...when you are 74 years old? Many people live healthy lives well into their 80's (and beyond). There is no single correct answer for everyone when it comes to how long you will live before you become a burden to someone, or lose the capacity to decide for yourself. Perspective is everything. Having recently crossed the half century mark, in my youth I figured I wouldn't make it to 30. I probably have fewer brain cells today than I did back then, but I also have more synaptic development and more "wisdom". Try it! You'll see that there is life after 75.
Instead of blaming capitalism, why not place the blame on the responsible individuals? Other economic systems have had exactly the same problems with people who have behaved exactly like Gates and Balmer.
Only time will tell if things will be any different under Nadella. Right now it's too early to say that Microsoft has changed it's ways.
HP is not the same company it was before the Compaq merger, but I see this as an improvement over some of their recent past underhanded tactics. One example that comes to mind is the time that I had to pay >$1k for a "refurbished" tape drive (rather than forking out over twice that for a new one) after a firmware "upgrade" caused the drive to self destruct by adding a useless and stressing servo limit test at power up.
HP isn't the best at anything anymore, but they certainly still rake in the profits (largely from ink jet refill cartridges).
Save yourself some money and a future headache by buying a Xerox printer, a Fujitsu scanner, or a Dell computer.
"We think Unix is a pretty lousy operating system to put inside a workstation. It's old technology and it's really big and you need a Winchester so you can never make the workstations cheap..."
I'm glad that Jobs was open minded enough to recognize the value of Unix, and to eventually migrate MacOS to BSD Unix.
(I watched the video and typed this post from a laptop running Linux.)
As recently as a few hundred years ago, farmers turned to witchcraft while seeking blame for similar problems. People haven't changed very much. Science and education have improved over the past few hundred years. Science and big government now fulfil part of the role the church did in those days. Overall there isn't much difference between what happened then and what is happening now. When do the human sacrifices begin?
I remembered this incident when it occurred. Last month I spent an hour searching the Internet for any trace of it and came up empty. At the time I was taking an IT security course and I wanted to share the details of the incident with my classmates. Given recent events within the IT security community, this story seemed very relevant. I couldn't find anything at all so I eventually gave up.
Thank you for bringing this incident back to light.
Analog cellular phone calls are covered by a separate law (The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986). It not only makes it illegal to record them, it makes it illegal to sell a radio that can receive them (or be easily modified to receive them). Thankfully all mobile phones are digital now. Unfortunately that law is still on the books.
Another court case conflicts with the Google ruling. Back when they were in popular use, the police sometimes recorded wireless phone calls from 46/49 MHz cordless phones (without a warrant). The police used these recordings in court to convict a drug dealer and the drug dealer argued that the communications were private. The courts ruled that they were not. Here is the court ruling from this case:
Unencrypted RF communications should be fair game for anyone to receive and record. The fact that it's digital seems to be what swayed the judges in this case. I can't for the life of me understand how this could have happened. I'm not in favor Google's actions, but they were not illegal. Now the law has been twisted and there will be unintended consequences.
Whether or not it supports master mode is the first thing I looked for on the product page. It doesn't say whether it does or not anywhere. If it did, I would buy one today.
My poor old Nexus One struggles with memory usage. Every time some app is updated for Android 4 I lose more space (both storage and run-time).
I only use that phone about 9 days per month, but it is becoming less and less useful as time goes by because of this memory usage issue.
A few months ago I moved the Dalvik cache onto an Ext3 partition and it helped somewhat. I still have over half of my apps moved to the SD card because everything will not fit.
Developers, please continue to try to optimize your applications for older phones.
You said; "The floppies would boot up the computer right into the game so there was no OS involved."
What you meant to say was that the installed OS of your computer was not involved. The games you were booting from floppies provided their own OS, and it did not resemble the one you were accustomed to.
The BIOS is part of an operating system. Some older operating systems use the ROM BIOS for all of their I/O. Older PCs booted up in real mode and could use the ROM BIOS without consequences. Newer machines and operating systems need a BIOS that is compatible with protected mode. Most newer UEFI BIOSs still support the legacy mode.
Back before the IBM PC and MS-DOS, many people ran CP/M. The CP/M OS consisted of a console command processor (CCP), basic disk operating system (BDOS), and basic input output system (BIOS). This is the origin of the acronym.
Unless you bought your CP/M computer from some systems provider (such as Northstar, Osborne, or NLS), you had to write your own BIOS. If you added a peripheral (such as a printer), you often had to modify your BIOS to support it. (The elite BIOS programmers would even include code for I/O redirection.)
