There's no one size fits all approach to dealing with trolls. Some are best dealt with by ignoring, some by fighting, and some by feeding them until they explode.
my experience with the NYC subway system tells me that if I'm relying on the subway to get me between classes, forget it. Bad enough on one campus if a teacher goes long or has to talk after class I might not have enough time to run across campus and make it to my next class.
So, it's not just, "I won't use public transport" it seems more like the case that juggling two disparate school schedules IS a logistical hassle. I mean, if you got lucky and a class at MIT starts an hour or two after a class you're taking at Harvard, then sure. But it's really not practical.
That's not The Problem. There's no single The Problem. There are lots of problems, including an obesity epidemic(Hence the sugary soda ban in NYC).
The biggest problem we have right now is that we have a bunch of people who are intellectually unserious and cling to various pop psychology or pop philosophy memes and claim that is the absolute truth to solving all of our problems. I'm not talking about just idiots on message boards, comment threads, on HAM radio, etc. I'm talking about Congressmen and Governors and business leaders who really have no idea what they're doing, much less that we have problems or how to solve them.
There ARE political ideologies that suggest the hideously controversial suggestion that we have complex problems that need serious, complicated, nuanced answers. The second biggest problem we have is that those political ideologies are given equal weight to the whack jobs who think that Ayn Rand is some kind of philosophy giant or something.
So, given that debate isn't going to solve the first problem, or the second problem, and that there's nothing of substance to discuss other than a rant about Atlas Shrugged and a bizarre smattering of links about ebola.
Which is somehow in mainstream news but covered up and we're being lied to? Also laced with factually incorrect fears to boot. Hint, airborne ebola isn't a thing like airborne flu. Don't huff fresh pig or monkey shit off of the ground and you'll be fine. Also when the CDC took the infected Americans into custody they did so with insane levels of control over the whole process.
Anyway, there's nothing of substance to debate. The dude's probably not a troll; it doesn't pass the "is this funny to assholes" test, sounds like the dude cracked.
Yeah, but no one was buying the old giant cheese grater. That's why it languished. It stopped being a priority for them.
Part of me wants, so badly, for Apple to come out with a reasonably priced mid tower Mac Pro or some other concept where I can mess around with the hardware, but another part of me knows that just ain't going to happen.
Part of what allows Apple to do what it does is the fact that they control the hardware
I don't think that's necessarily true.
What we tend to think of as personal computer problems might just be Windows problems. I'm willing to buy the notion that tight and close driver development are absolutely points in Apple's favor, I'm curious as to what the day to day life is like with a Hackintosh.
That being said, Apple will never do OSX as generic PC OS unless someone can come up with a really compelling reason other than OSX on every desktop. This isn't 1992 anymore and shipping an OS isn't the whole product story anymore. Not unless life with such a machine actually turns out to be really good. Like, giving ice water to people in hell good.
There have been plenty of educated bloggers, and plenty of idiot journalists.
The difference between a reporter and a blogger is that a reporter tends to have the financial support needed to sustain long investigations and a better platform which to spew their news.
Dude, you've cracked. Turn off the computer, put down the copy of Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, and go lay down for awhile. Deep breaths. Relax.
It's funny, this is actually dealt with in Gundam X. The captain of the ship that everyone rides around in was a veteran child soldier who fought in the war that ruined everything. He wound up with pretty bad PTSD.
What about false positives? We know hash collisions are a thing. If they find a positive, do they actually check it out? do they compare metadata? Like, hash matches, but the size and filename are wrong.
I'd hate to get some random binary blob(zip, mp3, etc.) emailed to me only to have Google flag it because it matches some kiddy porn.
I'm not sure if this counts, but on handhelds, day of release, I couldn't find fire emblem awakening anywhere. It was available at the same price on nintendo's e shop.
While very cool, and I want one..... I can't justify buying the rMBP's... A cheap dual-core atom Thinkpad Tablet 2 running Win8 and a docking station meet most business desktop/mobile needs dirt cheap. While *I* would notice and make use of it, I can't justify it for my users.
I'd hate to be one of your users. The advantages of faster CPUs or fancy SSDs isn't in maximizing performance all the time, but rather day to day life with the machine gets nicer overall. A dual core Atom would be an awful day to day experience. Things will run, but not very well. Besides, how cheap is your company if you can't afford nice things for them? I'd hate to see what your bathrooms look like.
"Sure, a toilet would be nice, but a hole in the ground works just as well!"
