Forgot your password?

typodupeerror

Comment: Re:How (Score 1) 231

by mattventura (#43908255) Attached to: Beer Fridge Caught Interfering With Cellular Network
A small device like a cell phone or wifi card might transmit around 1W and receive at orders of magnitude lower than that. Now think about how much power a fridge uses. Hint: It's a lot more than 1W. It's obviously not all going to go into RFI, but a faulty motor with a spark gap could still produce a (relatively) significant amount of radio waves.

Comment: Re:Too good? I think not (Score 4, Insightful) 397

by mattventura (#43814811) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: When Is the User Experience Too Good?
I think the real problem with warning messages is that they're so overused that people ignore them. If UI designers had saved warning messages for things that were actually important ("You're about to delete a file") rather than stupid things ("You are loading a web page with unsecured elements") then people might actually pay attention to them.

Hell, back when Vista first came out I had to go through FOUR, yes four UAC dialogs to create a folder in program files and rename it.

Comment: Re:Sounds reasonable to me. (Score 4, Informative) 573

by mattventura (#43813195) Attached to: FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month
In TFS, it makes it seem like Verizon complained to him because he was running servers which are generally against the ToS of residential plans, rather than the excessive bandwidth usage. The excessive usage may have been what triggered the phone call (so they could figure out what was actually going on), but it was ToS violations that were the issue at hand.

Comment: Re:Nintendo's Right, but being Jerks about it... (Score 1) 297

The LPers put work into their videos. Nintendo made the game and sold it for profit (not to mention free publicity from videos). So previously, Nintendo and the video producer both put some effort into it, and were both rewarded. Now the LPers not only had to pay for the game, but had to produce the video and are now getting zero revenue out of it. Nintendo just wants to have their cake and eat it too.

Comment: Re:Desperate times? (Score 1) 297

It's not a sign of them running out of money. It's business as usual. Just because a company has X amount of money doesn't mean they don't want to make more. Companies would ALWAYS like to make more money.
Besides, I'm 99% certain Nintendo isn't the first company to do this. I recall hearing about some of the scummier game companies doing this.

Comment: Re:Eoin McKeugh just became immortal. . . . (Score 1) 243

by mattventura (#43743875) Attached to: Irish Judge Orders 'The Internet' To Delete Video
That's not how the DMCA works. Under the safe harbor provision, if they comply with the takedown notice, you can't sue them for it. The only time he would be able to sue people is if they refuse to take the video down.
For that matter, why would the DMCA even apply here? This is an issue of libel, not copyright.

What the world *really* needs is a good Automatic Bicycle Sharpener.

Working...