Comment Honestly (Score 1) 148
What Geniuses.
What Geniuses.
I weep for the desktop...
So, with 79% of the vote unspoken for, a third party could have really cleaned up had one been organised enough.
Accounts would sign in to Microsoft Live or whatever they call it now.
Linux clients (and possibly servers) would mysteriously not work quite as well as before, when the new updates intentionally use Java features known to not work well on non-MS platforms.
Servers might just be consolidated to "authorized" providers such as XBox Live.
The PC version might be crippled to get "feature parity" with the console versions?
I'm curious:
Is there anyone here who does not, upon sitting at another person's computer, immediately un-hide file extensions if they are hidden?
Further, has anyone here ever had a user object to having their file extensions un-hidden?
I suspect the answer to both is "no".
That has to be one of the worst xkcd comics I've seen in a long time. The left picture shows a white and gold dress against a blue backdrop, and the right picture shows a blue and gold dress against a yellow backdrop. In neither picture does the "gold" look remotely like anything that could be called black.
I think a lot of this confusion is coming from the fact that the white balance of the picture is such that the blue fabric looks like evening light scattering off a white surface (a very light blue), so our eyes are interpreting that as the "white" point, and correcting everything else in the picture to match. So we have a way overexposed very dark object made to look like a slightly underexposed light object.
Why not? Honestly, why would a motivated enough studio not do such a thing? Remember the BMG rootkit fiasco. The only problem for them was that they were caught.
Does anyone else just want to sit down with the genius who decided to put a Java runtime into a standard for home video and have a long, fireside chat?
Possibly involving the poker and some of the larger blocks of firewood?
Just in case you weren't aware, the full text of that beatitude is:
"Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth".
That does not sound like a cautionary tale.
To quote Queeg:
Chess
Even with the backlight turned right down? I have never seen this happen to such a degree that makes a redshifter ineffective, though I don't own a Kindle so perhaps it's specific to those.
On desktops and laptops I use redshift-gtk. It sits in the background and gradually adjusts the gamma of your screen based on your longitude/latitude and the time of day. There is an icon in the system tray that you can click to manually turn it off to see the difference or if you briefly have a need to see colour-accurate content.
I don't recall what one I have used for Android, though I have used Nightfilter in the past that works well (though manual).
What are you doing about it?
If you say "nothing" then as a citizen you are a major part of the problem.
Anyone reading screens at night should already have an automatic redshifter installed, unless you explicitly need to stay awake for some reason. I use them for all my desktops, laptops and tablets.
The difference on your eyes is, pun intended, night and day.
Terrorist group wants to legitimize their snooping activities.
News at 11
Work is the crab grass in the lawn of life. -- Schulz