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Comment Re:painted into a corner... (Score 1) 403

Hell, all of the scientific inaccuracies aside, I couldn't take Kirk being promoted from boot ensign to commander of the Enterprise after no time on board. What happened to all of the other officers in the chain of command with seniority and more experience? Maybe it's just my Navy (which Starfleet emulates) background, but that was pretty dumb.

Comment Not big on "Stinkpads" (Score 1) 271

I work at a business school. One of our graduate programs buys tablets for their students, who start each January. In January 2012, they purchased ThinkPad X220t tablets. They had bought ThinkPads in the previous couple of years, too. Price was the main consideration. We've had problems with the Lenovo systems and the support every year. Frequent hardware failures, lousy on-site support. We are a Dell shop, so that's what I am comparing the Lenovo experience with.

We create the Windows image for the program each year, using a fresh copy of Windows 7, Office, anti-virus, etc. which is burned to the 35-40 systems we get in. We do this with every Dell we get in year round for faculty and staff with no issues. Dell provides easy access to the right drivers, and after the OS is installed, the Dell and third-party drivers work on the fresh build.

Not on the Lenovo X220t systems. After a fresh OS install, pulling the "current" drivers from Lenovo's site resulted in many issues, especially with the Wacom tablet drivers. Quite a few of the drivers on their site listed for this specific model did not work, not just the Wacom drivers. Just for the Wacom drivers (the most difficult to remedy), my engineers jumped through many hoops before finding an old, legacy set of drivers buried deep on Wacom's site to make the tablet interface work correctly. No Wacom drivers from Lenovo's site worked. The wireless adapter drivers were also a problem.

Lenovo's support told us that we shouldn't have created a fresh image and should have stuck with the bloated crap the systems shipped with, and basically refused to help us. That's crap that you can't rely on the drivers that they make publicly available to work if you rebuild the system for any reason.

Bottom line is that we do this all the time with our Dells, and the drivers we get from their site always work on a fresh Windows install on their hardware. Lenovo - not so much. This past January I was able to convince this graduate program to go with Dell XT3's. We built a fresh image for them, using the drivers from Dell's site, and they've worked flawlessly. And we haven't had one XT3 in for hardware issues whereas in past years we typically saw three or four Lenovos in the first couple of months for hardware issues.

No, I don't work for Dell. It's just what I have to compare to.

Submission + - Canon's image verification system cracked (h-online.com)

TJNoffy writes: The H Security's H-online reports that "Hacker Dmitry Sklyarov has succeeded in extracting the secret signing key from numerous digital SLR cameras and has used it to sign modified images which Canon's latest OSK-E3 security kit verifies as legitimate. Canon's Original Data Security System is intended to show whether changes have been made to photographs and to verify date and location information.

The system is primarily used for ensuring the integrity of evidence, for reporting accidents and for construction records. The system is also useful for allowing news agencies to determine whether images have been modified. Sklyaro informed Canon of the vulnerability back in September, but has received no response from the camera manufacturer."

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