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Ask Slashdot: What Single Change Would You Make To a Tech Product?

An anonymous reader writes: We live in an age of sorcery. The supercomputers in our pockets are capable of doing things it took armies of humans to accomplish even a hundred years ago. But let's face it: we're also complainers at heart. For every incredible, revolutionary device we use, we can find something that's obviously wrong with it. Something we'd instantly fix if we were suddenly put in charge of design. So, what's at the top of your list? Hardware, software, or service — don't hold back.

Here's an example: over the past several years, e-readers have standardized on 6-inch screens. For all the variety that exists in smartphone and tablet sizing, the e-reader market has decided it must copy the Kindle form factor or die trying. Having used an e-reader before all this happened, I found a 7-8" e-ink screen to be an amazingly better reading experience. Oh well, I'm out of luck. It's not the worst thing in the world, but I'd fix it immediately if I could.

508 comments

  1. I would by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Give myself First Post everytime!

  2. Stop spying on everyone by WaffleMonster · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nobody wants to be stalked with creep ware.

    1. Re:Stop spying on everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      For that to work you'd also have to come up with a scheme of monetary compensation or none of us will get to play with toys.

    2. Re:Stop spying on everyone by stooo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Buy it.

      --
      aaaaaaa
    3. Re:Stop spying on everyone by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

      For that to work you'd also have to come up with a scheme of monetary compensation or none of us will get to play with toys.

      Like this?
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    4. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total, utter agreement on the creepy spying. And BTW, "creep" is EXACTLY how we should be referring to those who spy on us.

      And how about stopping (and reversing) the dumbing down? Just because you want your software to work smoothly on a tablet doesn't mean you need to cripple it by removing half the functionality, despite the pop-fad trend.

    5. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care that you don't want to be spied on. I want to spy on you. And you want my silly game more than you diswant the spyware, so you can deal with it.

    6. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that's a myth propagated by the people who make money from ads that spy. The regular old non-spying ad industry did a fine job subsidizing content before we had all this tech.

    7. Re:Stop spying on everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many united states dollars it will take to give live realtime traffic updates around the entire world?

    8. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that's your attitude, then I'll just take your game and block your ads. There would be nothing you could do about it.

    9. Re:Stop spying on everyone by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      > Nobody wants to be stalked with creep ware.

      I wish the mods would come in and special case you up to +6, Real Talk

      The extents to which they will go to track people in order to spam them is truly ludicrous.

    10. Re:Stop spying on everyone by cfalcon · · Score: 0

      No, he doesn't have to find a way to feed you just because you found a way to erect a toll booth one time. There's plenty of ways to make money without ads, but that's not the topic. You don't have to solve an economic problem to get rid of ads.

    11. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy, same price as it is now.

      You only offer the information for users that have opted in to sharing location information. You then monetize the users who opted in. Therefore if you want the freebie you give something in return.

    12. Re: Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I really really hope hundreds of thousands of people working with ads lose their jobs soon. They simply don't deserve to get paid.

    13. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...Therefore if you want the freebie you give something in return.

      Then it's not a freebie, is it?

    14. Re:Stop spying on everyone by pla · · Score: 2

      For that to work you'd also have to come up with a scheme of monetary compensation or none of us will get to play with toys.

      If $600 for a phone doesn't cover the cost of production, charge more.

      ... And then (rightly) go out of business when your customers laugh and buy a $150 knockoff that has all the same features at a quarter the price.

    15. Re:Stop spying on everyone by maorb · · Score: 1

      The $600 for the phone didn't cover to cost of the third-party apps or the websites you accessed using the device.

    16. Re:Stop spying on everyone by pla · · Score: 1

      The $600 for the phone didn't cover to cost of the third-party apps or the websites you accessed using the device.

      Right - The $80/month I pay to use the damned thing does.

    17. Re:Stop spying on everyone by MacTO · · Score: 1

      Buy it.

      You can also have advertising without tracking the end user.

    18. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like buying things?
      An actual honest exchange of money for purchase of the product described?
      (I mean buying at the actual price, not leasing at a discount only made possible by evil bastards who covertly collect/on-sell your data)

    19. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those that'd like a great privacy tool there's always demonsaw. Decentralized, searchable, anonymous. Set up a private group on your private demonsaw server and best of luck to spies.

    20. Re:Stop spying on everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Nope. Not at all. None of that money goes to the people who provide the services you use.

    21. Re:Stop spying on everyone by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if it were made a clear and easily-changable option to the user. Example:

      1. 30 day trial, no snooping
      2. Snooping version, free after 30 days
      3. Purchase non-snooping version

      And it should let you know when your 30 days are up rather than automatically go into snoop mode without confirmation.

      Clear and friendly choices can bring in more customers and more dollars.

  3. No LEDS by phishybongwaters · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No LEDS to tell me the device is turned off. No LEDS to tell me it's "sleeping". OR simply a method to disable these LEDS because I'm old enough to not want my computer room looking like the engine room of the enterprise WHEN EVERYTHING IS POWERED OFF NO LEDS

    1. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Single large pixel E-Ink (or whatever it's called) would probably be a better choice, just reflecting light, not emitting.

    2. Re:No LEDS by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      Huh? Most computers can have their LED's unplugged from the motherboard. There are several monitors on the market where the LED can be disabled (look for anything that is used in production environments like monitors from NEC and EIZO). Not sure about most speakers but mine have a physical button.

      I think what you want actually already exists.

    3. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can turn off the LED in TiVos.

    4. Re:No LEDS by Nkwe · · Score: 2

      While you are at it, no blue LEDs. They are way too bright and blue colored light supposedly messes with your brain's concept of day/night and your sleep cycle. If I am up late at night, I don't like the bright lights and I certainly don't want my sleep cycle messed up.

    5. Re:No LEDS by phishybongwaters · · Score: 2

      Oh my mistake, I thought the article was labled "What Single Change Would You Make To a Tech Product?" not "What Single Change Would You Make To a COMPUTER? Besides that I don't count prying plastic casings open desperately trying to not break the little flimsy clips as an easy method to disable the leds. I simply can not understand why there is no toggle to just disable the led circuits entirely. Go head and disable the led on your tablet, or the leds inside your macbook air, or your surge protecting power bar, or your UPS. See where I was going? I have and will continue to manually disable them on my desktops, but that's not really what this article was talking about, at all.

    6. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use black electrical tape.

    7. Re:No LEDS by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      If I am up late at night, I don't like the bright lights and I certainly don't want my sleep cycle messed up.

      Well ... then the easier solution is not to be up late at night on your computer and messing up your sleep schedule ... it's too late to worry about screwing up your sleep schedule while you're in the middle of screwing up your sleep schedule. ;-)

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    8. Re:No LEDS by sconeu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm with you. I'm still trying to figure out why my DVD player and TV need a light on to tell me when they're OFF. And when I turn them on, the LED goes off.

      Can anyone say "parasitic power draw"?

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    9. Re:No LEDS by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Put the TV and the everything connected on a power strip. Turn off the power strip to save power. Watch your energy bills drop.

    10. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be fine, but alarm clocks, bluetooth speakers and all number of devices that you might find in your bedroom can have superbright blue or white LEDs that can mess with your sleep even if you're not aware of waking up.

    11. Re:No LEDS by tibit · · Score: 1

      ...or at least make the freaking things not blink like crazy when I'm trying to sleep. Say what you wish about Apple, but at least they have figured it out and use light intensity ramps instead of ON/OFF patterns. I can put the macbook on the night table and be able to fall asleep without having to cover its LED. The HP printer, OTOH, had me look for an old floppy disk erase-disable tab sticker. The perfectly opaque sticker was a necessity given the absurd amount of light the indicator was giving off.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    12. Re:No LEDS by tibit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The LED is immaterial. The power supply is still there, and while on standby it's consuming way more power than the LED is.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    13. Re:No LEDS by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 1

      Plasti-dip.

    14. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      the problem is that there is a reconfiguration \ setup you have to do every time you turn it back on.

    15. Re:No LEDS by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      That would be fine, but alarm clocks, bluetooth speakers and all number of devices that you might find in your bedroom can have superbright blue or white LEDs that can mess with your sleep even if you're not aware of waking up.

      Well, I propose a two-pronged solution to this radical dilemma:

      1) Banish all things with bright LEDs from your bedroom which you think are keeping you awake
      2) See 1)

      In this way I feel we can optimize the effort required to not have this shit, and leverage our synergies towards a best practice for minimizing things which negatively impact our ability to sleep.

      If you feel this is inadequate for your needs, I suggest an aggressive application of electrical tape, or getting over it and stop whining that it's a difficult problem.

      I don't want a room full of blinking lights while I'm sleeping, as such I don't have them in the room I sleep in. It's really a fairly simple problem.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    16. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really good point. There's also a need to dim LEDs when in a low light home-theater environment. My theater has a lot of black tape over glaring LEDs. The blue LEDS need to go ASAP, but they're all a problem. I have a lot of tape over LEDs on my computers and displays, and they'd look a lot better if they simply dimmed.

    17. Re:No LEDS by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      No LEDS to tell me the device is turned off. No LEDS to tell me it's "sleeping".

      I would like to add: stop using those bright blue LEDs on everything. The ones on my equipment are like fucking search lights at night. I could read by the light of my electric shaver LED. I can see the glow from the computer equipment in my study down the hall from my bedroom. I have either (a) use black marker to dull them or cover them with paper.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    18. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      My 4-drive USB bays are all pointing sideways because of the blue LEDs on the front. It would be very risky to try to cut them out. I also had to tape the LEDs on the front of an HDMI switch to dim the selection and power indicators way down. This is a real problem, that can't be handwaved away with a solution for a tiny subset of the problem devices.

    19. Re:No LEDS by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Only if you have "smart" devices that don't save their configuration info.

    20. Re:No LEDS by thegarbz · · Score: 0

      Oh my mistake, I thought the article was labled "What Single Change Would You Make To a Tech Product?" not "What Single Change Would You Make To a COMPUTER?

      OR simply a method to disable these LEDS because I'm old enough to not want my computer room looking like the engine room of the enterprise

      I was only offering a suggestion.
      Go fuck yourself with that attitude.

    21. Re:No LEDS by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      > Well ... then the easier solution is not to be up late at night on your computer and messing up your sleep schedule ...

      No, it's not an easier solution to change your whole life, compared to swapping out the constant barrage of blue LEDs on devices that don't need them.

      The big deal is this- if you are up an hour before bed, working or playing, and there's not a lot of blue light, you will (probably) have a different set of hormones running around than if there is blue light aplenty during that time. It may not matter much, but it does seem to be a thing.

    22. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use that if I need the light out, and white tape if I just need it much dimmer than the manufacturer decided on. You can also buy dot stickers that are good for this task.

    23. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're just bothered by the lights, you can get light dims (http://www.lightdims.com), which partially or fully block the light. Or you can just use electrical tape.

    24. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with that is it doesn't change state when the power goes off. So if it suddenly loses power, it would still be showing as "on."

    25. Re:No LEDS by mlts · · Score: 4, Interesting

      e-Ink displays on more devices would be useful in general. For example, on a home router, it could display the initial password on it, and with a button or two, have minimal configuration done (set the IP), so it can have the rest of its configuration done via a web page (or SSH.)

      For external devices like a home NAS, it can show a snapshot of what is going on every so often (5-10 minutes), as well as show that there is an issue with a downed drive or fan. Even external hard disks could benefit, since the display could show SMART status, or number of writes for a SSD.

      For a time back in the 1990s, every device had a LCD readout that had verbose info on it. The computer case showed what was going on via POST. The monitor (CRTs, at the time) showed resolution and refresh rate. Printers showed stats like how much toner/ink was left in real time. Even tape drives showed how long until they needed cleaned, what density and blocksize was in use, and the capacity of the cartridge. If those displays could come back as e-Ink items, it would be quite useful.

    26. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why I love coming to Slashdot. The self-righteous know-it-all. The guy with a "solution" to everything! Really makes the comment section amusing!

    27. Re:No LEDS by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      Totally agree. My PC is in our bedroom, and LED's drive me nuts! I have a routine every evening where I set my mouse against my keyboard, or it shoots a sliver of blue light right at eye level. Then I turn off the monitor or it glows orange. I keep an old fleece slippe on top of my computer that I slide over the power button that glows green. I slip an old Amsterdam map over my USB switch that glows green. Finally if I have my work laptop in the dock I toss whatever is handy over the eject button and status LED's the glow blue and white respectively. I keep an old wrist rest over the laptop power cord that glows white.

      WTF man?

      If note for the gooey residue I would have used black tape, but have found no good non-marring alternative.

    28. Re:No LEDS by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      TVs and DVDs use an Off LED as opposed to an On LED. A TV is, by definition, close the picture it displays when in use, and a DVD player is assumed to be. Therefore, the On LED would be more annoying. Since the power supply, etc. are already consuming an order of magnitude (or more) than the LED will draw, there's not much reason, energy wise, to leave them off. Bonus, if you dislike it so you unplug it, you'll save more than 10x what you think you're saving (assuming you're the average person just worrying about the cost of the light.)

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    29. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which would be quite "dumb".

    30. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO LEDS

      Ok - someone has to.....

      ACHTUNG! ALLES TURISTEN UND NONTEKNISCHEN LOOKENPEEPERS!
      DAS KOMPUTERMASCHINE IST NICHT FÜR DER GEFINGERPOKEN UND MITTENGRABEN! ODERWISE IST EASY TO SCHNAPPEN DER
      SPRINGENWERK, BLOWENFUSEN UND POPPENCORKEN MIT SPITZENSPARKEN.
      IST NICHT FÜR GEWERKEN BEI DUMMKOPFEN. DER RUBBERNECKEN SIGHTSEEREN KEEPEN DAS COTTONPICKEN HÄNDER IN DAS POCKETS MUSS.
      ZO RELAXEN UND WATSCHEN DER BLINKENLICHTEN.

    31. Re: No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gaffer's tape should be a good solution for residue-free removal. Long-term may not be perfect, but far better than other forms of tape.

    32. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "An off switch for the LEDs on every device."

      The genie paused for a moment, and considered the inherent wisdom of the wish. In all of his 10,000 years he had never heard something so reasonable.

      "As you command." ... if only.

    33. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Posting AC (I modded you up)

      I block LEDs on things where its not needed like dashcams. I don’t need everyone knowing I’m recording. I’ve used a permanent marker on all LEDs (surface mount and on plastic casing) as well as any labels or markings.

      Someone else on Slashdot suggested black nail polish so I will be definitely trying that.

      I have used electrical tape over my laptop webcam (don’t need NSA front-door) by taking off the laptop bezel and sticking tape inside. It then doesn’t look any different outside. You could do this for LEDs if you are ok with opening things.

    34. Re:No LEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have an LG TV-set and there's an option to turn off the stand by LED in settings.

      I used to glue a little piece of black-tinted plastic to bright LEDs, but yeah - this is ridiculous.

    35. Re:No LEDS by crtreece · · Score: 1

      The LED is immaterial

      From a power usage standpoint, sure. From the standpoint of, "I'd like to sleep in the same room with some of this stuff, but cannot because it's too damn bright", it is very much a material consideration.

      --
      file: .signature not found
    36. Re:No LEDS by toddestan · · Score: 1

      That's why the LED is there. To tell you that you've forgotten to turn off the power strip.

  4. iPhone with square corners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just to shut the fuckers up

  5. Remove systemd from Debian. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd remove systemd from Debian so that Debian became usable again.

    1. Re:Remove systemd from Debian. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd throw Poettering to the pigs.

    2. Re:Remove systemd from Debian. by coolmoe2 · · Score: 0

      Can we make that a lot more broad and remove systemd from every linux distro. Then can we send the developers to mars on the first attempt.
      "Hey guys relax we could have used stable proven rockets but these are new and state of the art"

    3. Re:Remove systemd from Debian. by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      I'd remove systemd from Debian so that Debian became usable again.

      Have you offered your support yet?
      https://devuan.org/

    4. Re:Remove systemd from Debian. by KGIII · · Score: 1

      You want to take away the choice from the distro authors? You want to take away the distro authors, even at Debian, and force them to do what you want?

      I'm not sure that I agree that such is a good change to make to a tech product. I'm inclined to be diametrically opposed to that, in fact. What I do support is the idea where you can make your own distro if you want - one without systemd. You can even make it just like Debian sans the systemd functionality. There doesn't seem to be many people who are interested in making this happen.

      If, I had to pick just one change to make - and this ties into this, I'd make software more compatible by default. In other words, I'd like software to be completely cross-platform. It'd be nice to be able to run any OS X software on Linux, any Android software on Windows, and any Windows software on BSD - without complexity and with full functionality. Seeing as it's a pipe dream, I'll dream that big.

      Either way, if you want Debian without systemd that ship has sailed. I'd say it is unethical, immoral even, to limit their freedom of choice. They are not beholden to you. Just spin your own distro and make it without systemd. If people are wanting such a thing then they'll assist you in proportion to their desire for such a build. I've actually little opinion, not strongly in one way or another, on the subject but most of the people complaining seem disinclined to actually do anything about it even though they're well-enabled to actually act on their complaints. That is, after all, one of the major benefits of free software.

      Systemd hasn't even kicked my puppy or pissed in my Cheerios. It has even been helpful a couple of times when I was finding out the cause of system slowdown during boot. That said, if I opposed its inclusion, I'd simply start working on my own build and encouraging others to join me.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    5. Re:Remove systemd from Debian. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Debian is perfectly usable with systemd. I have it running on several computers.

      Now, I don't like the way systemd is designed, however the claim that is makes Debian unusable is absurd.

  6. Mac os X remove the apple only locks by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    Mac os X remove the apple only locks.

    Yes you can do your self but it will be nice to have so you can install updates without braking stuff.

    1. Re:Mac os X remove the apple only locks by tibit · · Score: 1

      With the most recent Clover UEFI bootloader, it's more and more a case of plug-and-play with OS X on supported non-Apple hardware. It even installs from the original install media now.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    2. Re:Mac os X remove the apple only locks by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      What I would rather see is an Apple-branded version of Linux that would function as an "OS X Lite" for generic PCs. It would have a good part of the useful functionality of OS X without cannibalizing Apple sales. For uses, it would be a low-cost way of getting some useful OS X functionality and connectivity with Apple products for networking and lightweight synchronization.

    3. Re:Mac os X remove the apple only locks by anchovy_chekov · · Score: 1

      What I would rather see is an Apple-branded version of Linux that would function as an "OS X Lite" for generic PCs. It would have a good part of the useful functionality of OS X without cannibalizing Apple sales. For uses, it would be a low-cost way of getting some useful OS X functionality and connectivity with Apple products for networking and lightweight synchronization.

      Is Darwin still an option?

      Tried to find it via darwin.org and it seems to have been yanked into the larger Apple sphere of influence.

    4. Re:Mac os X remove the apple only locks by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Yes, Darwin, the open source follower version of Apple's BSD core, is still being maintained in step with each OS X release. Now envision Darwin with an 'official' OSX GUI, such as would be compatible with generic PCs.

    5. Re:Mac os X remove the apple only locks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd install a spellchecker on Joe_Dragon's computer.

  7. Android apps on sdcard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its amazingly annoying that I can't install my apps on my 32 GB SDCard.

    1. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Huh? I can install apps on an SD card, and I can easily move apps that are already installed between the unit and the card. This is true for my Galaxy S1, S3, and S5 phones, and my Tab 10.2 as well. All Samsung gear, but this seems to be an Android and not a Samsung feature.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    2. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 0

      Oh, and my single change would require that systemd die in a fire.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    3. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      It depends on the Android device. The manufacturer gets to turn this feature on or off, and many turn it off while only providing 8 GB on board storage, of which half is taken.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    4. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd get rid of APK. Everything else is fine by comparison.

    5. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      You need to update your sig Coren. Your favourite moron stalker now uses 6 posts of insane drivel.

    6. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If apk's posts are insane drivel then why minus moderate them? Why not prove him wrong? Coren22 can't.

    7. Re:Android apps on sdcard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm actually enjoying seeing apk make coren22 squirm like the lying libelous retarded assburgers autism weasel coren22 is.

    8. Re: Android apps on sdcard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody cares if he's right or wrong. He's a fucking spammer and a stalker.

  8. Telemetry, Update Rollbacks, UX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    In order of preference:

    1) No telemetry, or all telemetry shall be user-disablable.
    2) If telemetry is disabled, updates shall be offered to the user on demand, but there shall always exist the option to roll back to the prior version.
    3) Fire all UX designers. Into the sun. With a cannon. (Many updates are delivered with unwelcome UX changes. #3 is merely the fallback solution in case I don't get #2. Although if we fired all the UX designers into the sun with a cannon, I might not need to worry so much about having to roll back unwanted updates.)

    1. Re:Telemetry, Update Rollbacks, UX by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, some of us realize there isn't much use for a clutch pedal in a fully automatic car.

      Sometimes updates remove functionality; it's silly to keep a UI element if it doesn't do anything. Sometimes the needs of the majority outweigh the needs of the power user; if the function is confusing for new users or could cause severe problems if misused, perhaps it's better to put it into an advanced area.

      I suspect what you really want is the same functionality/UI with security updates and such. Not a bad idea, but it's not free for the developer to maintain old versions... so don't be surprised if they ask you to open your wallet.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
  9. Ability to reverse out "updates". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When something works fine, but you're forced to do a version += 1 dance, only to find something borks or degrades previous functionality. I'm looking at your iOS! If I want to lose support for an outdated OS, so be it, I bought the fucking device. Let us revert or flash back to the original!

    1. Re:Ability to reverse out "updates". by stooo · · Score: 1

      GIT and/or apt takes care of that. Just install or compile the older kernel.

      --
      aaaaaaa
  10. The problem is the user by stooo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If a led is on, the device is not "OFF", it's in standby mode, which means that is still suck a non-negligible amount of permanent electricity, like 10-20$ / Year.
    These modes should be forbidden, or better, they should be taxed !

    --
    aaaaaaa
    1. Re:The problem is the user by grahamsz · · Score: 1

      That'd require drawing 10-20W while in sleep.

