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  1. Re:It's no longer economical to print on Paper Manufacturer Launches "Print More" Campaign · · Score: 1

    * and refilling. And they have places that will do that for you now with good ink. I use one called cartridge world. Easy and hassle free.

  2. Re:It's no longer economical to print on Paper Manufacturer Launches "Print More" Campaign · · Score: 3, Informative

    Christ- you should be using a laser printer. No wonder.

  3. Re:The Internet is less free... Everywhere. on In Brazil, Google Fined For Content of Anonymous Posting · · Score: 1

    NO. And I'm not anonymous. There is nothing that should be censored. It is speech. Words can't physically hurt you even when they can be hurtful. Neither do pictures, video, sound, and allot of other stuff that can be transmitted via a computer. Certainly it is undesirable to be a victim and for it to be on the Internet would be the understatement of the year. There is a bigger danger to society though than violent writings and pictures or child pornography. It is totalitarianism. It is the restraint of freedom. Is most importantly it is societies inability to discriminate for itself what is and is not good. We all have challenges in life. We all suffer at some point or another. This is a cost we all pay and sometimes some pay more than others. No matter who pays or how much though banning undesirable expression doesn't necessarily reduce suffering. It does create dangerous and hostile regimes. Ones where everything is decided by a select few and the people don't know they are being victimized. Western democracies are falling fast. Traditional media outlets are being consolidated or dying, the governments are beginning to censor, and soon it won't be just a few child porn sites- but a list of political, medical, and social sites that a few people decide should be censored. This isn't stuff I'm making up. It is stuff that is happening today. China does it, Australia is enhancing its system beyond censoring child porn and terrorism, and Germany, Britan, Canada, and and many others have similar child porn filtering lists now as well. Tomorrow when you decide it is ok for your child to go to school in the acid rain it won't be because the scientists say it is safe- it'll be because government started filtering the articles from the reporters who included quotes from scientists who said it wasn't safe. So those scientist no longer say things that they know contradict the political views of those in power-who just may be able to hold it indefinitely. The world accepted 9/11 as an excuse for all sorts of terrible atrocities. What would the world accept if a nuclear bomb went off in just one major city in the USA? Indefinite suspension of elections and numerous other legislation pieces disbanding various constitutional protections and even separate branches of government? The last time this happened they didn't even have enough time to read the law that was passed. Because that would be an effective dictatorship. If such a law was passed would they even bother to consider the fact that the constitution is above the law given that they got rid of the supreme court? Remember the president is now a dictator and those who just passed this law-well- passed it.

  4. Re:I was thinking this would be a boon for me... on McAfee To Pay For PC Repairs After Patch Fiasco · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I stopped doing the virus removals all together. I just wipe and reload every time now. 99% of the time if you scratch the virus removals you save everybody money because most of the time you end up failing to remove the virus. Even if you don't the machine isn't going to be 'like new' when you are done. I only want my customers to have a 'like new' computer when I am done. I NEVER want to have to come back. I don't feel right about charging someone twice. Even if it isn't really my fault. Even though I'm warning them... I do basically the same thing though as you. I ask them questions about how they use the computer, "do they you have the disks that came with it?", etc. and "then reason I ask is because there are different ways to resolve the problem and the one I usually recommend is wiping and reloading" . "It's quick, easy, and you end up with a system that is like new. If your system is slow now, it'll be as fast as it was when it was new when were done-or almost probably (as long as you have enough ram /w sp3 / etc av updates), and other problems that you might experience that are artefacts you might still experience from even a successful virus removal won't be present". The thing is though- I usually charge almost as much as the rip off scam artist places like like best buy. Although not the on-site pricing just the 'in-store' pricing. So it is a premium service in that respect at a really good deal considering what they are getting.

  5. Re:Just give us a name on Police Seize Computers From Gizmodo Editor · · Score: 1

    You are right about the beyond reasonable doubt. The catcher is that he could create reasonable doubt. The fact the device is going to have to be returned proved it isn't worth $5k. It is all the evidence that is needed to show it is the story that is worth $5k. Anyway. It wasn't goods that were exchanged. It was a story. In my opinion. I think the evidence shows it. I would agree with you on the fact that you would need to argue that- but none-the-less. This is why we have a court of law. Things aren't black and white. The law is suppose to require intent. He didn't have intent. I'm not convinced he needed the phone for publicity either. He needed certain information. Information that could have been provided without any crimed having been committed on his part.

