Comment Re:Soooo coool! (Score 4, Insightful) 319
I think it's more a bit of history repeating -- Native Americans meet people who see only dollar signs...
It's terrible how those poor ignorant savages keep being taken advantage of.
I think it's more a bit of history repeating -- Native Americans meet people who see only dollar signs...
It's terrible how those poor ignorant savages keep being taken advantage of.
The government or military may simply be interested in creating fear and demonstrate to the public that they are determined to screw anyone who doesn't conform. If that's the goal, electron scanning your hard drive is but a small price to pay.
Right, because that unethical government or military needs iron clad evidence for their devious plan to work.
Just a little over a week ago my boss brought this up:
Bullet #6 is probably the biggest complaint I hear from all PDA users.
He was referring to an article that he forgot to link to and I got the URL from an IM. It seems some "journalist" had an article due and the iPhone is hot and top 10 lists are easy to write. The #6 slot was dedicated to the enterprise shortfall of the iPhone by not including native support for editing MS-Office documents.
My boss doesn't even have a PDA. However, the other executives with PDAs have bought into the marketing line that needing to edit office documents on your phone is a sign of importance. That strokes their ego a lot more than pointing out it's more a sign of the need for a collaboration platform that can operate without duplicating and shuttling large binaries.
Cisco will soon be introducing a product to address this exact problem!
Please, this is Cisco. They've already purchased the company that makes the product to address this.
When their A320 debuted at the French airshow, the computer got very confused at take off and simply refused to allow the pilot to pull up more than 20-30 feet off the ground, causing the a/c to crash into the forest at the end of the runway.
I remember reading about that in high school. It's one of the "cautionary tales" in The Day the Phones Stopped Ringing. While the computers were initially blamed, the final conclusion was human error caused by a misplaced confidence in technology. It wasn't that the computers wouldn't let them pull up. The plane was physically incapable of pulling up when the pilots tried to. The pilots were maneuvering to give the crowd a good look and they believed the computers wouldn't let them do so if the plane couldn't handle it.
I am one of your support customers. Thing is, I'm not comfortable saying much else because we were told the 10th was the magic day, and it leaked 2 days early. To be clear, the patched BIND worked the way it's supposed to, and I'm sure it's going to work fine for most customers. With the news that you have patched versions that address the issues with heavily taxed servers, probably almost all of them. We jumped the gun because that's what we do. : ) And I'm sorry I was critical on BIND. It is still the industry standard, and the original daemon that made it possible to get rid of enormous host files. There's a degree of comfort in running *the* DNS daemon, and we were doing it even though my organization is decidedly anti opensource. That speaks volumes.
One can search the brain with a microscope and not find the mind, and can search the stars with a telescope and not find God. -- J. Gustav White