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User: MyOhMyOhMy

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Comments · 10

  1. Re:Text Messaging is Marked up 7314% on Antitrust Pressure Mounts For Wireless Providers · · Score: 1
    I don't like getting nickel-and-dimed by any business out there, including my own employer, who shall remain nameless. I get really annoyed, however, by the whining in the media about wireless operators charging for SMS traffic "data transfers that are virtually free to run". OK, the data transfer part may indeed be negligible, but there is a system with geographically distributed nodes (ka-ching!), each node built for high availability (ka-ching!), had to be purchased from the vendor (ka-ching!), with a support contract (ka-ching!), and people within the company maintaining the system. So, while utilizing the paging channel for SMS delivery is indeed gravy, handling SMS within the network required a multi-million dollar investment by the carriers, spent with the specific goal in mind: enabling my teenage kids to ping-pong all day long messages like "sup?", "i'm bord" "u suk", "ha, tag!", etc.

    Please, if slashot is indeed a place for majority technical crowd, let's not proliferate the myth of "SMS is free for the carrier" around here, but leave it to the ignorant media instead.

    Disclosure: I work for one of the major wireless carriers in the US in technical capacity (not marketing, PR, finance, or alike). I do not support the messaging platform, although I know people who do. No, I will not fix your cellphone :)

  2. Re:Don't forget to factor in the SMSC on What Carriers Don't Want You To Know About Texting · · Score: 1

    I am actually involved in telco business, although not with the SMS technology. TFA completely omits the SMSC in the infrastructure. From TFA: "A text message initially travels wirelessly from a handset to the closest base-station tower and is then transferred through wired links to the digital pipes of the telephone network, and then, near its destination, converted back into a wireless signal to traverse the final leg, from tower to handset." Wonderful, right? Just throw it into the "pipes" and it will magically arrive at the destination. If we used the article's logic, we could argue that ground shipping is a rip-off by the FedEx/UPS/DHL/USPS since most roads in the US are toll-free, thus it shouldn't cost hardly anything to deliver a package from point A to point B. Oh, well, another example of, ahem, "journalistic excellence" from NYT.

  3. Re:I fail to see the correlation. on Ericsson Predicts Swift End For Wi-Fi Hotspots · · Score: 1
    Well, the "5, Insightful" raises the bar quite high, but I'll attempt to challenge the insightfullness :)

    One should look beyond 3G and consider if Ericsson might have some vested interest in 4G technology, e.g. Wi-Max. Perhaps 3G is a weak competitor to Wi-Fi, but Wi-Max, once the kinks get worked out will pose a serious challenge. I really don't think I am alone in not liking to mess with the different SSID/WEP/WPA/WPA2 configurations every time I want to get online in a new place. I like the convenience of my EVDO connectivity that works wherever my wireless provider has coverage (Please, don't start bitching about coverage, even the worst wireless carriers have considerably wider footprint than the dinky Wi-Fi) . Based on the "Posted from a wifi hotspot" comment, it may be fair to deduce that the poster has not experienced the consistent convenience of EVDO. Yes, admittedly EVDO is slower than a G-Wi-Fi with a good broadband behind it, but that is why I hope the Wi-Max will marry the convenience of EVDO with performance of Wi-Fi.

    I cannot disagree that quite often wireless carriers have pricing structures that feel like medieval torture chambers. That is an unfortunate trend in billing practices in today's world in general. The book "Gotcha Capitalism" (Amazon.com: http://tinyurl.com/38353y) discusses quite a few examples of despicable practices by many businesses. That is the dark side of capitalism today, but let's not forget that at some point even inside the most evil carrier, there are technically minded people who truly believe in the technology they provide to the customers, and people who believe that customers will buy the services because of their beneficial qualities, not because they got bamboozled by the marketing department.

  4. i'm in ur... on Google to Begin Storing Patients' Health Records · · Score: 2, Funny
    ...HOSPITAL, GOOGLing ur MEDICAL RECORDS

    Sorry, I just couldn't resist.

  5. ...but is it child-proof? on Is the Game Boy the Toughest Product Ever Made? · · Score: 1

    The GameBoy may be pretty tough, but some things cannot be 100% child proofed. My kids lost the battery cover to the GameBoy Color within a year of purchase, so it still works, but the batteries are held by masking or duct tape, whichever is handy at the time. The DS, however, was dropped on the floor shortly after acquisition and one of the hinges broke on it. It was playable for a couple of years, but the top display has finally given in last week. Now kids can only play GBA games on it, since they only require the bottom display.

  6. Re:Use the gForce on Data Recovery & Solid State · · Score: 1

    Even if there was some shameless intent in doing "Ask Slashdot", I still believe the category has value to the average Slashdot reader, which I will not proclaim to be myself, since I have no idea what "average Slashdot reader" is like in the first place. The point is, that one could certainly Google for answers, and I frequently do, but sometimes one wonders how many people would agree the search topic is interesting, and would like to get feedback from Slashdot dwellers. This way one does not wonder alone.

  7. Re:Apple care on No Right to Privacy When Your Computer Is Repaired · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think a better analogy would be that you bring the car in to get new tires, forgetting you had a dead body in the trunk. The shop guys check on your full size spare as a courtesy, find the corpse. Should they protect your privacy or report their findings to the authorities? I know, sounds really dumb, how can you forget you have a dead body in the back? Then again, what was the guy thinking when he gave full access to the computer and all data on it, knowing that some of the content was clearly illegal?

  8. Coal Mining or Office Work? on Office Printers May Pose Health Risks · · Score: 1

    Well, this should get today's rural youth thinking twice before choosing the office careers in favor of coal mining. You can get black lung either way you go, and occasional mine collapse can't be much worse than dying in office as a result of a terrorist attack, a la 9/11. Don't forget, kids, you don't get fat from lugging coal all day!

  9. I am confused... on Boeing Helping to Develop Algae-Powered Jet · · Score: 1

    How can this "...reduce the net CO2 footprint for all of aviation to zero", if the fuel still has to combust in the jet engine, and CO2 would be one of the byproducts of that combustion? That statement was not in TFA, so perhaps this was an incorrect assumption by the poster. If this were H2 fuel, then the byproduct would be H2O, which would effectively reduce CO2 pollution.

  10. Re:better than SSRI? on Nicotine Is the New Wonder Drug · · Score: 1

    Everyone's lungs are different. In my bloodline, males who had smoked had developed emphysema, and if I continued smoking, I probably would develop it eventually. I had smoked for only 5 years, and every couple of months I had bouts of bronchitis-like cough that would last for a week. To me that was an indication that although George Burns could get away with smoking into the sunset of his life, I probably would not be so lucky.