Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Not on TV (Score 1) 114

It's a Netflix series, but in a TV format, and it'll likely air on TV in the few territories where Netflix doesn't yet operate. Netflix's original content is a lot more similar to cable (like AMC or HBO) than it is to network television, but it's still hour-long episodic content.

Comment Re:A BIG thumbs-up so far! (Score 1) 114

These are not low-budget productions. They've got a budget of $200 million for the Marvel Netflix stuff, which comprises four shows and a miniseries over roughly three years, or around 60 episodes. That's higher than most non-network shows, like Breaking Bad or Mad Men or The Walking Dead. Not quite Game of Thrones level, but these are still not small budgets... especially considering the limited set building and VFX compared to a show like GoT.

Comment Re:Never consumer ready (Score 1) 229

The downside of tape backup is that it's often not practical to restore from. Whenever we've had an incident where somebody messed up, it was decided that it would be less effort to spend multiple person-days rebuilding the data than it would be to restore from backup.

Yeah, it'll help in a catastrophic failure scenario, but sometimes I wish the IT guys would just turn on shadow copies or something, because tapes aren't helping with the "Oh shit, somebody accidentally deleted half the QA server, and it'd take a week to get the tape back from the archive facility, but we can rebuild it by hand in two or three days."

Meanwhile, if we'd had some sort of snapshot-based backup, it would have taken a few minutes at most.

Comment Re:Never consumer ready (Score 2) 229

If one of your consumer drives fail, you've got a new one in seconds without any physical activity, because the massive cost savings allows you to keep lots of spare drives on-site as hot or cold spares. Any company that has zero spare drives and must wait for an RMA to get their RAID array back in operation is doing it wrong.

Comment Re:Never consumer ready (Score 1) 229

Enterprises still use lots of tape backups. It's still much cheaper and more durable when it comes to backup up servers and physically shipping the data to IronMountain or the like. Iron Mountain's advertising trumpets that 94% of Fortune 1000 companies use their service, so that's a pretty clear indication that tape is alive and well.

Comment Re:Going off the grid completeletly is stupid (Score 1) 281

Battery University is years out of date. They're citing a cost for Li-ion of $1,000/kWh when in reality prices have dropped to as little as a quarter of that. Tesla, for their part, is currently charging $141/kWh for replacement batteries, no doubt on the assumption that their GigaFactory will get prices that low by the time Tesla batteries need replacing.

Comment Re:Going off the grid completeletly is stupid (Score 4, Informative) 281

The problem is that many utilities pay far less per kWh than they charge you. As a result, you're generating most of your power when you don't need it (during the day when you're at work), getting almost nothing for it, and then you're consuming most of your power when you're not generating it, paying full price for it.

The result? You end up saving very little.

It starts to make sense to have batteries to let you use the power you generated, giving you a much greater return. The only issue here is the cost of the batteries... which Tesla is trying to drive down as much as they can.

Comment Still a useless exemption (Score 4, Informative) 74

Amazon wants automated deliveries with minimal human intervention. The FAA's exemptions still require that the drones be operated by a human, with a pilots license, and only within visual line of site of the pilot.

Looks like Amazon is going to have to keep testing their drones in Canada, where they can test what they actually want to do.

Comment Re:Hmm (Score 4, Informative) 197

XP and later are the NT series too. Win2K was the first version of NT that saw any significant consumer use. It was originally intended to replace both NT4 and 98 (unifying the two streams like XP eventually did), but they later changed their mind and released 98SE and ME. Still, 2K was far more consumer-friendly than NT4 was, and lots of technically oriented users like myself followed the upgrade path of 98 -> 2K -> XP.

Slashdot Top Deals

THEGODDESSOFTHENETHASTWISTINGFINGERSANDHERVOICEISLIKEAJAVELININTHENIGHTDUDE

Working...