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Comment: Re:Hate to put a damper on the celebration (Score 1) 594

by Grismar (#40011343) Attached to: <em>Diablo III</em> Released

Your remark begs the question whether my country would actually extradite someone for a copyright infringement or something of the sort.

Actually, I seriously doubt any country would, unless it's an excuse to extradite someone who cannot be extradited on other grounds. So, no, U.S. law does not apply everywhere and most people get by fine without ever visiting the U.S.

Comment: Re:Death Valley (Score 2, Interesting) 90

by Grismar (#39839479) Attached to: NASA's Interactive Flood Maps

Actually, the Dutch water defenses can take quite a bit and do so regularly when storm surges occur. Of course, when a storm surge would come on top of a sea level increase of 1m overall, that would cause flooding sooner, at least temporarily.

However, this lame website simply colors every bit of land that just happens to be below the set level and ignores any defense that would keep the water out, even at the lower settings. It's utter bollocks and I'm betting it's only there to generate ad revenue. Oh /., how sad to see you slip into senility.. (not directed at parent, but at the so-called editors that decided this should run)

Comment: Apples and Oranges (Score 1) 366

by Grismar (#39617287) Attached to: Google Earns $2 Per Handset; Apple, $575
It's not a fair comparison, unless the point is that it is more profitable to sell the OS and the brand as well as the hardware. No surprise there, if you can make it work and Apple deserves the credit for pulling it off - though I still won't have any of their stuff. A fair comparison would be to make an estimate of the profit made by HTC, Samsung, Motorola, Asus, etc. on the sale of Android devices, combined with the profit made by Google off the platform. Looking at it that way, Android is likely to generate a lot more profit than iOS, just not for a single company. If Apple were to split into a hardware and a software and services company, which one would generate the most profit: the hardware one, or the software and services one? I would bet the hardware part, assuming that nothing else changes and they maintain a closed platform between the two. Google is on the software side of things, though that is slowly changing since their acquisition of Motorola Mobility.

Comment: You're lucky (Score 1) 523

by Grismar (#38206996) Attached to: How Does a Self-Taught Computer Geek Get Hired?

.. because you picked web development as a field. So if you're willing to work for a little less (or nothing) for a bit, you can get a decent portfolio of good looking websites out there. The portfolio will speak for itself if you document used technology and interesting background on your own website.

And I'm saying you're lucky because if you were a Java developer writing middleware or working basically any other development job out of immediate view, you'd have a hard time showing off your work without it being free and open.

Comment: Good thing too (Score 1) 172

by Grismar (#38095670) Attached to: New Study Finds People Remember More Than They Think

If my brain is only 80% sure that a remembered fact is accurate, I'm glad the result is "I don't know" when I try to remember it. People don't "remember more than they think", but the brain apparently stores a lot of junk that doesn't meet it's built-in (or trained) criteria for proper remembrance. Big surprise there...

What would be interesting is to see how the level of certainty needed to remember something changes over time and whether it is actually something that is taught or inherently built into the brain's structure.

Comment: Re:You still need iPhone 4S (Score 1) 403

by Grismar (#38058790) Attached to: Siri Protocol Cracked

I think the flaw in this plan lies in getting that app to run on a million iPhone's whilst maintaining your anonymity as a developer...

Unless you consider yourself the digital equivalent of a digital suicide bomber and considering getting sued into a hole in the ground is worth it if it gets a few million iPhone IDs out there. Even though Apple will be selling all those iPhone owners the next model in a year or so.

Comment: Not just about myself (Score 1) 1880

by Grismar (#38046632) Attached to: What's Keeping You On Windows?

What's keeping me on on Windows myself is the same as many people here: games. The fact that consoles are a decent alternative for some games and other games are now available on Mac or Linux-based alternatives is inconsequential. Some games I really like to play are Windows-PC only. And besides, I have a lot of older games on that platform that I don't feel like throwing out yet, nor do I feel thrilled at trying to get them to work in another environment. Games are for exactly those moments in which I do not want to be bothered with system administration issues.

But apart from that obvious one, my wife is also on Windows and I don' t like the added overhead from having different OSes in the same network, requiring me to keep different types of systems up to date and working. I know it can all work nicely together and in the past I've put in the effort, but right now ease of use is a serious factor.

And then there's customers. Since my customers use Windows on the desktop almost exclusively, I will always need to be able to develop for Windows and test on Windows; so the laptop I use for work runs Windows. I also like the fact that I can quickly identify with problems they have and use everyday experience to help solve their problems instead of having to turn them down with a smug "I don't have that problem because I am on Linux/Max OS" (which is what I see colleagues do and which is why my phone rings when the customer needs someone for whatever).

As far as licensing goes, it's not so bad. I only have two boxes that I paid a Windows license for (a gaming rig and a media center). All the other devices either come with pre-configured Linux-versions installed (like my NAS and a firewall/webserver/mediaserver as well as my routers) or our bosses paid for the proper licenses.

I used to regret not being able to use some of my favorite software on Linux, but free solutions for virtual machines and the maturity of CygWin have solved that problem as well. With stuff like Gimp, InkScape, etc. etc. working just as well on Windows, there is little or no practical reason to switch, just ideological ones.

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