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User: mcrbids

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  1. Re:Surpassing Vista on Windows 8 Passes Vista, Hits 5.1% Market Share · · Score: 1

    I know of nobody who likes or prefers Windows 8. I know of a few people who "don't mind it". The fact that this is what customers are saying about their flagship product should have them a bit concerned...

  2. Already happening on Android On the Desktop · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I still use my laptop for "srs bizness" but recently, when I did some server upgrades where I would normally log in via the laptop intermittently to perform admin functions, I found myself using my folding bluetooth keyboard and my Android phone instead.

    It was surprisingly productive and, being much smaller, was actually far more convenient than pulling out what felt like "big iron" to do a simple shell task.

    My Android 4.1 phone (Moto Razr Maxx HD and I love it!) is already my go-to device for casual browsing.

  3. Re:Good ... on Supreme Court Overturns Defense of Marriage Act · · Score: 1

    So, the phrase "constitutional rights" is a misnomer?

    Funny, that...

  4. Old meets new on California Sends a Cease and Desist Order To the Bitcoin Foundation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So, the purveyor of mathematical computations that can be traded and/or sold via a network of cryptography meets a foundation that sells the idea of value via paper receipts.

    This could get rather interesting...

  5. Re:Android 4.2 broke the Wii Remote driver on Android Fragmentation Isn't Hurting Its Adoption · · Score: 2

    Even so, this represents an edge case, and not the majority of app development by far. Most apps don't do anything special with phone features.

    Look at it like this... if you compare IOS 6 to Android 4.x, you get:

    IOS: you get 90% of 25% of the market on a single relesae.

    Android: you get 75% of 75% of the market.

    You end up with more than twice the target audience with Android 56.25% vs 22.5%. Now, IOS people tend to buy more apps because IOS users are "premium" users and many Android devices are "freebie" phones that come with a cell plan. But even so, those numbers should be scaring the piss out of Apple.

  6. Re:I cut my teeth on that CPU on PDP-11 Still Working In Nuclear Plants - For 37 More Years · · Score: 1

    For me, it was the VAX 11/750. That computer was gods-level engineering compared to the cheap sh17 we use today.

    ECC RAM? Oh please! The VAX would identify bad RAM spots on the fly and remap them as needed, reloading the contents of the RAM from disk as needed and the end user never had to know. There was a utility you could run to identify which RAM card (roughly the size of a dinner plate) to remove, that you could swap out without turning it off!

    Similar with hard disks: you could mark a drive to be disabled, and it would move all the files around without shutting down the system (if there was enough space) so you could upgrade the drives.

    Kicker: you could hot swap CPUs if you had a multi core system. (The one I used had only a single CPU, about the processing power of an 80286)

    Sometimes, I weep a little inside when I see what 1U "enterprise class" hardware today looks like compared to real, manly man stuff like the VAXes.

  7. Re:you've got to be kidding me on SanDisk Focusing More On Desktop and Mobile SATA SSDs, Extreme II Series Tested · · Score: 1

    It's like people are afraid of using a tool (SQL) to do what it does best: join relevant slices of data from a large set of data! (generally called a "database")

    When did it become preferred to use SQL more like a NoSQL like file store? No wonder some people are claiming that NoSQL is "better"!

    We use ORM for editing data, EG: CRUD. But for the types of complex reports that our customers ask for, there's no higher god than a good, well-written SQL query. Even though some queries take a while (5 seconds isn't unheard of) doing it any other way has (over and over) proven to be far slower and more error prone.

  8. Re:you've got to be kidding me on SanDisk Focusing More On Desktop and Mobile SATA SSDs, Extreme II Series Tested · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As somebody closely following the development of SSD technology (that we use for our database servers) I would have to respectfully disagree.

    You see, our results testing SSDs against PostgreSQL 9.1 showed that SSDs improved performance by at least 90%. In other words, queries, particularly the large, nasty, 10-table joins with combined inner, outter, and meta-table joins that our vertical application is rife with, take 10% or less time to run. That result isn't just dramatic, it's a game-changer. But the truth is that even that isn't enough. Being able to saturate a 6 Gbps SATA III link in a random access read-load is fine and dandy, but write performance is also a very big deal, especially since our system is highly transactional and transaction wait states are painful.

    In short, unlike CPUs, SSD technology is still immature enough that every bit of good news counts quite a bit.