  6. Re:Just give us a name on Police Seize Computers From Gizmodo Editor · · Score: 1

    Yea- if he actually dismantled the phone that might be a hard one. I didn't know he also had written in the article that he says he bought the phone. Maybe a good lawyer can get him out of it on fifth amendment grounds-or something like it. The argument could have gone he bought the story. I know what you are saying regarding the sufficient evidence. This is why you have lawyers and you bring in evidence and evidence to back up the fact you didn't hand money over for the device. The story is his evidence that he didn't pay for the device. The fact he says he does in the story might be arguable since you can't buy stolen property and his intentions were not to buy stolen property as the device is clearly not worth $5k to any consumer-but rather to write a story on it. A source is on the other hand worth $5k and that is in practice what he was paying for despite what is written. Then his lawyer would have to remind the jury that the client is not a lawyer and choice of words was only legally inaccurate.

  7. Re:Just give us a name on Police Seize Computers From Gizmodo Editor · · Score: 1

    What I still want to know is how do you prove what the money is for. If someone says "I am giving you $1.50 for the candy bar" and they get it on tape and it happens ok. Fine. If the one party gives the other $1.5 and the other gets a candy bar that doesn't prove the one is for the other. It suggests it. However it doesn't prove it. The average person doesn't spend $5k on a iPod even if it is a pre-release. This a is a special case and I question if a new source would too. They would buy the story for sure though. They wouldn't buy the pre-release intentionally and intent is suppose to be a required part of the law.

  8. Re:Just give us a name on Police Seize Computers From Gizmodo Editor · · Score: 1

    Interesting. As is the norm for Slashdot I didn't read the story- and definitely not the original material. I wonder if that could be thrown out on fifth amendment grounds somehow? He didn't know what he was saying? Or despite what he was saying it was not in actuality what the agreement was. Or maybe he paid for it- but is innocent on the grounds what he was actually was buying was the story, and never intended to retain the device, therefore he couldn't have actually purchased stolen goods despite what he wrote.

  9. Re:Just give us a name on Police Seize Computers From Gizmodo Editor · · Score: 1

    The problem is you haven't proven that he gave the device to Gizmodo for money. He also have Gizmodo a story. The pictures of the device and the story were what was valuable- not the device itself. Gizmodo publishes news- an device itself is worthless to them. As can be proven by the fact it was returned.

  10. Re:Just give us a name on Police Seize Computers From Gizmodo Editor · · Score: 1

    BasilBrush- your story doesn't add up at all. Gizmodo had no reason to ever own the phone. He didn't need to own the phone to get pictures and once he had pictures he certainly couldn't have ever owned it so he MUST have purchased the story rights only. The fact he possessed it doesn't mean he owned it. He could have gotten pictures without having possessed it. It makes more sense that he just bought the story for $5k and his source didn't want to be named for obvious reasons. Gizmodo then returned the phone. It would have been a brighter move for him to have seen the phone, checked it out, taken pictures, not retained it, and left. Not having ever known retained his source. Then nobody could even suggest he bought the phone- which any idiot can see doesn't even make sense regardless of if he continued to posses the phone (later returning it).

  11. Re:Damage Limitation on McAfee Retracts Lowball Bug Damage Estimate · · Score: 1

    If it is a PCI compliance issue! Read the PCI compliance audit procedures again. If you read the PCI audit procedures on page 23 it says under requirement 5: Use and regularly update anti-virus software or programs the following: 5.1 Deploy anti-virus software on all systems commonly affected by viruses (particularly personal computers and servers) If you read that carefully it says "commonly affected"- which means not GNU/Linux or Unix systems and if you read under that it specifically excludes UNIX based systems: Systems commonly affected by viruses typically do not include UNIX-based operating systems or mainframes. So I was right about it all along. It doesn't require anti-virus on UNIX or GNU/Linux machines. Next time show him this and you should be off the hook.

