ATMs have increased the number of employees in checkers/teller positions?

Taxi drivers are not going to be happy about self-driving cars, and though it's not possible now, it will be in the future. The bar on what can and can't be done automatically raises each year. Those close to the line need to see the writing. Unfortunately, there are a lot of people who have already been passed by the line and will never / can never catch up to it. It's going to make for a very bumpy ride over the next half a century.

Comment Re:Encryption (Score 1) 104

Ahhh, but as soon as it's an emergency, then the rules are suspended and you don't need to be a HAM to broadcast and would not be limited by the regulations that HAM operators are required to follow. And, let's face it - in a true emergency situation all the rules go out the window anyway. When it comes to saving a life or following the written word of regulation, life safety will always trump.

The only real thing that keeps encryption from being on the airwaves is hardware support - i.e. the availability of radios which both encrypt and allow operation on HAM frequencies. Most manufacturers are obligated to respect the rules, though clearly some Chinese versions tend to not disallow operation that goes afoul of the US regs.

Comment Re:Apple? (Score 1) 421

If OSX comes "free" with their hardware, but is also sold separately - or even just has a defined value separately - they will likely fall afoul of the law. Unless, of course, the judge is an Apple user in which case it will be swept under the rug.

iOS is definitely a different beast. You can't run any other software on an iDevice, and you can't buy it (developer licenses are not quite the same as an operational license). Same with Android and Windows Phone edition - the OS is arguably integral with the phone. At least, for now!

Comment Re:Scotch tape (Score 1) 405

You must have been out sick the day the entire marketing class discussed the challenges associated with market leaders such as Kleenex and Xerox.

Here's the cliff notes version: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G.... Even for the neck-beardiest android geek, deep in the logic center of the brains he knows that iPad has taken on a genericized condition in the mainstream.

Comment Re:Copyright has no clothes. (Score 1) 363

On the contrary, if EVERYTHING is copyrighted, then if you have something and can't show you've paid for it, then it's illegal. When every shared or transferred file is illegal, it make enforcement simple - you share a file, you go to jail.

Shortening (c) terms to something reasonable (certainly less than patents; why should a cure for AIDS be less protected than last night's episode of Ow, My Balls!*) means having to know when your licenses expire. And that's just too much overhead.

*An IP lawyer I know feels the opposite, that copyrights should last longer so that "public good" ideas pass into public domain earlier.

Comment Where it should have started (Score 1) 134

The initial price was that of a super-premium phone, which it wasn't. Amazon has never been about making money on hardware, but about eyeballs. This cash grab was unfounded. They lost the chance to make it as easy as "sign up and get your free phone, supported by the Amazon ecosystem". Now it's just an also-ran.

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