  9. Re: I don't get it... on Microsoft Office Finally Gets iOS App · · Score: 1

    Came here to say this. I have a folding iGo stowaway bluetooth keyboard for my phone, and I was honestly surprised and just how useful that thing is! I still have a laptop for my primary "work station" but when I'm on the go, it's surprising how much my bluetooth keyboard and Android 4.1 phone gets used instead.

  10. Re:so much for environmentally friendly on Volvo's Electric Roads Concept Points To Battery-Free EV Future · · Score: 1

    I think volvo, and most people, forget that the benefit of fuels (solid, liquid, or gaseous) is that they are very cheap to transport. Electricity, on the other hand, is insanely expensive to transport. Think about a 10% loss for every major hop. The middle of the road in a large city is likely 4 major hops from the power plant. That takes 100 down to 65. That's up to a 35% total loss.

    These numbers clearly came from a questionable source. (perhaps your backside?) The PDF available here indicates a transmission and distribution loss of between 6% and 8% for the United States power grid.

  11. Re:Feeding the Beast on EA Takes Over Scrabble App, Wipes Player Histories and Switches Dictionary · · Score: 2

    The logic here is simply borken.

    They are buying all these other companies and turning their products into crap and nobody buys them anymore because it's crap all the way down, as far as the eye can see...

    So, where did they get the money in the first place to buy all these other companies?

    Love it or hate it making quality stuff is *expensive*. Making a mid range game that a lot of people buy can be far more profitable than making a stellar game that a lot of people buy. First off, the risk is lower making a mid line game because the up front investment is far less.

    If it didn't work then EA wouldn't dominate the games industry like it does. (sadly)

  12. Re:Working Bluetooth would help a bit. on Another Study Confirms Hands-Free Texting While Driving Is Unsafe · · Score: 1

    I've gone through numerous BT headsets in the last couple years trying to find a headset that

    A) Would allow me to talk while riding a bicycle;

    B) Wouldn't cut out randomly;

    C) Wasn't more hassle than simply holding my phone to my ear;

    D) Could play music when not in a conversation.

    Sadly, every one I've tried sucks. Your Jawbone was actually one of the worst for audio noise while riding a bicycle, not doing much better than a sharty freebie headset.

    I've pretty much given up on BT/wireless headsets. Every one I've tried is pretty terrible.

  13. Re:you don't think people would check normally? on Another Study Confirms Hands-Free Texting While Driving Is Unsafe · · Score: 1

    The problem isn't so much with voice control, it's with the language.

    You can't even talk to your spouse in the car without having him or her clarify what you are saying every few sentences. It's so ingrained into conversation that we don't notice it much. Asking a machine (with no ability to "comprehend" anything we say) to do any better is just silly, at least for the near to mid-range term.

    Wife says "Romanesque" and slurs it slightly by mistake, and I hear "row man axe". Typically, I'll wait a sentence or so to see if I can figure out what she meant. I may just drop it if it doesn't seem important, or interrupt her if I still can't figure out what she means.

    It's typical. It happens all the time. Rarely are 100% of our words understood by those who listen in the best of circumstances. Asking a machine to do better with a crappy sound quality and lots of background noise is just folly.

    Even Google Glass largely works by using a restricted command vocabulary, something like the phonetic equivalent of the Palm Graffiti from yore. Even today, handwriting analysis isn't nearly as fast as Graffiti; I miss it to this day even though I love my Android phone.

  14. Re:It'll do a lot for pre-installed Linux too... on XP's End Will Do More For PC Sales Than Win 8, Says HP Exec · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a programmer I rarely have to deal with the types of document scenarios you paint.

    However, my wife (who is NOT a technocrat) is an honors grad student at a California State University and has been using OpenOffice for the entirety of her educational journey. She has had to give many presentations and turn in a ridiculous amount of homework papers and in all that time, has never, not once, ran into a compatibility problem.

    She gives her OO Impress presentations on a shared computer running some flavor of MS Office/Power Point and has no chance to "preview" to make sure it "looked right" and has still never been disappointed. No, not even one time. I offered numerous times to buy MS Office and she declined, saying that "it works fine" and didn't want to "change anything", especially if it cost $$.

    I'd happily grant that she's not getting a degree in the Graphic Arts (actually, Psych) but to say that OO gives "completely alien" results is simply absurd.

