That's not because funding is bad. It's because educators have no idea how to use technology in education and buy way too much of things that they don't need. And tech is so much more expensive than many more practical concerns. It's not all their fault because they've been told how important technology is but don't have the resources to understand what is needed.
If you have music transferred from physical media or purchased elsewhere, how do you put it on the iPhone? Now if you don't use it for music, that's perfectly understandable. I'm pretty sure that's the only syncing that still exists with iTunes now anyway other than a non-iCloud backup option.
Yes, in a court of law they are innocent until proven guilty.
You're mis-dividing the sentence. Until then, under the law, it is completely unsettled and so the defendant has a natural presumption of innocence. The only thing that will change that is a conviction. Maybe not in the court of public opinion - especially yours.
It puts them on a level playing field. Not having an advantage is simply fair. Google did not have an advantage when they started. They were just good.
the folks that Netflix should be concerned about are recording their content out the wazoo
Netflix has no vested interest in true security - just the illusion of security. The only thing they have to lose is content licensing deals, and their current level of security works fine to keep that.
Lots of states require two-party consent for audio recordings. This is a reason why so few surveillance cameras have microphones. The audio portion is often inadmissible.
You're probably an asshole who needs to be locked away for decades, and this is your last chance to prove the prosecutor wrong.
Repeat after me. Innocent until proven guilty. That's the law. You can hate on these people all you want, but that's a good reason for you to not be in charge of this.
And that means there has to be a protocol that the receiving device can use to retrieve the video that ultimately requires a level of trust in the device. Handing the decryption keys to the device by either method means the device could intercept and store the stream.
Just FYI, optical will not transmit DD+ or HD audio - not enough bandwidth. Standard AC3 over optical is probably good enough for most people if all the equipment will handle that and not drop all the way down to stereo.
I said it was based on it, I didn't say it was 1:1. "Ripped off" just means profit. It's not like the average consumer has their own supply chain - and oil pipelines have enforced a sort of natural monopoly.
But the fact is, refineries probably bring in more oil when prices are low, but sell it off very fast. After a price increase, it takes a lot longer to get rid of what's in storage tanks because there's lower demand.
Either way, you can look at publicly traded gas station chains and see that their profit margin on gasoline is not very high at the end of the day (I think less than 2%). That profit probably happens more at the supplier/refinery level.
Most likely a balance of covering their losses from when they had to sell low, response time of competitors on the price change, and that these changes likely come from corporate (except when competitors drop first).
Mr. Station Owner, the cost of the gasoline ALREADY IN YOUR TANKS didn't change from when it was delivered.
The cost of the gasoline in their tanks might be less than they have to sell it for. You have to sell based on futures pricing, and have it even out in volume and incidental purchases at an attached convenience store. Also, if their tank isn't totally empty when they get more gasoline in, they would have to calculate how much to raise the price and raise it instantly while people might be in the middle of pumping. Usually for price increases, the sign on the street changes before the price on the pump and the reverse is true for decreases.
I’ll tell you one thing: I don’t get any of that crap when dealing with the Pirate Bay.
I'll tell you one thing, if you just use decent HDMI cables you'll probably never get this error. HDMI has poor fault tolerance and basically treats any hiccup as an attack. I've never once had an HDCP error since that protocol became the norm.
It's possible. And it would be an AAC audio stream with H.264 video. You may choose to transcode back to something like AC3 for compatibility, but only if connecting to a 5.1 receiver.
If you have a nationwide cellular network and a few billion to spend, do you build out or just upgrade profitable existing nodes? They chose the more profitable option because that's what they do.
You don't get the content or the ads without the consent. They're just going to be required to be more honest when getting that consent.
That's not because funding is bad. It's because educators have no idea how to use technology in education and buy way too much of things that they don't need. And tech is so much more expensive than many more practical concerns. It's not all their fault because they've been told how important technology is but don't have the resources to understand what is needed.
If you have music transferred from physical media or purchased elsewhere, how do you put it on the iPhone? Now if you don't use it for music, that's perfectly understandable. I'm pretty sure that's the only syncing that still exists with iTunes now anyway other than a non-iCloud backup option.
