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User: Mr_Silver

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  1. Analysis? More targetted scattergunning on Python Scripting and Analyzing Your Way To Love · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whilst what he did was very clever, at the end of the day he manipulated the scoring so that his profile was placed in front of thousands of womens search results because it had a high match percentage (that normally would never have been seen).

    The TL;DR version of this story is that if thousands of women see your profile and, at the same time, are told by a website that you're a high match to them, then you've got a very good chance they'll contact you. Which shouldn't be a surprise to anyone.

    That, to me, is the digital equivalent of (the old advice) that you'll never meet someone unless you get yourself out there.

  2. Woah! Not so fast everyone! on HP Brings Back Windows 7 'By Popular Demand' As Buyers Shun Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Before everyone gets their knickers in a twist, read this article by Ed Bott.

    In short, this is just a marketing stunt, OEMs are still allowed to keep selling Windows 7 machines for quite a while yet and the number of Win7 machines that HP are selling hasn't actually increased (in fact, it's gone down by 1 - from 4 in August to 3 now).

    Now we've sorted that out, I'll let you all get back to the regular programme of bashing Windows 8... :)

  3. Re:Can't directly compare PC and phone sales ... on Apple Devices To Reach Parity With Windows PCs In 2014 · · Score: 1

    PCs have a longer lifespan, they are way overpowered for what most people use them for. I have a five year old 3GHz 64-bit AMD box. It is still quite usable, I upgraded the video card recently, about $150, and it is still quite usable for gaming. I have no compelling reason to replace this five year old PC.

    People say this a lot but every time I've come to upgrade my computer (after a long period of time) I've found that the newer CPUs are incompatible with my existing motherboard.

    Once I've bought a new motherboard then I find that my existing graphics card and memory won't fit in the slots available because the connectors have changed. Then to top it off, the new graphics card and motherboard I bought need a greater wattage than my existing PSU can supply - so I need a new one of those too.

    In fact, I updated my computer recently and the only internal components that I could keep were the hard drive and the DVD rewriter. Everything else had to be replaced.

  4. Re:Works for me on TorrentFreak Blocked By British ISP Sky's Porn Filter · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ignore me. Turns out the blocking only occurs if you have the under-18 filter turned on - which I managed to get from the article :)

  5. Works for me on TorrentFreak Blocked By British ISP Sky's Porn Filter · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Well, I'm on Sky and I just clicked on the torrentfreak link and ... lo ... their article appeared.

    Looks like it was a short-lived mistake.

  6. Microsoft is changing the name of Skydrive because it infringes the trademark of British broadcaster BSkyB, normally known as Sky.

    Before everyone gets up in arms, it's worth pointing out that Sky Television (which is where "Sky" got its name from) was created in 1980 and merged with British Satellite Broadcasting in 1990 to form the company known as British Sky Broadcasting or, more simply, Sky. The company not only does TV but broadband and VoD as well.

    In comparison, SkyDrive was developed and launched by Microsoft in 2007 - some 27 years later (or 17 if you only consider after the merger).

  7. Slashdot on mobile on Ask Slashdot: Why Do Mobile Versions of Websites Suck? · · Score: 1

    I read Slashdot daily on my iPhone using Avantslash.

    I think it works great and it's far better than m.slashdot.org - but then I'm biased as I wrote it. Yes, screen-scraping and reformatting is a little hacky, but this script has been required to read Slashdot on your phone for the past 10+ years. At the rate we're going, it'll probably be needed for at least another 5 years.

    If you don't believe me then try the demo on your own mobile phone first.

  8. Re:For bling people on Ask Slashdot: Easy Wi-Fi-Enabled Tablet For My Dad? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't get the hurt. Why is it sad but true? Apple puts the time and resources into doing it right, and it is a sad thing?

    A not-so-small subset of the Slashdot crowd don't like the direction that Apple, driven by actually understanding the needs of the average customer, are moving general computing.

    They seem to dislike it even more when Apple can charge a premium and millions will more than happily pay it to escape (what they perceive as) the mundane and bizarre decisions fostered on them by decades of techies who never really understood or listened to what the largest segment of the customer base actually wanted - or didn't want to think about.

  9. Re:So No One Thought It Odd on FTC Drops the Hammer On Maker of Location-Sharing Flashlight App · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Their flashlight app was requesting network and GPS privs? There's obviously a fundamental problem with the Android security model, and I'm just going to go ahead and point my finger at people. First off, people assume that just because it's on the Play store, it's safe to install. Obviously not the case. Second, people obviously don't review the privs their apps request and say something like "Why the fuck does a flashlight app need access to my GPS and network?" And third, lazy developers have no incentive not to request every priv in the model.

    Not to mention that although for a very basic app (like a flashlight one) it is possible to spot a nefarious permission, once you start looking a much more feature-rich app then it gets very difficult for users to work out the validity of the permission requested.

