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Comment Re: approximately the resolution of an adult eye @ (Score 1) 217

300dpi for print is actually a lot lower than 300ppi for displays. Each dot for print is, depending on your technology, either black, cyan, magenta or yellow, or one of a very small (typically 4-16) shades of these colours.

You are confusing DPI (image resolution) and LPI (effectively printer resolution). They are not the same thing.

Comment Re: approximately the resolution of an adult eye @ (Score 5, Informative) 217

For an adult human, 400-600 is about the limit of what we can detect.

No.

For most average human adults, the limit is about 300 dpi.

Speaking as a graphic designer with over two decades of experience, there is a reason that graphic designers have always targeted a print resolution of 300 dpi for colour images.

How 400-600 entered the conversation is beyond me. The percentage of people who can visually tell the difference between a 300 dpi output and anything higher than that is very, very small. The number of people who can spot the difference at 400+ is not even a consideration for discussion. I'm sure there are some who can but don't even vaguely think that they in any way represent the norm.

Any manufacturer who targets a screen resolution above about 350 or so is just targeting big numbers for the marketing benefit - the average user will never be able to tell the difference.

Comment Geek Rage!!! (Score 5, Insightful) 243

The Veronica Mars kickstarter promised "You will receive a digital version of the movie within a few days of the movieâ(TM)s theatrical debut..."

A digital version. Last time I checked, while most people may dislike UltraViolet, it is a digital version.

Now, I understand the servers got hammered and there were issues with the process and Warner Brothers offered a refund so people could buy the movie from a competing digital store but they fulfilled their promise or made efforts to rectify the situation when their servers failed under the load.

Also, they made no promise of DRM free. Doing a search of the Veronica Mars Kickstarter page, I find exactly zero mentions of DRM so why you would think they owe you a DRM free movie is beyond me.

You're clearly itching to pick a fight and begging to justify torrenting the movie rather than paying for it but, sorry, you haven't cited so much as one valid complaint. They offered a digital version of the movie and they delivered a digital version of the movie. Users that encountered issues were offered a refund so they could obtain the movie elsewhere since their servers weren't up to the task rather than WB just pocketing the money and saying "well, try again another time".

I see absolutely nothing nefarious here.

Much geek rage about nothing.

Comment Wait!... (Score 4, Insightful) 166

Wait! One dickhead stops using Google Voice and that earns a frontpage article on Slashdot??

SERIOUSLY?!?

Ok, come the fuck on!!!

Can this site make even a minimal effort to not be total shit? For quite a long time, Slashdot was very educational and informative but, over the past few years, it has sunk to near-uselessness. It's only because some people steadfastly refuse to give up despite the fact they are fighting a losing battle that the site isn't entirely crap.

One guy stops using Google Voice and that earns a Slashdot article.

Wow.

Comment Re:A hypothetical monopoly on smartphones (Score 0) 406

None of Apple's patents which are being enforced are essential to the difference between smartphones and dumbphones. Neither in the legal sense of standards essential patents nor in the sense of "without it, how will people know it's a smart phone?"

All their patents can be designed around.

As evidenced by the companies that have, you know, designed around them.

Comment Ignorance... (Score -1, Flamebait) 406

Ok, I'm certain I'm going to get modded into the stone age because, well, that's what happens on Slashdot nowadays so let's just get on with it.

First, the VAST majority of the patents involved in a mobile device are FRAND patents that are required for the phone to be, you know, a phone (plus the wifi and whatnot). And those patents are licensed at INCREDIBLY low rates per device because the inventor knows that they are going to make back their investment in the long run because EVERY device uses the patent. That is the value in a FRAND patent. That is why companies work so incredibly hard to get their invention involved in an industry standard - the value is long term. The value is in a steady stream of income, even if it is small per device, from everyone.

The other type of patents are the ones which Apple is enforcing in this case - non-FRAND patents. They are not, in any way, an "industry standard" and thus other manufacturers have a choice to a) pay whatever licensing fee they can negotiate with the patent holder or b) invent around it. Since it isn't REQUIRED, option b is available.

Now, the patent holder has the benefit that they are under no obligation to license the patent in question. With a FRAND patent, they do not have that choice. By agreeing to be part of an industry standard, the company agrees to license the patents at FAIR and REASONABLE rates and NON-DISCRIMINATORY. That means, EVERYONE can license the patent - the patent holder has no right to prevent a company from licensing it - and the rates MUST be fair and reasonable which equates with "very low because they make it up in bulk since everyone needs to license it." Thus, the 250,000 patents.

What trips up most people is the idea of "industry standard". It isn't a "well, everyone does it so it's standard". It is "companies pitched to be included in an industry standard that was being established by a board and went through an extensive review and development process". It is a legal term, not a description.

Apple's patents that they are enforcing aren't FRAND. They are under no obligation to license them to anyone. They are entirely within their right to not license them to anyone. Conversely, Samsung is also under no obligation to use them. They can agree to pay to license them or, alternatively, they can design around them and not infringe the patents.

Well, actually, there's another option, which Samsung opted for - infringe the patents and then drag the issue out in court and wage a PR war of misinformation. Most companies, however, either agree to license the patents or, if they can't reach an agreeable rate with the patent holder, design around the patents instead.

Now, feel free to mod me down since I'm clearly an Apple fanboy despite speaking the truth and I've dared to impugn the honour of Samsung...

Oh, and lastly, can we SERIOUSLY get one or two story summaries that aren't clear and obvious flamebait? This site has become total shit in recent years and I see no recovery... sigh...

Comment Re:Left out a key piece of the original headline (Score -1) 193

...(something which isn't even an option on iOS).

Wait. You just acknowledge that the VAST majority of malware comes from sideloaded apps and then make a snide comment about iOS because sideloading malware-laden apps isn't an option.

REALLY??

Only on Slashdot is the inability to load malware-riddled apps on your phone viewed as a negative...

Comment Re:And yet apple sells more tablets than anybody (Score 4, Interesting) 487

White label tablets also include TV dongles that happen to run Android - for some reason, they track as "tablet". Presumably it's the most accurate of the choices available. Despite it not being a tablet, at all.

And there are a LOT of these TV dongles out there. For example, do a search on Amazon or eBay for "android tv dongle".

Skewed and distorted numbers.

Comment Questionable Numbers (Score 5, Informative) 487

Sure, if you go with Gartner's numbers which undercut Apple's reported sales figures (you know, numbers that undergo SEC scrutiny for accuracy) by almost 4 million units while also adding in Android "white box" units that include TV dongles which track as tablets despite being not-at-all tablets while also clouding the results by reporting Apple's sales-to-end-users numbers with Android's shipped-into-channel numbers. So, yeah, if you cut Apple's numbers and artificially inflate Android's numbers, yes, Android is beating iOS in the tablet space.

And now you may mod me troll while claiming I'm just an Apple fanboy for speaking the truth.

I have such fond memories of when this site wasn't such a blatant tool of spin doctors for certain industry interests...

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