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User: Plekto

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  1. Re:Pay Later: $199 down + $15/month on T-Mobile Ends Contracts and Subsidies · · Score: 1

    True. But those are games. The reviews and analysis by the ENTIRE media assumes that it's all about the iPhone. And how it's no "savings" at all versus the other providers. Also how T-Mobile has slower speeds and isn't as bleeding-edge.

    And then there's the rest of us who see unlocked/jailbroken/etc phones of all shapes and sizes for cheap. With reasonable enough speed. And unlimited calls. Think about that. When was the last time any major carrier offered $50 unlimited calls? Let alone tossing a completely reasonable amount of data in on top of it?

    I think it will force the competition to adjust their prices. And quickly.

  2. Re:Pay Later: $199 down + $15/month on T-Mobile Ends Contracts and Subsidies · · Score: 1

    This of course assumes that you are yet another sheep who thinks that the only phone in the universe is an Apple product.

    The real savings comes if you are smart and get an Android type device for $100 from a place that just sells phones (unlocked, no less). Then you have no contract and no payments, either. For the price of the old down-payment, you simply own the phone outright and get the $50 a month service. Win-win.

    That the IPhone costs $650 is Apple's decision. In reality, it costs $200 to build. If you don't mind it not saying Apple on the front, you can get a phone made in the same area in China (where all the phones are made, sort of their version of Silicon Valley) for $150. The apps are now virtually identical on both markets anyways.

    If you go to Europe, it's already like this. You buy an unlocked quad band phone and use it with whatever carrier you want. If you go to another country, you simply pop in a sim card and use it on that network. No idiocy, no hair-pulling. You don't buy an AT&T anything. You buy a Nokia or a Sony or a LG and use it with your carrier, the same as you buy a laptop and plug it into your internet when you get home.

    Note - if you buy an iPhone anyways from T-Mobile, it's going to be unlocked/not tied to their service. That's a small plus as well, since it's not an option with AT&T.

  3. Re:Christians, physicians and hospitals on Missouri Legislation Redefines Science, Pushes Intelligent Design · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Nothing conflicts at all. In fact if you believe that the universe was created *by* a God, then everything we observe must be part of how it was created. That is, religion IS science. Wrap your brain around that.

    So why is there such a mess?

    The religious institutions are against it as it lessens their power over the masses, which means less financial and political power as well. The fear is that science introduces a far more dangerous condition, which is critical thinking. The last thing they want to deal with is informed people who question their religion and practices. Most of which have nothing to do with the core beliefs but are designed to keep these same establishments in power.

  4. Re:GW solution on Updated Model Puts Earth On the Edge of the Habitable Zone · · Score: 1

    The issue with a permanent ring is the materials and scale versus pieces of debris like in a traditional ring. To be effective, it needs to be just above low orbit. This means either a large amount of fuel to keep it from crashing into the surface, or accepting that 5-10% will precipitate out per year into the atmosphere to burn up. It maintain it, it's easier to launch more materials into the ring than it is to try to fuel an artificial construct. There are of course many technical issues to overcome, but in theory, at least, we could do this within our lifetimes.

  5. Re:GW solution on Updated Model Puts Earth On the Edge of the Habitable Zone · · Score: 1

    It would require a ring of about ten orbital canons spaced around the Earth's equator, firing every hour for roughly 20 years. (assuming a 100KG shell with aluminum or similar reflective pieces in it).

    Hopelessly impractical? Sure. But possible to actually do with our current technology. Maintaining it would require a much smaller fraction of the material.

    Note - the U.N. has already passed a resolution on this, believe it or not. As it stands, it is illegal to create an artificial ring around the planet.

  6. Re:GW solution on Updated Model Puts Earth On the Edge of the Habitable Zone · · Score: 1

    I once calculated this out, in fact. We need to move the Earth a bit over 2 feet per year to outdistance projected solar warming as our sun ages. This is within theoretical limits of our technology to accomplish in the next few hundred years.

    The other option is to make an artificial ring to block out about 1% of The Sun's energy.

