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Comment Net Neutrality is only a start (Score 1) 705

I think net neutrality as it's currently being proposed simply treats a symptom, not the cause. The cause is that telecom and cable companies have virtual monopolies due to access to public property that is granted to them exclusively. This allows them to pull whatever shenanigans they please; not just prioritized service. They have fiber wire just laying there unused because they don't feel the need to compete -- there's no one else around after all. They can price their plans ridiculously high (Verizon Wireless, I'm looking at you) without fear since they have sole access to a creme de la creme slice of spectrum that no one else is allowed.

If we truly want change, the various levels of governments need to pool some public funds into developing line and spectrum sharing technology. Plenty of non-profit organizations out there (EFF for instance) can provide technical input and ways to improve it in the future.

Then and only then will there be true competition when it comes to the internet. Anyone can start a cable company if they choose to invest in the routing/server infrastructure. Communities would be free to setup their own service with one giant pipe to the nearest hub. Competition will keep prices down and force companies to improve service instead of sitting back and raking in cash (and charging all sorts of nebulous, borderline scam fees).

Comment Why can't they put a simple FET in there (Score 1) 111

I keep wondering about this. Why do laptops not come with a switch to cut off the charge when the battery is, say, 99% full? Is it purposely so that the battery will die faster? The laptop works without a battery (while plugged in) so the regulator obviously is capable of handling both AC and battery levels of voltage.

So why are they constantly destroying batteries while plugged in?

Comment You gotta wonder how much bandwidth is left (Score 1) 107

You have to wonder, with all of these devices that use the rather spread-thin (no pun intended) "free" spectrum, just how much bandwidth is left in your average area? What with everyone's WiF, cordless phone, microwave, bluetooth, etc. devices running constantly, are we reaching a point where "free" consumer spaces simply need more bandwidth?

Comment Re:Not exactly a revelation (Score 1) 417

The iPhone4, as regarded by most of the tech community, was a bad design choice. That doesn't mean it's a consistent thing for Apple. The 3Gs, for instance, had form and function that was top of its class.

In fact, even in RF tests, it had one of the highest signal-to-noise ratios both when holding lightly as well as while "death gripping".

For the most part -- with a few exceptions -- I'd say Apple's recent products in the past ~4 or so years have more or less followed along the lines of "it works well and is pretty to boot". There are, of course, exceptions; such as the iPhone4.

Comment Re:Not exactly a revelation (Score 1) 417

You must've missed the other part of the argument: a crowd of technical people trying to make a consumer product. Engineers are great at what they do: making things work. But they aren't necessarily good at things like figuring out what sells and what the average person would want. They also tend to be less receptive towards suggestions from people they deem "beneath them" (read: marketing).

So say you have this brilliant idea about how to make an portable music player. You put in a chip with an insane graphics processor but a dog slow CPU but from an engineering perspective, "an extra 1/10 sec lag for a menu choice isn't much, but this thing can render incredible UI graphics!".

The marketing or artsy guy comes along and says "that's great, but 99% of the people will see that 1/10 sec of lag, and conclude "this thing is slow"."

At Microsoft, that guy would be told to go back to drinking latte's.

Apple leaves the hard engineering up to other people, be it the Darwin group, Samsung or Infineon (soon to be Qualcomm, apparently). Because those are the types of companies where the product's technical abilities is by and large the selling point and those companies should be run by engineers.

For a company that tries to make consumer goods, it can't be run adequately by engineers. And that's what Microsoft is trying to do.

Comment Re:That's great but... (Score 1) 104

See that's the thing. People -- including myself -- don't *want* to manually tag stuff. It's the difference between a computer geek and a computer user. The user just wants everything done for him/her with the possibility of tweaking how the machine makes its decisions.

I wouldn't put it past Google to work on advanced file auto-classification algorithms that will one day make "oh I gotta put this in my music folder" obsolete.

Of course, then there's the "wait, don't name that 'porn' automatically!!" aspect....

Comment That's great but... (Score 3, Insightful) 104

One of the important UI changes about a touch-only interface is that things such as managing the filesystem, arranging folders and icons, etc. are too cumbersome to do in the traditional navigator window type of interface.

iOS just gets rid of it altogether whereas Android limits you to handling files via applications. Unless they've managed to come up with a proper auto-categorization and file organizer -- such that I don't need to go through folders to get to a media file I want to play -- this will still be a cumbersome desktop OS with a touch UI "layer" on top.

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