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Comment Re:Bribe Fine (Score 2) 285

That is absolutely the case. The "wheels of justice" in China only turn that quickly if you've run afoul of a well connected (government cadre) earner. Given the size of Foxconn and the amount of money involved, it's got to be someone (or a number of people) VERY high up in the CCP food chain....hence the harsh and fast sentence.

Anyone making this out as some attempt at enforcing IP laws is kidding themselves.

Comment *yawn* (Score 2) 353

Changing the user experience for the sake of "changing the user experience" doesn't do it for me. Gnome3 is a downgrade for me and a nudge to check out KDE.

I guess you can't please all the people all the time, but this effort is headed in the wrong direction.

Best,

Comment Glen Gould's rendition is still the standard... (Score 1) 106

by which others are judged.

Both the 1955 and 1981 ("purists prefer the former") recordings are pure genius if you can ignore Gould humming in the background while he plays. It's unfortunate that Gould is no longer around to play yet another rendition to publicize a freely available score.

For those who care:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glenn_Gould

Comment So what's a "victim" to do? (Score 4, Interesting) 254

So you get an extortion note. Then what? Do you settle? If not, do you hire a lawyer? Do you do nothing and wait to see if an actual trial happens?

Who's to say that someone isn't being naughty and spoofing your address? Or perhaps someone has sniffed enough of your wireless AP traffic to divine the password and go to town downloading crap?

Comment People are creatures of habit (Score 3, Interesting) 301

It took me YEARS to wean most of my AOL using friends/relatives off of AOL. Once something winds up getting "automatically charged" on their credit card every month, a lot of folks are just too lazy to change. None of them were using any of AOL's "value added services" and it was just an email application for them. Most of them already had high speed internet from their cable company or a telco DSL line already. They're all using gmail now.

Comment restored a day's USENET from circa 1990... (Score 1) 498

A few months ago, I stumbled on a box full of DAT backup tapes from the early 90's. Back then I was getting a "full" USENET feed from UUnet via a 56K link using CNEWS plus a bunch of custom hacks on a BSDI box running on some uber expensive 486DX system. In those days I did a simple dump of each filesystem to DAT once a day so a simple restore was able to recover data from a few of the tapes on my CentOS 5.5 desktop. A lot of the tapes had become unreadable though. One of the readable ones contained my news spool for a downstream site. :)

Amazing what seemed to be "risque" on alt.sex.* is now fodder for Oprah on weekday mornings. LOL

Best,

Comment Re:Give a kiddie a script... (Score 4, Insightful) 390

Not really. These aren't "protesters trying to stop a building project." Like it or not, they're also criminals who are disrupting websites and networks that other folks are paying to use. However, let's humor you and say they're simple protesters. As every person who engages in civil disobedience knows, you've got to be prepared to be arrested/punished. The long arm of the law doesn't always roll their eyes and wait for you to go away.

Best,

Comment would like to pay locals, but am forbidden to... (Score 1) 436

I work for a subsidiary of a large American corporation (cough....GE...cough). My department has had a consistent problem training and retaining the revolving door of TCS (Tata Consulting) and other (mostly Indian) contract workers. The maddening thing is that we're funneled by GE into dealing with these agencies because "we have no headcount" and therefore are not allowed to hire permanent employees often at salaries that American staff would be quite happy with. I came to find out that we're paying $100-110k on an annualized basis for very junior level programmers. We're talking 25 year olds...many straight out of college. Of that, TCS is probably pocketing 30-40% (or perhaps more). Instead of getting these inexperienced folks and handing wads of cash to Tata, I could pay say $100k to an American programmer with a few years of actual/verifiable work experience in our field. The employee would be happy, I'd be tickled to not have to retrain someone for that spot annually, etc. I don't know what loophole in accounting makes this "cheaper" for the US corporation since we lose a LOT of productivity due to the constant revolving door, poor employee integration/communication/etc.

The current system is clearly broken. I think I'm in agreement that a good solution would be to require that H1-B employees be paid a premium over local staff. That way, they're available if you really need them, but there's incentive to source locally first.

Comment Re:Netflix does run on *some* Android devices (Score 1) 291

Having been involved in developing one of the early GoogleTV apps, I can say that Netflix does indeed work. So it is possible and it's possible with DRM.

However...

For higher end 720p-1080p content, ok....sure, I get it. Make it marginally harder to steal while your "new release" DVDs and BluRay content is in stores for whatever makes sense as a honeymoon period. But for your typical mobile content which is normally at much lower audio/video resolution, spare me.

Be happy that you got your micropayment from whatever android kiosk the owner used, even if it means that someone can "steal" that low rez crap later. Chances are if they really wanted to steal the content, they'd just download a ripped DVD/BluRay disk from the net, so it seems a bit silly to make it harder for folks to pay for the convenience of not bothering with all that.

Best,

Comment The Chinese standard (Score 0, Flamebait) 140

It will be oddly similar to the US/EU standard, sport a Luis Vuitton label, will cost 90% less, and will fail after 3 dockings. Warranty claims will be met by a government official surnamed "Wang" stating that his brother's ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H the company that produced them is no longer in business and that the principals have fled to Belize along with the proceeds of their sales. A full investigation will be promised, but appeals for transparency will be met with "mind your own fucking business, laowai!"

Film at 11.

Comment Re:Turbines are fuel guzzlers (Score 1) 338

Actually, no. The higher combustion temps associated with turbines increases fuel efficiency. The thing to do would be to tune the size/output of a small turbine to act as a generator and then use electric motors to propel the car. I suspect this hasn't been done due to the cost/complexity of a small turbine engine rather than a lack of fuel efficiency.

Comment Politics aside...what does LO offer me? (Score 1) 589

As an end user, what does LO offer me that I don't/won't get from Oo?

I guess when my distro(s) switch I'll follow along, but is there anything functionally better with LO that would convince an end user like me to be bothered with switching sooner rather than later?

And on another note:

To be frank, I've had a hell of time even getting my company to accept Oo as an alternative to Microsoft's Office product. And now I'll have to explain to a room full of PHBs why it would be better to change to LO after FINALLY getting some traction in having people actually look at Oo as an alternative. Sigh....the petty squabbling on both sides of this issue is just playing into M$'s hands.

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