Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:not the point (Score 1) 375

The problem is that the core design of X11 was decided upon about 30 years ago and the computing landscape has moved on significantly. During the past 30 years, there have been thousands of hacks to add new functionality to existing code-paths which are no longer relevant to today's environment - but necessary to be "X11" compatible.

Comment Re:Screen locker == physical access == ... (Score 1) 375

Why is this considered acceptable? Get physical access to my iPhone (for example - Android is probably the same?), good luck getting in.

Sure, with a PC there's a few things that are a lot more difficult to secure (e.g., the boot process) but throwing hands up in the air and giving up because of physical access is a cop out.

Comment Re:not the point (Score 2) 375

"merely add a function to the X11 API" is the problem. X11 is ancient, full of bloat that no one uses any more and not designed with core concepts in mind that are desirable in a modern operating system. Really, look up some youtube presentations from the Wayland guys - who actually work on X11 and listen to what they have to say regarding the complexity and brain damage in X11. It works, but sometimes, even the guys who maintain it don't know exactly why.

The X11 display server is a liability and needs to die. It should have been taken out behind the shed and shot about a couple of decades ago. That doesn't mean that "oh noes i will lose my remoting!", that can be implemented in it's replacement via a shim, the same way any X display server works for Windows or Mac.

Comment Re:It is "far better" at some tasks. (Score 1) 307

If you have an appleTV you just redirect the output to the TV when you get home, without even stopping the video. Unless you have a 4k display or other similarly really high res screen, reading is better on an iPad also because the text is just way clearer - you can also take it with you more easily if you need to refer to it when doing a task.

Comment Re:Need? No. Useful? Yes. (Score 1) 307

here here!

I have a surface pro 3 for work and I was also a big downer on the surface devices as a tablet. as a laptop, if you consider them as that they're great. but there's nothing useful i want to run on it that is in metro. Which means continually running classic windows apps, and the classic UI is just abysmal for touch. Even with a pen...

I think MS has a long way go go to catch up with the functionality provided by Cocoa touch.

Comment Re:iPads replaced laptops for me (Score 1) 307

What makes you say that? I've been an iphone/mac user since 2007, just upgraded to the iPhone 6 (from a 4s) and I'm still pretty happy with things. TouchID actually works, and rocks for my password manager... the battery life is better than before, voice calls from my mac through it is neat, etc.

Comment Re:Sort of like shitposting... (Score 1) 307

Do you actually own one? I have a surface pro 3 (as well as an iPad 4 and iPad mini), and sorry, but it makes a shitty tablet. As an ultra portable laptop, it is great, but I have regular issues with the metro apps falling over and not updating until i reboot the device, it is heavy, it has fans that make quite a bit of noise when it starts working hard, the battery life is way worse, it needs ant-malware, regular windows updates, etc. The Surface Pro 3 is doing well now because it is cannibalising laptop sales not because it's a great tablet experience. It's a small form factor laptop with a touchscreen, and has all the legacy windows baggage that incurs.

Slashdot Top Deals

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

Working...