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User: Golias

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Comments · 6,778

  1. Re:Anger. on To Ballmer, Grabbing iPad's Market Is 'Job One Urgency' · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is still a 2 product company and gets its revenue from the same 2 product lines they started with.

    MS-DOS and the microcomputer port of BASIC!?

  2. Re:Handbrake on Encoding Video For Mobile Devices? · · Score: 1

    I would counter that format requirements will continue to go up as available tech improves, but the truth is that I ***still*** have not bothered with Blu-Ray at all, and even lossy 1/4 HD rips of Doctor Who look pretty good on my high-def projection system, let alone my tiny iPhone screen. As we already have with audio, we're rapidly reaching a point where most consumers simply aren't going to care about fidelity improvements enough to invest in near-future new technologies.

    The screen already looks good to me in 720p or 1080i or even 640p (sometimes less). Spending thousands of dollars on something more impressive isn't going to make my 41-year old eyes see it any better.

  3. Re:Interesting Spin in the Summary on Forced iAds Coming To OS X? · · Score: 1

    Which would be simply awful if anybody was forcing you to pay for cable.

  4. Re:hooray on Jailbreaking iPhone Now Legal · · Score: 1

    It's kind of irrelevant, actually.

    You can buy an iPhone for $199 with a 2-year contract that locks you into AT&T anyway, or you can spend something like $600 on a PHONE just so you can jailbreak it and use it with a carrier that won't support visual voicemail and might lose you support from the app store, just so you can run a handful of "unapproved" apps which most people don't care about.

    Guess which option nearly everybody is going to take?

  5. Re:Interesting Spin in the Summary on Forced iAds Coming To OS X? · · Score: 1

    Just like we don't have to pay to watch cable thanks to ads?

    We don't. I don't pay a dime for my TV service, but rather get it for free over-the-air (and via Hulu) thanks to ads.

    Nobody HAS to pay for cable. Some people CHOOSE to. And they pay less than they would if cable channels had no ads.

    If you want to buy ad-free viewing, get a NetFlix account and watch via Instant streaming.

    Hooray for consumer choice!

  6. Re:No, you're just full of shit. on WSJ's Mossberg Calls For a Tougher Broadband Plan · · Score: 1

    Joke ----------->
    Your head.

  7. Re:No, you're just full of shit. on WSJ's Mossberg Calls For a Tougher Broadband Plan · · Score: 1

    You just wanted to cherry pick your data.

    The EU has recently accepted what are considered second and third world countries, many within the last 10 years, including Bulgaria, Romania, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, etc.

    Yeah, and we've got the Southeastern states. Pretty much makes us even.

  8. Re:Well, SILLY, on Nokia and RIM Respond To Apple's Antenna Claims · · Score: 1

    Phone calls are nearly obsolete, as far as I'm concerned. I'd say about 75 percent of my voice minutes are occupied by my over-60 parents calling me about stuff. Everybody else in my life usually "talks" to me via texting, e-mail, social networks, etc. when we're not face-to-face.

  9. Re:No surprise on Verizon Hints At Scrapping Unlimited Data Plans · · Score: 1

    All customers of everything are purely a source of profit, and the correct price to charge for anything is whatever the market will bear. That is how capitalism works. If you want me to either give something to you or do something for you, you must pay me what I ask in exchange.

  10. Re:Unlimited already means 5G on Verizon Hints At Scrapping Unlimited Data Plans · · Score: 1

    Reminds me a bit of this classic strip:

    http://www.penny-arcade.com/images/2009/20090501.jpg

  11. Re:Why not raise the price instead? on Verizon Hints At Scrapping Unlimited Data Plans · · Score: 1

    I find your ideas intriguing, and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

  12. Re:Not so much on Updated Mac Mini Aims For the Living Room · · Score: 1

    Before DVD's arrived, most people thought it was WEIRD to own a physical copy of a movie.

    After all, the vast majority of people do not watch the vast majority of movies more than once. Only the most dedicated of nerds and cinemaphiles maintained large libraries of VHS tapes and/or Laser Disks.

    DVD's became cheap enough that people started to feel that they "might as well" go ahead in buy them, especially when $35 at Best Buy allowed you the opportunity to watch stuff like all the episodes of Season 2 of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" in sequence. But that only recently has been how the market has behaved, and if streaming continues to get better and cheaper, I can see people not caring about owning disks anymore.

    Heck, I used to line a wall with disks just like every other movie/TV junkie... but I don't believe I've purchased a new DVD since Spiderman 3, and now I'm wondering why I bothered.

    If I want to watch a new release, I can add it to my NetFlix queue and wait a couple days with pretty much no cost beyond what I'm already paying for the service, or I suppose I could shell out a couple bucks to "rent" it off iTunes if I'm in some kind of a hurry. For most old movies (and a growing library of TV shows), I can stream them immediately off NetFlix and/or Hulu.

    So it's unlikely that I'll buy another DVD ever, and buying a player for a new format is out of the question.

  13. Re:Apple may think Blu-Ray is already dead on Updated Mac Mini Aims For the Living Room · · Score: 1

    As more and more stuff shows up on NetFlix, I've been carting more and more of my disks to the used CD store down the block and getting rid of them, as well as dumping files off my hard drives. Why store all that shit when I can watch them whenever I want anyway?

    The day just might arrive that NetFlix, Blockbuster, Apple and maybe Amazon will all be in the arena, offering "unlimited" streaming of every DVD ever made.

