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User: gosand

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  1. I guess it depends... on Debian Derivative Optimized for the Raspbery Pi Released · · Score: 2

    I was paid $50 to get my phone (free with rebate).. now the service, that's another story. But they go hand-in-hand, so you can't really separate them. It's an HTC Sensation, and is my first foray into smartphones. It's cool - but I really still don't get how people can't live without them. And I'm no luddite, hell I used to work for THE cell phone company back in the day and had one of the first flipphones and first StarTacs. I got those because it was cool.. now I just find them annoying for the most part.

  2. It already IS big business... on Why Junk Electronics Should Be Big Business · · Score: 1

    My neighbor collects trailer-truckloads of old electronics, sorts the parts, and sells them off to some company in Germany I think. He said it was one of the largest recyclers. It has overhead, but the metals (not just gold) that they get from electronics can make him about $10k per load. OK, so not HUGE big business, but the larger the scale, the more efficient it becomes and the more money you can make. You can't really make anything off of a few parts.

    I had another insane neighbor about 5 houses down that had about 200 old P4 systems that he was trying to chemically strip the gold out in HIS GARAGE. I only met him twice and briefly, but he was a scary guy that you would expect to be killed by chemicals in his garage.

  3. In other Slashdot news.... on The Web Is Not the Internet · · Score: 1

    Your computer case is not called "the hard drive" or the "cpu", although that's what most people refer to them as.... and if you are running out of disk space, you don't need more "memory".

  4. Re:No, it is YOU that don't get it. on Facebook Scans Chats and Posts For Criminal Activity · · Score: 1
  5. What about all the set-top boxes and whatnot? on Microsoft Killing Silverlight? · · Score: 1

    I'm planning to get a DVD player this holiday season that supports Netflix. I wonder how this will impact all those that already have devices (game systems, tvs, etc) that support netflix. I just went through watching all 7 seasons of Trailer Park Boys via Netflix watching them on my wife's laptop and via a windows VM on my computer. It was great! Even if I could have figured out how to copy them via Netflix, I wouldn't have. I mean, I know I can go out and download them via torrents, but as long as they are available on Netflix, why should I?

    I've always wondered about this kind of thing from way back when MP3s emerged for music. If they would make the content cheap and available, we wouldn't have this rabid need to hoarde it. Now there is no guarantee that Netflix will always have what I want to see, and I do have to pay a subscription fee... but as long as I do and they have what I want to watch, I don't feel the need to have a local copy. Once someone gets it, and content is available all the time for a reasonable subscription price, I don't think people would be so hell-bent on retaining local copies of stuff. Some will, but I think they put way too much focus on preventing that instead of making it unnecessary.

  6. you're right.. and wrong. on The RMS Tour Rider · · Score: 1

    I saw a lot of RMS haters posting this and making fun of him for being a demanding ass. In particular, a lot of popular Mac people on Twitter were laughing at him for being a prima donna. I just don't get it. His requests are basically:


    1.     Don't misrepresent my position by describing me as advocating something I'm not
          I'm not rich, so don't make me pay for stuff out of my own pocket because I can't afford to.
          I'd much rather sleep on someone's couch and hang out with locals than be chauffeured around and entertained constantly.

    I don't think any of those are unreasonable at all.

    You're right. But he didn't say those things. He said a lot more than that, in bizarre and excruciating detail. This isn't some off-the-cuff email he sent, this was his official communication! Is anyone supposed to seriously remember all of that stuff? It is funny and ridiculous. Don't think so? Check this out and see if you get a chuckle: http://thestallmandialogues.com/ . RMS basically needs to lighten up. I feel bad for the guy, sounds like he's incapable of enjoying himself.

  7. My encounter with Dennis Ritchie in May 2011 ... on Dennis Ritchie Day · · Score: 1

    One day something set me off, and I was wondering how the name "cron" was chosen. Wikipedia credited Brian Kernighan with creating cron, so I took a chance and emailed him. He responded and said he thought it was derived from chronos.. but that he didn't write it and didn't know why Wikipedia credited him. He said it was probably Ken (Thompson), Dennis, or Bob Morris.

    So I emailed Ken and Dennis at what email addresses I could find for them, I couldn't find Bob's email.

    Dennis emailed me back and said that Steve Johnson was the author of the Unix cron, and that he thought the name had to do with chronology. Ken emailed me back and said he thought he wrote it, and that the name had to do with time.

    I was really surprised these guys emailed me back about something so trivial, but I was still pretty excited about getting responses. The answers weren't completely definitive, but interesting none the less. Something that we use every day, and nobody seems to be quite sure who wrote it.

  8. Hey, I went there... on Is Perl Better Than a Randomly Generated Programming Language? · · Score: 1

    Interesting... I found their CS department to be OK.. but I got my BS-CS back in '93 at SIU-C. Maybe the department has changed, I know the landscape of CS certainly has. But these researchers are from SIU-E, and I don't even think they had a CS department back then. I don't think you can discount the research entirely based on where it came from.

