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User: Reschekle

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Comments · 59

  1. Re:His mistake is obvious on Man Who Sold $100 Million Worth of Pirated Software Gets 12 Years In Prison · · Score: 3, Informative
  2. Re:Sounds reasonable to me. on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 1

    Check the ToS. It explicitly states that the service is subject to undisclosed data usage restrictions.

  3. Re:THERE IS NO LIMIT on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 1

    Actually what you quoted IS from the ToS. That's precisely what makes the service explicitly NOT an unlimited service.

  4. Re:Sounds reasonable to me. on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 4, Informative

    The only person claiming this plan is unlimited is the author of the story.

    While sometimes the marketing people fuck up, Verizon does not label their plans as being unlimited that I can tell: http://www22.verizon.com/home/fios-fastest-internet/fastest-internet-plans/

  5. Re:Think of Verizon's position on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 5, Informative

    Verizon doesn't call their plans unlimited.

    http://www22.verizon.com/home/fios-fastest-internet/fastest-internet-plans/

    No mention of any unlimited plans.

  6. Re:Think of Verizon's position on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 1

    Please provide a link to or scan of Verizon's marketing materials describing any of their FiOS internet plans as having unlimited data usage.

  7. Re:Think of Verizon's position on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, they don't.

    http://www22.verizon.com/home/fios-fastest-internet/fastest-internet-plans/

    Go find the word 'unlimited' on that page.

    In the ToS, they specifically mention that excessive use is a reason to boot you off.

    http://my.verizon.com/central/vzc.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=vzc_help_policies&id=TOS

  8. Was never an 'unlimited' plan to begin with on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'd like for someone to point to marketing or promo material from Verizon calling this plan an 'unlimited' plan. While it's possible the marketing guys screwed it up, it's more likely that this plan was never labeled an 'unlimited' plan at all. For some reason when ISPs crack down on excessive use, there are always hordes of people who claimed they purchased an 'unlimited' plan when the evidence says otherwise.

    Companies like AOL got in trouble because they went from only having time-metered dialup plans to having so-called unlimited plans where you could stay dialed in as long as you'd like. A lot of people took them up on this and left themselves dialed in for weeks at a time. AOL took it upon themselves to make exceptions to this (as it impacted service for other users - no free lines for customers to dial in to!) but never put in any fine print in. AOL got sued and lost over this, and subsequently they started changing the wording of their marketing materials and putting in fine print.

    Now days nobody expects broadband to have the same types of limits so the ISPs simply just don't bother with the 'unlimited' verbage. They prefer to use terms like 'always on' and such, which means something entirely different.

  9. Re:Not even close on Larry Page: You Worry Too Much About Medical Privacy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Umm, if you're not being open with your partner about your STD as far as I'm concerned you're a criminal and a scumbag.

  10. Re:How does Apple Decrypt it? on Apple Deluged By Police Demands To Decrypt iPhones · · Score: 1

    Android phones are unencrypted by default. This is definitely an area that iOS is far superior in. Recent versions of Android include encryption but it has to be enabled as a separate option. It will also only encrypt your internal storage, though vendor-forks of Android such as Samsung will do both internal and external (not an issue if you don't use SD cards). Additionally, the encryption is one-way and irreversible (though, again, this is something Samsung has improved in their fork).

    Perhaps the most annoying thing about Samsung's encryption is that they force you to choose a very secure password, which is reasonable for powering on the phone, but they also force this password to be your phone's screen unlock code as well, which is extremely annoying especially if you're working with an enterprise device that has a security profile that forces the phone to lock after a few minutes.

    The reasonable thing here would be to have an screen unlock PIN consisting of 4-10 digits that wipes the phone after a few incorrect tries and a much stronger phone decryption code that has to be entered when the phone is powered on. This can actually be accomplished by rooting the phone and hacking some scripts but it puts you in the position of putting an unsupported modification onto your phone just to make it usable. None of this is a problem if you're a hacker, of course.