      I don't doubt that there are devices that do that, but my macbook pro draws something like 1-2W while sleeping (assuming it's done charging). I don't think my fridge even draws 20W when it's idling

    2. Re:The problem is the user by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's a list of some common devices. A stereo receiver can end up costing you $40, but a desktop computer is more likely to be $7 a year (turned off, in standby mode).

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:The problem is the user by hjf · · Score: 2

      Even with LEDs off, the power supplies still need power to work. LEDs draw so little power compared to SMPS ICs they make no difference.

    4. Re:The problem is the user by swimboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That article is over 7 years old! The first clue was mentioning at the bottom, "You can also check planned electronics purchases for the Energy Star approval sticker." Virtually everything is Energy Star certified these days, and uses a *LOT* less electricity. (There's no date on the article itself, but the first comment is 2569 days old.)

      --
      Ask me how the Heisenberg Principle may or may not have saved my life.
    5. Re: The problem is the user by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

      Maybe if you keep the power brick plugged in. Apple might have slacked off and decided to not optimise for low idle power when the brick is plugged in, since the user won't notice... That's where legislation might come in eventually.

      It should be way less than 1W assuming everything is working normally and the laptop is not plugged in.

    6. Re:The problem is the user by danbob999 · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I can't wait to have TVs with a big "enable" button to enable the IR receiver, so that I can then use the remote to turn on the TV.
      It would make remotes much more useful.

    7. Re:The problem is the user by smithmc · · Score: 2

      These modes should be forbidden, or better, they should be taxed !

      They are "taxed"... every time you pay your electric bill. Don't want to pay it? Switch off your power strip.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    8. Re:The problem is the user by MobyDisk · · Score: 3, Interesting

      1) In general, criticizing a citation is only valid if you can provide a better citation. In this case, a newer article would qualify.
      2) People still use 7-year-old electronics.
      3) Newer articles seem to indicate this is still a problem. Ex:
      PS4: 10 watts
      XBOX One: 13 watts
      (Source: http://arstechnica.com/gaming/...)
      "Is standby growing or shrinking? It's probably growing."
      (Source: http://standby.lbl.gov/faq.htm...)
      Displays: 12 watts
      (Source: http://www.energysavingsecrets...)

    9. Re:The problem is the user by Lumpio- · · Score: 1

      $10-20? [citation needed]

    10. Re:The problem is the user by cfalcon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well no, they don't NEED to work. If I unplug something and later plug it back in, it works. If I turn it off and it enters a standby mode, consuming trivial power, and then later I turn it on, it works. Since the case where no electricity is used and the case where trivial electricity is used both result in a working product, no, the power supply doesn't "need" to be doing crap.

      The bigger issue is that the lights all add up and are ludicrous, especially the blue ones. It's annoying to have to consider this when choosing what goes in your bedroom.

    11. Re:The problem is the user by jabuzz · · Score: 2

      Except my TV uses less than 0.1W in standby. Just in case you missed that decimal point it is less than 100mW, and that is even with the red LED to tell me it is in standby illuminated. I am not actually sure what the real number is because the manual says just says less than 100mW and I my measurements say it is less than ~80mW, it all gets rather tricky as basically you are measuring the lowest amount of current that my multimeter is capable of doing on mains voltages.

      It also has a hard off button on the side, that takes it down to 0W. However given the difference is so little that I can save more energy by picking an aluminium drinks can off the ground and putting in the recycling than the TV would consume in a whole year on standby.

      Sure standby was bad, but a properly designed device can have a standby so slow it makes no practical difference.

    12. Re:The problem is the user by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, my post was sarcastic. There is a reason we have "standby" modes except of "off" modes. The most common reason is to power the IR receiver.
      Cable set-top boxes are also use a standby mode because they are very slow to boot from real off.

    13. Re:The problem is the user by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      If it can be turned on by remote control, then it needs some kind of standby mode to watch for the remote control signal. Even your 1970s wood cased TVs were running in a standby mode (for the few that featured wireless remotes) instead of a true 100% power-off.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    14. Re:The problem is the user by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Your best bet is to either switch it off at the wall (not relevant for the US, but good for countries with switches on wall sockets by default) or, if you can't reach the socket, put it on one of those extension cords with an inline switch.

      I went on a bit of a rampage a few years back and made sure *everything* in my home was physically switched off when not in use (not standby: switched off at the wall). Being an engineer I took data up to and after the change and the downward tick in bills (about $50/year) is noticeable above the noise.

    15. Re:The problem is the user by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a tax for the user.
      The manufacturer should be taxed, so they would have an incentive to put in a real power switch.

    16. Re:The problem is the user by KGIII · · Score: 1

      They are taxed. They use electricity and the electrical consumption is taxed. All of my power comes from renewable sources, when I'm home, so why should I pay an additional tax? Hell, the vast majority of my power (all of it, currently) at home is from sources of my own generation - solar and wind. I generate enough to put extra into the system because I'm still attached to the grid. But you want to try to control someone else's behavior via taxation...

      No, I'm not okay with that. If it's bad then it should be outright illegal not allowed simply because someone can afford it. If it's not bad then stop trying to control what other people do just because you don't like it. "It should be taxed!" is so facile as to be bordering on moronic.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    17. Re:The problem is the user by crtreece · · Score: 1

      I'll agree that some minimal standby mode is needed there. It's the "turn a light on, to signal that the device is off/in standby" that is annoying. Our 1970s remote-control TV managed to be in standby mode without having to turn on a light to show the world that it was in standby mode.

      --
      file: .signature not found
    18. Re:The problem is the user by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      You can thank the Japanese for that. They have been big on lowering power consumption for a long time, but after Fukushima there was a real surge in demand for lower power products as everyone wanted to do their bit to help. Japanese manufacturers invested a lot in lowering all aspects of energy use in their products as a result.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    19. Re:The problem is the user by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The ATX power supply spec is part of the problem. To get really low standby power you need a dedicated ultra low power AD/DC converter circuit to deliver 100mA, rather than the standard 5V standby which the spec suggests should be capable of 2.5A and is thus optimized for that.

      That is assuming you care about soft power on/off features. Soft power off is nice because it avoids that "it is now safe to switch off your computer" message. Soft power on isn't used by post people, but I think they would baulk at the big clunky power switch needed for hard power control.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    20. Re:The problem is the user by Misagon · · Score: 1

      In the European Union, devices are required by EU law not to draw more than 1W in standby.

      However... many manufacturers get around that by simply not calling it standby.
      Games consoles' "standby" power usage was in the news a while ago. The XBox One, PS4 and Nintendo Wii each draws more in "standby" than my NUC in idle.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    21. Re:The problem is the user by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 1

      And it's completely backward to have devices with an LED activated to tell you that the device is inactive.

      A bright red e-ink indicator would be much better. A lot less annoying and uses a lot less power too.

    22. Re:The problem is the user by tepples · · Score: 1

      For one thing, a completely unpowered computer cannot wake on LAN. For another, a physical switch is too easy to accidentally put in the wrong position: lose unsaved changes if suddenly turned off, or cause an expensive tech support call when the novice user cannot quickly find it to turn it on.

    23. Re:The problem is the user by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      Who cares? Not everything needs to wake on LAN. Not all computers need to wake on LAN. Not all devices need a remote control. There's parasitic power draw on blenders. Does your blender needs to wake on LAN?

      The power switch is one of the few things that is actually intuitive. Tech support costs? Lol whatever.

    24. Re:The problem is the user by smithmc · · Score: 1

      All taxes eventually make it to the individual. Corporations don't pay taxes, they pass them along to their customers.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  11. Laptop stuff by jones_supa · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have many little ideas to improve laptops.

    - Allow disabling LEDs or have them all under the lid. I don't want my whole room blinking when the machine is in suspend.
    - Do not use eye-scorching low frequencies like 200 Hz for backlight PWM.
    - Make Macs with matte screens.
    - Put in place dedicated volume keys instead of clunky Fn buttons.
    - Have a small maintenance hatch in every machine for easy dust removal from the heatsink.
    - Include a trackball so I can play 3D games on couch without an external mouse.

    1. Re:Laptop stuff by ADRA · · Score: 2

      http://solutions.3m.com/wps/po...

      I'm sure there are many more vendors but that was the top of my google juice.

      --
      Bye!
    2. Re:Laptop stuff by OzPeter · · Score: 4, Interesting

      - Put in place dedicated volume keys instead of clunky Fn buttons.

      Back in the mid 90's I really appreciated the external analogue volume control on my Thinkpad. One quick swipe before booting up to turn the sound off ensured no embarrassingly loud chime when Windows XP started.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    3. Re:Laptop stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1 for the dustremoval hatch :-)

    4. Re:Laptop stuff by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Here's how Fujitsu does it. A small slot with a removable cover. Much better than having to disassemble large parts of the machine just to remove the dust which is bound to accumulate there anyway.

    5. Re:Laptop stuff by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Yep, those were pretty comfortable to use. Some mouse wheel -like thing could be used for digital volume control as well.

    6. Re:Laptop stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make Macs with matte screens.

      How about TVs with matte screens.

      I recently had the displeasure of trying to replace my broken 47" LCD TV. Every single new TV - at any price point - had a glossy screen.

      So now when I sit in my living room to watch TV, the screen shows a crystal clear mirror view of my kitchen.

    7. Re:Laptop stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      - Put in place dedicated volume keys instead of clunky Fn buttons.

      First thing I thought about when reading the summary: simple, analogue potentiometer for volume control. Why the hell should I need a software layer for volume control?

    8. Re:Laptop stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -Put in place dedicated volume keys instead of clunky Fuck'n buttons.

      Fixed that for you. You can swear, we're all adults here ;)

    9. Re:Laptop stuff by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Back in the mid 90's I really appreciated the external analogue volume control on my Thinkpad. One quick swipe before booting up to turn the sound off ensured no embarrassingly loud chime when Windows XP started.

      I agree with you that analog volume control is a good thing.

      But I'm very confused:

      (1) If you were "embarrassed" by the Windows XP chime, why not disable it (or disable system sounds completely)?? That's one of the first 3 things I do when installing an operating system -- I don't need my computer to beep at me just to say, "Hello, I've booted your OS!" Obviously you disliked it enough to find it "embarrassing"; why have it at all?

      (2) Even so, I also still can't figure out how you were even booting Windows XP "back in the mid 90s." It didn't exist yet.

    10. Re:Laptop stuff by freeze128 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Windows XP didn't exist in the mid 90's.

    11. Re:Laptop stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The last I checked turning off sounds, including logon, was possible in XP.

    12. Re:Laptop stuff by KGIII · · Score: 1

      Oddly, only my backup "throwaway" laptop that I brought with me does that. It's just some inexpensive Toshiba Satellite but it has a volume wheel on the front of it that comes in handy.

      On the other side, just disable startup notification sounds and the indicated complaint goes away without needing a hardware solution. It's in the system settings.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    13. Re:Laptop stuff by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Also, stop cramming number pads into laptops. It makes keys small/unusable/missing, and it ruins the alignment of the main typing area. Use the space for properly sized arrow keys and actual home/end/pgup/pgdn keys (not via Fn). Thinkpads used to get this right, at least as of T410, I'm not sure if they do any more.

      Those who don't need proper keyboards can always get a tablet or something instead. Please make actual keyboards for those few who still use them.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    14. Re:Laptop stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you see, it worked.

  12. Just mod it ! by stooo · · Score: 1

    Just mod it yourself...
    a bit of metalwork is not so difficult. And as a bonus, it's really cool.

    --
    aaaaaaa
  13. Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being as everything is practically made from a code of some sort...

    * Software - already there for the most part, code is code and most of the good stuff is open source

    * Machined Products - gcode

    * Cast Products - fdm or machined mold which is cast and recast

    * Injection Molded Products - machined die for hydraulic press

    * FDM Products - Mostly already there, gcode

    The exceptions are forged products (mostly still a lot of labor in that), hand crafted products (not what we are talking about nor the economy English exists in, and formed products (think sheet metal brake).

    Considering that 70% of common products fit into the non-exception category... their design files could be open sourced and at that point anyone with the hardware could re-create them as they see best. The better designs if re-shared would be more popular (think music since Napster).

    The other big one is UI design on physical products, think your car's stereo... your tv, anything that has a screen (your phone). That's practically what apps did to phones with some clever marketing and sales based wording. They took a device and made it open in every form except the most basic of the operating system. Move all of the functionality to apps and you have a ui anyone can build. Now they screwed that up with app stores but it's at least a step forward.

    I think the point is pretty clear, let people muck with things and they get better. Kinda like pottery, metalsmithing, masonry, etc. Keep things impossible to improve upon and they are just temporal and forgotten.

    So TLDR; The single change I would make to any product would be to open the source of it's design, as it's probably just some software + a manufacturing process anyway.

  14. Replace Gnome Shell with Cinnamon by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 1

    Demote the Gnome Shell to "sad historical artifact" and promote the Cinnamon developers to lead Gnome development (cf "egcs").

    --
    the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    1. Re:Replace Gnome Shell with Cinnamon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting the management at Red Hat to do this. For some weird reason, they're completely convinced that the Gnome team is on the right path.

    2. Re:Replace Gnome Shell with Cinnamon by KGIII · · Score: 1

      I did not realize that Gnome was being hosted by RedHat. That, err... That explains a bit. A quick Google doesn't seem to be productive in my attempt to see when Gnome was "assisted" by RedHat or if they've always been that way. Gnome was pretty good for a while. I've not liked their DE in a while. I recall which was the last version that I liked - I think it was in the 2.0 region? These days, I just enjoy the simplicity of LXDE and tend to default to that where applicable.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    3. Re:Replace Gnome Shell with Cinnamon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The main Gnome developers are all Red Hat employees, and that's their actual job at RH. It's been that way for probably well over 10 years. So since they're employees, all their actions can be considered to be approved by RH upper management.

  15. milking machines are for cows not for perverts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You are all cows. Cows say Moooo. Mooooo! Mooooo! Moooo cows Moooo! Mooo say the cows. YOU MILKED COWS!!!

  16. Within the realm of possibility by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd force manufacturers to open their products and support them regardless of their users.

    It's ludicrous that we live in a world of locked bootloaders and warranty fuses. How can you void a hardware warranty by running a different OS? How can we release a device that gets no updates after only the shortest time?

    Devices have a useful life, they should be supported throughout that useful life.

    1. Re:Within the realm of possibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer a world of locked bootloaders. Specifically one that prevents a specific malware product. The name of this product is Microsoft Windows.

    2. Re:Within the realm of possibility by BESTouff · · Score: 1

      mod parent up

  17. Biggest oops by stooo · · Score: 1

    Oops, the launch vehicle lifted off with telemetry disabled, no UX, no command update, and with Moscow as a target.

    --
    aaaaaaa
  18. Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by bhlowe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Title says it all.

    1. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by chispito · · Score: 1

      Are they really that different? Besides Delete/Backspace, what's the big deal?

      --
      The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
    2. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by tibit · · Score: 1

      Hate to burst your bubble, but it's already here. I'm using a Dell SK-8115 keyboard with my mac. Works perfectly fine. Same for Apple keyboards and PCs.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    3. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alt and Win are flopped. If you're trying to form finger memory between Mac, Windows, Mac w/ Windows keyboard, and Windows w/ Mac keyboard, it's a giant pain in the ass.

    4. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd like to get rid of everyone that uses the subject line to start their comment. That is all.

    5. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by OzPeter · · Score: 2

      Alt and Win are flopped. If you're trying to form finger memory between Mac, Windows, Mac w/ Windows keyboard, and Windows w/ Mac keyboard, it's a giant pain in the ass.

      Given that things like cut and paste are totally different key strokes between Windows and Mac, worrying about key placement seems kinda pointless.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    6. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by HalAtWork · · Score: 2

      Remap keys

    7. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by hackertourist · · Score: 1

      Placement of Ctrl, Alt/Option, Cmd and Windows keys.
      For a Mac, you want Cmd next to the spacebar (for easy access to the most-used shortcuts like Cmd-X/C/V) and Ctrl off to the left somewhere. For Windows, Ctrl needs to be next to the spacebar.

      I've got a Windows machine and a Mac running off the same keyboard (KVM switch). Switching is a pain. I've experimented with key remapping software, but haven't found a program that would swap keys only if keyboard 'X' was attached.

    8. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Given that things like cut and paste are totally different key strokes between Windows and Mac, worrying about key placement seems kinda pointless.

      Huh? In most Mac apps, the shortcuts are Command-X and Command-V. On most Windows apps, the shortcuts are CTRL-X and CTRL-V.

      Your pinky just needs to move one key over. It's annoying as heck. I use a Mac at work (because that's what they give me), but I need a Linux virtual machine to get certain work done. It's a pain in the neck because on the same freakin' keyboard, I need to put my pinky in two difference places depending on what workspace I'm on. About 50% of the time I get it wrong and have some random other thing pop up that I didn't want. (And yes, I could go and try to change default keyboard shortcuts, but some of those are application-specific, and it's a pain.)

    9. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remap keys

      Nope; that screws you up when you remotely connect to a Windows machine. Been there, done that.

    10. Re:Common keyboard for Windows and OS X by Misagon · · Score: 1

      Both PC and Apple keyboards are USB keyboards that work with on both PCs and Macs. There are only a handful of badly engineered keyboards that don't work on MacOS and iOS because of Apple's USB HID stack being more picky about correctness than MS Window and Linux.

      The Windows keys and the Command keys both emit the same codes in the USB Human Interface Device protocol.
      The only significant difference between PC and Mac keyboards is in the order between those keys and their neighbouring Alt on the bottom row.
      Better keyboards (like my Ducky G2Pro) have a DIP switch or a programming setting for swapping the order of those keys between PC order and Mac order.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
  19. I'd make customizable... by unixisc · · Score: 1

    ... every product that I use, in whichever way I want it. Like my car should recognize whichever device I want it to recognize at any given time - be it the music of my Winbook, or my phone or anything else. Oh, and have Bluetooth hosts be capable of handling multiple guests - like if I'm in the car w/ both my phones, as well as tablets, I should be able to play music on the iPod but at the same time, if an incoming call comes, the car navigation system should be able to switch to my phone.

  20. iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would add wireless to the iPod and give it more space than a Nomad. Without those changes it is just lame.

  21. Usernames by drama · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I would definitely go back and make it common practice to use email addresses for usernames instead of letting users choose.

    1. Re:Usernames by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, so when they change mail servers they are forced to change username too. Good one... except it isn't

    2. Re:Usernames by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Good point. Perhaps the OP meant "login by email address." Although if you have a display name, and can login by email, then the username can just be a hidden guid.

    3. Re:Usernames by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had to disable my onscreen email address after getting pics of supercreepy tombstones mailed to me. And all I said was that Bush jr and his gang should all be held to trial for treason.

    4. Re:Usernames by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      email address can be lost. It's a common problem for account recovery. What you have today, you may not have access to in a few years time. Over the years you may have many email addresses, remember what you used on what device proves problematic. Furthermore, domains may disappear entirely, or mail hosting accounts get hacked and lost, or the service pulled.

    5. Re:Usernames by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      This really seems like a bad idea in all ways, shapes, and forms.

    6. Re:Usernames by will_die · · Score: 1

      Only if I can change the user name. I have to many systems I still use that require I enter old email addresses.

  22. Dumb TVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'd make dumb TVs again that didn't try to make use of the wifi without my permission.

    And I'd require Smart TVs to have a physical jumper at the back that's easily reached by the end consumer that can completely disable the smartness if someone so desired.

    1. Re:Dumb TVs by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      And I'd require Smart TVs to have a physical jumper at the back that's easily reached by the end consumer that can completely disable the smartness if someone so desired.

      That would be stupid. If you don't want the smart TV features, why would you pay extra for the smart TV in the first place?

      I'd make dumb TVs again that didn't try to make use of the wifi without my permission.

      There's lots of dumb TVs still out there. Go buy one of those. If I were in the market for a TV, that's what I'd be buying. I hear the Seiki ones are pretty decent. I think Vizio still has some dumb TV models too.

      These companies only sell this crap because consumers are dumb enough to buy it. It costs more to make a smart TV than a dumb TV, since the electronics are a lot more powerful. So if you don't want your TV spying on you, then don't buy one! But what'll happen is too many morons will buy the smart TVs and not enough dumb TVs, and then the mfgrs will simply stop selling the dumb ones. It hasn't gotten to that point yet (unless things have changed in the last couple of months since I last looked), but it could.

    2. Re:Dumb TVs by lgw · · Score: 1

      The best TV display panels come attached to smart TV B, and even mid-line TVs use a fast processor to avoid motion artifacts, so the smart TV BS is just piled on.

      However, it's not like your TV is going to start using your wi-fi without configuring it. I'm not much worried about it spying.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  23. I'd shrink the iPhone back to a 3.5" screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, I don't want a tablet in my pocket thank you very much.

    1. Re:I'd shrink the iPhone back to a 3.5" screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's about the perfect size currently. I don't want a phone the size of a postage stamp.

    2. Re:I'd shrink the iPhone back to a 3.5" screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      iPhone has always been the "perfect size" even though that size has changed over the years..

    3. Re:I'd shrink the iPhone back to a 3.5" screen by tysonedwards · · Score: 1

      Every iPhone is precisely the size it is.

      --
      Thirty four characters live here.
  24. fleshlight Re: milking machines are for cows by avandesande · · Score: 3, Funny

    How about turning fleshlight into a girlfriend?

    --
    love is just extroverted narcissism
  25. Better security... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...for life-saving medical devices...

  26. Re:A single change? by leonbev · · Score: 1

    It probably will never happen, but getting rid of the Dice sponsored stories would be a good start.

    Seriously, guys... we're smarter than the average Internet user. We can spot marketing drivel from a mile away.

  27. That's easy by phantomfive · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I would make it open source (or at least unlocked). Locked hardware (and to a lesser extent, 'cloud' services) is one of the biggest threats to the worldwide computer community these days. It gives control of things to corporations, much like AOL was trying to do in the 90s. Who wants to be locked into the AOL world?

    Right to Read is fiction, but corporations have been trying to make it reality for a long time. Walled gardens are bad for our freedom (and frankly don't improve security, either).

