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Comment Re:OpenVZ (Score 2) 62

Things may have changed in the past couple of years, but I distro-upgraded-before-I-looked from Ubuntu Hardy LTS to Lucid LTS and found that the OpenVZ components were removed and LXC components added which threw me for a few loops on my home containers. At the time I found LXC to be lacking in tools and documentation, and OpenVZ wasn't being supported in a sane way. I had enough troubles with Lucid in containers that I put everything on a hard box and later moved all of it to Windows and Ubuntu-in-Hyper-V. But once LXC has decent tools and documentation I might look into it again. Sharing a kernel was very handy for my home sites.

Comment Re:I've never understood... (Score 1) 117

Except that Twitter is almost never just 140 characters. Rather, it is 10 words of description and then a shortened URL to who-knows-what. There's very little meaningful information that can be conveyed via video in 6 seconds.

In 140 characters you can learn whether or not you want to follow the link. (Or the tweeter.) It's brilliant.

Not sure what 6 seconds of video can do, but I'm interested in finding out.

Comment Re:Serves them right (Score 1) 578

It's like the argument put forward by Neal Stephenson in Cryptonomicon - the Allies won WWII because they had the best technology,

Really? It's been a while since my history classes, but I thought it was the U.S. ability to manufacture more tanks and ships and trucks and things. The Sherman was outclassed but was sent in much larger numbers. And their bomber's couldn't reach the U.S. factories whereas the German factories were having to move into hollowed-out mountains and such. The Germans had ballistic missles, cruise missles, superior tanks and were on the verge of intercontinental flying-wing bombers.

They also were fighting a two-front war.

Japan put a prototype jet fighter in the air during WWII.

I don't think the Allied Forces had superior tech in WWII.

Comment Re:Downgrade rights (Score 1) 671

If anyone had actually spent time using it, or if CowboyNeal was attempting anything other than a flamefest to drive ad impressions, perhaps that'd be more clear to people.

Imagine Windows 7 where the start menu opened at login and took up the whole screen. That's it. If you don't use any modern apps, you won't ever see the WinRT part of the system. Start an application, you're on the desktop.

Simple question: Do you use Metro IE or desktop IE?

I'm trying to run Win8, and when I'm living on the desktop I'm okay. But then I try to open up a PDF, media file or image and suddenly the default Metro-based app launches and my desktop and task bar are gone. I haven't yet figured out how to close the Metro app to return to the desktop. I have to alt-tab back to the desktop and then right click in the top-left hotspot to close the Metro app. Instead I am now manually dragging PDFs into Chrome (the desktop version) and right-clicking media files to launch in desktop WMP. (Adobe's PDF reader annoys me, too, so far I am avoiding installing it.)

I've installed Win8 on my main home machine to force myself to get used to it, but I have yet to like anything about Metro. Shutting down or sleeping the computer takes several gestures and clicks.

When I look at the Metro screen my brain wants to explode. The Win7 start menu does a decent job of promoting my commonly used links while allowing me to pin items if I want, but I can also search the start menu, and unlike Metro it will show me apps, files and control panel items in the search results. In Metro I have to move the mouse a lot and click to search files, apps or control panel items. In the Win7 menu I have the option of browsing the hierarchical folder structure, too. In Metro I get the mass of gaudy tiles that make no immediate sense to me and then a bunch of ugly tiles for installed programs and all the items that might have appeared buried in the hierarchy in Win7. I am not liking it yet and haven't yet figured out an advantage for me with Metro.

Comment Re:Incredibly stupid (Score 2) 231

Seriously? People that use such easy to guess (and therefore pointless) shouldn't even have access to anything that needs protection...

Pfffft. You ever worked for a Director/VP or higher? Try telling them how to set their passwords. I've seen "boss", "super" and other motivational-poster-worthy simple words. And they want everything to auto-login. One of the last major worm outbreaks I encountered originated in the senior executive offices.

Okay, that was a few years ago. Maybe that company has learned a few things since then.

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