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User: DanTheManMS

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  1. A few departures from the S3/S4/S5 on Samsung Officially Unpacks Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge At MWC · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No removable battery. Less space than an SD card. Lame.

    In all seriousness, it does look like a very nice phone. And Samsung has gotten better about pre-loading less bloatware on their more recent releases. We'll have to see how the general public receives it though.

  2. Re:I farted on Distracted Driving: All Lip Service With No Legit Solution · · Score: 1

    It reminds me of those computer applications you can install that will block you from launching certain programs or accessing certain websites unless you punch in a complicated code, designed to help remind you that you've got real work to do and can't afford to slack off on the Internet. I can at least somewhat understand why someone would install one of those programs for themselves on their computer. Needing something like that to keep you from using your phone while driving is just asinine.

  3. Re:At least the can float on cash on Can Nintendo Survive Gaming's Brave New World? · · Score: 1

    Someone else had that same wish and decided to build it out, and out came Project Unity. It's fairly impractical, but I like watching the design process video.

  4. Re:no love for Ars on No Love From Ars For Samsung's New Smart Watch · · Score: 1

    The faster you drive, the more gas you burn.

  5. Re:Is anyone surprised? on No Love From Ars For Samsung's New Smart Watch · · Score: 1

    Watches are dead and good riddance.

    Personally I feel naked without my watch. It's nothing fancy, just something my parents gifted to me from Kohl's 10 years ago for around $50 I believe, but it's held up well and functions the same today as it did 10 years ago. Pulling out my smartphone and fumbling to find the button just to check the time feels clumsy to my mind. I'm a very time-oriented person so I like having that information available as easily as a quick downward flick of my eyes. Well, that and I can wear it in the shower so I can determine the exact moment that I MUST turn off the water before I'll be late to work, heh.

    At the same time I fully understand why people would abandon watches in favor of cell phones. I hardly ever use my dedicated GPS unit anymore because my phone is "good enough" at fulfilling those needs. In the case of telling the time and date, I still prefer to have the dedicated device for its simplicity and long-lasting battery life. To each his own, eh?

  6. Re:Samsung Proprietary on No Love From Ars For Samsung's New Smart Watch · · Score: 1

    Hey, just wanted to say thanks for linking to the Omate. I've actually never heard of it before, and it seems really intriguing (I've spent the past hour reading the wiki and browsing the forums). I think I'll hold off for a month to see if it does manage to become Google Play certified, but it's definitely on my radar now.

    The one common complaint I see about it is the screen resolution only being 240x240 versus the 320x320 of the Galaxy Gear. Admittedly most Android apps aren't scalable down to that small of a resolution, but I want to point out that you can do some amazing stuff with that resolution if given the chance. Using classic videogames for my analogy, the Game Boy Advance only had a 240x160 resolution, the NES was 256x240, the SNES is usually 256x224... you get the idea. A lot can be done with that space if used wisely.

  7. Re:Not to be a hater... on VLC Reaches 2.1 · · Score: 1

    Replying to clear my karma rating. Put "flamebait" on the wrong reply by mistake.

  8. Re:iPhone 3G? on Apple Launches iPhone Trade-In Program · · Score: 1

    You said it yourself, the phone came out 5 years ago. The latest software that runs on it is the version that came out nearly 3 years ago (4.2.1, released November 2010). You're delirious if you think that's worth anything as trade-in.

  9. Re:How can an OS have such a fundamental problem? on All Bitcoin Wallets On Android Vulnerable To Theft · · Score: 1

    I imagine that some sort of store-credit type thing would work better for this type of scenario. For instance, while credit cards give you a real-time accepted/denied decision, it still takes days for the transaction to fully process on the back-end. I imagine that Starbucks is a lot more certain that transactions will go through when paid with one of their pre-paid store cards.

