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Comment But deep-tissue massage in the classroom is OK... (Score 5, Interesting) 333

Just a little background here. My wife, two boys and I recently relocated back to the bay area. My son (and wife and I) interviewed at the Waldorf school, and my son was admitted. We decided not to have him attend because 1) the cost was high (roughly $15K a year for 3 half-days a week for a pre-schooler) and 2) the people making decisions there are little bit... eccentric. They made it very clear that they are anti-computers and anti-video (TV or videos of any sort). That's fine, if a bit unrealistic. Next they let us know that the teachers provided deep-tissue massage to the kids during each day's nap time. And explained how cell phones and electromagnetic radiation are giving people cancer. And talked about how a montessori education (aka actual learning in the classroom versus solely focusing on play as they do for preschoolers at Waldorf) isn't effective at an early age. I'm fine with these folks taking whatever positions they like, but I don't need my son to go to a school that believes technology is evil and learning is inappropriate in a preschool classroom. We're paying roughly the same money for my son to attend a montessori school nearby (5 half-days a week) and are pretty happy with it. To each their own, but honestly the attitudes present there really didn't work for my family.

Comment Re:The Sooner the Better (Score 1) 437

One thing they could do to speed adoption would be to make sure there are more than ZERO devices available at retail to work with it. I understand it's new tech, but to hype Thunderbolt all over the product description when you CAN'T BUY ANY DEVICES THAT USE THUNDERBOLT is a bit ridiculous. Do a search on Amazon, Newegg, Best Buy, anywhere... you will find nothing. Meanwhile USB 3.0 outperforms FW 800 easily, and devices that use it actually exist. I like what Apple is trying to do here, but they should spend more time convincing Lacie, Western Digital, Seagate, etc. to actually ship devices that uses it and less time selling us on its thus-far untapped potential.

Comment fine with cubes, but give me walls and a door (Score 1) 484

I'm fine with being in a small space. I just need a desk for my laptop and a phone, plus a place to stash my bag and coat. But for the love of god, give me some privacy and quiet. I need to be able to talk on the phone with some privacy. I need to be able to think without putting on headphones. Bottom line, if you want me to come to work rather than work at home... you need to make it not be worse than working at home in every possible way. I have a toddler and an infant at home, so one would think I would do anything to leave. Yet at the office I have two coworkers constantly talking to each other, others loudly talking on the phone, the temperature is ridiculously variant to the point that I have an extra coat in my cube and always wear layers, the cafeteria food is awful and oddly more expensive than fast food... plus I have to drive 15 minutes each way (an easy commute) to have the privilege. If you want me to commute, make it worth it. As it is I do anything I can to avoid going to the office because I am _far more productive at home_. Make the office awesome for getting work done, or bail on the concept entirely. This "how little can we get away with" mentality is a waste of money and time for everyone.

Comment Re:Once again.... (Score 1) 356

Innovation is all about scope though. If the context is 'has ever been done on any technology platform ever,' then sure... what Microsoft has done with Xbox Live is not innovative. But, then that means that everything Apple has done over the past 5 years--that basically everyone classifies as innovative whether we like it or not-- isn't either. Ipod, done before. Iphone, done before. Etc.

If you focus the lens to video game consoles, what Xbox Live has done is without a doubt innovative. That you can use it without worrying about hardware requirements, operating system requirements and with a very low cost of entry is what has made it so successful. Live is the differentiator between Microsoft's console offering and what Sony and Nintendo are selling... and it has proven to be a solid advantage within a key segment of the gaming community. Re: Office, I'm inclined to disagree with you. Sure there is some lock-in, but they have provided saving to xml and export to PDF for several versions now. People like me use Office instead of the alternatives because, frankly, the applications are superior to competitive offerings. Sure there is the myth that OpenOffice is as good, or within my firm (IBM) the concept that Lotus products offer the same functionality... but for people that spend hours a day with these tools Excel and PowerPoint are head and shoulders above the competition. Keynote is impressive, but there aren't enough people using Macs to make using that format a smart choice if you share content with a reasonably broad audience.

Comment Re:Once again.... (Score 2, Interesting) 356

While the Xbox may seem to somewhat fit the 'throw money at it until it's relevant' idea you provide, Xbox Live on the other hand is innovative in many ways. It was innovative to include an ethernet plug on the original Xbox (ps2 offered this later, Dreamcast offered it as a separate $100 addon, etc), and then to have a network with gamertags and proper matchmaking. On the 360, Xbox Live is consistently ahead of the competition as well, offering in-game chat across games first, Live-only games for download with demos that always include the full version within them for a simple, in-game pay to unlock.. Etc.. Sony has been trying to catch up with PSN, but still doesn't offer some key features that Xbox Live provides, namely cross-game chat. For the most part, Sony has just been implementing whatever features of Xbox Live people seem to enjoy (trophies to replicate achievements, etc). They are also pushing the envelope with other services on Live... like Netflix support for Gold account holders and now the ESPN live functionality. They had TV episode and movie downloads prior to Sony, and Netflix long prior to Sony and Nintendo.

So.. like it or not, Xbox Live is hugely innovative. Aside from Live, however... I completely agree with your argument. I used to work at Microsoft, and embrace+extend is definitely the name of the game. Their problem lately, in my opinion, is poor leadership. Steve Ballmer takes the 'me too' nature of the company too far, consistently looking to copy others that are making money even when Microsoft has no competency to beat that competitor. Bing is the perfect example... Microsoft continues to try to beat Google at search, when it's apparent to anyone that they won't ever accomplish that (and no one else will either). Lately they have at least realized that their massive cash cows in Windows and Office are what deserve the most attention, but the company still needs to do a better job (any job) of focusing on their competencies and delivering against those rather than simply trying to follow the money others are making.

