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Comment Hey look! An Ebay Auction. (Score 4, Insightful) 114

I hate to be that guy, but is this marketing spam? I mean, it's not like it's some lost version of the game or some unreleased sequel. Its a late prototype of a widely released game that may or may not have the exact same ROM on it as the one that shipped. Rare? Yes. Interesting to anyone other than an high level (read:obsessive) collector? I doubt it.

Comment Good Luck (Score 5, Insightful) 123

Putting an end to Gamestop's business model is exactly what the publishers intended to do when they started moving to digital downloads. Add to that the DMCA which makes it illegal to circumvent such practices and the non-existence of the right of first sale for digital goods and Gamestop is up a creek without a paddle. And as much as I dislike Gamestop, so are we.

Comment Re:It's still a Dell. (Score 1) 218

No doubt that ASUS has no reputation for good customer service -- but I've been fortunate enough to not have to deal with them, yet. That said, Dell's consumer level CS is incredibly bad too. Their business class CS, however, was, as of last year, still really solid. I wouldn't hesitate to buy a Dell server, or even a desktop for employees, but I wouldn't touch their laptops with a ten foot pole. After all, the best warranty is the one you never use.

Comment It's still a Dell. (Score 1, Informative) 218

I'll be honest, I haven't given a Dell laptop a serious look in years, but I handled tons of them through the late 2000's and the build quality was so poor that I really don't even look at their equipment anymore when picking a laptop for myself or someone else. I don't know if they've changed recently, but I haven't heard anyone make that claim. It doesn't matter to me what OS ships with the hardware if the hardware itself is flimsy. A laptop that won't bend, crack or break at the hinges within a few weeks is worth a $50 premium, IMO.
I actually feel that Asus and Toshiba build much nicer laptops at about the same price point, but I'm sure someone will disagree (after all, this is /.)

Comment Re:Best use of space in clamshell? NOT (Score 1) 135

There's this pesky thing called physics that likes to get in the way: Namely, your device will be topheavy to the point of being unwieldy for non table use. The brilliance of the top containing only the screen is that it makes the thing balanced. I suppose you could put some additional stuff in the clamshell top. Ideally, the SSD, since it is a "low bandwidth" device (compared to a GPU or RAM) and requires only a few traces to be added to the cable running between the halves.

Comment Cable TV anyone? (Score 5, Insightful) 204

Not to point out the rotting dead fish in the middle of the room, but this is exactly what happened with cable TV, and yet there is no real outrage on that front any more. I'm not saying it's the right thing...or even "acceptable" but customers seem to never balk at ads, and content streamers never turn down a revenue stream. It feels almost inevitable.

Comment Re:We're gonna lose a lot. (Score 1) 636

The concern isn't that people won't have access to personal computing power, it's that the power of customizability will go away. How many generations of geeks have been raised at this point because, when they discovered that they wanted to get under the hood of their home PC, all they had to do was download a free IDE or install a free OS, with no non-technical hoops to jump through or laws to worry about skirting. That freedom is something that, as a society, we cannot afford to lose.

Comment Re:More data needed. (Score 1) 707

Of course it's not sufficient. What leader will fight if he has nothing to gain, and more importantly, expects to lose?

And, it should go without saying: People can be wrong. Both about thinking that they will win, and can take into account irrelevant factors like "guts" or "purity", and that they have something to gain (e.g. irrational concepts like "honor" or "pride"), but in modern, literate societies those factors are less common and less prevalent, varying from society to society and individual to individual.

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