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User: Mr_Silver

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  1. Re:Who gives a fuck on Chrome For OS X Catches Up With Safari's Emoji Support · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I consider then harmful.
    I suspect Emoji are like those smileys with mustaches, beer steins, and birthday cakes that show up in skype chat. I hate that garbage. Many a time, I write a sentence that contains a parenhtesis, using grammar correctly, and then my message comes across as some random retarded shit sprinkled with smileys. I have a hard enough time avoiding typos, I don't really need the client mucking it up even worse.

    That's not the fault of Emoji, that is the fault of the client replacing things like ":)" and ";P" with pictures in order to simulate Emjoi.

    As bizarre as it sounds, you actually want to be embracing the support of Emoji! This is because all the searching and replacing logic (which, as you rightly pointed out, tends to make unwanted changes to your text) is now redundant and can be removed by the developers.

    The net result is that people can still insert smileys with moustaches, beer steins, and birthday cakes and you can still type grammatically correct messages (or code) without fear of them being replaced with pictures. A win for everyone.

  2. ZX Spectrum loading sound on Ask Slashdot: Sounds We Don't Hear Any More? · · Score: 1

    The sound the ZX Spectrum played when loading your game.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mbumzCdw4Ts

  3. Oh dear on Sony Thinks You'll Pay $1200 For a Digital Walkman · · Score: 1

    At some point, my iPod Classic is going to bite the dust and I'd love something that is a similar size that can store my large music (and video) collection and have a decent battery life.

    This could have been it, but with an old version of Android and a stupid price point, I think I'll pass. Hopefully they'll come up with something that is less audiophile and more useful for the masses.

  4. Re:No... on Tumblr Co-Founder: Apple's Software Is In a Nosedive · · Score: 1

    But they are right about the software, never has it been more insecure and more geared towards grabbing up your data and marketing/profiting from it.

    The only thing I can think of that involves "grabbing up your data and marketing/profiting from it" would be iAd and that's hardly a large part of Apple.

    What's your proof that Apple are making a massive play to slurp up your personal data and use it in the way Google would?

  5. Partial solution on Tumblr Co-Founder: Apple's Software Is In a Nosedive · · Score: 1

    Part of the solution would be for Apple to decouple application updates from operating system updates.

    I see no reason why a bug fix to Safari (of which there are plenty required) has to be delivered in the same way as an iOS update when they already have a perfectly good app updating mechanism (the App Store). Plus customers are used to apps updating frequently and automatically, adding Apple to the mix isn't going to be something strange for them.

  6. Re:As expected... on Box Office 2014: Moviegoing Hits Two-Decade Low · · Score: 4, Informative

    When you keep releasing a slew of poorly written movies, yet continue to demand unreasonable fees, this is the result. People aren't willing to shell out the bucks to see a B grade movie. It's just not worth it anymore.

    This gets mentioned a lot on Slashdot but, in reality, the number of "good" movies has remained reasonably unchanged each year.

    Here are the movies in the IMDB Top 250 grouped and counted by year:

    Year Total
    2014 6
    2013 4
    2012 5
    2011 5
    2010 6
    2009 6
    2008 4
    2007 5
    2006 5
    2005 3
    2004 7
    2003 7
    2002 4
    2001 8
    2000 6

    In fact, 2014 (Interstellar, Boyhood, Gone Girl, Guardians of the Galaxy, The Grand Budapest Hotel and X-Men: Days of Future Past) was actually a better year than 2013 (The Wolf of Wall Street, Rush, 12 Years a Slave and Prisoners).

    The "prime" year was 1995 but that only resulted in 10 films (Se7en, The Usual Suspects, Braveheart, Toy Story, Heat, Casino, Twelve Monkeys, Before Sunrise, La Haine and Underground).

    (Nitpickers will point out that I really should run this over the entire DB and not the Top 250 and all take into account all film ratings - they'd be right, but that's a lot more work which I don't have the time to do).

  7. Didn't this help the demise of music DRM? on 10-Year-Old iTunes DRM Lawsuit Heading To Trial · · Score: 1

    The lawsuit accuses Apple of violating U.S. and California antitrust law by restricting music purchased on iTunes from being played on devices other than iPods and by not allowing iPods to play music purchased on other digital music services.