  12. Outraged for many reasons:big 1 collateral damage on File Sharing Remains a Perk of College Life · · Score: 1

    This is so completely outrageous because if you read the law they basically force the schools into taking technological steps that have significant/and or insurmountable costs and/or incalculable collateral damage. The schools must impliment one of the folling technological solutions to inhibit piracy and it MUST work or they have to try another (with reviews). There are four categories of "technology-based deterrents" they can choose from: 1. Bandwidth shaping 2. Traffic monitoring to identify the largest bandwidth users 3. A vigorous program of accepting and responding to Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notices 4. A variety of commercial products designed to reduce or block illegal file sharing Bandwidth shaping? This means that I'm screwed if I want to download an Ubuntu ISO. Traffic monitoring? I'm screwed if I want to download lots of GNU/Linux ISOs- not to mention my privacy. Respond to DMCA notices wouldn't be acceptable because of the insurmountable costs to forward notices to students unless you correctly interpret the law-at least my interpretation of it. That being if the school hosts the content on there servers they must act. If a student hosts it on their private servers the DMCA doesn't apply and they must bring a lawsuit. The university should still be protected under the DMCA since they still made a good faith effort to comply with correctly filed DMCA complaints. Lastly we all know that commercial products that are designed to reduce or block 'illegal file sharing' have both collateral damage on fair use rights and content that isn't held by the copyright owner in question claiming copyright whose copyright is being refused- not to mention degrading performance of the network. Interfering with network traffic should be illegal. It doesn't matter who does it. Neither ISP nor government should should interfere with a users traffic. We should all have unfiltered access to the internet without any firewalls and if the technology is shared bandwidth evenly distributed amongst users to whatever alotment they've purchased or otherwise obtained until it is utilized at which point they can be charged for more or be throttled. Of course bandwidth prices should never be costly- and the more you purchase in a given month the less it should cost as you are contributing more to the maintenance of the system- and therefore entitled to lower prices as is the case with ANY OTHER PRODUCT- when purchased in quantity (just about).

  13. Re:And The Flip Side ... on Oracle Wants Proof That Open Source Is Profitable · · Score: 1

    So did it help, hinder, or do absolutely nothing for them either way?

  14. Re:It's not about the cost. on 100% Free Software Compatible PC Launches · · Score: 1

    If you are in North America (USA only I think at the moment) ThinkPenguin.com is working on developing the free and open source market: http://www.thinkpenguin.com/ They make an effort to only sell systems with free and open source drivers/firmware (wifi, graphics, sound, etc.) as well as accessories like USB wifi sticks, printers, etc.

  15. Re:But on 100% Free Software Compatible PC Launches · · Score: 1

    I think the BIOS is a work in progress. The problem right now is NONE of you are buying these systems. You need to actually hunker down and start supporting companies that are trying to support the GNU/Linux market-even when they are doing it with 'off the shelf' parts at 'ridiculous' prices. Right now we need more technical people working on developing supporting applications for GNU/Linux so that we can support non-technical GNU/Linux users better so that we can grow the market. If the market grows we'll be able to work on getting the LinuxBIOS onto these boards. People don't realize how expensive all this is in comparison to the number of people actually willing to put money down on this stuff. I know it's something that both Open PC, ThinkPenguin, and the founder of the LinuxBIOS project are interested in doing.

  16. Re:Microsoft builds Linux powered OpenPC on 100% Free Software Compatible PC Launches · · Score: 1

    That wasn't the goal here. The goal was to put together a FREE system that worked out of the box for ordinary users and techy people alike without having to build it yourself. I shouldn't HAVE to build a computer myself. We don't all have the time to do this kind of thing. Some of us have more important things to do like design nuclear reactors.

  17. Re:$500 (Monitor Sold Separately) on 100% Free Software Compatible PC Launches · · Score: 1

    Low-end isn't the same as crap. You've compared crap to something decent. Acer is crap. Having to replace something costs time, money, and knowledge. This system is more than capable for the majority of people and adding more ram would be overloading it. In your case adding more ram would be a necessity for most people and cost $150 in labour and parts offsetting any savings- not to mention the screen being too small and needing to be a separate keyboard, screen, and mouse and still only getting a barely functioning MS Windows system (or is this a Linux pre-install? still- probably not really designed for GNU/Linux-so.. barely functional). You are an idiot.

  18. Re:Why? on 100% Free Software Compatible PC Launches · · Score: 1

    You miss the whole point of commercial efforts like this. By purchasing from small companies like this who are giving back you help create a market for GNU/Linux. That market increases the products that support GNU/Linux. You don't have to get this for yourself- especially if you are on a limited budget. Get it for a friend- or family member. This is a worthwhile cause-and not some gimmick by a large evil corporation. Dell's effort to support GNU/Linux is a total fraud. This one isn't.

  19. Re:Why? on 100% Free Software Compatible PC Launches · · Score: 1

    The difference between the two is you bought a laptop that by chance worked with GNU/Linux perfectly (somehow I doubt it) and they designed a computer for GNU/Linux. The chipsets in your laptop were not designed for GNU/Linux. You the manufacturer install wifi card that had open firmware and open source drivers? How about a open source graphics drivers? Without either of these your're missing suspend to ram and your system won't work with all flavours of GNU/Linux. The support is non-existent with your setup. Something you get with these systems. You've paid the devil's tax- not here. The MS Windows system NEEDs more ram- this system might not have as much ram-but needs less- so your system is actually slower in practice. Now- if you don't value your time- ok. but I do. Chances are you had to install GNU/Linux and that means it cost you $100 (since you are smarter than most and make more money probably)... so, now who.. add it all up the better deal isn't with the system you bought. This probably isn't the best system for you- but neither is the one you bought. The best system for you is probably a higher end system from ThinkPenguin, System76, or somebody else with GNU/Linux on it.