    Because of the fragmented nature of Android, Google is not in a position to provide LE assistance for every device and carrier fork of Android.

  11. Re:Far cheaper options on German Ministry of Education Throws Away PCs For 190,000 € Due To Infection · · Score: 1

    This post shouldn't have been modded down. It is a valid argument. There are tons of business apps out there that won't run on Linux. Just because Linux has an OSS equivalent of something doesn't mean it is also equivalent in quality, support, or familiarity to the users who already have years of training invested in a particular tool.

    There are some offices where Linux, one of the free office suites, and some of the various free apps out there would be adequate for the required workflow, and we do hear about those companies and governments when they switch to Linux.

    However, to blindly proclaim that Linux is a drop-in replacement for Windows that will start saving you money immediately is quite ridiculous. If this was *really* the case then businesses would already be doing it en masse.

  12. Re:Sure, go ahead. on Japanese Police Urge ISPs To Block Tor · · Score: 4, Informative

    They caught the guy who sent them so I'm not sure why Tor needs to be blocked.

  13. Re:Wouldn't KVM... on Xen To Become Linux Foundation Collaborative Project · · Score: 1

    (A Xen hypervisor, rather)

  14. Re:Wouldn't KVM... on Xen To Become Linux Foundation Collaborative Project · · Score: 1

    RHEV uses KVM. With that said, I believe (haven't checked recently though) that Red Hat still supports running RHEL as a guest inside of a KVM hypervisor.

  15. Re:Surveillance on Bin Laden Raid Member To Be WikiLeaks Witness · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem though is that the NSA has been caught red-handed on multiple occasions. Then we hear about NSA's massive new data center that is under construction. So we want to know what they're up to and what they're doing. They won't tell us. The courts refuse to do their jobs when we try to sue and discover the information. Even NSA's budget is a state secret. So maybe what the NSA is doing is totally above board (or maybe not) but they refuse to have any level of accountability so as far as I am concerned, and many other people are concerned, they are guilty until they can prove their innocence.

    Given the history of our government misusing its powers, I don't think it is unreasonable at all to assume that the NSA is up to no good.

  16. Re:Transactional Currency, not Safe Haven Storage on Will Legitimacy Spoil Bitcoin? · · Score: 2

    That's not really true. Miners can collectively switch to a new client that supports whatever feature they want, but everyone else needs to run the same client in order for that to work.

    Otherwise the rest of the bitcoin network will refuse to confirm their transactions.

  17. Re:Transactional Currency, not Safe Haven Storage on Will Legitimacy Spoil Bitcoin? · · Score: 2

    No. The smallest unit of Bitcoin is the Satoshi, which is 1/100,000,000 of a bitcoin.

  18. Re:E-books on Supreme Court Upholds First Sale Doctrine · · Score: 1

    It will happen eventually but the developing world can't afford to give each of their college students iPads or Kindles or whatever. Paper textbooks are cheap outside of the USA because that is what the market will bear over there.

    They will be on paper for at least a little while longer.

  19. Re:Oracle sucks. on Solaris Machine Shut Down After 3737 Days of Uptime · · Score: 2

    You sound like you've never had to mediate a 3-way vendor argument between the hardware vendor, the linux support vendor and the HBA vendor, all claiming that it's someone else's fault that the hardware/OS/HBA combo doesn't work, even though they assured you that it did before you bought it. Oh, and you're a top customer, so they want to keep you really really happy. But not "it actually works" kind of happy.

    I was talking about Solaris on Intel. Not sure where you got this from. In fact, you kind of reinforce my point: running Solaris on other people's hardware is just asking for trouble like this, which WAS MY POINT!

    Anyway, if you really want to play this game, I'd be more than happy to pull up some of the various support cases I've opened with Sun and Oracle about Solaris and get you to try to explain each one to me, since you're such a bigot for Solaris.

