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Comment Here's a source link (Score 0) 164

My boss just sent me a link to an article about this. However, it's a Fox News link, so I feel sort of dirty even clicking on it and even more so for posting it. Please don't mod me down, since it's the only link I can find.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/03/30/visa-mastercard-warn-massive-security-breach-report-says/

Comment Re:Wonderous (Score 1) 371

You make excellent points, and your solution would make the studios lots of money. Unfortunately, they believe that their way will make them even more money, and they really don't give a damn whether or not they piss off people in the process.

That's the problem with most big companies these days: they have no desire of building good will among their customers. It used to be--and still is for many small businesses--that you treat your customers with respect. Some businesses do this because the owners think it's the right thing to do, but even those who don't care so much about morality might still do it because happy customers tend to be repeat customers, and, even if these businesses get less money per transaction, they will make it up in the long run. However, many large companies don't give two shits whether their customers like them. Their goal is to get as much money as they can per transaction. Will the customer be happy and come back? Fuck that! We'll find a way to make them come back, no matter what it takes. You'd think these companies would have figured out that a good deal of piracy is a direct reaction to that, and, honestly, I do think they've figured it out. It's just that they've decided that they're going to fight fire with fire and attempt to beat the dirty pirates into submission. It's turned into an arms race, and no one is willing to back down, since backing down in our society is seen as a sign of weakness.

Comment Fuck you, Warner Bros.! (Score 3, Interesting) 371

Yeah, I know this post really adds nothing new to this discussion, but I just have to say it. Fuck you, Warner Bros.! I'll rip my DVD's--you know, the ones I paid for--on my own computer, in the comfort of my own home, on my schedule, and I'll watch them anywhere I please. And you know what, if I take a notion, I'll even set up a media server and stream them all over my house. And you won't see one extra penny from any of this.

Oh, and I'll show others how to do the same thing.

You guys had a golden opportunity here. You could have offered digital copies of the movies people already bought for a reasonable price, maybe as a streaming option, but no, you not only decided to charge them, but you went out of your way to make it more inconvenient than it would be if they simply do it themselves. You really are a bunch of geniuses. Please tell us where you got your MBA's so we can all go there and develop the acute business acumen that you obviously possess.

Comment Re:Just browse porn on the company laptop. (Score 1) 671

I'd love to see where you work, because I've never encountered an IT department like yours. Most IT people are so overworked that they don't give two shits about what someone is doing online, with one big exception. They will most certainly care if you do something that causes problems that they then have to fix, especially if you were explicitly told not to do it. They may also care if they've been explicitly told to block certain activities by management, and you try to get around those blocks, but, again, you're doing something that's creating problems for them. If you think that they're the only people who can be dicks, then go fuck with accounting, HR, or legal, and you'll get the same reaction.

Comment Re:Is it really their "right"? (Score 1) 671

First of all, have you asked if you are permitted to do these things while you're on the clock? Maybe your job is structured so that you can, but not everyone's job is. But, at any rate, while I don't think a company that allows you to telecommute is going to care if you go in the kitchen and make a sandwich, going to the gym is really pushing it, don't you think?

But, at any rate, using a company laptop to browse the occasional personal Web site is a damn far cry from intentionally altering it to prevent the company from knowing what you've been doing. That's like the difference between using the company car to stop at the store to grab some milk as opposed to using it to take a weekend vacation and then rolling back the odometer so no one will know. I know someone who does use her company car for taking personal trips, and the company pays for the gas, but the difference is that she has been told that she can do these things. It's one of her job perks, and she and her boss are on the same page about it. That's a far cry from what this guy wants to do.

Comment Here's exactly what to do (Score 1) 671

I'm going to tell you exactly what you need to do, and it's extremely simple.

1. Reimage that bad boy to your heart's content and install whatever you want.
2. Reply to this post with your position and company name. That way, anyone reading this thread will be able to watch your company's job site to see when your job comes open after they can you.

If you think I'm kidding, go ahead and put your plan into action. You think you'll have time to return your laptop in pristine condition, but what's your plan when your boss stops by your house on a weekend because his laptop died two hours before he's scheduled to fly out for a meeting, and, since he went by the office and didn't see yours in your office, he knew you must have it at home? How are you going to stall him, and, even if you can reimage it while you pretend to take a very long dump, how are you going to explain that it doesn't have that mission-critical application that IT pushed out last month and asked everyone to install when they were prompted to? And what will you do if the laptop gets lost and IT can't contact it to do a remote wipe? If that happens, you'd better pray the thing isn't found and returned, because it likely won't come directly back to you, and IT is going to be pissed when they see what you did to it. And these things do get returned on occasion. My department just had one that was returned after going missing 14 YEARS ago.

