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Comment Re:Kool-aid Overdose (Score 1) 458

Market might not be going anywhere but it might not be a healthy place to be.

What's worse is that if things go really poorly the much touted "choice" that PC proponents scream about might go away and many people in practical terms may be forced to pick from some bland options that don't really work because of how cheap things are being made.

Comment Re:They always [conveniently] miss facts... (Score 1) 458

Because "a while" might be like 10 15 minutes. When all you want to do is unplug, go out and start jamming, that sucks as UX. plus no worrying about what happens if the device writes garbage to the config, or what happens if power is lost mid write, etc.

Want to know how Apple beat Microsoft? There you go.

Comment Re:They always [conveniently] miss facts... (Score 1) 458

At the time I don't think that parsing metadata was feasible with out having to sit there and wait until it finished. Forcing users to use a tool to manage their device libraries meant the device never had to deal with the contingency of what happens when a bunch of mp3 files are dumped in.

The fact that the iPod was tied to iTunes meant that Apple didn't have to keep up backwards compatibility for no other reason other than some people didn't want to upgrade. Going with the, "here's how to do it, and if we change it, too bad so sad. Update it to work with the new stuff" still leaves part of the ecosystem up in the air with devs who may leave users wih software that doesn't work.

Being a control freak has its advantages. Everyone else chased commodity products with no differentiation and Apple is now laughing all the way to the bank.

Comment Re:Kool-aid Overdose (Score 1) 458

The problem is that very few OEMs are making money if at all. The DIY PC building niche isnt going to save the venerable PC.

Where are the profits? We easily see the market share, but the PC OEM industry has been this tenuous low margin for well over a decade and a half now.

If the PC is here to stay, who's going to build them?

Comment Strictly speaking... (Score 1) 307

A lot of us don't need powerful Core i whatever or AMD Phenom something or anothers.

Most of us could probably get buy with an ARM laptop running some oddball variant of Linux.

Most of us aren't going to because the experience sucks.

Even though my iPhone 6+ is plenty big, it's still not big enough and the form factor sucks for reading. Somehow 4:3 is really good for bashing out screeds on slashdot, reading reddit, facebook, writing email, etc. Not to mention specialized use cases like art creation tools and so forth.

Just because we don't *need* it doesn't mean that it's not worth buying. I love my iPad.

Comment Re:youtube.. inefficiencies (Score 1) 225

The reason why they don't just let you link to an mp4 or webm is that they're under this idea that their dynamic quality switching(which in theory should switch based on how good your connection is to youtube, but really just decides to pick between 240p and 1080p because fuck you) and their embedded player is a much better UX.

To that I say, fuck you Google. YouTube embeds on mobile give a direct mp4 stream and it beats the pants off watching it on their app or via their site's viewer.

Comment Re: Honestly... (Score 1) 328

What the hell kind of feature is, "if we let in poor countries, we could possibly make this whole thing blow up?"

It's a bug, thought of as a feature. Like the Windows 8 start menu.

Even if you give all credence to the idea that this was something that let bankers run off with as much money as possible... that's not what would happen. Bankers would run off with a lot of money... that would become incredibly devalued.

Comment Re:Uh... They're not required to go to that school (Score 1) 323

if it wasn't a public school? Sure. Don't go snooping around my shit. Even if i've got nothing to hide I have a lot to be embarrassed about or just don't want people to know about.

Because it IS a public school? Yes. The rules are and should be different. The kids all have a reasonable right to privacy. But when there's substantive claims made about bullying, harassment, threats, etc. that reasonable right to privacy shouldn't matter.

Comment Uh... They're not required to go to that school. (Score -1, Flamebait) 323

Unfortunately for all those up in arms about this, this is a safety issue. If they don't like the policy, pull out of the school district. If my kids got harassing phone calls from other students, the school is going to hear about it. Even if it's not during school hours. The fact that when at school, they're compelled to be in places where they may have to encounter someone who's made a credible threat against them.

It doesn't change because it's on the Internet. Doesn't matter if it's a phone call, a letter, Facebook/Twitter/Tumblr/WhatsApp/etc, skywriting...

If the kids have nothing to hide, then release it. If not, pull the kids from the school. They're not obligated to go, and they're certainly not obligated to be abusive assholes either. We don't need more enabling of bullying and peer enforced sociopathy.

Doing absolutely nothing and being hands off isn't making things better. If you don't think this is a problem or worth tackling, I don't think you're hooked up right. I don't know if this is the right approach, but I'm not hearing any better ideas.

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