    Unless I'm mistaken, wasn't this also the cause of the eventual death of DRM?

    The music industry didn't like Apple's desire to sell every track at the same price (instead preferring to charge higher for more in demand music) - yet found themselves in the uncomfortable position of not actually being able to do that on competing stores thanks to the very DRM (they insisted on all content having) not being compatible with iTunes.

    I can't help wondering what would have happened if the same situation had also been played out with video and eBooks...

  8. Windows Media Center support? on Windows 10 To Feature Native Support For MKV and FLAC · · Score: 1

    What I'd like to know is whether or not this means we don't have a install a codec park (like Shark007) just so we can get support for all the common video formats in Windows Media Center.

    Talking of Windows Media Center, does Windows 10 actually improve on this awesome (but sadly neglected) piece of software - or are they going to squander the opportunity again like they did with Windows 8?

  9. Re:BT? Sky? on BT Blocking Private Torrent Sites? · · Score: 1

    What the fuck are these things? Am I supposed to know software/brand/product/service names off the top of my head?

    Ever thought about using your favourite search engine to look them up?

    There are plenty of non-USA based readers here who have to do that whenever a USA-centric article appears (which is often).

  10. Re:The answer is...virtual credit cards on UK Hotel Adds Hefty Charge For Bad Reviews Online · · Score: 1

    "this will be only used if the guests do not show up"...well, I created a virtual VISA with 5 EUROS. First thing my parents heard from the idiots "Your VISA card is not working".

    Hotels typically do a pre-authorisation on your card which essentially checks to see if the card is active and that you have enough balance to cover the amount they are pre-authing. It does this by placing a hold on that amount until the transaction is settled or the authorisation falls off (usually a couple of days, but could be longer)

    Since you only loaded on 5 euros, it'll naturally fail if they attempt a pre-auth above that. People who hand over a card to a hotel with not enough money on it are commonly trying to rip the hotel off.

    TLDR; version: The hotel weren't "idiots", you just didn't understand how card payments work. Next time, create a virtual card with enough funds to actually cover the bill.

  11. Not that influential on Facebook Wants You To Vote Tuesday · · Score: 2

    Back in 2011 we had a vote in the UK as to whether we would switch our voting system from "first past the post" to "alternative vote".

    Although my Facebook feed was absolutely riddled with people proclaiming their support for AV and no-one for FPTP (and a quick straw poll of my work colleagues suggested the same for them) that wasn't reflected in the results which were that 68 per cent voted No (to AV) and 32 per cent voted Yes.

    Facebook may have influenced some people to go out and vote, but it certainly didn't seem to reflect how the country voted as a whole.

  12. Re:Anyone still going to the movies? on MPAA Bans Google Glass In Theaters · · Score: 1

    Waiting half an hour to buy a ticket for about ten bucks, then suffering for 3 hours in 100+ degrees heat to ensure you need to buy something to drink, sitting and standing in the leftovers of the previous show and getting to choose to either not understanding any dialogue or getting a tinnitus from explosions and music (or rather, having that choice being made for you)...

    I went to see Gone Girl in a UK cinema a couple of weeks ago. Ticket and food purchases were quick (although shockingly expensive), there was no queuing, toilets were clean, cinema was warm and clean, patrons talked quietly until after the adverts ended, no-one's phone rang, no-one took out their phone and started browsing facebook, no-one talked over the film and the volume was set at a comfortable level.

    The only time I've had a bad experience was twice and I go to the cinema about twice a month. One about 3 years ago where the air conditioning was going nuts and it was way too cold and one about 9 years ago where some kids talked throughout the film.

    Why is the cinema experience in America so utterly miserable?

  13. Re:Touch ID for $100?? on Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More · · Score: 1

    Does the Touch ID imply that it also has an NFC chip for ApplePay? (Apparently it does, and the iPad Mini 2 doesn't.) That's an odd thing to leave off the comparison chart.

    This was mentioned in the keynote. Although they both have Touch ID, neither of them come with NFC.

    As a result, they'll only support half of Apple Pay. That is, they'll support purchasing things online from retailers, but not contactless transactions at physical merchants with a contactless terminal.

  14. Re:Touch ID for $100?? on Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More · · Score: 1

    If there was anything else worthwhile, wouldn't apple be boasting about it rather than us having to wait for a teardown?
    I am convinced that Touch ID isn't worth $100 to me...

    I don't remember Apple talking very much about internal memory on an iPad - mainly because it means nothing to the average customer.

    As a result I'm hoping that the Mini 3 has 2GB compared to the 1GB inside the Mini 2. That way Safari can manage to open 2 tabs without having to force a reload (so losing your buttons and form fields) when you return to a tab.

  15. Touch ID for $100?? on Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More · · Score: 3, Informative
    If you look at this comparison chart you can see that the iPad Mini 3 is exactly the same as the existing iPad Mini with Retina Display (now called iPad Mini 2) with the exception of two things:
    1. It's got Touch ID
    2. It's $100 more expensive

    I'm not entirely convinced that Touch ID is worth the extra $100. Hopefully the IHS teardown will indicate if there is anything else of value between the two.

  16. Silly design decision on Apple Edits iPhone 6's Protruding Camera Out of Official Photos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone know of any iPhone 5/5S users who complained that their phone was too thick?

    I see no reason why Apple felt it necessary to slim the device down even more - when they could have just had the same thickness as the 5/5S resulting in no silly bulge for the camera.

    Plus, they could have put a bigger battery in the case and maybe get an hour or so extra time out of the thing. Which I can imagine would be a lot more useful than shaving a couple mm off an already perfectly slim enough phone.

  17. Re:Incredibly bad live stream on Apple Announces Smartwatch, Bigger iPhones, Mobile Payments · · Score: 1

    Whoever was in charge of the live stream are a bunch of amateurs, incompetent idiots and should be fired, publicity shamed and never hired again.

    According to this article there were a number of issues which were all caused by Apple rather than Akamai:

    The bottom line with this event is that the encoding, translation, JavaScript code, the video player, the call to S3 single storage location and the millisecond refreshes all didn't work properly together and was the root cause of Apple's failed attempt to make the live stream work without any problems. So while it would be easy to say it was a CDN capacity issue, which was my initial thought considering how many events are taking place today and this week, it does not appear that a lack of capacity played any part in the event not working properly. Apple simply didn't provision and plan for the event properly.

    I don't know enough about streaming to comment on the validity of the assertions made.

  18. Re:It is time someone belled the cat. But wish.. on Apple Said To Team With Visa, MasterCard On iPhone Wallet · · Score: 2

    There was a very nice system, including PIN numbers to manage the POS terminals. Way back when stock trade was 49$, it was 25 cent per transaction irrespective of the size of transaction. This should have become zero. But that is not what happened.

    The 25 cent transaction fee is charged by the acquiring bank, not Visa and Mastercard - whose fees for debit are typically 1 cent per transaction as they are a volume based business.

    The reason that acquirers charge is because they incur costs associated with that transaction (including, but not limited to, interchange fees). If they didn't charge, it would fail as a viable business model.

    Pre-paid cards still have to use Visa or MC to get the request for the money from the acquirer (who has the relationship with the merchant and typically provides the terminal) to the card issuer (the bank that supplied the pre-paid card).

    Regarding AppStore vs MC+Visa, in order for Apple to be able to accept payments directly they would have to get an e-money licence so they could issue virtual debit or credit cards for use on their phones. By doing so, they'd still need the rails that Visa and MC provide - unless they really want to get into the business of connecting themselves to all the banks worldwide (aka becoming a payment processor).

  19. Re:Funny thing about email on Daimler's Solution For Annoying Out-of-office Email: Delete It · · Score: 1

    This is Europe.
    There _is_ no unpaid overtime!

    I've worked for UK, Spanish and German companies and and sure there is, it's done all the time. Often when you work longer hours in the day and do the odd bit of work at the weekend.

    If people check their mail during vacation, they are working, and they have to be paid and their vacation is still due an they can sue the company when they leave (or not) to get payment for the missed holidays or weekends.

    IANAL but I believe that only counts if they specifically ask you to check your email. If they don't and you go ahead anyway, then you won't get paid for it.

    I always leave my blackberry at home when I go on holiday.

