Comment Re:You realize... (Score 1) 186
The premise is that things going extinct is universally bad.
I don't think you'd be here typing that if the dinosaurs didn't go extinct. Extinction is not bad, nor is it good, it simply is. It is evolution.
The premise is that things going extinct is universally bad.
I don't think you'd be here typing that if the dinosaurs didn't go extinct. Extinction is not bad, nor is it good, it simply is. It is evolution.
David Cameron needs to watch this video.
correction: Btguard
...if humans save these pink iguanas, we are interfering with nature. Can't have it both ways, by saying our actions that make stuff go extinct is bad, and actions by nature that makes stuff go extinct is bad, too.
This. My first thought upon reading TFS was, how did this ever pass peer review and testing to get into the "stable" kernel? They do still perform peer review and unit testing, don't they?
Testing? Who does that anymore? That is the user's job.
MMO's and Microsoft have made it so.
Earth is not a stable static thing. It changes. All the time.
Excuses. The market's response to excuses: Steal it if you won't make it available.
Guess you haven't used uTorrent lately, they advertise often enough for BitGuard, which is a very easy point and click VPN service. Any idiot could set it up.
erm correction: So offer us both, simultaneously, an online release and theater release, so the shy people can enjoy the movie WITHOUT the need to wait 6 months or steal it.
From TFA:
Under CCMA there is no limit on the number of notifications that must legally be forwarded to ‘offending’ ISP customers, which has led to a 69.6% reduction in infringements at Bell Canada, with Rogers, TekSavvy, Telus and Shaw all reporting notable reductions in piracy (or, theoretically, greater uptake of VPNs).
I'm willing to bet after the first notification, people just move to a VPN service to hide behind... Fix the inaccessibility issues involving movie and show availability, and I think you'll see piracy drop a lot faster than trying to punish people. People really just don't care, they just want their movie or show, so make it accessible and affordable. Market is just waiting on you guys to fix the issues IMHO.
Some people also don't want to go to a theater with a bunch of other people and pay astronomical prices for a bag of popcorn. On the other hand, some people really like that theater experience. So offer us both, simultaneously, an online release and theater release, so the shy people can enjoy the movie with the need to wait 6 months or steal it.
Personally I'd like to see the environmental nightmare of the Keurig and Tassimo curl up and die.
Enh, I've always used a filter basket and normal coffee grounds with my Keurig. I love the thing personally. I have an older one without DRM silliness. They really are nice appliances when used intelligently.
At last, a serious blow to the pocket book for companies employing stupid DRM crap.
Consumers voted with their wallets and Keurig learns a valuable lesson. Let's hope other industries learn from their mistake and consumer continue to take a stance against this garbage.
This is nothing new. Microsoft has been dealing with this issue for...ever? Older hardware can't run the newer versions of operating systems. So what? Some people may not want to upgrade, or can't.
Not really sure why Android is being singled out for such accusations, Windows suffers the same issues, and has always had problems getting people to upgrade. Windows 10 is almost out, or is it out yet? I can't recall, I'm still on Windows 7 myself. Works for me. Many people don't see a point to upgrading for a very simple reason: If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
There's still a lot of Windows XP installations going too. So I dunno what the point of this article is.
Well said, also no one seems to be calculating in the environmental costs of conventional power, or the benefits to society as a whole when those environmental costs are reduced *IF* more and more of us switch over to such systems.
No. This is EXACTLY the way people need to look at it.
Short sighted retard thinking. Which is the problem with Americans, can't see past your own short life spans. If I pay for such a system and install it on my property, sure, I may never 'recoup' the cost of the system in my life span, but my property is off the grid, for whoever gets it after I'm gone.
Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"