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    1. Re:That's easy by ADRA · · Score: 2

      Meh, many people want locked down worlds where hackers can't infect their systems. Given the picture of infosec these days, you'll only see this getting more acute. I'm all for the 'Do this complicated step to void your warranty but unlock everything' operation. But having said thing unlocked, uninformed users can be notified with big haggard warnings that they're living in an 'unsafe' platform. Said services could live through a user's connected services instead of the host itself, but once machine trust is gone, its a tricky / useless endeavour to try and enforce otherwise.

      --
      Bye!
    2. Re:That's easy by mlts · · Score: 1

      Bingo. The Internet caught the big content providers by surprise, back in the 1990s. For a while, there was a war between computers (and AOL/CIS) versus TV set top boxes on what would provide the interactive media coming into households. Fortunately, in that case, the good guys won. However, that was a battle, and it is a war, and if we don't resist it at every turn, we might just find that all our computers wind up as locked down consoles. Great for the 0% piracy rate and ensuring constant revenue streams for quarter figures. Not great for the users because you don't know who or what is spying on you, or if the backdoor reserved for the maker now just got old on the black market, and is now being used for botnets.

      People need to vote with their feet. Never buy a phone without a bootloader that is easily unlocked. Do not buy consoles, which one has zero control over.

    3. Re:That's easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It gives control of things to corporations, much like AOL was trying to do in the 90s. Who wants to be locked into the AOL world?

      Most consumers, that's who.

      Just look at all the idiots who use Facebook for absolutely everything, as if Facebook was the whole internet. They don't use email or other websites any more, they just use Facebook to communicate or even to buy stuff.

    4. Re:That's easy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Meh, many people want locked down worlds where hackers can't infect their systems.

      That doesn't work. It's security theater.

      Furthermore, there are ways to achieve that security theater without keeping the hardware locked. Plenty of Android manufactures do it.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:That's easy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Most consumers, that's who.Just look at all the idiots who use Facebook for absolutely everything, as if Facebook was the whole internet.

      I don't think so. Even the people I know who are mostly computer illiterate use things like wikipedia (even if they don't know what wikipedia is)

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:That's easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That's funny, some people I know say that Wikipedia is all BS and that you can't trust anything on there because anyone can edit it, but meanwhile you can trust Breitbart.com and YouTube videos from people who make "documentaries" "exposing" the FEMA concentration camps.

    7. Re:That's easy by ADRA · · Score: 1

      Well, I have no axe to grind, but the linked news issue was users downloading untrusted third party software from unbeknownst vendors and expecting what exactly? So yeah, worm, rootkits, etc. Galore. If you leave the rails, there's a lot of great things to be had, and a lot of risks. Doing so should certainly be done by the trained / brave and not by a clueless user wanting to install the newest Angry Birds a few minutes faster than through official channels.

      --
      Bye!
    8. Re:That's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We never would have learned the truth about 9/11 if it weren't for YouTube. Wikipedia, on the other hand, still only documents the official story.

  28. XBOX One by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The user interface is infuriating when drilling down more than 2 levels into any one direction of the navigation clusterfuck they built.

  29. Remote login, please by mi · · Score: 1

    I want to be able to login to my phone. And toaster. And dishwasher. ssh would be best, but even the silly old unencrypted telnet is fine. With the standard assortment of Unix command-line tools, of course, plus the phone-specific utilities.

    The devices currently make certain things very easy, but other things remain impossible (MS Windows approach). Opening up would allow proficient users to do things, Apple/Google could not think of...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:Remote login, please by stooo · · Score: 1

      >> I want a backdoor in my devices, so every kiddie is able to login to my phone. And toaster. And dishwasher. ssh would be best, but even the silly old unencrypted telnet is fine.

      Corrected that for you...
      Uh, but this one is already done... Courtesy of phoney US agencies and similar.

      --
      aaaaaaa
    2. Re:Remote login, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hm, I like it! I could program my toaster to turn off every other element so I get nice stripes on my toast and I can pretend I made grilled cheese on a grill.

    3. Re:Remote login, please by mi · · Score: 1

      Uh, but this one is already done... Courtesy of phoney US agencies and similar.

      Whether that's true or not, I do not have the shell-access to the device, and I want one.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    4. Re:Remote login, please by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      Wait, you make grilled cheese sandwiches by toasting the bread?

    5. Re:Remote login, please by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      > I want to be able to login to my phone. And toaster. And dishwasher.

      "Vulnerabilities in certain models of BRANDNAME toaster can allow a remote attacker direct access to the heating coils, and the hardware override was ditched and all the shills on the tech website said it was great and what are you a dinosaur for wanting a switch and now your house is burning down because someone didn't like what you said online."

    6. Re:Remote login, please by mi · · Score: 1

      Disabling an important functionality for fear, that it will some day be abused, seems wrong. What was it about essential liberty vs. temporary security?

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    7. Re:Remote login, please by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      Big difference between essential liberty and all your appliances having backdoors.

      Look at medical devices- there's a huge hoopla over the fact that they are so vulnerable. Why would you want everything like that? All these products are commodity, cheapest bidder stuff. Routers can barely be secured- just barely- and we're talking toasters and furnaces and stuff with real ability to hurt you?

    8. Re:Remote login, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just have to lie the toaster on its side to avoid making a mess when the cheese melts.

  30. Lose the obsession with thinness by Solandri · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd rather have a thicker laptop which could work off battery from when I wake up to when I go to sleep (~16 hours - both work and evening relaxation use), and charge overnight. A thicker phone which only needs to be charged every 2-3 days, instead of every night. A thicker tablet that can last a week or two on a charge instead of a few days.

    My phone (Nexus 5) was so thin compared to my previous (Galaxy S with a slide-out keyboard) that I dropped it more times in my first week owning it than I had dropped the old phone in 3 years. I ended up getting a case for it, not to protect it but to make it thicker so I wouldn't drop it so much. I don't need nor want it to be any thinner. Do something useful with that extra space - like pack in a bigger battery. (I'm happy to report though that with the Marshmallow update, the phone easily lasts 36-48 hours on a charge. Many days it still has over 70% charge left by the time I go to sleep. Maybe we'll manage to get back to the days when you only had to charge your phone every 3-4 days.)

    1. Re:Lose the obsession with thinness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      My requirements last phone upgrade were:

      1. Waterproof.

      2. Durable.

      3. Has to be big enough to hold securely and small enough to fit in a pocket.

      No other specifications mattered to me. There was only one model in the Verizon store that qualified, and it was an older one.

    2. Re:Lose the obsession with thinness by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, with Marshmallow they've figured out that if the screen is off and the readings from the accelerometers (the 3 axes) are almost the same now as they were a couple of minutes ago, then it's probably fine to not burn a ton of battery doing networking and processing right now, even if an app says that it would like to do that.

      Apps can still force their way through, but only once a minute at most.

      I'm sure they'll switch to a more sophisticated quota system in some future OS upgrade.

  31. PASSWORDS by gurps_npc · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Passwords need a major revision.

    Everything should be two factor password system with one being a token/phone/pc, the second one should be a short, (no more than 6 symobls - including every key on a standard keyboard - and you should not have to change anything more often than twice a year.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    1. Re:PASSWORDS by gstoddart · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Everything should be two factor password system with one being a token/phone/pc

      Of course the problem with this is it somehow presumes I trust entities with my damned phone number.

      And I'm sorry, but that's not happening ... if Google wants my cell number so they can ostensibly text me with two factor authentication, the reality is I simply don't trust them and fully expect this will be used for further marketing/tracking/analytics.

      Take the marketing weasels out of the mix and make sure this stuff is to protect my privacy and security.

      But until then, every web site which says "oh, just give us your cell number for added security" gets a big "fuck you". Because time and time again they prove they're not to be trusted.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    2. Re:PASSWORDS by MobyDisk · · Score: 2

      Wow, that sounds like the exact opposite of what I want.

      1. Short passwords = harder to remember and less secure.
      2. Two factor authentication means I have to give my cell phone number to everyone and have it on hand, or I have to carry 500 keyfobs. I can't login quickly because I have to wait for a text, and if I lose my phone I can't login to anything. I personally choose never to use 2-factor authentication, and instead have good passwords. I *might* reconsider for my bank.

    3. Re:PASSWORDS by gurps_npc · · Score: 1

      The first option was a token, not a phone. Use that..

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    4. Re:PASSWORDS by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      The two factor capablility makes it more secure, not less. Short passwords are easier to remember than longer passwords, assuming you are not doing something stupid.

      The other factor does not have to be your phone, it can be a token. More importantly, if it is done correctly on your phone, they don't get your phone number - that would be stupid for reasons you mentioned and has NOTHING to do with what I was describing.

      For token, think of a small USB device you plug in to your PC that has a very long password.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    5. Re:PASSWORDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why settle for 2-factor? I propose we switch to 6 factor authentication!

      So for any given username, you also need confirmation by:
      password (4-8 characters, must include lower case, upper case, numbers, symbols, and at least one exotic ASCII)
      certified device
      time of access
      blood test
      mother's approval
      astrologer's consent ("Mars is crossing Aries, not a good month to log into paypal.")

    6. Re:PASSWORDS by vux984 · · Score: 1

      Everything should be two factor password system with one being a token/phone/pc,

      No thank you. I'd like to be able access things like webmail without a token. The reason I'm using webmail in the first place is usually that I don't have my phone or laptop with me. And the last thing I want is a token that can never leave my side, and that upon being lost or damaged locks me out of everything everywhere.

      Additionally, I dont' want to give all these entities my cell phone number. (A common identifier that can be used to tie multiple otherwise disconnected accounts together; that ties me to a geolocation, a real identity and even payment information -- unless i go to steps like carrying around a dedicated burner phone.)

      I simply don't care to hand them all that information; especially since their marketing deparments treat it as a gold mine.

      And if I'm not using a phone as my token... I definitely don't want to carry around a bag of RSA dongles.

      the second one should be a short, (no more than 6 symobls - including every key on a standard keyboard

      a) Whose standard keyboard? Not everyone speaks US english or uses a US english keyboard.

      b) Why limit it to 6 characters? None of my passwords are that short. And at 6 symbols your are into easy "over the shoulder" password theft territory.

      "Aha! But they won't have the token!" you'll counter.

      Aha nothing! many of the people who might steal my password over my shoulder would be able to get access to my phone too. Coworkers, roomates, the pickpocket at the restaurant, bar, or checkout line...)

      Each authenticated resource has a different risk profile, and merits different levels of protection. The registrar account holding our domains and our investment accounts needs a lot more security than a logon at slashdot. The same rules for both don't even make sense.

      I certainly don't want a dongle for /. and I don't care to give dice my phone number either; nor have to deal with 2 factor to login to /.

      Passwords (and authentication in generall) is a complicated problem. And standardizing electronic authentication is as absurd as standardizing physical authentication. (Can you imagine how absurd you'd look declaring that everything from your luggage to the bank vault should use the same type of key to open the lock?)

    7. Re:PASSWORDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, because then everything is linked to a real human being. Making it easier for goddamned targeted ads and other privacy BS that gets compromised by hackers

    8. Re:PASSWORDS by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      > Passwords need a major revision.

      Ok, so far I'm with you....

      > Everything should be two factor password system with one being a token/phone/pc,

      NOOOOO this is all shit that can be social engineered or outright owned.

      I call and say I lost my token. But I'm talking about your token. And I googled your elementary school, so now I have your number for long enough to own your everything else that uses it to authenticate.

      > the second one should be a short, (no more than 6 symobls

      My big gripe is differing password standards. I need to be able to reuse passwords at similar places (for instance, forums have one password, places I buy stuff have another), and my number 1 max gripe is max password lengths. I hate max password lengths. They are absolutely idiotic. So your revamp would break every password I have, and leave me with a gutted password for when the second factor gets owned.

      Terrible. Terrible terrible terrible terrible terrible terrible.

      Just awful.

    9. Re:PASSWORDS by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      I'd be happy with an RFID tag in my wallet and/or phone plus some facial recognition for all the low security stuff. Just unlock as I approach or as I enter. Add a password on top for the higher security stuff.

      Passwords rules need at least to be consistent. At work one system is limited to a maximum of 8 characters, while the other is a minimum of 8.

      Elsewhere special characters can't be handled, while the next system requires them.

      It got stupid to the point where I now keep hints written down for a bunch of occasional used passwords and user names, which mostly defeats the point of strong passwords. but after a while I just stop giving a crap and just want to get on with life.

    10. Re:PASSWORDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I need to be able to reuse passwords at similar places

      Don't do that. Use a password manager like KeePass.

    11. Re:PASSWORDS by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Short passwords are easier to remember than longer passwords,

      Are you sure?
      Short complex password, or long dictionary passphrase?
      Until someone points to a study on the topic this will remain a matter of opinion. But I suspect that people find short passwords hard to remember because of the arbitrary and inconsistent rules on character case, symbols, numbers, and length. If it was just a matter of comparing biscuit' to 'I ate biscuits for dinner last Tuesday" then shorter would be better. But when it becomes 'B1scu!t' the scales tip toward the passphrase. More evidence of this is that people take passphrases, and create rules for turning them into short passwords. Ex: 'I ate biscuits for dinner last Tuesday' becomes 'i8bfdlT'

      if it is done correctly on your phone, they don't get your phone number

      Oh, you are referring to using OTP algorithms. I find most online services don't support that: They just want your cell number and they text you something.

      As for the rest of your post: I agree.

      Side question: Could you help me understand something that happens with online discussions? I find that people seem to reply to posts, and restate something that I said, but in a way that implies I disagreed with it. Is a debate technique to try and discredit someone? For example, you posted "two-factor capability makes it more secure, not less." That statement implies that I said two-factor capability is less secure. I did not say that, I said short passwords are less secure. I even pointed out, albeit indirectly, that two-factor is more secure when I said "I *might* reconsider for my bank." Another example is your statement that the other factor could be a a phone or a token. Was there something in my post that implied I didn't know that? I specifically mentioned both phone and keyfob. I'm just trying to understand since this seems to happen a lot.

    12. Re:PASSWORDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Text messages are not to be trusted. Every day I receive atleast 20 texts claiming to be my land lord with a new bank account, the cellular company saying I should visit a website, or an advert for prostitution. Others can already intercept my texts so the 2 factor is meaningless. Even the cellular company can't stop it.

    13. Re:PASSWORDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the greater the length of a password, the *easier* it is to remember? U wot m8.

    14. Re:PASSWORDS by Tom · · Score: 1

      Those 500 keyfobs can be software.
      That phone number can be 500 phone numbers, all routed to one, the same way we make bogus mail accounts that forward to our real mail accounts, but that we can shut down if they get too much spam.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    15. Re:PASSWORDS by Rob+Lister · · Score: 1
      Moby, if I had a mod point left I'd up your score.

      Ex: 'I ate biscuits for dinner last Tuesday' becomes 'i8bfdlT'

      That is a great system I use in all critical places. I note with humor however that you used only 7 characters in your example. Most places would reject your example as being too weak but would accept Biscuiteater1@ as being ultra strong. Irony. And in fact yours really is too weak but at least it won't fall to a dictionary attack.

      Regarding my use of that system, the real difficulty comes in the 'rule' not reusing the same password for different systems. I can remember a single pass phrase perfectly, but 10 pass phrases, even if I could remember them, I'd lose track of which is used where. And so I end up reusing.

      The second difficulty occurs on my work systems. There's about 8 separate logins and each one forces me to change it on a periodic basis (and that period for each is different or not sync'd to others. What choice do I have but to write it down?

      There's gotta be a better way. If I could stop having to memorize all those passwords, perhaps I'd have brain cells left to fix it.

      Regarding your side question: Folks like to argue. Disagreement, even if feigned, provides impetus.

    16. Re:PASSWORDS by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      You don't need to give Google or anyone else your phone number to use 2FA. You have an app, which doesn't need permission to access your phone number, that knows what time it is an a secret seed number that is shared with whoever you are authenticating with. Using that seed number both you and the service you are authenticating with can generate a code for every 30 second block of time. You authenticate by entering the code.

      No-one else can generate the codes without knowing the secret seed number, that is never displayed on your phone and never transmitted except for once during set-up.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    17. Re:PASSWORDS by tepples · · Score: 1

      I can't login quickly because I have to wait for a text, and if I lose my phone I can't login to anything.

      And in the US, I have to either pay per incoming text or pay per month for unlimited texts.

  32. Windows by chipschap · · Score: 1, Funny

    I'd roll Windows back in stages until it reached 1.0 and after that, back into oblivion.

    1. Re:Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      With Windows, I could rattle off a decent list:

      1: Get rid of activation. The pirates can jump over it, businesses can use KMS servers, so it mainly annoys people. OS X, Solaris, IRIX, AIX, have turned a profit for a long time without this in place.

      2: The ability to create offline media patch repositories like WSUS Offline, except an official method. This way, it makes it easy for a home/SOHO user to install a VM or machine and have it be at the latest (or at least pretty recent) when it comes to patches.

      3: A master switch, flip it, no telemetry data, no UI data, no file searches, no Cortana... the machine will check for updates for security and AV defs... and that's it. No other OS needs to phone home as often as Windows seems to.

      4: a LTS release. For most people, XP is just fine, and the "functionality" (i.e. telemetry data) isn't needed. Of course, there are major security improvements between XP and Vista (such as separating the user context from admin rights), but the ideal would be an edition of Windows that can be serviced and patched for 10-20 years.

      5: A fscking CHKDSK for ReFS. Even if it only does similar to a ZFS scrub, it is needed.

      6: A real backup utility in the client versions. wbadmin is great, but only on server editions. Even better, being able to restore from MBR to UEFI and back, would be great.

      7: SSH.

      8: Infiniband support. Combine it with Storage Spaces Direct, and you have actual decent speeds.

      9: Hyper-V shipped on, and functionality added so the hypervisor can check signatures for rootkits in real time. Since rootkits can't get outside the machine's address space barring a F0 0F bug, it is a way to find those and get rid of them posthaste.

      10: Coupled with having the Windows desktop in a VM would be backups done by an instance outside the VM, so ransomware or a logic bomb can't delete the backups.

    2. Re:Windows by chipschap · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That is a well-thought through list with meaningful improvements.

      You realize that most of what you suggest (except possibly items 8-10) would make Windows into ... well ... something like Linux :)

  33. iPhone Calendar event forwards. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'nuff said.

  34. Stop Preloading Crapware by DickBreath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Stop preloading crap that I don't want and didn't ask for.

    If for some inconceivable reason I wanted the Facebook app, I can find it and download it quite easily. After that, it every time I upgrade my device, I will automatically have that app pre-installed. If you must pre install it to avoid tech support questions, then at least make the God forsaken thing un-installable!

    I have nothing against Uber, but if I wanted their app, I would install it.

    Maybe you should pre-install a computer algebra system app? (CAS) Since I use it, I would tend to believe that everyone would be interested in such an app!

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    1. Re:Stop Preloading Crapware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The pre-installed software does not stop people from buying the hardware. And it winds up benefiting business partners. So, you can expect it to continue no matter how much you hate it.

       

    2. Re:Stop Preloading Crapware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That junk reduces the price of the hardware. It's the singular reason it exists. Each crappy application publisher has paid the manufacture to be there. Your examples suggest you are new to this. It's been a plague on mankind since IBM compatible PCs started getting into the consumer market, and it's been shitting on every other device ever since.

    3. Re:Stop Preloading Crapware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Phone/PC companies do this for added income. I hate it all as well, but they don't do it because you might want it. They do it because they are paid per unit sold with that software pre-loaded.

    4. Re:Stop Preloading Crapware by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      It's been a plague on mankind since IBM compatible PCs started getting into the consumer market,

      No kidding.

      Back in the '80s I got one of the (perhaps THE) first third-party external hard drives on the market. It came preloaded with a bunch of junkware.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  35. Change Windows' file path separator to forward-sla by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Backslash-as-a-filepath-separator is extremely annoying, both because it's gratuitously different from every other OS, and because it's also used (in C, C++, and elsewhere) as an escape character, which can cause endless hilarity for anyone who isn't very careful about that.

    And I'd also like them to replace the Windows DOS prompt with bash running inside a proper terminal window. Installed by default.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  36. Telephones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Voice mail tag: When im talking to Larrys voice mail, and Larry is talking to my voice mail... just put us through to eachother.

    2. 911 butt-dialing. When i lock the keypad on my phone.. i want ALL the buttons locked...even (especially) the ones that dial 911.

    3. Charging. Every phone should have -at least- two places you can plug it in & charge it.. so when one goes bad you can still make a phone call. (this also goes for laptops & tablets)

    4. Simcard lockouts should be illegal.

    1. Re:Telephones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed

      The Nokia E72 has 2 ways of charging, the usual Nokia power port and via USB.

  37. User Serviceable Everything by KermodeBear · · Score: 1

    Phones with no way to replace the battery? Gosh, your battery is dead, you have to buy a whole new device.

    The video card on your lap top is flakey? What a shame, time to buy an entirely new machine.

    Your provider won't update the official version of Android (or whatever) on your device? Well it's really hard to do, I guess if you want that new version you better buy a new device, or figure out how to jailbreak the old one and pray you don't brick the thing.

    --
    Love sees no species.
    1. Re:User Serviceable Everything by tibit · · Score: 1

      Gosh, your battery is dead, you have to buy a whole new device.

      I don't know where you live, but within 10 miles of me there is literally a dozen places, not related to the device manufacturer, where they'll gladly replace my non-user-serviceable battery for me, for a reasonable price. Or I can just get a kit from iFixIt or whatnot.

      The video card on your lap top is flakey? What a shame, time to buy an entirely new machine.

      Laptops with video cards are like one in a million on a good day. For the rest of us, there's no such thing as a "video card" in a laptop. It's called the main board or logic board, and sure as heck is replaceable!. No need for an "entirely new machine".

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  38. Legacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Legacy BIOS/Support on all these new x86 Tablets/device.. No locked secureboot..

  39. Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Almost every streaming media player on almost every platform, from Windows to Linux to HTML5 Video to DRM-encrypted stuff like Amazon Video and Netflix, has severe limitations on its willingness to download the video while it's not actually playing.