  20. Re:Better than doing this on a smart TV? on Add a TV Tuner To Your Xbox (In Europe) · · Score: 1

    4. EPG being as inaccurate as the ones you get on a flat screen TV one.

    This is a good point. Even though DVB-T/T2/S (not sure about C) can provide EPG data, Microsoft get their EPG data from third parties. This is a good thing because you get 14 days worth of data and extra meta-data associated with the program listing which allows them to do some quite nifty functionality.

    Unfortunately the data is often wrong and (in the UK at least) the series link data is either not there (so you cannot record the season of a show because it thinks it's a one off) or on every single instance of a show meaning that you end up filling your HD with hundreds of repeats.

    There is even a hacky bit of vbscript which is designed to attempt to delete any duplicate recordings, it's that bad.

    http://www.fourteenminutes.com...

  21. Re:T vs T2 vs S on Add a TV Tuner To Your Xbox (In Europe) · · Score: 2

    Whoops misread the article and thought it said DVB-S not DVB-C.

    DVB-C is television content through a cable. It's popular in a large number of countries and, for the UK, would be how Virgin Media would deliver their content.

    Having said that, I'm not entirely sure whether or not you would be able to use a DVB-C tuner to get Virgin. The majority of people I know use a STB supplied by Virgin (which, in the past couple of years, has been a rebranded TiVo). Someone else with more knowledge than me will probably be able to confirm.

    It'll be interesting to see how many tuners you get. If it's only one then you'll only be able to watch one channel and you'll only be able to record another if it is on the same multiplex. So if BBC1 and BBC2 are on the same multiplex then you can record one and watch the other - but you wouldn't be able to record BBC1 and watch ITV since they are on a different multiplex.

    If they are serious about providing a good STB experience (and they are part the way there because Windows 7 Media Center and a DVT-T2 tuner blows most of the STBs I've ever used out of the water for experience and, sadly, cost) then they really need to be offering a dual tuner.

  22. T vs T2 vs S on Add a TV Tuner To Your Xbox (In Europe) · · Score: 4, Informative

    DVB-T is OTA SD television content branded as "Freeview". You get over a 100 channels but, to be honest, only about 30 of them are any good. There are all the major stations (BBC 1 and 2, ITV, Channel 4 and 5), their additional channels (BBC 3, ITV 2 etc), some +1 hour channels and some Freeview only channels. Whilst these are all subscription free, there is a small amount of subscription content and it's not essential to subscribe to these. You don't get many of the Sky channels.

    DVB-T2 is the same as T but with the inclusion of 10 or so (I can't remember the exact number) HD channels. It's branded "Freeview HD". Again, subscription free for the majority of the channels. It's nice to watch Top Gear in HD.

    DVB-S is the same as T2 but, I think, has a few more HD channels. It's branded "Freesat" and requires the installation of a satellite dish on the side of the house - which often fails the WAF test. It arrived before Freeview HD and so was the first way to get HD channels, although I'm not sure whether that really is the case any more.

    For those that are wondering, "YouView" is actually a STB with a DVB-T2 tuner and a range of additional catch-up and VOD services bolted on.

    The majority of people will probably get DVB-T2.

  23. Gaming? on AMD Prepares To Ship Gaming SSDs · · Score: 2

    Seems odd to call them "gaming SSDs" when they sound like just really fast SSDs. I'm actually surprised they are marketing them that way - especially since they'd reach a wider market if the didn't just target gamers.

    Plus are games really that much faster? When I bought my Samsung 840 I put everything on there. However as soon as I found out that the load times in HL2 weren't noticeably different (probably because the longest part of the "please wait" wasn't disk access) I quickly shifted the entire "steamapps" folder to my HDD.

  24. Re:Not a private police force on City of London Police Take Down Proxy Service Over Piracy Concerns · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The City of London Police Force is not a private police force, its a public body that receives government funding and is the same as any other police force in the UK, bar the fact that it doesn't have an elected police commissioner.

    It's far more insidious than just the fact it doesn't have an elected police commissioner and it most definitely is not the "same as any other police force in the UK".

    http://www.theguardian.com/com...

  25. Re:Nor Private Police on City of London Police Take Down Proxy Service Over Piracy Concerns · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The City of London Police is overseen by an elected body and funded through taxes. It is not a private police force. I think that was just a transparent attempt to sensationalize a news story.

    It's a police force controlled by private businesses and backed by the government.

    http://www.theguardian.com/com...