    Spoken like someone who has never run them side by side in a large estate

    I have and do at my current gig, so shut your pipe. I have also done software development for both. So I know the ins and outs of both OSes pretty damned well. I even admitted to you that Solaris is the better OS, yet you're still not happy with my response. Spoken like a true fanboy you have.

    There is one advantage to Solaris and it is the vendor lockin, namely the fact that you have limited hardware combinations, whereas with Intel you have literally hundreds of combinations of chipsets and configurations to support and test against. Again, this is one reason why I do *NOT* recommend Solaris on Intel unless you're buying one of Oracle's own Intel servers where they have actually tested the OS and the hardware together.

    Or who want to run large databases with more than a few GB of RAM. Small databases seem fine on Linux, but Oracle or DB2 or Sybase don't seem as stable on Linux as on Solaris when you get up to 32+GB RAM.

    I'm running rather large databases, much larger than that, with OEL on Dell branded hardware. It just works for us.

    Yes, and it's a crying shame. Oracle are terrible. I know of whole enterprises who jumped ship when Oracle took over. But Linux still isn't there, even though most places I'm working at these days have more Linux than Solaris, HP-UX or AIX, and usually more than all other Unix combined. But there's still too much of the amateur around Linux.

    Your only indictment against Linux is that you have some specific hardware issue, that's not really convincing and pretending that Solaris doesn't have those issues is just plain laughable and absurd.

  20. Re:Oracle sucks. on Solaris Machine Shut Down After 3737 Days of Uptime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    OK, first off, it is not stolen. You cannot steal open source software. Oracle is following the GPL.

    Second, Oracle was doing OEL before they acquired Sun.

    Solaris is a technically good and high quality OS but its hardware support was limited. If you bought the Sun-branded boxes and Sun-branded cards, you were OK. However if you are white-boxing a server, you had to be careful to select chipsets that were on their compatibility list. Then support got murky at that point even then.

    I really, really love Solaris, but let's face the facts. Outside of the SPARC platform, there is no reason for Solaris. Linux does everything as well or nearly as well. Linux is weaker in some areas, but not weak enough to justify the cost and lock-in of Solaris.

    Solaris exists for Oracle to milk legacy customers on support contracts who aren't ready or willing to migrate to Linux and commodity x86 hardware . There isn't much if any new development going on, and Oracle is only pushing Solaris to new customers as part of their big data warehouse solutions (where customers have $$$$$ and want to spend it with one vendor) where they want to get people locked in to one vendor.

  21. Re:Once upon a time... on Rusty Foster Isn't Dead · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a urban legend. Attaching "Business Reply Mail" envelopes and cards to parcels is an invalid use of those mailings and will be discarded. You are either lying (this incident never happened) or your postman has never worked in sorting and has no clue about this.

    See here and here.

    If you want to piss them off, send them something nasty that will gum up the letter-opening machines at the CC company. Of course you may well end up being sued or charged with a crime, depending on the circumstance.

  22. Umm.. on The New Ethanol Blend May Damage Your Vehicle · · Score: 1

    It's been a while since I've used a full-service pump but they ALWAYS ask you what kind of gas you want in your vehicle..

    What, do you think that people who drive diesels are constantly getting regular gasoline in their tanks because the pump boy doesn't know how to ask you what fuel you want?

  23. RTFA (or summary for that matter) on The New Ethanol Blend May Damage Your Vehicle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The environmentalists are actually against it

  24. Re:Wasnt there supposed to be some law passed... on Apple Kills a Kickstarter Project - Updated · · Score: 0

    No. There is an industry standard for phone charging that Apple voluntarily agreed to - basically saying all phones will come with a standard charging port (micro-USB). But that standard is essentially pointless because you can be compliant by making an adapter available as an option.

    Apple has a micro-USB-to-Lightning adapter that you can purchase, as an option, for like $30.

  25. Re:This happens everywhere, not just China... on The Trouble With Bringing Your Business Laptop To China · · Score: 1

    Yeah this stuff happens everywhere but China is like the world's capital of industrial espionage. It happens by several orders of magnitude more in China than any other place.