What is the purpose of free software if you are not supposed to use your freedom?
The purpose of free software in regards to what the OP speaks of is freedom from Google and code/hardware control of his e-mail servers. That said, nobody sane said that free software is automatically and guaranteed to be easier, better, or even cheaper than proprietary software (cheaper as in opportunity cost, not necessarily as in price).
I wouldn't say anyone is seriously telling him he's not supposed to use his freedom, but that his freedom comes at a large time cost. Is being free from Google in regards to e-mail worth it based on an ideological stance alone? That depends on how much you value your time in relation to how much you value your ideological stance. Seemingly, in regards to e-mail servers, people value their time over their ideology.
And you're ascribing action taken by Sony as malice, which isn't necessarily the case. Speaking in hypotheticals in regards to actions Sony could have taken is, again, taking the action out of context to imply nefarious intent. Maybe you personally find this as a division but I've seen people on slashdot and other forums use it as another transgression bullet-point to convince others just how evil Sony is when the action in and of itself, when not attributing non-existent properties to it, is completely benign.
Then the subpoenas of people who visited a web site, or watched a video, which was still yet another division.
Which 1) weren't turned over to Sony itself and 2) only used to argue jurisdiction. It's disingenuous to use the action out of context to imply nefarious intent.
Sony's done enough on its own to make certain segments of the population upset, and with good reason. There's no need to make stuff up.
The question is do they care. They don't. OtherOS and any potential property rights implications are so low on the totem pole for your average person that Sony doesn't even look bad from it. It's hardly being mentioned outside of tech sites, and even then only on possibly Slashdot or homebrew sites does Geohotz sit in good favor.
He's running a dev unit. 3.60 has not been jailbroken. This was non-news when this video surfaced two days ago because it was debunked mere hours later. Glad to see Slashdot posting articles in a timely fashion.
This happened at my high school years ago (aside from the grade selling). The student in question put keyloggers on a number of PC's in one lab trying to get a friend's Ragnarok Online password, but instead got the system admin login info.
He was caught when his calculus teacher went to change the grade of one of her other students from the semester before and discovered his D- became a straight C.
So, if b12 has no set release date aside from "when there are no more hard blockers", why release it with 9 or 10 hard blockers remaining, with the promise of a b13 down the road? The entire point of not having a release date was so you could actually finish the thing.
Perhaps I am ignorant in the ways of software releasing, but this release doesn't seem to have much of a purpose.
Anti-incumbent furor is something I've always been entertained by, in the sense that bad-blood is always complained about, but not what's making the blood bad to begin with.
So you vote everyone out. Okay, great. What's to prevent this load of politicians from going bad? The threat of getting voted out? Something they'll have to face every 2 to 6 years anyways?
The structure of government is what requires change, not necessarily the people. Unless you treat the underlying cause, you will face the same problem again.
And if they include their anti-virus, then they're a monopoly trying to exploit the market through tying. There's no winning for them.
Though your point doesn't really stand as their AV solution is free.
Seems game companies like Ubisoft and EA are keen on sending more ammunition to ppl defending piracy to be used against them.
To people who would have pirated anyways. You're not entitled to their game, no matter how bad of a deal it is. Their business failings don't forgive your moral failings.
What you're supposed to do is return them to the bank or contact the secret service and turn the money over. However, you're not reimbursed for this. If the ATM gives you a fake $20 and you go inside and give it to the bank, you're out those $20 because they didn't witness what happened between you getting the money and you coming inside the bank.
Knowing that, what you do with the counterfeit money is sort of up to you. Maybe you didn't realize it was counterfeit and will spend it anyways.
It's best to withdraw cash from inside the bank and verify it in front of the teller, because if they see that you didn't swap any bills and you were given a fake by them, they will exchange it.
Of course, Vista and 7 tried to be a $500 way of running Windows apps, while XP was a $100 way of running Windows apps. And compared to XP, Vista also needed $400 worth of hardware.
Depressing proof that it's all in the marketing.
Vista cost me $100 the week it came out - legally at that. You're either doing it wrong or you're being disingenuous for the sake of argument.
Given the complexity of games today, it would likely mean the same game being shipped, sans patches that fix bugs later on. UT3 isn't some game from 15 years ago; the code base I'm sure is nowhere comparable, so to be quite honest, bug free games these days aren't a realistic expectation.
What gives Microsoft the right to change the way the Windows platform handles media content?
That it's their software that they've created? That they're allowed to do with it as they see fit, because it's theirs and they own it?
How dare they change their new OS so that it differs from the old one, you know?
What is the purpose of free software if you are not supposed to use your freedom?
The purpose of free software in regards to what the OP speaks of is freedom from Google and code/hardware control of his e-mail servers. That said, nobody sane said that free software is automatically and guaranteed to be easier, better, or even cheaper than proprietary software (cheaper as in opportunity cost, not necessarily as in price).
