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Comment: Re:Unbelievable (Score 1) 330

by Dogtanian (#40121161) Attached to: Hacked Bitcoin Financial Site Had No Backups

Retrieval of that free backup costs a whopping $25.

Think about that statement for a minute...

Backup is free. Retrieving said free backup is what costs you.

Which means... it's not free.

For what it's worth, I knew exactly what you were trying to get that when you said "think about that statement for a minute" the first time.

But you *do* get the backup for free, it's the restoration you pay for. I'm aware that you probably think this sounds like disingenuous pedantry, but the evidence that the "free" backup isn't valueless is that... you try getting your data back from a faulty hard drive *without* a backup and you'll be damn lucky to get some (or any) of it back for $25!

Comment: Re:Ah fearing VCRs (Score 1) 46

by Dogtanian (#40120311) Attached to: Court Ruling Shuts Down Australian Cloud TV Recorders

That's not what's wrong with the idea at all. Many early VCRs didn't record, they were VCPs...

I might be wrong, but I'm not aware of player-only machines having been a significant percentage of the market, at least not when the mass market was taking off in the late 70s. I'd have thought that- aside from the fact that the mechanics would be almost the same- that the technology required to create a playback-only head would be only marginally less complex than one that could record.

DVD players aren't as good a comparison because they were *much* cheaper than late-70s/early-80s VCRs (in real terms) during the early-2000s, which was around the time they *really* exploded in popularity (i.e. sub-£100 in the UK, and rapidly falling even further versus around ten times that price for a VCR in late 70s terms).

Interesting that you mention DVD recorders being bought by old people because they worked like a VCR, because I made a similar comment about how (and why) they had some popularity a few years back but were ultimately a red herring. Namely that DVD recorders were based on a new, digital technology yet the mode of operation was similar enough to the VCR that anyone used to that way of doing things would see the DVD recorder as its natural successor. But this misses the point that in the digital age you only really need DVDs if you plan on archiving and 90% of VCR recording was just timeshifting, so the PVR is the better choice for those people- they just had to have time to make the paradigm shift of not having lots of tapes and discs and the like.

It didn't help that in practice, DVD recorders had annoying (and pointless) complexities that VCRs didn't, like media compatibility, finalising discs and the like.

Comment: Re:Ah fearing VCRs (Score 1) 46

by Dogtanian (#40114923) Attached to: Court Ruling Shuts Down Australian Cloud TV Recorders
This assumes that people would have been willing to pay the same (or very close) for a playback-only videocassette machine instead of one that could record. I doubt removing the latter facility would have decreased the cost by that much.

Remember that when they first came out, home video recorders were very expensive by modern standards, and in part it was probably the mass market that helped to drive the price down in the first place. Chicken and egg. A playback-only machine, even if marginally cheaper, would have been a much harder sell.

Comment: Re:Or what? (Score 1) 345

Of course, let's not also forget the World War II bomber [the Sunday Sport reported they had] found up there.

I remember when the story broke (in the Sunday Sport) that a London Routemaster bus had been discovered there. They had pictures as well.

They reported that a bus had been found at the South Pole, but I couldn't find one about a bus on the moon. Perhaps you're confusing the two somewhat similar stories, or maybe they did another?

Comment: Re:Or what? (Score 1) 345

Also, don't forget the bodies of the two astronauts killed by those escaped Kryptonian criminals.

Speaking of "don't mess with our stuff", was it Superman II (Zod and friends) or Superman IV (Nuclear Man) where he had a fight with the baddies and the American flag got knocked over, then (spoiler follows *cough*) when he inevitably won, he put the flag back up?

Of course, let's not also forget the World War II bomber they found up there.

Comment: Re:That's great and all but... (Score 2) 96

by Dogtanian (#40094855) Attached to: <em>Minecraft</em> Mod Adds Emulated 6502 Processor

No. But you'd know that if you had bothered to look up what a 6502 was [wikipedia.org].

Except that this is Doom we're talking about, and despite its x86-centric origins, it's been ported to just about every damn platform in existence. So there's probably a version out there for a 6502-based machine, along with others for the Intel 4004, the the Colossus and for a half-broken abacus some guy found on a skip.

Though in the case of the abacus, you do need floating-point beads apparently.

Comment: Re:Sweet (Score 3, Interesting) 313

by Dogtanian (#40093983) Attached to: Return of the Vacuum Tube

Now I can have a tube amp in my mp3 player.

Well, they released a motherboard around a decade back with integrated vacuum tube based audio.

I remembered this as being a separate soundcard, but I couldn't find reference to anything like that online, so I might have been wrong. Still, given that onboard audio isn't- or at least wasn't back then- generally considered to be the best (i.e. not what the audiophiles would have gone for), this seems like a strange mix. As if the valve/tube-based PCI card wouldn't have been weird enough, mind you. :-)

The heart is not a logical organ. -- Dr. Janet Wallace, "The Deadly Years", stardate 3479.4

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