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Comment Re:So, basically, this is Steam for movies? (Score 1) 498

I don't like the idea of needing this "Cloud" thing to use something I paid good money for. I haven't downloaded anything from Steam for that reason, and because I'm forced to use it after I purchase one of their games at a brick-and-morter, I haven't purchased anything made by Valve since the original Half Life.

Say, Mickey, here's a suggestion: make sure you use someone like Microsoft to handle the technical details. I mean, there's no "Danger" in trusting them with The Cloud, right? What could possibly go wrngo?

Comment The old new Windows version (Score 1) 414

Let's take a brief spin in Professor Peabody's Wayback Machine, shall we? When it first came out, I took the new version of Windows for a spin, and hated it. It required more resources than I felt it deserved (particularly memory). In addition to all the bloat, I thought the user interface was the ugliest I'd ever seen. Plus, it didn't give me anything I didn't already have with the old system. Other than some DRM, that is.

That new operating system was called XP. I decided to stick with 2000 Professional. I still use 2000 to this day for all my work and some games. I keep it away from the Internet (no browsing, and no email), and have no problems. Oh, and I'm still using Office 97 on it as well.

Now, tell me again why Windows 7 is so much better than Vista, when I don't even feel a need for XP?

Comment If You Want Something Done Right! (Score 2, Insightful) 246

Why on Earth would you trust your valuable data (and if it wasn't valuable to you, why keep it in the first place?) to someone else, someone who doesn't answer to the same people you do? I have always thought that "the cloud" is an epic fail waiting to happen. As a concept, it makes no sense. It's a scheme worthy of Professor Harold Hill himself.

You want your data safe? You want it backed up properly? Don't want to lose it? Then put it on your own hardware and take care of it yourself. Don't leave it to someone else to save your bacon when something goes wrong. Because, in the end, they don't care about you. You're just a monthly fee to them, and the agreement/contract/whatever you signed with them absolves them of all responsibility.

Comment Potential Impact of SCOTUS On Bilski (Score 1) 747

Imagine the impact on this whole debate should the Supreme Court of the US use Bilski to kill or limit software patents (don't hold your breath), as Red Hat and the FSF are now arguing in their amicus briefs. First of all, will we be free then to embrace Mono and Moonlight without fear of reprisals from Redmond? Will Microsoft make changes to both specs to make them very difficult, if not impossible, to implement properly without Windows running?

Comment Still not a good idea (Score 1) 1124

Remember that wonderful default in Windows that forces you to hold down the Alt key to see which letters on menu items identify the shortcut keys? I make sure that's always turned off when I use a computer. Firefox better have a way to *permanently* restore the menus, without holding down the ALT key (not to mention hide the #$%&@% ribbon), or I guarantee you there'll be a fork!

Comment What Schooling Should Be (Score 1) 1345

Currently, at least in the United States, school is a wonderful place to learn how to take and pass tests. That's it. Just because someone can pass a test doesn't mean they've learned *anything* about the subject tested. Today's tests by their very nature ask simple questions whose answers can be easily graded. Real knowledge doesn't fit into such easily-designated cubbyholes. As a result, we are rapidly building C.M. Kornbluth's world from "The Marching Morons", if we're not there already. Change is badly needed.

School should be a place that prepares a child for living in the real world, not fulfill the fantasies of Liberal Arts graduates who seem to think that being "well rounded" is the goal of every human being on the planet.

Horse hockey, as Colonel Potter is fond of saying!

What subjects should be taught? Here's a short list:

Reading, Writing / Speaking (i.e., how to effectively express yourself), Math (up to Geometry and your basic Algebra), Logic (i.e., how to think and reason in any situation), Social skills (i.e., how to deal effectively with people), Computers (how to use them safely, how to find information using the Internet), and everyday technology (basic home repairs -- including simple electrical, plumbing, and carpentry, basic car repairs, and everybody learns how to drive a car *properly*), and what they used to call "home economics" -- buying a home, paying bills, buying groceries, etc. Add "how to get and keep a job" to that list.

Optionally, we might want to teach a foreign language (not everybody may have the ability to handle it, though), but only if the first priority is *speaking* it, not reading a paragraph and answering a bunch of questions. After all, language is for communication first and foremost.

Oh, and about testing? Absolutely *no* written tests other than for Writing (essay, of course) and Math (a sheet of paper with a question and lots of blank space for the answer). Everything else is a "show me what you've learned". Explain it verbally, demonstrate it with your hands, something, *anything* but use a number 2 pencil to answer.

Call this whole thing "Modern Urban Survival", and the Final Grade will be given *after* graduation in the real world.

Comment Evil Doesn't Exist (Score 1) 527

Nobody does anything they truly believe is wrong. We are constantly justifying our actions, and see ourselves as the righteous hero of our own personal story. For anyone to be evil, they would have to willingly (and perhaps even enthusiastically) do that which is anathema to everything they personally believe in and rely on -- to do something they know is wrong simply *because* it's wrong. Should you find such a person, they're not evil, just mentally ill.

That's why it's said that the road to hell is paved with good intentions. What we call "Evil" is merely well-intentioned people doing terrible, unforgivable things for all the "right" reasons.

Comment The Male Sense of Direction (Score 4, Funny) 520

Men start out believing the first option, "Astoundingly good", and ignore the advice of their wife/girlfriend until they end up saying "How the hell did we end up *here*?

As for the women, there's no way to know how good they are at directions, because we're not listening to them to begin with!

Comment Civilizations are short-lived (Score 1) 642

No technological civilization lasts more than a few thousand years. They either use up their resources and die out or go to war with one another and die out, or suffer from some planetary natural disaster (comet, meteor, solar flares ... take your pick from the available sci-fi scenarios) and die out. By the time they have the means to reach the other planets in their solar system, they usually have other, more serious, problems to deal with, and the cost of getting out of a planet's gravity well is too high to be worthwhile resource-wise. Interstellar travel, while possible in theory (leaving out faster-than-light travel, which is flat-out impossible in the real universe), has an even higher cost than getting off a planet's surface, with an even *lower* return on the resource investment. Not even human beings are *that* stupid!

Bottom line: there are hundreds of thousands of civilizations out there, but they're in the exact same pickle we are. Don't bother leaving the porch light on -- they're not coming.

Comment Running Code in a PDF Reader! (Score 1) 179

In my opinion, the purpose of a PDF reader is to ... wait for it ... *read* a PDF file, not run Java or any other sort of scripting. If a publisher wants to create an interactive program, *there are programming languages for that!* If Acrobat Reader was made to specifically prevent a document from doing anything except *being passively read*, we wouldn't have half these problems.

The Swiss Army Knife approach only works for Switzerland's military elite, not software companies!

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