Slashdot Mirror


User: mejogid

mejogid's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
51
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 51

  1. Re:Doesn't matter on Ubuntu Moves To Yahoo For Default Firefox Search · · Score: 4, Informative

    All they're doing is changing the system defaults - your user profile will remain exactly. It gives them the potential for a positive cash flow and the only cost is that people who need their Google will have to add 2 seconds to their system set-up process. I'm tempted to go Yahoo anyway due to their better privacy policies, and if doing so helps Canonical then that's pretty tempting. It's good to see a couple of underdogs team up like this, even if Yahoo is semi-backed by MS.

  2. Re:Patent pending? on Misa Digital Guitar Runs On Linux · · Score: 2, Informative

    What looks unique to me is the use of the touchscreen not to interact with virtual strings but to control midi parameters - the neck is used to finger chords, and all notes fingered are played no matter where on the touchscreen you tap. The touchscreen is used to modify pitch and distortion with multiple fingers at the same time for multiple chords.

    In comparison, your example involved fingering chords and 'virtually' strumming them - much closer to a typical electric guitar. If it's an effective instrument this does seem innovative enough to be patent-worthy IMO.

  3. Re:ATT vs Verizon in NYC (ATT rocks for data) on Rumor — AT&T Losing iPhone Exclusivity Next Week · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Nexus One is manufactured by HTC, not Google - they have a lot of experience making OEM phones (many of the network-branded phones of the last 15 or so years were designed & built by them).

    As for software, it's give and take - I like Android for the multiple concurrent apps (allows some very clever add-on features, such as automatically switching on your wifi when the cell identifier indicates you're in an area you normally use it), the widgets (especially calendar), the open app store (so emulators and alternate browsers are allowed) and the google integration & syncing. On the other hand, the app ecosystem isn't as good as the iPhone and the UI isn't always as fluid/good looking.

    Depending on your use case, I can see how Android could be far better suited.

  4. Re:Here is an idea on Kodak Sues Apple & RIM Over Preview In Cameras · · Score: 1

    Bit of a false dichotomy - given the current state of corporate America it's more likely they'd savagely poach each others' ideas and blow the spare cash on more advertising or to line the pockets of execs. At least the patent system is inefficient rather than intentionally wasteful...

    Software patents are complete bullshit, but that doesn't mean all patents are worthless. Medicine, for example, would likely have stagnated long ago without patents. Cameras are somewhere in between but this is the kind of case the court systems were designed to test, unlike software patents which are abused by people cashing in on insignificant advancements.

  5. Re:Here is an idea on Kodak Sues Apple & RIM Over Preview In Cameras · · Score: 5, Informative

    In 2008, Nokia had a net income of 5.77 billion dollars, Apple had a net income of 4.83 billion dollars. Their margins are lower then Apple's but they're a far bigger company. Get your facts straight before dismissing others.

  6. Re:Get off my lawn kid! on Kodak Sues Apple & RIM Over Preview In Cameras · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If he's seriously making a business suggestion then it's moronic because:

    • A hostile takeover isn't an opening gambit, it's a last resort when a company's board strongly opposes a takeover.
    • The companies have absolutely no overlap outside of iPhone cameras which is hardly worth buying the entire company for.
    • Kodak is making a loss at the moment, so probably not the kind of profits Apple would enjoy reaping.
    • You don't make acquisition of random companies because they have minor overlaps with one of your product lines.

    But that's irrelevant, because it was clear from the second sentence that he was suggesting that Kodak were out of date ("ancient cameras") and deserved punishment for making this accusation by Apple ("target practice"). None of that seems to justify being labeled Insightful. Apologies for my age, unfortunately ad-hominems aren't considered legitimate arguments nowadays gramps.

  7. Re:Here is an idea on Kodak Sues Apple & RIM Over Preview In Cameras · · Score: 5, Insightful

    God forbid that a company that helped pioneer photography for the last hundred or so years be paid for doing so. These are real patents designed to incentivise R&D and prevent competitors cashing in on another company's research. Judging by the number of companies paying them they're not without merit - why should Apple be exempt?