  7. Why Not Just Go Prepaid? on AT&T: Don't Want a Data Plan for That Smartphone? Too Bad. · · Score: 1

    AT&T and several other carriers have prepaid (Android) smartphones. I have one and simply didn't buy a data plan. So it doesn't work at all unless I am in a hotspot or similar free area and then I can turn the data on manually.

    What many people don't realize is that it's not the carrier at fault here but Apple. Apple mandates in their contracts with the providers that every iPhone has to have a data plan included. So if you go to a different type/brand of smartphone, you're able to order services individually.

    AT&T's prepaid service is actually quite decent. I bought an Android phone for $99 and that was that. I can go to the app store, buy programs, use the GPS, the FM radio (it's not web-based radio), and have all of the functions of a smartphone other than data. For not a dime per month. Essentially I have a $99 iPod Touch since the apps are identical in almost every case.

    Verizon doesn't have prepaid smartphones. None of the 10 cent a minute options are real smartphones. If you get a tablet or smartphone, they require a data plan.

    T-Mobile does let you do this. But their phones are much more money, typically.

    NOTE - you usually must buy a phone that is prepaid. Many can be upgraded to full service but almost none of the contracted/full service phones can be downgraded to prepaid. This isn't a technological problem but a contractual one with the phone makers and the providers. Yes, the prepaid can be downgraded and upgraded each month as you need them to be, if that's what you desire.

  8. Re:No chance of striking Earth on NASA Says Asteroid Will Buzz Earth Closer Than Many Satellites · · Score: 2

    The interesting thing is that even if it was going to hit the Earth, they would still be telling us the exact same thing most likely due to how our Governments view the need to "protect" us for our own good.

  9. What about a LED Sign? on Ask Slashdot: Where Are the E-Ink Dashboards? · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I'm getting old, but way before we had plasma TVs and LED/LCD TVs, we had these LED signs that displayed information in just about every business and storefront window.

    Now they have full color versions of these, even. And for the simpler ones, the energy usage is measured in watts. As in no more than a standard light bulb or two. The question is, exactly how much writing needs to "change" every 15 minutes or so? If it's just a few lines, a few of those red LED signs/scrolling displays stacked together would work perfectly.

  10. Re:"security" on How Do YOU Establish a Secure Computing Environment? · · Score: 1

    One way that they did this at one company that I worked for had every machine was in a metal cage/box. It covered the floppy and CD drives, but the cover over them could be opened with a key.

    IT had physical access, but users had none. Just the machine and the files on the server. Zero security issues in the time I was there. Keeping the employees off of the internet was all that was really required. (plus everyone now has phones so let them do their own wi-fi)

  11. Re:"security" on How Do YOU Establish a Secure Computing Environment? · · Score: 1

    Heh.

    But the old idea of keeping work and pleasure separate is still the right one. If you keep both computer systems from each other, you keep most of the problems from happening.

    The only potential issue might be email, but that's usually simple enough to deal with as an IT administrator.

  12. Re:"security" on How Do YOU Establish a Secure Computing Environment? · · Score: 1

    True, but I think the OP was talking about something that was connected to the outside world/internet.

    The truth, though, is that nothing connected to the outside world will ever be secure. At best you minimize your damage. But you can absolutely ensure that users don't do as many stupid things. For instance, you can disable the USB ports and remove the CD and floppy drive from your machines. Then just and run them as terminals. No issues with flash drives or CDs. Then you can of course nuke all internet browsing.

    The solution that my last employer provided was an open wi-fi connection for everyone to share that was for phones and such only and 100% not connected in any way (separate ISP and hard line even) to the main server. They could do all of their idiocy on that connection and sure, it was slow and sucked, but there was no way into the servers. Only the IT department's machine had outside access. Not perfect, but far better than letting every employee use the same system.

  13. How I fixed my machine on Slashdot Asks: SATA DVD Drives That Don't Suck for CD Ripping? · · Score: 1

    I had the same problem. Windows doesn't play along nicely with multiple SATA drives sometimes. Especially if you have RAID in the mix or different types of hardware (IDE and SATA and so on). It kept having cache and access and speed issues. Eventually it started dropping the DVD drive or reporting that it was merely a CD drive. I was pulling my hair out.

