Slashdot Mirror


User: DCTech

DCTech's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
108
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 108

  1. When can we get Reddit's moderation system on /. on Reddit Turning SOPA "Blackout" Into a "Learn-In" · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Frankly it seems to be much better than what we have on Slashdot. Increasingly I've found both people and the moderation on Reddit to be much better than on Slashdot. So when can we get fix for that?

  2. Re:Right to submit future domains, but on Dutch Court Forces ISPs To Block the Pirate Bay · · Score: 1

    Sure, but then they won't get the millions of dollars they currently do. They're in the top 100 of most visited websites in the world. Their traffic will drop to 0.001% if they change to darknets, and that would destroy their site (and profits).

  3. Re:Slashdot loves facebook on Facebook Adds Ads To News Feed · · Score: 1

    So upon court order law enforcement get your ip? What were you saying?

  4. Re:Right to submit future domains, but on Dutch Court Forces ISPs To Block the Pirate Bay · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Intend counts a lot. With a name like The Pirate Bay everyone pretty much knows what the site is meant, and used, for.

  5. Re:Right to submit future domains, but on Dutch Court Forces ISPs To Block the Pirate Bay · · Score: 1, Informative

    The judge actually specifically addressed that issue.

    While the court noted that an ISP blockade against The Pirate Bay would also prevent legitimate access to the site, it noted that the legal offerings available at The Pirate Bay are not limited to the site and are also available from other sites and means. As such, preventing a large number of copyright infringements is justified.

  6. Re:dot bit on Dutch Court Forces ISPs To Block the Pirate Bay · · Score: 1

    Neither of those work because they block IP's too.

  7. Re:Right to submit future domains, but on Dutch Court Forces ISPs To Block the Pirate Bay · · Score: 3, Informative

    Except that it's only limited to one site, and the decision was only made because TPB didn't start filtering dutch visitors like earlier court verdict said. They have also been playing games setting up additional domains and ip's, because they know companies have to go via slow courts to get them banned.

  8. Right to submit future domains, but on Dutch Court Forces ISPs To Block the Pirate Bay · · Score: 5, Informative

    The verdict also said that if they submit non-TPB domains or ip's and violate that court decision, they will be legally liable.

  9. Re:It's not only programmers vs bosses on The Bosses Do Everything Better (or So They Think) · · Score: 1

    Why is that idiotic? It's entrepreneurship. My income is completely based on commissions and has been for the last five years. I'm not even working for anyone, as I do affiliate marketing on the internet (and no, not the spammy type, the useful type where my visitors actually benefit from my sites). Sure, there's some insecurity in a job like that, but there always is if you run a business. On the other hand on good times I've also made significantly more than I would get if I were paid a normal salary instead of commissions. On top of that I am free to travel the world at the same time and can wake up (and take holidays) when I want to. Everyone's own choices.

  10. Only If You Have Liked Those Pages on Facebook Adds Ads To News Feed · · Score: 4, Informative

    The article clearly notes (and shows screenshot) that the ads that will be displayed on your news feed are from pages you have liked. I only like pages I want to get updated information from (like Team Fortress 2 and some bands), and I get their news updates already. So what's the problem?

  11. Re:I don't see the problem at all! Am I just dumb? on Twitter Comes Out Swinging Against Google's Personalized Search · · Score: 1

    Their back-end is quite technically outstanding. Those Twitter clones couldn't handle such load. Apart from that, what sites on the internet actually are that technically outstanding? Pretty much none. The most valued asset of websites is their users and community.

  12. Re:It's not only programmers vs bosses on The Bosses Do Everything Better (or So They Think) · · Score: 1

    It's not an anti-Google or anti-Linux spin, those are just good examples that everyone knows. Linux is struggling to get market share, and while Google has successful products, they have tons of which they just cancel or someone never hears about (or has a reason to use). For example, see this story about the cancellation of Google Health. It's filled with people who haven't even heard about it, or didn't know why they'd use it.

  13. Re:It's not only programmers vs bosses on The Bosses Do Everything Better (or So They Think) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I simply find both sales and marketing immoral (at least in the forms they commonly have in our society).

    Sales and marketing is mostly finding out what a person needs, why he needs that and how they can help the person with it. It's also making it easier for customers to buy your services or products, and letting them know such product exists (to fix a need, again). What is so immoral about that?

    I've stumbled upon many programmers who are trying to sell their products to customers but they lack total understanding of it. They want to spend time with the product, and almost loathe customers (which is shared feeling between lots of geeks and programmers). But you can't run a business like that. You need someone to take care of the customers and researching what their product can fix. "Here is the thing, maybe it does something for you" isn't really good selling point. You need to figure out and tell the customer what he would gain by buying your product or service, from the customers point of view.

  14. It's not only programmers vs bosses on The Bosses Do Everything Better (or So They Think) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Programmers themselves really often make the mistake of thinking that everyone else's job is simple and easy and doesn't require much knowledge, or that companies should be spending more resources on programmers and IT than other departments. Best example is sales and marketing people. Programmers think it is completely unnecessary, but quite frankly, they would perform really poorly trying to do that kind of work. And I say this is a programmer-since-I-was-a-kid, but only picked up some sales and marketing skills after becoming an adult (I run my own business).

