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User: AuMatar

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Comments · 6,002

  1. Re:Custom ROM? on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 1

    Google Play Store and Google Play Services aren't free, and Google doesn't sell them to individual users. You can pirate them, but you can't use them legally.

  2. Re:Google play services required on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 1

    Not legally. You can pirate Google Play Store, then download Play Services through it. But you can't get a legal license to Play Store without paying Google.

  3. Re:Custom ROM? on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 1

    Yes, if you pirate it you can run it. The reason it isn't shipped with those devices is Google won't license it to them. Its not licensed to the ROMs either.

  4. Re:Custom ROM? on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 0

    Not the Play Store, Google Play Services. Totally different things. Google Play Services is a bunch of functionality like maps, geofencing, fusion location detector, activity detection, etc that they only license for a fee to OEMs that agree to a large list of terms they have to agree on. Google Play Services is basically the carrot they use to force OEMs to play by their rules.

  5. Re:Google play services required on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 1

    If you want to run a custom rom for any reason (for example, privacy and securtiy) you can't run google play services.

  6. Re:In a watch, batteries should last a year or mor on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But the smartphone allowed people to do things they couldn't already do. The smartwatch allows them to.... not take their smartphone out of their pocket. That's it, its a subset of all the functionality of their phone, and it doesn't do most of them that well. There's nothing compelling about them.

  7. Re:Charge what it costs to certify on FDA: We Can't Scale To Regulate Mobile Health Apps · · Score: 2, Funny

    And I gave my reasoning. You can keep on to your infantile libertarian dreams, but a government agency is always more trustworthy than a private company- a government agency has at least some checks and balances and accountablility. A private agency has absolutely none, and is motivated solely by profits. Belief that they will actually do their job is asinine.

    Private regulation is no regulation

  8. Re:Charge what it costs to certify on FDA: We Can't Scale To Regulate Mobile Health Apps · · Score: -1

    Sure he does- he says a private organization. There is no way in hell a private organization would ever be legit. First off, a private organization could make more money by reducing their oversight and rubber stamping, at least in the short term. And that's all most care about. Secondly, even if they didn't drug companies could make more money by setting up sock puppet regulators so they'd eventually just do that.

    Private regulation is no regulation- period.

  9. Re:Charge what it costs to certify on FDA: We Can't Scale To Regulate Mobile Health Apps · · Score: -1, Troll

    Oh look, the Libertardians are out in full force.

    Yes, the FDA is supposed to be enforcing efficacy. That's its entire point- to ensure that drugs do what they say.

    Nor would regulating apps be about efficacy and not safety. If an app says you should take a certain drug and that drug has side effects, its a safety issue. If it provides a diagnosis and that's wrong, its a safety issue.

  10. Re:Charge what it costs to certify on FDA: We Can't Scale To Regulate Mobile Health Apps · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    In other words, provide no oversight at all while an "independent" firm rubber stamps all the industry's apps for a completely legal fee which ends up going to the executives of the fake company via bonuses, then let it fold and start up a new one.

    Privatized enforcement is no enforcement. If it can't be overseen by the government it needs to either be banned. You can open up the question of if it needs to be regulated at all, but providing the illusion of safety and regulation when there is none is far worse.

  11. Re: We can thank corporate America on Ask Slashdot: How Often Should You Change Jobs? · · Score: 1

    15 years experience in a mix of small companies (I'm at my 3rd startup, the other two were successfully sold) and large (including HP and Amazon). This includes stint as principal at some of those companies and lead developer at one of the startups.

  12. Re:We can thank corporate America on Ask Slashdot: How Often Should You Change Jobs? · · Score: 0

    Net positive shouldn't be more than a month. They're already trained programmers, even if they don't have the business knowledge to take on whole features they can be used as an assistant and start being worth their pay almost on day 1. The only way to be net negative is to take more time from senior programmers than they save by doing work, the only programmers that should have that issue for more than a week are juniors.

