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User: LordThyGod

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Comments · 249

  1. Re:Compatibility with Google Play on LG Not Working On Windows Phone 8 Devices · · Score: 1

    So I get a -1 for being honest? Slashdot is bizarely anti-MS, anti-BSD, anti anything but Linux, Android, etc.

    In a sane world it's crazy not to be anti MS. They've screwed the pooch too many times to merit anything else.

  2. Re:"Destablization" on Microsoft, BSA and Others Push For Appeal On Oracle v. Google Ruling · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He/she is off his/her meds.

  3. Re:Look, the thing is... on Surface Pro Sold Out; Was It Just Understocked? · · Score: 0

    Cons: Weight 2lbs (Is that really a con?) Battery Life: 4.5 hours

    Microsoft

  4. Re:Old dog on Microsoft Going Its Own Way On Audio/Video Specification · · Score: 1

    Or 4, they think they can get away with screwing everyone else and taking control of a potentially very lucrative market, like they did with: * Internet Explorer and their custom implementations of HTML/CSS * Their custom windows-only version of Java * OpenXML and their subverting an entire standards body to get it ratified as a 'Standard' just so they could go after special government contracts requiring an open format, without having to give up control of the office suite space. * Custom extensions to LDAP to hinder interoperability with Active Directory. * Countless other things that anyone could find doing a few searches of Microsoft's history.

    There's a reason Microsoft's catch phrase is "Embrace. Extend. Extinguish." and it's sad that, like an abused spouse, people keep giving Microsoft another chance because, "They will do better this time."

    Thank you. Well said.

  5. Just taking orders on US Attorney Chided Swartz On Day of Suicide · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not so much the prosecutors fault, as it is a system that over zealously values intellectual property, so that the prosperous can be even more prosperous. We, as a society, have lost our bearings. Things are out of whack. I read today an article in the nytimes about sex trafficking, and how border guards in Pakistan, are on the alert for terrorists and pirated DVDs, yet ignore blatant evidence of young girls being sold into slavery. The reasoning? They want to please the Americans whose priorities are terrorism and piracy. We are broken.

  6. Re:Overraction on Ruby On Rails SQL Injection Flaw Has Serious Real-Life Consequences · · Score: 0

    Why would anyone with a superior intellect develop for a piece of shit pile of security holes like Wordpress?

    Your turn, nigger.

    Why massa you don't have to develop for shit you don't like, you jus' have to tell us po' boys where the current security holes are. That's all. 2 minutes of your precious time, massa, is all we'uns ask. Your turn butthole.

  7. Re:Overraction on Ruby On Rails SQL Injection Flaw Has Serious Real-Life Consequences · · Score: 2

    Wrong (again!). What you meant to say was *WordPress plugins*, that are mostly abandoned open source projects. Your active support, participation, and superior intellect would surely be welcomed.

  8. Re:Which Word? on Google Docs Vs. Microsoft Word: an Even Matchup? · · Score: 1

    Rephrase to "everyone you know", because certainly not "everyone I know" is using MS products. Google stuff tends to work cross platform. While I don't often write on a tablet, I do look at a lot of stuff, and Google stuff works just fine. It works (to an extent) anywhere there is a browser, including phones. MS stuff not so much. The vendor lock approach works in some use cases, but not everywhere, and in fact, is start to cause cracks in the monopoly.

  9. Re:show me the money on Hit Game Makes £52 In First Week On Windows RT · · Score: 2

    and bing too ...

  10. Re:Again? on Windows 8: a 'Christmas Gift For Someone You Hate' · · Score: 1

    Nah. Its xmas. These articles are like gifts. Ballmer himself is a gift we should learn to appreciate while we still can. A real clown. Enjoy it while we can. Someday MS might do something innovative before anyone else does and actually succeed in the process. Possible maybe, but not very likely.

  11. Thank God for Ballmer on Microsoft Surface Struggles to Ship A Million Units · · Score: 1

    What a hapless boob. Everything the man touches turns to shit. We are very fortunate he is around, and driving the bus straight off a cliff. How much wong does he have to suck to keep his job?

  12. Re:It doesn't compete with tablets on Why Microsoft's Surface Pro Could Fail · · Score: 1

    So who really cares? While I know (in my all knowing way) what you are talking about, I think if I ask around my family and friends (sadly, mostly non-geeks), I doubt seriously they could care less about these features. And probably would not know even what Eclipse is. So its a niche product at best, with some interesting features.

  13. WordPress for Cities on Ask Slashdot: What Web Platform For a Small Municipality? · · Score: 1

    http://en.wordpress.com/cities/. Its as easy to use as anything out there. There are more ways to extend it (without writing code) than anything else out there.

  14. Re:Microsoft is right on Microsoft Complains That WebKit Breaks Web Standards · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Informative? GMAFB. They are not "developing their own extensions", they coming out ahead of the curve in implementing new features that MS can't be bothered with most of the time. The vendor extensions are an established method of doing this. In fact, MS has the ms- extension they use for just the same situations (its just they don't have as many opportunities to use it since they continually lag so far behind all the competition). And MS never did anything like this years ago. Never. What they did was either outright ignore standards, create their own standards, and implement deliberately buggy implementations that saddled their ignorant user base with for years. What MS was doing was deliberately disrupting web tehchologies in a negative way to slow the adaption of new technologies since their income was all tied to desktops. And deliberately so. What -webkit is doing, is advancing technology. Two ends of the spectrum.