    You'll know that day is about 2 years away when Apple releases some kind of Mac for the home with no optical drive whatsoever.

  14. Re:Apple TV on Updated Mac Mini Aims For the Living Room · · Score: 1

    I also have an older computer hooked up to the TV that records television off of the analog cable channels (I haven't gotten a digital tuner card yet). The Mac can't do that without yet another box (EyeTV).

    If by "another box" you mean "an HD tuner that's about the size of my thumb", then yes that's true.

    I've been DVR-ing free over-the-air HDTV on a mini for years now. It works great.

  15. Re:Apple TV on Updated Mac Mini Aims For the Living Room · · Score: 1

    I have guests over watching 420p sources scaled up to a 720p projector on a 119" screen all the time. Most of those who even give a second thought to video specs simply ASSUME they are watching Blu-Ray disks on a 1080p screen until I inform them otherwise, because they don't notice any pixelation.

    And a lot h.264 files out on the Internet are only 360p, and even THOSE look perfectly watchable on my ridiculously-large screen. I seriously doubt anybody watching on their 50" plasma set can even tell the difference without doing a direct A/B comparison test.

  16. Re:NYC on New York Times Bans Use of Word "Tweet" · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have visited NYC a few times now and I sincerely hope you don't consider the native speech there to be representative of proper American English. It's a weird and extremely grating nasal abomination punctuated by such erudite phrases as "you douchebag, ya scumbag".

    Picking that region and main newspaper for some "lesson" in proper speech is weird. It's completely alien to the rest of the nation. It really should be its own city state, I would be thrilled if they removed themselves from the US actually, or they were asked to just leave, and take their newspapers and so called financial "industry"-the white shoe boys gangster mafia-with them.

    The New York Times does not publish in the dialect(s) of the common citizens of that New York City. It has been regarded as a "paper of record" for most of its existence and is more formal about adhering to an academic writing style than most other newspapers.

  17. Re:OK, I'm curious... on Google Reportedly Ditching Windows · · Score: 1

    It's very easy to mistake any critical question for raw snark when it's written in text on a forum full of strangers, especially a place like Slashdot. I find that it's *usually* worth the effort to resist that impulse.

  18. Re:OK, I'm curious... on Google Reportedly Ditching Windows · · Score: 1

    You use an iPad in the music studio? I wasn't aware that there were apps that made it useful there.

    I think you meant the Mac, which I have seen used extensively in studios due to the high quality of Logic Pro, and I've even seen iPods used as pocket drives, but the form factor of an iPad makes me suspect you got something wrong.

    Using an iPad in a music studio feels like mixing paint with a phillips screwdriver: sure, you can do it, but it's not the intended use of the tool and there are other solutions that are much better.

    I don't record on the iPad. It's more like a Swiss-Army peripheral device than anything else. When recording, it's a control surface. When rehearsing and learning new material, it saves me the trouble of printing charts on paper. When performing, it runs the board wirelessly, saving me the trouble of a cable snake and allowing the sound tech to sit ANYWHERE while having total control over our road rig. These are just a few of the uses I've found for it, and it seems like every week I find more.

  19. Re:NO NO NO NO NO on Microsoft Windows 3.0 Is 20 Years Today · · Score: 1

    Except for the story we're commenting on, you mean.

  20. Re:MACS???!?! on Google Reportedly Ditching Windows · · Score: 1

    Good thinking, but a Mac mini is even safer from spear attacks than a PC tower, especially if you rack-mount it, leaving only a 2" by 5" target made of hard metal.

    Although if your machine is at all in danger of getting hit by a fisherman's spear, you probably have even bigger problems due to water damage.

  21. Re:MACS???!?! on Google Reportedly Ditching Windows · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This old myth has never been true.

    Apache is more popular than the Windows web server, yet gets hacked less, which completely debunks the idea that being a market leader is the only reason Microsoft products are so shockingly vulnerable to attacks.

    OS X is a GUI shell on a BSD layer on a Mach engine. Like any flavor of *nix, it was designed from the ground up to live safely in networked, multi-user environments.

    It's an order of magnitude harder to hack than a Windows box, because of superior design. This has been demonstrated over and over for nearly a decade now, yet the MS fanboys continue with the silly drumbeat that Macs are only enjoying security via obscurity.

  22. Re:Flamebait on Google Reportedly Ditching Windows · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Really? I find it EXTREMELY useful in the music studio. I guess I missed the memo that this is not supposed to be the case.

  23. Re:and why, exactly? on Japan Plans Moon Base Built By Robots For Robots · · Score: 1

    Yeah, he's from the country that the "pawns" played Chess with for over half a century.

  24. Re:Apple. on Ninth Suicide At iPhone Factory · · Score: 1

    Cuba. But you likely can't visit there to see for yourself, so you are stuck believing the propaganda about the country.

    Castro was/is far from perfect, and the place is had a utopia, but it is far from totalitarian. I'd argue that most of the 'democracies' today are far more closer to totalitarian than Cuba.

    Tens of thousands of ex-Cubans currently living in Florida (after risking their lives to get there) would beg to differ.

    I don't see many people trying to cross the Gulf on makeshift rafts to get IN to your communist paradise. Why do you s'pose that is?

  25. Re:NO NO NO NO NO on Microsoft Windows 3.0 Is 20 Years Today · · Score: 1

    If you kill a product it does not get another birthday.

    Tell that to George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Dr. Martin Luther King.

    You can't. They're dead.

    Also, notice that nobody announces how old George Washington is every year.