As integrated video chipsets get faster and the displays get cheaper, it'll be mainstream. Like I said, I love the displays personally but I can't justify the additional cost. If the screen can do at least 720p then it's good enough in most use cases.
As of Ivy Bridge, integrated video is already good enough. OEMs are trapped on two sides. First, margins are slim enough already, trying to add decent components is a hit they can't afford to take. Second, does Windows 7 or 8 even support actual high DPI screens? Or is it stuck in 72 DPI hell?
Everyone I know who has worked at an apple retail store who has sold a computer to someone who was looking for a machine with just that use case in mind has either directed them to a MacBook Air or an iPad. You're talking about people with more money than sense.
Though you're wrong about high res screens. The screen in the retina pros generally are taken advantage of by anyone who has eyes. The resolution is doubled but the OS interprets it as one point made up of a block of 4 pixels. So doing things like sub pixel manipulation makes everything look crisp and beautiful. I can't wait until this kind of thing is main stream. Going to even higher DPIs still has gains for the same reason, iirc. You can't see the pixel lines anymore, but that doesn't mean fonts get sharper or images look nicer. There's a point of diminishing returns, definitely, but I don't know if we are there yet.
My reading of it is that the functionality of the software on the recorder is a DARD, but, the AHRA doesn't make the distinction between software and hardware. Given that the AHRA was from a time before that was even a problem...
I still pretty much agree with the consensus that GM and Ford are going to knock this out of the park. However, I do see ways that it could be ruled against them and that has some interesting effects elsewhere.
I think this kind of thinking is pretty detrimental to mobile.
When you put a "better" camera on, will it have new optics? Will it jut out of the case like a sore thumb? What about new SoCs? Will heat and battery become problems?
I'm pretty skeptical. I think mobile has been a huge hit because of the trend away from desktop modes of thinking. Holistic integrated things are more than the sums of their parts than generic gizmos that are just a random slathering of parts.
Take for example the iPhone 5s. The finger print sensor has been amazing, but it wouldn't work with out the A7's secure enclave. To do that in Ara you'd have to ship a replacement button or have a sensor on the module itself.
The problem is when you have no access to data, then your website solution's useless to me.
For example, the Ultra Street Fighter 4 Framedata app for tablets would be useless to me if I had to have data to access it. the data's rarely going to get updated, and the structure of the data doesn't fit nicely into ebook format either.
This also isn't the biggest problem either. The biggest problem is the amount of apps. For example, there's a ton of twitter apps in the store, which one do you use? Also what reason is there to pay for say, Tweetbot when the official app is free? Also do you get gun-shy because you've bought a few apps and they suck?
Some of this isn't being touched upon by TFA, so. Take that for what it's worth.
When the AHRA was talking about DARDs, they were thinking DAT and to a lesser extent MiniDisc, not CDs or MP3s. So, the RIAA's gamble was that they were trying to get the Rio PMP300 treated like a DAT device, which failed because it's not an audio recorder. You couldn't use a line-in jack to record MP3s to that thing.
What boggles me is that the parallel out jack on the PMP300 doesn't constitute transmission. Eh, wtf.
The Letter of the law though, on what is a DARD is quite clear:
(3) A "digital audio recording device" is any machine or device of a type commonly distributed to individuals for use by individuals, whether or not included with or as part of some other machine or device, the digital recording function of which is designed or marketed for the primary purpose of, and that is capable of, making a digital audio copied recording for private use, except forâ"
EPL -might- be right. British law, particularly copyright law, is a little weird.
We're going to get a LOT of US Centric comments here, but I'm really hoping someone with an understanding of British law can help clear up this mess.
That doesn't work either.
There's no one size fits all approach to dealing with trolls. Some are best dealt with by ignoring, some by fighting, and some by feeding them until they explode.
int main() {
return 0;
}
exploit THAT.
HAHAHAHAH.
Who are these magical hipsters the tech community seems to be obsessed with?
Mavericks and Yosemite will run on it.
my experience with the NYC subway system tells me that if I'm relying on the subway to get me between classes, forget it. Bad enough on one campus if a teacher goes long or has to talk after class I might not have enough time to run across campus and make it to my next class.
So, it's not just, "I won't use public transport" it seems more like the case that juggling two disparate school schedules IS a logistical hassle. I mean, if you got lucky and a class at MIT starts an hour or two after a class you're taking at Harvard, then sure. But it's really not practical.