    This is not helping anyone. It's not a security feature, because anyone who wants to pirate the video will do so regardless of how they try to restrict it. It's not a bandwidth-saving feature, because most people who start to watch a video are going to either close the video player or watch it all the way through anyway.

    The people it really hurts are, oh, I don't know, *the vast majority* (at least in the US), who don't have enough connection throughput to stream the video "live" at the highest-available bitrate. Almost no one has the ability to stream 2K or 4K at decent quality. Most people still don't have the ability to reliably stream at 1080p; "smart" streaming players will frequently drop down to 360p or 480p during playback when there are throughput bottlenecks caused by other customers or background programs or other users on the same uplink. There are even probably a lot of people who can't reliably stream 720p.

    Yet streaming video players are deliberately coded to be as stupid as possible, and not allow the user to "pre-roll" the entire video, basically meaning that they open up the video player, then leave it paused for half an hour or an hour while the video downloads, then come back and watch the whole thing at full quality with no "graceful downgrades" due to their connection being slow.

    This is a draconian and quality-killing misfeature that puts users in a bind, since most (good) streaming video content providers don't allow downloading, or if they do, it's in SD only. HD viewing is almost universally restricted to streaming only. And on the few devices and services where downloading in HD is allowed, often the video is encrypted and can't be streamed off of the tiny tablet you have to download it from (see the Kindle Fire lineup) without using some flaky, unreliable piece of shit like Miracast.

    Apparently the video content providers are wholly uninterested in giving the best experience to the vast majority of their customers who aren't lucky enough to live in a high-income, high-population-density area that got fiber to the premises before all the big ISPs decided to stop rolling out fiber to new customers. They're perfectly content to let us watch video in varying levels of quality as the player constantly recalculates the data transfer rate and delivers quality varying between 240p and 480p most of the time, with occasional jumps to 720p.

    It's galling to think that something as commonplace as streaming video has been implemented so incorrectly, and probably deliberately so, by so many tech companies -- Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, HBO Now, and so on and so forth. And if it's actually the content cartels making them do this, well fuck them. I've stopped subscribing to their services and stopped handing them my money. They can get my money when they and/or the ISPs stop putting every citizen who doesn't live in Dallas or Seattle or San Francisco in a double bind, where they can't get a decent ISP, and can't take advantage of commonplace and desirable online services even if they pay for them, without moving their life, family, job and household into the inner city where they're choking to death on smog and can't even fart without being heard by a dozen neighbors packed in an apartment like sardines.

    1. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Preach it, brother. Been wanting the samething for a long time.

      Tivo does have the option to download to your device, i.e. iPad/iPhone, but not live pre-buffering. It's a start I guess.

    2. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seconding all the above. I also have just one more thing to add:

      Videos in 720p on Youtube, which I was previously able to watch perfectly fine on my old hardware, is now constantly buffering and stuttering after the switch to 60 frames per second videos. Because of this change I am now sometimes forced to reduce the video quality to 480p.
      Here we have video quality being sacrificed for a higher frame-rate, which is completely bonkers.

    3. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Yet streaming video players are deliberately coded to be as stupid as possible, and not allow the user to "pre-roll" the entire video, basically meaning that they open up the video player, then leave it paused for half an hour or an hour while the video downloads, then come back and watch the whole thing at full quality with no "graceful downgrades" due to their connection being slow.

      Did you ever think that it's not "stupid" but more related to customer preference? I would venture to guess that most people don't want to wait for the full video to download as soon as they've purchased/rented/clicked on it. First, the customer wanted "streaming" not "downloading to play later" videos. Second if they could/wanted to wait for as little as half an hour, the customer would have gone outside and headed to their nearest Redbox or even (gasp!) brick and mortar store to get the DVD/Bluray themselves. Thirdly, you think that most people really care whether it's 4K vs 1080p vs 720p. Most people don't care that it's pixelated for part of it as long as it isn't for the entire thing.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    4. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Rather than being able to download a streaming file, I would settle for an end to silly restrictions on availability of streamed content. If your streamed TV episodes are ad-supported, we should be able to access them at any time, from anywhere. For streaming content on cable channels, make it mandatory that "Verify your provider" supports ALL cable providers that carry the channel.

    5. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 1

      Did you ever think that it's not "stupid" but more related to customer preference? I would venture to guess that most people don't want to wait for the full video to download as soon as they've purchased/rented/clicked on it. First, the customer wanted "streaming" not "downloading to play later" videos. Second if they could/wanted to wait for as little as half an hour, the customer would have gone outside and headed to their nearest Redbox or even (gasp!) brick and mortar store to get the DVD/Bluray themselves. Thirdly, you think that most people really care whether it's 4K vs 1080p vs 720p. Most people don't care that it's pixelated for part of it as long as it isn't for the entire thing.

      This argument is fallacious in many ways. Let me enumerate them:

      1. "Customer preference"? By saying this, you are implying that having video pre-roll before playing, AS AN OPTION, is somehow impinging on the preferences of others with the ability to stream from start to finish. However, there is absolutely nothing preventing someone to open the video player, immediately press play, and watch the video with no delay. The specific functionality I'm looking for is for the video to keep downloading the stream while the video playback is paused. So to say that the customer prefers to watch the video instantly is to completely bypass the fact that I'm a customer, too, and I want this feature that does not in any way intrude on people who don't want it.

      2. I would actually prefer the ability to download the videos instead of streaming them. But we live in a society where access to legally purchased video content (movies and TV) is almost completely locked down by the "Content Cartels". The Content Cartels are a bunch of large enterprises with huge budgets that dictate terms to content providers like Amazon, Netflix, etc. by telling them how they can and can't use their content. They often specify explicitly certain features to be allowed or disallowed.

      One of the most common restrictions imposed by the Content Cartels is that of "no downloading". This kind of restriction is exactly what I object to, but assuming they aren't willing to budge on that, at least pre-rolling the video stream might be a happy medium. You just download the encrypted video into a RAM buffer and decode it and send it to the HDMI output on the fly. The video is no more or less secure if pre-rolled vs. streamed "live".

      Then there are additional restrictions imposed on certain devices in an effort to push consumers to purchase individual streaming providers' hardware. For example, if you want to download Amazon Instant Video titles in HD, you have to purchase an Amazon Fire device. If you have an iPhone, iPad, or non-Amazon Android device, you either can't download at all, or you can only download in SD.

      3. Referring to driving out to a Redbox or buying the DVD/BluRay is fallacious, because you are referring to antiquated physical media distribution as a solution to an online services problem that can be resolved by software alone. Why should you encourage society to spend a tremendous amount of fuel on physical distribution of goods that can be delivered at a fraction of the economic and environmental cost as electrons over a wire (or indeed, over the air, if you have LTE)? "Just buy the BluRay" is about as stupid of an excuse as I've ever heard for not supporting video streaming pre-rolling.

    6. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet streaming video players are deliberately coded to be as stupid as possible, and not allow the user to "pre-roll" the entire video, basically meaning that they open up the video player, then leave it paused for half an hour or an hour while the video downloads, then come back and watch the whole thing at full quality with no "graceful downgrades" due to their connection being slow.

      What bothers me most about this is that YouTube use to actually allow you to pre-load the entire video at the quality you selected.
      This was before Google got their hands on it and started "optimizing" things.

      They had to go really far out of their way to turn things into what they are now.
      Allowing the video to fully pre-load was the easy path. Turning it into the mess that it is today was difficult and deliberate.

    7. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 1

      I neglected to mention in my first reply:

      My eyesight is bad. Like, extremely bad. Even with glasses, I regularly experience symptoms of blurry vision due to dry eye, difficulty focusing, and many other visual impairments caused by extreme nearsightedness and astigmatism.

      But even under these conditions, I can VERY obviously tell the difference between 720p video on a 720p display, and 1080p video on a 1080p display. The distinction is stark, obvious, and completely game-changing.

      Now, I can't quite tell the difference as obviously between 1080p and 2K, but that's because the higher you go in definition, the less benefit you see.

      Your argument was effectively that people can't tell the difference between, and don't care about the difference between, 480p, 720p and 1080p. This, to me, is completely bunk. If I'm half blind and I can obviously tell that there is far less quality and much "muddier" detail in lower resolutions (it's staggeringly obvious when comparing something less than 720p with 720p), I shudder to think how awful it must look to someone who has good vision. And those people can probably appreciate the quality improvements in 4K, too, even though I can't.

      It's ridiculous to me that you think it's acceptable to have a video stream change in quality every few seconds from, say, 240p to 480p to 720p. It's like night and day. You can't even make out someone's face in a close-up shot if your original stream was at 720p but got downsampled to 240p. You just miss out on a ridiculous amount of detail. All you get is a vague idea of what apparently is going on. All the definition is lost.

      You either don't watch streaming video, or your connection is so good that it never drops below 1080p. I can't imagine someone who's actually experienced streaming on a slow connection could hold this kind of viewpoint.

    8. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 1

      "Settle"? You're effectively asking for the Holy Grail of content freedom. :-) I'd love to have that, too, but as a bit more of a realist/cynic, I thought I'd ask for something I felt might possibly be attainable if we complained loudly enough to the powers that be.

      But keep dreaming. Maybe one day we'll be able to enjoy high-quality content, without DRM, at reasonable prices, on any device, downloadable offline, shareable between devices and between friends.

    9. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      1. "Customer preference"? By saying this, you are implying that having video pre-roll before playing, AS AN OPTION, is somehow impinging on the preferences of others with the ability to stream from start to finish. However, there is absolutely nothing preventing someone to open the video player, immediately press play, and watch the video with no delay.

      Sigh. How many would choose this option? Very few. Yet you call it stupid when they don't offer an option that few people would choose. I see.

      The specific functionality I'm looking for is for the video to keep downloading the stream while the video playback is paused. So to say that the customer prefers to watch the video instantly is to completely bypass the fact that I'm a customer, too, and I want this feature that does not in any way intrude on people who don't want it.

      How is that not the same thing as simple buffering? The problem is that you want control over a feature that very few people want but it's stupid that programmers didn't offer it to you. But to answer your very specific feature set, YouTube offers it from select studios.

      2. I would actually prefer the ability to download the videos instead of streaming them. But we live in a society where access to legally purchased video content (movies and TV) is almost completely locked down by the "Content Cartels". The Content Cartels are a bunch of large enterprises with huge budgets that dictate terms to content providers like Amazon, Netflix, etc. by telling them how they can and can't use their content. They often specify explicitly certain features to be allowed or disallowed.

      Content Cartels meaning the legal copyright holders? Yes, they have control over content they own. But that's what copyright means.

      3. Referring to driving out to a Redbox or buying the DVD/BluRay is fallacious, because you are referring to antiquated physical media distribution as a solution to an online services problem that can be resolved by software alone. Why should you encourage society to spend a tremendous amount of fuel on physical distribution of goods that can be delivered at a fraction of the economic and environmental cost as electrons over a wire (or indeed, over the air, if you have LTE)? "Just buy the BluRay" is about as stupid of an excuse as I've ever heard for not supporting video streaming pre-rolling.

      Your argument is fallacious because you are imposing a solution of yours that only you want. If people are streaming, they want it now. If they can't get it now, there are other options. That's like saying I want high speed fiber but I don't want to pay anything to install it. You have to pick and choose between two options; you don't get to create a third option then complain that it's not unfair when it doesn't exist.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    10. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 1

      Sigh. How many would choose this option? Very few. Yet you call it stupid when they don't offer an option that few people would choose. I see.

      What evidence do you have that "very few" people would choose to pre-roll the stream if that feature were available? I have actual numbers that favor the proposition that people would use it.

      Consider that the average household in the United States has a connection that's "rated" at 11.4 Mbps or less (source: http://readwrite.com/2014/10/0... - October 2014, so maybe it's 12 Mbps by now?). Given that the actual throughput delivered on most connections is between 60 and 80% of what's advertised (for many, only 40% of what's advertised during prime time), that means most people can expect to get around 7 Mbps, optimistically. And that's before you take into account the overhead of hundreds of TCP connections -- per computer/device in the household -- that maintain background services, checking for updates, other tabs open in the web browser, etc. -- which can use up a significant portion of that overhead. So to get your average 7 Mbps, you need to go around to every room in the house and instruct everyone to stop what they're doing, stop using the Internet entirely and shut down their computers so you can watch a video at 720p with your 7 Mbps connection.

      And then once you get rolling, it will still drop down to 480p or 360p fairly often when other subscribers on your oversold ADSL or cable connection try to download stuff at the same time as you. A consistent 720p stream needs a steady throughput of at least 4 Mbps, but it's very, very easy to get a lot less than that unless your connection is basically fiber to the premises.

      How is that not the same thing as simple buffering? The problem is that you want control over a feature that very few people want but it's stupid that programmers didn't offer it to you. But to answer your very specific feature set, YouTube offers it from select studios.

      "Simple" buffering on most streaming video players is designed to only buffer ahead a few seconds if you pause the video. It will only continue to buffer more than that if you are actually playing the video, or if your connection is so slow that it can't even keep up with the lowest available quality setting (often 240p or lower).

      It's nice to know that one service out there supports what I want "from select studios", but that hardly solves the problem when the majority of the content I want is on other services. I can also download the free movies produced by the Blender Foundation and watch them in 1080p in VLC over and over, but Big Buck Bunny gets old after a while, as entertaining as he is.

      Content Cartels meaning the legal copyright holders? Yes, they have control over content they own. But that's what copyright means.

      The problem is that the Content Cartels deploy policies that are actively harmful to the majority of their customers, and do so knowingly, for reasons that I frankly struggle to understand. I believe that they would actually make MORE profit from their content if they would allow people to download it in 1080p and/or pre-roll the stream, because this would enable people with slower connections -- remember, a majority of the US population -- to enjoy the content in the highest quality.

      My working thesis is that people who are unable to enjoy the content at a lower quality will eventually become frustrated with the service and stop using it. If this means they resort to RedBox, then maybe that's not a net loss for the Content Cartels, since they're paying as much or more for the rental compared to an online streaming subscription; but it's still a practice that's extremely anti-consumer.

      Do they have the legal right to be asshats to their customers and make their lives harder? Sure. But not everything that's legal

    11. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by werepants · · Score: 3, Informative

      Did you ever think that it's not "stupid" but more related to customer preference?

      What customer would EVER prefer that a paused video would not continue loading? Netflix, Youtube, Google Play, Vimeo - all of them stop downloading when you pause, which makes them unusable if your connection is slow for whatever reason - network congestion, bad wireless signal, etc.

      I recently rented an online video from Google Play and demanded a refund, which I wouldn't have done if this feature existed... the video kept stopping to buffer every 30 seconds or so. That ruins a movie. If I could have left it alone for 20 minutes to load, and then watched the whole thing, it would have been fine. Google's choice to save bandwidth (or whatever their motivation is) cost them that sale.

      So, there's no real "preference" at play here, unless your preference is for limited options. You can still stream it real time, the OP is asking that you also be allowed to download in one chunk when bandwidth is limited so you get a seamless viewing experience without frequent pauses to buffer.

    12. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Krishnoid · · Score: 1

      Yet streaming video players are deliberately coded to be as stupid as possible, and not allow the user to "pre-roll" the entire video, basically meaning that they open up the video player, then leave it paused for half an hour or an hour while the video downloads, then come back and watch the whole thing at full quality with no "graceful downgrades" due to their connection being slow.

      Does anyone have hard information on why pretty much everything is coded this way? With all the features they offer, I'm kind of hard pressed to understand why there isn't a single video player, or maybe even a specialized proxy server, that offers an option to buffer videos like this.

    13. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by JoeyRox · · Score: 1

      The streaming is stopped to save bandwidth. Why download large segments of a show that may never get watched? Some stats on how often a given stream is viewed until completion would help support or dispel my reasoning.

    14. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Downloadability would be more of a unicorn than generally available ad-supported streaming. I'm not even insisting on DRM-free, because that would be relevant only for downloadable content. I just want the long-established ad supported broadcast TV model to be available online, and for my pricey cable subscription be available when I'm away from home.

    15. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      It's a feature designed to save bandwidth for the site itself, not to make the experience more pleasurable for the end-user. If video players routinely downloaded the whole video at high quality, even when paused, then bandwidth costs would go up quite significantly.

      Further, how does a player choose the high-quality stream over the low-quality stream other than by using the download speed? I don't see how you can make the playing of online videos, and automatic selection of quality, as easy as players do today in any other way.

    16. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great name... You're not related to customer preference either! :)

    17. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by KGIII · · Score: 1

      I can agree but my complaint would be in an opposite direction. I want to be able to scale back quality. I don't need HD. SD is fine. I'm comfortable with 480p or even 360 or whatever it is. I don't need more bandwidth, I've got plenty. I just need to be better able to utilize my bandwidth. Actually, even still, it doesn't really throttle my bandwidth down - I'm paying for 12 Mb/sec and generally exceed that number. I just don't need (or want) the greater resolutions.

      I watch documentaries and, often times, those are just on in the background or listened to while I close my eyes and think about how nice it would be to sleep. (I wasn't going to sleep anyhow, I might as well listen and learn something.) That is, almost exclusively, what I watch. So, for me, it's just not worth the compute cycles or bandwidth to render HD.

      On the other hand, I'd like to be able to select to do so, if I want. I've resolved this with YouTube's site by using something called Magic Actions for YouTube but that's just a single site. I'd like more streaming video to have the ability to set a default settings and then change the settings per video (or session) as I am in the mood for.

      Also, I don't want to download. If I wanted to download, I'd do that. I want to stream. I agree that it would be a nice option but it's not something I'd make much use of except to fill more storage space with videos that will never actually be watched. If anything, I'd still support the idea. I guess, to try to sum it up, I'd want greater configuration options including default settings and methods as well as session settings and methods. I'm a big fan of the ability to customize and fewer things are really offering this as a choice as of late. I don't feel competent to speculate as to why.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    18. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by KGIII · · Score: 1

      I believe you can still do that but it requires an extension. See the options included with Magic Actions for YouTube for an example. I find it to be a *very* handy extension but, in my case, I usually use it to set the default to a lower bitrate than normal. Odd, I know. That said, I believe it's under the "better buffer' type of setting. If you enable it then, I think, it buffers the entirety (or a good deal of) the video before it begins playing the video in question. I've only enabled it to test but I think that's what it was doing. As I recall, you could set it, leave the tab, return, and it would be buffered but one should keep in mind there are reasonable cache limitations.

      I suspect they also don't want you pulling it out of your cache easily. However, this "protection" mechanism is also easily bypassed with a variety of tools. My favorite is a GreaseMonkey script that simply adds buttons to download it in a variety of formats. I've not used such, not in quite a while, but I imagine that such things continue to exist. There were a good number of them the last time I checked the script repository for such. My assumption is that this remains true.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    19. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      They do it that way because they want to stream to devices with very little RAM. Can't cache to flash, you will wear it out. Available RAM for buffering might only be a few tens of megabytes. Steaming boxes/sticks/smart TVs use SoCs that are pretty cheap, so they don't have much memory.

      So they concentrate on perfecting streaming. They could do more caching on computers with gigs of RAM, but then computers would stream better than the cheap TV boxes and and people would think the latter are crap. When making commercial decisions of this nature, it's always about improving the lowest common denominator.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    20. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is where a bittorrent seedbox comes to the rescue ...

    21. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by unencode200x · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree and don't want to get in the middle of the back and forth, but just wanted to point that DirectTV's DVR does this. It starts streaming the a Video on Demand and at the same time downloads it. So maybe 15 minutes into a movie I have the whole things downloaded to its local drive. You can also add an external USB drive to it to increase your capacity. It was really nice (I cut the cord though). It's something I miss, although sometimes it would use too much of my limited bandwidth.

      --

      Chance favors the prepared mind.
      Perfect is the enemy of good.
    22. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by Misagon · · Score: 1

      It's not a security feature, because anyone who wants to pirate the video will do so regardless of how they try to restrict it.

      I have worked with video streaming. Don't think for a second that any demand from the movie industry for a security feature has any realistic basis in how hard it makes it to crack.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    23. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by werepants · · Score: 1

      Good to know - that's the kind of thing that content providers could support very easily, but they've made the business decision to save bandwidth instead of making the viewing experience more flexible and user-friendly.

    24. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 1

      I find it a dubious claim that if you unlocked pre-rolling that you'd waste a lot of bandwidth, especially if you limited the download rate to 2x the bitrate of the stream. So for example if the stream runs at 8 Mbps, you would prevent your servers from sending data to the client (except, perhaps, in very short bursts if they're about to run out of buffered data) any faster than 16 Mbps. If the stream is paused for a long time, you could even drop that down to 1x the bitrate (8 Mbps).

      So if someone opens a new tab, pauses the video for 10 minutes out of a 50 minute stream and then closes the tab, and they have a 100 Mbps downlink, they'll still only have downloaded no more than 20 minutes out of the 50 minutes of the video in that 10 minutes. If you didn't cap the downstream rate, they'd have downloaded the entire video in that interval.

      You can also add in more client-side tricks like detecting if the user is actively viewing your video player's tab or if they've task switched (I've seen a few HTML Canvas and other JS tricks that can try to fudge that detection), and pause pre-rolling if they switch tabs.

      That way, people who REALLY want (no, need) to pre-roll in order to not experience degraded quality or dropouts due to a slow connection, would be able to pre-roll, but those with high-speed connections who never actually watch the video would not inundate your network with undue load.

    25. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by allquixotic · · Score: 1

      Having the option to manually select a quality level, even if there's a smart algorithm "by default" that determines quality based on connection speed, would be the optimal scenario for user experience.

      Come to think of it, I can state in detailed requirements terms exactly what I think this should look like.

      So you have your standard "toolbar" of media controls on a video player. Play/pause button, a horizontal scale to let you skip around in the video, a volume control, full screen toggle. Now add in (either in a sub-menu upon clicking a gear icon or other settings meme, or directly in the media controls toolbar) two more options:

      1. A checkbox labeled "Pre-roll". Default: unchecked. If checked, three things happen. One, you are unable to seek (skip) around in the stream while it's checked. Two, your download rate is capped at 2x the bitrate of the stream you're downloading. Three, if your quality selection is set to "Auto", the quality of the downloaded stream is the maximum quality available that's supported on the device.