  20. Re:There must be something more on MPAA Shuts Down Town's Municipal WiFi Over 1 Download · · Score: 1

    Give me a break. Shutting services down never works. Nobody every succeeded in restricting stuffs on the Internet this way. It just doesn't work that way. When you shut one down another pops up. The internet is global and you can't possibly control what goes in it to any significant degree. Thus it makes no sense to try. It is just a waste of resources. ISPs shouldn't have to respond to these complaints. Period.

  21. Re:I've got wikipedia reader in my pocket on Wikipedia In Your Pocket, $99 · · Score: 1

    Not even close. You pay through the nose for that. This is a thousand times better- and other devices beat the iPhone in terms of price, usability, and features.

  22. Re:No GPS thanks on Congress Mulls Research Into a Vehicle Mileage Tax · · Score: 1

    You know what. You make a good point. I don't want the government to know even how much I drive. Maybe taxing tires would be a better idea. At least then I could pay cash and the government doesn't have to know how much I drive. I imagine that wear and tear on the tires also equates to some degree to size/weight/use of the tire. Just determine the number of miles a car's tire will go and tax based on that. If it wears out quicker than another car it most likely is due to the weight of the vehicle. I only wonder if we would be unfairly taxing those who travel on less well maintained roads allot-and given they were maintained less it probably is almost like a double tax. Then again those who travel on those types of roads probably are in the middle of nowhere and/or those people deserve to be taxed more cause they travel heavily trafficed roads that need repair more often and are more expensive to repair.

  23. Re:hacking on Congress Mulls Research Into a Vehicle Mileage Tax · · Score: 1

    I bet if you made an exact copy of a license plate and didn't get pulled over for speeding or some other vehicle violation and the other cars plates weren't turned in- or owner's license suspended, or the other vehicle's owner gets a warrant for arrest or something like that-years and years and years. As long as you are duplicating a plate from the same make/color vehicle as you a cop who checks the plate number won't have a reason to pull you over and if you aren't pulled over for violating traffic laws... you'd probably survive a long time. I think there is a huge difference between the two though. The license plate is harder to duplicate. The duplicating of a RFID is easy and chances are you could probably even just not report the miles or not report them correctly. Or maybe just report the wrong vehicle. YOu might get screwed if these RFID readers also have cameras though and suspicion arises for one reason or other. That's why you get multiple RFIDs for vehicles of the same make/model though. If the bills aren't significantly larger and the owners have nothing to compare to... your in the clear.

  24. Re:Yeah, right on Microsoft Says No TCP/IP Patches For XP · · Score: 1

    MS Windows 7 has many of the same problems as Vista. It still has issues regarding DRM. The interface still sucks. MS Office 2007 hasn't exactly changed-and don't tell me that this isn't part of MS Windows cause every single user almost has it and you can't buy an older version. It is for all intensive purposes the MS package that we're talking about- and that has largely gone unchanged in any significant manner. The whole MS ecosystem is crumbling before us. Even if you ignore MS Office 2007 nightmare the system is supposedly leaner according to the hype- yet I know for a fact that what hasn't been cut is still bloated just like Vista. The reviews pre-release are just like Vista- great. Now you say it has been released? Not it hasn't. Not in practice. You can't get it. Until you can actually get it on a computer it isn't out. The fact we still don't have it makes everything hype. Until I actually see it running for more than 6 months on a low and mid-range machine I'm calling it crap. Nothing more than hype suggests otherwise. Microsoft is bound to release lots of services packages that screw it up. We also don't have the compatibility that Microsoft Windows XP has- and definitely nothing like what GNU/Linux has. GNU/Linux actually has the best compatibility - despite what all the MS Windows fanatics claim. You aren't forced to upgrade every time Microsoft releases a new operating system because the printer manufactorers fail to provide updated drivers to the proprietary crap they release on MS Windows.

  25. Repulsive. on Trust an Insurance Company's "Drive-Cam?" · · Score: 1

    I find this idea repulsive. Just like I find social security numbers, drivers licenses, license plates, and government installed cameras in public places. Whatever happened to the constitution?