If you have a draft decent enough that it could be picked up by a traditional publisher, you have a draft decent enough to get an editor for a share of the profits. No need for cash up front. I think this will become a common model. And the end result will be a well edited book, unlike stuff that goes through the big publishing houses which certainly is not - if it is midlist they don't want to spend the money for more than basic copy editing (and its obvious they often don't even bother with paying a starving student to do even that!).
Anonymity also inspires people to act in ethical ways. Remember this the next time you are following a revolution on Twitter, where your anonymity means your life. Or will you be too busy engaging in heated kernel architecture debates and looking at lolcats?
I think you are misreading. They tell you to sign up with the name you are usually known as. They also support a separate profile for each and every gmail email address you have, and allow you to link and trivially switch between them without a login/logout dance. Pseudonym support was built in from day one, even if you can't use it for impersonating Justin Bieber.
It would be nice if this was all spelled out explicitly - searching for pseudonym or alias in the G+ help gives no results.
Good luck applying your moral argument to other countries legal systems. If you charge more than another country finds reasonable, they take that as oppression and exploitation. This is why generic drugs exist. This is why a blind eye is turned to piracy. By charging too much, you have opted out of the trade relationship and nobody really cares what you think or how much you whine, only about what threats you are able to follow through on.
Indeed. When you control the trade marks, you can stop people calling things 'Android' in the same way you can stop people calling a Windows based device 'Android'. If crappy code or hardware is giving your brand a bad reputation, you need to be more proactive about protecting it.
Same result if she was real, although the online angle is relatively new. People who have had bad relationships (or no relationships) commonly cling to the first person they find who they think wants to be with them, and are commonly fleeced, often legally. I'm pretty sure when you hear the term 'golddigger' you don't think of some dude down a mine shaft. People have been marrying Vegas strippers and Thai bargirls and Russian mail order brides for decades and will continue to do so. People have been marrying elderly widows for centuries.
It all comes down to trust being an essential component to a serious relationship. Once a con has gained that trust, the victim has lost.
And then they get pissed off because someone tells them about the model they *should have* bought. Buyers Remorse as mentioned in the quote. People want the best phone for their money. Is the 5320 better than the 6100? Or the 8600? Or the 3120 Classic? Which are the 'new' models replacing which 'old' models? Do you know if you need s40 or s60? Your trading features for a price point - WiFi or GPS, what sort of input device, slider, candybar, clamshell - Oh My! It is so complex it is rare to get it right. Online reviews are useless in many markets, as models get tweaked for different regions. And in the rare cases you get it right, a new model will be out in a month that would have been better. It is *far* from a straightforward choice, and when I think of Buyers Remorse I think of Nokia.
Actually, yes. Many people here in Thailand *are not* aware. Nazi swastika T-Shirts and helmets are sold on the streets by people who have no concept of the history of that variant.
WWII around here had little to do with the Nazi's, around here they were busy with the Japanese. Education is terrible so people generally have a poor grasp of local history, let alone what was happening in Europe while their country was occupied by the Japanese and hundreds of thousands died by being worked to death. And why go all the way to Europe for the horror show when Cambodia next door played host to the Khmer Rouge.
As opposed to the existing mess the 'Net is already in?
Even if done poorly, it would be a massive improvement and everyone would benefit including the people cut off with no help from their ISP to rectify the situation.
I don't think the industry complaining is interesting. A lot of the industry will resist the change as their careers are on the line, like the stars who disappeared because sound came along and their voices where not up to par, or the stars who will disappear because their skin doesn't stand up to HD.
What I find interesting is the consumers who are complaining. People like me who are finding the movies are more enjoyable in 2D. I find 3D movies uncomfortable and destroy immersion in pretty much the same way as uncomfortable seats or irritating people sitting nearby do.
I'll fondly recall Comming At Ya and Treasure of the Four Crowns from 25 years ago in glorious full colour 3d, but I'm certainly glad the technology never went mainstream like predicted. We have been here before, same arguments, same excuses, nearly identical technology. Industry sees it as a way of making a buck but the artists and consumers reject it. Come back to me when we can project holograms or something my brain will actually believe is 3d.
