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Comment Re:Tired of this shit (Score 0) 448

Just....wow, dude! I know that a period of listening to Rush Limbaugh will start making you fell all victim-like and stuff, but - has any of this stuff directly affected you in any meaningful way other than to make *you* feel victimized somehow? Sure, there's always assholes ready to condemn you, denigrate you in some way and try to make you feel less a real person than them. Hell, I'm a dirt-worshiping heathen in North Georgia Bible-belt territory. Trust me, I know whereof I speak, even though it's not "race" but "religion". Same shit, different tribe. How about getting over that crap, turn off talk radio and enjoy this blessing of life. Like the man said in the movie "Life's too short to go through it pissed off all the time.". Cheers!

Comment Pretty damned sweet (Score 0) 89

I'm running Mint 17 RC right now, due to a fat-finger where I was trying to install it in a separate partition and blew up my partition table. Rather that try to reinvigorate Windows 7, I just went ahead and installed it on the whole disk and - damn! It is really nice, Once I saw that youporn videos worked, I was sold! :-)
Portables

Nokia's N1 Android Tablet Is Actually a Foxconn Tablet 109

sfcrazy writes: "Nokia surprised everyone when it announced the N1 Android tablet during the Slush conference in Finland, today. This story has a twist, though: the N1 is not a Nokia device. Nokia doesn't have a device unit anymore: it sold its Devices and Services business to Microsoft in 2013. The N1 is made by Taiwanese contract manufacturing company Foxconn, which also manufactures the iPhone and the iPad.

But Nokia's relationship with Foxconn is different from Apple's. You buy iDevices from Apple, not Foxconn; you call Apple for support, not Foxconn. You never deal with Foxconn. In the case of N1, Foxconn will be handling the sales, distribution, and customer care for the device. Nokia is licensing the brand, the industrial design, the Z Launcher software layer, and the IP on a running royalty basis to Foxconn.

Comment Re:Piketty is wrong. (Score 1) 839

What you and the economists are saying actually fits right in with Piketty's view. Consider that globalization - which has severely negatively impacted middle-class workers (and their entire communities) - has benefited the owners of the capital disproportionately. They reap the gains by virtue of their ownership of the capital and the rest of us continue to slide downwards as the middle-class continues to be hollowed out.

Comment Re:Less static hardware. (Score 5, Informative) 993

Actually, while working at Intel, I saw quite a few scenarios where hot-plugging of hardware is a critical requirement for long-uptime servers. Think adding storage, additional networking interfaces, and - for cPCI chassis - telecom interface cards. With systems that need to stay up all the time - and expand capacity - hot-swap is a great feature.

Comment Re:Was it really so bad? (Score 1) 392

Rather than burn a mod point, I'd add on to that that ANY major software project, especially one that has to integrate so many wildly different back-end systems with differing formats, standards, etc. is prone to go through shake-out periods. Has anyone here had Version 1.0 rollout bug-free, ultra-secure, fully scalable, redundant, and on-schedule? Anyone? Hands-up.....

Comment Re:Nice Synergy (Score 0) 347

Hold on there, big fella! Once you - as an organization - apply to the IRS for a tax-exempt status and swear under penalty of law that you are not engaging in political activity (and let's be clear - tea party organizations are by definition 100% political), then you *should* expect the IRS to come sniffing. Do not extrapolate that simple reality into "OMG - if I support X party then they're going to audit me!!!". Reality check, please....

Comment Re:At the risk of being flammed into oblivion (Score 1) 146

I do. The thing that you're ignoring is this: the combination of my insurance premiums through work; my employer's premiums to the same insurers; medicare; medicaid; VA and a few others dwarfs - on a per-capita basis - what anyone else in the world pays for coverage. And that coverage, in case you haven't noticed, is ridiculously complex with tremendous gaps and inefficiencies that make the whole experience much, much worse than any dealings with the IRS - and I've had a few. In each case I found the IRS to be very helpful and pleasant to deal with. As opposed to, say, AT&T...

Comment Re:Just think, you could have had universal health (Score 1) 723

Excuse me? That whole post made no sense whatsoever! How did you get health care without insurance or a very large wallet? And don't hand me that crap about ER coverage being "free". It's not! Once you leave the hospital, you're going to have to make a detour through the business office where you'll get a full walletectomy before you can leave, and if you don't have cash, you'll have the collection agency knocking at your door.

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