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Comment Re:How about (Score 1) 193

The problem is you can't anymore, without forgetting to use the web in its entirety.

Bullshit. You name me one Google service that you can't live without. Last time I checked, Google Beating Heart or Google Breathing Air were not available yet.

Comment Re:some sharp knives in that European drawer (Score 1) 193

The Internet has the bad habit of not forgetting anything, hence laws are necessary to purge incorrect, or out of date information pertaining to people.

There are already existing laws that cover incorrect information. Correct information itself is never out of date. If someone has been charged with a crime, that fact stays, even if s/he was found not guilty. Information on the second world war is out of date as well, shall we just erase that from history?

If the OP shouts communism or socialism it just shows how idiot you really are.

On the contrary, it shows how socialistic nanny-states try to force companies founded in free countries to adhere by their standards. The EU doesn't want American laws to apply to Europe, but they do want EU law to apply to US companies? They can fsck themselves.

Comment Re:What about long-term data integrity? (Score 1) 438

If that's the case, then why are they not copying the data to ram contained on the drive itself? Seems like an awful waste of cycles with a relatively simple fix. Is it just a cost issue?

Cost and reliability/latency. If you copy it to RAM and get a power outage, data is gone. So that will ruin your reliability. Which means that you have no choice but to ack the write after it's written to the actual block itself. Which in turn increases the latency between receiving the data and ack'ing it.

Comment Re:What about long-term data integrity? (Score 5, Informative) 438

Most current MLC (multi-level cell) implementations can sustain anywhere between 1000 and 3000 write/erase cycles per cell. This is better than TLC (triple-level cell, max 1000), but far worse than SLC (single-level cell, max 100k up to a million, depending on the technology).

The problem is the way how flash itself works, and how smart your controller is. Unlike a disk, flash must be erased before writing. And here is where the problem comes: flash data is stored in a page of cells, with typically 8 pages of data per "block". Erasing happens on the block level. So in order to erase a single page of data, you need to erase all 8 pages in a block. Since you need to keep the data of the other 7, you first need to copy that data into another block, erase the original one, write all data back and erase your "tmp" block. The churn on blocks happens a lot faster than what you'd think.

Having that said, for consumer products, MLC or TLC is perfectly fine. For enterprise, not so much.

You'll see that in the price, obviously. TLC is the cheapest, followed by MLC, and the most expensive technology is SLC.

Comment Re:Google doesn't have a monopoly on ANYTHING. (Score 1) 334

serves to remind everyone who is in charge here: voters rather than shareholders.

This. Exactly this. This is exactly my point. But quite the opposite.

If I own a loaf of bread, I get to choose whatever the F I want to do with it. I own it. No matter what my neighbor thinks, I own it and if I want to eat it, or let it sit, it is my property.

Google is private property. Private property with shareholders yes, but it is still private property. The moment a government, -any- government, starts to interfere, it is interfering with private property. And that is exactly the thing I don't want the government to do with very limited exceptions (such as an idiot owning a nuclear bomb). Simply being the best in their industry (search results), is not one of these exceptions.

The owner of the corporation is in charge of the corporation, not a voter (or a politician that nobody voted for).

And once more, you modding-morons can mod me down as much as you like because you disagree, it doesn't make my points any less valid.

Comment Re:Google doesn't have a monopoly on ANYTHING. (Score -1) 334

Not only that, but the EUSSR doesn't seem to understand that an American corporation has nothing to do with European communists.

What part of this is not true? The EU is operating like a socialist federation these days: they shove EU laws (up to and including a constitution) through their member states' throat and enforce them. In some cases, their "constitution" was rejected in a direct referendum and they *still* passed it as law. You tell me how that does not constitute Soviet behavior.

They should go and re-read their history books and remember how close all of Europe was to speaking either German or Russian.

Again, totally nothing factually wrong with that. If it were not for the Americans, all of Europe would either suffer under the Nazis or under the Soviets.

My point is that the EU is a bunch of arrogant idiots who have no business telling an American company to split up.

They are arrogant (see point #1) and have no clue about technology. You tell me what's wrong with my assessment.

Sure, if you live in Greece and need the EU to fund your pension, I can understand that you'd downmod someone who confronts you with the truth. But, I'm far from a troll. Unless you want me to start lecturing you on the benefits of a hosts file... (but let's not go there).

Comment Re:Google doesn't have a monopoly on ANYTHING. (Score 4, Insightful) 334

The EU commision can't tell US companies to do anything but they can set conditions for allowing them to operate within the EU. It's called sovereignty and the US does it too all the time. Having a beef with virtual or actual monopolies is not exactly a communist thing either. A monopoly is a direct attack on the free market and therefore upsets true free market believers.

Finally at least a reply that contains an actual argument. Thanks for that.

I actually agree with you. The EU can set conditions for allowing a company to operate within the EU. However, they EU should not be in a position to split up a privately owned enterprise. If they feel that Google has too big of a market share, than they should encourage competition. Which, BTW, there is a lot of. Bing, Yahoo, Duckduckgo, Ask.com (yikes) and many others.

In the case of Microsoft's anti-trust case, there was no such thing. Most people and business needed a Windows PC because (at the time) it was pretty much the only thing that would be compatible with your neighbor's PC. MS controlled the desktop. Switching required a installing a new operating system, and most people didn't even know how to do that let alone that they were even aware of alternatives.

Google does not control your search engine. Internet Explorer defaults to Bing, and soon Firefox will default to Yahoo. It is easy to switch default search engines, all you need is to change a bookmark. However, I prefer Google simply because it's better and a lot of people will do the same.

Having a better product than others doesn't necessarily mean you're an illegal monopoly. Google's perceived monopoly can be gone in six months, as soon as a competitor brings a better product.

Look at Myspace vs Facebook, for example.

Comment Re:Google doesn't have a monopoly on ANYTHING. (Score 0, Troll) 334

Like it or not, idiots or not, they do have such business, simply because your poor little "american company" is no such thing. It's an international corporation that was once founded in america, but now does business all over the world, including within the EU and actually quite a lot of it.

Fine, have it your way. Doesn't matter for the purpose of the discussion. Let's assume it is a worldwide company with no particular headquarters.

What is happening here is that a bunch of politicians are interfering in the legitimate business of a private enterprise. Not as a result of violating any laws (there are criminal courts for that), but as a direct result of the success of the company. That smells like what Mother Russia did with Gazprom and is one of the big reasons why I've started to hate the EU so much that I chose to leave it.

Oh and btw, modding me a troll just because you disagree with my opinion makes you a bad mod.

Comment Re:Google doesn't have a monopoly on ANYTHING. (Score 0, Troll) 334

Google is where it is because a lot of companies are run by boards that are more interested in feathering their own nests instead of what they largely give lip-service to - "innovation"

Not only that, but the EUSSR doesn't seem to understand that an American corporation has nothing to do with European communists.

They should go and re-read their history books and remember how close all of Europe was to speaking either German or Russian.

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