You missed the period 25-30 years ago when we had 3d with polarized glasses, which died as it was just a gimmick. This tech needs a big company wanting to make lots of money pushing it - it needs the hard sell because customers won't actually want it beyond the initial gimmick.
Hardware compatibility list for Windows is pointless. Unless you bought it in an Apple store, it works with Windows. Or I should say, it will work at least equally as well with Windows than with any other OS.
To further qualify, *Bangkok* has the hospitals. Even an hours drive away the hospitals are bad. But there are a lots of hospitals in Bangkok that are world class, and here most westerners can afford better care than they can at home. Outside of Bangkok and in the neighboring countries expats agree the best treatment for anything more serious than a broken leg is a trip to Bangkok.
Little known fact - if you have an expensive medical or dental procedure, discuss with your insurance company a trip to Bangkok or other medical tourism destination. Better treatment than they will pay for back home, you get a free holiday out of the deal, and the insurance company wins too because it saves them money.
Unfortunately in Australia the consequences for lying seems to be reelection, as demonstrated by the repeated election of the Howard government. Caught out a number of times, but quickly forgotten as the propaganda machines kicked in. People believed they were best for the job despite knowing they were liars.
The King cannot change the laws - he does not have that power under the constitution. Instead he is limited to pardoning individual charged with Lese Majesty, which I think he has in all cases in recent years. He seems to have made what statements he can about these laws. He can't do anything about the web site blocks.
Politicians are the only ones who can change or abolish these laws. Except they can't, as their opponents would paint them as anti-monarchy and they would be out on their ear in no time via the ballet box, protests or coup. The vast majority of Thais really do love their King to this extent and willingly give up their freedoms for this. You can be patronizing and say they are stupid or short sighted or victims of an amazing propaganda machine for the last 60 years, but they still feel this way.
So nothing is going to change until the 80 year old King dies, at which point it is anyones guess what happens. The Thais are a superstitious lot and there are a number of groups who put credence in an old prophecy that the current King will be the last in his dynasty. Surprisingly enough, a lot of them are royalists with a number of people on the 'red' side wanting the prince to end up on the throne due to his past ties with Thaksin. After the succession, the Lese Majesty laws will no longer be such a hot potato because any successor (if there is one at all) will not have anywhere near the same public adulation.
Slony-I and Londiste won't be dying any time soon. The built in replication will work for simple installations. 3rd party replication gives you a lot more rope to play with for complex replication environments or masochists.
The article is not 'just clarifying that customs officers have the right to search your laptop'. It is also pointing out that now you need to declare if you have pornography when entering the country, and if you say yes, will need to go through the 'something to declare' lanes and answer questions about your pornography.
Do I want customs officials to be asking me leading and ambiguous questions like 'Where did you obtain your pornography?', 'Are you sure your pornography contains no images of people under 18 years old?', 'Is any of your pornography of a violent nature, simulated or real?', 'Does your pornography depict sexual acts with animals, living or dead?', 'Does your pornography contain images of people who look under 16 years of age?'. And I certainly don't want people poking through my porn collection. Sure, now I'm aware of this I can avoid it but a) that just points out how silly it is and b) I shouldn't have to go to the bother and c) don't like where these laws are leading.
And if you say no, and your laptop is searched anyway, there is now grounds to keep you out of the country.
As an Australian citizen, I certainly don't want to be interrogated like this. As an Australian citizen, I don't want guests visiting my country to be interrogated like this.
Are any browser developers looking at this seriously? Looking at panopticlick's output, I could happily do without any of that crap being sent to a site except my preferred language. The rest could just be standard boilerplate, with everything else being dealt with client side. I occasionally might get a video that can't be decoded or a font that is mapped weirdly, but that happens today anyway.
Fred Reed was discussing this the other day on http://www.fredoneverything.net/DeadCarriers.shtml - he lists four cheap methods to take out modern carriers and argues that the US navy is pretty much obsolete in the modern world.
