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Comment Re:Another moron CEO (Score 3, Insightful) 182

The idea of BYOD may kill Windows 10, but it's nowhere near the level of acceptance necessary to kill Windows 8. My business won't let *any* outside devices connect to their network for security reasons, and I suspect that they're not at all alone in that respect. Chained-down PCs running whatever the company's acceptable suite of apps may be are still the norm.

Comment Re:Simple is not ugly. (Score 1) 370

Agreed. Opinion article is opinion. There's nothing wrong with the simplicity of Wikipedia's interface.

Additionally, I'm not certain that I would want the submission process simplified. It's already simple enough that there's plenty of faulty information on the site from uninformed or spiteful editors. What would happen if every assclown in the universe could edit entries without learning a bit of markup code first?

Submission + - Peer to peer chat clients 1

An anonymous reader writes: I've been trying to get away from using chat clients like Yahoo, MSN or any others that require logging into a server, partly because I'm not comfortable with my messages to my lover passing through the hands of a third party. Now, with p2p being common, are there any chat clients that allow a direct computer to computer chat session?
Businesses

Submission + - Class Action Lawsuit Against Netflix (fool.com)

N3tRunner writes: The Motley Fool reports:

A Manhattan woman is filing a class action lawsuit in federal court against Netflix. She says the deal between the DVD-rental service and Warner Home Video is a "scheme to restrain trade."

Time Warner has inked deals with Netflix and Coinstar's Redbox to hold back on new releases for 28 days after their retail debut. Time Warner claims that 75% of its DVD purchases come from the first four weeks that a new title is on the market, and eliminating availability from $1 Redbox kiosks and Netflix's value-altering unlimited plans should stir up more sales and full-priced rentals. The deals pave the way for similar arrangements by studios including 20th Century Fox and General Electric's majority-owned Universal that have bellyached in the past.

Comment Re:Already Under Investigation (Score 0, Flamebait) 144

Yeah, the offer isn't ripping anyone off. Novell is worth practically nothing as a company, they don't really have products that anyone is interested in purchasing anymore. Maybe for headhunting purposes their programmers are worth something?

That lawsuit seems way off base though. I've owned Novell stock for years and this buyout is a real blessing.

Comment Google V China (Score 5, Interesting) 115

I'm really quite proud of Google for taking on China over this issue. I understand that China is a big search market and Google is just trying to ensure that it gets every last click out of it, but having uncensored access to Google search is something that Chinese citizens really should have. It's one of their only ways to find news and information that hasn't been filtered through the government's propaganda machine. Obviously, that's why China doesn't want them to be able to use it.

Comment NASA had plans... (Score 1, Insightful) 319

Maybe that senator didn't realize that NASA had lots of plans that it was working towards, up until Obama killed them all with his new budget. The death of the Constellation program nixed everything that NASA had been working on for the last few years.

Realistically though, the senator probably *did* realize this and was just being a jackass and trying to score some political points by "demanding results" and making NASA look bad in the process. Hooray for politics.

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