  8. Re:Finally above ground on Google Attackers Identified as Chinese Government · · Score: 1

    They have. Don't confuse a free market with free people. On a free market, you are free to sell whatever you want, at whatever price you want. You are not necessarily free to say whatever you want.

    That's a very difficult thing to argue - in China I can't sell a newspaper, I can't run an ISP, the government won't want me competing with state run and state managed heavy industry, I won't be able to export or import at free market prices due to exchange rate fixing, I won't be able to change from being a "rural" to "urban" worker without government permission, if I run a search engine I will be required to sensor it(see: Google) etc etc.

    It's very difficult to have a free market and for the government to retain the degree of overall control that China's government demands. Perhaps not impossible, but no existing or historical society has managed it.

  9. Finally above ground on Google Attackers Identified as Chinese Government · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's hardly a secret that governments conduct cyber-espionage - what seems shocking in this instance is that they have been caught and that a major company, a telecoms giant and the US government have all gone on the offensive. This seems like a pretty dramatic shift, and you have to wonder what China's really done to provoke such a reaction after everyone's spent the last decade quietly appeasing them to try and get a foothold in their markets. It sounds like reading the subject lines of a few Chinese activists' emails is only the tip of the ice berg in this case, it'll be interesting to see what else has yet to be revealed.

  10. Re:Memeory Leaks on Mozilla Rolls Out Firefox 3.6 RC, Nears Final · · Score: 1

    Granted, but that's because relatively few linux developers are making an effort with Gecko/Firefox. In particular, Gnome has undergone a 2 year transition to Webkit that so far is showing very limited performance improvements and has meant that many projects have seen no real user visible changes (especially epiphany, which has not been changed noticeably since it reached parity with Firefox 2 a couple of years ago). It's quite sad that a FOSS icon has been largely rejected by the linux community and that it now performs worse there than on closed platforms.

    Regardless, I use epiphany on Gnome because it feels much more native and slicker than firefox or chrome, even if it's still wanting for features.

  11. Re:Memeory Leaks on Mozilla Rolls Out Firefox 3.6 RC, Nears Final · · Score: 5, Informative

    Firefox at this point is really quite reasonable with its memory use - I can't get my head around the continual complaints. The only area where it's appreciably worse performing than Chrome is in UI responsiveness and this has significantly improved in 3.5. It also has far faster back/forward navigation through the cache and (although I don't have figures for this) it feels faster at displaying pages without extremely heavy javascript. There's also less flicker - most pages load in one paint rather than loading in sections. Besides that, web browsers have a lot of useful RAM caching they can do (your history, uncompressed images etc) - it hardly makes sense to keep browser usage below 174MB when even netbooks come with 1-2GB and that RAM can be used effectively to speed up the browser. Frankly, if you're too stingy to splash out on a stick of RAM use xterm with lynx or another browser from the era when that amount of RAM was normal.

  12. Re:At the risk of being flamed to hell on Fedora 12 Package Installation Policy Tightened · · Score: 1

    Users have always had the ability to run apps in their home directory that *run with user privileges*. As this stands, there's nothing to stop a script installing a daemon that runs as root with a known exploit and running that exploit. If the application is within the user's home directory, there's no chance of it having privileges beyond that of the user in a properly configured system.

  13. Re:Great work! on Fedora 12 Released · · Score: 1

    I've switched from Fedora to Ubuntu recently just because of various small things that add up. Synaptic has a much nicer feel to it than package-kit for me at this point, and PPAs are a brilliant system for keeping apps up to date over a single release cycle or testing out new applications - I'd love to see a Fedora equivalent if there is one. I also find following developer releases more pleasant with Ubuntu, having used Karmic a couple of months before release.

    Fedora does somehow give me a nicer feeling than Ubuntu, perhaps since Core 3 was my first full time Linux distro, so I'd welcome any arguments to get me to switch back! I do appreciate the tech orientated development and user communities, and its out of the box experience is far more professional than many other distros in most areas.