Thankfully they appear to just be trying to shut down the propaganda machines that are driving this. Nobody is censoring the foreign press, except the red camp who booted them out of protest sites for 'biased reporting'.
The issues that stop people knowing the full picture here are the defamation and lese majesty laws, which are used as political weapons. Reporters still have to be circumspect to avoid retribution, or make sure they are out of the country before they go to press.
I suspect all those titles would be what the panel termed 'niche-y'. Casual gaming is where the big money is, and big companies are chasing that market with big dollar signs in their eyes.
What wasn't mentioned is if the PC gaming market is getting smaller with consoles and iPhones and handhelds stealing sales, or if the newer devices are opening new markets. Sure big publishers are going to be chasing the new multi billion dollar markets, but they are not stupid enough to leave behind their existing multi billion dollar markets.
And letting people select if they want filtered or unfiltered content when they subscribe to a service wouldn't provide the same warm fuzzies? You could even mandate public and workplace systems get filtered if you want.
The current plan should die because my freedoms are being removed by other peoples morals and potentially other peoples political opinions. I currently live in a country with censored Internet and know just how pointless and annoying this filtering is. There is just too much outcry when you block major sites, so YouTube didn't stay offline for very long, and you can't do it for long and banning small sites is whack-a-mole with a million moles and a single mallet. It will be pathetic if when I finally return home to Australia it has censorship on par with the third world with all the underlying hypocrisy. What is Conroy's electorate again and is it a safe seat? I might see if I can change my registered voter's address.
Please, won't somebody think of the adults for a change? The kids aren't even old enough to vote!
So your saying people should continue to develop MySQL because it already does everything it needs to?
If you want a better MySQL you can get it today. MySQL development has nowhere to move as there are better options in every direction. It can sit right where it is though running millions of Wordpress sites quite happily for quite some time due to inertia and apathy. I wouldn't be banking on any commercial customers though.
If you have a draft decent enough that it could be picked up by a traditional publisher, you have a draft decent enough to get an editor for a share of the profits. No need for cash up front. I think this will become a common model. And the end result will be a well edited book, unlike stuff that goes through the big publishing houses which certainly is not - if it is midlist they don't want to spend the money for more than basic copy editing (and its obvious they often don't even bother with paying a starving student to do even that!).
Anonymity also inspires people to act in ethical ways. Remember this the next time you are following a revolution on Twitter, where your anonymity means your life. Or will you be too busy engaging in heated kernel architecture debates and looking at lolcats?
I think you are misreading. They tell you to sign up with the name you are usually known as. They also support a separate profile for each and every gmail email address you have, and allow you to link and trivially switch between them without a login/logout dance. Pseudonym support was built in from day one, even if you can't use it for impersonating Justin Bieber.
It would be nice if this was all spelled out explicitly - searching for pseudonym or alias in the G+ help gives no results.
Good luck applying your moral argument to other countries legal systems. If you charge more than another country finds reasonable, they take that as oppression and exploitation. This is why generic drugs exist. This is why a blind eye is turned to piracy. By charging too much, you have opted out of the trade relationship and nobody really cares what you think or how much you whine, only about what threats you are able to follow through on.
Indeed. When you control the trade marks, you can stop people calling things 'Android' in the same way you can stop people calling a Windows based device 'Android'. If crappy code or hardware is giving your brand a bad reputation, you need to be more proactive about protecting it.
Same result if she was real, although the online angle is relatively new. People who have had bad relationships (or no relationships) commonly cling to the first person they find who they think wants to be with them, and are commonly fleeced, often legally. I'm pretty sure when you hear the term 'golddigger' you don't think of some dude down a mine shaft. People have been marrying Vegas strippers and Thai bargirls and Russian mail order brides for decades and will continue to do so. People have been marrying elderly widows for centuries.
It all comes down to trust being an essential component to a serious relationship. Once a con has gained that trust, the victim has lost.
