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Submission + - Has Lego Sold Out?

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Matt Richtel and Jesse McKinley write in the NY Times that for generations of American children, Legos were the ultimate do-it-yourself plaything. Little plastic bricks, with scant instructions, just add imagination. But today’s construction sets are often tied to billion-dollar franchises like “Star Wars” and “Lord of the Rings” and invite users to follow detailed directions, not construct their own creations from whole brick. It’s less open-ended, some parents and researchers say, and more like paint-by-numbers. “When I was a kid, you got a big box of bricks and that was it,” says Tracy Bagatelle-Black. “What stinks about Lego sets now is that they’re not imaginative at all.” Lego loyalists are quick to defend the company. Josh Wedin, the managing editor of the Brothers Brick, a Lego blog, called complaints that they are less creative “simply ridiculous,” adding that Legos always included some instructions, though he says he misses the alternative designs that used to be on the back of the box. But Clifford Nass, a sociology professor at Stanford University who studies how people relate to the physical world versus the virtual world, says some essential qualities were lost when Lego became more like other toys. “The genius of Lego was, you had to do the work.” Learning about frustration, Nass says, “is a hugely important thing.”"

Comment Re:Wait for Haswell (Score 1) 260

If you can wait awhile longer before buying, Intel's upcoming Haswell processor is reported to have significantly improvied graphics performance, and Intel GPUs are well-supported with free drivers in Linux and Xorg. They're less-powerful than NVIDIA and AMD GPUs, but should be fine unless you need to play high-end games on high quality settings.

Yes, and than wait another year or so until they get the drivers to work properly, which they still didn't with Sandy Bridge.

Comment Re:Not sad at all (Score 4, Interesting) 260

The "Sandy Bridge" and "Ivy Bridge" stuff is nice.

I have an Ivy Bridge laptop. What's so nice about it? How much time has passed since the hardware release? I still have tearing artifacts around every title bar on KDE, all because of bugs in drivers - both with Ubuntu's default driver and the one from PPA.

It's all great that their drivers are open and free, but quality-wise they have always been a mess.

At this point, if you want a great out-of-the-box support, all you can do is wait. Either when Intel will improve their quality, or when nvidia fixes their optimus stuff. Don't know much about the AMD side of things.

Comment Re:Hopefully distributed? (Score 1) 238

You already can run your own web server free of any corporate oversight. Guess how many people do. You can already run your own mail server free of any corporate monitoring. Guess how many people do. Diaspora failed because they thought people cared about these things. Guess how many people do. People use Facebook/G+/Twitter and whatnot because: 1. Everyone else is. 2. They don't have to run it.

You can already choose between gmail, hotmail, yahoo, etc., and your own personal mail server, and they all can exchange data with each other. Guess how many people do it?

Comment Re:My conclusion: No to financial transaction tax! (Score 1) 443

From this, I would draw the opposite conclusion: we should oppose proposals for a financial transaction tax at all costs! If high-frequency trading is the disease, then a tax on transactions is not the cure. It would make government addicted to the new revenue and therefore dependent on the high-frequency traders, thus ensuring that those leaches will never go away.

A better solution, I think, would be to require stock exchanges to operate on a once-per-second clock. Any trade orders that arrive within each timeslice would be executed in a random order, so as to defeat any advantage the high-frequency traders would get by being fast.

And what exactly stops an algorithm from trading on behalf of several institutions? A hundred of trades on behalf of a hundred of institutions per second? Your proposal would not work.

Whereas having a transaction tax would make most of the HFT schemes not profitable, and a lot of them would go away.

That would also make market manipulation through robot ping-pong (i.e. robots selling small amounts of securites to each other at increasing prices), etc. less feasible.

Comment Re:Yet (Score 1) 211

Wasn't that the CDMA Nexus S though? For anybody that doesn't know, not only do you need to have a Nexus device to be assured of updates, that Nexus device needs to not be CDMA. Even the Galaxy Nexus from Verizon is unsupported by AOSP.

Does it also need to be a Galaxy Nexus that was not sold in Canada?

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