Is saving a few hundred bucks by not buying a netbook or tablet worth possibly losing your job?

Comment Re:Stockholders (Score 1) 247

Unfortunately, it won't happen because many stockholders aren't interested in the long-term health of the companies they invest in. All they want to see is an increase in the price of the stocks they're holding only for as long as they're holding them. That's why you see companies so reluctant to invest in capital expenditures. Sure, those expenditures are good for the long-term competitiveness of the company, since they're often investments in updated infrastructure, but they cause a short-term decrease in profits. If profits fall, stock prices almost always fall, and that can lead to company management and even board members getting sacked. And, since no one wants to lose their job, they're going to do whatever is necessary to keep the stock price up. Sure, the company may sink in a few years, but that'll be someone else's problem.

A perfect example of the current investor mindset is when Carl Icahn bought a huge chunk of Yahoo a few years ago. The only reason he did it was because rumors were circulating that Microsoft was interested in buying the company. Icahn bought up a bunch of stock and then immediately started pushing hard for a buyout, and he just about went ballistic when the Yahoo board refused to go along and sell. Icahn wasn't interested in the long-term health of Yahoo. Hell, he wasn't even interested in the short-term health of Yahoo. He was (and is) just a big parasite hoping to buy in, get the company sold, and make a tidy profit, never mind the fact that most employees would have lost their jobs and a competitor would have been removed from the market.

Short-term greed is, unfortunately, the name of the game these days. Get in, get a quick stock price appreciation, and get the hell out.

Comment They would have done it anyway (Score 1) 247

Is anyone really surprised here? AT&T was going to raise prices anyway, no matter how this deal went. The only difference is, had they gotten T-Mobile, they would have probably raised rates even more, since there would have been one less competitor in the market for people to go to. All they're doing is trying to justify this increase in light of the deal falling apart. If the deal had happened, they'd have said that the rate increase was coming anyway, but it would have been larger had they not gotten T-Mobile.

And, in case anyone still thinks this had anything to do with the T-Mobile buyout not happening, consider this: big companies rarely change their prices on a whim. Before they do it, there's going to be market research to determine what they can change and how much, there will be discussions in upper management, and there's got to be time to change billing systems, point of sale systems, and advertising. This isn't something they cooked up overnight. There simply wouldn't have been time.

In short, AT&T was planning this price increase all along. Any rationalization for it is pure spin.

Comment Re:Take the phone? (Score 2) 247

Yes and no. You can take the phone if you get it unlocked (call AT&T and tell them you need it unlocked because you're going overseas and want to buy a prepaid SIM while you're abroad--they should do it if your account is in good standing). Then, you can use it with T-Mobile, but only EDGE data will work. Since AT&T uses 850 and 1900 for 3G, and T-Mobile uses 1700 for 3G, 3G data will not work on T-Mobile with this phone.

If you want a similar phone that supports 3G on T-Mobile, you can pick up a Samsung Vibrant, which is almost identical. However, I'd highly recommend looking at something new. Both the Captivate and Vibrant are pretty old devices now, and you aren't going to get any more major updates to them from Samsung. Plus, compared to other phones, GPS on the Captivate is truly awful. Don't get me wrong, it's not a terrible phone. I know because I had one when I was with AT&T, but there are many better handsets available now.

Comment Re:Awkward reunions replaced by awkward friend req (Score 1) 168

I agree with you completely, and I'll add that I think, with elementary and high school, you don't really get to choose your friends, especially at a smaller school. You're sort of thrown into this group of people who you have to see every day, whether you like it or not. Sort of like work, except that, with work, at least most folks have developed the maturity level not to be complete assholes most of the time

Comment Awkward reunions replaced by awkward friend reques (Score 4, Insightful) 168

The big thing I've noticed is that, once one person from high school finds you on Facebook, the rest will soon follow. I've had practically zero contact with the folks I went to high school with in the past 23 years after graduation, and I'm inclined to keep it that way. But then someone found me and friended me, and I foolishly accepted, probably because that person was someone I didn't despise. Then more showed up...and more...and more. Then I was getting friend requests from people who I really didn't like too much. Those are sitting out there in friend request limbo, where I plan on leaving them until the day I finally quit Facebook, which, given this whole Timeline thing, may be coming soon.

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