Comment Re:All-fronts attack (Score 1) 250
Comment Re:Open wi-fi should be perfectly legal (Score 1) 250
Comment Re:Depends (Score 1) 250
Comment Re:Srsly? (Score 1) 250
Comment Re:Depends (Score 1) 250
Comment Re:Depends (Score 1) 250
Comment Re:Depends (Score 2, Interesting) 250
Comment Re:Depends (Score 1) 250
Problem is that people who provide services have long been held liable for the actions of people using those services. The precedent is here.
If someone is in your place of business, and they get hurt by another customer, you can be heald liable.
It may not be right, but it is the way that it is. There is precedent.
If you make your Wi-Fi completely open, and someone uses it for a crime, then you are liable. You should have secured your network better.
Comment Re:!smallstep (Score 1) 597
Linux/WINE/Word is hardly the answer.
Wine/Word is just asking for a crash to begin with. It is just never quite right.
Comment Re:Strange leap in logic... (Score 1) 597
From there, it's but a small step to realizing that they can also walk away from Windows completely
No way. I'm as huge a unix and Free Software proponent as anyone here, but even I can see that statement is utterly idiotic. The motivation to stay with XP is the desire to not change.
Part of the problem with people who are trying to encourage/push businesses to switch to Linux is that they are targeting the wrong audience.
I agree here, unless there is a real motivating factor involved and established business should not change their OS midstream without a great deal of thought and consideration.
The proper target audience for this kind of effort is NEW businesses. Those guys who are at the startup level and are going to have to lay down the cash for training either way.
Don't target the guys who have already blown their startup training budget and have fourty grand worth of equipment and software already devoted to one general setup.
Target the guy who is about to make that move. If you point out that training costs are going to be about the same either way, but that he could save a fortune on the software he might be motivated to go the Linux or Unix route.
You have to be able to aproach the issue with solid, practical information. If the company is already highly invested in their current system then it is not practical to switch to something totaly different unless there is a dire need to do so.