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Comment Re:Meh. fud spam. (Score 1) 237

Even the creator of the test admits that any average user will probably not come anywhere close to 500 TB of writes during the lifetime of their 256 GB SSD.

Someone like Backblaze might if they used the SSD as a cache drive for a RAID array, but using a TLC based drive for that purpose is pretty foolish.

Comment Re:Slashdot obsession (Score 1) 332

Or (more likely) you're a nerd with a small horde of Bitcoin who wants as much positive publicity for the currency as possible.

I'm thinking that Slashdot should start requiring Bitcoin article posters to disclose how much Bitcoin they have before publishing the article. CNBC requires someone to disclose that their firm owns 5,000 shares of stock XYZ when they go on air and proclaim how great stock XYZ is... why not require the same level of transparency here?

Comment We should do a release date pool! (Score 1) 1009

We should really do a release date pool, and make our best educated guesses as to when Windows 9 will ship.

Will it be like Windows Vista and takes years longer than the original estimate, or will it be more like Windows 7 and be a release with minor changes that ships on time?

My money is on November 6, 2014, and that it will be little more than a UI refresh for Windows 8.1.

Comment Re:Bitcoin is vulernable to government manipulatio (Score 1) 396

I do not think that Bitcoin (or any cryptocoin for that matter) will be a good method for payment transfer until prices stabilize. As long as the price of Bitcoin can swing as much as plus/minus 50% in a day (as it did several times in 2013), no sane person would use it a big ticket purchase.

Comment Re:Odd... (Score 4, Insightful) 186

If given a choice, I'd imagine that Red Hat would have users choosing CentOS than Ubuntu if they are looking for a free Linux distribution with longer term support. At least Red Hat can then give them the option to easily upgrade to RHEL without forcing them to reinstall their systems.

Switching between the two distributions (or even Scientific Linux) is already as easy as switching repos and updating a few branding specific packages. I'd imagine that Red Hat would make the process even easier to do so in the next release.

Comment Re:Guesses as to end effect? (Score 1) 202

Yeah... If Overstock.com really wanted to start taking Bitcoin right away, they could just use the Bitpay API and be done with it. I couldn't see setting that up taking more than a few days of development and QA testing.

It's actually a pretty good way of accepting Bitcoin, as the conversion to US dollars is done almost instantly.

Comment Re:Is his reasoning flawed? (Score 1) 691

Heh... you're assuming that Bitcoin is going to be wildly popular and every person on the friggin planet (even the ones who don't even have electricity now let along stable Internet access) are going to be using it to make ALL of their currency transactions.

I'm sure that's a problem that the Bitcoin Foundation would love to have, but I doubt that it will be something that will happen during our lifetime. I hope that I'm wrong, and that what I just said will make as much sense as a "640k will be enough for everyone" statement 20 years from now... but I doubt it.

Comment Re:house of cards? (Score 4, Interesting) 698

If anything, bricking a few million old PC's might actually have a stimulating impact on the economy. When the users toss out their 5 year old system that is probably still running Windows XP, they will likely go out and buy a shiny new laptop from Dell or HP that comes with a copy of Windows 8.1 and Office 2012. It will probably come with a "free" trial subscription of McAfee or Symantec virus protection as well. Lots of profit to be had by all in the IT industry.

When you think about it that way, it makes you wonder who paid the Chinese programmers to write this malware.

Comment Re:Does it mean, (Score 1) 110

I agree with you completely.

Let's put it this way... if you were about to start a long term contract for a big project, would you rather get paid in dollars (which will likely be worth at least 95% of what they are now at the end of the contract), or in Bitcoin (which may be worth anywhere from $10 to $10,000 each a year from now, depending on who you talk to)?

Bitcoin might work for buying a bag of weed or some cookies, but you would never use it to do real business until the currency stabilizes.

IT

Ask Slashdot: How Do I Convince Management To Hire More IT Staff? 383

An anonymous reader writes "I work at a manufacturing company. We have roughly 150 employees, 130 desktops, 8 physical servers, 20 virtual servers + a commercial SAN. We're a Windows shop with Exchange 2013. That's the first part. The second part is we have an ERP system that controls every aspect of our business processes. It has over 100 customizations (VB, but transitioning over to C#). We also have 20 or so custom-made support applications that integrate with the ERP to provide a more streamlined interface to the factory workers in some cases, and in other cases to provide a functionality that is not present in the ERP at all. Our IT department consists of: 1 Network Administrator (me), 4 Programmers (one of which is also the IT Manager). I finally convinced our immediate boss that we need another network support person to back me up (but he must now convince the CEO who thinks we have a large IT department already). I would like them to also hire dedicated help desk people. As it stands, we all share help desk duties, but that leads to projects being seriously delayed or put on hold while we work on more mundane problems. It also leads to a good amount of stress, as I can't really create the solid infrastructure I want us to have, and the developers are always getting pressure from other departments for projects they don't have the manpower to even start. I'm not really sure how to convince them we need more people. I need something rather concrete, but there are widely varying ratios of IT/user ratios in different companies, and I'm sure their research turned up with some generic rule of thumb that leads them to believe we have too many already. What can we do?"
Bitcoin

Bitcoin Tops $1,000 For the First Time 371

An anonymous reader writes with this bit from The Next Web "Bitcoin hit a new milestone today, passing the $1,000 mark for the first time. The virtual currency is currently trading above the four-digit figure, with its highest at $1,030 on Mt. Gox, one of the largest exchanges. Last week, Bitcoin's high for the day was $632. That means its trading value has surged 62.83 percent in a week, assuming we're looking at just its high points. That figure could of course rise even further if Bitcoin continues to push further up throughout the day."

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