Comment No, but they could restrict OSX to the Pros... (Score 1) 239

Of course they won't kill OS X, but it would certainly make some sense to put iOS on the cheaper machines and restrict OS X to the MBP's and Mac Pros. Mac Pros become a lot more appealing (despite their high price) if you need to buy one to have a legit Mac desktop machine for development. Think about it, iOS on Mac Mini, Macbook, OS X on MBP and Mac Pro. Justifies the high price they want to keep on MBP and Mac Pros, and also lets them go lower on the pricing of the mini, the iPad and the Macbook. I don't think this is farfetched at all.

Comment Re:Discovery Channel (Score 1) 287

Clearly they need to strike a balance, but let's be honest here. A few years ago, the 'pure' Discovery Channel you liked could take literally any topic, no matter how interesting, and make it a cure for insomnia. While I agree they've swung the pendulum entirely too far in the other direction, that doesn't mean that their 'HD filming of something interesting with a narrator putting you to sleep with a monotone commentary' style was somehow stellar tv either.
Privacy

Lower Merion School's Report Says IT Dept. Did It, But Didn't Inhale 232

PSandusky writes "A report issued by the Lower Merion School District's chosen law firm blames the district's IT department for the laptop webcam spying scandal. In particular, the report mentions lax IT policies and record-keeping as major problems that enabled the spying. Despite thousands of e-mails and images to the contrary, the report also maintains that no proof exists that anyone in IT viewed images captured by the webcams."
Earth

Planned Nuclear Reactors Will Destroy Atomic Waste 344

separsons writes "A group of French scientists are developing a nuclear reactor that burns up actinides — highly radioactive uranium isotopes. They estimate that 'the volume of high-level nuclear waste produced by all of France’s 58 reactors over the past 40 years could fit in one Olympic-size swimming pool.' And they're not the only ones trying to eliminate atomic waste: Researchers at the University of Texas in Austin are working on a fusion-fission reactor. The reactor destroys waste by firing streams of neutrons at it, reducing atomic waste by up to 99 percent!"
Education

Study Finds That Video Games Hinder Learning In Young Boys 278

dcollins writes "Researchers at Denison University in Ohio have shown that giving PlayStations to young boys leads to slower progress in reading and writing skills. Quoting: 'The study is the first controlled trial to look at the effects of playing video games on learning in young boys. That is to say, the findings aren't based on survey data of kids' game habits, but instead on a specific group of children that were randomly assigned to receive a PlayStation or not ... Those with PlayStations also spent less time engaged in educational activities after school and showed less advancement in their reading and writing skills over time than the control group, according to tests taken by the kids. While the game-system owners didn't show significant behavioral problems, their teachers did report delays in learning academic skills, including writing and spelling.'"
Cellphones

BlackBerry Bold Tops Radiation Ranking 189

geek4 writes with this excerpt from eWeek Europe: "Data from the Environmental Working Group places the BlackBerry Bold 9700 as the mobile device with the highest legal levels of cell phone radiation among popular smartphones. Research In Motion's BlackBerry Bold 9700 scores the highest among popular smartphones for exposing users to the highest legal levels of cell phone radiation, according to the latest 2010 Environmental Working Group ranking. Following the Bold 9700 are the Motorola Droid, the LG Chocolate and Google's HTC Nexus One. The rankings still put the phones well within federal guidelines and rules."
Bug

Outlook 2010 Bug Creates Monster Email Files 126

Julie188 writes with this snippet from Network World "Office 2010 is still in beta and a patch is already out. Microsoft is trying to fix a bug in the email program Outlook 2010 Beta that creates unusually large e-mail files that take up too much space. The Outlook product team has offered a bug fix for both 32-bit and 64-bit systems that fixes the problem going forward, although previous emails will remain super-sized. This could be a problem for email programs that limit message sizes, such as Gmail or BlackBerry."
Games

Game Industry Vets On DRM 372

An anonymous reader points out an article at SavyGamer in which several game industry veterans were polled for their opinions on DRM. Cliff Harris of Positech Games said he didn't think his decision to stop using DRM significantly affected piracy of his games, accepting it as an unavoidable fact. "Maybe a few of the more honest people now buy the game rather than pirate it, but this sort of thing is impossible to measure. You can see how many people are cracking and uploading your game, but tracking downloads is harder. It seems any game, even if it's $0.99 has a five hour demo and is DRM-free and done by a nobel-peace prize winning game design legend, will be cracked and distributed on day one by some self righteous teenager anyway. People who crack and upload games don't give a damn what you've done to placate gamers, they crack it anyway." Nihal de Silva of Direct2Drive UK said his company hasn't noticed any sales patterns indicating customers are avoiding games with DRM. Richard Wilson of TIGA feels that customers should be adequately warned before buying a game that uses DRM, but makes no bones about the opinion that the resale of used games is not something publishers should worry about.
First Person Shooters (Games)

Infinity Ward Fights Against Modern Warfare 2 Cheaters 203

Faithbleed writes "IW's Robert Bowling reports on his twitter account that Infinity Ward is giving 2,500 Modern Warfare 2 cheaters the boot. The news comes as the war between IW and MW2's fans rages over the decision to go with IWnet hosting instead of dedicated servers. Unhappy players were quick to come up with hacks that would allow their own servers and various other changes." Despite the dedicated-server complaints, Modern Warfare 2 has sold ridiculously well.

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