  15. Re:Parent has got it. on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    1) Microsoft isn't well known for being a Unix vendor, you know? They sold it, and even made some money at it but nothing like DOS/Windows.

    2) IBM thought the PC was "ill fated". Note that I did forget a "t" at the end of "IBM though"...

  16. It was predicted 20 years ago on Watching the Police: Will Two-Way Surveillance Reduce Crime? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Strangely, the scenarios presented were placed 20 years in the future. Posted in 1993, then-revolutionary Wired Magazine got it exactly, dead on. It's almost strange how they were so dead-on as far as the time scale.

    Notice all the dash cam footage coming out of the Soviet Union...

  17. Re:Parent has got it. on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Think about it this way, Microsoft got started in the OS business by being an app provider whose apps a lot of people liked. They then leveraged that and the money to build an OS and then used the app business to build on their OS value. It was only later that the OS and the apps flipped in value, with the OS dominating everybody.

    What the.... ?!@#$ parallel universe history are you talking about!??? Microsoft started as a language vendor (not typically considered an "app") selling BASIC, then got into the O/S business by buying QDOS and selling it at a ridiculous markup to IBM, who just wanted something quick for their (they though) ill-fated "personal computer".

    They later used the profits from their DOS O/S to build "app"lications like Word to outcompete Word Perfect and Excel to outcompete Lotus 1-2-3. In the future, please take the time to have some clue what you are talking about before posting...

  18. Re:Gnome3 on Fedora 19 Beta Released: Alive, Dead, or Neither? · · Score: 1

    Network Manager is a victim of the 80/20 rule. 80% of the time, it works fantastic. 20% of the time it's better to disable it and edit the config files yourself.

    And you know what? That's good enough for me. I use NM nearly always on my laptop because usually I just want to get connected the usual way. When I'm interested in "server level" connections I disable NM and roll my own configs manually.

  19. Re: sounds like someone is following this thread on Google Acquires Kite-Power Generator · · Score: 1

    Damn. Time to change my password...

  20. Re:Xbox One server centers on Sears Is Turning Shuttered Stores Into Data Centers · · Score: 1

    No, that's just a result of their Windows 8 adoption strategy.

  21. Re:why is this news? on Intel's Linux OpenGL Driver Faster Than Apple's OS X Driver · · Score: -1

    Unless you can download a better performing driver for OS X, this is an argument for using Linux.

    Bwah ah ah hha ha ha ha! God, you're killing me! Because people who are buying computers and/or setting them up will actually care about video benchmarks whether or not Linux is faster on the 1-2 year old Mac Mini than OSX?!

    This is news in that Linux drivers have traditionally been the second-rate bastard child of driver land, and bringing the drivers up to something more current is a clear step in the right direction. But it's nearly negligible in terms of "making an argument" for Linux.

    For those that should be using Linux, the case is already made: stable, secure, *nix environment, etc. I'm guessing that all 5 Linux gamers will rejoice this news, however...

  22. Re:rather have money on Do Developers Need Free Perks To Thrive? · · Score: 1

    Paid Claims $21,523
    Claim Expenses $5,240
    Service & Admin Fees $8,026

    Now, that's just sad. it cost them about $0.62 to dispense each $1 in claims.

    Anybody who tells you that private insurance is "more efficient" is just looney. Medicare overhead ranges from 1% to 6% depending on what you call "overhead".

  23. Re:Google+ has 390Million Actice users on Google Drops XMPP Support · · Score: 2

    Your expletive-laden post makes clear your generally a-social tendencies. You have a small circle of close friends and F--- everybody else.

    Fine. But don't think you are the majority.

  24. Re:I can't wait to see this battle on Google Demands Microsoft Pull YouTube App For WP8 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, this is just part of their "don't be evil" campaign, where they are fostering competition in the market place.

  25. Re: The most pointless phone ever is a flop on Facebook Home Flagship Phone, HTC First, May Be Discontinued · · Score: 1

    But virtually every single competitor phone out there that anybody would care about *can* do Facebook. Thus, if you care about Facebook, you already have it in your hand.

    It doesn't matter if the competitor's products are used that way, it's whether or not they are capable of it. And pretty much any smart phone is 100% FB capable, so no reason at all to buy a "FB Phone". And ask yourself which is worth more: The option of having FB installed on your phone, or the requirement of having it installed?