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User: mea_culpa

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  1. Re: Only 30 Grand? on Chevrolet Unveils 200-Mile Bolt EV At Detroit Auto Show · · Score: 1

    I had a 2006 VW Passat that cost more in maintenance than it cost to buy another car. I loved driving that car, when it was new it was a lot of fun. But I'm not in any hurry to get another VW anytime soon.

  2. Re:What rules prevent them from doing this already on Google Fiber's Latest FCC Filing: Comcast's Nightmare Come To Life · · Score: 1

    I really wish cities would run fiber like they do water and sewer pipes. It does make much more sense. I'm a bit uncomfortable having government manage the data though. I'd be worried about censorship issues and such. Having private companies compete to provide data over these lines may work though.

  3. Re:What rules prevent them from doing this already on Google Fiber's Latest FCC Filing: Comcast's Nightmare Come To Life · · Score: 1

    You are right. It is much worse now.

  4. Re:What rules prevent them from doing this already on Google Fiber's Latest FCC Filing: Comcast's Nightmare Come To Life · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in the 80s and 90s lots of smaller cable companies lobbied local governments and were granted easement access to install their poles, wires, and equipment. Many poles belonged to various utility companies and Ma Bell and access was also negotiated with them. This is a very long process with lots and lots of red tape.

    Bigger companies like Comcast bought these smaller companies primarily for these rights. Anywhere smaller companies overlapped the wires were pulled off of poles to prevent any chance of a competitor gaining easy access to these rights. Any new competitor would now need to start from the very beginning like the smaller companies did in the 80s and 90s in obtaining access.

    In my city we had a choice of Dimension Cable and Cable America in the 80s and 90s. Both of these smaller companies did all of the busy work for Cox which gobbled both of them up and dismantled the redundant perfectly good infrastructure of Cable America.
    Comcast did this on a much larger scale.

  5. Re:Is anyone surprised? on Ars Dissects Android's Problems With Big Screens -- Including In Lollipop · · Score: 1

    This and mobile versions of websites still loading despite requesting the more functional desktop version.
    (I'm looking at you Slashdot.org)

  6. Re:Please Microsoft... on The Classic Control Panel In Windows May Be Gone · · Score: 1

    I've done IT freelance for small businesses in my area for 15 years. I've learned over the years that I can tell which small businesses will succeed and which will fail. One thing that I find consistent about the successful companies is how they deal with careless users. If a user is consistently infecting their computer with malware they get fired. The SMB owner sees this as a personnel problem and deals with it. If this user can be so careless with a computer what's to say they won't be careless about their job? (Now, I don't know if it was the malware that got specifically got them fired, for all I know they were too careless about their work which got noticed by management) Multiple $250 repair invoices for one particular user in the span of three months gets probably gets noticed in a smaller company.

    Another indicator is how much they invest in hardware and software. There is a sweet spot of sorts, investing too much is careless, investing too little is also careless. When a company won't invest in small things that pay for themselves over the long term, such as the right printer for the right job, they are in trouble. It is also a sign for me to negotiate a higher retainer amount or not add them to my clientele in the first place.

  7. Re: New York on NY Doctor Recently Back From West Africa Tests Positive For Ebola · · Score: 1

    Now am I actually worried about a mass outbreak in the US? No. I find that unlikely. However, this virus has a 50-70% mortality rate and there is no vaccine.

    This is not something you take lightly. You pay this sort of virus the respect it deserves and enact BASIC quarantine procedures. Rudimentary.

    It is obvious that there is no leadership. It is all political posturing now. It is very disconcerting watching the head of the CDC be so careful about keeping political talking points while conveying real information about preventing the spread of this virus is secondary.

    Any sane person still working for the CDC can't possibly enjoy it anymore. I'd guess the best and brightest have moved to better pastures long ago. It isn't just the CDC either. I'd bet every other 3-4 letter agency is experiencing something similar. This worries me more than the actual virus.

  8. Re:clockspeed really? on Ubisoft Claims CPU Specs a Limiting Factor In Assassin's Creed Unity On Consoles · · Score: 1

    The Pentium 4 was intel's Windows Vista moment. Corners were cut, marketing overruled engineering and performance suffered.
    When it came out there were still PIII's running noticeably faster.

    This combined with the RDRAM fiasco allowed AMD to have a nice run with the Athlon series and break Dell's intel exclusive offerings. It was a big deal at the time. I'm certain that intel was thoroughly embarrassed and rightly so. I doubt it is a mistake they want to repeat anytime soon.

  9. Re:Come on, Elon, quit fooling around. on Tesla Announces Dual Motors, 'Autopilot' For the Model S · · Score: 1

    I suspect that this may be one of the real reasons there was a war in Afghanistan.

  10. Re:capable of feats not yet seen in electric vehic on Tesla Announces Dual Motors, 'Autopilot' For the Model S · · Score: 1

    A good EV like the Tesla with a >500 mile range requires a Li-Unobtainium battery.

    I'll take a >200 mile range EV over a gasoline powered car no matter the range and not complain one bit.

  11. Re:Awesome on Tesla Announces Dual Motors, 'Autopilot' For the Model S · · Score: 1

    This is a normal trend for new technology.
    The first computers, cell phones, CD players, even VHS players were priced out of reach of the average tight budgeted middle class family.
    Over time these products were mass produced and made affordable.

    Tesla is out to prove that EV's are a viable alternative to ICE cars. Which thus far every other auto maker has failed miserably to do.

    Check back in 5 years, EV's like the Tesla will likely be much more affordable.