      2. A drop-down list labeled "Quality". The default setting is "Auto" (determine quality based on bandwidth - like most current video services). Then offer qualities as low as, say, 240p, and as high as the native quality of the source media or otherwise the highest quality offered by the service. Each quality should maintain the aspect ratio, though.

    26. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by tepples · · Score: 1

      And if it's actually the content cartels making them do this, well fuck them. I've stopped subscribing to their services and stopped handing them my money.

      You're always free to start your own movie studio, produce your own films comparable in production values to those of the major studios, and then offer them for streaming with full preroll.

    27. Re:Complete video stream pre-rolling by tepples · · Score: 1

      The "preference" is for films published by the content cartel, as opposed to more obscure films with (on the whole) lower production values.

  40. YES! ban blue LED's!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1 blue LED can light up an entire football stadium.

    And if you are unfortunate enough to let your eyes land on them.. you will have retinal artifacts following you around for the next half hour at least.

    Thank god for black fingernail polish!

  41. Apple Eraser by tverbeek · · Score: 1

    An eraser on the other end of the Apple Pencil, or a button on the side that switches it to "erase" mode while pressed. Because I make mistakes, and even the Apple Mouse has always included a single button (real or simulated).

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
  42. Turn off Sponsored Posts on SlashDot by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 2

    Turn off sponsored posts on SlashDot. Or, at least, allow us to comment on them. (Boy are there some stupid ones posted. Looking at you, CA.)

    1. Re:Turn off Sponsored Posts on SlashDot by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Wow, I had forgotten about those. They've already worked themselves into my blind-spot where I don't even see them.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Turn off Sponsored Posts on SlashDot by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 1

      Today I see, "From Renewable Content to Environmental Benefit, How 1 Company is Building a Sustainable Portfolio" by everyone's favorite munitions manufacturer: Dow Chemical. The only thing missing from the headline is the "...Using This 1 Weird Trick" bit.

  43. Acknowledge Human Interface by classiclantern · · Score: 1

    All mechanical and electronic equipment must immediately acknowledge any and all user input, whatever the interface may be. The response must be in the form of a pleasant sound and a visual change in the device or another device (in the case of remote controls). I'm so sick of pressing a button and nothing happens. Did the thermostat not see my action? Is my toaster busy doing something else? Is my AppleTV ignoring me? I just want all machines to respond as if humans are their overlords and even if they can't act on my command, they must acknowledge they received a command. I'm tired of all the arrogance Engineers built in to the products I buy. Led by Apple the unresponsive machines are now the norm. Look at your AV equipment. If your TV is off and you press any button on your remote, the TV should turn on and execute that command. Why does only one button work on the whole damn remote?

    --
    Now that I said that, I fell better.
  44. Minor stuff? by del_diablo · · Score: 1

    LCD monitors displays frames when they get them. Quality of the panel be damned.

    or
    Games framerates are now stable, rock stable. Delta time and benchmark performance be damned.

    or
    Bluetooth sync is just to press sync on both buttons, and it just works after that without ANY hazzle.

    1. Re:Minor stuff? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      For Bluetooth, I think you're asking for buttons on each device to be paired, which you press at the same time to pair them.

      That won't work. Lots of Bluetooth devices don't have any buttons at all. All they have is a 4-digit pairing code on a label. Adding a button costs a lot of money: electromechanical devices are frequently some of the most expensive components, so it's cheaper to leave them out if they're rarely used or not really necessary.

    2. Re:Minor stuff? by del_diablo · · Score: 1

      The point still stands, the little I have synced was a mess to sync up. Even with the streamlined stuff, like Apple bundle stuff, you still have to do horrible confirmation stuff.
      I think I got spoiled badly by owning a Wii. You sync once, and it just works after that.

    3. Re:Minor stuff? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Weird, I haven't had much trouble. Syncing two different phones to my car was easy as pie.

    4. Re:Minor stuff? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Bluetooth sync is just to press sync on both buttons, and it just works after that without ANY hazzle.

      Including the hassle of security breach when it turns out you accidentally synced to the attacker's device?

  45. Kill Bloat by cahuenga · · Score: 2

    The Swiss Army Knife School of Software Development needs to die, please, die now. My graphics editor will never be used to email my congressman, and I sure the fuck don't need my phone texting me about what's in my refrigerator.

    I want fast, uncluttered software that doesn't bitch at me or offer to order me boner pills.

    1. Re:Kill Bloat by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      I want fast, uncluttered software that doesn't bitch at me or offer to order me boner pills.

      Maybe that's how it was built, but your machine got infected.

    2. Re:Kill Bloat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My graphics editor will never be used to email my congressman

      My congressman only responds to image macros.

  46. I'd alter Slashdot by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

    I'd remove anonymous posting on political threads so we could have a productive discussion.

    --

    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    1. Re:I'd alter Slashdot by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      They need to do something to prevent APK posting; his insane drivel/spam is drowning everything out.

    2. Re:I'd alter Slashdot by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      Can your post do 16 things?

  47. Kill Bloat by cahuenga · · Score: 1

    The Swiss Army Knife School of Software Development needs to die, please, die now. My graphics editor will never be used to email my congressman, and I sure the fuck don't need my phone texting me about what's in my refrigerator. I want fast, uncluttered software that doesn't bitch at me or offer to order me boner pills.

  48. The gmail opening page by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    That screen (the gmail ad ) that greets you should be changed so you would NOT need to click a mouse (or touchpad).

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    1. Re:The gmail opening page by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? What are you talking about?

    2. Re:The gmail opening page by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's an irritating screen that shows itself whenever you clear cookies and surf back to gmail. I know I never used to see it until I set my browser to forget cookies/data whenever I close it. It's annoying (you need to click through it) and pointless (if your at the gmail page then presumably you're there because you're already using gmail).

      I'd add: give me a logout that works for the gmail website on ipads and mobile devices. Whenever I try to log out on such a device (unless I can load the desktop page and go from there) I just get stuck in an infinite loop.

  49. Replace all LUDDITE software with APPS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Modern app appers know that only apps can app apps, so all LUDDITE software should be trashed and replaced with appy APPS!

    Apps!

  50. the damn touchpad on laptops by Provocateur · · Score: 3, Interesting

    because IBM's trackpoint hits the right spot absolutely positively every f****g time.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    1. Re: the damn touchpad on laptops by dossen · · Score: 1

      Good one. While I like my thinkpads, I would like to have other options while keeping my prefered pointing device. And all the stupid pointing pads should at the very least be disablable at a level _below_ the OS - anice cover plate would be nice too :-)

    2. Re: the damn touchpad on laptops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (plate on the pad) Also a good one. (skinnable would be grand)

      I like what you're doing--enhancing the trackpoint experience, but not doing away with the eraserhead.

      But disablable is not even a cromulant word; "dispsable" touchpads are gibsonesque.

    3. Re:the damn touchpad on laptops by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      because IBM's trackpoint hits the right spot absolutely positively every f****g time.

      You make it sound like a G-Spot for laptops

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    4. Re:the damn touchpad on laptops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obligatory xkcd.

    5. Re: the damn touchpad on laptops by loosescrews · · Score: 1

      There is an option in the BIOS on my Thinkpad to disable the trackpad. Some laptops have a dedicated button to disable the trackpad.

  51. Quit when I select quit by frnic · · Score: 1

    Not eventually when the program gets around to it.

  52. Two-button Mac Mouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple, I would like a second mouse button and a clickable scroll wheel, please!

    Of course, I already bought a third-party mouse with these features, but I feel driven to force all other Mac users to do things RIGHT.

  53. LEDs by TFlan91 · · Score: 1

    Oh my god LEDs.

    My living room needs a warning sign for people with epilepsy. I don't need to know every flippin bit that is going across the wire for my router AND modem.

    The 5 LEDs that are constantly on to indicate connectivity? Useless after the first 5 seconds of booting. I can tell if it's working by having internet or not! I don't need fancy blue then orange then green lights to tell me this.

    I feel like marketing said "We need what people see in movies with huge machines and dancing lights that mean absolutely nothing to 99% of the people."

    If those LEDs are so absolutely needed to figure out whats going on, then that person shouldn't be trying to figure out whats going on, and they should be put behind a maintenance panel that triggers then being on or off by it being open ( Meaning I don't want a panel to cover it, then seeing a rainbow of colors from the heat vent )

    1. Re:LEDs by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 1

      E-ink should be able to replace most of the indicators on devices in use today.

      They even have tech to display three states ("white", black and red).

    2. Re:LEDs by Richard_J_N · · Score: 1

      Try a wonderful product I recently found: lightdims.com - this lets you subtly reduce the LED to where it should be.
      They work excellently, except where the LED is "domed".

    3. Re:LEDs by tepples · · Score: 1

      I can tell if it's working by having internet or not!

      But if you lose Internet, how do you tell whether it's your computer, router, or modem that's at fault?

  54. Apple Music App by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would take the Apple Music App back to the last version that doesn't suck.

  55. Voicemail by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    Make it visual, so I can skip going through all of them but pick and choose which ones I want to process pronto. I'm making my schedule for the day, and I don't have the luxury of sifting through each and every one in that artificial sequence of yours, really.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    1. Re:Voicemail by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      I remember that early iPhone ads seemed to show this very feature, but I've never seen it on a real-life iPhone in my life. Not that I'm exactly surrounded by them, but I'm sure I would have noticed it on the few that I do see.

      Maybe at least your telecom provider sending you the voice-mail by email? That would be a start.

    2. Re:Voicemail by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      Someone once told me that Google voice-to-text would be the starting point, but that I haven't seen yet. Maybe you've heard of something like that instead?

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  56. Prioritize Mobile Battery Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...not how thin you can make it.

    Everything is already too thin, battery issues aside.

  57. Traffic Lights that aren't as stupid by exabrial · · Score: 1

    As I approach an empty intersection, the light should turn green! I can't imagine the amount of fossil fuel this would save.

    1. Re:Traffic Lights that aren't as stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I approach an empty intersection, the light should turn green! I can't imagine the amount of fossil fuel this would save.

      you mean like all the intersections with signs that say "stop here to activate/actuate signal" and a pressure sensor under the road that already do this?

    2. Re:Traffic Lights that aren't as stupid by Rob+Lister · · Score: 1

      Better, it should see me coming and be green before I get there.

      Best, it should exhibit that behavior for me even if the intersection is busy.

    3. Re:Traffic Lights that aren't as stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a pressure sensor. It's a simple coil of wire - essentially a metal detector - that detects the large chunk of metal you just parked over it. Mind you they aren't normally sign-posted where I live, though you can usually see the characteristic square-shaped cut where they've installed them.

      They're great and all, except for three things:
      - they sometimes can't detect bikes. So you can either wait for a car to obligingly drive over the detector (could take a while on a quiet side street) or ride up onto the footpath to press the pedestrian crossing button.
      - they should always be used in addition to a regular cycle. I've come across cases where the sensor was not working and the lights on that particular side street were set to only turn green on detection of a car - after a few minutes you can either get out and press the pedestrian crossing button (risking the wrath of any drivers behind you if you're too slow getting back in) or go through the red when safe and risk a hefty fine.
      - impatient drivers tend to creep too far forward to activate them, then get annoyed when they don't work.

  58. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by stooo · · Score: 1, Informative

    We could extend that to require POSIX compatibility for windows.

    --
    aaaaaaa
  59. Is Slashdot a tech product? by sootman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If so, revert it to how it was about 8 years ago.

    Also, make Apple not do about half of what they've done, design-wise, in the last 5 years, to both hardware and software. Thin gray letters on white? Buttons that look like text? Colors from the background creeping into every UI surface? A phone that's so thin, there's a bump for the camera lens to fit, and so thin that its battery doesn't survive one day of moderate use? Fuck all that.

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    1. Re:Is Slashdot a tech product? by Grishnakh · · Score: 0

      Also, make Apple not do about half of what they've done, design-wise, in the last 5 years, to both hardware and software. Thin gray letters on white? Buttons that look like text? Colors from the background creeping into every UI surface? A phone that's so thin, there's a bump for the camera lens to fit, and so thin that its battery doesn't survive one day of moderate use? Fuck all that.

      I completely disagree with all of this stuff. If you don't like these things, then stop buying Apple products. I think Apple should do more of this stuff. If they continue being profitable, it'll show what idiotic sheep their customers are.

    2. Re:Is Slashdot a tech product? by sootman · · Score: 2

      No can do -- Android and MS suck even more. They take the worst of what Apple does and copy it badly and make it even more sucky. You wanna see sheep? Look at the design groups at Google and MS. "Fuzzy, indistinct crap? We're on it!"

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    3. Re:Is Slashdot a tech product? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      You know, I love Apple products generally, but I can't disagree with any of of his.

      Especially the "buttons disguised as text" thing. Terrible. Google are even worse at this particular design error though.

    4. Re:Is Slashdot a tech product? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Actually Google's material design is pretty good, and they were the first to do it. Apple copied them, as did Microsoft, and both created a poor imitation. Apple jumped from skeuomorphic "maybe I click on the cheeseplant?" and Microsoft from the Vista Aero look, which was actually quite reasonable apart from an early excessive use of semi-transparent "glass" that they soon dropped.

      Material design works well because it is simple and consistent. It's always obvious what things are clickable because they use a consistent colour. The somewhat controversial decision to get rid of button borders in some cases is because it's easier to operate with touch that way. Your finger is not a very precise pointing device, and seeing a hit box just makes you subconsciously aim with more effort. The actual hit areas in material design are relatively large. The mistake Apple and Microsoft made was in not making the hit areas massive when getting rid of visual borders.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:Is Slashdot a tech product? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The hell are you on about? Microsoft's current design came first, then Apple's, then Google's.
      Personally I like Google's the best, and Apple's the worst, although they're all pretty decent....functionally they're all basically the same. Although I think Apple builds far-and-away the best *phone* as far as performance, compatibility, future-proofing, camera, etc.

      The bad things that stick out in my mind of each UI are either minor or just poor implementation.
      Google - some apps with too much wasted space, like the YouTube app that wastes like half the screen on stupid menu bars, and those dumb floating plus signs everywhere.
      Apple - A few really messy or crappy core apps (ex. iTunes/Apple Music)
      Windows - Sporadic inconsistency and aging parts of Windows (I never played with a Windows Phone), ex., 2 different control panels.

  60. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #3/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I guess we should avoid your crap, it looks like it is marked as malware." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Monday November 02, 2015 @03:52PM (#50850445)

    62 reputable sources + /. users say different:

    Safe by 57 antivirus programs in 64-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...

    +

    the 32-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...

    &

    Per VirScan (installer too)-> http://f.virscan.org/APKHostsF...

    ---

    MalwareBytes' hpHosts Admin (MalwareBytes employee) hosts & recommends it -> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl... & MalwareBytes = BEST antivirus per this VERY recent testing of them all http://www.av-test.org/en/news...

    (& he certified my source http://slashdot.org/comments.p... - he wouldn't host it, much less recommend it, minus that...) /.'ers say my work is good too:

    "his hosts program is actually pretty good" - by xenotransplant (4179011) on Monday August 10, 2015 @03:34PM (#50287195)

    "I like your host file system." - by Karmashock (2415832) on Wednesday September 09, 2015 @03:57PM (#50489401)

    "APK is kinda right... I've given up on JS based adblocking and gone to blackholing in /etc/hosts, just like it was back in the 90s. The computational load has gotten intolerable for any ad-blocking using JS. I've tried his hosts file generating software. It works." - by bmo (77928) on Thursday October 15, 2015 @11:30AM (#50736071)

    "his hosts tool is actually useful for those cases in which one does indeed want to locally block stuff outright while consuming minimum system resources" by alexgieg (948359) on Friday September 25, 2015 @09:57AM (#50596461)

    "No complaints from me, I like APK's spam. Reminds me to use a host file. Also, his stuff is free." - by aaaaaaargh! (1150173) on Tuesday November 17, 2015 @09:31AM (#50947415)

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't in part #4/6... apk

  61. Out of Office Autoreply in Apple Mail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are kludgy workarounds sure, but WHY is there no Out of Office Autoreply in Apple Mail?

    1. Re:Out of Office Autoreply in Apple Mail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, technically if you're in a Starbucks you are "out of the office" and that seems kind of redundant since the only place I see people working on Macs is there.

      And, of course, Steve would never consider himself out of the office so the feature doesn't have a reason to exist.

  62. No non-removable persistent storage in PCs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No user-agent string in web browsers (what a waste of bandwidth that is.) No "referer" header either. No cookies, just a short, fixed format session header (non-persistent).

  63. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #4/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "His newest post is trying to refute that MiTM attack opportunity his software provides" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015

    I DISPROVED it: Hardcoded favs users provide themselves are REVERSE DNS verified & my program filters 5,500++ false positives:

    1.) Search engines
    2.) Antivirus (e.g. updaters)
    3.) Security community sites
    4.) Captchas, brower home pages + download pages
    5.) Ebay/Amazon (shopper & banking)

    (Security community I get hosts data from do false positives filters in current data + removal lists).

    ---

    "won't demonstrate security of his product be exposing the source (someone might steal it!)" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015

    I don't give away work to be stolen OR misused like GOOGLE CHROME http://it.slashdot.org/story/1...

    "the secretary at MalwareBytes took a look at his source code and said it looked all good to them" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015

    My ware went thru code verification by Mr. Steven Burn of Malwarebytes' hpHosts

    http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    A competent coder & BEST security researcher I know of FROM THE BEST ANTIMALWARE THERE IS http://www.av-test.org/en/news...

    NOT a secretary!

    ---

    YOU BLEW IT ON ADMIN PRIV TOO: My program doesn't require it hosts does (WFP/SFP): my program protects hosts beyond it!

    I.E.-> I run manually minus admin priv & drag result to hosts naming it "hosts" overwriting original.

    Only auto update needs it (WFP/SFP) & users set it themselves in program shortcut: Not programmatic impersonation.

    ---

    DNS introduces a SECURITY ISSUE RIDDLED SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE & doesn't secure down to endpoints on a LAN -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    How I use remote filtering DNS combined w/ hosts is there showing many DNS security issues hosts overcome.

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't in part #5/6... apk

  64. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #5/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Virus scanners/Adblock software don't need admin priv to update" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    Neither does my program. AV does to remove threats - Adblock addons = Vastly INFERIOR in abilities + efficiency vs. hosts as I proved & no one proved me wrong to date!

    ---

    "your software does" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    No hosts do (WFP/SFP) - Intake update of new hosts data doesn't!

    ---

    "won't reveal your source code" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    I don't owe you it. I don't give away work to be stolen OR misused like GOOGLE CHROME http://it.slashdot.org/story/1...

    ---

    "What's stopping you from pointing my bank's web site at your private server?" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    I don't keep a server. Security guru (not - you create no ware for security & your forensics skills = non-existent): Put it in a VM, trace it via process monitor + wireshark (don't need code)!

    ---

    "the possibility of being caught, which would be pretty hard to catch w/ such a large hosts file, as no one can go through it manually." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    I put hardcoded fav sites @ top of hosts for speed & reliabilty - spotted easily & bulk of hosts = sorted blocked known bad threats provided by the security community (filtered vs. 5,500++ false positive possibles in my program & by current security community data).

    ---

    "What are you going to do when Windows gets rid of the hosts file completely?" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    Hasn't happened!

    ---

    "They have already taken steps to make it useless in Windows 10." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    It works there!

    Telemetry's killed 10 by itself: VISTA = Win10 = Win8 = flops - who're you fooling other than yourself?

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't. in #6/6... apk

  65. For the Raspberry PI 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In order of importance:

    1- Gigabit Ethernet that is not tied to a USB 2.0 bus
    2- USB 3.0 bus with at least 6 ports on the board and headers for more
    3- Open source drivers for all video codecs
    4- A PCI express connection

    This would make clustering small groups of boards possible with not so much latency. (A fully connected mesh as opposed to a simple star network topology.)

    1. Re:For the Raspberry PI 3 by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 1

      I'm waiting for a Raspberry Pi 2, Model A+

      I need the CPU speed and the extra RAM but I don't need all the superfluous hardware.

  66. Make the US Post office key to identity management by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Long ago right after the first mass emailing spam, the US Post office should have assumed the role of proving identity of email accounts.

    Over time this would evolve into these rules

    1) there would be a difference between "signed" email and everything else
          1A) Signed email is always traceable back to the sender and the sender is verified to the person.
          1B) Unsigned email could carry a cost and user controls to turn off
          1C) "Printed" mailers that is the key financial backbone of the present USP could be delivered electronically
    2) Complete security and privacy of signed email -- Think global PGP with NO_ONE except the owner having both keys
          2A) constantly evolving and testing of crypto techniques
          2B) training postal people on identity management
          2C) Putting the postal service between the user and the goverment spys

  67. Windows by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    That EULA should block the entire screen if you click 'do not accept' Here you are provided with a menu of other options.

    a) Install an OS of your choice from CD or USB.
    b) I need this as a paperweight for my flatbed.
    c) I need this as a doorstop first, then wish to donate it to the library after (I have enough tablets and hardware, thank you)
    d) why is still in beige, it doesn't go with anything I have in the den!
    e) I wish to continue my descent into hell; please install the latest Windows.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  68. add a @#!! USB port to iPads n/t by smoothnorman · · Score: 1

    ..

  69. XBOX Holo by MakersDirector · · Score: 0

    We're all complaners? Speak for yourself.

    In any case. Holographic projection technology has long been available.

    I'd like to see Microsoft release a holographic projection based console gaming system at a short term financial loss, with the long term goal of miniaturizing the technology and making it more cost effective and simply making it available to the public.

    Microsoft can learn a lesson from what it did with the XBOX 360. It was the costliest research project the company had ever developed. For the first several years it lost money. But after four years though, it quite literally dominated the industry and within seven years, the revenue from video games exceeded the revenue of Hollywood movies. The company took a gamble, but the demand was clearly there and Microsoft knew it.

    Similarly. You see a great deal of demand for VR right now. But what consumers really want is interactive worlds.

    Why 'enter' a simulation, why buy expensive and bulky feedback devices, goggles, and other gear when you can have it all around you?

    The Kinect provides the sensory mechanism to detect interactions and position information for programmers to shape sounds accordingly.