    For example, a mobile banking app wants your location. Is this because:

    1. It's sending location data to a server to track you?
    2. It's sending it to third party companies for location based advertising?
    3. It wants that information so it can tell you where the nearest ATM or bank branch is?
  10. Is it just me ... on Mozilla Organizes Game Creating Contest, Prizes Worth $45,000 · · Score: 1

    ... or would have it been much more beneficial for everyone if Mozilla spent the $45,000 on a developer who could trawl through Bugzilla and fix some of the highly rated Firefox defects?

  11. Re:Every year on The Desktop Is Dead, Long Live the Desktop! · · Score: 2

    Every year we hear about how the desktop is dying and every year it doesn't. When will these idiots realize that desktop PCs are a niche that's not going to go away? It might shrink, especially compared to other forms of computing. But reports of its death have been greatly exaggerated.

    Even Apple, when announcing the iPad, accepted that there would always be a need for a desktop PC:

    When we were an agrarian nation, all cars were trucks because that's what you needed on the farms. Cars became more popular as cities rose, and things like power steering and automatic transmission became popular. PCs are going to be like trucks. They are still going to be around ... they are going to be one out of x people.

  12. Hands on on Jolla: Ex-Nokia Employees Launch Smartphone (MeeGo Resurrected) · · Score: 1

    The Verge has posted a hands on with Jolla. It's not good news:

    Yes, it sounds very reminiscent of the Nokia N9, but in practice it's highly unintuitive and unwieldy to the point where the entire UI paradigm can be considered broken. Screen transitions and in-app animations go from left to right, inviting the user to swipe from right to left to go back, but thatâ(TM)s not how youâ(TM)re supposed to do it. A notification pops down from the top of the screen, but if you try to swipe down to view it, you're liable to unintentionally close your current app, or more annoyingly, lock the entire phone. Then there's the fact that a swipe from the middle of the screen produces a different result than a swipe from the edge. It all adds up to a frustrating learning experience. The user is forced to adapt around the operating system rather than the other way around.

    All the effort of adapting to Jolla might be worth it if the device offered some unique advantage over others on the smartphone market, but it doesn't. The only standout quality it has is the goodwill of old Nokia loyalists and those who like to support grassroots projects. Unfortunately, there just isn't a very good smartphone here, and that's what you need if you intend to compete with behemoths like Google, whose Nexus 5 is a startlingly good value at 70 euros less.

    http://www.theverge.com/2013/11/29/5156446/jolla-smartphone-hands-on-preview

  13. All or nothing approach is silly on 1.2% of Apps On Google Play Are Repackaged To Deliver Ads, Collect Info · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I personally dislike Google's all-or-nothing approach to permissions. It gives the user a complete list of things (some of which may be valid and some not) with absolutely no context as to why they need this and then basically tell you that if you want the app then you have to accept the lot.

    Coupled with a barely managed market place, you're just asking for someone to slip something malicious into the store and for anyone downloading it to blindly hit "accept".

    A better method would be to rationalise some of the permissions (for example, do you really need to spook everyone with "read call state" given that it's used to suspend an app when a call comes in?) and then pop up a request to access the other permissions at the time when they are needed - a la iPhone.

    That way I know why my app wants to access my contacts (because I've just pushed the button that says "invite a friend to a game") and also means that if I'm not comfortable with it having access to my call history then I can decline and still have the opportunity to continue using it.

  14. Automatic upgrade on Netflix Users In Danger of Unknowingly Picking Up Malware · · Score: 5, Informative

    You'd think something like Silverlight would automatically upgrade itself.

    It will, assuming that it's given a critical priority within Windows Update and the user has their machine set up to automatically download and install updates.

    Come on, this is basic Windows stuff. Can we get someone on the Slashdot staff that has actually some experience of the operating system in use by 96% of the population please?

  15. Re:in a strange twist of fate on Microsoft and Facebook Launch Internet Bug Bounty Program · · Score: 1

    the black market on the other hand offered to pay handsomly a years salary for my exploit that breaks microsoft embedded security in appliances like ATM's and nuclear reactors, thereby recognizing and acknowledging my important work in the field of security.

    So what? It's well known that crime always pays significantly better than being honest - unless, of course, you get caught.

    A smash and grab robber in a Rolex store is going to make more $ per hour than your server in McDonalds or even a white collar worker.

    However for the vast majority of people, this is a complete non-issue because their moral compass is firmly intact.

  16. Re:It's all about the lock in... on Why iTunes Radio Could Take Down Pandora · · Score: 2

    Well, since iTunes Radio only works on Apple Devices, and Pandora works everywhere, I would not be too worried.

    Given that the "everywhere" support that Pandora has is actually restricted to only three countries - if iTunes Radio works on all Apple devices worldwide, I would be worried.