    Then I got an external Firewire case. Problems dropped to ZERO. I tried USB but it was too slow and it conflicted like crazy. But evidently firewire uses its own bus and controller that's separate from the rest of the idiocy (being based upon SCSI technology). I can plug it in and out and it always works. My burner is a bog-standard $30 ASUS burner. My software is happy as a clam with it. I've burned Apple, Windows, and Linux CDs as well as made bit-for-bit copies of the latter (which isn't even a recognized format by Windows). Coasters are a result of bad media if it happens.

  14. Re:of course on GOP Study Committee Director Disowns Brief Attacking Current IP Law · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's even worse that you think.

    We think of it as the companies being donors. With people in Congress calling and asking for money. But the reality is that the companies come TO the politician first and say "we'll give this money to either you or your opponent - you decide." It's not the officials asking for donations for their election/re-election efforts. It's an outright threat by the corporations to keep their "workers" in Congress in line. We're going to give you this money and you'll accept it - or we'll find someone who will.

    93% of the time, the candidate with more money wins. That isn't a threat, it's a promise that you'll be unemployed if you piss off your masters.

  15. Since most of extra-solar space is empty (outside the area where there is a large concentration of solar winds), if you went short distances, you could probably only cause a localized shock-wave. So it might take, say, 10 or 20 jumps to get to the nearest star safely. You'd have to exit and enter the systems on each end somewhere outside its ort cloud, most likely. Considering the potential time savings, though, it's a no-brainer to try to build one of these. Half a year to get to the jump destination plus a few hours per jump. Sure beats slow-boating it for decades.

  16. Re:Starship Troopers here we come. on Artificial Muscles Pack a Mean Punch · · Score: 1

    They did at least get the idea of an oppressive media-driven corporatocracy right. But we're talking about 3 minutes, total, of the entire pile of offal. Given the movie's length, that gives is about a 2% success rate.

    If the remake is even close to 25% accurate, it'll be seen as an icon of the genre. It's one of the few times that you actually want a remake of a movie. Plastic and foam kind of don't make for a believable experience. Nor does a casting job from hell. Or effects that Lucas did better 20 years earlier.

    As for the muscles, it's an impressive step towards real artificial limbs. With that sort of efficiency and speed, that means a human-strength model would be extremely light and use an extremely compact power source. Sure, you'd have to recharge your arm or leg once every day or two, but that's nothing. In fact, with recent advancements in wearable power generation technology, it might be self-recharging as long as you're outside.

  17. Re:And if you buy 1lb of flour on Ask Slashdot: AT&T's Data Usage Definition Proprietary? · · Score: 1

    The problem was entirely with the local phone company in my case. I had a new line straight to the box, new lines put under the hours, and all new equipment put in. And still, static. (DSL line worked, but if I can head massive static on the phone, it's certainly affecting the DSL as well) So if the OP is suffering from 20% more usage than his router is reporting, he very well might be dealing with bad lines or equipment as well.

  18. Re:And if you buy 1lb of flour on Ask Slashdot: AT&T's Data Usage Definition Proprietary? · · Score: 1

    The OP was in a fairly rural state, though, so he's probably lucky to get 256K if he's outside of town. Add in old equipment along the chain and maybe a crappy install on top of that, and I can see 20% overhead and/or losses.

  19. Re:And if you buy 1lb of flour on Ask Slashdot: AT&T's Data Usage Definition Proprietary? · · Score: 1

    Correct. But they are almost certainly calculating it correctly. There's the data, the headers, any background traffic. Gaming does this a lot, btw. Tons of tiny little wasteful packets and the system constantly asking for updates/pinging/etc. Downloading a torrent is even more crazy - you can send an astonishing amount of traffic back and forth by the time you get even a single small file. Add in some dropped packets when the telephone is being used and there you go.

    When I had DSL, if I started talking on the land line, my speed would drop into the dirt. I could hear static on the phone as well. DSL works over amazing distances, but he might be struggling to get even 256K. Note - old wiring in the house also does this. Most proper installs run a new line from the pole directly to the computer. A lot, though, especially if you are in an apartment, do not. Given how crappy DSL generally is, I can see a 20% overhead quite easily.

