Submission + - Aaron computer rental firm spies on users (yahoo.com)
The manager tried to repossess the computer because he mistakenly believed the couple hadn't finished paying for it, the couple said. Brian Byrd, 26, said the manager showed him a picture of Byrd using the computer — taken by the computer's webcam. The image was shot with the help of spying software, which the lawsuit contends is made by North East, Pa.-based Designerware LLC and is installed on all Aaron's rental computers.
Comment US Bank and JPM Also Used Epsilon. (Score 1) 185
http://www.boiseweekly.com/CityDesk/archives/2011/04/02/chase-us-bank-customers-warned-of-e-mail-security-breach
Comment Re:Self-destructive (Score 1) 589
openSUSE and Ubuntu are switching to the LO codebase.
Comment Re:massive miscalculation (Score 1) 174
while i don't launch balloons - if that is the way you wanted to do it.. would it not make it easier and safer to secure it to a flatbed truck and drive it under the balloon then release then having a crane hold it??
The "crane" is needed to hold the payload still until the balloon ascends to pull the flight train and the gondola payload vertical. The tension in the flight train at balloon release pulls the payload horizontally, fairly hard. The flight train is typically 1000 feet long! While you could secure the payload to a truck, gondolas aren't generally designed to handle transverse loads at the load point. You really don't want them to, either; there's often (comparatively delicate) momentum transfer units at the load point that allow accurate pointing of telescopes once at float altitude (~125,000 feet, or ~35 km). And once you build a structure to take the pressure off the gondola load point, you're generally back to a crane design again.
You can see pictures and movies of our experiment's launch last year from Fort Sumner, NM. The StratoCat site has some additional details about this flight and many others, including ours.
Catastrophic launches like this are really rare -- the CSBF team really do a fantastic job. It's really had to tell exactly what happened here, though fairly high winds were a complicating factor. It's very lucky for everyone involved that no one got hurt.
Condolences to the science team, and best wishes that they can pick up the pieces and fly again...
Comment Re:Tell me about it (Score 1) 225
It just usually happens that because Game development is a field where the leaders are usually in it for the fun of creating games, they aren't going to give up their positions for a better job at another company.
If you started as a level designer in EA or Microsoft, I don't think you will ever get to lead designer, unless the current lead designer decides to create his own startup. He probably gets paid well enough, has a reasonable amount of job stability (because if it doesn't sell, blame the pirates), and enjoys what he is doing.
If he leaves, the borg company will purchase a smaller dev company and make their lead developer the new lead. It's not the first time it has happened.
Comment Re:He Is Quick to Forgive Apple, Of Course (Score 1) 944
I agree that its better, but it runs contrary to his statements. (And if I recall my tech stories correctly Apple is one of the reasons the HTML5 spec doesn't define codecs, convenient.)
I've often wondered why Dirac isn't more widely used, isn't it supposed to be patent unencumbered as well?
Comment Re:Passive Denial of Service is a Bad Precedent (Score 2, Insightful) 537
Comment Re:Hypocritical cross-platform support story (Score 1) 944
Supposing you want to run a program that I write, and I'm going to write it in exactly one language because it's just me and not a corporation with thousands of employees, and I'm not so in love with the Mac that I will write it to run only there.
Then what do you recommend I do in the face of "de-emphasized" Java?
Comment Re:Student Interest Does Not Equal Employer Intere (Score 1) 225
If you owned a video game studio, who would you publish? Some guy who sat on his ass and got a degree in "video game design" from some no-name school? Or some guy that programmed and released for free an innovative game over the internet? I'd take the guy that has results.
Uh, perhaps the time spent in the course gives you some skills to make your own video game which you can use to impress people. It's not like you're just paying for a note from your teacher after 4 years of doing nothing.
Comment Re:Take some time and think (Score 1) 537
"just do it, its your employer" isn't good enough.
I'm not sure why you think this, as that will land you (in jail in rare cases or) out of a job. It is expected that an employer has full control over what you do in your position (insofar as you are willing and able to do it or quit). This includes reversing policy or statements they have made at any time. If you want to sue them for attempting to coerce or asking you to do something illegal, that's an after-the-fact. Welcome to the real world.
Comment Cool, I can't wait to start suing. (Score 0, Flamebait) 537
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