Comment Re: Yes Microsoft (Score 1) 23
"So when Microsoft continually abused their monopolistic control of 90% of the PC market, they were let off the hook"
Apple has not actually been punished yet. They still have the opportunity to pay a bribe.
"So when Microsoft continually abused their monopolistic control of 90% of the PC market, they were let off the hook"
Apple has not actually been punished yet. They still have the opportunity to pay a bribe.
"just allow side loading like mac os and alot of issues go away."
"Not really. If you aren't on the App Store your sales will take a hit."
Uh, you think the sales of apps which most users cannot now load on their devices will go down?
"Android makers are whining when they already own the biggest slice of the pie?"
They do not in the US, which is what this story is about.
IDGAF, I scarcely use gimp any more due to the interface still being shit even after they allegedly improved it.
I'm a VZ prepaid customer in the US and I get unlimited text.
The argument against SMS is way overblown. For it to work an attacker would not only have to gain access to your account details but also spoof your phone on the phone network. Possible? Yes, likely? Unless a nation state is after you - no.
Actually, it's a pretty common strategy for breaking into the accounts of celebrities. It usually involves convincing someone who works for one of the phone companies that you've gotten a new phone, i.e. they already have enough personal info from you to impersonate you to the phone company. And then after that, all your accounts fall like a house of cards.
It's not less capable than any old M chip.
Got any actual points?
Hurr durr both sides durr hurr
Don't go back and forth with them. Just go to your credit card company. They need to learn.
Luckily little requires it so far. Unfortunately GNOME is going all in which means GTK is going to become a problem. So now if you want to avoid the fuckery you have to find Qt based replacements for that stuff. Sigh.
"the problem (with Android) is that browser based password managers barely work for anything outside of the browser due to how poorly Android is designed to allow this to function."
This is one of the few parts of Firefox on Android that has been reliable for me...
I only skimmed the article, but am I the only person who thinks that, if we had a situation or field of diagnosis where doctors were only getting it right 20% of the time, we would throw some research/education/analysis at it? Because 20% correct (or 80% incorrect) seems kinda concerning and I would think would lead to a lot of brouhaha or lawsuits? Maybe it's just me.
I'm assuming this is based on edge cases, e.g. medical images where cancer was just barely starting to appear, situations where lupus is mistaken for rheumatoid arthritis, etc., in which case the human rate of correct diagnosis could indeed be very low, precisely because they were chosen from cases where humans had made mistakes before.
If that is the case, then the question becomes whether the model is over-trained on these edge cases and would generate false positives, would miss obvious diagnoses, etc.
You're arguing with someone who's given you millions of dollars over decades about a single 2-dollar missing component on a massive order they made? You're insane. They're just going to go elsewhere. It's not even worth the time on the phone call to argue it.
You're assuming companies don't understand that. What you're missing is that the companies that do this tend to be the companies that have their customers over a barrel. You have a choice in where to buy random stuff online. You don't have much choice in airlines. Only a few companies go to both of the airports that you need to fly between. They can screw you as much as they want, and unless you're prepared to lawyer up, you're gonna accept whatever they give you and like it, or you're not gonna fly, because they're all approximately equally horrible.
Ultimately, the reason for bad customer service is that the customer has no power. Short of a class action, you're not going to change their behavior, and they usually write their contracts to make class actions hard. And governments are thoroughly in the pockets of these big corporations, so they're not going to do anything about the problems, either. And there's no competition, because a few big companies have cornered the market, in part because of high cost of entering the market, which in turn, is often because of high regulatory burden. But those regulations are essential for preventing other problems, e.g. safety issues, so removing the regulations won't help, either.
The right fix is to separate the customer-facing organization from the safety-critical organization. Have a few companies that own fleets of airplanes, and a hundred companies that rent planes from those companies and fly them and sell tickets. With that organizational model, all of these problems go away, because the customer-facing orgs have a low barrier to entry, so you'll tend to end up with companies competing to provide the best service at the best price, with some focusing on higher-tier service, and come focusing on lower prices, but everybody knowing that if they screw up, you'll go with one of a hundred other companies. And you'll get a higher diversity of routes, and you'll have aggregators combining routes from multiple airlines, etc.
Unfortunately, we won't see this, because regulators aren't interested in breaking up oligopolies these days.
Yeah, I once looked into them and got sticker shock
Almost anything derogatory you could say about today's software design would be accurate. -- K.E. Iverson