Comment Re:Well. (Score 1) 253
I meant solid state external hard drive, of course.
I meant solid state external hard drive, of course.
While I think the basic premise is a little silly, I imagine a $200 fanless laptop is powerful enough to run Plex (I run Plex Server off an old Mac Mini, and never have had any problems).
Depending how much space you need, get a solid-state SSD or even SD card, put some kind of basic protection about it (a cheap laptop bag?) and throw it in your crawlspace.
My Plex server runs fine over wifi (with the router right next to it), but I still have it connected to Ethernet. I imagine that could be a problem with higher bitrate movies.
Holy crap, and the GM of Toyota probably doesn't go on record as being a fan of Ford's latest offerings, either.
The people telling you this are salesmen, trying to attach race-car prestige to a $40,000 coupe with incremental upgrades.
Almost all electric cars don't have a traditional gearbox. A Fiat 500e doesn't. Also, gearboxes (or maybe a CVT) are something you want. I'm sure for $2 million it's nice, but it's not anything worth caring about.
Qualcomm invented the cell phone.
I would go too google.com and enter '-slashdot Mouse/Pointer For a Person With Poor Motor Control.'
I want to interject that "My Sweet Lord" and "He's So Fine" are the EXACT SAME FUCKING SONG. Same melody, structure, and everything. Basically a cover, except you take out the cool girl group singing "sha la la" and add in some Hare Krishnas singing the Hare Krishna mantra.
If this had been made in Brazil, Chinese companies would still have copied the basic design. You can also get fake rolexes in China, and those are made in Switzerland (according to 3 seconds of Googling).
They didn't use the same factory, so the country of the original is a basically irrelevant point.
You could easily spend more than $5000 getting braces or plastic surgery.
It would still be worth mining bitcoins, if somebody else was paying for the electricity.
For all the hate the US gets on Slashdot, it's still the country of record. It's hitting the big time. Top finance jobs are centered in the US. Top technology jobs are centered in the US. The movie and TV industries are largest in the US. 9 of the world's 10 best universities are in the US. Sure, such jobs are available in Nigeria, but the best most and the most talented tend to work in the US, and you're limiting your kid's future by not allowing it.
I know so, so, so many Chinese people (both PRC and Taiwan, Malaysia, etc.) killing themselves to get their kids in the US because it has the best school and the top jobs. Not to mention, my wife's parents, several of my best friend's parents, etc. NOT doing it, when it would be easy to fill out paperwork, just seems like irresponsible parenting.
Well, the software was sold in the US. And, charges against the dude were dropped. And it was 14 years ago. So I think it's understandable that it's no longer a burning issue.
But what you're saying would be equivalent to somebody else making their own show where kids turn into ninjas and attack warriors, not just somebody making their own Power Rangers mini-movie.
Similarly, there's a difference between being inspired by a band, and just re-doing their song without permission.
It is protected by copyright, and calling it satire is obviously bullshit.
Usually companies let fan-works slide, and as long as your fan-film or fan-fiction or geeky video is just done for fun, why shouldn't the company allow it? It's just building good will and it's a super-fan only thing that doesn't really change what most people think of the brand. They still have legal rights to disallow it, but they choose not to.
This video, with recognizable stars and lots of money put into it and professional purposes (it seems to be a kind of work to put on the director's resume) went too far. I'm not at all surprised they aren't happy with it, and legally and ethically they have every right to get it off of the youtubes.
HOLY MACRO!