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Comment Re:huh.. (Score 1) 405

I assume assume that running one's own Exchange server at home provides to a professional Exchange administrator the opportunity to tinker with and hack at an Exchange server at home rather than at work where bosses tend to frown upon such activities.

P.S.

I found it very hard to type "professional Exchange administrator"

Comment Re:They could lure more people into buying their b (Score 1) 66

The biggest apparent hole in the Roku's featureset is the inability to play the content you already own.

True. They are not likely to add that capability either. :( Their box costs $100 and has only a very simple remote. They don't want the support costs involved in supporting anything as complicated as CIFS and codec issues. They want to sell an idiot proof black box that requires no after sale support.

That said, I'd love to be able to stream my music collection through it...

Comment Re:mac != unix (Score 1) 699

Yes, terminal.app is a GUI app and so is xterm. Isn't the whole purpose of a graphical display to let you have a whole bunch of xterms open at the same time?
At the moment I have 4 iTerms open with a combined total of 11 tabs. That's pretty much how I've used Unix since my first SparcStation was plopped on my desk. "Lot's o' xterms"
Businesses

Google's Prediction Market 94

Googling Yourself writes "Employees at Google are encouraged to place bets on Google's prediction market — an exchange that tries to forecast events based on the money wagered on a particular outcome. Employees have made wagers with play money (Goobles, as in rubles) on questions like: will Google open a Russia office? will Apple release an Intel-based Mac? how many users will Gmail have at the end of the quarter? One tangible benefit to the company is that the market allows Google to track how information disseminates in the company. A paper called "Using Prediction Markets to Track Information Flows: Evidence From Google" discusses information flows in the company based on the prediction market data and contains many other interesting observations of Google culture. (pdf)"
Announcements

Submission + - Scientists claim to have broken the speed of light (breitbart.com)

GnarlyDoug writes: German scientists claim that they have broken the speed of light barrier while researching quantum tunneling. In effect they claimed that some photons traveled a greater distance than other photons in the same amount of time, and thus moved faster than the speed of light. Personally I'll wait to see what happens when their tests are peer reviewed and duplicated, but it's interesting.
Software

Submission + - Skype goes dark, may be offline until Friday (computerworld.com)

jcatcw writes: Skype is blaming software issues for a lengthy outage that may last for more than 24 hours. Some users claims there's a log-in authentication failure. "Those that are in stay in and those trying to sign in can't get in," according to Tom Keating. In what maybe an implicit acknowledgment, the company is recommending that users leave their client software active.

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