  9. Re:Respect on Netflix Loses 800,000 Subscribers After Qwikster Gaffe · · Score: 1

    They need DRM because they signed the deal with Microsoft to use Silverlight. Perhaps they had to agree to use some kind of DRM in order to get the rights to stream the content? I honestly don't think there's any real technical reason.

  10. Re:Respect on Netflix Loses 800,000 Subscribers After Qwikster Gaffe · · Score: 1

    I respect the fact that they go back on ideas that are bad.

    I remember when they were going to take away the ability to manage multiple queues. I used that all the time when I had room mates, and then with my fiancé back when I was getting 3 at a time. They got a lot of feedback and kept the multiple queues.

    I am probably going to discontinue my service anyway because of the lack of a Linux desktop client. It has been way too long. I shouldn't have to pay Microsoft or Apple just to watch Netflix.

    I agree with your points. How many companies would say "well, you guys spoke up and we hear you."?
    I thought the move was dumb, but I also thought that there had to be some reason behind it. Execs and higher-ups in a company actually have a hard job. They have to figure out how to CONTINUE to make a company successful. Quick math on internet forums don't show the whole picture of a company. Netflix was a great value, and as their streaming content grew it was super-fantastic. But I can see how there are costs associated with that. Something has to pay for those costs. Maybe they were working on thin margins to get that customer base, and it was becoming a financial nightmare to keep streaming and mail DVDs separate. Maybe it was the Silverlight deal that is costing them. We don't have the whole picture. It's not clear if this was really an "innovation" move or something that seemed to make sense on the company side. I certainly wouldn't expect someone to lose their job over it.... after all, this wasn't one person's idea, I'm sure they had lots of discussions about it. Although I bet the people who didn't like it are enjoying a big bowl of "I told you so". :)

    They tried something, it didn't work out, they yanked it. I understand people getting irritated and asking questions - if we didn't, Netflix would have gone forward with it and it would have sucked for us. But in the end - it's entertainment. People shouldn't get all frothing-at-the-mouth over it. The people who swear to never use Netflix again because of this need to chill out. It's amazing to me the money people will waste in their lives and get mentally stuck on some other things that don't cost all that much.

    I hear you on the Linux client, it's a pain. But, with the various systems that play Netflix (TVs, DVD players, game systems) and Windows machines/laptops, I don't see how they can justify doing a Linux client. Their problem was locking in with Silverlight.

  11. Re:No, it doesn't mean there's a global oligarchy on The 147 Corporations Controlling Most of the Global Economy · · Score: 1

    But at the end of the day, if you don't have a product or service that customers want to buy, your company is dead, regardless of how much of the global capitalist infrastructure it controls.

    Even if this were true (which I don't believe is the case), it doesn't matter. A dead company doesn't mean anything if another takes its place. A dead company *sounds* bad, just like losing your job. But many a CEO or other very wealthy person has lost their job and made million upon millions of dollars doing so. Many a company has failed and died, with no real ill-effects done to those at the top of it.

  12. I don't agree on Most Sophisticated Rootkit Getting an Overhaul · · Score: 1

    I don't know if I'd call Mark Zuckerberg *evil* per se...

  13. Re:OK, what are we calling "TV"? on Doctors Recommend Against TV For Kids Under 2 · · Score: 1

    You can hear everywhere that kids who grow up without TV are better adjusted than others.

    Really? I've actually NEVER heard this. Please cite something credible.

  14. OK, what are we calling "TV"? on Doctors Recommend Against TV For Kids Under 2 · · Score: 1

    Is it television programming, or anything that comes out of that box with the moving pictures?

    My daughter loved watching Signing Time, which we got as a gift, and we ended up buying the whole series. It teaches them sign language. She was signing before she could talk. My other two kids followed suit. We found it greatly beneficial.

    Now the programming they watch (@ 2, 4, and 6) isn't quite up to that standard of educational learning, but Nick Jr (formerly Noggin), PBS Sprout, PBS, and a couple of other channels offer what I consider to be great programming.

    It's like saying the internet is bad because of goatse (or facebook, for that matter).

  15. You are aware that all of those USE the internet? on Movie Industry: Loss of Control Worse Than Piracy · · Score: 1

    Look, those were some of the first players in the digital music realm. I remember posting on Slashdot back in 2001 or so (sorry, not going to go find it) about how the music industry was stupid for not embracing the digital music revolution instead of fighting it. I know I wasn't the only one.

    My idea was that instead of suing Napster et al to kill digital music they should have started selling digital content. They should have started building their digital library, offer a CD buring service in stores where customers could burn whatever songs/albums they wanted with a reasonable pricing system. (.50 per song for anything 1 year old, .25 up to 5 years old, .10 older than 5 years). Build a menu of pre-made playlists for purchase (like staff picks in bookstores). People wouldn't mind buying songs even multiple times if the price was right. Offer them the SERVICE of music.