  12. Re:Am I the only one? on The CDC Is Carefully Controlling How Scared You Are About Ebola · · Score: 1

    I'm not scared but a bit nervous when I learned about the 1.4 million predicted infections.
    That tells me that it will have likely broken containment at that point and well on its way through US borders.

    Once a single kid in some US school is found to be infected all hell is going to break loose. Everyone will pull their kids out of school and begin stocking up on food creating a demand surge that will overstress the supply chains of grocers further compounding panic. Price freezes, rationing, over militarized improperly trained police create a volatile mixture IMO.

  13. Re:Seems dubious to me. on Comcast Takes 2014 Prize For Worst Company In America · · Score: 1

    I've been quite pleased with the quality of Monsanto products. I use RoundUP grass and weed killer to keep my landscaping tidy without fail.
    I'm sure those in the agriculture industry also appreciate their service. I don't agree with some of their offerings but from a customer service standpoint I have no complaints.

  14. Re:Vive le Galt! on Mt. Gox Gone? Apparent Theft Shakes Bitcoin World · · Score: 1

    Despite all the regulation in place dealing with USD fiat currency $60,000,000,000 has been lost to various ponzi schemes even after Bernie Madoff. Which goes to show that no amount of regulation will compensate for human greed.

    Anybody that was serious about bitcoin likely educated themselves on how they work or should have. They understood that transferring them to Mt. Gox was the same as transferring them to someone else's wallet. Regulation was not necessary to know that Mt.Gox was a horrible company. They've had a track record of incompetence since the very beginning.

  15. Re:3 Day Old News on Audience Jeers Contestant Who Uses Game Theory To Win At 'Jeopardy' · · Score: 1

    If the game is meant to be entertaining then the creator needs to change the game.

  16. Re:Erm, the 3DS on How Can Nintendo Recover? · · Score: 1

    My problem with the Wii U is there was no where to demo it. When it launched it launched in plexiglass cases with the controller firmly bolted down. It was like playing a gameboy. There was no way to experience it in any way.
    Every console I purchased starting with the SNES could play actual games at the demo kiosk in the stores.

    Nintendo really cared about presentation back then, the SNES kiosks were connected to EGA monitors offering slightly better better looking graphics than a TV could and looking much better than the competition next to it at the time. When playing the demo I wanted nothing more than to take one home. Nintendo's presentation of the U only made me scratch my head. Their marketing was and is horrible no matter how good the console may actually be. I certainly wasn't going to shell out $350 when I knew for certain that my kid would be excited beyond measure getting a tablet.

  17. Re:Tulips on Why Bitcoin Is Doomed To Fail, In One Economist's Eyes · · Score: 1

    Except that tulips could not be teleported to and from special freely made flower pots in any location on the planet. Tulips could not be stored as a number, written down on a piece of paper, placed back into a magic flower pot and teleported elsewhere. Their supply was not fixed, they could not be infinitely subdivided and still be useful.
    How is bitcoin tulip again? Or are you just an uneducated jackass?

  18. Re:End of Life for XP in General on Chrome Will End XP Support in 2015; Firefox Has No Plans To Stop · · Score: 1

    Yeah, three full OS versions:

    Not quite. There has been one full version and three point releases.

    XP = 5.1

    Vista = 6.0

    Win 7 = 6.1

    Win 8 = 6.2

    Win 8.1 = 6.3

    The n.0 versions of windows have traditionally been less than stellar compared to their .1 counterpart. This is the first time we are dealing with a .2 and .3 release and I agree that there seems to be an abundance of suck on these releases.

  19. Re:No, bad idea on Auto Makers To Standardize On Open Source · · Score: 2

    CAN is based on Modbus, Modbus is a lot like ethernet. There is no security at the bus level, much like connecting a laptop into an office LAN.

    There needs to be an intermediary device, CAN on one end, a firewall in the middle, and a very limited and hardened interface for the infotainment system.

    Thus far automakers have been keen on connecting infotainment systems directly to the bus.

  20. Re:I'm confused on Administration Admits Obamacare Website Stinks · · Score: 1

    Because so much more young and healthy are getting maimed in car accidents than older unhealthy people getting diabetes and cancer.
    Insurance is all about managing risks. The risks involved determine the premiums.
    Or are you confusing insurance for health care?

  21. Re:I'm confused on Administration Admits Obamacare Website Stinks · · Score: 1

    If it is not a tax then why do I have to file it with my taxes? Why is the IRS the one responsible for its enforcement?

  22. Re:Verizon does have the best coverage on 2013 U.S. Wireless Network Tests: AT&T Fastest, Verizon Most Reliable · · Score: 1

    If my business didn't rely on reliable mobile coverage I would have left Verizon long ago. VoIP works surprisingly well on their LTE network.

  23. Re:The girl you should've asked to prom... on Paul Otellini: Intel Lost the iPhone Battle, But It Could Win the Mobile War · · Score: 1

    This is likely the main reason Otellini "stepped down" a few years early. Intel CEOs typically stay at the helm for 10 years.

  24. Re:It's like deja vu all over again on Microsoft's "New Coke" Moment? · · Score: 1

    I didn't agree with the ribbon interface at first either. But after watching the lengths at which microsoft went in R&D it does make more sense. After watching this 1 hour 30 minute presentation I was left with the sense that this move was genuinely engineering over marketing.

    However, force-feeding Metro to windows users stinks of marketing over engineering in a big way. For this Microsoft deserves lots of egg in their face.

  25. Re:New Coke? on Microsoft's "New Coke" Moment? · · Score: 2

    Bob
    Me
    Vista
    Clippy
    Zune

    Each of those were still more useful than Windows 8