    But, it's certainly not ethical, either, to be counting this towards a cap, especially if there is no non-capped option available. (well, there always is - via their business service, but that's a whole other wad of butt-hurt).

    Note - the OP really needs to get cable or something without the insanity. DSL is always the choice of last-resort.

  20. Re:Screw that... on Curiosity Spies Unidentified, Metallic Object On Mars · · Score: 1

    It's almost certainly a bit of debris from the shield and/or lander. If you look at the high definition video, you see the thing slam into the surface right before Curiosity lands and it looks like it hit hard, with a huge plume of dust and debris. Fragments could have reached a few miles from the looks of it.

    Or it could be a screw. (arm falls off as it reaches for the item. Camera is now looking at an arm and a screw.)

    Trust me on this. There's nothing on Mars. After millions of years being irradiated, it's as lifeless as the Moon except *maybe* at the poles where some bacteria or viruses survived. note - the Moon is similar in that it's covered in a blanket of dust, but below the dust is pretty much normal rock.

  21. Re:NOOOOOO on The Case That Apple Should Buy Nokia · · Score: 1

    Shame, since I find it easier to read the way you put it. ;)

    Company having a problem? I know! Just merge it into another corporation and ensure even greater monopoly power.

    I sometimes wonder what people are thinking. Don't they ever learn from history?

  22. Re:Might be incentive to buy American? on Supreme Court To Decide Whether Or Not You Own What You Own · · Score: 1

    I think you'd be able to recycle it, though. ;)

    But seriously. This would be like coming up with a $1 tax on bullets. And then forgetting that it affects law enforcement, the military, and so on. THe idea (IIRC) was about software initially, but making it apply to physical items is sheer insanity.

    My guess is that if this passes, that businesses will be able to re-sell items (since evidently only businesses are people any more - we're just meat-sacks with numbers attached), so either you'd have to apply for and pay re-seller's license fee, or give the item to a place that did.(ie- donate or "recycle")

  23. Re:Might be incentive to buy American? on Supreme Court To Decide Whether Or Not You Own What You Own · · Score: 2

    Think of how many auto dealers alone would scream at this. No used car sales. In fact, I can right off the top of my head just keep coming up with example after example of businesses that sell used equipment. Ebay, for instance, would simply shut down. And they have pretty deep pockets last I checked.

    And then there's the absurd part of it. That we actually are limiting ourselves as a nation based upon the IP and copyrights of other nations like China that ignore our same laws. We might as well just give up and move Congress to Shanghai. I really would like to know the thought process behind the idiot who first thought this up. Because once you think about it beyond your tiny little niche and apply it to everyone, it's a disaster.

    Welcome to the U.S. Nobody can sell anything used - just throw it away.

  24. Re:The Real Reason Samsung Lost. on Unredacted Filings Reveal Claims of Juror Misconduct in Apple vs Samsung Trial · · Score: 1

    This will be Apple's problem in the counter-suit. I expect them to get similarly reamed by Samsung.

  25. Re:The Real Reason Samsung Lost. on Unredacted Filings Reveal Claims of Juror Misconduct in Apple vs Samsung Trial · · Score: 1

    There is a double standard, though. In copyright and patent law, thanks to decisions and laws made in the last decade or so, the defendant pretty much has to prove that they didn't do what the plaintiff is charging them with.

    Also, Samsung did exactly the same trick in 2004. And got hammered then as well. They simply are choosing to not comply with the laws concerning data retention. There's a big difference between "I didn't store it - oops" and "It was deleted as per company policy. We don't follow U.S. laws concerning this but instead Korean laws." Samsung has a history of obstruction and weaseling out of it at the last minute isn't going to change a thing. The jury obviously made their minds up since the original order was given much earlier in the case and colored the entire thing up until the end when Apple decided to let it drop.

    Once the can of worms is opened and the jury assumes that one side is lying, you really can't undo that at a later date. Samsung was essentially fried at that point. Samsung is basically trying to prove that it didn't do what it was charged with without any evidence. My guess is that they probably thought that they could stall long enough so that it wouldn't affect their business. And that the fine would be fairly small and they'd just pay it. But a billion, well, that got their attention right quick.