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Comment Re:All your accounts are belong to us. (Score 1) 251

I am too. I noticed recently youtube has a picture it scraped up from a google+ account I never consented to be made, never told it to use, and really it's a mystery where it came from or who it is. But it's now me, and I cant get rid of it. Might just delete my youtube account as a result.

Google used to be useful but lately it's about the creepiest thing on the web (for me, at least, since I can and do avoid facebook entirely.)

Comment Hard to do (Score 2) 259

I have never been able to stand running Ubuntu for more than a few minutes to begin with.

Now it's gone from technically awful to actively evil, it would be nice to be able to switch away as a statement, but that would require actually using it to start with.

Comment Re:Throttle by Wire is more than just assembly (Score 1) 610

"So then don't do a sloppy implementation, and reap the benefits."

You think simply designing a technically superior product would allow me to compete with the big automotive manufacturers around the world? Are you dreaming?

I could tell you how to do it in general terms but it involves a lot of very painstaking work by some top dollar professionals. The auto companies have the funds to do it, but they arent going to devote those funds to the job unless the liability is calculated as exceeding the cost. Which is obviously not the case at present.

Comment Re:Mozilla is not free (Score 0, Flamebait) 173

"Disclaimer: I work for an ad company."

Stop breathing. Seriously. You're wasting oxygen that something more useful, like a cockroach, could be breathing.

"Fearing the loss of third party cookies (which IMO is not that much of a privacy issue)"

Your opinion is not relevant.

"ad companies were forced to develop alternative methods to track people."

No. No one is forcing you to track people, full stop. It's a matter of choosing to be evil.

"Granted, it is not as effective (in the same scope) as third party cookies, but the added benefit of being able to track users across devices - if approximately - gives then an edge over the old methods"

It's less effective for now and breaking it completely will be the next item on the agenda of whitehats worldwide.

Comment Re:Pay for bug fixes? (Score 1) 109

The contributors that are scratching their own itch are one group - the users who dont code are another. The first is only serving the second in the sense of letting them have whatever is useful to them at no cost - which is significant - but they still go in the direction that suits them, fix what bothers them, leave unfixed what does not. Which is only fair - they are donating their time.

But many people use free software without actually being coders at the appropriate level to alter every piece of software they rely on. And their needs are not always met by the results of the coders scratching their own itches. Very often they would be happy to pay small fees to see the things that are more important to them addressed, and often there are enough of them that feel that way to pay a freelancer decently to do the work, at least in theory.

Hooking the two groups up effectively is hard though. This is the latest in a long series of attempts to do so. I am hoping it is successful.

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