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User: hobarrera

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Comments · 1,954

  1. Re:Breaks some websites on With HTTPS Everywhere, Is Firefox Now the Most Secure Mobile Browser? · · Score: 1

    No need for a new computer, you can run OpenBSD fine on that already.

  2. Re:What assholes on Oracle Broadens Legal Fight Against Third-party Solaris Support Providers · · Score: 1

    And, just to clarify, while this is legal, strictly speaking, it's not right, or a good business practice either.

  3. What's a "custom domain"? on Developer Loses Single-Letter Twitter Handle Through Extortion · · Score: 1

    Avoid custom domains for your login email address and don't let companies such as PayPal and GoDaddy store your credit card information.

    What's a "custom domain"? Or rather, which domains aren't custom?
    I think that "Avoid evil companies like paypal and godaddy" are the only real lesson here.

  4. Re:And for the rest of us? on LibreOffice 4.2 Busts Out GPU Mantle Support and Corporate IT Integration · · Score: 1

    Also, unclear what happened to Linux support.

    The LO is only gradually changing to look (and work) more and more like MSO, in order to make MSO users more at home. Of course, those of us who never used MSO, have nowhere to turn, and it looks like most of the feature on these realeases actually just target windows too.

    Looks like we'll need a new Office suite for Linux and non-MSO users?

  5. Re:Jolla Sailfish perhaps on Ask Slashdot: Life After N900? · · Score: 1

    Indeed, Jolla is the direct succesor of the N9, which is somewhat of a succesor to the N900. I belive it's the closest choice in terms of software stack and openness. I also wouldn't be surprised if we see a keyboard back-lid for Jolla in future (with all the exchangable lids, and functionality they can have).

  6. Re:Sure... when Unity3d makes a Linux editor... on Developing Games On and For Linux/SteamOS · · Score: 1

    Game devs that want to target Linux will keep wanting to dev on _____.
    Linux devs who want to start doing games, will keep wanting to develop on Linux.

    Also don't forget the devs that "hate windows but use it because the SDK only works there". Those would fall into group two. Granted, it's not all the developers out there, but certainly a pretty large proportion of the total.

  7. Re:The Solution is Obvious on Microsoft's Ticking Time Bomb Is Windows XP · · Score: 1

    They wouldn't go out of business. They'd just shrink to their natural size.
    Supose 100millon webcams get sold per year due to non-funciononness on new OSs. If they wrote drivers for new OSs as they come out, they'd probably sell way way less (10M?). But that's the size a that company should have, artificially inflating it with programed obsolecense is a waste of resources for humanity as a whole.

  8. Re: Graphics Cards on Valve Releases Debian-Based SteamOS Beta · · Score: 1

    You say that until the driver that supports your card stops supporting the latest kernel, and you can't recompile it. Nor can anybody. You're just screwed. It's happened plenty of times, and will keep on hapening.

    Also, open source and performant are not mutually exclusive (Intel Linux drivers).

  9. Re:Debian! on Valve Releases Debian-Based SteamOS Beta · · Score: 1

    Just the window manager really, no big incompatibility there. Most of us all use different ones already.

  10. Re:The Solution is Obvious on Microsoft's Ticking Time Bomb Is Windows XP · · Score: 1

    There's Windows XP 64bit edition. That's what my mother actually uses, and it supports all the amd64 architecture features.

  11. Re:The Solution is Obvious on Microsoft's Ticking Time Bomb Is Windows XP · · Score: 1

    Of those reasons, I'm betting #1 is 'No driver support for half the hardware in the system.'

    Who wrote the initial drivers? Microsoft or third parties? If third parties, are they still around? If so, why aren't they supporting Win7?

    Because that's not profitable. If company X writes windows 7 for old hardware, they can't sell you new hardware as easily.
    Mind you, I don't approve of this, I'm merely explaining their rationale.

    Does Linux support that hardware?

    I have tons of equipment that's better than crap being produced today, but drivers for it don't exist past XP.

    Someone wrote the driver for linux, most likely (a) for free, because he needed it, or (b) payed by the company. However, since the linux kernel is far more stable (in terms of API) than windows, the driver just kept on working until today. I've got a webcam that supported up to windows 98. Yes, 98. It works fine on Linux.

    Fine, just don't connect your machine to the Internet and put others' at risk.

    Microsoft's big "problem" is "free updates". They should have a yearly subscription fee and that should increase as the OS gets older at some predictable rate. That's how to properly price ration an old OS's updates. They simply can't be expected to support XP forever, for free.

