Comment The M in EEPROM (Score 1) 264
BTW, please stop calling flash as "Memory" (in the title) because memory is often confused with RAM.
Flash memory is a form of EEPROM, or electrically erasable programmable read-only memory.
BTW, please stop calling flash as "Memory" (in the title) because memory is often confused with RAM.
Flash memory is a form of EEPROM, or electrically erasable programmable read-only memory.
>Not sure what you're referring to, but I've yet to encounter a DVD (not Blu-Ray) that Media Player Classic and VLC can't play, and since they aren't officially licensed players that means they're cracking whatever DRM is on the disc.
Yeah, I already said that, basically. DVDs have been cracked for ages. I don't know what this watermark thing the parent poster referred to is.
journald delivers ascii logs in real time, you just have to use a syslog daemon like you always have anyway.
Sure. So now I get an additional log daemon which doesn't feed logs back upstream. Explain how this is simplifying my system.
They claim they're moving things, not removing them. If done well this will help KDE immensely because current prefs dialogs treat trivial and significant settings as equally important by barfing them all up together into a big dialog.
The awesome structured and indexed log file format has a stable API and structure
Odd, so does a syslog. And you can still use tools to read it. Indexed files could be built from it if you had that much logging done. And since systemd has no option to output the ascii log in realtime, you have to use the tools. If you want to use the body of existing tools which do things with normal log files, you'll now need a FUSE filesystem to treat the binary logs like real logs, or you'll simply be out of date as you read the ascii logs from journald.
android-x86 is a bit of a dog's breakfast. They only kick out a release image every now and again, everything never works, lots of crashes. The latest 4.4 image is way less stable than the last 4.0 image they put out, and they stopped building nightlies and so did everyone else. It's really quite useless and always has been, because they never actually finish a release. Google kicks out a new version, they say "Ooh, shiny!" and they move on before they actually get the system working reliably or properly. Then you get to deal with all the apps that won't work right on x86 on top of that. It makes far more sense at this point to go ahead and run the emulator.
As Chinese economy grows, so does its middle class. As its middle class grows, it demands more democratic reforms and more government responsibility
Well, maybe. Or maybe it just demands a higher standard of living, one which cannot be supported without more oppression.
No, agregation into packages is completely unacceptable.
Then be prepared to pay $19.99 per year for each website, even if you plan to view only one page on that site, because you are unwilling to pay for bundles of multiple sites. Look at 50 different sites one month? That'll be a thousand dollars.
It's actually a good strategy for MS, I think, and I believe Ballmer screwed up by not following this strategy.
For other companies, it only works in the short term because their competitors win in the long term because without good employees, the company can't develop new products. However, for MS, this just isn't a concern. They're a monopoly in many markets, especially in business software; companies aren't going to suddenly stop buying Windows, Exchange, Office/Outlook, etc. MS can milk their existing customers for a couple of decades I think, and could easily jack up prices greatly.
"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight