Comment Re:Trying to remain "competitive" I guess... (Score 1) 249
and be sure to write a letter to the offending company the reason that you will not do repeat business with them.
and be sure to write a letter to the offending company the reason that you will not do repeat business with them.
...I'm sure in a case like this that something can be worked out. Instead of actual reporting and checking up on the situation, we instead get people using words like "impossible"...
So... They reported what the situation *is*.. And that's not actual reporting? The fact of the matter, it *is* impossible to go buy a new PS3 with OtherOS. It *may* not be impossible in the future, however that's conjecture, not reporting.
What does Apple have to do with this? In what way is the licensing for an Apple Computer different than a Windows PC? If your talking APPLIANCES, like Game machines or phone devices, such as iPhone, the Apps offered with iPhone don't 'come with the unit'. They weren't sold with it and certainly weren't guaranteed from Apple to be allowed on the device.
In regards to Game consoles, Sony is on a limb here all by their lonesome, as Apple doesn't have a game console (although arguably the iPhone, but they haven't crippled some game that came with it), and there is no similar situation on the XBox either that I know of.
Try to keep your rants in line with the topic at hand?
Backroyalties (license fees for past infringement) -- or the equivalent in case of a lawsuit, damages for past infringement -- certainly add to the problem, but the biggest leverage a patent troll can have is the ability to force an "infringer" to discontinue shipping a key product (or several key products at the same time). That's when a company's ability to stay in business becomes seriously endangered and that's the perfect basis for a hold-up.
It looks like someone puked down half the screen.
Well...I wouldn't quite say that. It's different - that's for sure. But, I have seen puke on a screen (my roommate, freshman year, came back and got sick in front of his computer) and the Google redesign doesn't look like that.
I'm not normally a person to care too much as long as I have an option
So...that means you must care quite frequently as most websites/software/etc don't give you that much of an option on how THEIR interface looks. And, to be fair, you do have an option - go to a different search engine. Or, don't even use the main Google interface. There are many ways to get the results you are looking for that doesn't actually involve hitting the home Google page.
Much like youtube, where their redesign is personally hated as a facebook rip-off.
I can understand not liking the new layout. Definitely entitled to your own opinion. I haven't particularly warmed up to the new Google look yet. However, you then go to say (and this is why I'm responding at all)...
It's seems that in both cases, the redesigns are universally disliked
"Universally disliked" is a very strong set of words. Do you have proof of this? You mean there is NOBODY who actually likes the changes?
but good ol' google is being evil by not responding to consumer complaints over it. Other than "screw, you."
Now that's just not being fair. Google has to make decisions at times about how THEIR product looks. If you read the blog posts (by Google, as well as by others), Google did quite a bit of acceptance testing and research to determine how to best layout their new site to provide better information, more information, and make it easier to read. You may not like what's up there now, but you should have seen the ones they rejected. Either way, Google is not being evil here...they are running a business and trying to make the views to their search results viable and on the cutting edge. They may even make mistakes while doing that (as I said - I'm not sure what I think about the new design yet), but they are most definitely not being evil here. And I never once heard them say, "screw you." Not once.
I just don't understand why they would take up the left side of the screen with something I'll never use. I guess it looks like every other web site now, but I always appreciated Google's cleanness and simplicity.
To paraphrase a great quote:
You are so wrong that even in a universe where you were somehow right you would still be wrong.
When you start treating common tools as weapons you turn vast swaths of the population into criminals, which is only a good thing if you consider a police state where everyone is a criminal a good thing.
The (not so) funny part is that's where eternal copyright+DMCA leads us, too.
Have you done anything illegal this week?
If you think the answer is "no", how sure are you of that really?
If that father wanted to hear his daughter all he had to do was unplug it.......
Then:
*unplug phone*
"Daaaadddddeeeeee I was talking to my booooyyyyyyfrieeeennnnnndddd!"
Now:
*unplug wireless*
"Daaaadddddeeeeee I was IM'ing my booooyyyyyyfrieeeennnnnndddd!"
Yeah dads can hear their daughters all right.
Another important lesson is "Do NOT try to catch a falling soldering iron with remaining unseared hand."
There, fixed that for you in typical SlashDot style.
Every aircraft we have, every cruise missile, launched at once, loaded with conventional bunker busters, would not make a dent in the north's 10,000 artillery tubes which are heavily fortified into the hills.
Artillery is surprisingly ineffective when it remains behind heavy fortifications. The gun tubes have to exit the bunker somewhere.
You don't have to destroy the gun, only it's ability to fire.
I would not be interested since vendor lockin is not my bag. If you like that sort of thing go for it.
Except for the fact that it's wildly hallucinogenic. That's why it took a few months for them to report it. What didn't officially come out was this:
"We were all tripping so hard, somehow we ended up naked, running around in the lab apparently for like two days. No one remembers a thing, but the technicians that found us said we were laughing our asses off and talking to non-existent creatures in the room."
It's always embarrassing when something like that comes out.
Who are you to say who we're fighting?
He's not. Make a list of who we're trading violence with. You'll find the enemies mentioned.
IF I HAD A MINE SHAFT, I don't think I would just abandon it. There's got to be a better way. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.