Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Headline is misleading (Score 1) 1

While the headline is accurate, it very optimistically misleads by omission. This was not the newsworthy portion of the judge's ruling. All of Google's other attempts for summary judgement that were submitted at the same time were denied. Google had attempted to reduce the case to a patent-only licensing case, but the judge saw their actions as a much larger copyright issue. The only thing he threw out was the file name copyright claims, which Oracle was silly to include in the first place.

The headline is almost the same as saying that a glass with one sip of water in it is practically overflowing. The implications of the ruling for anyone that ever copied a header file, but wrote their own implementations, are huge!

--Len

Comment Re:What is the world coming to? (Score 0) 345

The problem is that Samsung et. al are throwing inferior, more expensive knock-offs into the marketplace, hoping to capitalize on Apple's ground-breaking success. If Samsung didn't try to ape almost every detail of the iPad, then these suits wouldn't have happened.

To many people, if it looks like an iPad, it is one.

Think about it this way. What does a ThinkPad look like? Whether it was made by IBM or Lenovo, it has a distinct style (industrial design) that sets it apart from every other Wintel laptop out there. Same question for Samsung mobile devices? Today, they look near identical to Apple's stuff, which was original in concept and imlementation when released. Galaxies Tabs look like IPads. Most Android phones look like iPhones, instead of the Blackberry/Treo/Sidekicks that they looked like in development, prior to the iPhone.

-- Len

Comment Re:seems simple (Score 4, Interesting) 432

I'm curious to get the input from you or someone else that has done the necessary research on Android tablets as to which the "best one" is supposed to be.

The best one is the one that does the most things you would like to do, in a stable manner.

Right now, for most people, that would be the iPad. Apple has their shit together, and that just cannot be said of ANY Android tablet maker or even Google, at this point in time. They just passed something like 100,000 iPad-specific Apps in their store. I have friends who are anti-establishment types (big Android fans), who have published an iPad app, and won't even consider producing an Android version. As new developers, they want to be paid, and pragmatism is a very good idea.

Sorry, but until Google steps up and blesses a reference standard like a Nexus Tab or something, the Android tablet market won't have any "best" tablet. Until Google steps up with a real tablet SDK and a good emulator, the hurried and shoddy Android tablets will always take a back seat to the iPad.

On a side note, the history of Android and iOS devices should be considered when looking at this market disparity. Apple started with the tablet first, and shrunk it down into a phone. Sure, the iPhone preceded the iPad to market by three years, but the tablet touch interface was being developed for the better part of a decade before it was shrunk down for the phone. In both iPad and iPhone/iPod renditions, the devices were clean-sheet from the ground up. Apple got it right on the tablet, and then worked to get it right on the phone. The delay in releasing the iPad was most-likely due to needing the silicon to catch-up, so that the user experience wouldn't suck. Apple has fast emulators for both the iPad and the iPhone, and targeting either device with a common codebase is very easy.

Android, on the other hand, started out using the Microsoft Windows Mobile reference platform for hardware. The initial designs (pre-iPhone) looked much closer to Blackberries, than the now-omnipresent iPhone/Touch form factor. The first Androids were hobbled by their MS-designed roots with goofy memory management, and all Android manufacturers are still paying Microsoft for the privilege of using their crappy design. Android tablets grew out of this, with the added technical problem that any manufacturer could do whatever the hell they wanted to do. Until Honeycomb, all Android tablets used ugly (fragile) hacks to scale up phone interfaces. From Google's own admission, they did the same for Honeycomb, and won't be releasing the source because of it. Hopefully, they will eventually get it right.

-- Len

Comment Misleading summary (Score 1) 1

Apple asked to see physical prototypes with intended packaging of Samsung's announced and shown devices, for trade dress issues that their suit involves. They are not going after all future Samsung devices, just ones that have been shown publicly and bear a very strong resemblance to Apple's products. Their claim appears to have merit, as Samsung performed a crash redesign of the Galaxy Tab 10.1, when the iPad 2 was revealed, arriving at a near identical design being shown month later. This happened as they dumped their stock of their original design that looked like the first iPad, but in black rather than aluminum.

    Samsung's wants to see Apple's unannounced and non-public prototypes, because it just wants to see them (cuts down on copying time). Their new demand is unrelated to their countersuit, and may just be a delay tactic.

--Len

The Military

Submission + - Crashed Copter Sparks Concern over Stealth Secrets

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "The Wall Street Journal reports that the crash of a helicopter involved in the raid on Osama bin Laden's Pakistani hideout has prompted intense speculation about whether the aircraft was specially modified to fly stealthily—and whether its remains could offer hostile governments clues to sensitive US military technology. Remnants of the helicopter, including a nearly intact piece of its tail, suggested that the aircraft involved in the raid wasn't the typical Black Hawk flown by special-operations forces as aviation experts who scrutinized photos of the scene say the tail had unusual features that suggested the helicopter had been extensively modified to fly quietly, while appearing less visible to radar. "The odds are fair—based on my knowledge of the subject area—the vast majority of the special MH-60s aircraft were purpose-built to make those aircraft as stealthy as they could possibly be," says aviation expert Jay Miller adding that the remnants of the aircraft suggested extensive use of nonmetallic composite parts, which reflect less radar energy. Experts also say the tail rotor's design suggested an effort to reduce the "acoustic signature" of the helicopters to make them fly more quietly. Stealth features would have been particularly important in the bin Laden mission as the Navy assault team presumably wanted to give those in the compound as little warning as possible."
Android

Submission + - Samsung's happy Galaxy Tab users are actors. (technologizer.com)

harrymcc writes: "At the CTIA Wireless show in Orlando this week, Samsung unveiled new Galaxy Tab tablets and showed videos of interviews with "true-life" users who raved about the Tab, including a travel writer, a filmmaker, and a real-estate CEO. One problem: the writer and the CEO are actually New York stage actors."

Comment Wrong perspective (Score 1) 1

The offshoring and inshoring have nothing to do with the lack of qualified student candidates. Today's kids are not adequately prepared from high schools for collegiate STEM education. Between non-existant expectations for academic success pushed by teacher's unions and permissive parents that let their children prioritize X-Box habits above basic education fundamentals, the current generation of students is primarily composed of tech users rather than tech makers.

--Len

Comment Misinformed (Score 1) 164

I know you are trolling, as the article did not say any such comment, but I know we did use use Arnold Schwarzenegger in his prime as an informal pilot input design case. If this plane is easy enough for a grandmother, let alone a C programmer to fly, then I did my job too well. All joking aside, Pete Siebold, who piloted the craft today, did almost all of the C/C++ programming for the SS1 program and its simulator, and he flew this craft very well today.

The article did mention Burt Rutan as the designer, which is unfortunate. Burt has corrected this misconception many times, but all of Scaled's work will always be tied to him and his legendary career achievements.

--Len

Comment Re:deposit? (Score 2, Informative) 164

I believe the founder's group (the first 100 passengers) have paid the full price for the priveidge to be in that group. I've met a few of them, and many are more ordinary middle class people than one would think.

The desire to be among the first private people in space is strong with many, and not limited to the super-rich.

--Len

Comment Re:cheap shot (Score 1) 772

It is pretty obvious that you've never spent time with senior citizens with limited income, and capital gains.

You sound like you are trying to appeal to the non-productive parasites, rather than the working poor.

--Len

Comment Re:cheap shot (Score 1) 772

I've never been hired by anyone who was poor. Both I and my wife have worked private companies that were owned in whole or in part by people affected by the tax cuts that you appear to detest. Less taxes for the owners == more job security, and more probability of more workers being hired to help me out.

The reality is that the expiration of the Bush tax cuts == a 50% increase in federal tax rate for anyone making less than $34,550. The reality of the expiration of the Bush tax cuts == an infinite tax rate increase for capital gains for low-income poor people, as their current rate goes from 0% to 20%. The reality of the expiration of the Bush tax cuts means a 33% increase of tax rate for small business owners that pay themselves with dividends, rather than wages. All of these are bad for the poor.

Doing nothing about extending the tax cuts will hurt the working poor, while the entitlement class of non-productive parasites is not affected either way.

-- Len

Comment Re:I don't get it. (Score 1) 764

This is why Microsoft is becoming the stuff you use at work and Apple is slowly becoming the stuff you use everywhere else.

Just like IBM! Does anybody remember them? Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM, and now, entire IT careers are based on buying whatever has Microsoft branding, because now nobody gets fired for buying Microsoft. The IT department where I work now are trying to shoehorn MS SharePoint into whatever need we have. Usually where it will never solve anything, and only makes things worse. Alternatives be damned! We only buy Microsoft branded crap!

Originally, I was going to use Wang as an example, but IBM just fits better.

-- Len

Politics

"Cumulative Voting" Method Gaining Attention 375

Local ID10T writes "The AP reports on a system of voting, called 'cumulative voting,' which was just used under court order in Port Chester, NY. Under this system, voters can apportion their votes as they wish — all to one candidate, one to each candidate, or any combination. The system, which has been used in Alabama, Illinois, South Dakota, Texas, and New York, allows a political minority to gain representation if it organizes behind specific candidates. Courts are increasingly mandating cumulative voting when they deem it necessary to provide fair representation." Wikipedia notes that cumulative voting "was used to elect the Illinois House of Representatives from 1870 until its repeal in 1980," without saying why the system was abandoned.

Comment Re:It's also worth mentioning... (Score 1) 203

From my checks, Chrome. both 4.0.xxx and 5.0.xxx are running newer versions of WebKit than Apple's shipping version of Safari, on both Windows and Macs. As such, Chrome has a few more check marks in some compliance areas than Safari.

Quite a few of these compliance counting tests are bogus, as they rely on the browser reporting their support. As one example, I note that Chrome 5 reports that it supports the 'date' type of input, where Safari doesn't. In my testing, neither support it, so Chrome is lying. The nightly WebKit makes an attempt at doing 'date' type of input, but it is horribly broken. IE8 and Mozilla also fail for 'date'. Opera (which I only use for testing) correctly handles the 'date' type of input, displaying a usable date-picker, but it can't handle border radiuses or drop shadows which WebKit browsers handle just fine (excepting Micorosoft's testing).

For me, IE9 is useless, as where I work will be stuck on XP for a really long time, and IE9 will not arrive there. All of the other browsers are what matter for me, as I am putting as much HTML5 and CSS 3 as I can into a project now because those portions will progressively improve as browsers improve. The fall-backs are safe and usable on current browsers, but the enhanced functionality will be delivered without rewriting my code. All other browsers will continue to do more-modern things on XP.

-- Len

Slashdot Top Deals

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

Working...