The "less than one-third" people who feel they are in control of their personal information are living in a dream. All of the service providers collect and use all of the information that is available to them. If everyone knew what is happening behind the scenes they might demand data privacy laws similar to those in Germany.
I can truly sympathize with the OP.
My 300 Mbps Verizon FiOS service has been broken for over a week now. Verizon claims it is a widespread outage, but apparently it isn't wide enough to get anyone to actually work on it. Today I reconfigured my network to use one of my kids' cell phones for the main Internet connection. Now it works better than it has for weeks, even though I'm only getting 6 Mbps of bandwidth.
Upon my initial report Verizon insisted that everything was fine and that it must be my equipment. Two days later the techs showed up, and after two hours they flagged the problem as an "outage". I've called every day since then and they always claim that it will be repaired by 1pm the next day (or 1am if I'm calling in the afternoon). There is no evidence that anybody has worked this problem. The equipment in question is commonplace, and Verizon has the resources to complete a repair like this in a matter of hours.
Verizon's customer service has been completely worthless. You cannot even speak with a tier-2 technician, and the tier-1 phone monkeys are not allowed to access any useful corporate information.
Just like (GTE) DSL and ISDN before it, Verizon FiOS was an excellent product when it was first introduced. Things began to go downhill a few years later when the product support was transitioned away from the "Advanced Products Group" to the regular phone monkeys. I've had it for five years and it's been good, but I'm now ready to pull the plug.
No mod points here. I played WoW for 3 years on Linux using Crossover Games. Codeweavers has merged all of their Wine forks into one product so it's even more worthwhile to buy it now. There have been a few issues (such as memory problems on 64-bit Linux hosts), but overall it works pretty well. I had no trouble doing end-game raids (Vent works fine too).
Sun had recently settled their lawsuit with Microsoft over Java with undisclosed terms. A conspiracy theorist might wonder whether those terms included Sun acting as a proxy for Microsoft in channeling that $23M to Caldera/TSG/SCO.
How can you miss the difference between parents having the means to fund a child's Harvard education (incomplete at that) and being a multi-billionaire?
I plan to send a kid to Harvard, and even though I am a millionaire, you've never heard of me (and probably never will). I began working at 15 and never inherited anything. I've never stolen money from anyone and I don't think I'm taking too big a slice of "the pie". I'm just now finishing a BS degree 30 years late, but at least I'll have a better education than Michael Dell, Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, and Steve Jobs.
My GP post was modded down to zero so I guess most Slashdotters today are communists and socialists. They'll never become wealthy with such attitudes.
...when you are 74 years old? Many people live healthy lives well into their 80's (and beyond). There is no single correct answer for everyone when it comes to how long you will live before you become a burden to someone, or lose the capacity to decide for yourself. Perspective is everything. Having recently crossed the half century mark, in my youth I figured I wouldn't make it to 30. I probably have fewer brain cells today than I did back then, but I also have more synaptic development and more "wisdom". Try it! You'll see that there is life after 75.
NASA is helping SpaceX. Is Boeing a branch of the Federal Government? How is now different from before?
Only time will tell if things will be any different under Nadella. Right now it's too early to say that Microsoft has changed it's ways.
We still have Scientific Linux.
Dell went private with a lot of help from Microsoft ($2G). Perhaps this all comes down to an anti-OSS policy mandate.
HP is not the same company it was before the Compaq merger, but I see this as an improvement over some of their recent past underhanded tactics. One example that comes to mind is the time that I had to pay >$1k for a "refurbished" tape drive (rather than forking out over twice that for a new one) after a firmware "upgrade" caused the drive to self destruct by adding a useless and stressing servo limit test at power up.
HP isn't the best at anything anymore, but they certainly still rake in the profits (largely from ink jet refill cartridges).
Save yourself some money and a future headache by buying a Xerox printer, a Fujitsu scanner, or a Dell computer.
Link: here
"We think Unix is a pretty lousy operating system to put inside a workstation. It's old technology and it's really big and you need a Winchester so you can never make the workstations cheap..."
I'm glad that Jobs was open minded enough to recognize the value of Unix, and to eventually migrate MacOS to BSD Unix.
(I watched the video and typed this post from a laptop running Linux.)
See: How a Bad Rye Crop Might Have Caused the Salem Witch Trials.