And then they get pissed off because someone tells them about the model they *should have* bought. Buyers Remorse as mentioned in the quote. People want the best phone for their money. Is the 5320 better than the 6100? Or the 8600? Or the 3120 Classic? Which are the 'new' models replacing which 'old' models? Do you know if you need s40 or s60? Your trading features for a price point - WiFi or GPS, what sort of input device, slider, candybar, clamshell - Oh My! It is so complex it is rare to get it right. Online reviews are useless in many markets, as models get tweaked for different regions. And in the rare cases you get it right, a new model will be out in a month that would have been better. It is *far* from a straightforward choice, and when I think of Buyers Remorse I think of Nokia.
Actually, yes. Many people here in Thailand *are not* aware. Nazi swastika T-Shirts and helmets are sold on the streets by people who have no concept of the history of that variant.
WWII around here had little to do with the Nazi's, around here they were busy with the Japanese. Education is terrible so people generally have a poor grasp of local history, let alone what was happening in Europe while their country was occupied by the Japanese and hundreds of thousands died by being worked to death. And why go all the way to Europe for the horror show when Cambodia next door played host to the Khmer Rouge.
As opposed to the existing mess the 'Net is already in?
Even if done poorly, it would be a massive improvement and everyone would benefit including the people cut off with no help from their ISP to rectify the situation.
I don't think the industry complaining is interesting. A lot of the industry will resist the change as their careers are on the line, like the stars who disappeared because sound came along and their voices where not up to par, or the stars who will disappear because their skin doesn't stand up to HD.
What I find interesting is the consumers who are complaining. People like me who are finding the movies are more enjoyable in 2D. I find 3D movies uncomfortable and destroy immersion in pretty much the same way as uncomfortable seats or irritating people sitting nearby do.
I'll fondly recall Comming At Ya and Treasure of the Four Crowns from 25 years ago in glorious full colour 3d, but I'm certainly glad the technology never went mainstream like predicted. We have been here before, same arguments, same excuses, nearly identical technology. Industry sees it as a way of making a buck but the artists and consumers reject it. Come back to me when we can project holograms or something my brain will actually believe is 3d.
You missed the period 25-30 years ago when we had 3d with polarized glasses, which died as it was just a gimmick. This tech needs a big company wanting to make lots of money pushing it - it needs the hard sell because customers won't actually want it beyond the initial gimmick.
Hardware compatibility list for Windows is pointless. Unless you bought it in an Apple store, it works with Windows. Or I should say, it will work at least equally as well with Windows than with any other OS.
The Mirror's Edge campaign is pretty easy, on the PC. Apparently it is one of the few games where the PC port improved the gameplay experience.
To further qualify, *Bangkok* has the hospitals. Even an hours drive away the hospitals are bad. But there are a lots of hospitals in Bangkok that are world class, and here most westerners can afford better care than they can at home. Outside of Bangkok and in the neighboring countries expats agree the best treatment for anything more serious than a broken leg is a trip to Bangkok.
Little known fact - if you have an expensive medical or dental procedure, discuss with your insurance company a trip to Bangkok or other medical tourism destination. Better treatment than they will pay for back home, you get a free holiday out of the deal, and the insurance company wins too because it saves them money.
Unfortunately in Australia the consequences for lying seems to be reelection, as demonstrated by the repeated election of the Howard government. Caught out a number of times, but quickly forgotten as the propaganda machines kicked in. People believed they were best for the job despite knowing they were liars.
The King cannot change the laws - he does not have that power under the constitution. Instead he is limited to pardoning individual charged with Lese Majesty, which I think he has in all cases in recent years. He seems to have made what statements he can about these laws. He can't do anything about the web site blocks.
Politicians are the only ones who can change or abolish these laws. Except they can't, as their opponents would paint them as anti-monarchy and they would be out on their ear in no time via the ballet box, protests or coup. The vast majority of Thais really do love their King to this extent and willingly give up their freedoms for this. You can be patronizing and say they are stupid or short sighted or victims of an amazing propaganda machine for the last 60 years, but they still feel this way.
