Comment: Re:Practical Implications? (Score 1) 535
Comment: Helps with Product Leaks Too (Score 1) 266
+ - Google: Microsoft Not Driving Consumer Revolution->
Link to Original Source
+ - Cell phone link to brain cancer overhyped?->
Link to Original Source
Comment: Re:In other words (Score 1) 200
Comment: Re:In other words (Score 2) 200
+ - Intel to integrate Thunderbolt into Ivy Bridge->
Link to Original Source
Comment: Re:Is Google becoming AOL? (Score 1) 417
AOL was an ISP. It was easy to copy and improve on AOL's early business model and ISPs become a community in a very short time. Even today, no one wants to become a "dump pipe," just look at how the cable companies and cellular networks try to protect their turf with long term contracts and bundling their data service with something else (TV, movie, phone, etc.) AOL didn't know how to evolve, AOL died.
Google is an advertiser/data miner. It is very hard to copy or capture Google's data. Google's business model is secure because of extreme high cost to enter the market. The only thing Google has to worry about is users giving their data to someone else. That is why they made Android and Chrome; prevents MS and Yahoo from gathering user data. Facebook, not Apple, is the only real threat to Google.
Comment: Is Google becoming AOL? (Score 2) 417
If memory serves me right, didn't the early versions of AOL work a similar way as the Chrome browser? A user types in a keyword into the AOL broswer and AOL matched the keyword with a URL, website pops up. A user types a keyword in Chrome and Chrome searches your history or uses Google's search engine to match the keyword with a URL, website pops up. I know you can change the search engines in Chrome but the end result is the same; the user doesn't have to know how the Internet works to use the Internet.
History repeats itself.
Comment: Apple is a hardware company (Score 2) 95
Comment: Re:Hmm... (Score 1) 399
Comment: Re:"doesn't have a USB or HDMI port" (Score 1) 161
+ - Apple Moves to Tighten Control of App Store->
Some application developers, including Sony, say Apple has told them they can no longer sell e-books within their apps unless the transactions go through Apple’s system. Apple rejected Sony’s iPhone application, which would have let people buy and read e-books from the Sony Reader Store.
Apple said on Tuesday that it was still allowing customers to read e-books they bought elsewhere within apps. For example, a Sony app could still access books the customer bought earlier from Sony’s store.
But Steve Haber, president of Sony’s digital reading division, said on Monday that Apple had told his company that from now on, all in-app purchases would have to go through Apple.
“It’s the opposite of what we wanted to bring to the market,” Mr. Haber said. “We always wanted to bring the content to as many devices as possible, not one device to one store.”"
Link to Original Source
How To Replace FileVault With EncFS 65
from the for-secretive-tweakers dept.