Every time I ask Apple users about the non-replaceable batteries, their reply is **always** -- (ie. without fail) "you just don't get it", without **ever** being able to articulate exactly what I don't "get".
For the most part, it's an aesthetic choice. For example, a battery door would interrupt the smooth surface of an iPod. The device wouldn't feel quite as nice to hold in the hand. The cost of that aesthetic is a more difficult process to replace the battery every three years or so. Is the exterior aesthetic worth the triennial inconvenience? I dunno. Maybe? It seems like a pretty subjective question.
There can't be any 'paleo vegans', ever, though; they'd starve to death.
How do you figure?
The caloric content of fruits and nuts is quite high. No reason a person can't survive indefinitely on that.
Plenty of large mammals survive on vegan or nearly-vegan diets. Gorillas, for example, eat a diet that's about 97% plant-based. And those guys need a lot more calories than we do.
Hmm... so you're saying my keyboard's gonna have an AT connector attached to a PS/2 adapter attached to a USB adapter attached to a Type C adapter? Sounds good to me. Bring it on!
You can show that actual harmful data is being sent and not just the telemetry that MS claims, right?
How about this:
When you encrypt a disk using Windows Home, Microsoft silently transmits the key to themselves, in case they ever need to decrypt your disk in the future. http://www.securityweek.com/mi...
Does that count as harmful? The data is not anonymous. Its transmitted silently, and it can be used to compromise the user's privacy. That at least lands in the "potentially harmful" category, right?
Clarification: windows pro or enterprise can be made to encrypt a disk without send the key to microsoft, though its not the default behavior. Windows home will always silently send the key to MS.
Windows 10 does send information back to Microsoft, but nothing personal aside from anonymous telemetry data... it's doing the same thing OS X does
That is not the case, at least with respect to encryption.
When you encrypt a disk with filevault, the system will ask if you want to share the key with Apple, or if you'd prefer to keep it private.
When you encrypt a disk with bitlocker, the system will send the key to Microsoft, without asking. The key is tied to your email address, in case Microsoft is ever asked to decrypt your disk.
Doesn't that reveal a fundamental difference in two operating systems' attitude toward user privacy?
not paying your employees a living wage, isn't that kind of making it personal?
No. It really isn't. I'm sure it feels personal, but like ten percent of the city is earning minimum wage.
That's what Ms Jane doesn't seem to realize: her experience is not unusual, its ordinary. Like super-ordinary. And both problem and solution are in the realm of public policy. San Franciscans raised the minimum wage a recently. Maybe they should raise it further.
I think if she had focused her letter more specifically on the wage issue and made it a bit less personal, it would have been better received.
"Lady Murderface" is the name she used to share the post on Twitter. The name probably colored my initial perception of the post, because it doesn't actually seem creepy on a second read.
That's kinda what I meant by professional context though... I don't mean she shouldn't have taken her complaint public; the public forum is definitely the place for it. But I wish she had focused more narrowly on the professional issue.
Instead she takes the reader through four paragraphs of autobiographical detail. We learn about her relationship with her dad and about her old living situation and how she won't get a promotion for at least a year. It all feels kinda self-indulgent, until she drops her bomb in paragraph five: Yelp employees are going hungry and some of them are homeless. Holy shit, why did she wait five paragraphs to say that???
From peoples' comments, I suspect most readers aren't getting past her autobiographical opening. People are dismissing her as self-indulgent and unprofessional after reading a few paragraphs... by the time she reveals that Yelp has a real problem, she's already lost half her audience.
anyone who publicly points out that wages paid are too low to survive in San Francisco should get fired?
Its not what she said. Its how she said it.
Ms Jane's blog post included a link to her bosses' home address and a picture of his house. She shared it on twitter using the pseudonym Murderface.
I don't want to dismiss her complaints. Her complaints are serious and Yelp would be foolish to ignore them.
But if you were in charge of HR in this scenario, would you decide to keep an employee who uses the name Murderface and posts the bosses home address on her blog?
