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Comment: Re:Nothing (Score 3, Informative) 879

by Lord Byron II (#38578822) Attached to: What's Keeping You On XP?

But Microsoft doesn't want to deal with this. With the release of Windows 8, they will have four (semi-)separate code bases (XP, Vista, 7, 8) to keep secure. That's a coding nightmare that nobody wants. If Microsoft can get everyone on the same OS, then their costs of producing patches drops to a quarter of what it once was.

Touchscreen device for the elderly?

Submitted by Lord Byron II
Lord Byron II writes "My grandma is in her 80's, is bed-ridden, in a nursing home, and is basically reaching the end of her life. Her legs are weak, meaning that she is confined to her bed, and her hearing is pretty much gone. Her sight is good and her mental facilities are still there, but even so, she spends most of her days just watching daytime TV, like the Price is Right and talk shows. The family has tasked me with finding her an easy-to-use, not overly expensive device that would mentally challenge her. Ideally, I would like to get something iPad like so that she could play card games and such. But the Internet connectivity and advanced features are completely unnecessary. Is there a simple device that will let her easily play some games?"

Comment: Content creation (Score 3, Insightful) 511

by Lord Byron II (#37303534) Attached to: Laptops In the Classroom Don't Increase Grades

You don't become a great artist by looking at great paintings. You get there by painting all the time. You don't become a mathematician by watching the instructor. You get there by doing the homework. You don't become a famous author by reading Jane Austin and Mark Twain. You get there by writing.

In every case, the thing you must do is create content. However, that's almost impossible on tablets (no keyboard), hard on laptops (small keyboard, no real mouse), and even slightly challenging on desktops (ever try typing out a complex mathematical equation in Latex?).

Today's latest and greatest systems (I'm looking at you, iPad) are really geared toward content consumption, not creation. We should focus more on making it easy for kids to express themselves and then give them the tools that do that.

Comment: Re:Warranty (Score 4, Insightful) 244

by Lord Byron II (#37093784) Attached to: Sandy Bridge-E CPUs Too Hot For Intel?

Is this really such a big deal? I've used third-party high end cooling solutions for over a decade now and I always buy tray-only CPUs. I buy AMD and I can usually find the processor I want without the heatsink and fan. Are things that different from Intel?

I say it's a great change. How many stock fans and heatsinks will be saved from gathering dust because of this? How much waste will this reduce? Plus it will put $10-15 in someone's pocket (probably Intel's).

Comment: Re:China? (Score 3, Informative) 403

by Lord Byron II (#37056150) Attached to: UK To Shut Down Social Networks?

Asking shouldn't make it right either. I know I'm saying this through U.S.-colored glasses, but free speech is a fundamental human right and no one should ever be expected to give it up.

More to the point, the problem here isn't social media, rather it is that the police feel its okay to shoot kids and the kids feel its okay to loot and riot. Both of which can occur just as well with or without social media.

Comment: Re:ZSNES is perfect (Score 1) 227

by Lord Byron II (#37047508) Attached to: A Quest For the Perfect SNES Emulator

"That seems like the wrong approach. How about emulating the hardware, and running the Xbox OS from a hard disk image (or real xbox hard drive)?"

But now you're talking about copyright infringement. I know it's ironic since what most emulators are used for, but still, requiring an emulator to use a copied ROM would just get you a nice lawsuit from the gents at Microsoft.

In Greene, New York, it is illegal to eat peanuts and walk backwards on the sidewalks when a concert is on.

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