  14. Re:Backwards? on Murderer With "Aggression Genes" Gets Reduced Sentence · · Score: 1

    If prison exists as an example to others, then this ruling doesn't even make any sense, as a person cannot change their gene structure.

    I think this is an understatement - it's a dangerous ruling since if prisons exists as an example to others then those most genetically predisposed to killing will have less of a deterrent and be even more likely to kill if gene tests become as common as many predict.

  15. Re:Well, there are a couple solutions to this on Mac OS X 10.6.2 Will Block Atom Processors · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You seem to have quite an optimistic view on the benefits of software licensing. While I do think the consumer would benefit from a more open OS X licensing model, I'm not sure Apple would benefit:

    1) If Apple enters an all software market, they lose a major selling point of their hardware and enter an area with more competition and a lower barrier to entry (see: Linux). OEM licensing could potentially be more profitable, but I'm unconvinced that the market for OS X is much bigger than the market for Macs - users, particularly businesses, are often held back by software requirements rather than by the price premium.

    2) Apple likes dictating what hardware you purchase - cheaper, more standard tower blocks don't fit with its image as being refined and premium, and the netbook market has far lower margins than they currently reap on MacBooks. One MacBook purchaser could well bring more profit than 5-mac-netbook purchasers. Apple doesn't want to enter a race to the bottom - they make plenty of money through brands that are seen as higher quality.

    3) Why? It gives them higher margins and it's unclear whether the market share increase would offset that.

    Most importantly, in my opinion:

    4) Apple is so profitable because they have created their own "premium computer" market that is far larger than anything held by Alienware or Dell's Adamo. They do this by creating products that appear relatively unique and are functionally different from competitors' equivalents thanks to unique software, design and minor features (such as battery life on their laptops). Without OS X, a Macbook is just another expensive laptop. There is also some level of positive feedback - unique hardware makes the software appear higher quality, which makes the hardware seem more unique etc - and some of the major selling points depend on hardware-software integration.

    I'm not saying it isn't possible that Apple would benefit from opening up their software, but it's far from being certain.

  16. Re:Who wants to update?? on Mac OS X 10.6.2 Will Block Atom Processors · · Score: 1

    And I quote from the link you posted: "Upgrade your Mac with the latest versions of your Apple software — all in one box" Apple sells computers with disks licensed only for that computer, which won't work even on other Macs of different configurations. The only OS X copies you can purchase on their own are upgrades.

  17. Re:Now give me the dual core... on Intel Core i7 For Laptops — First Benchmarks · · Score: 1

    The Core 2 Duos that will provide perfectly adequate battery life are fine for gaming - no games can really take advantage of four cars, and few are particularly CPU bound in the first place. The issue there is GPU power, and there's simply no way to come close to a desktop, regardless of budget, in that department. In that sense, you have to accept sacrifices and go for a decent mobile chip, and there's no point throwing four i7 cars at something like that. Even then you could buy a good laptop (with moderate gaming capabilities) and a gaming rig for a similar price, and cover all your bases.

  18. Now give me the dual core... on Intel Core i7 For Laptops — First Benchmarks · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article doesn't seem to suggest that this will really be enough to bring quad core laptops out of their current niche - we're talking an expensive machine which will clock in a bit over 3 hours battery life if you don't use its power, and potentially under an hour if you do. This would presumably be even worse with the higher clocked chip mentioned. I just don't feel there's much demand for such portable workstations - I can't see a good case for doing anything that processor intensive on the go. What does look very interesting is the 32nm dual core version - if they can carry over a comparable power consumption improvement to what they've achieved at the quad-core level that could be a very fast, very power efficient machine.

  19. Re:Great idea! on Google To Offer Micropayments To News Sites · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't believe it's reasonable to expect all papers to be funded by advertisers. Things like investigative journalism, sending journalists to press conferences, researched opinion pieces and the like *are* expensive, and somebody needs to fund them. Free (gratis not libre) press only exists because of the paid press and the likes of the AP/Reuters who do the initial research. People definitely pay for a higher quality of news coverage online - look at Bloomberg. Granted that's a niche, but I personally would be willing to pay a reasonable amount (less than the cost of a daily newspaper) for better, more up to date news coverage with more insightful editorials.

