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Comment Re:Bad usernames too (Score 1) 343

What happens when a bad update or a hardware failure renders the service (for which you have the account) inaccessible? What happens when electricity stops existing? What happens when the Martian lizard baby eaters who were behind the JFK assasination fake their moon landing in 2012? What happens when the sky falls on your head? In other words, problems can be solved by parts; trying to solve them in a all-or-nothing way as a single large interconnected hairy mother-of-all-problems blob only leads to hair loss.

Comment This means one thing: PLAINTEXT PASSWORDS! (Score 1) 209

Exposing the password list implies that the passwords were actually stored, in plaintext. Wtf, what year do people think it is, 1241? Plaintext passwords == passwords stolen from you sooner or later. One would have thought that after all this time - and it's been a long time - they would have learned by now.

Comment Re:Touchscreens vs. Touchless (Score 1) 152

[citation needed] - outside of Hollywood, the idea of actual physical feedback is doing quite well. I for one like to *feel* where one button ends and another starts, thankyouverymuch - something that touchless interface can't give you, per definition (oh, but then we can build touch feedback to the touchless interface! And something to rest your hands on! And we'll be back full circle where we started, but much more *high-tech*, yaaay.).

Comment 1990s touchscreens called... (Score 2, Informative) 152

...and they want their gorilla hand syndrome back. As the makers themselves admit, completely lacking any ergonomy ("users tended to separate the vertical and horizontal planes and avoid using the curve as much as possible."). Working with your hand(s) above heart level is tiresome, for reasons entirely physiological - there's plenty of research for that, but we geeks just tend to dismiss it as NIH and assume "we know better", don't we? It's a very cool toy project, yes - but utterly impractical.

Comment Re:Fat Gene? (Score 1) 507

If by "getting a discount" you mean "sue the pants off them after the fact", the answer may be "yes". This is now a (first-)world-wide phenomenon best described as "I'm only responsible for my actions when I feel like it, otherwise I'll use {the devil|my genes|the society|the Internet|the weather} as a defense." Unfortunately, it works, thus affirming the meme.
Microsoft

Microsoft Opening Outlook's PST Format 319

protosage writes to tell us that Microsoft Interoperability is working towards opening up Outlook's .pst format under their Open Specification Promise. This should "allow anyone to implement the .pst file format on any platform and in any tool, without concerns about patents, and without the need to contact Microsoft in any way." "In order to facilitate interoperability and enable customers and vendors to access the data in .pst files on a variety of platforms, we will be releasing documentation for the .pst file format. This will allow developers to read, create, and interoperate with the data in .pst files in server and client scenarios using the programming language and platform of their choice. The technical documentation will detail how the data is stored, along with guidance for accessing that data from other software applications. It also will highlight the structure of the .pst file, provide details like how to navigate the folder hierarchy, and explain how to access the individual data objects and properties."
Microsoft

Microsoft Security Essentials Released; Rivals Mock It 465

Bimal writes "After a short three-month beta program, Microsoft is officially releasing Microsoft Security Essentials, its free, real-time consumer anti-malware solution for fighting viruses, spyware, rootkits, and Trojans. MSE is available for Windows XP 32-bit, Windows Vista/7 32-bit, and Windows Vista/7 64-bit. 'Ars puts MSE through its paces and finds an unobtrusive app with a clean interface that protected us in the dark corners of the Internet.' The software received positive notes when in beta, including a nod from the independent testing group AV-Test." But reader CWmike notes that Symantec is trash-talking Microsoft's free offering. Jens Meggers, Symantec's vice president of engineering, dismissed MSE as a "poor product" that will "never be up to snuff." Meggers added, "Microsoft has a really bad track record in security." The GM of Trend Micro's consumer division sniffed, "It's better to use something than to use nothing, but you get what you pay for."

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