    Now build a projection mechanism and you have a limited albeit fully interactive simulation 'all around you'.

    No, I am not talking about the Hololens or the screen projections on walls. I'm talking about real, 3d projections.

    Projected pixels in 3d space all around you, the gamer. A virtual planet, floating above your head in your living room. A HALO ring world you physically walk through. Scantily clad Avatars with swords in a lifelike version of Skyrim 2.0 walking through your living room.

    There comes a point where technology's paced introduction to the population needs to be short circuited.

  70. Smaller phones. by smithmc · · Score: 2

    I would reset the popular smartphone form factor back to 4.5" to 4.7". I don't want to have to carry around a small tablet in my pocket, in order to have the latest features.

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    1. Re:Smaller phones. by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      You will change your mind when you start to age and your eyesight dims.

    2. Re:Smaller phones. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My smartphone has a 3,5-inch display. (Motorola Defy+) And I think that's pretty large -- wouldn't want anything larger. The mini version that got released a bit after I bought mine has 3,2 inches.

      Well, the display size is about the only good thing about the phone, actually.

      I was looking at an Xperia 'Compact' to replace it but, er, the display is 4,6 inches. Not so compact after all.

      At this point, I'd rather find a dumb phone...

    3. Re:Smaller phones. by smithmc · · Score: 1

      You will change your mind when you start to age and your eyesight dims.

      Not too worried about that; I've been on the same prescription for about 12 years. But when it happens... then I'll get another phone. It's not like you're assigned one phone for your whole life (yet).

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  71. USB port on iPhone by tekrat · · Score: 1

    I recently upgraded to an iPhone 6 from an Iphone 4. What a freaking nightmare because Apple only "allows" you to copy your data from what you have saved in their cloud,

    And not everything is saved in the cloud. For example: If I download a PDF reader, and then download PDFs to read, what gets backed up by the computer is the PDF reader, and NOT the PDFs.

    This could have been avoided by having a USB port or a card reader in the iPhone. This is something Android gets right, and Apple gets horribly, horribly wrong.

    I now realize that because I use the phone as a general purpose computing device and SAVE DATA TO THE PHONE, so I can access it anytime (even when I don't have a phone signal), I can only upgrade my phone once every ten years or so, because the hassle Apple has created for me is too much trouble.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    1. Re:USB port on iPhone by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      Umm... you can also sync to your computer to make a backup, and then restore the new phone from the backup. iTunes even prompts this on new device setup. Stop making a mountain out of a made-up problem.

      Now, some apps store data in places that are explicitly not included in a backup/restore - and that's the fault of the app developer for choosing to do that (some devs use it for a shady up-sell to store data in their cloud)

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    2. Re:USB port on iPhone by tekrat · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid this is explicitly not true.

      Not even all my NOTES (made in apple's notepad app) were able to come over, I had to cut/paste into an email, email myself and cut/paste back into notes.

      PDFs did not copy over even from backups made from SYNC. Nor did any WIFI locations/passwords. Nor did any application data. Although after the Sync I got all my apps and music back, all the third party apps such as PDF reader, were like starting from scratch.

      Text messages and related data certainly do not get backed up, there's even a booming market for "copy programs" so you can copy that data to a new phone.

      I've had to retain my old phone as a backup device because I'm still not 100% sure what data I'm still missing on the new phone.

      Don't tell me this is trivial, because then it's obvious you don't really use your phone for much more than playing a few games and surfing facebook, you've never used your phone for much.

      --
      If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    3. Re:USB port on iPhone by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      Then you must be doing something wrong - this has worked flawlessly for me from a 3GS to a 4S and now a 6. I've done it with multiple iterations for both myself and my wife, and replaced a broken phone as well. I've also assisted my parents with incremental upgrades mixing and matching devices as they were lost/broken, and hand-me-down replacements with 3G, 3GS, 4, 4s, 5, and 5s. I myself have well over 100 apps and not the same ones that my wife or parents are using.

      As I said, any specific apps where this failed are most likely because the developer explicitly used the APIs that save data in a non-backed-up location. I had exactly 1 app where it didn't carry over using the backup/restore process, and that app was pushing 3rd party cloud sync as an add-on service.

      Wifi locations and passwords should not be saved on device - that would be a security risk. All my notes and reminders have worked fine. PDFs again depend on the app and what the app developer decided to do for data storage. I know none of my PDFs in iBooks were lost and I never have used cloud sync for that. My text messages go back to 2011 when I still had a 3GS. The only reason they don't go back earlier is because I hosed my backups at one point when messing around with jailbreaking. Again, no issues carrying it forward between devices.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    4. Re:USB port on iPhone by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the many, many, backup and restores I did in my jailbreaking days because jailbreaking put your device in a wiped "new device" state.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  72. The Too Clever By Half problem by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    An example of this is the Kindle app, which I'm a heavy user of. I want to see pages left in book, and pages left in chapter. What the app insists on doing is displaying time left in chapter. To do this it has to go through a laborious "Learning your reading speed..." process at the beginning of each chapter, which it has to do all over again after any time when you momentarily suspend the app. A straightforward display of pages left would be easier to implement and a lot more useful.

  73. "even a hundred years ago"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even a thousand years ago! I don't think that was the effect you were looking for.

  74. Cellphone Provider Preloaded Bloatware by Revarg · · Score: 1

    This should be made illegal. When i purchase a phone from a service provider (Verizon, i'm looking at you) there should only be the most basic apps for functionality from the OS. I would even settle for the ability to uninstall this crap-tastic spam, but the best they will let you do is 'disable' aka, 'i'm going to sit here, take up storage, and bug you repeatedly to update me'. I should not have to purchase an unlocked phone from the manufacturer just to evade what essentially amounts to corporate malware.

  75. Easy to upgrade Macs by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 1

    The latest Macs (including the Mac mini and low-end iMacs - desktop computers) cannot even have their RAM upgraded, meaning you either get something that's not future-proof or you need to shell out more money right at the start to get more. It's a PITA to upgrade/change the hard drive too. Why do they need to make their desktop computers smaller and thinner? There's no point in doing that.

    It makes Macs even more expensive because you can't save up to get one and then save more later to upgrade it.

    1. Re:Easy to upgrade Macs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But all those things you mentioned as *problems* are deliberate because they directly increase Apple's *profit*. Even the thinness thing: this style cue differentiates Macs from commodity, cheap PCs.

      You have to either accept Apple's products for what they are or ditch them entirely -- Apple is not for people who like to tinker. Apple is closed box, take it or leave it, but at least it looks pretty doing what Apple allows you to do.

    2. Re:Easy to upgrade Macs by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 1

      I don't choose Apple because of the hardware, I choose Apple because of the software.

      What we'd really need is official Mini-ITX Mac motherboards. Pick your own CPU, RAM, GPU, HDD/SDD, etc. Release three motherboards every year (good, better, best), I'd be happy with that especially if OS X could run on something like a Celeron or Pentium. It would be good enough for a starter/basic system.

  76. vim keymappings in all programs by spudnic · · Score: 1

    vim keymappings in all programs intended to be used with a keyboard! I've got AHK doing most of this for me now.

    --
    load "linux",8,1
  77. On the startup of windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    start: JMP start

  78. Voice Messaging by aarongadberry · · Score: 1

    I'd introduce Voice Messaging

    Sender Side
    1 - Click to voice message someone from the phone dialer
    2 - Talk
    3 - Click Send

    Receiver Side
    1 - Notification akin to text
    2 - Listen / Look at the transcribed message

    Calls are inturruptive in nature, this would be a non-inturruptive voice option.
    Easy to re-record if desired
    Voicemail is ANNOYING
    Submit technical support or customer service requests

    I know some tried this with proprietary solutions...but without global or at least platform level availability it was doomed to fail.

    1. Re:Voice Messaging by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      Why isn't voicemail a built in functional app?

      I want to see the list of voicemails and quickly tap to hear, or swipe to delete. Needing to use a keypad and press 1 to hear, and 7 to delete is obnoxious.

  79. Is complete obliteration a change? by Dracos · · Score: 1

    I would remove WordPress from existence across all of time and space.

  80. Gamer Gripes -- Controllers by ioev · · Score: 1

    Since I'm a gamer, I'll talk about what I would have changed with modern controllers:

    • No clicky d-pads or buttons. These have started to show up on modern consoles and handhelds. Not only is the audible "click" annoying, but it also feels unnatural, when controlling a player character.
    • Standardized 4 button layout. I'd say go with the Super Nintendo layout, because it was first. Sony had to make up symbols instead, and then Microsoft uses a bastardized Super Nintendo format (which Valve chose to adopt, though this made sense given most PC games expect a 360 controller, even though everyone I know uses a PS3 controller...). Don't even get me started on the OUYA. Since pretty much all controllers have the same components and layouts, they should have the same button naming conventions.
  81. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Alomex · · Score: 1

    Windows has been Posix 1.0 compliant since the Win NT days.

  82. Death to the touchpad! by damn_registrars · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seriously, touchpads are the worst pointing devices in the history of pointing devices. Every manufacturer claims to have a "better" touchpad, but they all just end up sucking in different ways. I typed my thesis on a 10+ year old IBM keyboard with a trackpoint on it, because I couldn't stand any other option that was on the market (and I paid dearly to acquire it!).

    My change would therefore be for more manufacturers to use trackpoint (or trackpoint-style) keyboards. Laptops, desktops, even foldable bluetooth keyboards for tablets. Give us something that works. We've seen other vendors (Dell, HP, Toshiba, and even Sony) use them in past years, it can be done again.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Death to the touchpad! by Wycliffe · · Score: 2

      Seriously, touchpads are the worst pointing devices in the history of pointing devices. Every manufacturer claims to have a "better" touchpad, but they all just end up sucking in different ways. I typed my thesis on a 10+ year old IBM keyboard with a trackpoint on it, because I couldn't stand any other option that was on the market (and I paid dearly to acquire it!).
      My change would therefore be for more manufacturers to use trackpoint (or trackpoint-style) keyboards. Laptops, desktops, even foldable bluetooth keyboards for tablets. Give us something that works. We've seen other vendors (Dell, HP, Toshiba, and even Sony) use them in past years, it can be done again.

      The problem with this comes down to personal preference. I can't stand trackpoints. I even prefer touchpads to mice. My current laptop actually has both a touchpad and a trackpoint and I never use the trackpoint because to me it's like trying to navigate with a joystick or controlling the mouse with arrow keys.

    2. Re:Death to the touchpad! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree! touchpads need to die horribly! And glossy and 16:9 and 16:10 screens as well!

    3. Re:Death to the touchpad! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have bought an external touchpad for my desktop PC.

    4. Re:Death to the touchpad! by Toshito · · Score: 1

      The 90's called, they want their trackpoint back.

      --
      Try it! Library of Babel
    5. Re:Death to the touchpad! by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Funny, I'd say the exact same thing about the touchpad, as the biggest complaints I had about it in the 90s still apply today.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    6. Re:Death to the touchpad! by Toshito · · Score: 1

      Well, it was a lame joke.

      I don't like all touchpads, some are really crap.

      But the one on my laptop is great, really responsive, precise, and I actually use gestures on it (to scroll up or down for example, it's totally intuitive).

      I want to change my laptop, but I'm afraid maybe I won't have a good touchpad this time.

      I've used the trackpoint a couple of times since the 90's, and I can't get used to it. I always overshoot.

      To each his poison ;-)

      --
      Try it! Library of Babel
  83. Make things user programmable by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

    Example, my PS3 has Play TV, and is used primarily as a DVR/media center. Why when I turn it on by inserting a disc, does it load that disk, but when I turn it on after having been used as a DVR, it goes to the default on screen? Why can't I tell it to default to PlayTV or Netflix? Or better yet, Play TV if turned on between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. and Netflix any other time?

    Simple rules are impossible for that, and everything else. I want my water heater to drop 10 degrees between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., and again from midnight to 6 a.m. Better yet, have it learn my patterns, and provide the optimal water temp with the minimal power. Perhaps some of that can be done with home automation, but that doesn't work yet, at least not on a mass consumer level.

    But the single biggest product change I'd make is 240V to the socket, with a single high efficiency power supply providing 5v/12v/48v to every socket as well. 5V so you can have USB charging at the wall with no adapters (except for Apple).12V for low-use DC, such as Christmas lights, cordless phones, and other uses that need more than 5V, and 48V for high-use DC, such as laptops and such. Have them all remote-switched so without anything plugged in they are zero draw. And every consumer device will be re-designed for the new voltages. Never hunt for a wall wart or charger again. Standard power plugs for everything, shared cords, and same voltage. Cut costs and boost efficiency.

    1. Re:Make things user programmable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      48V to the socket is doable but lower voltages need more amps -> more line losses and less voltage makes it to the endpoint. At 5V not much voltage loss can be tolerated so its not really possible to do a centralized power supply for that.

      The best way to do that stuff is step down converters in each socket. But 48V could be interesting besides all the extra wiring it would require.

    2. Re:Make things user programmable by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If you need more than 2A at 5V, you'd use 12V.

      The reason 5V needs such big wires is that people are running 5A at 5V. Why yes, I do have a 5A charger for my phone. And yes, it does run at 5A. Rather than that silliness, people should step up voltages. But the ubiquity of 5V is such that the devices use it even if not appropriate. If 12V were more available, or 24V or 48V, I think that devices would abandon 5V for something higher.

  84. High Contrast Screen Display as Default by Aero77 · · Score: 1

    I don't understand this obsession with white backgrounds and light shaded text. Why can't we have true high contrast background & text coloring? And don't point me at those crappy system themes that don't work 80% of the time. I'm talking about true high-contrast regardless of the application or web page.

  85. Mozilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fire every suit and "UX Expert" at Mozilla.

  86. Re:fleshlight Re: milking machines are for cows by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    That would require getting out of the basement, so not likely to happen.

  87. Hundreds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try dozens. One in many cases.

  88. sound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every device that beeps would have a different, easily distinguished sound.

  89. 4 inch screen high end Android phones by kaka.mala.vachva · · Score: 3, Informative

    I miss 4 inch screen, high end Android phone. If I want a phone with a good screen I have to go to 5.5 inches or above, or settle for a low end, slower phone.

  90. Use standard batteries when possible by istartedi · · Score: 1

    I understand it's not possible to put our current standard batteries in the latest phone. OTOH, a bulky DSLR has no excuse for a proprietary battery.

    Related: make your equipment capable of running on both the lower-voltage rechargeable and alkaline. I'm pretty happy with my NiMH charger and AAs, but I know my lantern could be brighter if it hadn't been designed for alkaline. The only reason I have any alkaline in the house is because of this stupid irrigation timer--I just assumed that all modern stuff would work with a wider range of voltage now, but the timer doesn't. It doesn't draw that much power either--worked all summer and barely drained the alkaline batteries, yet it insists on the higher voltage.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  91. Re:Make the US Post office key to identity managem by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

    Dangit! I lost my mod points because I commented. I have wanted this for years. I hate signing-up for electronic delivery of anything important (tax forms, bank statements, credit card statements) because I fear something technical will go wrong, or I'll get massive spam. Those problems are largely eliminated with postal mail. The government backs it, so it is reliable enough to be used for legal purposes. And it has a cost so the volume of spam is limited.

  92. Camara that sticks out on an iPhone 6... by sp4ni3l · · Score: 1

    YES, it is an issue and nobody even try to convince me otherwise! I need (a) Steve back whole will kill these "compromises" immediately!

    1. Re:Camara that sticks out on an iPhone 6... by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      YES, it is an issue and nobody even try to convince me otherwise!

      I need (a) Steve back whole will kill these "compromises" immediately!

      This was a ridiculous "compromise" to a problem that didn't need to exist. They should have just made the iphone slightly thicker and used that extra space to increase the battery size which would solve an ACTUAL problem of short battery life.

  93. Add Power/Volume control to Roku Remote by zoid.com · · Score: 1

    I would add a universal power/volume control to the Roku remote.

  94. Kill all non-Linux OSes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would nuke both Windows and OS-Sux.

    You want a Brain-dead system that rates highly for UX you have Gnome & Unity. They hide shit just like OS-SUX and Win 10. When I use an OSX term, its like stepping back in time 15 years, and Windows is like stepping back 25 years. And the driving psychopathy behind both systems is making them worse.

  95. So Many Ideas by jmactacular · · Score: 1

    Here are a few...

    1) Tailor TV commercials to my likes and profile. I don't need nor want to see commercials for Depends, Viagra, Tampons, etc. And it's a waste of the advertisers marketing dollars. I'm willing to give the cable company or whoever my gender and age in exchange for this, that should be sufficient.

    2) Make digital TV tuners support PiP again like our old analog CRT TVs did. Right now I can only get 1 PiP of a coax input, which is far less channels. In fact, add support for say 12 PiPs at once with live channel previews.

    3) Also, as with old CRT TVs, make the channel change response time instant again, instead of the ~1 sec delay with each Up/Down channel change click on the remote. Don't understand why this slowed down with newer digital technology!

    1. Re:So Many Ideas by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      The risk with (1) is that now someone at your house blames you for the ad that plays. Now it's your fault, or something, just like your ebay page is your fault, your amazon page is your fault, your google results are your fault... bleh.

  96. Stop the gouging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop the slow rise. Switch to a version of non-capacitive transistors like BJT or something similar and run chips at 250-750 GHz, just dump more and more cores and memory on chips. No real reason we can't just add a crap ton more power to everything for power users and advanced gaming systems, workstations.

  97. Change Intel.Prop laws, for design evolution by klek · · Score: 1

    I would change intellectual property laws so that we can get an actual *evolution* of device and UI design.
    Forcing companies to poorly ape better design features only gives us half-baked products with confusing interfaces as R&D departments dance around IP rules preventing them from simply using a superior design.

      E.g. The continued awful design of Windows making a kludge of Macintosh's far better UI. The above-mentioned 7-8" e-ink reader being superior to the Kindle and Kindle kopy-kats. Android vs. iPhone. The list is nearly endless.

    The second thing I would change is: Adding basic html formatting to Slashdot, ...like Reddit has. It ain't that hard..

    1. Re:Change Intel.Prop laws, for design evolution by spazzmo · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that Xerox's UI?

      --
      The cheese stands alone...
  98. Some lower tech things... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While talking about the death of Windows and so on, how about some simple things that might make life easier:
    1. Putting all automobile gas caps on the same side and thus avoiding messes at the gas station.
    2. Making all similar bolt patterns on wheels the same. Thus all 4 bolt 13 inch wheels would be interchangeable. While at it, use the same size nuts.
    3. Standardize the size of food containers.
    4. Agree on either A4 or 8.5 x 11, and get rid of legal sized paper.
    5. Have cable TV systems put broadcast channels on their over the air channel numbers,or let me program the number showing. We might even consider going to common numbering for networks across the country.
    6. Minimum leg room on airliners based on actual people.

    Just a few things on my 'if I were in charge' list.

    1. Re:Some lower tech things... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) So there is a massive line up on one side and nobody on the other?
      2) true but nuts and threads use standard measurements
      3) how so? They use imperial or metric system as a standard
      4) absolutely! A4 is different depending where you are. America have it shorter and wider compared to Australia which is taller and thinner but both are called A4.
      5) this may be depending on your broadcast area where broadcasts of the same service overlap. You may be receiving the service on a regional transmitter where the major transmitter in a larger area is using that channel/frequency relating to the service name. Some devices do let you organise services to channel numbers.
      6) no comment (I don’t fly).

  99. microUSB by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    I can't believe no one has complained about microUSB connectors yet (or maybe I missed it). I'd eliminate the microUSB connector and go back to the much more robust miniUSB connector on phones and other such devices.

    While they're at it, they need to increase the thickness of phones and use the space for much bigger batteries. And build an Otterbox-type case in as well, so it's an integral part of the device instead of an add-on. And make the thing easy to disassemble, service and repair too.

  100. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Dadoo · · Score: 1

    You know you only need to use blackslash on the command line, right? And that's because Windows originally used - and still does, in many cases - forward slash to indicate command options. Changing that would break their users' stuff.

    In most places other than the command line, forward slashes work fine; in C, "c:/Users/Jeff" works just as well as "c:\\Users\\Jeff".

    --
    Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
  101. Full size arrow keys on laptops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sweet Jesus why is this not a mandatory thing?

    1. Re:Full size arrow keys on laptops by Richard_J_N · · Score: 1

      Even better - let's put the down-arrow offset slightly down (so that it is easier to feel for it), and let's not have PG-up and PG-down in the arrow-key block!

  102. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Dadoo · · Score: 1

    You know how I know you've never actually tried to write Posix-compatible software for Windows?

    --
    Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
  103. Control by JMJimmy · · Score: 1

    Make everything an option the USER controls.

    The implications would be massive, the complexity even more so. It'll never happen but one can dream.

  104. ALSA sound drivers for DOS by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

    I would want ALSA of some sort to run under MS-DOS (or FreeDOS), in extended memory and emulating Sound Blaster 16/Pro/Vanilla, Adlib etc. so we can play the good old games without DRM, slowdowns and sound glitches, or Windows.

    I like PCs too, so what about putting a PC in my PC.. 300MHz 486 on a PCIe 1x card that beams VGA and sound output (SB compatible) over the PCIe bus to my main PC, my PC gives it input and block devices. Nerds can get GPIO and serial on the card, and total cost low.
    That stuff was boring 20 years ago (Mac Performa DOS compatible, Amiga before that and Z80 add-ons for 6502 computers etc. before that)

  105. Christmas lights, etc. by DriveDog · · Score: 1

    Stop just connecting the LEDs to AC such that they switch on and off at 60Hz (or 50). That's incredibly annoying. Rectify the power feeding them.

  106. I'd hijack a news media site for product ideas by burtosis · · Score: 1

    Then I'd just implement the really good ones and take it in!

  107. How about Kensington lock slots and keylocks? by mlts · · Score: 2

    For laptops, how about Kensington lock slots? Computers are not cheap, and it would be nice to be able to chain it down to a desk without having to either go with a laptop cage, lock it in a drawer, or use some slapdash method like a piece of metal between the hinges.