So nothing is going to change until the 80 year old King dies, at which point it is anyones guess what happens. The Thais are a superstitious lot and there are a number of groups who put credence in an old prophecy that the current King will be the last in his dynasty. Surprisingly enough, a lot of them are royalists with a number of people on the 'red' side wanting the prince to end up on the throne due to his past ties with Thaksin. After the succession, the Lese Majesty laws will no longer be such a hot potato because any successor (if there is one at all) will not have anywhere near the same public adulation.
Slony-I and Londiste won't be dying any time soon. The built in replication will work for simple installations. 3rd party replication gives you a lot more rope to play with for complex replication environments or masochists.
The article is not 'just clarifying that customs officers have the right to search your laptop'. It is also pointing out that now you need to declare if you have pornography when entering the country, and if you say yes, will need to go through the 'something to declare' lanes and answer questions about your pornography.
Do I want customs officials to be asking me leading and ambiguous questions like 'Where did you obtain your pornography?', 'Are you sure your pornography contains no images of people under 18 years old?', 'Is any of your pornography of a violent nature, simulated or real?', 'Does your pornography depict sexual acts with animals, living or dead?', 'Does your pornography contain images of people who look under 16 years of age?'. And I certainly don't want people poking through my porn collection. Sure, now I'm aware of this I can avoid it but a) that just points out how silly it is and b) I shouldn't have to go to the bother and c) don't like where these laws are leading.
And if you say no, and your laptop is searched anyway, there is now grounds to keep you out of the country.
As an Australian citizen, I certainly don't want to be interrogated like this. As an Australian citizen, I don't want guests visiting my country to be interrogated like this.
Are any browser developers looking at this seriously? Looking at panopticlick's output, I could happily do without any of that crap being sent to a site except my preferred language. The rest could just be standard boilerplate, with everything else being dealt with client side. I occasionally might get a video that can't be decoded or a font that is mapped weirdly, but that happens today anyway.
Fred Reed was discussing this the other day on http://www.fredoneverything.net/DeadCarriers.shtml - he lists four cheap methods to take out modern carriers and argues that the US navy is pretty much obsolete in the modern world.
Thankfully they appear to just be trying to shut down the propaganda machines that are driving this. Nobody is censoring the foreign press, except the red camp who booted them out of protest sites for 'biased reporting'.
The issues that stop people knowing the full picture here are the defamation and lese majesty laws, which are used as political weapons. Reporters still have to be circumspect to avoid retribution, or make sure they are out of the country before they go to press.
I suspect all those titles would be what the panel termed 'niche-y'. Casual gaming is where the big money is, and big companies are chasing that market with big dollar signs in their eyes.
What wasn't mentioned is if the PC gaming market is getting smaller with consoles and iPhones and handhelds stealing sales, or if the newer devices are opening new markets. Sure big publishers are going to be chasing the new multi billion dollar markets, but they are not stupid enough to leave behind their existing multi billion dollar markets.
Amazing isn't it. India announces they are doing chemical weapons research, and nobody seems to care because it is fully organic and tastes great!
I must remember this PR tactic next time I'm looking for more cost effective ways to give permanent blindness and 3rd degree burns to crowds.
And letting people select if they want filtered or unfiltered content when they subscribe to a service wouldn't provide the same warm fuzzies? You could even mandate public and workplace systems get filtered if you want.
The current plan should die because my freedoms are being removed by other peoples morals and potentially other peoples political opinions. I currently live in a country with censored Internet and know just how pointless and annoying this filtering is. There is just too much outcry when you block major sites, so YouTube didn't stay offline for very long, and you can't do it for long and banning small sites is whack-a-mole with a million moles and a single mallet. It will be pathetic if when I finally return home to Australia it has censorship on par with the third world with all the underlying hypocrisy. What is Conroy's electorate again and is it a safe seat? I might see if I can change my registered voter's address.
Please, won't somebody think of the adults for a change? The kids aren't even old enough to vote!
So your saying people should continue to develop MySQL because it already does everything it needs to? If you want a better MySQL you can get it today. MySQL development has nowhere to move as there are better options in every direction. It can sit right where it is though running millions of Wordpress sites quite happily for quite some time due to inertia and apathy. I wouldn't be banking on any commercial customers though.