    On the other hand, they thrive on piracy, so I understand why they have this arrangement.

    Morality aside, and thinking just about money: yes, a yearly subscription is what's best for them. I think that's their goal as of Windows 8.1. Buy yearly payments and upgrades would not haved worked 10-15 years ago.

  12. Re:The Solution is Obvious on Microsoft's Ticking Time Bomb Is Windows XP · · Score: 1

    The cost for supporting a single machine that uses XP is equal to the cost of an unsold Windows 8 license.

  13. Re:Wine is working on that on Developing Games On and For Linux/SteamOS · · Score: 1

    My Dad recently moved to Linux. He uses a windows VM to use tax-related software. It's either that, or not being able to submit tax-related-data, which would mean, "Go to jail. Do not pass go."

    If wine was as easy-to-use and newbie friendly as expected, that's one less windows machine (abeit, a VM) the world would have.

    Sure, he used a VM. But most non-tech people wouldn't do that. They'd want that exe to run, or go back to windows, and that's the end of it.

  14. Re:Subject on Linux x32 ABI Not Catching Wind · · Score: 1

    Water is cheap too. Should I just leave the tap running all day long?

    Yes, memory is cheap, but that philosphy of not-caring because it's cheap is what has lead to incredibly bloated programas nowadays. What huge features does MSO 2010 have, that justify the over 10x space and memory used in comparison to MSO '95? Prettier looking, a few extra features. But that's essentialy it. A that's just a normal, random example too.

  15. Re:Sure... when Unity3d makes a Linux editor... on Developing Games On and For Linux/SteamOS · · Score: 1

    Where would you develop for Linux if not on Linux? It's a desktop OS, already very oriented towards developers.

    As a Linux user and dev, I seriously don't know how to develop on any other platform. I'm interested in game development as a hobby, but if I had to deal with windows, I'd simply never do it. It's just too much hastle for me.

  16. Re:Wine is working on that on Developing Games On and For Linux/SteamOS · · Score: 1

    Ah, because wine 64bit support on slackware is very important for making Linux a mainstream desktop OS.

  17. Re:So long as we have non-Steam games too on Developing Games On and For Linux/SteamOS · · Score: 1

    Oh, there are plenty. Humble Bundle games. Don't Starve. Planetary Annihilation. A lot of the steam games also have non-steam versions you get if you buy it from their website too.

  18. Re:Article is generic on Developing Games On and For Linux/SteamOS · · Score: 1

    You're not suposed to RTFA on slashdot, you must be new here.

  19. Re:Get rid of those things on 60% of Americans Unaware of Looming Incandescent Bulb Phase Out · · Score: 1

    On a closet, attic, or other closed spaces, the avoidance of accidents pays of. CFLs contain mercury, you don't want to accidentally hit and break one (which WILL happen in small, closed spaces full of stuff).

  20. Re:Get rid of those things on 60% of Americans Unaware of Looming Incandescent Bulb Phase Out · · Score: 1

    Yeah, they're cheaper in the US. For me (outside US), a LED bulb costs the equivalent of a month's electric bill. If I change all 8 bulbs in the house, and get a 20% decrease in my bull, it'd still be 40 months before I recover the investment. And 20% is a very very generous guess, since light bulb don't add up that much.

  21. Re:Get rid of those things on 60% of Americans Unaware of Looming Incandescent Bulb Phase Out · · Score: 1

    I've also wondered if LED lights enough in a large room. A 65W CFL can light my whole (rather large) room. Aren't LEDs more directional? Does one bulb light everything nicely?

    I'm not trolling, mind you, I'm legitimately asking, because I haven't seen them outside lighting stores, where there's so many lamps around that it's impossible to tell.

  22. Re:It's not just benefiting your employer... on Ask Slashdot: Do You Run a Copy-Cat Installation At Home? · · Score: 1

    It also benefits you because you had FUN doing it, and what's life without fun!?

  23. Re:Self employed so no separation on Ask Slashdot: Do You Run a Copy-Cat Installation At Home? · · Score: 1

    All this is quite true for all the smaller companies I've worked at, generally, with a programmer/engineer as owner/boss. But larger companies (and especially those that have more conservative profesions al boss), tend to be quite the opposite.

  24. Re:Better investment... on Ask Slashdot: Do You Run a Copy-Cat Installation At Home? · · Score: 1

    True, but if you own company does well, the extra profit is also yours, quite contrary to being a payed employee.

  25. Re:No Shit on DRM Has Always Been a Horrible Idea · · Score: 1

    Did anyone actually need an article to realize this?