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Comment Re:3G Owners are SCREWED (Score 4, Insightful) 94

iPod touch 2g also.

It was still being sold as the 8 gig version less than 3 months before the announced last software update.

The 3g 8gig was being sold around 6 months before the last announced software update.

I understand not getting feature updates, but why can't we get security updates for a device apple was still selling a year ago?

Comment Hackersforcharity.org (Score 2) 229

Hackersforcharity.org

I highly recommend reading the blog, and maybe contacting Johnny. Reading their blog gives a good feel about what tech charity work in Africa can and cannot do, from someone who gave up their career to do it.

For those who want to volunteer closer to home, http://www.nten.org/ has national and local resources. Their local affiliated NCtech4good group seems to be doing good things in my area, I've only found them recently myself.

Comment Re:Think of it as 4.0.2 (Score 1) 599

What version of Chrome are you running? Most people running Chrome have no idea that it's going through major version upgrades all the time.

The curse of Firefox is the extensibility. Chrome has had a more limited, but growing extension system, and it isn't brittle like the one in Firefox.

Jetpack is the project to bring a Chrome like plugin layer to Firefox, which will handle the needs of 95% of addons, and should greatly ease the upgrade pain when developers start switching over to it.

It was only released widely a week ago, so there's still some time before it's ubiquitous, but when it is the upgrade pain for users and developers goes away.

TL;DR:
Firefox is doing the right thing, but there will be a bit of pain before things get better.

Comment Re:Cognitive dissonance endgame (Score 1) 638

We care about what we eat too, which is why we want plants that require less herbicide and insecticide, yield more for less water, and feed more people.

These things are necessary for producing enough food to feed our planet.

Please explain how carefully modifying food is worse then random mutation? Careful modification changes food less then traditional techniques of creating new plants for food. Toxins have been added to plants by traditional breeding.

There's not enough land and water for 18th century farming methods without billions starving to death, and any method of modifying foodstuff is dangerous. What you call frankenfood *is the safe, tested, well understood food*. It has to pass many tests traditional breeding does not.

Comment Re:Answer... (Score 1) 530

Unfortunately, I've had to think a lot about this recently. In NC, we passed a bill imposing lots of regulation and cost on public ownership of networks, many of which are more onerous then the regulations for the private sector. I fought this, as did many other technologists in the area, as the Internet is really 21 century infrastructure, and giving it wholly to corporations by force of law is a bit... premature at least. The FCC made statements condemning the law, as did many other national spokespeople.

It passed anyway. Fuck you very much Time Warner and the republicans you bought.

Comment Re:Answer... (Score 4, Insightful) 530

Would for profit roads be better for our economy then our present system? Are you against municipal providing of water and sewer services?

Government excels at providing these sort of infrastructure projects. If we took a tiny fraction of the military budget and put it to providing fiber to every home in America, we would be investing in important infrastructure just as we did with roads. It would be a boom for our total economy, instead of a small win for a small fraction of the telecom space only.

Comment Re:ssh + rsync = win! (Score 1) 482

The major and minor version has to match, but not the patch level.

That's why Ubuntu has packages for both 2.27.* and 2.32.*. Those are the only versions you're likely to encounter today, but soon 2.40 will be taking over.

These are all major changes, and worth the compatibility split.

I've never had trouble finding compatible versions in any OS that is actively receiving security patches, and the capability and failure tolerance of unison is without equal. I've never lost data in many years of using it in fairly complicated fashions. If they tried to support multiple revisions of the protocol with the same codebase, without much more engineering it would get brittle and data loss would be much more likely.

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