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Comment Re:Control (Score 2, Insightful) 417

Just to add to this, I think we also have to acknowledge that fascism just works. Frankly, a lot of the technology that Apple adds to OS X is hardly earth shattering, but they can make it work and get it adopted by a large audience with surprisingly few problems because they have total control. I'm no expert, but I have been using Linux for over a decade (Slackware 96 was my first distro and I even used a version of Debian with a Linux 1.x kernel), and I have witnessed many attempts to get new and interesting systems added to Linux. Democracy is slow. Look at all the effort it took to get Pulse working in a reasonable fashion. I'm no Pulse hater, I think it is an amazing piece of software, but the growing pains were agonizing. Even standardizing on X11 drivers infrastructure has been difficult (there were at least 2 versions of Ubuntu that contained major regressions in Intel graphics drivers). All of this leads to fragmentation and compatibility problems.

OS X is impressive because it suffers from this less. The total control wielded by Steve Jobs allows Apple to introduce new(ish) technologies in a timely manner. Yes, things like Grand Central or Time Machine may not be entirely unique, but they work and are available to a large audience.

I don't think that geeks give Steve Jobs a free pass. I think they just acknowledge that his way of doing things has been very successful in the grand scheme of things. OS X is an impressive piece of software that brings to the table many of the things that Linux folk have been talking about for years.

Comment Re:Stability (Score 3, Insightful) 891

Just look at Office 2007. Word looks and behaves nothing like Outlook or OneNote. In Windows, the big players tend to have fairly good interfaces, but as soon as you move away from the over-$100 realm of Windows software, you're in amateur land and the interfaces quickly devolve into a case study in worst practices. I find that I much prefer using ported Gnome software in Windows than many native solutions. Yes, Photoshop is a fantastic program, but I'd take GIMP over ArcSoft abominations any day of the week. At least I don't have to pay for GIMP.

This article should really be titled "Why Users Drop Cheaper Programs for More Expensive Ones". At least the open source solutions generally resist the urge to insert ads into their software and use a bunch of proprietary widgets.

Comment Re:Hulu sucks...period (Score 1) 375

Visiting multiple websites isn't that difficult. That is why we have bookmarks. They allow us to easily and quickly go to a page that we have visited previously. I know for instance that Battlestar Galactica is on Hulu but Lost is on abc.com. So, when I want to watch Lost I go to abc.com and when I want to watch BSG I go to hulu. This isn't a problem. If this becomes too burdensome for consumers then the media companies will simply fail as people will stop visiting them. Right now I get ALL of my television from hulu, with the exceptions of Lost (abc.com) and some PBS stuff (digital converter box). I get more than enough TV right now. If a new show comes around that wants my attention, it would do well to distribute itself through one of the channels I already frequent.

I agree that it is a bit stupid for a media company to wall itself off, especially in the near future when more and more people drop cable/satellite for Internet based television. Right now abc probably has no problem getting people to watch Lost on their website. This is not really a burden to consumers though. Besides, Hulu is actually reducing fragmentation. I mean, we could have a situation where you have to go to Nbc.com to see the Office and then over to scifi.com to watch BSG. Instead, I can watch both of those on Hulu. That seems like a win to me. Also, unlike with iTunes and cable, I don't have to pay to watch TV. The ads on hulu are the exact right length so that I don't mind watching them.
Operating Systems

What Normal Users Can Expect From Ubuntu 8.10 511

notthatwillsmith writes "With Ubuntu 8.10 due to be released in just a few days, Maximum PC pored through all the enhancements, updates, and new features that are bundled into the release of Intrepid Ibex and separated out the new features that are most exciting for Linux desktop users. Things to be excited about? With new versions of GNOME and X.Org, there's quite a bit, ranging from the context-sensitive Deskbar search to an audio and video compatible SIP client to the new Network Manager (manage wired, Wi-Fi, VPN, and cellular broadband connections in one place)."
Operating Systems

Netbook Return Rates Much Higher For Linux Than Windows 663

ivoras writes "An interview with MSI's director of US Sales, Andy Tung, contains this interesting snippet: "We have done a lot of studies on the return rates and haven't really talked about it much until now. Our internal research has shown that the return of netbooks is higher than regular notebooks, but the main cause of that is Linux. People would love to pay $299 or $399 but they don't know what they get until they open the box. They start playing around with Linux and start realizing that it's not what they are used to. They don't want to spend time to learn it so they bring it back to the store. The return rate is at least four times higher for Linux netbooks than Windows XP netbooks.'"
Media

Submission + - Book Publishers Abandoning DRM

tmalone writes: The New York Times is reporting that book publishers are beginning to phase out DRM protected audio books. This month the world's largest publisher, Random House, started offering DRM-free mp3s; Penguin has announced that it will follow suit. It seems that *gasp* DRM doesn't work:

"Publishers, like the music labels and movie studios, stuck to D.R.M. out of fear that pirated copies would diminish revenue. Random House tested the justification for this fear when it introduced the D.R.M.-less concept with eMusic last fall. It encoded those audio books with a digital watermark and monitored online file sharing networks, only to find that pirated copies of its audio books had been made from physical CDs or D.R.M.-encoded digital downloads whose anticopying protections were overridden."
Maybe now I'll be able to put audio books from my library's website on my iPod, or listen to them on my Mac or my Linux box.
Security

Submission + - NYT Article About One of the Original Phreaks 1

tmalone writes: The New York Times is running an end of year piece about the most interesting people who have died this year. One of their picks is Joybubbles, also known as Josef Engressia, or "Whistler". He was born blind and discovered at the age of 7 that he could whistle 2600 hertz into a phone to make free long distance calls. He was one of the original phone phreaks, got arrested for phone fraud, and was even employed by the phone company. The article deals more with his personal life (he was abused at a home for the blind) than with his technical exploits, but is a very interesting story.

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