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Comment What about Powershell ? (Score 1) 197

Isn't it strange that there is a group within Microsoft that can turn out such great tools for for languages developed outside, but where they are touting Powershell as a strategic tool you are stuck with a toolset that lives back in the 80s ?

Why can't Microsoft put out a Visual Studio plugin for Powershell with full intellisense, breakpointing, inspections, etc. ?

Sad :-(

Comment VMware are also overcharging Australians (Score 1) 280

I bought a copy of VMware Workstation last year via their online store.

On their site you could choose what currenty to pay in - the conversion to Australian $ added around 40% to the price. What stung was at the time the Australian dollar was stronger than the US$, so in theory the price should have dropped.

I actually phoned up and queried why - the lady at the other end told me that it was due to the exchange rates when they set the price and not the rate at that point in time. However that would only have been the case if they had set the price several years previously.

Now they have fixed the problem by not letting you chose the currency - they force you to pay their inflated Australian prices, even though all you are buying is a license key.

It sure makes those US hosted proxy services look attractive.

Comment So what - have you looked at VMware lately? (Score 2) 440

Have a look at the current pricing for VMware Workstation 7.1

If you pay in US$, they want $189.00

Currently AU$1.00 buys US$1.03 according to the TV, making that approximately AU$183.00

Click on the pull down option on th VMware store to convert the pricing to AU$, it becomes AU$277.00 - a markup of AU$94.00 or approximately 50%.

I've rung and asked them why the difference - and got some bulls**t about there being annual price adjustments based on the current currency conversion. The only problem is the last time that AU$ was low enough for that was back in the 1980's.

US companies regularly rip off Australians.

Comment Good product placement for education (Score 1) 241

Many education departments have licensing arrangements and good discount structures with Microsoft.

This is a product that they will be able to order from right out of the catalog, and at better prices than people are talking about here.

There are certainly many cheaper products out there (my favorite right now is the 'ET-STM32 Stamp') but if I was looking to build up an embedded computing curriculum for a school, these gadgets are well worth a look.

Comment Ah - did they just say they spy on their users ? (Score 1) 384

"Motoblur collects information about customer use of applications and how that use relates to functions like power consumption"

Are they collecting data on what apps their users use ?

Are they sending it back to Motorola for analysis ?

Does it mention anything about this in the customer documentation?

Comment 10M cards is a lot of depth for crypto analysis (Score 1) 251

Now is the time that Sony should start worrying.

10 million cipher-text objects with plaintext customer details is an interesting target for cryptoanalysis.

If you know the card details of some of the people whose cards you have encrypted copies on, you have both plaintext and ciphertext to work on. And to make it even better credit card numbers have a checksum algorithm built into the number, so you have a method of testing the resulting decrypts for validity.

Why do I think that someone is probably running some GPU assisted EC2 machines at Amazon on these now ?

The only 'secret' protecting those cards is how the numbers are encrypted.

Powned

Comment Doesn't this sound familiar to anyone ? (Score 1) 191

I can recall when Microsoft launched a product called Microsoft MS DOS 1.0.

It's main claim to fame was that you could take your existing CP/M code, and with a few changes make it run on their new product.

Of course all it did was suck programmers across to this new platform where people just stopped writing the old stuff.

Has someone reopened the old play book ? Hello, Bill - is that you back again :-)

Comment Vaporware or pipe dream ? (Score 1) 140

They don't appear to have an actual chip at the moment. From looking through their web site they have a design that can be downloaded to an FPGA, and a software simulator. That is a very long way from a real product.

Why would anyone think this is a viable idea for the open source community ?

Maybe if someone like AMD got behind it ?

Without a long term commitment from a reliable manufacturer to supply these at a competitive rate for 5+ years there is a large risk that people investing in designs using this chip will be left high and dry. They would be far better to look at some of the ARM derivatives where at least you are not locked into a boutique supplier. The only thing that could make this a useful idea would be the availability of FPGA chips at the same price point - not holding my breath there.

Comment It's an End Of Life planning decision (Score 1) 551

You can probably view the last allocation of IPV4 address blocks as a signal to look at your end of life planning process.

For a business it's a case of looking at upcoming purchases, and to either require that new purchases are capable of IPV6 out of the box, or otherwise have business units accept the lack of conformance and prepared to write the equipment off sooner.

Once vendors start seeing requests for IPV6 compatible equipment, they will either need to supply it, or watch business go to their competitors.

As far as 'board level governance goes', for the moment it's simply having a strategic plan that leads the organisation towards IPV6, an indicative date to aim for (say 5 years from now - little to fear now), and a statement that the detailed technical work needs to wait until there is enough technology and expertise on site to plan and implement the cutover. Unlike Y2K there's plenty of time to do this without too much shock or fear - but ample time to get infrastructure and skills.

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