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User: Shirley+Marquez

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  1. Re:Hmmm on RadioShack Puts Customer Data Up For Sale In Bankruptcy Auction · · Score: 1

    Asking for your telephone number was a way of getting a unique identifier for each customer, allowing them to track your pattern of purchases. (They never called the numbers; Radio Shack did no telemarketing. They just used them as a database key.) There was the potential confound of multiple people living at the same address and having the same phone number, but it was the best they could do at the time outside of asking for your name and address, which would have been far more time consuming. Nowadays stores use loyalty cards or match your purchases to your credit card, but those tools weren't available to Radio Shack when they started collecting phone numbers.

    If you also gave them your address (as you would if you had made a request to receive catalogs) they could have potentially used your purchase pattern to send you customized flyers, though so far as I know Radio Shack never did that. Target, years later, is a notable example of a company that DID send customized flyers and got in hot water for it: http://www.forbes.com/sites/ka...

    Knowing the patterns in which people buy things is valuable data for a company. Even if they don't have any way to match it up with your personal information and thus have no way to contact you, it gives them information on things like which products are bought together or by the same people, which would allow them to design more effective advertising.

  2. Re:Last week I tried to write a Win8.1 universal a on Microsoft Releases Windows 10 SDK · · Score: 1

    There was a Windows Phone 7.5, and even a mostly ignored Windows Phone 7.8 that was thrown out as a sop to the owners of Windows 7 phones that would never be upgraded to Windows Phone 8. There was no desktop Windows 7.5.

  3. Re:Last week I tried to write a Win8.1 universal a on Microsoft Releases Windows 10 SDK · · Score: 1

    PlaysForSure was the worst. Not only because their actions contradicted the name, but because it took away things that people had already paid for. It's different from discontinuing Zune; sure they weren't making any more of them, but the Zune you already owned still worked.

    Flight Simulator had a good run. So did Encarta, until the internet and Wikipedia made it obsolete.

  4. Re:Universal wants me to use YouTube more on Universal Reportedly Wants Spotify To Scale Back Its Free Streaming · · Score: 1

    If the ads actually were worth two cents the record labels might be happy. Spotify is currently playing less than one tenth of a cent for song plays by free users, and the amount they pay is 70% of their total ad revenue. They pay about 10 times as much for plays by paying users (the number fluctuates between half a cent and a cent per play, because revenue and the number of plays changes from month to month) which is 70% of their subscription revenue.

    Spotify really wants everybody to subscribe, and the labels would also like that. But they're not willing to compromise the free tier too much because they see it as a necessary promotional tool for the paid service. Spotify has been hard-line about not restricting any songs to be only available to paid subscribers, because they believe that would quickly lead to the free service offering only music that nobody wants to hear, and then it would be impossible to get people in the door. (Paid service also gets you ad-free listening, higher quality streams, and the ability to download songs to your mobile device for offline listening. In some countries the free tier has a limit on the number of hours you can listen; they currently enforce no limit in the US.)

    The basic problem with the free tier is that advertisers won't pay enough for those listeners to make the model work well. That may change over time if online radio advertising can prove its value, or it may never change. If it does not, I think the eventual endpoint is that services like the free Spotify tier will go away. But I also think the company is right about the current need for it to grow the streaming market, and the record labels just have to deal with the loss of revenue in the short term. That will be a challenge for them, because long term thinking is not a priority in most board rooms.

  5. Still a little while to go, however. Anybody buying that card is going to have at LEAST 16GB on the motherboard, more likely 32GB or more.

  6. Re:Ergo! on Ask Slashdot: Good Keyboard? · · Score: 1

    Amusing. But Microsoft never had a monopoly on keyboards (or pretty much any other computer hardware) and they don't really have a monopoly position in operating systems any more. Office, on the other hand, is still going strong.

  7. Re:64GB on Google's Pricey Pixel Gets USB-C and a Lower Price · · Score: 1

    Yes, you can plug in a mouse. It has two standard USB 3.0 ports as well as the two Type C ports. And it supports Bluetooth.

  8. Re:64GB on Google's Pricey Pixel Gets USB-C and a Lower Price · · Score: 1

    They did keep the 32GB storage in the $999 model. It's the $1299 upsell model that has 64GB, and also 16GB RAM and an i7.