Yes, in a court of law they are innocent until proven guilty.
You're mis-dividing the sentence. Until then, under the law, it is completely unsettled and so the defendant has a natural presumption of innocence. The only thing that will change that is a conviction. Maybe not in the court of public opinion - especially yours.
It puts them on a level playing field. Not having an advantage is simply fair. Google did not have an advantage when they started. They were just good.
People who don't care aren't against it. So that doesn't matter so much.
the folks that Netflix should be concerned about are recording their content out the wazoo
Netflix has no vested interest in true security - just the illusion of security. The only thing they have to lose is content licensing deals, and their current level of security works fine to keep that.
Walking while black at the same time a crime happens anywhere. You most be unaware just how often this happens.
Lots of states require two-party consent for audio recordings. This is a reason why so few surveillance cameras have microphones. The audio portion is often inadmissible.
They gave consent when they accepted this as a condition for release
Before armchair lawyering, did you work for Microsoft writing EULAs?
You're probably an asshole who needs to be locked away for decades, and this is your last chance to prove the prosecutor wrong.
Repeat after me. Innocent until proven guilty. That's the law. You can hate on these people all you want, but that's a good reason for you to not be in charge of this.
These are also people that are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
And that means there has to be a protocol that the receiving device can use to retrieve the video that ultimately requires a level of trust in the device. Handing the decryption keys to the device by either method means the device could intercept and store the stream.
Just FYI, optical will not transmit DD+ or HD audio - not enough bandwidth. Standard AC3 over optical is probably good enough for most people if all the equipment will handle that and not drop all the way down to stereo.
I said it was based on it, I didn't say it was 1:1. "Ripped off" just means profit. It's not like the average consumer has their own supply chain - and oil pipelines have enforced a sort of natural monopoly.
But the fact is, refineries probably bring in more oil when prices are low, but sell it off very fast. After a price increase, it takes a lot longer to get rid of what's in storage tanks because there's lower demand.
Either way, you can look at publicly traded gas station chains and see that their profit margin on gasoline is not very high at the end of the day (I think less than 2%). That profit probably happens more at the supplier/refinery level.
Not at all - bargain-priced Monoprice cables for me, usually. You can't go by price to tell if something is good.
Most likely a balance of covering their losses from when they had to sell low, response time of competitors on the price change, and that these changes likely come from corporate (except when competitors drop first).
Mr. Station Owner, the cost of the gasoline ALREADY IN YOUR TANKS didn't change from when it was delivered.
The cost of the gasoline in their tanks might be less than they have to sell it for. You have to sell based on futures pricing, and have it even out in volume and incidental purchases at an attached convenience store. Also, if their tank isn't totally empty when they get more gasoline in, they would have to calculate how much to raise the price and raise it instantly while people might be in the middle of pumping. Usually for price increases, the sign on the street changes before the price on the pump and the reverse is true for decreases.
I’ll tell you one thing: I don’t get any of that crap when dealing with the Pirate Bay.
I'll tell you one thing, if you just use decent HDMI cables you'll probably never get this error. HDMI has poor fault tolerance and basically treats any hiccup as an attack. I've never once had an HDCP error since that protocol became the norm.
It's not transparency that annoys people, it's complexity.
What happens when the cost of materials/supplies goes up? Do you add an "inflation fee" too?
Airplay->MP4 anyone? I'm sure it's possible.
It's possible. And it would be an AAC audio stream with H.264 video. You may choose to transcode back to something like AC3 for compatibility, but only if connecting to a 5.1 receiver.
The "technical limitation" is that they don't want to send video to a device that can decrypt and archive it.
If you have a nationwide cellular network and a few billion to spend, do you build out or just upgrade profitable existing nodes? They chose the more profitable option because that's what they do.
20 years later, and no new, large scale businesses, which rely upon residential super high speed internet have emerged.
Comparing on-demand streaming video to cable does not make it less of a new, large scale business.
The odds of getting some form of cancer are now 1 in 3. I believe it was rarer than 1 in 25 back in the 80s.
Isn't this just down to more medical intervention on heart disease, cholesterol, and high blood pressure? You have to live long enough to get cancer.