  20. Re:Duh on Watermelon Juice Makes Great Biofuel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ploughing waste back into the land or leaving it to decompose is hardly wasting anything - it's a natural fertiliser and reduces the need for less sustainable artificial fertilizers. Creating artificial nitrate fertilizers often involves using huge amounts of fossil fuels to extract nitrogen from the atmosphere, and many other minerals are mined unsustainably and in a highly environmentally destructive manner.

  21. Re:How.... on Microsoft Discloses Windows 7 Pricing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Snow Leopards adds no significant (home-)user visible changes - most of the changes are architectural and under the hood, aimed at developers. You won't get developers using features that most users don't have, so you can't sell a platform based on developer potential alone.

    Apple has recognised this and priced Snow Leopard to tempt developers, so that they can use the same base in future OSes (Open CL, 64-bit, full Cocoa etc). On the other hand, Vista is that new base and MS doesn't really care if you develop for Vista or 7, although you could argue they should've priced Vista more competitively.

    Oh, and you seem to be neglecting the fact that Snow Leopard is only that cheap for Leopard users - Tiger users need to shell out $169 for iWork, iLife and Snow Leopard. And let's not forget that Apple uses software to sell hardware - users will upgrade to Snow Leopard then realise they need a 64-bit processor (so no first-gen Intels) and a recent graphics processor (last couple of years) to take advantage of the most of the improvements. PowerPC users will also need to buy a whole new PC to use the new OS.

    MS' pricing may not be as low as we may have hoped, but let's not paint Apple as the angel it clearly isn't.

  22. Re:ARM hostile to Linux? on Nvidia Lauds Windows CE Over Android For Smartbooks · · Score: 2, Insightful

    now that Linux is crucial for their survival.

    While I'd agree that linux has started to make an impact on mobile devices, thanks primarily to its non /GNU implementation in Android, it's clearly not the only thing keeping ARM alive (apologies for the wikipedia link, the sources seem to check out). While their profit/unit may be low, they've got £50 million net income, 1,500 employees and and have shipped 10 billion devices including 98% of phones. Linux may be a growing market, but suggesting it's keeping them afloat is ludicrous.

  23. Re:What is decent? on Firefox 3.5 Hits Release Candidate Milestone · · Score: 1

    This is a strawman - nowhere did I claim that firefox would perform at the desired speed on any piece of hardware, and I'm sure there are some netbooks on which its performance leaves something to be desired. However, that remains only a minute proportion of total computer ownership. If it's specifically the implication that netbooks are indecent that offends you, then replace "decent PC" with "the majority of personal computers or notebook purchased within the last 3 years at a cost of $500 or greater".

  24. Re:Still the slowest browser. on Firefox 3.5 Hits Release Candidate Milestone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm sorry, but without any benchmark or other reasonable test there's no way of ranking the browsers in terms of general speed. I personally find firefox 3.5 faster than IE8 - I don't know if that's because I'm using XP, because that's the result I want to see or any other reason; the point is it's a subjective evaluation. Furthermore, adblock with a reasonable filter list and flasblock improve page load times and responsiveness substantially. The private browsing issue is reasonable, although I've not personally been troubled by it having no real need to combine "private" and less private browsing. I also feel the clear recent history function mitigates that to some extent.

  25. Re:Still the slowest browser. on Firefox 3.5 Hits Release Candidate Milestone · · Score: 5, Informative

    CNet show firefox being substantially faster as of March in terms of browser performance. Admittedly firefox is a dog to start up, but that's one of the major goals for 3.6 last I checked. Having used the betas for a while, it's been a long time since I've felt I'm waiting on my browser as I did in versions 3 and particularly 2. I don't think anyone with a decent PC is going to be frustrated by the performance on 3.5, and with additional improvements already underway in trunk I don't think firefox is in any way falling behind. Oh, and how is private browsing broken in 3.5?