    For desktops, I'd like to see real keylocks return. Not the crappy round-key cheapie type, but the real 5-6 pin Medeco locks that IBM used on their PS/2 machines. The keylock in front would be a soft-switch to the OS to disable all HID devices and blank the screen (so someone plugging in a USB keyboard or mouse would still be locked out.) The keylock in back would keep the case from being opened without leaving obvious damage. Combine this with some type of cable, and it will help ensure the desktop stays put.

    Of course, it might be nice to have a fiber optic cable that each end plugs into a set of S/PDIF slots. If the cable is cut or unplugged, it acts as an intrusion sensor, and immediately hard-powers off the machine. This way, if a machine is physically grabbed, the data is protected.

    1. Re:How about Kensington lock slots and keylocks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For laptops, how about Kensington lock slots?

      What are you asking for here, that the slot be removed? Most laptops I've seen do have the lock slot, even my dirt cheap netbook.

    2. Re:How about Kensington lock slots and keylocks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't want to see it disappear... In fact, I'd like to see it returning to laptops. Apple seems to have done away with the slot, even though virtually every laptop has it (and it may not be secure from a heavy attack, but it provides a theft deterrent which is good enough for a lot of cases.)

      For Apple products, the -only- real game in town are docks like Kensington's which can lock the laptop down. Otherwise, it is ironic how one of the most expensive brands in the industry can't even bother to have a way for basic physical security available.

  108. Something simple by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    A simple one for me. The ability to click on a context menu item and have the menu stay open afterwards. RISC OS mice had three buttons, and one of them let you do just that.

    Enabling interlacing is a pain in VLC because of this.

    Right click->Video->Deinterlace->On->Left click
    Right click->Video->Deinterlace mode->Yadif (2x)->Left click

    Then if you want post processing, that's another right-click/navigate/navigate/left click.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  109. My list by cfalcon · · Score: 1

    1- All hard drives, and flash drives, and any drives, need to have a write protect tab with hardware protection, by spec.
    2- Any CD that needs to eject for realsies needs to have an override more reasonable than a paperclip.
    3- Way the hell more little kitchen doodads should have magnets on them capable of sticking them to the side of a fridge, dishwasher, or each other in a drawer.
    4- Clamshell packaging needs to go, period.
    5- Any tech that displays prices should have an option to round the price up and keep rounding. 2999? That's 3000. The computer does it because only one small part of your brain can, and the rest sees 2000.
    6- It would be fantastic if everyone who labels a controller for a video game system could not be idiots about it. Nintendo established a standard with X on top. Sony moved the X to the bottom. Microsoft stuck it on the left. I guess we are just stuck with three standards now, one for literally each of the three consoles. If even ONE button was in a consistent location, it would be so great.
    7- We'll probably all need routers that can block ads and tracking and crap, so that probably needs to be a physical button on routers soon.

  110. Add left justification to the kindle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or even proper hyphenation

  111. Open firmware by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    And standard cables/connections, standasrd replaceable batteries, standard communication protocols, and detailed technical manuals by request for free.

  112. Superhydrophobic coating for keyboards mandatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *cue the jokes about "fluids" spilled onto keyboards* but for those of us who enjoy a cold brewski while gaming, it would come in handy not to fry a $100+ keyboard when accidents happen.

  113. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Alomex · · Score: 1

    Well you are wrong about that too. I developed software which ran in a variety of platforms (solaris, nt, linux, vms, ultrix/tru64) using the posix compliant set of calls.

  114. Matte TV screens by crabbz · · Score: 1

    You can still find monitors and laptops with matte screens if you look, but TVs are all shiny mirrors now. Bring back the large matte TV screens please.

  115. consistent pricing between digital and physical by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

    This is less tech and just the sorry state of physical and digital media.
    Why does amazon charge more for the physical than the digital on some movies and the reverse for other movies?
    While we're at it, how about a service that charges me $1/hour to watch movies and then gives me access to 100% of everything that was ever made.
    Yes, amazon prime and netflix are cheap but their selection is terrible. Amazon's paid side is better but some of the prices are completely out of line.
    Right now, the best selection would be netflix by mail but then you have the huge delay of actually mailing out the physical dvd.
    A good compromise would have been the "remote dvd player" services that loaded the dvd for you but they've unfortunately been killed.

    1. Re:consistent pricing between digital and physical by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      And make it so I can sell digitally purchased media. I have gone back to Blu-ray/DVD because I can watch it, then resell it when done. If I go digital and pay the premium, I am stuck with it until my grandchildren inherit my Amazon/Apple library.

  116. give me back physical buttons on my car radio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just because you can put a touch screen interface in car, doesn't mean you should.

    1. Re:give me back physical buttons on my car radio by murderdeathkill · · Score: 1

      Word! I hate have to take my eyes off the road, and go through menu levels, just to turn the bass down a little.

    2. Re:give me back physical buttons on my car radio by dasgoober · · Score: 1

      Who turns down bass, old man!

    3. Re:give me back physical buttons on my car radio by murderdeathkill · · Score: 1

      I run two 12" JL woofers flat out all the time. Some recordings have more bass than others. Minor adjustments must be made, to maximize bass, while avoiding damage, or muddy sound.

  117. no upgrades by k6mfw · · Score: 1

    I'm tired of having to constantly upgrade to upgrade in order to meet the next upgrade. All of these, if not many, require online registration and create account and password. I want to install and use it. If I want an upgrade then I will seek that out. Otherwise let me use the program, offline, and don't bother me.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
  118. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Granted! Internally, MS-DOS and Windows do not care and will use either / or \ as the path separator. The C++ thing of "\\" is not necessary and never was. The only thing that ever cared was the COMMAND.COM interpreter which used / for options. The operating system's system calls never cared.

  119. That Elusive 7" E-Reader... by CrashNBrn · · Score: 1

    Here's an example: over the past several years, e-readers have standardized on 6-inch screens. For all the variety that exists in smartphone and tablet sizing, the e-reader market has decided it must copy the Kindle form factor or die trying. Having used an e-reader before all this happened, I found a 7-8" e-ink screen to be an amazingly better reading experience. Oh well, I'm out of luck. It's not the worst thing in the world, but I'd fix it immediately if I could.

    Oh well, if only you could find a 7-8" ereader. You must of scoured the earth.

    Display Size:
    5" (47), 6" (343)
    7" (24), 8" (1)
    10" (4)

    You must of searched heaven and hell for that 7-8" e-reader.

    eBook Reader Display Size
    Under 6 Inches (8)
    6 to 6.9 Inches (70)
    7 to 7.9 Inches (47)
    8 to 8.9 Inches (2)
    9 to 9.4 Inches 9 to 9.4 Inches (1)
    9.5 to 9.9 Inches 9.5 to 9.9 Inches (4)
    10 Inches & Above 10 Inches & Above (2)

  120. SHUT THE FRACK UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Render all browser incapable of starting a audio or video stream without my approval. This is the worst intrusive tech, the worst of the popups!

  121. UI animation that's interruptible by user by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The new trend launched by Apple is for UI animation to have priority over user interaction.
    In other word, the UI serves the purpose of showcasing itself rather than performing its function.
    This needs to change.

  122. Spotify -- Sonos by StirlingArcher · · Score: 1

    All I want for Christmas, is Spotify Connect to be supported by Sonos. Never gonna happen though.

  123. Waterproof keyboards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In every laptop. Liquid spills are the number one laptop killer. And so increadibly frequent. There is no reason why liquid needs to be able to enter a laptop keyboard. It woukd be so bloody simple to fix.

    1. Re:Waterproof keyboards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suggested something similar with a superhydrophobic coating of paint to keyboards being mandatory.

  124. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Rophuine · · Score: 1

    And I'd also like them to replace the Windows DOS prompt with bash running inside a proper terminal window. Installed by default.

    I can't give you installed-by-default, but download MobaXterm. It's about a trillion times quicker than installing Cygwin on every Windows machine you use, especially because you can just put it in Dropbox or similar and have it follow you around.

  125. Add a $10 / 10 min battery to every desktop... by jpellino · · Score: 1

    to allow save / quit in case of power bloops.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    1. Re:Add a $10 / 10 min battery to every desktop... by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      Brilliant!

      I wish every app would also respond to shutdown requests ASAP. Don't ask me to save, just save it as a _shutdown copy and shut the hell down. A fully graceful power down system for both software and hardware would be great for both normal life and power outages.

    2. Re:Add a $10 / 10 min battery to every desktop... by unencode200x · · Score: 1
      --

      Chance favors the prepared mind.
      Perfect is the enemy of good.
  126. Give Skype to Valve by bistromath007 · · Score: 1

    In one stroke, I've increased the chance its functionality will actually be improved at some point, slowed the creep of ads getting stuffed into it, improved Steam's (and therefore any Steam game's) voice functionality significantly, and introduced a glimmer of hope that the client source might be opened.

  127. Flatten OLED TVs by hudsucker · · Score: 1

    I'll buy an OLED TV when you sell it without the useless curved screen gimmick.

  128. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just say 'slash', newbie. saying "forward slash" makes you sound like a poser-tech e.g. an ubuntu grad or a left-handed guy, or someone who failed English. To summarize, it's either just slash or backslash.

  129. Comprehensible User Interface by n2hightech · · Score: 1

    The user interface on computers, tablets and phones have continued to "evolve" beyond comprehensibility. Constantly changing the interface does not make it better only different and in many ways worse. Hiding menus and requiring several different ways to access settings makes for a very poor user experience. The Apple clean look, Androids and windows attempt to replicate it just shows that the programmers know nothing about human factors and interface design. It should be obvious how to do something not hidden. Searching for how to open a menu is not fun its a pain in the ass. It should be easy to turn off annoying garbage functions not take 15 minutes of internet searching to learn the secret handshake of the month.

  130. Physical write/read-only switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On USB sticks (again), BIOS, EFIS, hard disks, the OS, etc. Would solve a lot of security problems.

  131. My data is my own. by GrantRobertson · · Score: 1

    I have lived through several iterations of what was originally called "time sharing" and is now called "the cloud." my biggest complaint is that vendors want the primary location of all my data to be on their site. We only get to look at it, or maybe download an archive of it. I have always believed in the opposite model: My data exists and is used and manipulated on my local system. The cloud should only be there as a replication service to facilitate merging that data to my other devices (and only if I don't feel like actually connecting those devices directly). Kind of like a universal, automatic GIT for all file types.

  132. Right Tap by devnullkac · · Score: 1

    Find a way for a touch screen to tell the difference between my index finger and my middle finger so I can go back to using context menus on all my devices. Also so I can tell it when I'm really angry with it.

    --
    What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
  133. TIME TO VENT. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh boy, My chance to vent about all the stupid people creating the internet.

    First off, I would remove all the stupid popup ads, both on sites as well as on videos. ( We all hate them, and we all avoid those companies like the plague. We tried blacklisting all annoying advertisements, but not enough of us know how to.)

    The second thing I would change is the removal of the "back button" on some web sites, ( this is becoming more and more of an issue as more and more sites figure out how to write that single line of text disabling it. )

    Third Why don't smart phones have a Forward button, they have the back button but no forward button. WHY?? WHY?? One of the most retarded annoyances on a phone. ( Seriously how many times have you clicked the back button on a search page only to find out what you typed is gone. A forward button would eliminate billions of retyped letters in the smart phone, )...

  134. Physical keyboards back in cell phones by dasgoober · · Score: 1

    Virtual keyboards suck, especially for non alpha-numeric characters!!!

  135. f.lux on all screens, end blue light at night by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

    I've started using f.lux and on my iPad and Computers. I feel it makes a huge difference at the end of the day plus it visually alerts me to bedtime.

    f.lux® software to make your life better

    Some initial studies has shown that using f.lux on your screens at night is equivalent to getting extra sleep.

    Apple claimed f.lux violated the developer agreement and made them take down the source, but you can still get it here:

    Git Hub for f.lux

    Just use Xcode to install and side load.

    What is flux?

    f.lux indicator applet
    Better lighting for your computer

    f.lux indicator applet is an indicator applet to control xflux, an application
    that makes the color of your computer's display adapt to the time of day, warm
    at nights and like sunlight during the day

  136. I'd make Slashdot load the page at the top. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's with Slashdot always jumping down the page? Why can't it load at the top, instead of jumping down to some random location? I presume it's supposed to be leaving me where I left off, but it's not really doing that.

  137. Slashdot scrolling by fuo · · Score: 1

    I'd stop slashdot from auto-scrolling to the middle/end of the main page when I refresh it. Or at least make it optional. And get rid of all the video stuff.

  138. Things I would fix: by mikael · · Score: 1

    With file brower windows, the copy and move buttons always seem to next to each other, so one slip and duplicate copies of files rather than moving them.

    Fix the increasing code size in Android. It's becoming impossible to install new applications on a Samsung Galaxy SII because of all the "updates" from Google. I have to remove them in order to update Skype. And it's annoying to find out that Skype needs to be updated simply because it has become impossible to log in.

    Allow the panoramic photograph option in Android to enable the camera lens to zoom in. This used to be the case, but somebody decided that thy "camera lens shalt always be zoomed out."

    When I'm installing Linux on a external HDD drive, it copies the GRUB bootloading data from /dev/sda rather than creating an new fresh install.

    Get ALSA sound to work on GT72 laptops (with the ALC898 sound chip). I'm sure it's something in /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf, but just can't find anything that works.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  139. Non-volatile memory in my car stereo by murderdeathkill · · Score: 1

    I grow weary of having to reset: radio stations, EQ, crosser points, disable animation.... every time I have to disconnect my battery. Memory is cheap, why is this a still a thing? Hell, just write a small file to the thumb drive that stores all my music.

  140. Get Rid of Cap Lock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get rid of Caps Lock, or at least move it. It is so close to the beloved Tab key. I suspect most use of Caps Lock is accidental. NO ONE SHOULD EVER NEED TO USE CAPS LOCK!

  141. Geek port! by Moof123 · · Score: 1

    PC's are hugely powerful, yet strangely cut off from the outside world. How about bringing pack some ADC/DAC plus GPIO to the PC so that kids can actually do something with a PC beyond typing, web surfing, and playing games?

  142. Fix slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about an option to view all /. comments on a single page, like it used to be. The multi-page comment pages for nested comments is buggy with many pages showing the same duplicate comments and many other comments not being shown at all. Fix this 10-year old bug please.

  143. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #1/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Apk doesn't think DNS servers are worth running & believes Microsoft Active Directory can run w/out DNS." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday October 27, 2015

    Where'd I say it? Show us (not illogic logic but where I literally said it). I say AD needs internal DNS far back as 2007

    http://forums.tweaktown.com/wi...

    See "To warn users who have ActiveDirectory/AD LAN-WAN setups to NOT use external DNS servers" there in my security guide.

    Fact: You shoot your mouth off lying about it & me, hmmm?

    (It's your mentally damaged goods assburgers brain acting up trying to put words in my mouth I never said? Yes...)

    ---

    Where did I say I don't use DNS too?

    Clue: I do & detailed it for you AGAIN (via my std. post on DNS vs. hosts) -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    ---

    "You must really suck at programming" - by Coren22 on Monday November 23, 2015

    What've you programmed? Other /.'ers disagree:

    "his hosts program is actually pretty good" - by xenotransplant (4179011) on Monday August 10, 2015 @03:34PM (#50287195)

    "I like your host file system." - by Karmashock (2415832) on Wednesday September 09, 2015 @03:57PM (#50489401)

    "APK is kinda right... I've given up on JS based adblocking and gone to blackholing in /etc/hosts, just like it was back in the 90s. The computational load has gotten intolerable for any ad-blocking using JS. I've tried his hosts file generating software. It works." - by bmo (77928) on Thursday October 15, 2015 @11:30AM (#50736071)

    "his hosts tool is actually useful for those cases in which one does indeed want to locally block stuff outright while consuming minimum system resources" by alexgieg (948359) on Friday September 25, 2015 @09:57AM (#50596461)

    "No complaints from me, I like APK's spam. Reminds me to use a host file. Also, his stuff is free." - by aaaaaaargh! (1150173) on Tuesday November 17, 2015 @09:31AM (#50947415)

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't. in 2/6... apk

  144. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #2/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "figured out why privilege escalation's a bad thing?" - by Coren22 on Tuesday September 22, 2015

    How else can I programmatically update hosts itself?

    ---

    "it requires elevation to write hosts" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday September 23, 2015

    Hypocrite later admits it!

    Even MalwareBytes AntiMalware DEMANDS it or it can't do a job fully like many security tools!

    ---

    "Needing admin privileges every time a program updates is poor design" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    Mine doesn't to get new data to update hosts vs. threats. Only hosts itself updates need it vs. WFP/SFP. Users set it too. It's not programmatic impersonation.

    ---

    "90's tech to fight modern war" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    Ozymandias/Watchmen per a namesake:

    "I resolved to apply antiquities teachings" (hosts) "to our world today & began my path to conquest - Conquest not of men but of the evils that beset them: Fossil Fuels (antispyware), Oil (antivir), Nuclear Power (addons) are like a drug & you gentlemen along w/ foreign interests are the pushers"

    It works Aryeh Goretsky NOD32/ESET hosts = good security-> http://it.slashdot.org/comment...

    Oliver Day (Symantec) too-> http://www.securityfocus.com/c...

    MalwareBytes' hpHosts' Admin hosts + RECOMMENDS my APK Hosts File Engine 9.0++ SR-2 32/64-bit-> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl...

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't. in #3/6... apk

  145. Cellular on a laptop by jonyen · · Score: 1

    Aside from the issue of data plans and the alternative of getting a MiFi, I would add cellular connectivity directly into a laptop. People shouldn't have to hunt for WiFi or carry around a secondary device for Internet access.

    1. Re:Cellular on a laptop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can put a SIM card and WWAN into a Dell Latitude.

  146. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #3/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I guess we should avoid your crap, it looks like it is marked as malware." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Monday November 02, 2015 @03:52PM (#50850445)

    62 reputable sources + /. users say different:

    Safe by 57 antivirus programs in 64-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...

    +

    the 32-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...

    &

    Per VirScan (installer too)-> http://f.virscan.org/APKHostsF...

    ---

    MalwareBytes' hpHosts Admin (MalwareBytes employee) hosts & recommends it -> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl... & MalwareBytes = BEST antivirus per this VERY recent testing of them all http://www.av-test.org/en/news...

    (& he certified my source http://slashdot.org/comments.p... - he wouldn't host it, much less recommend it, minus that...) /.'ers say my work is good too:

    "his hosts program is actually pretty good" - by xenotransplant (4179011) on Monday August 10, 2015 @03:34PM (#50287195)

    "I like your host file system." - by Karmashock (2415832) on Wednesday September 09, 2015 @03:57PM (#50489401)

    "APK is kinda right... I've given up on JS based adblocking and gone to blackholing in /etc/hosts, just like it was back in the 90s. The computational load has gotten intolerable for any ad-blocking using JS. I've tried his hosts file generating software. It works." - by bmo (77928) on Thursday October 15, 2015 @11:30AM (#50736071)

    "his hosts tool is actually useful for those cases in which one does indeed want to locally block stuff outright while consuming minimum system resources" by alexgieg (948359) on Friday September 25, 2015 @09:57AM (#50596461)

    "No complaints from me, I like APK's spam. Reminds me to use a host file. Also, his stuff is free." - by aaaaaaargh! (1150173) on Tuesday November 17, 2015 @09:31AM (#50947415)

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't in part #4/6... apkalexgieg@gmail.com

  147. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #4/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "His newest post is trying to refute that MiTM attack opportunity his software provides" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015

    I DISPROVED it: Hardcoded favs users provide themselves are REVERSE DNS verified & my program filters 5,500++ false positives:

    1.) Search engines
    2.) Antivirus (e.g. updaters)
    3.) Security community sites
    4.) Captchas, brower home pages + download pages
    5.) Ebay/Amazon (shopper & banking)

    (Security community I get hosts data from do false positives filters in current data + removal lists).

    ---

    "won't demonstrate security of his product be exposing the source (someone might steal it!)" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015

    I don't give away work to be stolen OR misused like GOOGLE CHROME http://it.slashdot.org/story/1...

    "the secretary at MalwareBytes took a look at his source code and said it looked all good to them" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015

    My ware went thru code verification by Mr. Steven Burn of Malwarebytes' hpHosts

    http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    A competent coder & BEST security researcher I know of FROM THE BEST ANTIMALWARE THERE IS http://www.av-test.org/en/news...

    NOT a secretary!

    ---

    YOU BLEW IT ON ADMIN PRIV TOO: My program doesn't require it hosts does (WFP/SFP): my program protects hosts beyond it!

    I.E.-> I run manually minus admin priv & drag result to hosts naming it "hosts" overwriting original.

    Only auto update needs it (WFP/SFP) & users set it themselves in program shortcut: Not programmatic impersonation.

    ---

    DNS introduces a SECURITY ISSUE RIDDLED SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE & doesn't secure down to endpoints on a LAN -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    How I use remote filtering DNS combined w/ hosts is there showing many DNS security issues hosts overcome.

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't in part #5/6... apk

  148. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #5/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Virus scanners/Adblock software don't need admin priv to update" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    Neither does my program. AV does to remove threats - Adblock addons = Vastly INFERIOR in abilities + efficiency vs. hosts as I proved & no one proved me wrong to date!

    ---

    "your software does" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    No hosts do (WFP/SFP) - Intake update of new hosts data doesn't!

    ---

    "won't reveal your source code" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    I don't owe you it. I don't give away work to be stolen OR misused like GOOGLE CHROME http://it.slashdot.org/story/1...

    ---

    "What's stopping you from pointing my bank's web site at your private server?" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    I don't keep a server. Security guru (not - you create no ware for security & your forensics skills = non-existent): Put it in a VM, trace it via process monitor + wireshark (don't need code)!

    ---

    "the possibility of being caught, which would be pretty hard to catch w/ such a large hosts file, as no one can go through it manually." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    I put hardcoded fav sites @ top of hosts for speed & reliabilty - spotted easily & bulk of hosts = sorted blocked known bad threats provided by the security community (filtered vs. 5,500++ false positive possibles in my program & by current security community data).

    ---

    "What are you going to do when Windows gets rid of the hosts file completely?" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    Hasn't happened!

    ---

    "They have already taken steps to make it useless in Windows 10." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 10, 2015

    It works there!

