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Comment Re:HDD != Cloud (Score 1) 127

Of course, they did hire new people. But tell me, how many hardware companies do you know that produces high quality software and/or services?

Well, there is one: Apple. And this is IMO the key to their success. They do both well (whether or not you agree with their policies/strategy is another matter, both their software and their hardware are top-class in their respective fields, and nobody even questions that.)

The rest of them? All hardware manufacturers I can think of makes software that sucks big time (graphics, printers, scanners, all those devices - and their drivers - come to mind)

So is it possible for WD to do a good service online? Of course it is. But in my view, it's extremely unlikely.

Comment HDD != Cloud (Score 1, Insightful) 127

Choose your vendor carefully. HDD manufacturers are probably not good at cloud services, just because it's not their core business, nor is it close to their core business. I could've told you that. You want cloud storage? Go DropBox, Amazon, Google. These guys know what they're doing.

Now, don't treat this storage as safe or secure. It's cloud storage. Safe is copied over to at least two different remote locations plus at least two local storage devices. Secure is encrypted and offline. Cloud is neither, but it is convenient.

The key here is to know what you are doing, which isn't always obvious.

Comment Re:Whatabout we demand equal time of our views ins (Score 1) 667

But I don't think anyone would disagree that our modern secular humanistic moralities have been at least shaped in part by the bible and other religious texts.

No, no, not by the bible, only by the "good parts" of the bible, or in other words, by other people that chose those good parts. The Bible has nothing to do with it.

Comment Re:Whatabout we demand equal time of our views ins (Score 1) 667

When you need people to tell you what's inside a book, it's either that it's too complicated (tech stuff, specialized book, etc) or it's that someone will try to fill your brain with their view of things. Obviously, someone explaining the bible falls in the second category.

It looks as if religion has found a set of explanations to make the big book acceptable and now it's serving that to the world, not the other way around.

Comment Re:So if you forget to lock your front door (Score 1) 246

In France we actually got someone behind bars for something very similar with a law that I find pretty smart that says approximately: "If you are somewhere where you *know* you shouldn't be, and you don't get out immediately but you *knowingly* stay there and snoop around, then you're guilty."

I think that's the expression of common sense. It might be just me.

Comment Re:Damnit (Score 1) 302

I once worked for a medium-sized startup where we had hundreds of thousands of lines of code. We went from a Solaris Java 1.3 32 bit JVM to a Windows 1.4 64bit JVM with not even needing to recompile the project. Just a few config files needed some path to be rewritten, but nothing java-related.

So unless you're using JNI, I'd say the WORA is pretty much alive on Java, and that from day one.

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