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Comment Re:Can they land the use case? (Score 2) 48

The use case is you have a decent size screen on a device that you can pocket. If you look at the latest foldables, they aren't much thicker than non-foldables. About as thick as an iPhone from a few generations ago.

They seem to have reached the point where the tech is reasonably mature and not excessively fragile. Now they just need to get the price down.

Comment Re:Electric Company (Score 1) 27

The Courts need to recognize that Internet has become a necessary utility and that the music companies need to deal with the individual directly through the Courts, not in a lazy clandestine way.

The record labels were originally suing individual users back in the Napster days and it was causing a bit bad PR for them.

I also can't help but think that going after ISPs is something of a cash grab, since I really don't know anyone who even bothers trying to pirate music anymore. It's no longer worth the effort with how cheap music streaming services are.

What really scared them was other countries not tolerating that bullshit and in most other countries if you lose a lawsuit like this the other party can come after you for damages. They don't care about negative PR, but a case where they are forced to pay out for having their spurious claims disproved scares the living shit out of them because it sets a precedent.

Comment Running out of ideas to steal. (Score 2) 48

Yeah... Android manufacturers need to pull their finger out and give Apple some better ideas.

Multiple manufacturers have tried the folding phone several times with little to no success. I can't see Apple succeeding (they'll pretend they are though).

What I can see is Apple presenting their most rigid phone ever as "the iFold 1billion and 2 PRO" with someone standing on stage showing us that it flexes slightly if measured with laboratory equipment... and when people break it in real life telling us "you're folding it wrong".

Comment Re:Navy SEAL drills work best for Navy SEALs (Score 2) 107

I read Richard Marcinko's leadership book (Marcinko was the SEAL who founded DEVGRU, the SEAL's most elite unit, aka Team Six). From it, I concluded this: Applying Navy SEAL principles to lead people works best when the people are physically and mentally built like Navy SEALs. Most people are not, not even elite company CEO's and their staff.

It becomes a game of square peg / round hole.

Special Operator type training is far too advanced for a corporate retreat, what they really need is basic. Learning how to march as a unit, work as a unit, understand and follow orders, et al. Shit that a soldier is expected to have down pat long before they ever get advanced training. Training that might actually be useful in helping people work together or improving discipline... However the ego of your average corporate dick will never allow that, they think they're special so they want the special training.

But in reality they aren't getting anything special, just paying to be shouted at by someone who claims they were a SEAL, SAS, et al. but in all likelihood never were.

Comment Re:Built from leftover parts (Score 1) 136

Totally different business but exactly the same problem. Nordstrom generally has the latest trend clothes in fashion and pretty good quality; it's known for it. But when it had leftover inventory it knew there were people a step down from their target demographic that would love Nordstrom's quality products even if they're a season or two out of fashion for cheaper, so they opened Nordstrom's Rack to sell off the excess inventory.

Nordstrom's Rack got so popular they couldn't keep it stocked, and eventually started developing their own dedicated Nordstrom Rack brands, which sort of defeated the purpose of Nordstrom's Rack as it's entire value was Nordstrom's quality, late season, at a discount, but now it's discount quality with the Nordstrom's name on it.

Law of unintended consequences I guess.

Not really an unknown consequence.

Popular brands know never, ever release your cheap products under your brand. Airlines are famous for this, when QANTAS wanted to release cheap, no frills flights under a LCC model, they didn't brand it as QANTAS CHEAP because that would cheapen the brand QANTAS, they created a new airline called JetStar and even though they are wholly owned subsidiaries. It's not unusual for a budget airline to operate under the parent airlines AOC (Air Operator Certificate... the bit of paper that says you're allowed to carry passengers), LEVEL (Spanish low cost carrier) operated under another AOC until it got it's own (Iberia's I think). The point is, they didn't want to associate the parent brands just in case they got successful.

But this isn't exactly off brand for Apple, they're charging $700 for a $300 laptop and $300 is being generous as we know it's really a $200 phone.

Comment Re: humanity (Score 1) 85

No, Governments are not expected to move humanity ahead.
That's a bizarre disconnected form of Statism on your part. Do you have a shrine to the Government in your home for all its noble deeds?

Governs are expected to do what they're elected to do, no more, no less.

You can't make routers, but you can choose whether or not to buy one.
Do you also believe that you should be able to use the Government to force routers to be what you consider secure?

I think you are a cancer. Itching for a boot to lick, as long as it's a gentle one. No holocausts this time, please.

Comment Re: Found another commie troll account (Score 2) 193

Don't know, chief.
Honestly- no fucking clue.
Obviously communism, for a litany of reasons, isn't a workable solution with human culture being what it is at this point in our history and/or development.

"Socialism" is vague enough of a term that I feel like you threw it out there as a trap.
There are many socialist aspects of every single democracy on this planet. Are more of them better? Sometimes. Are less of them better? Sometimes. Are none of them better? Universally not.

All I know is that when you're driving off of a cliff, "well where else are we going to go?" isn't a fucking productive addition to the conversation.

Comment Re: I think it would be a good idea.. (Score 1) 118

So, you're saying the US doesn't care about owning Saudi-area oil fields?

The US does not own Saudi area oil fields.
So yes, that's precisely what I'm saying.

So, the US just goes over there over-and-over for kicks?

Kicks and kicks? Absolutely not. The oil economy is critically important to US hegemony.
The accusation is plunder, and that's what's stupid.
Saying "we're over there because of oil" is perfectly accurate. But it's not because we need it.

I doubt all the gasoline and diesel we use today is solely from US oil fields.

It's not.
You also left out how much we export.
The net inflow is about 2mbbl.
Basically, fucking nothing.
And none of it comes from the middle east.

Oh, and typically the one calling someone a (and I quote) "fucking moron" just to start an argument tend to be the narrow-sighted one,

Your own links demonstrate that you were wrong about this thing.
For how many years have you been saying the US went into the middle east to "steal its oil" without bothering to do the 15 minutes of research it would have taken to demonstrate that you were wrong?

That makes you a fucking moron.

Comment Re:Not impressive, a Pre-ML 1990s PC doable proble (Score 2) 39

Didn't they try to do that kind of image recognition in the 90s and find it unreliable? IIRC they tested it with tanks and found that rather that detecting tanks it was detecting sunny days, and once they eliminated the weather variations it couldn't do anything useful.

Today Tesla's vision system is notoriously unreliable, and you would assume that in military applications the aircraft are going to be camouflaged.

Comment Re:bent pipe (Score 1) 39

But then you have to transmit potentially massive amounts of data back to Earth.

Say you want to detect aircraft entering airspace. They are difficult to detect with radar, so you want to do it optically. You need decent resolution to capture small drone sized ones, and you need multiple images to help with camouflage, false positives, and determining flight path.

That's a lot of data. The data rate is likely to be the limiting factor on what resolution and how frequently you can image an area. Being able to do the detection on the satellite, and only send reports or images that suggest further investigation is worthwhile, is going to be very useful.

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