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Comment Re:A more important issue... (Score 1) 246

There's very few companies you wouldn't be able to sue if you could sue for that. Heck, Linux is very stable if you use "the good parts" and set it up just the right way, but get out of its comfort zone (ie: start using it on the desktop with a setup thats not the "ONE" setup) and things go to hell pretty quick.

Comment Re: Neener (Score 1) 97

Personally at this point my favorite is LevelUp, though its a lot more localized. Its just a barcode picture, you point whatever version you have to the machine, it turns green, you're done, save a ton of money, and can use whatever device you want (android wear watches work nicely with it).

Its not as fancy shmancy as NFC, but it the deal is better for both the customer (get pretty decent discounts) and the merchant (pretty much no transaction fee whatever and free hardware in many cases)

Comment Re:Would this solution stem these unending breache (Score 1) 97

this isn't a password you can hash and compare hashes. You have to use the number, so it kind of has to be in number form somewhere... Even if it was encrypted and the key was on a different machine... it will get read and decrypted next time its needed. Then you can steal it there.

Now for a lot of cases you don't need to store credit card numbers at all, you can just replay a transaction, but thats not always possible.

Comment Re:Well DUH, You can't stop piracy. (Score 4, Insightful) 116

I'm not saying I agree or not with piracy, but this is a ridiculous arguments. "You can't completely stop X, therefore you shouldn't even try to do anything about it".

That can be said about -ANY- crime/undesirable behavior.

"You can't ever completely stop home invasions. Its a waste of effort to put lock on doors".

Some people will do whatever, all the way down to the extreme, no matter what you try to do about it. Efforts to stop "X" is generally to stop as much as you can.

The question is purely: "is it beneficial to society to spend X amount of resources to stop Y amount of piracy (or to try at all). Yes/No.

People feel pretty strongly on both sides of the fence as if it was an obvious question with an obvious answer to either of the sides. It is not that simple.

Comment Re:The Netherlands has something similar (Score 2) 291

If it was a reasonable company doing it, it wouldn't be so bad. In this case for example, for a lot of people, the account setting to turn it off doesn't work (you get an "unexpected error" when clicking the button on the website). You're also only notified of it up to several months after they turn it on, and their customer reps lie about it and ways to get out of it.

If they were up front, honest, and had a decent workflow to get out of it such that a non-techy could understand how to do it without being lied to, and it wasn't enabled by default in areas where population density means a saturated 2.4ghz space, thus making a lot of every day devices fail because of it, there wouldn't be any problem.

Comment Re:What about things like the JVM inside a contain (Score 1) 149

Think of it as running separate VMs in an hypervisor, but SOME stuff can be shared. If its all in the package, yes they'd have their own mysql or postgres, but its the same thing as if you had VMs with everything included.

Nothing stopping you from having an instance for the database, and an instance for the web server that connects to the database.

Comment Re:Suing over something that can easily be changed (Score 1) 291

Comcast tends to make it hard to bring your own modem. The list they give of the ones that will work is frequently out of date, once you have one you may or may not need to talk with them to get it recognized, and they may just lie to you instead of helping.

Beyond that, its just that, again, they don't tell you when they turn it on (until months later, I eventually got a letter, though I already knew they had). I had tried to turn it off via the account settings (there's a button to do so), but it always has "an unexpected error". I eventually managed to get it turned off by talking to an agent (I wasn't in the mood to fight with a third party one that should work but doesn't because Comcast's a dick company).

Now, even after all that, it still doesn't matter: I live in a very high density area, and there's something stupid like 30+ xfinity wifi hotspot within range. The 2.4ghz band is totally useless from interference.

Easy right? I just got a 5ghz router, and that works great. Oh, but the Wii U is 2.4ghz... Well, I'll wire that. My TV is 5ghz so thats fine. My roku is 2.4ghz...I could buy a new one. Oh but the Nest thermostat....and the list goes on.

Its just something they shouldn't be doing, flat and simple.

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