    It's a bit more inconvenient, I will admit. But it makes commonplace Bitcoin transactions a lot more realistic. And the concept isn't unheard of, actually. When the Bitcoin protocol adapted to make microtransactions unfeasible (as that was never truly the goal of Bitcoin, and microtransactions spam up the blockchain a lot) it basically broke all of the "daily bitcoin faucet" type websites that could no longer be profitable. In response, a third-party website popped up that stores records of your "free daily bitcoin" microtransactions, and outputs an actual Bitcoin payment once it's reached the threshold that makes it profitable again. I think I explained that poorly, for which you must forgive me. It's early on Monday morning after all.

    Long story short, while this is a setback, I don't view this exploit as a game-changer, not with the momentum that Bitcoin has behind it right now.

  10. No, I'm not. on Why PBS Won't Do Android · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "You might be wondering why the U.S. Public Broadcasting Service doesn't have a compelling Android footprint." This... this is a thing people spend their time wondering about? What a pointless thing to start an article with. Guess the editors are running out of good ways to spark another iPhone vs Android debate.

  11. Re:Blackberry Q10 on How Did My Stratosphere Ever Get Shipped? · · Score: 1

    Ya know it's the weirdest thing. I work for a third-party cell phone kiosk that sells for 3 different carriers, two of which have the new Blackberry phones. Two weeks ago Blackberry brought us all out to a local pub/arcade place for some food and games and to give us a presentation on how to sell the Z10 and the Q10. I feel that I learned a lot, and I feel much more equipped to sell the phones properly now, despite the knowledge that they are essentially lobbying us to try to get us to recommend them more than normal. Really though, the Z10 and Q10 are actually a lot better than I originally gave them credit for, and I could actually now see myself using it (although somewhat begrudgingly, as I still consider it a downgrade from my S3).

    But that training was 2 weeks ago. Not 6 months ago when the phones launched. Hell, on one carrier we've already designated it the status of "sell it until we run out, but we're not getting any more in." The phrase "too little, too late" comes to mind often, regarding both the phones themselves and the training.

    Blackberry just leaves too sour a taste in too many people's mouths, people who really wanted to be loyal BB users but kept getting burned over and over again with crappy products. They've finally made a decent smartphone, but they don't have enough fanboys left to support it.

  12. Re:OMG, it still looks the same on iOS 7 Beta 3 Now Available For iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch · · Score: 1

    Agreed, it's embarrassing that my free flip phone from 2006 can do more with Bluetooth than an iPhone can.

    The inability to send contacts via Bluetooth is especially maddening, as I work in a cell phone kiosk that doesn't have one of those $10,000 machines to transfer contacts so when upgrading customers' phones, I typically use Bluetooth or a memory card to transfer contacts, neither of which are options on the iPhone.

  13. Re:OMG, it still looks the same on iOS 7 Beta 3 Now Available For iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch · · Score: 1

    Seriously, try Swiftkey. It was a lifesaver after I switched from iOS to Android. It's not a different form of input like Swype, just another QWERTY keyboard that has bigger buttons and better autocorrect / word prediction.

  14. Re:Well that's vague. on LibertyReserve.com Shuttered, Founder Arrested In Spain · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sounds like the guy running Bitcoin should keep his anonymity?

    That comment shows a complete lack of understanding of what Bitcoin is. What you just said is as vague as saying that "The guy running the Internet better watch his back!"

    Regardless, the only reason I know about LibertyReserve is because of Bitcoin. LR used to be one of the few ways to reliably buy Bitcoins, but it looked way too shady for me so I found other ways.

  15. Re:What's the cost for Cash? on Credit Card Swipe Fees Begin Sunday In USA · · Score: 1

    Another benefit, in addition to needing to deposit less cash at the end of the day, is merely the customer service aspect. The store has already paid for access to the checking account, so it doesn't cost any more to charge $45 instead of $25 for instance (debit fees are per-transaction, not by percentage like credit card fees are). It's convenient for the customer who doesn't have to make a separate trip to an ATM, and makes them more willing to come back to the store for future purchases.

  16. Re:Misleading headline, airport wasn't shut down on Scary Toothbrush Prompts Shutdown of World's Busiest Airport · · Score: 1

    Ah, you're right. In my mind I had "terminal" and "concourse" combined into the same term. I thought the summary was saying they shut down, say, Concourse C entirely.

