Apparently because it's some sort of "drop off" safe.
In the normal operation of the safe, the majority of operations are executed by way of a touch-screen on the safe. Once the money has been inserted into the safe, it is automatically deposited to the retailer's bank, which means that it's the bank's money and a store manager cannot remove cash from the safe. Typically, to remove cash, there is a requirement for both the store manager and a Brink's employee to be present.
That still doesn't explain why people in this sort of industry think you need Microsoft freaking Windows for a simple UI screen. Perhaps they are using Visual Basic? (rolls eyes)
This is 2015, folks, this is the kind of crap you can do with a Raspberry Pi, and if it's long-term support you want, you will still be able to get boards ten years from now, at most needing software changes in the form of a few different kernel drivers.
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Wenn ist das Nunstück git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput!
It's just HP ES, formerly EDS, that are required to dress like that. I am also guessing it's just the customer facing team.
If this is true, you needed to be modded up. EDS is the IT services company that was started by H. Ross Perot, and if they're only asking it for the customer-facing people, then why the fuck hasn't it already been in place for years?
But TFA says "R&D", which doesn't sound like the kind of stuff I would expect from the EDS folks.
I'm getting shown advertisements for something that's using my own resources.
If they are doing that, then they are definitely being assholes. If they don't have to proxy the connection, then it's not costing them bandwidth. If they are running a service to let you find or connect to your box (due to stuff like not being on a static IP), that's a little bit of effort on their part, but not much.
If their only contribution is requiring you to go to a web site to connect to a box when you could have reached it directly with older client software by typing in its IP address, fuck them.
it's your internet connection you're streaming from
Is that really true? Or does the entire stream get proxied through Sling's servers because it's not trivial for something behind NAT to be a server?
people forget that the original pitch for cable-tv was that, because you paid a monthly fee, there would be no ads in the content
[Citation Needed] where does this meme come from?
The original pitch for cable TV in the 1950s was basically "we make the antenna work so you don't have to", especially for people who lived in an area where mountains obstructed the signal. Cable-only channels came much later, in the late '70s and early '80s when satellite TV happened. And they already had ads on them.
It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.