Comment Doesn't that put the cat among the pigeons, (Score 5, Insightful) 217
I wonder how Bayer is going to keep this new study out of their court case where they're suing the EU for banning neonicotinoid pesticides.
I wonder how Bayer is going to keep this new study out of their court case where they're suing the EU for banning neonicotinoid pesticides.
The real solution is that:
1. More content needs to be accessible via peer-to-peer.
2. ISPs need to have content proxies and encourage their users to use them.
3. Don't use "transparent proxies" because they're frequently worse than useless.
4. Static data shouldn't be served via HTTPS but instead by some kind of GPG content encoding via HTTP so that it may be cached.
Just my 2.
I deliberately do not install Flash on my computers _and_ I deliberately choose to not install any of the third-party work-alikes.
If the content owner only publishes content in a SWF, it is not worth my bother to look at it. Okay, I can't view video clips in Facebook, but if it is an embedded youtube video, usually I can view it just fine by going to youtube's website.
People get the government that they voted for. If they are upset, they need to regard and blame their neighbours.
Microsoft should be under no further obligation to its customers with respect to Windows XP.
For free? I agree they should have no open ended support obligation. That does not mean however that their customers should be forced to spend money on software that does nothing new that they need.
However, if individual customers are willing to _pay_ a subscription for further support from Microsoft, they should be allowed to do so.
Microsoft has taken that option off the table. So exactly what do you propose as an alternative that doesn't involve paying hundreds to thousands of dollars to buy new computers and software that many of us do not actually need?
The UK Govt is among one of their customers who is going to pay Microsoft for further Windows XP support.
For people who are not willing to pay, Windows XP will continue to work as it currently does. Third party vendors are likely to continue to provide antivirus updates or perhaps even binary-patching the existing code to continue to operate - that is the model with OS/2 continues to exist today even though the product hasn't been supported by IBM since 1998.
Just for convenience, I have been a paying customer of Dyn for a couple of years, now.
It is a sad end but it will not change my use of their services.
No other publicly available product has ever had such a long support duration as Windows XP has had.
Microsoft should be under no further obligation to its customers with respect to Windows XP.
However, if individual customers are willing to _pay_ a subscription for further support from Microsoft, they should be allowed to do so.
Lets face it: They're probably sitting on a huge amount of old inventory and for every 1 semi-tech savvy customer who specifically wants the faster CPU version, there will be 1000 customers who wouldn't know the CPU from their elbow.
If Microsoft is really playing serious to make people switch to Windows Phone, they will have to somehow make syncing contacts, emails and calendars between Windows PC and Apple/Android not work as well as with Windows Phone.
It would likely open themselves up to anti-trust suits but they already know how to handle that.
That's not how ICO fines work.
The way they work is this: If you suffer a data breach that the ICO hears off, they'll investigate.
Once the investigation is complete, they'll do a few things:
1. Write a beautifully-worded press release explaining exactly what you did wrong and put it on the news wires.
2. Write an equally beautifully-worded report explaining what you did wrong in explicit detail.
3. Issue a thumping great fine.
It's important to note that they don't have to take an organisation to court to raise this fine. It's the other way around - if your organisation gets fined, it's down to you to raise an appeal.
Parent posting needs to be modded up.
A previous employer, a game company whose name rhymes with lizard, uses MITM proxy
This is an industry wide issue thanks to RoHS. This isn't just Apple, this effects Dell and HP laptops that have high temp GPUs. The XBox 360 is another perfect example. The problem is caused from the constant thermal cycling causing expansion and contraction as it cools. Like bending a paper clip, over time metal fatigue sets in and cracks the solder.
AFAIK, they still use tin-lead based solder in medical equipment, even the new stuff, for this reason. The consumer industry went along with the RoHS stuff because they knew it was a form of built-in obsolescence. Even the tin whisker problem has been known about since the 1960s.
A gesture that the UK Govt did wrong at the time
We must never forget that sometimes, the laws are wrong and cause great people to suffer or die.
Hmmm. Yeah, you're right. The stuff I had seen is for an obsolete manufacturing process and doesn't apply to the bio-engineered solution which is used in the USA.
Do you have a link describing this process? Or are you making this up?
IF I HAD A MINE SHAFT, I don't think I would just abandon it. There's got to be a better way. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.