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Comment Re:What's missing from this story? (Score 1) 569

If you were a cop and you were sent to an address in response to a 911 call claiming that there was someone at that address with a dangerous weapon, would you walk up to the door and knock politely? I dont think so, you would want to stop the person inside from using any weapons they have on you before they have the chance to react.

Comment Re:Yeah because you know... (Score 2) 224

Such things already exist. Devices that plug into the OBD2 port on a vehicle and monitor/log all the relavent information already exist. Some combine this with GPS tracking (to log where the car is as well as how its being driven).

Plenty of options for parents to monitor how their teenager is driving and whether they are driving safely or not, this just happens to be one actually built into the car (and capable of doing more than just logging as a result)

Comment Re:Teenagers shouldn't be driving NEW cars anyway (Score 3, Informative) 224

The roads in Australia are filled with SUVs just as much as they are in the US (and that number seems to be growing all the time based on my observations) and yet people who know what they are talking about (including a family member who has been working in dealerships and selling both new and used cars for decades and now works in management at a dealer) still recommend small fuel efficient Japanese cars as good first cars for young drivers (despite the "increased risk" if they get into an accident with an SUV)

Comment Teenagers shouldn't be driving NEW cars anyway (Score 2, Insightful) 224

Teenage drivers with fresh licenses should be driving older cheaper-to-buy cars.

Unless a teenager (or their parents) are rich, they should be buying an older cheaper car that doesn't require taking out a massive auto loan. In Australia the usual recommendation/good option is something small and Japanese like a Toyota Corolla, Honda Civic, Suzuki Swift, Mitsubishi Lancer, Nissan Pulsar, Mazda 323, Honda Jazz or something like that but in the US the best option may be different.

Comment Re:iPhone vs what? (Score 0) 214

Any phone that doesn't restrict your ability to run the software (and operating system) of your choice on it is what you should be buying instead of that crApple ifPhail.

If it was an actual device (and not just some schematics and a prototype built on an ARM dev board) I would be recommending the Neo900 as the best option for people wanting a truly open phone. With the Neo900, it will be possible (as far as I am aware) to run a 100% FOSS software stack on the main ARM CPU and have basically complete device functionality including LTE cellular modem, power management/battery charging, phone calls, SMS messages, GPS, WiFi, FM transmitter, FM receiver, camera and bluetooth.

Comment Re:Australian here (Score 1) 85

Given how much money the big media companies spend on political donations to both sides of politics in this country I wouldn't be so sure that the Labor party are going to be voting no on this bill.

Not to mention that they are filming the latest Pirates of the Caribbean film right here in sunny Queensland and I can gaurantee that Hollywood is talking to both sides of politics and pointing out just how much money is being injected into the Australian economy by content production and that without strong anti-piracy measures, all that content production (and associated economic benefit) will be in jeopardy.

It worked in New Zealand where they used the Hobbit films as a lever to get the changes to labor laws that they wanted, I see no reason the same wouldn't work here in Australia to get the anti-piracy measures they want.

Comment Things I dislike about Mozilla (Score 1) 300

Let me start by saying that I have been using Mozilla (the suite) since the 0.x beta days and I am using SeaMonkey (the successor to the Mozilla Suite) to write this post.

The things I dislike about what Mozilla are doing:
1.The way they are forcing all sorts of new UI onto people without ever considering what its users (both users who have been using for years and those new to Firefox) actually want.
2.The fact that they have become conservative when it comes to supporting new web things. In particular new image formats like mng, jng and webp. It used to be that they would support all these new web things and push the envelope, now they are behind Chrome and even IE in some of these areas.
3.The way they dont care about the corporate market, dont provide official installers that the corporate IT people can use and push to all their machines, dont provide the configuration options the corporate IT people need, dont provide a way for the corporate IT people to block updates except when they are ready to push them locally and dont provide a way for the corporate IT people to turn off all the things (phoning home etc) that the corporate IT people dont want.

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