  15. Re:So who would do a better job? on Bungled Mobile Bet Will Be Ballmer's Swan Song · · Score: 1

    Well, the market changed course years ago. They are too little too late to the party. That's their style though ... wait for someone else's good ideas, use your market dominance to co-opt those ideas, and then make money after the market is already developed. That's worked well for them for many years. This time they might have waited too long for the market to mature, and/or for their reaction to it. They don't innovate, they renovate. Tough noogies. That's the consumer side. They've lost that already and they playing desperation catch up now. The business / enterprise is another matter. That moves much slower and they have no Apple-like competitor. That's going to be theirs for a long time to come. MS won't go away completely (regrettably). They will just become less and less of a factor for consumer products. And we are all better off as a result.

  16. Re:Google is more evil than Microsoft ever was on Why Google Went Offline Today · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Wrong thread bimbo.

  17. Re:Code versioning and deployment? on Ask Slashdot: Taming a Wild, One-Man Codebase? · · Score: 1

    Bazaar does the same, or at least can.

  18. Alternatives on Ask Slashdot: How To Run a Small Business With Open Source Software? · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've been involved in the bookkeeping end of several small businesses. My suggestions .... as to payroll, do not do this in house. Its a PITA, and you will wind up either making mistakes you will come to regret, or spend more time on it that you might be able to use more wisely somewhere else. Keeping up with local tax districts, who lives where, when the govt(s) (assuming you are US) decide to make some subtle change to tax regulations. Penny wise, pound foolish to do this in house for most small businesses. As to basic accounting and booking, I am not aware of anything that does the sheer number of things that QuickBooks can do, or as well. But I haven't tried everything. This sounds to me like the kind of thing that is hard for free / open source projects to compete with. Maybe your needs are very simple? I would suggest some of the SaS products like FreshBooks. These may not meet your critieria of open source projects per se, but many of these have open API's which is a step in the right direction. Also, these are likely built with open source projects, eg Apache, Ruby, PHP, MySQL, Python and so on, so there is some second hand support of open source that way. They also free you from the local installation situation, and can be accessed via mobile or remote locations (ie work from home), with zero hassle. I have used FreshBooks for accts receivable situations, and found it very nice. Compared to QuickBooks, I would opt for FreshBooks for billing and invoicing easily. I have not looked at with acct payables or general ledger in mind though.

  19. Re:Erm... on Aussie Online Retailer Impose IE7 Tax · · Score: 1

    The guy that said they are "actually pretty awesome" browsers now. I am pretty sure he is suggesting that people should be using them now.

  20. Re:Erm... on Aussie Online Retailer Impose IE7 Tax · · Score: 1

    Ah, OK, now I got it. So we are supposed to support them now not so much for doing "good work" but because they are no longer purposefully doing bad work?

  21. Re:Erm... on Aussie Online Retailer Impose IE7 Tax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Which begs the question why was the world's largest and wealthiest software company not able to do a "really good work" with previous versions? They didn't know how? Couldn't be bothered? Enjoy causing mischief?

  22. Re:Search for Dummies on Microsoft Patent Hints At Search Results Tailored To User's Mood, Intelligence · · Score: 1

    How helpful have they been to you?

  23. Clean House on Ask Slashdot: Best Practices For Leaving an IT Admin Position? · · Score: 2

    Unless you are very sure you will continue to have an amicable relationship, I would suggest some kind of internal code audit in addition to having all passwords changed. My little personal hell went something like this in a small business situation (many years ago) ... I am abruptly terminated due to change in ownership and a brief transition period. 10 days later the main server crashed, and all the kings men could not put it back together again (due to really, really poor choices of who was hired). The company went several months without any of the company data (sales, etc). An insurance claim was filed that claimed I left behind a "bomb" that was mysteriously remotely triggered and physically destroyed hardware on one system, deleting all data irrecoverably, and destroyed all the backups (even though externally stored on removable media). In essence the entire system was inoperable and because it contained custom, in house code, could not be rebuilt. The insurance company took this hooey, paid the claim. Then sued me. Some time shortly after this, they replaced all the systems in the business (this was part of the claim I was sued for), and destroyed the original systems thus removing any evidence that might exonerate me. Clever stuff. It was not difficult to prove my innocence to all this utter nonsense, but it took several years and > $10K to get out from under it. Fun stuff.

  24. Re:An Ode to Zune on Microsoft Killing Off Zune, Windows Live Brands? · · Score: 1

    *snicker* .... wishing me had mod points.

  25. Re:This is why I no longer buy music on Copyright Industry Calls For Broad Search Engine Controls · · Score: 1

    Amen. The greedier these bastards get, and their elected lackeys tow the line, the more civil disobedience becomes a moral duty. And we should encourage friends and family to follow our lead.