    I thought that this could be done in the dying record stores. Burn them audio CDs, or MP3s to CDs (DVDs were a ways off, as were mainstream MP3 players). SELL MP3 players / USB drives and let people load them up with the purchase. But do it in a way where you lay down the infrastructure to keep the business. That could easily be built into an online service too. Harness the excitement that people have around music instead of trying to so strictly control it.

    They chose the dinosaur way, then Apple comes along and changed the game with the iPod and iTunes (neither of which I've ever used). The 'music industry' could have really done so much with digital music to actually advance things, but they let other people do that.

  16. and sell, and sell, and sell... on India Launches $35 Tablet · · Score: 1

    I just had a guy here doing a repair on my floor. He almost left his phone, and we got to talking about them. He was complaining that his iPhone was starting to flake out and that he was going to have to get a new one. I showed him my phone, which is about 5 years old and works fine, and that my wife and I share minutes and we spend about $60 a month between us. He said he spends something like $200 a month on his.

    So you buy an expensive phone and pay $200 a month to use it, and when it breaks you just go get another one.

    He was also complaining about his iPad2 he bought, how hard it was to use, and how it didn't do stuff like it showed in the commercials.

    We've really turned into a society of very obedient consumers.

  17. Re:As a longtime Motorola shareholder, may I just on Google To Acquire Motorola Mobility For $12.5 Bill · · Score: 1

    or he was being EXTREMELY sarcastic. ;)

  18. As a longtime Motorola shareholder, may I just say on Google To Acquire Motorola Mobility For $12.5 Bill · · Score: 1

    THANK YOU!!!!

    I got a job out of college at Moto in the cellular division back in 1993. I bought up some shares in their employee stock purchase plan. I left the company after about 5 years, I just wanted to broaden my experience. When I left, the stock had done a 3-1 split and was around 35 a share. Then the bottom fell out, it got down to about $4 at one point I think. Recently MOT split into MSI and MMI (mobility). Right about now, after the stock jumped after this announcement, I have just about broken even. Not bad for an 18 year investement.

  19. Anon - I implore you.... on Anonymous Vows To Destroy Facebook · · Score: 1

    I absolutely abhor FB, I have a fake account I check once a month or so, just because I have a couple of friends in other parts of the country/world. But they all just post drivel, so I'm not missing much. At first I thought it would be great if FB was actually destroyed.

    But do you know how many moms, dads, and people my age (in my 40s) rely on FB for spewing their constant, horrendous banality? If FB is destroyed, they might start talking to me about this crap again.

    Anonymous, please - PLEASE - let FB continue, it's just a Darwinian tar pit.

  20. You do know what DEFCON is, right? on 4G and CDMA Reportedly Hacked At DEFCON · · Score: 1

    I can't even come up with a sufficient analogy to describe how wrong your comment is.

    Like entering a bicycle in a Formula 1 race because you don't like going fast?

  21. I don't get it... on Doom 3 Source Code To Be Released This Year · · Score: 1

    What's your angle?

  22. Honestly, is this a genuine concern for people? on What Happens After the Super-Hero Movie Bubble? · · Score: 1

    Fucking hell, it seems like we have actual things to be concerned with. Perhaps we should be discussing what will happen when people get tired of broadcasting their random thoughts minute by minute to the world? But I guess that's pretty much how this "news" could be categorized.

  23. RTFA much? on RIAA Math: Sell 1 Million Albums, Still Owe $500k · · Score: 1

    but it also delves into some of the sneakier aspects of record label contracts with musicians -- things that many musicians simply won't know about or understand when they sign their contract.

    Musicians are musicians, not lawyers. I'm pretty sure they have to hire someone to read these things and explain them to them. Let's face it, people DO get famous and rich even by signing with the RIAA. No, I think the RIAA is to blame here. Just because someone gets conned doesn't mean they deserve it.

  24. Go for extra credit on Ask Slashdot: Easiest Linux Distro For a Newbie · · Score: 1

    If the assignment is to "try out an OS" there is no reason to over-complicate it. Download several LiveCDs and try them. I'd say Knoppix, Kubuntu, and Damn Small Linux. You won't mess up your computer by installing anything. If you want extra credit, install your favorite it to a thumb drive. But if it's really just to try out another OS, LiveCDs are the way to go.

    Extra geek credit - have her understand that Linux technically refers to the kernel and the OS is the kernel + other utilities and libraries that make the computer run - but that for all intents and purposes, most people just refer to it as Linux.

  25. Glenn, is that you? on Microsoft's Hottest New Profit Center: Android · · Score: 1

    Is this conclusive? Not at all. The above numbers could be false. Is it probable? Well, that's for you to decide.

    This sounds like something Glenn Beck would say and doesn't really help your case all that much.