Slashdot Mirror


User: duane534

duane534's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
15
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 15

  1. A New World (One Without You) Whoa! on Verizon, 4G and iPhones · · Score: 1

    There was a time when Apple computers did something their PC counterparts didn't. They were stable and secure where PCs weren't. They had high-end hardware where PCs didn't. The market changed. Windows 7 included fine-grained security controls. Toshiba, et. al. trounced even Apple in hardware reliability. Apple became just a name. There was a time when Apple MP3 players did something their generic counterparts didn't. They were better MP3 players. iTunes blew Windows Media Player out of the water, too. The market changed. Better MP3 players came out. Phones, et. al. started playing music, too, and streaming it from online, even. For free. Apple became just a name. There was a time when Apple phones did something more than BlackBerries, Palms, and Android devices did. They had an App Store. They had a nice web browser. They were reliable. The market changed. A smartphone drops calls. Which is it? iPhone. A smartphone overheats? iPhone. A smartphone is riddled with restrictions on paid content... See a pattern? Now, look at the market. BlackBerry just released the Torch. Yeah, the screen isn't amazing. OK? The web browser renders pixel for pixel how an iPhone does. It plays music like an iPhone does. Oh, yeah. Except, the BlackBerry can run multi-task more freely, text message more quickly, receive messages faster, go longer on a charge, and on... Same story on Android. Same story on Palm, to a degree. Remind me again why a Verizon customer should give two thoughts about a phone MAYBE coming that has less capabilities than half the current lineup?

  2. Re:It is the most important open source project. on OpenBSD 4.7 Preorders Are Up · · Score: 1

    *without Windows 7 on it

  3. Re:It is the most important open source project. on OpenBSD 4.7 Preorders Are Up · · Score: 1

    3-year hp desktops to 6-month asus notebooks.

    NOT A SINGLE ONE OF THEM has all the drivers required for normal operation... And they don't accept vista drivers either... Amazingly, on several of those machines, as a joke we tested mac os x hackintosh, just to see how it goes. And the hackintosh performed better out-of-box than windows 7. No need to say that ubuntu recognized everything from the start.

    I call B.S. First, where and how did you buy an Asus laptop that recently with Windows 7 on it? Second, Ubuntu is not going to load proprietary drivers from the start, anyway. I've used it. I've used all of the above. Worst case scenario, Windows Update will grab the drivers from the Internet. Sound and video has been standardized for years. There are plenty of pros for Linux. Don't get me wrong. But HARDWARE SUPPORT, especially support of WEBCAMS is NOT one of them.

  4. Re:It is the most important open source project. on OpenBSD 4.7 Preorders Are Up · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected. Still, however, WHS has the main security issue that XP had: users are all admin by default, as are applications. Just not SUCH a childish-appearing UI. Your common security issues aren't from inbound port scans. I've personally run XP SP3 for months with no antivirus or third-party firewall. No major problems, less you do something excessively stupid like running IE or Outlook Express unrestricted. Problem is, that is what anyone who is running a default installation of Windows prior to Vista is doing. It's generally a moot point, though. Any PC that is new enough to still be running its original power supply can run some incarnation of Windows 7. Any comparable Mac can run Mac OS/X. All of the above can run Linux 2.6. If the only way that a given executable file, including the OS itself, can break something is with user intervention, there is only one word: PEBKAC. Thus, not Microsoft's fault. Neither, Apple's (as much as it pains me). Nor .

  5. Re:It is the most important open source project. on OpenBSD 4.7 Preorders Are Up · · Score: 1

    The fact that home users are the ones least knowledgeable to adjust from defaults, the least likely to block ports, the least likely to consider other server options, et al., and Windows Home Server is based on Windows XP.

  6. Re:Not Surprising on Tethering Is Exhilarating (With the Nexus One) · · Score: 2, Informative

    Or, the fact that only 3% of the T-Mobile network is even UMTS (3.0G) takes care of the situation for them.

  7. Re:Not Surprising on Tethering Is Exhilarating (With the Nexus One) · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Is that the reason you use to justify the iPad not being able to multitask? AT&T's flagship phone has been, is, and always will be the BlackBerry Bold.

  8. Re:Two reasons PC games can be cheaper on Nintendo On the Hunt For More Scalps · · Score: 1

    *tips his hat for your signature* Recent switch from T-Mobile to AT&T. $30 more per month. Worth every penny when you carry a smartphone... Hell, any phone you want to always WORK.

  9. Re:Yeah, fuck that. on Ubisoft's Constant Net Connection DRM Confirmed · · Score: 1

    Won't anybody think of the fucking children?

  10. Re:Apple... on Mobile Operators Fight App Store Fragmentation · · Score: 1

    Apple may be many things, but consumer advocates they are not.

  11. http://m.google.com on Mobile Operators Fight App Store Fragmentation · · Score: 1

    http://m.google.com/ Step 1. Select the search field. Step 2. Type 'mobile app' and a word describing the functionality you need. Step 3. Search. Step 4. Install.

  12. Relative Distances on Fly Me To Which Moon? · · Score: 1

    Considering the relative distances between the moons themselves and the distance between the moons and Earth, wouldn't it make more sense to do BOTH with one craft?

  13. Re:Tough choice on Baby To Be Born Without the Gene For Breast Cancer · · Score: 1

    Bravo to the family. Of course, the best and most direct way to eliminate genetic disorders is to sterilize anyone with the gene, but this gets the job done as well without limiting the genetic advancement of the population by sterilizing so much of it. I have a pretty OBVIOUS and NOT-VAGUE position for the whole baby vs fetus argument. Life begins at the same spot life ends. Any truth is the same viewed from all directions. You must have neural activity to be considered alive. If you don't, you're dead. Birth is just the opposite of that. If there's no neural activity (thus, no consciousness), stem cell research is fair game. Genetic manipulation is fair game. Abortion is fair game. In all reality, abortion would probably be a good source of the former. Natural selection is a nasty process. If you don't advance, you will die out. Pregnancies that will lead to problems (social, pathological, etc.) SHOULD be terminated, hopefully learning from them. If we truly want a world where people are smarter and healthier, we must do it. We already thwarted evolution with contraception. We have to take it into our hands.

  14. Re:Innovation pays on iPhone Tops Windows Mobile Share; MS Releases iPhone App · · Score: 1

    By "niche", I believe you mean "expensive".

  15. Re:Not a surprise... on McCain Campaign Sells Info-Loaded Blackberry PDAs · · Score: 1

    My BlackBerry has a simple local wipe AND a remote wipe feature. It wouldn't eliminate the PIN-to-PIN issue, but FFS, verify the recipient. No different than an SMS.