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Games

Submission + - China game boss sniped rivals, took down Internet (networkworld.com)

carusoj writes: "An attack by a Chinese online game provider meant to cripple the servers of its rivals ballooned to cause an Internet outage in much of the country in May, according to police. The escalation began with a distributed denial-of-service attack on a domain registrar that serves many small gaming companies. While the national scale of the effects was unusual, such attacks are common among some small Internet businesses competing to draw customers in China, security researchers say. Police have arrested four people involved in the attack."

Comment Re:FSF is not very truthful in this campaign (Score 1) 926

What Microsoft did to Netscape (drive their $30 Navigator browser out-of-market) is approximately equivalent to Comcast announcing "we'll give everyone free MP3s" and thereby driving Itunes.com out of business. It's called anti-competitive monopolistic behavior, and it's explicitly forbidden by U.S. Antitrust Laws that were passed ~100 years ago.

Kinda funny, I remember being pretty pissed that Netscape was charging money while Mosaic was free.

The idea that someday I may not be able to backup my CDs or DVDs, due to Windows blocking that action, troubles me.

If that scares you, run Linux or Apple.
Seriously, if you want there to be competition for the monopoly you hate, then support that monopoly's competitors.

Comment Re:The guys with Tin Foil Hats maybe? (Score 1) 324

Not even close to true. He doesn't own ABC, CBS, or NBC. He does own Fox, one of four major networks. On cable, you have Fox News owned by Murdoch (very Republican-oriented, granted), CNN owned by Ted Turner (debatable), but the rest of the news channels aren't close to right-leaning in general. For newspapers, he owns the WSJ, which is the only prominent right-leaning paper, with the Washington Post and New York Times being the two most prominent newspapers in the country. They also happen to be *extremely* left.

So your big Republican conspiracy is 1 out of 4 major networks, one or two major cable news channels, and one major newspaper. That's a lot more than those that are clearly left-leaning. The network news tends to skew left, as do newspapers in major cities.

Correct, Murdoch doesn't own the "most of the mainstream media".
He does own a larger percentage than just about any other single entity, (the New York Post too) but he doesn't control the whole picture.

ABC is owned by Disney, CBS is owned by Viacom / National Amusements, Inc., NBC is owned by GE

You could try and say that Disney, Viacom and GE are totally Republican because they're big business, but then you could come back and say they all love Obama so that makes them Democrats.

Fox is about the only one that with a very obvious news slant, typically coming from pundits like Bill O'Reilly or Sean Hannity, but they don't speak for the whole corporation.

The whole left/right slant thing is COMPLETE BULLSHIT for most news organizations.
The truth is, they're all about ratings and making money, regardless of left or right.

As for newspapers, isn't Google News the most popular? :)

I just watch Jon Stewart anyways, he must be neutral. Oh shit, Comedy Central is owned by Viacom so there goes that!

Comment Corporate Drivel (Score 1) 451

Honestly this looks like a pretty typical HR "ethical training" type of course.

We've been subjected to similar training where I work, it's pretty much all BS and nobody pays attention to it.
Just watch the dumb videos, take the quiz so you get training credit and that chick with the hot ass in HR will stop bugging you to take the sexual harassment training.

Comment Re:Who is running Nielsen anyway, Leslie? (Score 1) 248

So far I think the product tie-ins for Eureka are pretty hilarious and creative, and possibly telling for the future of advertising.
They typically even have versions of the advertising on the syfy website too.

Somebody is paying attention and figured out that probably 99% of people that watch shows on syfy use DVRs and fast forward through the commercials.

Hopefully syfy is smart enough to not rely on the Nielsen ratings.
I'm so sick of the major networks canceling all the good shows probably based on incorrect viewing reports!

If the world goes the way of Hulu, then the networks won't need Nielsen anyways.

Comment Re:Dangerous (Score 2, Interesting) 109

True that people can still ignore the warning, but if we're talking about the common user who is now terrified of viruses, spyware and 1337 h4x0rs, odds are they won't click continue.

The CMS that ran our corporate site got hacked a few months back.
Google crawled it and found some hidden links to some malware sites, and my company got on that blacklist.

Customers, suppliers and CEOs were all freaking out, so after we fixed it ASAP we went to Google webmaster tools and requested a recrawl of the site, and that's the ONLY option you have. No phone number to call, no support email, and not even a time frame for when your site will be recrawled.

Meanwhile people are freaking out about the website and we just have to wait a day or more.

I'm not objecting to Google having blacklisted our site, that was LEGIT.

Just that when you are blacklisted, you have no recourse other than to just sit on your ass, wait for Google and hope you don't get fired.
If they're going to wield that kind of almighty power over everyone's website, there should be a better option for a way to get off that list.

Google support is pretty crappy, and I can guarantee they're missing out on some big money in paid support options,
because I can guarantee my company would have shelled out a few grand just to get the website off the blacklist immediately!

Comment Company or Technology? (Score 2, Interesting) 213

Just strange that they let Yahoo control multiple features (Weather, stocks, search (you can opt for Yahoo instead of Google)) with no concerns for them taking over the device.
Plus Yahoo has apps for Y! Messenger, Y! Music, and another app that brings in quite a few other services.

Then on the phone technology, there's Fring which let you make calls through skype and bring in all your IM contacts, and TruPhone which I think also brings in skype and you can make soft phone calls over 3G.

Seems like their decision was based more on the corporation they were competing with than the technology conflicting on the iPhone.

Comment Re:OpenDocument (Score 1) 357

The patent clearly states that it is for A word document in A SINGLE XML file. ODF is a zip file with many XML and binary files inside so is outside the scope of this patent by a long shot.

OOXML files (.docx, etc) are also zip files with multiple XML files. If you take a .docx file and rename it .docx.zip you can unzip it and check it out.
I just made a simple test.docx, and there were 7 files in the zip.

So, since the patent CLEARLY states that it is for a single document, does that mean this patent is for vaporware, or is Office 2010 going to change their OOXML implementation to be a single XML file instead of a bunch of them zipped up?

Or did MS screw up and somebody filed the wrong verbiage?

Comment Re:Business is Business (Score 1) 321

Oh, come on - really? Then how come many websites don't work with Opera, or Safari or sometimes even Firefox or Chrome.

Yes really. Until IE6 usage drops off, people will still develop for it.

According to these guys IE6's market share is still way higher than Chrome, Safari or Opera.

Trust me, it's a pain in the butt. Here at work we test with IE8, IE7, IE6, Firefox and Safari. Started some testing with Chrome, but most of our websites are for business users in the manufacturing sector, and we haven't seen a lot of adoption there.

It really really sucks, but you have to play to the browsers with the market share or people will go to a competitor.
(Or they'll send a nasty email that gets routed to the president of the company. Not that that's happened or anything)

Honestly if we actually had a customer using Opera and they complained about it, we'd have to start running through our test matrix with that too.

Comment Re:Pff.. (Score 1) 582

Really, that's it EXACTLY.

I think people using search engines (or decision engines) really just expect them to do some magic and return the right pages.
Way back in the day you could get high on a search engine just by putting a specific word a million times on your page, or cramming a bunch of stuff in your meta tags.
Then PageRank came along and screwed all that up, and now Google goes beyond that and changes it's search on the fly based on "interesting" trends it finds.

The search algorithms are just programs that try their best to guess what results to show based on a massive pile of millions of records in a database.
Microsoft may have a weighted keyword thesaurus or something, but I doubt it just because messing with that can REALLY backfire on you.

If you start messing with the control knobs for the tubes, you never know what kind of crab is going to come out!

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