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Comment Re:darn. (Score 1) 264

Setting a radio station preset is a long-press.

Maybe we should make selecting a radio station long press (so you're REALLY sure).

We could even be safe and make you pull over to the side of the road to set a radio station (like some cars make you do to select GPS destinations)

(I am totally kidding about all this by the way)

Comment Re:darn. (Score 1) 264

Sorry, I said it was a pet peeve. I realize it's not the end of the world.

I have a JVC car stereo with bluetooth and I have to reach over, press and hold the phone button on the radio unit for 2-3 (or more?) seconds before the JVC unit will beep, and then siri will beep.

I know it's minor to most people, but I do have to take my attention away from driving, and I would prefer a dedicated siri button (along with a separate dedicated phone answer button and a separate dedicated phone hangup button). It's the difference between "works for me" and "truly well designed".

Comment darn. (Score 0) 264

"To activate Siri voice control, just press and hold the voice control button on the steering wheel."

My pet peeve. For Siri, why can't we just press it without the holding part? Come on, I'm driving here.

Comment Re:"Apple Maps as in-car navigation" (Score 1) 198

I disagree.

"the competition can move faster" - the auto manufacturers move on 4 or more year cycles. Most aftermarket units are ridiculous -- who uses CDs anymore? But they still ship with CDs and DVDs.

"and produce better results" - I see zero car systems, from manufacturers or aftermarket, that I would enjoy owning. I actually like the controls from manufacturers, but the systems themselves suck and are obsolete before they ship. The aftermarket gives you the ability to upgrade your car to keep up with the times, at the expense of of a crappy user interface and low-margin-hardware-manufacturer-software.

Seriously, the answer is to integrate with your phone, which actually does move fast and produce better products.

Comment Re:No (Score 4, Interesting) 627

I think a better analogy is that an IDE to a developer is more like a CNC machine to a carpenter.

It's possible that a CNC machine can allow an experienced carpenter to do his work fast and efficiently.

But for an unskilled carpenter, I see two possibilities:
- the carpenter may limit his designs to what the CNC machine can make (no curved wood objects for one example)
- the fundamentals of carpentry might be ignored (like the properties of natural wood, growth, shrinkage)

In the context of an IDE maybe like:
- only build on one platform
- only create products the IDE way (maybe creating "apps" instead of minimal command line tools or OS internal things)
- allow the developer to ignore corner cases that are abstracted away with IDEs (memory management? interrupts?)

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Opinion of slashdot beta? 9

An anonymous reader writes: What are your thoughts about slashdot beta? Post your complaints here so that I don't have to see them elsewhere. Additionally, if the beta is so bad that you don't want to stay, what other news website do you recommend?

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