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Comment Re:Mists of Dailyquestia (Score 1) 204

They whined about not having the option to do more. The trouble now is that people feel like it's mandatory to do more than before. So they switched from not having the option of how many quests you do to not having the option of how many quests you do. People don't like feeling that they absolutely have to do X amount of quests a day if they want to stay relevant. Esp on a week day. People like the option to do more on their days off but that doesn't mean they want to always do more in their after-work time. So it's not about the upper hard cap it's about the softer minimum cap being too high for those that work for a living.

In previous expansions dailies didn't unlock content and gear to the extent they they do now.

Having said that, I don't feel it's that bad especially if you take advantage of the "massively online" part of WoW and group up. Dailies really do go fast in a group.

Comment Re:Mists of Dailyquestia (Score 1) 204

It's worse still if you play as a tank or healer. DPS players can at least blitz through individual enemies quite quickly. As a tank or healer, the health pools for enemies take so long to chip down that the daily quest grind can actually take hours. Plus the daily quests are tied into the valor point system, so unless you are a hardcore raider, you're more or less tied into continuing with daily quest grinds even after you max out your reputation. JOY!

Two things. 1. Blizzard has made it easier than ever to respec. 2. MASSIVELY ONLINE. Get some buddies to run with. If you don't have any in your guild or whatever, spam general chat as you are picking up the quests. "Heals LFG daily quests" I get invited almost instantly on pvp realms. The DPSers never have to stop... if there's PvP it results in major pwnage and fun. You may even make a new friend.

I know there's a tenancy to want to solo all the content you can... but it's not necessary. You don't have to compete for the same quest mobs. Blizzard even reworked the "loot x many items" quests so that you don't have to collect x many for each player in the group. If a creature drops a quest item, everyone in the group can loot it. That is to say, adding more to the group doesn't increase the amount you need to kill.

If we can queue for random BGs, random dungeons, random raids, random scenarios... don't you think you have acquired at least some tolerance for having random players in your party? If someone is in the area doing the same thing as you... just send an invite. Makes it quick easy and encourages your faction to work together. "Boring and repetitive daily quests" everyone says... group up and it you won't find them so boring... even if you do you'll find that you move through them fast enough that it's not such a big deal.

Comment Re:No platform is 100 percent secure? (Score 1) 299

Go back and read your post. You were talking about how different versions of "Apache, MySQL, PHP" would make a difference. Routers might be running different software than desktops but that doesn't seem to be what you were talking about. You were talking about running different versions of the same software.

Comment Re:No platform is 100 percent secure? (Score 1) 299

Linux and UNIX in general was designed from the start to be secure.

No they weren't. That's something that happened over time. SE Linux and its competitors are basically bolt on security that came after the fact.

Note: I'm not saying anything about how secure Linux is secure today. I'm just saying that it wasn't a design goal from the start.

Comment Re:No platform is 100 percent secure? (Score 1) 299

Yes and no. What versions of Linux are those machines running? What versions of Apache, MySQL, PHP are they running? Very few Linux installs have common attack vectors.

It's not that uncommon to find vulnerabilities that span multiple versions. Some vulnerabilities go unnoticed for a long time. There are often large parts of software that go unchanged for many years. This isn't an open vs closed source thing either. Version numbers often change faster than the bulk of the code. Having different versions doesn't make you immune. It really is not that uncommon for a security advisory to be issued against many versions of a product.

Version numbers != obscurity.

Comment Re:No platform is 100 percent secure? (Score 1) 299

More like Linux still doesn't have the market share to warrent spending significant time developing malware for it.

Windows' market share hasn't changed in a significant way. Yet, their security has improved. Clearly the secureness of a software product is independent of its market share.

Having a larger market share only means that there will be more attempts. It doesn't say jack shit about how successful those attempts will be. You can't use market share to say much of anything about the security of a product. It doesn't work. It's folklore.

Comment Re:Terrible editing culture (Score 0, Troll) 248

Link to the history of your unspecified articles or you're a troll. 90% of comments like yours are exaggerated and based off of the perception granted by listening to the internet echo chamber. Your post is devoid supporting evidence and sounds like an echo to me.

I'm not saying this type of thing doesn't happen. I'm saying that I doubt you've participated in Wikipedia enough to make such a wide generalization. What did you do to try to resolve the issue?

Comment Re:Interesting bug, but don't get excited. (Score 1) 249

You are not running this kernel on your server or workstation unless you are a dev, it hasn't filtered through to distros yet.

I'm a crazy, bad ass, rebel that uses ArchLinux for my workstation. Living wild and dangerous, I reclessly shutdown my heathen ext4 computer every night. I feel like I'm that evil mayhem guy on the Allstate commercials. RECALCULATING!

Comment Re:how long (Score 1) 152

YES!!!! I finally feel like a real bad ass running systems with *only* 1 or 2g of RAM!

Seriously, Firefox is fine on small machines too. That means that it's not an issue on an average machine or big machines (which will be average soon enough). Also, most articles comparing browsers show that Firefox is competitive with other browsers WRT memory usage. You kids just need to find something else to bitch about that's all.

You memory trolls are starting to sound as stupid as the version number trolls.

Comment Re:Damn Distrowatch (Score 1) 120

It's a decent measure for what people are curious about. I have to admit every time I consider switching distributions or am trying to find a specialized distribution for a project, I usually end up there. It may not be a good estimate for what people are actually using, but it is still an interesting measure of what people are looking at.

It's not an absolute, but if you look that the top of the list... the interesting and relevant distributions are all at the top. You'd probably have a hard time arguing that any distribution in Distrowatch's top 10 isn't decently relevant. While it might not be an accurate indicator of absolute popularity, it's not all that useless to look at either.

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