    I think I also know why programmers suck at sales and marketing people. Programmers, and geeks, quite often lack the social skills and knowledge of human psychology to succeed in it. I know I used to, and many slashdotters say they'd rather be left alone to work on code. Frankly, these are important skills. Programmers have the ability to read code, error messages and everything else that is presented to them as facts and clearly. They have the mindset of a computer, "do x, get y". What they lack is reading people and other things when it isn't presented to them in a straight, clear form. Programmers fail to see subtle hints and expressions. They need it in clear. Maybe it's a difference in brain or something. It's also why so many people with Asperger syndrome are overly fascinated by computers. They also cannot read subtly things, they need it in clear. Code, compiler messages and computers provide that.

    Which is also why I don't understand why programmers and IT usually put down other departments like sales and marketing. Maybe because they don't understand that it is actually hard work, and requires learning just like you do with programming books. Yes, some people will be good at it naturally, but majority aren't. It's the same with programmers and pretty much anything. The fact is, sales and marketing is hard work. It's especially hard to do it correctly, as it's usually the sales and marketing people that are responsible for the product gaining any users.

    You can have everything right in your product but if no one knows about it and if there's no one telling you what would your product improve on the persons work or life, then your product is almost useless. This same trend can be seen with Linux and to an extend with some Google (and other geeky companies) products. Just throwing something at wall to see if it sticks doesn't work. You need to do your research, you need to interact with your customers and most importantly, you need to provide them with something that actually fixes a need they have. "But GPL is free, and leads to code liberation" frankly doesn't cut it. Most people care about their own needs, and that does nothing about them. Sales and marketing people are good at researching, reading and telling people, from the customer point of view, that what would it fix in their lives, and it is an essential skill.

  15. Re:Please no on Google Merges Google+ Into Search · · Score: 1

    If people are choosing Google then why is Google paying OEM's/Manufacturers/Browser makers/Shareware authors over billion an year to set google.com as default homepage and/or search engine and to spread Chrome?

    And why did Chrome in Russia have specific switch in code that defaulted the search to Google instead of Yandex?

    That's because people aren't choosing Google. They get shoved to Google in various ways.

  16. Re:Google Analytics on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 1

    I was obviously talking about how people usually do it. Of course you can do all sorts of tricks or server side determination on when to include GA, but that's completely beside the point and not how majority do it.

  17. Re:Google Analytics on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 1

    Yes, because someone who has different opinion is obviously a paid shill. Do you even notice how paranoid you sound?

  18. Re:Google Analytics on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 1, Interesting

    That makes no sense. Facebook like button really isn't on all pages of the internet because it makes no sense to have it on them, and isn't as widespread either. But every site wants to see how many visitors they have and all other information about them.

    But hey, if you don't believe me, take a look at Blekko's Grep the Web. As part of crawling the web they do exactly this kind of stuff, to determine how many websites have something compared to other.

    Here we can find number of domains with Google Analytics: 12,380,670
    Here we can find number of domains with Facebook like button: 522,242 + 817,817 = 1,340,059

    Yep, exactly the same. Except that Google Analytics is installed on 11 million more domains than Facebook like button.

  19. Re:Hosts R Us and smack down on FB and themz on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 1

    Yes, because completely blocking whole amazon aws and facebook is such an awesome idea.

  20. Re:Google Analytics on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 0, Troll

    You're wrong. Google Analytics is installed inside head of html document, and you almost always do this in the template so it really goes to every page on site. Facebook buttons are only on the pages where it makes sense, like news items. On top of that Google Analytics is used on like 99% of sites while Facebook buttons are on far less. Analytics is currently much larger privacy issue, and you know it.

  21. Re:Google Analytics on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's not exactly the same. Google Analytics tracks all pages on domain, site-wide. Facebook buttons only the page where they are. There's a huge difference. Also, Google really likes to change the whole thing about knowing your real name.

  22. Google Analytics on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: -1, Troll

    Why don't they do anything about Google Analytics? It's MUCH larger privacy issue than Facebook like buttons and users have to go through the same trouble to block them both. They are also both installed by webmasters who agree to conditions. Google Analytics is on billions of websites, even Slashdot, and tracks EVERYTHING. They need to do something about that first.

  23. Re:Uhg on Google Merges Google+ Into Search · · Score: 0

    Google's monopoly isn't about users and their choices, it's about advertisers and what choice they have. Google is actively hindering and trying to kill of competitors by denying advertisers from running same ads on other networks if they want to use AdWords.

  24. Re:Please no on Google Merges Google+ Into Search · · Score: 1, Troll

    The antitrust issues rarely are from direct user point of view. It wasn't with Microsoft, it isn't with Google. With Microsoft they were trying to kill other browser and OS makers by making deals with PC manufacturers. With Google it's issue with advertisers, who are the actual customers of Google. Since Google maintains a monopoly on search, they can pretty much dictate pay per click advertising. And they do.

    European Union was looking into Google's monopoly issues because Google was denying advertisers from running same ads on other networks if they want to use Google's ad services. This is already bad in US, but in several European countries Google has a market share of 90-99% in search. There are just no alternatives, and if there are, Google is doing everything they can to kill them off. Hence the antitrust issues.

  25. Re:Please no on Google Merges Google+ Into Search · · Score: 0

    Those are just apps you can use if you want to. It's completely different if Google asks you to create Google+ profile when you're booting your Android phone.