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Comment Re:Advantages of phone (Score 1) 186

Saddly, the phones have their own problems: - they eat batteries like candy (even wireless credit card transaction are remotely powered by the terminal. Whereas a dead phone is dead and can't be used for paying). - again, they are conencted. Which means that they could be compromised themselves. (Specially since people tend to install tons of crap).

Not to mention they are supposed to be connected but if you don't have reception or there is an interruption to cell service you can't pay.

Comment Re:Installable devkits (Score 1) 69

I agree. But these naysayers have kept telling me that a PC game developer won't get an audience even with content because effectively all the audience for local multiplayer content are console users.

Well obviously you can't just put out the same experience that console users already get. Obviously it needs to be good content that people actually want, yet-another-local-multiplayer-game is not going to win anybody over because you can't disrupt the status quo with an unimaginative "me too" offering. Why buy title X and move my PC into the lounge when I can just play title Y on my console? Well you have to provide that reason.

This is the same reason Ouya failed, all they provided was a platform and were banging on about having things like TwitchTV and Minecraft and Android games like everybody else so why would anybody buy one? The idea was that developers would create the reason to buy one but instead developers just waited to see if anybody else invest first and so Ouya died.

Comment Re:New version! (Score 2) 264

"it does not respect the UNIX way of doing things" IS a valid technical argument.

What exactly is "the UNIX way" of doing things? Because in looking at the existing UNIX-derived operating systems like AIX or HPUX and the UNIX-certified ones like OSX this move to systemd (whether you like it or not) certainly does seem to be in keeping with the UNIX way of doing things.

Perhaps what you mean is that you're complaining that it isn't doing things the way UNIX did them 20-odd years ago, which may well be a valid complaint but calling that "the UNIX way of doing things" doesn't give much confidence that you know what you're talking about. If that's what you mean and that's how you prefer it to be then certainly your preference is a valid complaint to take onboard.

Comment Re:Installable devkits (Score 1) 69

A bunch of Slashdot users over the past several years have been repeatedly telling me that almost nobody is willing to do that.

Of course nobody is willing to do that, there is no advantage or reason to do it. But it is extremely easy to do if some reason to do it came about, like a decent game that required it or was made more enjoyable by it.

You aren't going to get an audience without content.

Comment Re:The FSF has failed (Score 1) 201

No, like I said, the initial naming was good. It was Free. Free as in beer, free as in speech. That one word worked perfectly.

I think it's terrible since obviously there could be software that was free of charge but not free of restriction so using one word to mean two things was always going to be confusing. Naturally software that was free of charge would be referred to as free software just like anything else that usually has a cost associated with it but is offered free of charge.

In the context of speech "free speech" obviously means free of restriction because speech does not have a cost associated with it. In the context of beer "free beer" obviously means free of charge, everybody knows that you aren't entitled to go to the manufacturer and get the recipe to make it. So the term "free software" could mean free of charge or free of restriction or both.

Comment Re: Inclusion would lower it if anything (Score 1) 62

Even if you play it that way, you're still proving my point. If Google didn't figure you using those services into the price of the device, then they would charge the OEM for licensing the Android trademark, which means the manufacturer would charge you more money for the phone.

They do, it's called the Open Handset Alliance.

Comment Re:Installable devkits (Score 1) 69

The question was "What platform for independent development can easily be connected to a TV?".

Lots, including the PC. Now obviously the next question is why would you want to connect it to a TV, the answer would be that there are games (like local multiplayer ones with controller support) that people want to play that benefit from it.

Comment Re:The FSF has failed (Score 1) 201

I'm pretty sure that has been tried (by others) and did not hold up in court.

I don't see any reason it couldn't - if you have examples though that your assertion is based on I'd be interested to see because I can't find anything - you can specify license constraints on linkage so certainly there is nothing to stop restrictions being placed on the license of the input to GCC.

If he could, believe me, Stallman would.

I don't think he would, that would kill GCC.

Comment Re:The FSF has failed (Score 1) 201

How do you propose they prevent GCC from producing propriety software?

Make it a term of the license for the software.

I'm sure there's plenty of case law wherein a toolmaker has tried to claim that use of their tool gives them rights to the things created with that tool, and have been shut down.

Right, but this isn't about giving the GCC authors the rights to the programs created with GCC.

Comment Re:Installable devkits (Score 1) 69

Yet OUYA fizzled for some reason.

Ouya fizzled because it was the answer to a question nobody asked. There are many platforms for independent development that already exist so yet another entry into the lowend was really not going to be successful. Being based on Android was in some ways advantageous but really that was the nail in its coffin, it was easy for developers to just develop an Android game and publish it independently, publish it to Google Play and publish it on the OUYA store so OUYA had no exclusivity, no reason to buy it. It was just a low-powered Android box tethered to your TV that had no "killer feature".

Comment Re:The FSF has failed (Score 1) 201

But Stallman's playing the long game. The cost is too high. Candy today, chains tomorrow.

So why not prevent GCC from being used to produce proprietary software? It seems pretty hypocritical to prevent the export of GCC's abstract source tree due to the fact that it could be used to aid closed-source software when GCC itself is used to produce closed-source software all the time.

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