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User: Gumbercules!!

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  1. Re:Queue the headphone jack comments on Apple Sets a New Record For iPhone Sales (theverge.com) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Then again, Cook is no Steve Jobs. Steve Jobs brought "Gorilla Glass" to the masses. Tim Cook tried and failed with "Sapphire Glass". Steve Jobs was the iMac, iPad, iPhone, iPod - Cook was iWatch and iBuds - and dwindling sales of computers, iPads, and loss of market share for iPhones.

    I'm not an Apple fanboi (feel free to read my years of posts, many of which are not Apple friendly) but if you look at the numbers, Mac sales went up not down. I'm also fairly sure Apple couldn't give a shit about the market share of iPhone considering they make like 100% of the profits, with what marketshare they have.

    I don't really feel inspired by Cook, either - but to say he's failing at making Apple a profitable company is just your own Reality Distortion Field. Apple is the most profitable company on earth and it has been pretty much since Cook starting running it. It's making more money than ever. He's doing exactly what he's supposed to be doing - making a shit tonne of money. That might not be cool for people who really love tech - but he's tasked with making Wall Street and investors happy, not geeks.

  2. Re:Word 2013 rated garbage on Wine 2.0 Released (softpedia.com) · · Score: 2

    Oh that's disappointing. I was really hoping to use Real Office(tm) on my Mac, not that pathetic port version Microsoft still ships for Macs - and yes I am being serious, not sarcastic. Some of the Excel features I really need are missing and the simply fact of not having favourites folders in Outlook is beyond irritating. Parallels is slow as hell.

  3. Re:Firefox is back! And windows exploit more $$$? on Pwn2Own 2017 Offers Big Bounties For Linux, Browser, and Apache Exploits (eweek.com) · · Score: 1

    Possibly - but there's likely a similar set of drivers. a) Microsoft is paying for the bounties. b) Again, criminals know if they can break Edge, they will get a sizeable number home users now and more in the future and c) (some) corporations are more likely to use Edge than Chrome, especially as more move to Windows 10.

  4. Re:Firefox is back! And windows exploit more $$$? on Pwn2Own 2017 Offers Big Bounties For Linux, Browser, and Apache Exploits (eweek.com) · · Score: 1

    Windows kernel exploits are worth more because they're worth more on the open market (because that's where the corporate data is and corporations pay ransoms). pwn2own has to compete with the black market, after all. If you discover have a Windows exploit - you can sell it for a lot of money if you sell it exclusively. Not so much an OSX and even less a Linux desktop exploit. So market forces dictate that, if you want people to actually turn up to pwn2own and show you their exploits, you need to make it attractive, not just to pure whitehats but to greyhats, too. If they can get $50,000 or something from "some guy in Russia" you can't very well offer $5,000 and hope they tell you out of the goodness of their hearts.

  5. They're not hoping people will magically discover flaws because of the reward, rather that they will turn in known vulnerabilities or not hand them over to the black market, for money.

  6. Re:55 million golden parachute!! on The End of Yahoo: Marissa Mayer To Resign; Yahoo To Change Its Name To Altaba (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    But the Alibaba shares are not included in the sale - that's why the remaining entity is (almost) called Alibaba...

  7. Hence me saying "or maybe even $10,000...." - but a x70 increase (fine and penalties combined) plus jail seems OTT, to me.

  8. What? on The FBI Is Arresting People Who Rent DDoS Botnets (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The FBI estimate his attacks cost Chatango about $5,000.... so bail is set at $100,000 and fines are around $250,000 with 10 years in prison? What?!? Surely a payment of say - $5,000 or maybe even $10,000 to the effected company would be a more suitable response?

  9. Thank God! on The UN Will Consider Banning Killer Robots (hrw.org) · · Score: 1

    I was worried about self-determining attack drones but if the UN is getting involved, the problem is as good as solved! There's absolutely no way individual countries can ignore the UN and just do whatever they want... I'll be sleeping soundly, tonight!

  10. Good thing they're waiting until after New Years! on Verizon Changes Its Mind and Will Kill Samsung's Galaxy Note 7 on January 5th (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    Looks like there will be some extra fireworks on New Years Eve, after all!

  11. Re: Excellent on Google Is Rolling Out Android 7.1.1 (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    I get that beta means beta. And I'd be cool if the issues only existed on beta - but they don't. The current Telstra "stable" still has 4G issues (see my links) and always has. My issue with beta is that I *had* to use beta to get nougat on a Nexus phone - i.e. that despite marketing to the contrary, I still don't get updates for it the way you're supposed to.

  12. Re:Excellent on Google Is Rolling Out Android 7.1.1 (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    They put extra effort into screwing businesses. We switched all our business phones at work to personal plans because you get MORE data for LESS money, simply by changing it from business to personal. It's insane.

  13. Re: Excellent on Google Is Rolling Out Android 7.1.1 (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    However as I said in the post above, I *did* update it manually - and then LTE stopped working because it was no longer compatible with Telstra's network. Which has been a common and long standing problem with the Nexus 6P and Telstra and it's been going on for over a year. Don't believe me? Ask Whirlpool: http://forums.whirlpool.net.au... or Telstra themselves: https://crowdsupport.telstra.c...