    Telemetry's killed 10 by itself: VISTA = Win10 = Win8 = flops - who're you fooling other than yourself?

    APK

    P.S.=> Con't. in #6/6... apk

  149. Bring back the Age of Elegance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bring back Lisp machines. There are tons of times where a little change would save me massive amounts of time. For example, say you have 300 images to sort. You can open them up in your file explorer in icon mode, but even the large icons are too small for many pictures. So you open a normal image viewer, but all it lets you do is delete the current photo or save a copy. So you move through an image one of a time, tab to the file browser, find the image you're looking at, drag it to the proper folder, then switch back to the image viewer and repeat. A slow, error prone, and tedious process.

    I'd much rather be able to open the image viewer, switch the program into some type of dev mode, click on the delete button to see all the action handlers, change the delete command to a move to folder XX, copy the delete button and modify the new one to move to folder YY, and again for folder ZZ. Then switch back into running mode. Now I'd be able to use the arrows keys to move though images at full screen while pressing 1, 2, or 3 to move that image into the proper folder. Way easier and much faster if everything was designed to a similar standard.

    Sadly no programs work like that (does Emacs?), but they could all have been that way if history was a little different. It's a crying shame.

  150. Coren22 = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" #6/6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coren22 'eats his words' vs. me 2x yet again:

    "introduces risk you are relying on a 3rd party to update a hosts file potentially opening you up to MITM attacks" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 17, 2015

    How? My prog puts entries in as non-blocking to hostnames on ones users give it as favs to speed up @ TOP of hosts REVERSE DNS VERIFIED!

    (For more speed, & reliability + security - in RAM as 1st resolver queried = faster & more secure vs. remote DNS w/ all its security issues in Kaminsky flaw, DNSChanger malware IP stack settings, routers bushwhacked in DNS settings, rogue DNS, Open DNS servers abused by malware. It aids in reliability vs. redirects).

    YOU'D SPOT IT INSTANTLY @ TOP OF CUSTOM HOSTS & can easily edit anything you want out!

    (Rest = known bad sites from 10 reputable security community sites for blocking - the MAJORITY of what's in my hosts files!)

    + my sources do removal lists vs. false positives & helped me create a "FP" filter in my program (5,500++ of them)!

    ---

    "maybe one day you can get a score 5 comment" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 17, 2015

    See subject & ~ 12 +5 upmods: "Eat your words" (1st one: You tried using what I post there against me to FAIL):

    +5 'modded up' posts by "yours truly" (11):

    http://news.slashdot.org/comme...
    http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...
    http://news.slashdot.org/comme...
    http://science.slashdot.org/co...
    http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...
    http://hardware.slashdot.org/c...
    http://news.slashdot.org/comme...
    http://news.slashdot.org/comme...
    http://hardware.slashdot.org/c...
    http://yro.slashdot.org/commen...
    http://yro.slashdot.org/commen...

    "You believe you are getting the better of me" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday November 17, 2015

    YOU GOT THE BEST OF YOURSELF in fails & lies about me. Your immature signatures about me SCREAM you're butthurt - Did it to yourself.

    APK

    P.S.=> You fail Coren22... apk

  151. Root access by Techmeology · · Score: 1

    I'd change the locked down nature of many consumer devices to that root access can be obtained without relying on vulnerabilities.

    --
    Excuse for why is your room always messy?
  152. Standardized settings management by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    I'd like to see a standard way to store and import/export settings for applications such that each one doesn't reinvent the feature management wheel. That way one can use a single tool to search, study, import, export and change them. Here's a rough draft of a settings attribute layout:

    app-ID // or app name
    feature-ID
    title
    group-ID // group feature belongs to
    value-type // string, number, integer, date/time, uri, other
    custom-value
    factory-value // default install value
    value-changed-on
    feature-notes
    user-notes // user can save reason for change
    key-words // synonyms to aid feature search engines
    scope // global (computer), user, document, etc.
    sequence // used if there is a usage ranking

    I realize there are various intricacies to work out, such as prerequisite settings, but this can serve as a starting point.

    1. Re:Standardized settings management by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Curious, how would this be helpful? I've written application settings before, and both iPhone and Android have a standard way of doing it (but it's not as thought-out as your method). I'm not sure I've ever thought of this as something that slows me down, though. What am I missing?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Standardized settings management by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      You are thinking of OS or bundled "system" apps, aren't you? An independent app would invent an independent way of managing features.

      And even though those devices might have a standard GUI for finding and editing them, each vendor either has a different way of importing/exporting them, or provide no easy way, period.

      Plus, if they were standardized in an open way, you could install a different "settings browser" with fancier search, find, compare, query, report, alarm, etc. features.

    3. Re:Standardized settings management by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It's been a while since I've done Android, so I had to look it up again. This is what I was talking about.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  153. Pilfer-proof packaging by mileshigh · · Score: 1

    No more sealed-edge pilfer-proof packaging that makes it:
      - unreasonably hard to get at the contents
      - necessary to use tools
      - hard to return the product
      - easy to cut your hand on jagged edges

    Imagine if beer were packaged like that! Wouldn't be good for sales...

    1. Re:Pilfer-proof packaging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Destroy-to-open packaging cuts down on product returns. Maybe it's guilt. I dunno - I don't let it stop me if I want to return something.

  154. Global Shutter by Art3x · · Score: 1

    I would like global shutter to return to cameras again. CMOS image sensors usually have rolling shutter, a step backward from CCDs. With rolling shutter, each line of the image is taken at a different time, as the sensor's reader rolls down the frame. This leads to many artifacts: camera flash banding, leaning trees and buildings as you go by, bent golf clubs, scattered fan blades, and others.

  155. Dow makes LOTS of stuff. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    ... by everyone's favorite munitions manufacturer: Dow Chemical.

    Dow makes a LOT of chemical stuff. Some of it's useful to the military.

    If their Dow Corning partnership-subsidiary hadn't been hammered into bankruptct by a bunch of (later shown to be bogus) suits claiming medial harm from their silicon breast implants, we might have had hybrid cars a couple decades earlier, out of Detroit rather than Japan, using lenticular, glass fiber, super flywheels, rather than batteries, for energy storage.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  156. An on/off switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not a standby button with a LED/clock/other to reassure me that my device is off, because if it's powering a LED/clock/other then by definition it is still on. I mean a physical, literal, actual, genuine ON/OFF switch that physically, literally, actually, genuinely prevents power from flowing from the power source (be it battery or plug) to the device.
    (still, it could be worse: at least I live in a country where the wall sockets have off switches)

  157. Slashdot autoreloading by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

    I'd stop slashdot from automatically reloading the page at random, causing it to suddenly jump away from whatever paragraph I was reading. Drives me crazy. You'll find lots of discussion around the net with people trying to find ways to fix it.

    https://webapps.stackexchange....

    http://www.kellestine.com/disa...

    http://lifehacker.com/5321420/...

    Please slashdot, just get rid of this horrible behavior, or at least give a way to turn it off.

    --
    "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
  158. bring back full height 4:3 screens by Richard_J_N · · Score: 1

    It is frustrating to me that we now have "shortscreens" everywhere - instead of full-height screens (e.g. 20" at 1600x1200), we now have 16:9 (and no doubt 16:7 in due course). For real work, whether programming, CAD, or just reading webpages and documents, there is no substitute for screen-height. Yet a combination of the DVD-tail wagging the productivity dog, and a dishonest marketing campaign (17" widescreens have less area than 17" regular screens) means that we can't get decent screens anywhere. For desktops this is just about tolerable with the advent of very very large 16:10 screens, but for laptops, it is a nightmare.

    1. Re:bring back full height 4:3 screens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed!

      Short screen + task bar + title bar + menu bar + toolbar (now ribbon) + tab bar + status bar = reading one line at a time!

    2. Re:bring back full height 4:3 screens by neminem · · Score: 1

      I was going to say that too, except, 16:10. I mean, more choice is always good, so I agree that it *would* be good if 4:3 screens also still existed for people who preferred them. Personally, the first time I got a 16:10 laptop, I fell in love instantly - I wouldn't want to go back to 4:3 in a laptop screen any more than I want to be forced to go to 16:9. So I was going to say bring back 16:10, but sure, bring back both while you're at it. Choice is good.

  159. Send a file by Moof123 · · Score: 1

    Seriously, why is sending a file or blob of data not a better, easier experience? You have to attach it to an email, often with pretty limited sizes and/or number of files. They then live on in my email history.

    I want to be able to send files to someone (often myself) or to a specific computer (again often to myself across the room or building). There is a need for this, and things like Dropbox and cloud storage are trying to address it, but it should be a more core function to computers and be simple, and secure without third party opportunities for failure/obsolescence. You can use sharing of a drive/folder, but often I am only sharing to get the file across and for no other reason and would prefer if it was a direct action to see the file arrive with a notification and click accept&save, rather than a passive one where it shows up silently in email or a shared folder.

  160. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please. if i say slash, everyone always says "which one?"

    Honestly i never know which is which anyways. Does the top or bottom leaning backwards mean its a backslash? pretty sure top, but really, it could be the bottom. As the parent says, different OS's use different things. OSX uses one of the slashes as a very annoying escape character when they could just wrap the entire path in quotes like windows does. Makes typing paths on OSX with spaces exceedingly tedious.

    File paths are the opposite of web. Thats all you have to remember in the windows world.

  161. LED lighting that flickers by Richard_J_N · · Score: 1

    It's so easy to include the smoothing capacitor - but so many LED lights strobe at 50/60 Hz. This produces a really unpleasant effect, especially if people move about (or simply move their eyes). LEDs are far worse than tungsten here, because the LED is usually on for only a very small fraction of the duty-cycle, has no thermal inertia, and many of them only operate on one half-cycle not both. When LED lamps are dimmed, it's truly horrid. (I also hate the poor colour rendering, and the tendency to get harsh ("cool-white") or dirty-grey ("warm white") llight rather than a full spectrum.

    1. Re:LED lighting that flickers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if we're talking open ended changes, why not just up the main frequency or go to DC to remove strobing plus a bunch of other benefits?

      500Hz (hell even 200Hz) mains would do wonders:
      - You could scale transformer size down massively, and they would get more efficient at the same time.
      - Simple rectifier/filter circuits could use caps an order of magnitude smaller - smaller caps are cheaper and more reliable.
      - Lighting flicker would become basically invisible even without a smoothing cap.

      The downside would be that syncing the grid might get a bit harder over large areas. DC would be even better, and quite doable with modern tech, but it would lose the simple elegance of AC distribution and require a lot more tech to make it work.

  162. Re:Change Windows' file path separator to forward- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know that you just fine can use the forward slash in Windows, right?

  163. Change to Google Glass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would make it so that Google Glass can be self-contained to your own systems, never attempting to connect to or upload to their 'cloud'.

  164. Make Windows FOSS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The title says it all. It's the only way Windows will ever be brought into the 21st century.

  165. Two, both for mobile devices. by aussersterne · · Score: 2

    (1a) Root/jailbreak everywhere, as an easy option (not called that any longer). Rather like the security control on Mac OS. "Security" on by default, but can be turned off with a click.

    (1b) An unlocked SIM socket on every device, of every size, along with a dialer/calling app for mobile networks. So that I don't have to choose amongst the limited selection of "phablets" but can instead use an iPad Mini or a Samsung Galaxy S2 as my phone if I want to.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  166. ignore thinness and get a bigger battery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For cell phones, ignore thinness and just get a bigger battery.

  167. Users by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    I'd fix users.

    Actually, only half a joke there. The net has allowed ways to be educated and informed whilst unleashing ways to witness stupid, never possible before it.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  168. Make Highe-end phones with real QWERTY keyboards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Posting AC as I moderated/upvoted a few things.

    I wish there was a Samsung Galaxy line with a real tactile physical QWERTY keyboard.
    Just make the screen a little smaller and add the keys, don’t touch anything else!

    Just look at the key layout of the Nokia E72 which got it pretty perfect including holding buttons down to do extra things (torch and bluetooth on/off).

  169. No Goddamned grey text by vandelais · · Score: 1

    Whichever dipshit thought light grey on white was an elegant or usable contrast ratio for normal text?
    But we see it all the time.

    --
    Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
    1. Re:No Goddamned grey text by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Hey man, I don't want my CRT to get phosphor burn. It's not "light grey" it's regular intensity, versus "high-intensity". It was for bitmap fonts on CRTs that weren't really capable of multiple font weights, so different intensities were used to simulate different weights.

      How would you like it if all text had the maximum weight?

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  170. HOLY MEMORY HOLE FUCKTARD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've been through this before, in case you've forgot.

    You can't prove jack shit because you refuse to log in. All you can prove is that someone modded up some AC posts. FAIL.

    Whereas someone here not so long ago found you IRL (and it wasn't even that hard) and IIRC even sent you a postcard to prove it, which you admitted receiving. FAIL.

    You have no fucking idea how lucky you are, do you? You really need to stop while you're ahead.

  171. Disable autoplay video by geronimo1000 · · Score: 1

    Although everyone seems to be doing it these days, videos in web pages shouldn't autoplay by default. Or at least there should be a consistent, user-friendly way to disable it.

  172. Make it useful by ARF2F2E · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but today's so called smart phones (both apple and android) are crap. They are more trouble than they are worth unless you are simply looking for a distraction. I want something that will allow me to effectively manage my email, make and receive calls, manage my contacts, maybe browse the web and do it all without the pain and lack of privacy involved with today's devices. It really isn't too much to ask for. The very fact that so many people put up with the crap manufacturers put out today is just amazing.

  173. Schematics by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

    Schematics for everything

  174. Sell OS and Computer seperately by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    No pre-installed anything, you take the OS you already paid for on your last computer and install it on your new computer. It's just another piece of software. Or you buy a newer OS for your old computer. A lot of our problems could have been resolved if we never had so much damn lock-in that granted one company control over all our PCs.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  175. Any Android phone with a good keyboard, please! by profke · · Score: 1

    My first android was the G1. Frankly I never got a better one! Sure, I like the nice, large screens we have now too. But imagine a 5" screen with the same keyboard mechanism underneath. It would, for all intends and (most) purposes, be a small laptop. I would buy one!

  176. 1 TB == 1024 GB, not 1000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This annoys me to no end.

  177. Promised features that actually work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want the promised features to actually work and get real updates, in case there are bugs. I can understand few bugs in some special situations, but i want fixes for them. Fuck you all tech companies for abadoning all your products in a year.

  178. Return to write protect/enable jumpers by Technician · · Score: 1

    Add write protect to all routers, BIOS, USB sticks, etc. Eliminate infections from and to memory sticks,

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  179. instead of a single tech product... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'd go back in time and nix every single "mega-merger" that has anything to do with technology, from aol-time warner to hp-compaq to comcast-nbc, and everything in between, including all the mergers in telecom post-at&t breakup....

    while i'm back there, i might as well go ahead and fix the patent system, software patents, and patent litigation, before the whole fucking mess breaks.

    then i might just stay back there permanently because life was so much simpler a generation or two ago... so i guess if i had to choose one tech product to change... i'd change my one-of-a-kind ancient flip phone into a time machine.

  180. 8 inch e-reader on first page of google results by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://www.google.co.uk/#q=boox+e-ink+reader+8+inch

    FTFY.

  181. Re:fleshlight Re: milking machines are for cows by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    I couldn't imagine anything worse than an adult toy talking back.

  182. this or that by Tom · · Score: 1

    If I could make any change I wanted, I would make it illegal and/or impossible to display advertisement to someone without prior consent. No spam, no pop-ups, pop-unders, malware, clickbaiting, punched gorillas, max-volume ads, interstitinal ads, all that bullshit gone. The world would be a better place.

    If it has to be a technological change, I would wish for a universal connector. Everything going in and out of my computers, screens, drives, etc. is zeroes and ones anyways, why do I need twenty different form factors for those bits? I want one cable instead of power, audio, HDMI, DVI, VGA, USB, mini-USB, micro-USB, lightning, thunderbolt, ethernet, and all its relatives.
    Also, it should be a bus. One cable into computer, into a hub, and from there into screen, external drive, lan and whatever else. Power across all those cables to all the devices.

    A man can dream, yes?

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  183. Pointy Thumbs by Rob+Lister · · Score: 1

    Make my human thumbs pointy so I can type on my phone.

  184. Flash RAM + ROM as a safeguard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I still can't accept that a product dies if the power is lost during firmware flashing.

    It is really easy and cheap to add a ROM that after a push of a buton it wipes the flash and turns it to factory default, so making it unbrickable.

  185. Better batteries usage. by BESTouff · · Score: 1

    Mobile devices that last for a week on battery. 'nuf said.

  186. Bittorrent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There would be no such thing as a multifile torrent. A multifile bittorrent metadata file would be a collection of torrents for individual files with paths built in.

  187. Chrome OS security by claude.j.greengrass8 · · Score: 1

    I was add a user configurable plug-in security module that would encrypt all documents before they are stored/synced to Googles cloud.

  188. Physical keyboard, decent battery life for phones by flug · · Score: 1

    1. Physical keyboard on all phones

    2. Phone battery lasts 2-3 days with phone becoming however much thicker as needed to make that happen.

  189. Keyboards by flug · · Score: 1

    All chiclet style keyboards die in a fire and (at least for desktop computers where 'slimness' isn't either needed or a virtue, all keyboards must have a decent tactile feel. Something like the IBM Model M. http://www.theverge.com/2014/1...

  190. personally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would replace all apple logos on products with windows logos - just because it would be funny to see people get mad about it.

  191. Privacy By Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Design all tech devices, software, apps etc. for total privacy as a default!!!

  192. Correction to O/P by whitroth · · Score: 1

    No, they are not desperately trying to copy the Kindle format. The purpose of an e-reader is to REPLACE A PAPERBACK BOOK, which is of a size that you can put it in your back pocket (if you have them, sorry about the morons who design womens' clothes).

    Your bigger format won't fit my back pocket. Not sure if that's up to digest size - it's not quite magazine size... but you can't roll it up and put it in your pocket.

    Wish they still had freakin' buttons, instead of magic swipes....

                      mark

  193. Gamecube backwards compatibility for WiiU by Mirddes · · Score: 1

    because some idiot fucked it up.

  194. LONG LASTING BATTERIES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most mobile phones make it about a day, most powerful laptops 4-5 hours. The day when you charge once a week will make things like wearables practical.

    1. Re:LONG LASTING BATTERIES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most mobile phones make it about a day, most powerful laptops 4-5 hours. The day when you charge once a week will make things like wearables practical.

      YES!

  195. Windows stop begin for its life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I select Shutdown, I wish windows would immediately SHUTDOWN. NOT ask me if I'm sure I want to shut down, not warn me that I may lose any unsaved work, not point out there are background apps still running, would I like to wait for those to complete first. The background apps are stuck, and I don't want to save the unsaved work, as its messed up, I want to get rid of it. THAT'S WHY I pressed the freaking shutdown button!!!!!

    In short I want it to work like Linux. Oh wait, never mind, I'll just use Linux.

  196. WINE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd invest in the WINE Linux project so that it can run all Windows programs with near-100% compatibility, finally freeing the world from a (mandatory) Windows installation

  197. Less plastic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Less cheap plastic crap from China. Let's use recycled metals and tricky designing instead of inject mold cheap plastic. Nothing wrong with China products but I'd rather pay double the price for triple the life of the product.

  198. Ergonomics of size. by MercTech · · Score: 1

    The kindle size screen mimics the size of a paperback book. Easy to read holding in one hand yet large enough to display a decent size page for clarity. You can read a magazine while sipping soup.
        Tablets that try to simulate a functional computing device are too unwieldy for comfortable, casual, reading. When you change from what has come to be the most popular form factor; it is like trying to market a customized toothbrush handle. Why a customized toothbrush handle? "Because we can" just doesn't sell that well.
    Form follows function...
    So, most e-readers end up with a similar size and form factor; sized as a paperback book. And most tablets seem to emulate a standard sheet of paper size.

    --
    NRRPT/RCT
  199. Toggle switch for Cydia in iOS by elliott666 · · Score: 1

    Stock iOS should have a toggle switch to enable Cydia. All those amazing people who spend their time finding security holes to enabled jailbreaking could then focus on making the OS better. I hate that in order to use my iPhone the way i want i have to depend on a security hole being found.

  200. Brian Eno - The Microsoft Sound.wav by tepples · · Score: 1

    Windows 95 likewise had an annoyingly loud chime composed by Brian Eno.

  201. Windows is already LTS by tepples · · Score: 1

    OS X, Solaris, IRIX, AIX, have turned a profit for a long time without [product activation] in place.

    That's because these proprietary UNIX systems are meant to run on computers sold by the operating system publisher. Authentic hardware activates the operating system. "Don't Steal Mac OS X.kext" anyone?

    a LTS release.

    This already exists, provided that by "LTS" you mean something like Canonical providing security updates for each LTS release of Ubuntu for five years or Red Hat supporting RHEL for ten years. Microsoft has been providing extended support for Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, and Windows 8/8.1 for ten years after release or seven years after the successor release, whichever is longer.

    SSH.

    Coming.

  202. Redbox carries only new releases by tepples · · Score: 1

    Second if they could/wanted to wait for as little as half an hour, the customer would have gone outside and headed to their nearest Redbox or even (gasp!) brick and mortar store to get the DVD/Bluray themselves.

    Brick and mortar DVD rental is dead, and Redbox carries only new releases, not the back catalog. Besides, buses to and from the store don't run on Sundays (source: fwcitilink.com).

  203. Apple makes a Lightning to USB adapter by tepples · · Score: 1

    Apple makes a Lightning to USB adapter. Or is your complaint that it supports too few device classes, or that its implementation of USB mass storage class supports too few file systems and too few file types?

  204. Only one thing? by morgauxo · · Score: 1

    Since I only get to pick one thing just go down through this list in order. The first thing a device doesn't have.. that's my pick for that device.

    1) USB Host
    2) Video Out (Probably HDMI)
    3) Above should both be usable at the same time
    4) Ability to add drivers allowing one to use above USB host with devices the original manufacturer never intended
    5) Mouse friendly (but not mouse required) UI
    6) Slide-Out Physical QWERTY keyboard