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Comment What about rooting your 'droid? (Score 1) 423

I notice nothing is mentioned about simply rooting your android.

I haven't been able to find a definitive declaration, but I've been told and have read reports that rooting my DInc will result in a voided warranty.

IMO, this is like buying a Windows machine, but not having the right to administrative access.

What if I want to continue getting updates on the OS, but I also want to uninstall the crapware? I know there's very little on the DInc, but from what I hear and read, the X is choked with it. And these 'crapps' are using phone and network resources. What if you have a limited data plan (and regardless of what Verizon says, it will happen sooner or later), and your phone passively uses more than twice the data bandwidth you use actively? $$$$ out the window and into your carrier's pocket.

So, the real question (for me, anyhow), is does this apply to Android?

Comment How about this ... (Score 1) 757

Before everyone gets their panties in a twist, wait for Motorola to comment. This is just rumor, after all.

Motorola has admitted that they are locking down the firmware, and gone so far as to say that if you want to mod your Android phone, buy a Nexus One. They have not acknowledged any kind of bricking booby-trap so far as I can find.

That said, I'm most definitely not a Motorola user anyway. I despised their stupid bloody Krazr phone the instant I pulled it out of the box, and when it completely shattered, 2 months later after a 20 inch drop to a wood floor, I didn't improve my opinion of their phones. I don't think this is going to help them much, but I also don't think it's going to hurt them much. As another poster mentioned, it's just not on that many users' radar. Nobody cares except the modding community.

Now, in the interest of Full Disclosure, I expect my shiny new HTC Incredible to be shipped today. This will be my first smartphone (I know, I'm a Luddite), and I don't know what to expect. I don't expect to muck with the boot loader, though I may opt to gain root access after I've studied the pros and cons better.

Comment Re:Competition (Score 1) 222

Oh, yes. HTML5 is the "next big thing" and I've been mostly ignoring it (I'm a back-end C/C++/Perl dev, not a web dev).

I saw that memory test result. I think the big problem there was that it was a stripped down FF install - no extensions. I don't use that many - maybe 6 or 8, but in my experience FF would tend to suck epic quantities of memory into oblivion along with the CPU any time it went pear shaped. I never was able to isolate that problem to a single plugin, page, or combination thereof. Now that FF4 is isolating plugins and tabs better, maybe I'll be able to.

Comment Re:Competition (Score 1, Informative) 222

I was under the impression that's what 4.0 is doing. On MacOS, I get an extra FF icon in the Dock when I run into sites with Flash ...

Did I miss something?

And yeah, 3.6.x was so bad I upgraded my primary browser to the beta. Since then, no CPU drain at random, no out of control heat issue until I force kill it, and no framework lockup when I'm editing a long response on FB. It still freezes the edit box momentarily, but only rarely, and never crashes out or kills performance on the whole machine. To be honest, if the handful of extensions I use in FF had been ported to Safari, I'd already have jumped ship.

Comment Re:Competition (Score 4, Interesting) 222

Agreed. The JS engine is probably the only area FF is trailing the rest of the market by a wide margin. It's not like they're announcing they're getting further out in front of the pack. Announcing they're finally coming up to par in this area is the best thing I've heard about FF since ... well ever.

This might give me reason to hold out for FF4 rather than switching to Safari or Opera.

Submission + - RSA announces new Cybercrime Intelligence Service

Keyslapper writes: It looks like the big dog in network authentication is tackling cybercrime for the Fortune 500. The new service is focused on identifying compromised systems within a client organization and helping to deal with the threats they pose.

See the press release here.

Is this going to be a real blow to the cyber crime industry, or is this just another case of spitting in the wind? Let's hope it's the former.

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