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Comment Re:lamest name ever (Score 2) 318

Super isn't a click. Slashdot also swallowed my enter, and someone else pointed out you can also get a terminal with just T-E-R. So:

Super (Usually has a Windows logo on it) > T-E-R [enter] > in terminal

That is normally known as 5 key presses, and no mouse, much faster than using some crappy mouse movements + 3 clicks.

Linux pretty much lives in the console. To do anything of any gravity, you will invariably have it open at some point. Being such an essential tool, obfuscating behind mouse clicks like XFCE and Gnome 2 makes no sense.

Though to be honest, I don't use the terminal these days half as much as I used to have to with Gnome 2. But I think that is probably a limitation of the 90's style UI that forces you to use a console, rather than a UI that provides shortcuts to the activities that you want to perform, and that for the past few years Ubuntu comes with mostly sane configurations so I don't need to edit text files to get it to do anything.

Even my home server has a web UI, to make it quicker to change the options that I want to. Why would I use a text file that leave room for human errors such as typos. Typos in a config file can be painful.

Comment Re:lamest name ever (Score 1) 318

What's odd is I never said click on launcher. I think epy invented a step.

One thing, you missed long press super for help, which compared to any other system is vastly better. I remember accidentally removing my Gnome 2 panels, oh how much fun did I have trying to figure out how to create a new one.

Comment Re:lamest name ever (Score 1) 318

keyboard/mouse context switches are time consuming.. GUIs should do what needs doing with the minimum of clicks, leaving the keyboard stuff to the keyboard.

You mean like pinning it to the dock? One click launch? Middle click opens new instance, if right-click > new window is one too many clicks for you?

They should offer hotkeys as well. Having to type stuff out in some stupid search box is a crutch for a shitty ui design.

Now you're taking the piss. Press and hold the super key, not only does it show that I can launch dock items from the keyboard, but by long pressing super it even has a help system????

Comment Re:lamest name ever (Score 2) 318

what unnecessary steps are there to get to a console?

Super > T-E-R-M > in terminal.

It may be less characters to get terminal selected, but force of habit means I'll never know. How many steps does it take in your DE of choice?
Bearing in mind that if you are going to say "put it on the desktop, one click" then you can always pin the shortcut to the dock for one click that is never hidden.

Comment Re:The reason is simple. (Score 2) 513

Have they fixed the power sockets yet on any non-Mac lap/note/ultrabook? The first thing that goes on all my laptops have been the power socket where the weight of the plug pulls the socket away from the board and needs to be resoldered.

Why would I buy a Windows laptop for the same price when I know the damn thing won't be able to charge after a couple of years?

Comment Re:Why do they act like a keyboar dock is a big de (Score 1) 265

I think he is referring to a hinge. This allow the screen to be angled and not be on a flat surface, like your lap which is currently the biggest concern with the Windows Surface tablet that I've seen. Although that isn't the only concern, you have to have some weight behind the base otherwise it will be top heavy and tip over.

So yes, there is a difference and that Kensington looks like a terrible solution for the problem.

Government

Submission + - US government spending $19 million to assign contractors a number (foxnews.com)

Sparticus789 writes: A GAO report shows that "The government handles more than $1 trillion a year in contracts and grants. Washington needs to assign a unique number to each one of them, to track all the businesses and other entities it deals with. For more than three decades, it has turned to one company — Dun & Bradstreet — for its numbering needs." The article goes on to say "the government is now spending roughly $19 million a year on the system that cost just $1 million annually one decade ago."

The database only contains 625,000 entries, how many better ways are there to store this same amount of data?

Android

Submission + - Will Samsung Walk Out On Android? (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: "With the much-acclaimed Galaxy SIII in its pocket, don't think that Samsung is looking at Amazon's success with the Kindle and Apple’s success with its iOS devices and saying to themselves, 'No, we’d rather not have that kind of diverse revenue, we’ll stick to razor-thin hardware margins,' writes blogger Kevin Purdy. And that's not the only reason that Samsung might decide the time is right to maintain its own OS, or at least an Android fork: There's also the looming spectre of Google-Motorola."
Movies

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Will The Hobbit at 48 fps be better than 24fps? (hollywoodreporter.com) 1

kodiaktau writes: Film makers keep touting increased frame per second rate as improving viewing and cinema experience, however the number of theaters who actually support the equipment that can play the higher rate film. It makes me wonder if this is in the real interest of creating a better experience and art, or if it is a ploy by the media manufacturers to sell more expensive equipment and drive ticket prices up.

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