  17. Blame the OEMs this time on Students, Start-Up Team To Create Android 'Master Key' Patch App · · Score: 1

    Whilst it's common (and often justified) to have a pop at the carriers for delaying or preventing updates to devices, it's worth pointing out that I've got access to a whole range of Android devices direct from a number of different OEMs and not a single one of them has yet received an OTA update to fix this vulnerability.

    The carriers may still slow down this process, but it's already going slow enough with just the OEMs involved.

  18. Confused on Google Retiring Chrome Frame · · Score: 1

    I never really understood the point of Chrome Frame.

    Surely the very people who needed to use it (those in a locked down corporate environment) are the very same people who can't install it because they're in a locked down corporate environment?

  19. Digg Reader on Slashdot Asks: How Will You Replace Google Reader? · · Score: 2

    I've tried most of them and, to be honest, they are all pretty rubbish. I don't want any fancy new bells and whistles - but what Google Reader had today (minus the sharing bit) would be just fine.

    Unfortunately none of the alternatives I looked at could manage that. From non-working sites, to ghastly user interface design, to one which requires a browser plug-in just to work (seriously wtf?).

    On that basis, I'm really hoping that Digg Reader (whenever it arrives) doesn't suck. If it does, then I don't think there are any viable alternatives.

  20. Re:Yoleo Reader works for me on Slashdot Asks: How Will You Replace Google Reader? · · Score: 1

    The font is pretty hard to read, it would be nice if you used a different one.

    It's annoying that I cannot hide subscriptions in the left hand column. Especially when they have no new stories.

    Clicking on a thread causes an eternal spinning "Loading".

    At that point I'm afraid I gave up. It's a good start though.

  21. Re:I've been trying feedly on Slashdot Asks: How Will You Replace Google Reader? · · Score: 0

    Why on earth would you need a website for what ought to be a simple RSS reader?

    Off the top of my head, for locked down corporate computers and the ability to read and sync (the read/unread status of posts) across lots of different desktop, laptop, tablet and mobile devices.

  22. Facebook's issue not HTC on Facebook Cancels UK Launch of HTC First · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unless this was some special partnership, then Facebook will have a contract with a clearly stated MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity).

    If they cannot make that commitment to purchase from HTC the amount stated then HTC will charge them to get out of the contract. This will be broken down into costs for the handsets already produced and unsold, materials already bought and some additional fee for lost revenue on the rest.

    In short, HTC will be okay (they'll even make a bit of profit, although not as much as if the phone had been a success) however it will be Facebook who will be left with one expensive bill.

    (been there and, sadly, done that)

  23. Best analogy I've heard on Web of Tax Shelters Saved Apple Billions, Inquiry Finds · · Score: 3, Funny

    Google, Amazon and Apple are like those people who turn up to a "bring a bottle" party with a litre of supermarket own brand cola and then proceed to drink the Wyborowa vodka and Hendricks gin all night. They may upset a lot of people, but they've not technically broken any rules.

    If governments feel that companies (that follow their rules) still manage to pay too little tax - then the onus should be on the government to change them. Anything else they do is just blowing hot air.

  24. Not numbered. More declining. on The Days of Cheap, Subsidized Phones May Be Numbered · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The US phone market is just going the way of the European phone market. You'll still be able to get a contract and subsidised handset if you want, but you can also get a SIM only deal and bring your own handset.

    Not everyone can afford to drop £500 on a phone outright so there are many people who still go down the contract route.

    The SIM only deals will be split into two. Either you top up the SIM at the beginning of the month and get a bunch of texts and data - or you can get a contract for your SIM which gives you a load of minutes, data and texts for a monthly fee.

    Last time I had access to a network operators stats (4 years ago), customers on contract were about 51% of the total base. I wouldn't be surprised if SIM only is now the majority.

  25. Re:Almost useless on Smartphone Used To Scan Data From Chip-Enabled Credit Cards · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes and no... a few years ago when I got my first RFID card from Mastercard, I had to threaten to cancel the card if they didn't send me one without it. Two years later, when I got one from Visa, it was a 5 minute phone call and the new card (minus RFID) was in my inbox 3 days later.

    A minor point, but one that people on Slashdot don't seem to understand, is that you don't actually get your cards from Visa or MasterCard at all.

    They are payment processors and they pass payments from one bank to another. They ensure that the X banks in the world don't have to build connectiors to X-1 other banks just to let you buy something at a shop or online. Instead each bank just connects into Visa or MasterCard (or sometimes both) and then calls it a day.

    The relationship you have is actually with your bank (in industry speak, your card issuer). They are the ones that decide what payment scheme to use and issue you a card for that scheme. They are also the ones that would decide whether or not to make available to you the option to have a non-contactless card. Visa and MasterCard have no say in what they give you.

    Hopefully that clears things up a bit.