I wouldn't say anyone is seriously telling him he's not supposed to use his freedom, but that his freedom comes at a large time cost. Is being free from Google in regards to e-mail worth it based on an ideological stance alone? That depends on how much you value your time in relation to how much you value your ideological stance. Seemingly, in regards to e-mail servers, people value their time over their ideology.
And you're ascribing action taken by Sony as malice, which isn't necessarily the case. Speaking in hypotheticals in regards to actions Sony could have taken is, again, taking the action out of context to imply nefarious intent. Maybe you personally find this as a division but I've seen people on slashdot and other forums use it as another transgression bullet-point to convince others just how evil Sony is when the action in and of itself, when not attributing non-existent properties to it, is completely benign.
Then the subpoenas of people who visited a web site, or watched a video, which was still yet another division.
Which 1) weren't turned over to Sony itself and 2) only used to argue jurisdiction. It's disingenuous to use the action out of context to imply nefarious intent.
Sony's done enough on its own to make certain segments of the population upset, and with good reason. There's no need to make stuff up.
Support your municipal cable company!
Who? No, really, who is that? I have Comcast and...Comcast. I opted for neither.
Don't you know that Sony is bad?
The question is do they care. They don't. OtherOS and any potential property rights implications are so low on the totem pole for your average person that Sony doesn't even look bad from it. It's hardly being mentioned outside of tech sites, and even then only on possibly Slashdot or homebrew sites does Geohotz sit in good favor.
He's running a dev unit. 3.60 has not been jailbroken. This was non-news when this video surfaced two days ago because it was debunked mere hours later. Glad to see Slashdot posting articles in a timely fashion.
This happened at my high school years ago (aside from the grade selling). The student in question put keyloggers on a number of PC's in one lab trying to get a friend's Ragnarok Online password, but instead got the system admin login info. He was caught when his calculus teacher went to change the grade of one of her other students from the semester before and discovered his D- became a straight C.
So, if b12 has no set release date aside from "when there are no more hard blockers", why release it with 9 or 10 hard blockers remaining, with the promise of a b13 down the road? The entire point of not having a release date was so you could actually finish the thing. Perhaps I am ignorant in the ways of software releasing, but this release doesn't seem to have much of a purpose.
You're a nerd, he's a nerd, that makes you two practically bros.
Anti-incumbent furor is something I've always been entertained by, in the sense that bad-blood is always complained about, but not what's making the blood bad to begin with. So you vote everyone out. Okay, great. What's to prevent this load of politicians from going bad? The threat of getting voted out? Something they'll have to face every 2 to 6 years anyways? The structure of government is what requires change, not necessarily the people. Unless you treat the underlying cause, you will face the same problem again.
And if they include their anti-virus, then they're a monopoly trying to exploit the market through tying. There's no winning for them. Though your point doesn't really stand as their AV solution is free.
Seems game companies like Ubisoft and EA are keen on sending more ammunition to ppl defending piracy to be used against them.
To people who would have pirated anyways. You're not entitled to their game, no matter how bad of a deal it is. Their business failings don't forgive your moral failings.
What you're supposed to do is return them to the bank or contact the secret service and turn the money over. However, you're not reimbursed for this. If the ATM gives you a fake $20 and you go inside and give it to the bank, you're out those $20 because they didn't witness what happened between you getting the money and you coming inside the bank. Knowing that, what you do with the counterfeit money is sort of up to you. Maybe you didn't realize it was counterfeit and will spend it anyways. It's best to withdraw cash from inside the bank and verify it in front of the teller, because if they see that you didn't swap any bills and you were given a fake by them, they will exchange it.
Lost control of your computer != Hacked
It's worth noting that this beta signup also allows you to opt into Diablo and Warcraft universe beta testing as well.
Of course, Vista and 7 tried to be a $500 way of running Windows apps, while XP was a $100 way of running Windows apps. And compared to XP, Vista also needed $400 worth of hardware.
Depressing proof that it's all in the marketing.
Vista cost me $100 the week it came out - legally at that. You're either doing it wrong or you're being disingenuous for the sake of argument.
You should work for free, society deserves to leech off you...
Oh do fuck off you anonymous twat.
What's the problem? We were planning on thanking you in the release notes...
Given the complexity of games today, it would likely mean the same game being shipped, sans patches that fix bugs later on. UT3 isn't some game from 15 years ago; the code base I'm sure is nowhere comparable, so to be quite honest, bug free games these days aren't a realistic expectation.
Correlation != Causation
Released last November along with the Mac OS X client, it has failed to share the expected continual growth as seen with Mac client
Because you failed to read the sentence correctly.
What gives Microsoft the right to change the way the Windows platform handles media content?
That it's their software that they've created? That they're allowed to do with it as they see fit, because it's theirs and they own it? How dare they change their new OS so that it differs from the old one, you know?