Comment Sentient and self aware. (Score 1) 228
Computers can have free speech when that speech is theirs and not something algorithmically derived from what some human has said or written and when they independently demand that they have the right.
Computers can have free speech when that speech is theirs and not something algorithmically derived from what some human has said or written and when they independently demand that they have the right.
Interesting. I am currently beginning some experiments in self organising systems. I am using randomly generated genes and a genetic algorithm to spawn a self organising structure. Later I hope to be able to use these structures to create software. If I succeed, and give this software to you to run - who would be responsible for what it did ?
I have been using gnome 3 for a few months now. I have applied enough customisations that it is tolerable - not great, but good enough to get real work done.
The three things I would like to see are:
Named Workspaces In addition to the dynamic workspaces, which I quite like as a concept, I want a fixed set of named workspaces for my routine tasks.
Task Display I want to be able to see, at a glance, what is running on a workspace. I do not want to have to switch to the workspace view just to see if something has slipped under another window.
Task Launching The idea that I would want to reuse a terminal session on another workspace is daft. I can see that for some apps it might be OK, but for others its just wrong. This needs to be something that can be set on a per application basis.
Most of these solutions seem to be getting the cart before the horse.
Back in the early '70s, in Australia at least, you could get a university education almost for free. The result was that students studied what they had a passion for without worrying too much about what career they would end up with. The lucky ones got the careers they wanted, others with a real passion started businesses, and the rest ended up as teachers where they taught with that same passion.
Now a universtiy education is so expensive that it must be carefully tailored to where the good paying jobs already are. The passion has been lost, and along with it the good teachers and the innovative engineers - like those that started Sun, HP, etc.
Society has to put the investment back into education if it wants to get the rewards. Give the kids that education and they will go out and dream up new businesses that we cannot even begin to imagine.
I think that what MS is looking for is another income stream and they see the App store as a way to make a lot more money from software sales. For this they will be pushing everything onto the Metro interface.
MS can probably survive the failure of 8 to really take off. However if 9 goes wrong as well they might be in trouble.
OK (Its late in this bit of the world and I need more sleep.)
Agree, I cannot imagine too many office workers that I am familiar with being happy if their desktop machine was replaced by a tablet. In the office environment you want a big screen and a keyboard so that you can read docs while preparing emails - they live in Outlook.
I think TFA premise is wrong. The tablet is too big to be used as a phone, too small for office apps (other than note-taking, and a pen and paper is usually better) and Apple and Amazon have the other use cases well under control.
The only other possibility that I can think of is as a remote display for an existing computer - sort of like an X-Terminal. If I could get them at less than $100 I would buy three tomorrow.
True, but if i am going to build a tablet style app for Windows then I am going to build for the Metro interface so that I get both x86 and ARM at little extra cost.
Just curious, but what sort of processing do you consider to be "real world"?
My previous job for 12 years was maintaining a system for a large govt department that was mostly batch processing text files, with a little bit of image processing for good measure.
How about a tablet that just runs an X server - like the old X-Terminals?
For the business user they should have plenty of access to servers to run the software on - Linux or Mac.
Users are not currently expecting to run Windows on tablets so now is the ideal opportunity to get another product out there.
Agreed. Somehow we need to make a copyrighted work a liability rather than an asset.
[The best I can think of is to get the distributors involved in a legal battle amongst themselves.]
You are right in thinking that there is too much money tied up in the "value" of copyrights.
The only way we are ever going to get copyrights removed now is to turn it into a liability - somehow make owning a copyright to a work more expensive than its worth - any ideas on how this could be done ?
Copyrights were originally to stop publishers from making unauthorised copies, and was really a form of censorship.
We need a mechanism where authors can get rewarded for their work. The best time to do this is when the work transitions from private to public. The cost of trying to control a work once it has been released to the public is too high. It will either result in locked down equipment, or draconian laws - neither should be acceptable.
They don't have a product that runs Windows.
I wonder how much extra a Windows license would cost if you don't pay for the Android license?
We just need a way of rewarding the artists at the point where the work changes from being private to being public. Once a work has been distributed to the public it is rather pointless trying to keep it under control - DRM usually gets defeated eventually. It is at the transition point that the opportunity to reward the artist arises.
The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the `social sciences' is: some do, some don't. -- Ernest Rutherford