  13. Re:We can thank corporate America on Ask Slashdot: How Often Should You Change Jobs? · · Score: 0

    You're hiring bad people, or you're a shitty manager. Or both. I have yet to see a job where a mid to senior level hire isn't making positive contributions within a month, and generally they're at least getting something done by the end of the first week, even if its just minor bug fixes. If you're taking 18 months to train someone up, you're getting the absolute bottom of the barrel hires and you aren't doing your job of farming out work to them on a level they can contribute in the intermediate time. Your company would be better off if you were replaced by someone halfway competent.

  14. Re:Do we need HTML+Javascript at all? on Famo.us: Do We Really Need Another JavaScript Framework? · · Score: 1

    Don't use C#. Write a bytecode platform that anything can port to- Javascript, C, C++, C#, Java, Python, etc. Then developers can use what they want. Using C# is almost as big a failure of an idea as using Javascript.

  15. Re:Can an "atheist company" refuse too? on U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Religious Objections To Contraception · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So they were forced to by the government. So the government intervention was required. Thanks for proving my point. Although you're still wrong, because the amount of roads outside of suburban subdivision dwarfs the amount of in subdivision roads.

    As for the turnpikes nonsense- there wasn't even a real nationwide freeway before the Eisenhower system. The closest thing was route 66, which was mostly small local roads. If your statement was even close to true there'd be remains of private highways made useless by the interstate system. There aren't. You're just totally wrong.

  16. Re:Can an "atheist company" refuse too? on U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Religious Objections To Contraception · · Score: 1, Informative

    I'm sure if you keep telling yourself that you think it will become true. Sorry, that isn't anywhere close to reality.

  17. Re:Can an "atheist company" refuse too? on U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Religious Objections To Contraception · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The first day we formed tribes, so about day 1 of our species. The day you pay back everything you've ever gotten from society (education, protection, medicine, roads, etc) with interest, forget everything you've learned and experienced due to society and move to somewhere where you'll never interact with humanity again. Until then take some fucking responsibility for once in your life and do what's right by humanity you self-entitled asshole. Or drop dead and improve the human species.

  18. Re:California also legalized using polished turds on California Legalizes Bitcoin · · Score: 2

    Sounds great. We can have the government make them and call them U.S. dollars. And then we can run a sensible monetary policy around them. Or I guess we can use numbers on a computer in a deflationary currency with no controls whatsoever and a setup you need a degree in CS to understand. But I think I'll go with the government route.

  19. Re:One more diff for the legal patch set on California Legalizes Bitcoin · · Score: 1

    We do have a head version. Here's the federal: http://uscode.house.gov/

    Here's california's: http://leginfo.legislature.ca....

  20. Re:California also legalized using polished turds on California Legalizes Bitcoin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'll take the turds. They have value as fertilizer. While Bitcoin is bullshit, physical bullshit at least has a use.

  21. Re:It looks like a response to anti spam laws on Microsoft Suspending "Patch Tuesday" Emails · · Score: 1

    I think just about all of them. If a corporation is fined, an officer should be paying one as well or serving jail time. And be barred from receiving a bonus that year as well (so the company can't just pay back their fine).

  22. Re:Anyone else remember... on Google Demos Modular Phone That (Almost) Actually Works · · Score: 2

    I've actually done 2 of the 3 of those on laptops, to replace broken parts. They're fairly modular under the hood. For proof look at the 2 in 1 tablets- basically a snap on keyboard to a tablet. Laptops could easily have been done that way. They just never made them easier to remove because the manufacturers thought they could make more money by not allowing resuse and 3rd party parts. And of course all the internals have always been modular, that's why you can customize them at dell and hp's websites.

  23. Re:Anyone else remember... on Google Demos Modular Phone That (Almost) Actually Works · · Score: 2

    Exactly. That's why a modular PCs were never created. There's no way you can get high performance when the user can pick their own RAM, CPU, motherboard, video card, hard drives, etc.

    Oh, wait.

  24. Re:lifetime earnings isn't the whole picture on What's Your STEM Degree Worth? · · Score: 1

    A decade? A degree is 4 years.

  25. Re:Who gives a shit? on Nest Announces New Smart Home API · · Score: 2

    Yeah, don't really care. The cost of heating/cooling doesn't bother me, being comfortable is more than worth. It'd end up in manual override mode over 90% of the time anyway. But my comment was more towards making it internet connected with a web API than with programming it to turn off for a few hours during work.