Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Who can blame them? (Score 1) 649

Cyanogenmod on my phone and tablet, the cost of both being less than an iPhone 4, compatible with every game I've ever bothered buying, and I somehow am not weeping at the lack of Steve Jobs personal approval of the situation. It's smooth, supported, and consistent. If I *REALLY* need a driver or custom software, it can be done. Sorry, Android simply makes sense for a lot of things, from a rational, market perspective. I'm not saying Apple is worthless, or that the extra money you're dumping into their products is wasted. I'm saying that it's not necessary, and that I prefer independence to the Apple experience. I find it bothersome that fanbois seem to dispute my preference as some sort of evil. I'm not telling you what to do or what to think. I'm offering a personal observation from a casual users standpoint.

Comment Re:Who can blame them? (Score 1) 649

The choices are still right there. You get to trade off universal compatibility for pricing, support, community, customizability, and hardware specifications according to your own preference, rather than being restricted to only that mandated by the almighty fruit. Also, good luck getting iOS to behave as a good basic platform for anything other than Apple devices - whereas you can get Android to run on anything with a chip, short of a bag of Doritos.

I think Android kinda sucks because it's so incredibly tainted by the walled garden mindset, but the whole idea of fragmentation being bad is premised on the notion that what Apple is doing is the "right" thing. It's not - it's good for Apple from a business standpoint, period. They're not in business to make a better world, they're in business to peddle gizmos with a logo.

The case could be made that Android is in the business of making a better world, giving everyone a chance to peddle gizmos with a common logo.

Comment Re:Not really BP (Score 1) 133

Contracts at the time made it impossible for BP-ARCO to recover what was lost in the acquisition. The Wikipedia article about the Berkely Pit and Montana Resources is a good starting point if you're interested in the story. It's kinda ironic, but the profit from the other mines acquired with the Pit more than make up for the loss in keeping it clean and research into cleaning technology. Butte provided a helluva lot of copper and other resources to the world - and our mines continue to do so.

It's a perfect example of mining and resource extraction evolving with our understanding of environmental impacts and the balance between human expansion and long-term survivability. They tear down mountains in Butte, MT, to provide copper, molybdenum, silver, and other valuable resources for the rest of the world. It's an amazing thing to watch, having grown up there - you learn a little bit of awe at the fact that humans can tear down mountains, take what they want, and rebuild a mountain on the southeast end of the property. Trucks bigger than your house keep rolling loads of rock and soil, 24 hours a day. Fun stuff, for sure.

Comment Re:related question: (Score 2) 125

You can press the "Many More" button - setting up a script to get all of them is trivial with greasemonkey, and even more trivial if you spend a bit of time clicking. There doesn't appear to be another way of getting at posts, but all of them seem available, and all of them are easy to get at. I suppose you could also deconstruct whatever call is pulling the posts and try to get them all in one go.

Slashdot Top Deals

Happiness is twin floppies.

Working...