I remembered this incident when it occurred. Last month I spent an hour searching the Internet for any trace of it and came up empty. At the time I was taking an IT security course and I wanted to share the details of the incident with my classmates. Given recent events within the IT security community, this story seemed very relevant. I couldn't find anything at all so I eventually gave up.
Thank you for bringing this incident back to light.
Analog cellular phone calls are covered by a separate law (The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986). It not only makes it illegal to record them, it makes it illegal to sell a radio that can receive them (or be easily modified to receive them). Thankfully all mobile phones are digital now. Unfortunately that law is still on the books.
Another court case conflicts with the Google ruling. Back when they were in popular use, the police sometimes recorded wireless phone calls from 46/49 MHz cordless phones (without a warrant). The police used these recordings in court to convict a drug dealer and the drug dealer argued that the communications were private. The courts ruled that they were not. Here is the court ruling from this case:
Unencrypted RF communications should be fair game for anyone to receive and record. The fact that it's digital seems to be what swayed the judges in this case. I can't for the life of me understand how this could have happened. I'm not in favor Google's actions, but they were not illegal. Now the law has been twisted and there will be unintended consequences.
See: http://tucsoncitizen.com/wryheat/2013/05/18/cooking-consensus-on-climate-change
Give them a day. I'll bet it stops working tomorrow.
Whether or not it supports master mode is the first thing I looked for on the product page. It doesn't say whether it does or not anywhere. If it did, I would buy one today.
I remember reading about this technology 10 years ago: http://www.phys.huji.ac.il/~springer/DigitalNeedle/
I only use that phone about 9 days per month, but it is becoming less and less useful as time goes by because of this memory usage issue.
A few months ago I moved the Dalvik cache onto an Ext3 partition and it helped somewhat. I still have over half of my apps moved to the SD card because everything will not fit.
Developers, please continue to try to optimize your applications for older phones.
Thank you.
What you meant to say was that the installed OS of your computer was not involved. The games you were booting from floppies provided their own OS, and it did not resemble the one you were accustomed to.
The BIOS is part of an operating system. Some older operating systems use the ROM BIOS for all of their I/O. Older PCs booted up in real mode and could use the ROM BIOS without consequences. Newer machines and operating systems need a BIOS that is compatible with protected mode. Most newer UEFI BIOSs still support the legacy mode.
Back before the IBM PC and MS-DOS, many people ran CP/M. The CP/M OS consisted of a console command processor (CCP), basic disk operating system (BDOS), and basic input output system (BIOS). This is the origin of the acronym.
Unless you bought your CP/M computer from some systems provider (such as Northstar, Osborne, or NLS), you had to write your own BIOS. If you added a peripheral (such as a printer), you often had to modify your BIOS to support it. (The elite BIOS programmers would even include code for I/O redirection.)
The problem is that most software engineers are too dense to implement this properly.
The "less than one-third" people who feel they are in control of their personal information are living in a dream. All of the service providers collect and use all of the information that is available to them. If everyone knew what is happening behind the scenes they might demand data privacy laws similar to those in Germany.
Verizon's customer service has been completely worthless. You cannot even speak with a tier-2 technician, and the tier-1 phone monkeys are not allowed to access any useful corporate information.
Just like (GTE) DSL and ISDN before it, Verizon FiOS was an excellent product when it was first introduced. Things began to go downhill a few years later when the product support was transitioned away from the "Advanced Products Group" to the regular phone monkeys. I've had it for five years and it's been good, but I'm now ready to pull the plug.
-- This space for rent.
Also be sure to use channels that are spaced far enough apart so as to not interfere at all. (E.g. 1, 6, & 11)
No mod points here. I played WoW for 3 years on Linux using Crossover Games. Codeweavers has merged all of their Wine forks into one product so it's even more worthwhile to buy it now. There have been a few issues (such as memory problems on 64-bit Linux hosts), but overall it works pretty well. I had no trouble doing end-game raids (Vent works fine too).
Sun had recently settled their lawsuit with Microsoft over Java with undisclosed terms. A conspiracy theorist might wonder whether those terms included Sun acting as a proxy for Microsoft in channeling that $23M to Caldera/TSG/SCO.
I plan to send a kid to Harvard, and even though I am a millionaire, you've never heard of me (and probably never will). I began working at 15 and never inherited anything. I've never stolen money from anyone and I don't think I'm taking too big a slice of "the pie". I'm just now finishing a BS degree 30 years late, but at least I'll have a better education than Michael Dell, Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, and Steve Jobs.
My GP post was modded down to zero so I guess most Slashdotters today are communists and socialists. They'll never become wealthy with such attitudes.