It's not like she's spilling secrets. But posting her bosses home address in that context was definitely creepy.
Ms. Jane has some serious complaints, but she's going to a weird place by linking the dude's home address. She's taking her letter out of the professional context, and making it easier for people to dismiss her actual complaint.
Think about it. A disgruntled employee using the name MURDERFACE writes an angry letter, and includes your home address and a picture of your house. You can see how that's creepy, right?
Two motion controllers makes for a complete kit? When I played around with the DK1 I was pretty happy with the mouse and keyboard.
For me, having my hands in the virtual space, to pick up and manipulate objects, is a different experience.
With headset + gamepad/mouse, I feel like I'm sticking my head into a video game. Its an amazing view, but I'm not really "occupying" the virtual space. I'm keenly aware that my body is somewhere else.
With headset + hand controllers, I feel like I'm occupying a virtual space, rather than just looking into it. I can look down and see my hands, right where they should be. I can pick things up, put things down, throw things across the room. Force feedback even adds crude sense of touch.
Its not perfect. I can't see my body. I can't see my individual fingers - Its like I'm wearing bulky gloves. But the difference between having hands and not having hands... its huge. I can't overstate it.
That no, zero, zilch, long term use has been shown, is a fairly solid indication that the tests conducted have not gone well
I'm not sure that's a safe conclusion. Do hardware companies normally release the results of their internal user-testing? But they are betting their own money on the product, which suggests their in-house testing can't have gone gone too badly, can it?
I can tell you the Vive doesn't induce sickness is me, while the DK1 and DK2 do. I'm not sure if that's down to the accurate tracking, or the "room-scale" environments or what. I'm not sure how universal my experience is, but I think there's a real chance Valve has solved the problem for most users.
On the subject of extreme long-term use... its not a study, but they recently held a publicity stunt to show that they had "cured vr sickness." http://arstechnica.com/gaming/...
he certainly did not do anything to reverse the firing....
She posted a link to the dude's home address. That's pretty deliberate bridge-burning. Would it be wise for him to re-hire her after that?
What he should do is pay attention to her frustrations. Because its a sure bet she's not the only frustrated employee, and the company will suffer if they ignore employee morale.
...of course if you still have to spend say another $1,500 dollars to actually get VR than not so much of a bargain.
True, it's definitely not a bargain. Its an expensive product. But I do think an expensive complete product is the right path, in contrast to the incomplete products Occulus and Samsung have brought to market.
...use it too long and you will, well and truly suffer
My anecdotal observation is that they seem to have solved or at least greatly reduced the nausea problem. Using an oculus, I get nausea after about 30 minutes. But I've never felt it with a vive, even after a couple hours. But that's just anecdotal. I wouldn't mind seeing some actual test results.
The former is for making something.
The latter is only and exclusively for consuming it.
By that standard, you are misjudging this computer.
It may not be well-designed for the creation of text, but it looks VERY well-designed for the creation of visual art.
It seems like a great portable sketchbook for photoshop or zbrush. The thing weighs 1.7 pounds and has a built-in wacom drawing tablet!
You may be interested in the Gemini... a new android device with a very nice keyboard.
Seems pretty close to what you're after, although it's a clam-shell rather than a slider.
https://www.indiegogo.com/proj...
Every time I ask Apple users about the non-replaceable batteries, their reply is **always** -- (ie. without fail) "you just don't get it", without **ever** being able to articulate exactly what I don't "get".
For the most part, it's an aesthetic choice. For example, a battery door would interrupt the smooth surface of an iPod. The device wouldn't feel quite as nice to hold in the hand. The cost of that aesthetic is a more difficult process to replace the battery every three years or so. Is the exterior aesthetic worth the triennial inconvenience? I dunno. Maybe? It seems like a pretty subjective question.
"The amount of eggs in my fridge might mean my Sims are better off... the distance I drive to work might mean I get more juice in Need for Speed... "
Umm... mister Wilson? Neither of those ideas sounds like fun.
