Comment Re:A shot at other OS, computer *and* device maker (Score 2) 471
I love how people don't price in size, weight, or battery life. Those things are free, right?
They aren't free, but for lots of people they're less expensive than money.
I love how people don't price in size, weight, or battery life. Those things are free, right?
They aren't free, but for lots of people they're less expensive than money.
They don't have anything in the cheap $400 range because they don't make cheap.
They don't have anything (IMO) for the enthusiast desktop user. The iMacs are inappropriate for a few reasons, and Mac Pros are too expensive.I'd consider them for a laptop purchase, but in the desktop space they don't have anything that's remotely reasonable.
Slashdot is not edited, it is user submitted snippets of info with links back to the source, more about the discussion of the subject than journalistic skills
Last time I had a story accepted, it was edited. By which I mean they deleted random bits and introduced a typo. If they're going to modify things, they could at least improve them...
Back in the Win95/98 days, I can't tell you how many people mentioned to me that they had tried defragmenting their hard drive as a troubleshooting step.
I want to be able to drive my car myself and I don't want autonomous vehicles on the road unless they've been proven to be safe. I figure by 2030-2040 is enough testing.
Can we apply the same standards to human drivers too please?
Collaborative editing is often easier. This isn't necessarily a property intrinsic to online office systems, but offline ones are typically intended for offline editing. Even with a decent revision control system (is there one that can merge OO.o or MS Office docs? No idea), you periodically get sets of changes from other people and have to merge them. If you've got something that allows live editing by multiple people, you can see what other people are doing at the same time as you and avoid conflicts.
There's no reason that an office application couldn't support this, it just seems to be a feature they haven't implemented. You'd probably want a single server for your organisation that would track all of the changes (allowing every desktop to accept connections for peer to peer editing would give network security people nightmares, especially considering the security record of MS Office), and it would be great if the server could push change sets out to some revision control system so that they could be synchronised with other documents (maybe push live editing into a branch and then have a merge step as part of hitting save).
The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh