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Comment Re:I applaud the Chinese and I'm Austrian. (Score 4, Insightful) 150

Funny how tourists aren't interested in any places or buildings that were built during the last 60 years.

That's wrong for Vienna (e.g. Hundertwasserhaus) and it's probably just as wrong for Graz. The most prominent architecture was always novel and radical and just because some examples were simply not good, you cannot discredit modern architecture in general. Would we have the buildings like the Secession if we had always stuck to preserving traditional styles? In a few decades, we'll wish we had built more buildings like the new Sofitel (Jean Nouvel!). Sadly, people are more keen on preserving ugly 1950's buildings on the other side of the Wienkanal than having great modern architecture like the French for example.

Comment Re:It's the advertising out of control (Score 1) 135

Instead, it is a combination of the extra time needed to load Javascript from advertisers (whether it is to spy on you or just to rotate ads around), and programming defects in that Javascript (doesn't play well with others). Browsers have to stop and wait for scripts to finish loading before allowing everything to run or even be rendered. You can have a page freeze in a blank state when some advertiser's Javascript request isn't connecting or loading.

It is also a result of plain stupidity of some (major) ad server operating companies - here in Austria, we've heard things like "we try to disable caching for served media [images, swf etc.]" and we've actually seen images, animations, 200KB+ flash being loaded at every request because of this. Needless to say, the slow document.write() method of displaying ads is also still the norm ... If the W3C had any sense, it would have come up with an <AD> tag that worked like a restricted IFRAME (with mandatory caching) but could be turned on and off by the users (browsers). But like so many committees, the W3C is not interested in good technical solutions, but rather in the commercial interests of particular contributing corporations.

Comment Re:Too many connections (Score 1) 135

Somehow all of that content needs to be coalesced into fewer connections.

We did use fewer connections before CDNs, CDN-hosted JS libraries and cookie-less content domains became the norm and before web developers were advised by PageSpeed and other "authorities" to put content on multiple hosts to facilitate parallel access by browsers. Yes, it was a stupid idea to fix a minor implementation problem of browsers on the web server side.
Also, what contributes most to web page slowdown is ads and tracking code, both areas dominated by Google - who pretends to be somehow interested in speeding up the web (haha!).

Comment Re:Extremism in all cases is bad. (Score 1) 490

>slippery slope argument

You're right, slippery slopes do not exist and we should go down that road

at our peril

...

There are a lot of people who will tell you that they will not move to Linux until Photoshop or Solidworks works on Linux.

No problem for me, Linux doesn't get better or worse (well, more likely worse if the past 10 years have been any indication) if more people (esp. like those - who usually prefer pirating Photoshop over using free alternatives) use it. WINE should be improved to support more commercial software though.

Comment Re:Extremism in all cases is bad. (Score 1) 490

Without getting major companies to start moving their paid, closed source software to Linux first, you/re /never/ going to see Autocad or the like as Free Software on Linux.

Which is why we have GIMP even though Adobe hasn't ported Photoshop to Linux?

The next step after major companies declaring to port stuff to Linux is demand for a non-removable DRM component for Linux. I think the intention of Open Source was to pollute closed-source habitats with (viral) Open Source software, not the other way round. Closed source / DRM isn't magically going to become open when it's a perfectly valid and undisputedly supported option for Linux, why should it?

IMHO, the way to go is the way of the Humble Indie Bundle V - it's astonishing how little attention the Linux port got

Comment Re:Helpful Explanation and Anecdote (Score 1, Insightful) 271

In my opinion and from experience it's not about brutality, it's about money

Since you mentioned Nazis: money was one of the factors that drove the Nazi regime too. The question in both cases is: at what point do the insane ideologists take over (look at the Republican candiates for 2012...)? So it's not like it being about money at this time means we're not going in an entirely wrong direction. Regarding "brutal" - what would you call gitmo, all the secret CIA prisons, mass killing of suspects (as ordered by the president)? It's not something that affects us at the border controls, but it's the regime's brutality nevertheless.

Comment Re:DHS CS Expert. (Score 1) 271

t the DHS (and many other three-letter government agencies) does is a waste of money, I think it's also much worse than that.

Security is serious business (and money) and the DHS, TSA do a great job inciting anti-americanism and thus keeping the money flowing to the right corporations. The USA got rich by being a free country, now they (well, some) get even richer by doing the opposite. Isn't capitalism great?

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