I'm fine with digital audio output. But I need the ability to charge and listen simultaneously, and don't want to carry a hub around.
Give me two USB ports, and you've got yourself a sale.
Maybe he likes Apple's product design, but doesn't like the walled garden of their phone OS?
I have a macbook and a Note 5. They work fine together.
Bill was being pedantic, but he was using the standard (ie, present tense) definition if "is."
There can't be any 'paleo vegans', ever, though; they'd starve to death.
How do you figure?
The caloric content of fruits and nuts is quite high. No reason a person can't survive indefinitely on that.
Plenty of large mammals survive on vegan or nearly-vegan diets. Gorillas, for example, eat a diet that's about 97% plant-based. And those guys need a lot more calories than we do.
...CoD regen health crap.
I suspect you weren't paying close attention to the video.
The player healed by picking up medkits and little blue orbs.
The enemies seemed to be dropping a lot of health, but there was never any any regeneration.
What actually happens is that Samuel L Jackson shows up to defuse the situation and nobody gets hurt.
Not our coinage!!! Nooooooooooo...
Now I can't hoard gold! Oh wait, yes I can.
Well sure, today you can... but in 1964 you couldn't.
Private ownership of gold was illegal back then. It wasn't legalized again until 1974.
Hmm... so you're saying my keyboard's gonna have an AT connector attached to a PS/2 adapter attached to a USB adapter attached to a Type C adapter? Sounds good to me. Bring it on!
You can show that actual harmful data is being sent and not just the telemetry that MS claims, right?
How about this:
When you encrypt a disk using Windows Home, Microsoft silently transmits the key to themselves, in case they ever need to decrypt your disk in the future. http://www.securityweek.com/mi...
Does that count as harmful? The data is not anonymous. Its transmitted silently, and it can be used to compromise the user's privacy. That at least lands in the "potentially harmful" category, right?
Clarification: windows pro or enterprise can be made to encrypt a disk without send the key to microsoft, though its not the default behavior. Windows home will always silently send the key to MS.
Windows 10 does send information back to Microsoft, but nothing personal aside from anonymous telemetry data... it's doing the same thing OS X does
That is not the case, at least with respect to encryption.
When you encrypt a disk with filevault, the system will ask if you want to share the key with Apple, or if you'd prefer to keep it private.
When you encrypt a disk with bitlocker, the system will send the key to Microsoft, without asking. The key is tied to your email address, in case Microsoft is ever asked to decrypt your disk.
Doesn't that reveal a fundamental difference in two operating systems' attitude toward user privacy?
not paying your employees a living wage, isn't that kind of making it personal?
No. It really isn't. I'm sure it feels personal, but like ten percent of the city is earning minimum wage.
That's what Ms Jane doesn't seem to realize: her experience is not unusual, its ordinary. Like super-ordinary. And both problem and solution are in the realm of public policy. San Franciscans raised the minimum wage a recently. Maybe they should raise it further.
I think if she had focused her letter more specifically on the wage issue and made it a bit less personal, it would have been better received.
I'm not saying its a crime or something... but doesn't it kinda feel like a bridge-burning move?
Taking it to the dude's home makes it personal. Makes it clear her grievance is with HIM rather than with the company.
I'm not saying that's a bad thing. It sounds like the guy needs a wake-up call. I'd like to congratulate her for having the guts to give it to him.
I can imagine the company firing her for publishing her story even if she hadn't gone there. Which would have been shitty of them.
But the way it went down? Calling the boss out personally like that? It was awesome, but it feels more like quitting than being fired.
"Lady Murderface" is the name she used to share the post on Twitter. The name probably colored my initial perception of the post, because it doesn't actually seem creepy on a second read.
That's kinda what I meant by professional context though... I don't mean she shouldn't have taken her complaint public; the public forum is definitely the place for it. But I wish she had focused more narrowly on the professional issue.
