Comment Re:trade-off (Score 1) 264
You need to consider the cost of storage, as that actually costs me more than the price of the machine. My bill last month was $130 for 677.640 GB-Mo of storage (forgot to shut down some EBS locations) and 200 hrs of the High-CPU Extra Large instance. I also transferred OUT 130.669 GB of data.
Comment Best response to the "nothing to hide" argument (Score 1) 559
When you and your wife have sex, do you close the curtains?
Now, occasionally you might get some pervs, but in general it illustrates the point that privacy is a good thing and we should be jealous about guarding it!
Comment Why 1st gen. Apple products lack "features" (Score 4, Insightful) 514
It is this small-team approach that, of necessity, results in important capabilities being left out of the first release. The payoff, though, is that Steve ends up with a central core of perfectly-integrated functionality instead of a rambling labyrinth of disjointed “features.” This design framework is so well conceived that it can be built upon for years, even decades, without being stripped out and restarted. Compare that with the history of Windows, with false start after false start, resulting in their repeatedly beginning design anew.
Comment Re:Medical... (Score 1) 727
People like the digital ones because they don't just amplify, they selectively filter to you get the most useful frequencies. I don't know the physics, but I suspect it's far more advanced than a simple equalizer.
It probably isn't. Equalizers or adaptive equalizers (for when you don't know your channel characteristics, which you do in this case 'cause you can measure the ear's response first) are straightforward systems. It's basically a digital filter that inverts the channel's frequency response. Pop open MATLAB and you can have one up and running in minutes. There's plenty of source code on the 'nets for generating a equalizer for a DSP or FPGA. The hardware/software isn't hard at all. That only leaves testing and regulation for attributing to the high cost.
Comment Re:Beware of robots (Score 1) 229
Comment Re:I fear that pretty soon... (Score 5, Informative) 532
I think you're a bit misguided here. The "small fry sites" you're referring to are sites, like mine, that link to Amazon products in exchange for a cut from Amazon. It's huge marketing for Amazon, and a tidy revenue for me and others. But not now. I'm in NC and I got screwed. Amazon hasn't killed people *selling* products, they've just cut off people that are doing free advertising for them.
Comment Uh .... what about Dr. Horrible? (Score 5, Insightful) 860
Comment Re:subtlety schmutlety (Score 1) 852
Comment Re:Mic? (Score 1) 175
I have an iPod touch, and it works just fine with the apple headphones that include a mic. I didn't want to shell out for another pair of headphones, so I use the ones that came free with my Blackberry (also includes a mic) and that works fine too. I believe the earlier generation iPod touch required an external mic attached to the dock connector but the current models can use any headphone/mic in a standard size jack.
Comment Re:Weapons Grade Production? (Score 1) 432
*golf clap*
Nicely done.
Comment Re:The Only Reason This Distro Exists (Score 1) 351
If you're using PuTTY, you should check out PuTTY Connection Manager, it's free, it's PuTTY, and it's got tabs, connection profiles, etc. As soon as it supports PuTTYCyg connections I plan on switching to it for all my terminal needs on Windows.
Comment No need for a bionic arm... (Score 4, Informative) 72
Heh. You don't need a bionic hand for playing guitar.
Keith Xander has been doing it for years with one arm - and well, too!
Hell, there's even a guy who plays guitar with no arms! Granted, it's mostly Tom Petty songs, but still
Comment Re:overkill (Score 1) 333
Leave it to a Remo Williams fan to think bodies are the simplest solution to a problem
Comment there's no such thing as price gouging (Score 0) 1114
Price GOUGING, really?? Perhaps you'd better take a step back and learn some basic economics. I'd suggest _Basic Economics_ by Thomas Sowell. If supply drops, and demand stays constant, then prices have to rise - unless the prices are being controlled by the state.
Supply did drop - drastically - in North Carolina and the prices adjusted to prevent huge shortages. Unfortunately, Governor Easley instituted his "anti-price gouging" laws, which artificially kept prices low and thereby caused massive shortages.
What's better - waiting in line for 2 hrs to get $3.70/gallon or filling up immediately for +$4.00/gal? What about in an emergency, or if driving is essential to your job? Yeah, good luck trying to run a business when you spend 1/4 of your day waiting to fill up w/ gas.