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Comment yes and no (Score 1) 278

when I was 15 and I had my first PC, I did nothing with it except playing games and my grades nosedived... But gaming brought me together with people who did creative stuff with their PCs (on LANs) - Level-editing, programming, webdesigning,... they inspired me, I started programming myself and today I am a graduate computer scientist who used and still uses the internet heavily for learning.

So yeah, Computers can be bad for your grades, if you don't do anything than playing games anymore, but they can have the exact opposite effect - it depends on how you use them... maybe, JUST MAYBE there is a reason why 15 is not a legal age and you have legal guardians.
Google

Submission + - Ormandy gave Microsoft 60 days, not 5 1

AlgorithMan writes: We recently discussed the disclosure of an exploit for Windows-XP by Google engineer Tavis Ormandy only 5 days after notifying Microsoft about it. Many called his action irresponsible and even criminal, especially since the exploit is actively attacked. It turns out he gave them 60 days, not 5! In this regard I might add that many people seem to think "zero-day" was a synonymous for "exploit". It is not. If anything, it would have been a "five-day".

Comment This is so incedibly wrong (Score 1) 198

amongst other things like e-mails addresses and browser history

This is so incedibly wrong...
IF you sent such these informations (OR ANY OTHER) over an unencrypted WLAN (i.e. everybody can read all your data all the time and you're among the stupidest 2.6% of the population) exactly in the second when the google car passed by, then they stored the RAW PACKETS, which MIGHT include some E-Mail addresses (the ones used in the current mails, not your whole addressbook) or URLs that you are requesting right in this moment (NOT you browser history)

IMHO the assumption that google did this on purpose is absolutely absurd, because the expectation value of collected data is so small, that nobody would invest so much into trying it - AND they wouldn't have gone public voluntarily (which they did, but media like to "forget" this little fact...)

Microsoft

Time To Dump XP? 1213

An anonymous reader writes "Gartner is saying it's time to plan your migration now (if you havent already done it). I for one know my company still has loads of users still on XP, citing training costs (time and money) rather than software license fees. Is my company alone in wanting to stay in the 1990s or is Windows 7 the way forward?"

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