Instead she takes the reader through four paragraphs of autobiographical detail. We learn about her relationship with her dad and about her old living situation and how she won't get a promotion for at least a year. It all feels kinda self-indulgent, until she drops her bomb in paragraph five: Yelp employees are going hungry and some of them are homeless. Holy shit, why did she wait five paragraphs to say that???
From peoples' comments, I suspect most readers aren't getting past her autobiographical opening. People are dismissing her as self-indulgent and unprofessional after reading a few paragraphs... by the time she reveals that Yelp has a real problem, she's already lost half her audience.
anyone who publicly points out that wages paid are too low to survive in San Francisco should get fired?
Its not what she said. Its how she said it.
Ms Jane's blog post included a link to her bosses' home address and a picture of his house. She shared it on twitter using the pseudonym Murderface.
I don't want to dismiss her complaints. Her complaints are serious and Yelp would be foolish to ignore them.
But if you were in charge of HR in this scenario, would you decide to keep an employee who uses the name Murderface and posts the bosses home address on her blog?
It's not like she's spilling secrets. But posting her bosses home address in that context was definitely creepy.
Ms. Jane has some serious complaints, but she's going to a weird place by linking the dude's home address. She's taking her letter out of the professional context, and making it easier for people to dismiss her actual complaint.
Think about it. A disgruntled employee using the name MURDERFACE writes an angry letter, and includes your home address and a picture of your house. You can see how that's creepy, right?
Two motion controllers makes for a complete kit? When I played around with the DK1 I was pretty happy with the mouse and keyboard.
For me, having my hands in the virtual space, to pick up and manipulate objects, is a different experience.
With headset + gamepad/mouse, I feel like I'm sticking my head into a video game. Its an amazing view, but I'm not really "occupying" the virtual space. I'm keenly aware that my body is somewhere else.
With headset + hand controllers, I feel like I'm occupying a virtual space, rather than just looking into it. I can look down and see my hands, right where they should be. I can pick things up, put things down, throw things across the room. Force feedback even adds crude sense of touch.
Its not perfect. I can't see my body. I can't see my individual fingers - Its like I'm wearing bulky gloves. But the difference between having hands and not having hands... its huge. I can't overstate it.
That no, zero, zilch, long term use has been shown, is a fairly solid indication that the tests conducted have not gone well
I'm not sure that's a safe conclusion. Do hardware companies normally release the results of their internal user-testing? But they are betting their own money on the product, which suggests their in-house testing can't have gone gone too badly, can it?
I can tell you the Vive doesn't induce sickness is me, while the DK1 and DK2 do. I'm not sure if that's down to the accurate tracking, or the "room-scale" environments or what. I'm not sure how universal my experience is, but I think there's a real chance Valve has solved the problem for most users.
On the subject of extreme long-term use... its not a study, but they recently held a publicity stunt to show that they had "cured vr sickness."
http://arstechnica.com/gaming/...
he certainly did not do anything to reverse the firing....
She posted a link to the dude's home address. That's pretty deliberate bridge-burning. Would it be wise for him to re-hire her after that?
What he should do is pay attention to her frustrations. Because its a sure bet she's not the only frustrated employee, and the company will suffer if they ignore employee morale.
Here's the open letter, since tfs doesn't seem to include a link: https://medium.com/@taliajane/...
Her observations are valuable, and Yelp will be wise to pay attention. Its not in their interest to have frustrated employees.
But the part where she posted a link to her bosses home address? That was creepy and unnecessary.
...of course if you still have to spend say another $1,500 dollars to actually get VR than not so much of a bargain.
True, it's definitely not a bargain. Its an expensive product. But I do think an expensive complete product is the right path, in contrast to the incomplete products Occulus and Samsung have brought to market.
...use it too long and you will, well and truly suffer
My anecdotal observation is that they seem to have solved or at least greatly reduced the nausea problem. Using an oculus, I get nausea after about 30 minutes. But I've never felt it with a vive, even after a couple hours. But that's just anecdotal. I wouldn't mind seeing some actual test results.