  17. Misleading headline, airport wasn't shut down on Scary Toothbrush Prompts Shutdown of World's Busiest Airport · · Score: 5, Informative
    If you read the full article (I know, I know, it's Slashdot) you'll find that only a portion of one of the two baggage claim areas was shut down from foot traffic, as well as the MARTA entrance near it, for about half an hour. Not even a full terminal was shut down, and certainly not the entire airport.

    Talk about exaggerating the truth, jeez.

  18. Re:Bacon! on Man Pays For Cross-Country Trip Using Bacon As Currency · · Score: 2
    You jest, but someone actually did a cross-country Bitcoin-only trip in 2011: https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/BitcoinRoadTrip

    I'm not sure which story is more funny, to be honest

  19. Re:they should learn from Apple on Nintendo 3DS XL Is Out Now · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "They should learn from Apple"

    Apple has released 5 iPhones in 5 years, usually with an accompanying iPod Touch model to go with it. Nintendo has released 6 "DS"-branded consoles in 8 years: the DS, DS Lite, DSi, DSi XL, 3DS, and 3DS XL. I'd say they're doing something quite similar to what Apple is doing. Apple releases two versions of the same product depending on if you want the addition of the phone functionality or not; Nintendo releases two versions of the same product depending on if you have larger hands or not.

    Now I'll concede that the DSi models don't really differentiate themselves from the original two DS models as much as they should have, but the 3DS is enough of a complete change that I would say it's a brand new machine.

  20. Re:SNES controllers on SNESDev-RPi: a SNES Adapter For the Raspberry Pi · · Score: 2

    The idea here is to use the Raspberry Pi's GPIO ports rather than using USB as a go-between.

  21. Re:April fools? on Meebo Discontinuing All Services Except for Meebo Bar · · Score: 2

    Yep. When Google acquired Motorola Mobility, I knew that Zumodrive (a service very similar to DropBox that had recently before been acquired by Moto Mobility) would be on the chopping block, and sure enough, after a couple of months I got an email telling me that I needed to download everything from their servers before they shut down completely. At least they gave me the option of doing that though, which was nice.

  22. Re:AOL Keywords on Startup Applies For 307 GTLDs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sadly, we already have AOL Keywords reborn. It's "Go to Facebook.com/AOL_Keyword_Here for more details!"

  23. Re:Did I miss something here? on Global Payments Breach Led To Prepaid Card Fraud · · Score: 1

    Wait... So someone hacks in and steals a million and a half valid prepaid card numbers [...]

    It took a few re-readings, but to my best understanding, they stole valid debit card numbers, not prepaid ones. They only had the numbers and expiration date though, so full-on identity theft would be difficult, and this article is explaining how even having only the number was enough. They bought some cheap pre-paid cards (probably with cash), re-encoded the mag stripes with valid stolen debit card numbers, and used those to buy more higher-value prepaid cards (via a signature-based transaction so no PIN needed), which they then used to buy expensive stuff. I'm just curious why you would be able to buy a pre-paid card with another pre-paid card in the first place.

    I had forgotten about the original story on this incident, but that would explain why I got a new credit card in the mail a week or two ago...

  24. Re:I don't get it on Raspberry Pi Reviewed, With an Initial Setup Guide · · Score: 1

    Do you know what the purpose of the Pi is? An educational computer for children (like the amiga or the atari back when we were young).

    Quite frankly, I don't know what it is. After so many articles on /. I assumed it to be sensationalism akin to the likes of Bitcoin. I have not RTFA, or any "full articles" on this subject to be honest. Is it the next evolution of the "One Laptop Per Child" project?

  25. Re:Believable for AT&T on AT&T Charged US Taxpayers $16 Million For Nigerian Fraud Calls · · Score: 1

    [...]and for the extra $3 it's not worth going to court.

    IANAL, but if there are so many customers being ripped off that way, why not start a class action lawsuit?

    The US Supreme Court has recently decided that AT&T is legally allowed to put "You can't form a class action suit against us" in their license agreement. Now all the ISPs are rushing to add that clause to the mix. Even Netflix is joining in on the scramble.