    Nobody seems to be mentioning it, but the Pixel does have an SD slot. So if you really need more storage you could pop in a card. A 256GB card is under $100 now so it's not that big an expense, and storage on the card is fast enough for things like storing a few high definition movies to watch on a long plane trip.

  9. Re:But it's still a Chromebook... on Google's Pricey Pixel Gets USB-C and a Lower Price · · Score: 1

    I bought an Atom based Windows tablet. To run Windows. I wanted a cheap portable Windows device to run some ham radio applications as part of my portable station, and it fills the bill nicely. But I didn't go in with any plans to use it for Linux, nor have I tried it so far.

    You are correct, though, if one wants to use it to run any OS other than Windows. Investigate the particular device first.

  10. Re:Although... on Google's Pricey Pixel Gets USB-C and a Lower Price · · Score: 1

    Calling the Pixel "weak-ass" is unfair. The specs are good for an ultraportable laptop, which is what the Pixel is. It can't match the computing power of a 17" behemoth but it also doesn't weigh 8 pounds.

  11. Re:No more ports! on Reactions to the New MacBook and Apple Watch · · Score: 1

    The decision to use USB C is fine. But the system should have had three ports, not one. Having only one kills too many use cases.

  12. Re:No more ports! on Reactions to the New MacBook and Apple Watch · · Score: 1

    Another problem with having only one USB port: performance will be seriously compromised if you have a mix of high and low speed devices connected. Sure, they want you to go with Bluetooth for the mouse and keyboard if you are connecting those... but what if you have a USB mouse that you really love? Or you hook up something like a UPC scanner? (Many of those now use USB and act just like a keyboard, typing things to the computer when you scan a bar code.) Or a desktop label printer? What's going to happen is that the performance of your fast USB devices is going to be utter crap because you can't move them to another port that has only fast devices on it, as you would do on any sensibly designed computer.

  13. Re:So a coat it silly, but what about...? on Energy-Generating Fabric Set To Power Battery-Free Wearables · · Score: 1

    Except that wearables that light up tend to be worn in dark places, so a solar cell won't work. I don't see the nanogenerator fabric being practical for mainstream clothing in the near term but it will be great for costume wearables.

  14. Re:So much for Debian 8, then... on Google Chrome Requires TSYNC Support Under Linux · · Score: 1

    Not entirely true. Ubuntu releases a new hardware support package for the most recent LTS release at about the same time as they release a new version of the distro; that's a backport of the kernel used by the new version. In the case of 12.04 they basically FORCED people to install the new kernel after the release of 14.04; they are no longer doing security updates for the old one. There are also sometimes X server updates for LTS systems that have a GUI installed; there is one for 12.04 that uses the X server from 14.04 and is similarly mandatory.

    So... you will be able to have new versions of Chrome and Chromium on 14.04... IF you install the hardware update. You won't be able to have them on 12.04 because the 14.04 hardware support is the last version that release will get. Nor can you have them on 10.04, which is near end of life and scheduled to go out of support next month.

  15. Re:ABOUT FUCKING TIME! on Ubuntu To Officially Switch To systemd Next Monday · · Score: 1

    There is Devuan, a fork of Debian without systemd. No release yet, but they hope to have one ready by the time jessie is released so a modern alternative will be available. https://devuan.org/

  16. Re:Is it finally happening? on Intel Announces Atom x3, x5 and x7, First SOCs With Integrated 3G and LTE Modems · · Score: 1

    On a Windows tablet with an HDMI port, it's just like a desktop or laptop Windows system with a second display connected. You can use it as a second display to extend your display area, in which case it gets its own resolution and rotation settings. Or you can mirror the primary display; then both displays have to use the same settings.

  17. Re:Is it finally happening? on Intel Announces Atom x3, x5 and x7, First SOCs With Integrated 3G and LTE Modems · · Score: 1

    The Windows tablets already have HDMI out and USB host ports. The only remaining steps: shrink one down to phone size and add calling capability. These new chips should make it feasible. I hope they go with a separate HDMI port rather than rolling it all up into MHL, because you may also want to connect USB devices when you are using the tablet to run desktop applications. (Using a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse decreases the need.)