This is about MOOCs, not degree work.
So if you're taking a history MOOC and you want to learn about the Mongols, then the module is there for you.
Bro, do you even RTFA?
Context is everything. For MOOCs. This makes perfect sense. For degree work? Not so much.
That's not The Problem. There's no single The Problem. There are lots of problems, including an obesity epidemic(Hence the sugary soda ban in NYC).
The biggest problem we have right now is that we have a bunch of people who are intellectually unserious and cling to various pop psychology or pop philosophy memes and claim that is the absolute truth to solving all of our problems. I'm not talking about just idiots on message boards, comment threads, on HAM radio, etc. I'm talking about Congressmen and Governors and business leaders who really have no idea what they're doing, much less that we have problems or how to solve them.
There ARE political ideologies that suggest the hideously controversial suggestion that we have complex problems that need serious, complicated, nuanced answers. The second biggest problem we have is that those political ideologies are given equal weight to the whack jobs who think that Ayn Rand is some kind of philosophy giant or something.
So, given that debate isn't going to solve the first problem, or the second problem, and that there's nothing of substance to discuss other than a rant about Atlas Shrugged and a bizarre smattering of links about ebola.
Which is somehow in mainstream news but covered up and we're being lied to? Also laced with factually incorrect fears to boot. Hint, airborne ebola isn't a thing like airborne flu. Don't huff fresh pig or monkey shit off of the ground and you'll be fine. Also when the CDC took the infected Americans into custody they did so with insane levels of control over the whole process.
Anyway, there's nothing of substance to debate. The dude's probably not a troll; it doesn't pass the "is this funny to assholes" test, sounds like the dude cracked.
Yeah, but no one was buying the old giant cheese grater. That's why it languished. It stopped being a priority for them.
Part of me wants, so badly, for Apple to come out with a reasonably priced mid tower Mac Pro or some other concept where I can mess around with the hardware, but another part of me knows that just ain't going to happen.
The time for those kinds of machines is gone.
Part of what allows Apple to do what it does is the fact that they control the hardware
I don't think that's necessarily true.
What we tend to think of as personal computer problems might just be Windows problems. I'm willing to buy the notion that tight and close driver development are absolutely points in Apple's favor, I'm curious as to what the day to day life is like with a Hackintosh.
That being said, Apple will never do OSX as generic PC OS unless someone can come up with a really compelling reason other than OSX on every desktop. This isn't 1992 anymore and shipping an OS isn't the whole product story anymore. Not unless life with such a machine actually turns out to be really good. Like, giving ice water to people in hell good.
There have been plenty of educated bloggers, and plenty of idiot journalists.
The difference between a reporter and a blogger is that a reporter tends to have the financial support needed to sustain long investigations and a better platform which to spew their news.
Dude, you've cracked. Turn off the computer, put down the copy of Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, and go lay down for awhile. Deep breaths. Relax.
It's funny, this is actually dealt with in Gundam X. The captain of the ship that everyone rides around in was a veteran child soldier who fought in the war that ruined everything. He wound up with pretty bad PTSD.
What about false positives? We know hash collisions are a thing. If they find a positive, do they actually check it out? do they compare metadata? Like, hash matches, but the size and filename are wrong.
I'd hate to get some random binary blob(zip, mp3, etc.) emailed to me only to have Google flag it because it matches some kiddy porn.
I'm not sure if this counts, but on handhelds, day of release, I couldn't find fire emblem awakening anywhere. It was available at the same price on nintendo's e shop.
I don't know if that changes things fwiw.
While very cool, and I want one..... I can't justify buying the rMBP's... A cheap dual-core atom Thinkpad Tablet 2 running Win8 and a docking station meet most business desktop/mobile needs dirt cheap. While *I* would notice and make use of it, I can't justify it for my users.
I'd hate to be one of your users. The advantages of faster CPUs or fancy SSDs isn't in maximizing performance all the time, but rather day to day life with the machine gets nicer overall. A dual core Atom would be an awful day to day experience. Things will run, but not very well. Besides, how cheap is your company if you can't afford nice things for them? I'd hate to see what your bathrooms look like.
"Sure, a toilet would be nice, but a hole in the ground works just as well!"
As integrated video chipsets get faster and the displays get cheaper, it'll be mainstream. Like I said, I love the displays personally but I can't justify the additional cost. If the screen can do at least 720p then it's good enough in most use cases.
