Comment Re:Interesting Spin in the Summary (Score 1) 416
you do realize that selling ads to small markets makes no sense?
you do realize that selling ads to small markets makes no sense?
what? public kiosks? it's 2010. in 5 years most of the country will have a multicore computer with 4g wireless in their pocket and you think people will want to stand around and use a shared computer? why? to do what?
I mean, yeah, there's some spin in this article. But i've seen far far worse on slashdot. It makes a huge leap from "will apple actually do it" to "will people start installing linux" which is fairly preposterous. But it seems clear that apple is at least contemplating a version of iAds for the desktop space. and it might be something some subset of users would tolerate or embrace. However, it's kind of fanboish to just dismiss the question with some crazy kiosk talk and a "no big deal" defense of ads.
honestly though, i think the important question here is: if they have desktop iAds will they start a desktop app store? now THAT would be a big change for the consumer desktop world.
A newspaper, on the other hand, doesn't really want that and doesn't want to dedicate its services and infrastructure to hosting shouting matches.
uh...have you seen any of the opinion pages of the major papers? but, all kidding aside you're right. but at the same time so many of these outlets (especially smaller ones) have simple flat comments. even a moderately advanced system (with threads and some kind of reputation based promotion) would help solve a very large portion of the comment problems.
but charging a one time $1 fee isn't that bad of an idea.
I'm pretty sure that quote actually addresses the IP rights to the codecs and not the content.
However, DRM is probably a concern. But that doesn't explain why they'd exclude other codecs.
i'm a little tipsy and some of the grammar and specifics i screwed up. but the general point is valid: apple dominates the mobile app market.
Actually, in terms of dollars Apple does have a pretty strong monopoly on mobile application sales. Yeah, Android is closing the gap in terms of amount of apps Apple still completely dominates in terms of revenue. So much so that in 2009 99.4% of all the dollars spent mobile application purchases went through apples store. http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2010/01/apple-responsible-for-994-of-mobile-app-sales-in-2009.ars
it's in cydia.
yet at least. so far all of the "ad blockers" i've seen don't actually block ads. they just hide them. they still use your bandwidth. their code is still rendered.
from what i understand the devs dont (yet?) have to tools necessary to actually block elements. they can only hide them. which kind of rules out the possibility of any legitimate noscript equivalent. which is more important than an adblocker.
yeah, i got that notice too. i'm a little disappointed. I was hoping to pay them extra if/when they decided to stop providing my area with service.
not quite. the "quintessential" definition of a hackintosh is intalling OSX on retail PC (as opposed to mac) hardware. this guy used a real mac mobo. so, basically he just modded a mac into a linksys case. not quite a hackintosh. also, not quite news.
i tell people to get macs. not because they won't cause frustration (perhaps not quite so much yes) but because when i do get the support call i can simply say "sorry, i dont support macs"
yeah also note that cbs/last.fm only deny handing over "user info" which is seems like a carefully constructed statement. how exactly do they define "user info?" it implies that they have handed over some info.
it's probably DOA. no sponsor in the senate yet. so call/write/harass your nys senator to sponsor the bill.
also there's now the nys senate is now on twitter http://twitter.com/nysenate. so send them a tweet saying you want an open source tax credit.
or i could just use bittorrent for free. and as an added bonus i dont have to search for
less traceable?
i dont know about you but every ISP i've ever had has horrible NNTP retention rates. and now most ISPs are cutting usenet hosting completely.
so, if you want a good retention rate you have to PAY for a 3rd party service. at which point you've handed over you name, address and billing info. i guess it's not "traceable" because they're not tracing you so much as you've just put your name on a list.
Memory fault - where am I?