    A phone won't have the handy full size USB port that my WinBook tablet has (not enough room) but the Micro USB port on the WinBook is also a host port, you just need a cable adapter. The WinBook also has a Micro USB port. Interestingly, the Micro port, despite the form factor, is not a USB On-The-Go port, it only acts as a host. You can't connect the WinBook to your PC via USB to sync. But it's full Windows, so it's easy to move files via WiFi.

    Windows 8 doesn't quite have the UI down; it's not quite satisfying as either a desktop OS or a tablet OS. But Windows 10 is moving in the right direction and should get it sorted out. Basically you want a touch-centric phone/tablet UI on those devices with secondary capability to run desktop applications, while on the PC you want a keyboard-and-mouse-centric desktop UI with secondary capability to run phone/tablet apps. The default behavior of Windows 10 is to give you the right interface by default on PCs and pure tablets, and to automatically switch the UI on two-in-ones depending on whether the keyboard is attached.

  18. Re:Quite a weak X3 line ... cost determines succes on Intel Announces Atom x3, x5 and x7, First SOCs With Integrated 3G and LTE Modems · · Score: 1

    Exactly right. When you are as big as Apple, you can easily afford to hedge your bets and you would be stupid not to. Switching to Atom is a low probability event in my opinion, but if there is even a 1% chance that it would make sense, paying those developers is cheap insurance.

  19. Re:Quite a weak X3 line ... cost determines succes on Intel Announces Atom x3, x5 and x7, First SOCs With Integrated 3G and LTE Modems · · Score: 1

    There is a big market for low-end SoCs for phones and tablets. Look at all the recent phone models featuring Snapdragon 400 series chips. Atom x3 can sell to that market if the price is right; the integrated cellular modem will help keep down the total cost of the phone.

  20. Re:Deja vu all over again on Intel Announces Atom x3, x5 and x7, First SOCs With Integrated 3G and LTE Modems · · Score: 1

    Yes, but only if your chips are things that don't compete with Intel's products. I don't think they are open to fabbing AMD processor designs, for example.

  21. Re: Of Course on Statistical Mechanics Finds Best Places To Hide During Zombie Apocalypse · · Score: 1

    Guns aren't very effective at stopping zombies. You basically have to disintegrate them to stop them; a mere shot to the heart or head won't do it.

  22. Re:Yet another reason to abandon physical media. on Blu-Ray Players Hackable Via Malicious Discs · · Score: 1

    I still watch Blu-Ray for movies where I care about the picture quality. It looks and sounds a lot better than any currently available streamed video, for the simple reason that they are using a lot more bits to encode the content so you don't suffer such severe compression artifacts. I expect the same to be true for streamed 4K vs whatever they end up calling Blu-Ray 4K.

  23. Re:Best defense is not to care on Blu-Ray Players Hackable Via Malicious Discs · · Score: 1

    That's why I won't pay extra for a smart TV. I figure that its smart features will be obsolete within three years anyway, which is nowhere close to the useful life of the TV itself, and that I will have to buy some sort of external device if I want to continue to have smart features that will work with current services. (Currently that would be a Roku, an Amazon Fire TV, an Apple TV box, or something similar.)

  24. I live in Boston. In most of the city, there is only one consumer provider that meets the current definition of broadband (25Mbps or faster): Comcast. (A few parts of the city have a second one, RCN. And you can get business-oriented broadband services from other companies but they are crazy expensive.) Slower services are available: DSL from Verizon and CLECs, service from Sprint and FreedomPop on what is left of the Clearwire network, LTE from cell phone providers, and satellite internet if you have a clear view of the sky and can put up the dish.

  25. Re:If you hate Change so much...... on Users Decry New Icon Look In Windows 10 · · Score: 1

    I got curious when I saw the quote. If I did, I figured that maybe some other reader would as well.

    Dijkstra is most famous for his letter to the ACM titled "Go to statement considered harmful". A recent study showed that the GOTO statement as used by current programmers is not harmful - but that is largely Dijkstra's doing (and all the other people who pushed for modular programming and better control flow). Nowadays about the only use of GOTO is as a way of breaking out of loop structures if the language doesn't have another way to do it, but I go back far enough to remember the horrible spaghetti code that people used to write. Heck, I wrote some of it myself.