As of Ivy Bridge, integrated video is already good enough. OEMs are trapped on two sides. First, margins are slim enough already, trying to add decent components is a hit they can't afford to take. Second, does Windows 7 or 8 even support actual high DPI screens? Or is it stuck in 72 DPI hell?
Everyone I know who has worked at an apple retail store who has sold a computer to someone who was looking for a machine with just that use case in mind has either directed them to a MacBook Air or an iPad. You're talking about people with more money than sense.
Though you're wrong about high res screens. The screen in the retina pros generally are taken advantage of by anyone who has eyes. The resolution is doubled but the OS interprets it as one point made up of a block of 4 pixels. So doing things like sub pixel manipulation makes everything look crisp and beautiful. I can't wait until this kind of thing is main stream. Going to even higher DPIs still has gains for the same reason, iirc. You can't see the pixel lines anymore, but that doesn't mean fonts get sharper or images look nicer. There's a point of diminishing returns, definitely, but I don't know if we are there yet.
My reading of it is that the functionality of the software on the recorder is a DARD, but, the AHRA doesn't make the distinction between software and hardware. Given that the AHRA was from a time before that was even a problem...
I still pretty much agree with the consensus that GM and Ford are going to knock this out of the park. However, I do see ways that it could be ruled against them and that has some interesting effects elsewhere.
I think this kind of thinking is pretty detrimental to mobile.
When you put a "better" camera on, will it have new optics? Will it jut out of the case like a sore thumb? What about new SoCs? Will heat and battery become problems?
I'm pretty skeptical. I think mobile has been a huge hit because of the trend away from desktop modes of thinking. Holistic integrated things are more than the sums of their parts than generic gizmos that are just a random slathering of parts.
Take for example the iPhone 5s. The finger print sensor has been amazing, but it wouldn't work with out the A7's secure enclave. To do that in Ara you'd have to ship a replacement button or have a sensor on the module itself.
The problem is when you have no access to data, then your website solution's useless to me.
For example, the Ultra Street Fighter 4 Framedata app for tablets would be useless to me if I had to have data to access it. the data's rarely going to get updated, and the structure of the data doesn't fit nicely into ebook format either.
This also isn't the biggest problem either. The biggest problem is the amount of apps. For example, there's a ton of twitter apps in the store, which one do you use? Also what reason is there to pay for say, Tweetbot when the official app is free? Also do you get gun-shy because you've bought a few apps and they suck?
Some of this isn't being touched upon by TFA, so. Take that for what it's worth.
I'm just spitballing from the power usage specs when looking at monitors. I might be entirely wrong about the precise amount of wattage.
How it could draw more current than a 47" is easy, it's pushing four times as many pixels.
Still, a 3840x2160 display is going to use more power than a 1920x1080 screen, any which way you slice it.
Add to the fact they also haven't been selling well, and the price would be well over 3 or 4 grand...
Apple likes healthy profit margins but a 3 grand notebook on their product line isn't going to move. I'm shocked they sell 15" rMBPs.
When the AHRA was talking about DARDs, they were thinking DAT and to a lesser extent MiniDisc, not CDs or MP3s. So, the RIAA's gamble was that they were trying to get the Rio PMP300 treated like a DAT device, which failed because it's not an audio recorder. You couldn't use a line-in jack to record MP3s to that thing.
What boggles me is that the parallel out jack on the PMP300 doesn't constitute transmission. Eh, wtf.
The Letter of the law though, on what is a DARD is quite clear:
(3) A "digital audio recording device" is any machine or device of a type commonly distributed to individuals for use by individuals, whether or not included with or as part of some other machine or device, the digital recording function of which is designed or marketed for the primary purpose of, and that is capable of, making a digital audio copied recording for private use, except forâ"
source: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/...:
So the fact that Ford and GM advertise you can rip CDs into this thing makes it a DARD.
I think what may be a crippling blow here to the plaintiffs is that CDs do NOT implement any copy protection and this thing doesn't *record* audio.
However, the court or the jury may see otherwise.
Wrong.
This isn't what this is about. This is about the legality of CD audio ripping.
Which is odd, considering iTunes, Windows Media Player and even Xbox 360 and PS3 will rip CDs.
Either they've paid royalties or someone's about to lose big in court.
A nice 17" panel draws something like 120W of power at maximum, ~95W for a crappier panel.
The problem isn't just the battery, but also the power brick needed to refill that battery too.
But man alive what I wouldn't do for a 17" rMBP. :(