    The Nexus 6P has been a disaster in Australia and, despite the fact I loved the phone, it's pushed me off Android... for the time being.

  14. So Facebook's brilliant plan to solve "fake news articles" tricking idiots into believing things is to ask those same idiots who couldn't tell it was fake news to tell them that it was fake news? Yeah, that checks out. Go right ahead Facebook. I don't see any flaws in that logic, at all.

  15. Re:Excellent on Google Is Rolling Out Android 7.1.1 (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    Telstra (Australia). My Nexus 6P experience has been dreadful. Telstra say the phone is not supported on their network so it's my fault for buying one (Telstra are the largest carrier in Australia and, essentially, the only one with reasonable rural coverage - I travel rural for work a few times a year so it's Telstra or carrier pigeons). I've been pretty annoyed at how badly the phone has worked at that level but part of me is willing to accept that Telstra just couldn't care about what is essentially a niche phone. What I've been far more annoyed about is that even though it's a Nexus - I am still beholden to my carrier for (regular, easy, OTA) updates. Google advertised the Nexus as being like an iPhone, where you just get updates from the vendor - but in reality it's no different to a Samsung. You need the vendor to release updates, the carrier to test, etc.

  16. Excellent on Google Is Rolling Out Android 7.1.1 (engadget.com) · · Score: 2

    I look forward to never seeing it released for my phone. AND I HAVE A NEXUS 6P.

    Because despite the misleading article saying Google is releasing it for Nexus phones, the carrier still needs to test and release it (unless you want to download and manually install a ROM and completely wipe your phone) - and my carrier still has not released 7.0 for fucks sake. And for the record, I did manually install 7.1 through the Beta program on it - and promptly lost access to LTE on my carrier.

  17. ...no one will buy one.

  18. Real World Google on Google Opens Real-World 'Google Shops' in Canada (digitaltrends.com) · · Score: 1

    I hope it is exactly like this:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuOBzWF0Aws

    (College Humor: If Google was a Guy)

  19. Certainly it will cost more, initially, as there's a lot of setup and time involved to get to scale. However, once the manufacturing is in place and operating at scale, costs will come down. Maybe never to the same level but down, none the less. Apple makes a huge profit on each device, so if they wanted to, they could double costs and still make a huge profit, which would improve over time as costs come down.

  20. Re:Maybe true if you actually get updates on Google Security Engineer Claims Android Is Now As Secure As the iPhone (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    And you will notice that the Nexus 6P, even on that page, still lags behind the Pixel. Also, those ROMS require you to wipe your phone, which is a bullshit way to update. And they break LTE with my telco. Don't even get me started on how bad Google let me down with the Nexus.

  21. Re:Maybe true if you actually get updates on Google Security Engineer Claims Android Is Now As Secure As the iPhone (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    What?? They can get updated apps via the playstore - they certainly cannot get OS updates. Google has moved to try to make many of the key components of the Android experience app driven, to help get those updates out there - but if you have a 2015 Samsung and Samsung stopped releasing OS updates, you're out of luck, my friend (unless you can find a community created ROM to manually install and then eternally manually repeat this process).

  22. Maybe true if you actually get updates on Google Security Engineer Claims Android Is Now As Secure As the iPhone (vice.com) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Speaking as a long time Android fan who recently switched to iOS because work provided me an iPhone 7, this is only true if you actually get updates. And the vast majority of Android users, do not. So when they get a vulnerability found in their Samsung/HTC/Whatever device - chances are it will never get patched.

    I had a Google Nexus 6P as my previous device (it's still on my desk in fact) and while I loved the device, updates where not as promised. Despite it being a Nexus, I was still beholden to my Telco for updates and they dragged their feet like mad. In fact, when I last turned off the Nexus 6P, the Nougat update was still not available (unless you manually enrol in the beta program, which I did, but then I had all kinds of issues with the Telco's LTE). So even on a damn Nexus, updates are hardly assured.

    I fully realise older iPhones stop getting updates, too - but we're talking about a Nexus 6P here - the thing hasn't even been available for a year in Australia yet and Google and Telstra have already washed their hands of it. I also realise Google may / may not be responsible for the issues with Telstra's LTE on the Nexus 6P - but rest assured, if the iPhone has an issue, Telstra sits up and takes notice. When I first got my Nexus 6P, I spent the first 2 months locked to 3G because LTE wasn't supported at all on. (Source, in case you think I am making this up: https://crowdsupport.telstra.c...).

  23. Re:Probably a little more to it than that on 'Cultlike' Devotion: Apple Once Refused To Join Open Compute Project, So Their Entire Networking Team Quit (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 5, Informative

    In TFA it says they formed their own OCP inspired startup, SnapRoute.

  24. Samsung prefers actual explosions on Android Devices That Contain Foxconn Firmware May Have a Secret Backdoor (softpedia.com) · · Score: 1

    Samsung handsets have settled for actual explosions, instead of "Pork Explosions".

  25. Re:Easy back-up solution on Krebs Is Back Online Thanks To Google's Project Shield (krebsonsecurity.com) · · Score: 1

    What if they're using a 3rd party mail filtering service, like Trend Micro? Then their MX record would be Trend Micro, not their server.