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User: The+Cisco+Kid

The+Cisco+Kid's activity in the archive.

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  1. I'm confused.

    What market do they monopolize?

    In what situation does anyone not have a choice as to whether to use some product or service offered by google, or one offered by another entity?

  2. Ftfy on Google Hasn't Stopped Reading Your Emails (theoutline.com) · · Score: 1

    If you're a (any free email service) user, your messages and emails likely aren't as private as you'd think. (Your email provider) reads each and every one, .....

  3. Re: I just hope that ... on SpaceX Hits Two Milestones In Plan For Low-Latency Satellite Broadband (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Not *everyone* would have to switch to it. And not everyone would (at least among those that had other options to start with).

    But merely knowing customers had another option would hopefully put some pressure on the existing services to keep prices down and service levels up.

  4. I just hope that ... on SpaceX Hits Two Milestones In Plan For Low-Latency Satellite Broadband (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    they plan to offer this on a competitive basis in all areas of the US (especially rural or suburban areas that currently have none or maybe just one existing broadband option, but even in areas that have both cable and phone options)

    And that the pricing is within the reach of the average middle to low income person living in such areas.

    Previously I've only seen experiments that focus on providing service to third world countries but ignore the bast under or unserved areas in the US (cough, project loon)

    If this ever becomes fully available everywhere in the US, and is priced affordably, it may finally signal the start of the death of the monopolistic stranglehold the current broadband providers have on the market in the US.

    That the current FCC seems to be approving of it, suggests to me that it WON'T. It will probably be priced similarly to other Musk offerings, so high as to only be affordable to people with 6 figure or higher salaries.

    Because if there's one thing we know Pai protects, its the guaranteed mega profits of his corporate masters.

  5. Re:It's really a Hillary For Prison Thing on Fake News Sharing In US Is a Rightwing Thing, Says Oxford Study (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    Got a link to a site or story that accused Trump of being a Russian agent?

    If not, then your post is the exact sort of "fake news" that the story is about - putting words in other people's mouths.

  6. 1. Will the products be physically in stock for you to buy, load in your truck and take home? Or will it just be some sort of display where you have to order them and then wait?

    2. Will they be anywhere near in a price range that someone could buy without taking out the equivalent of a 2nd mortgage?

  7. Youd have the option to subscribe to cellular internet. Or you could opt to rely on using wifi (which could even be by tethering ti an existing cell)

  8. maybe, maybe not, but on Would You Use a Smartphone-Style Laptop With a Three-Day Battery Life? (king5.com) · · Score: 1

    Certainly not if it was locked into a ms os.

  9. people that want to be able to control their phone on Two Major Cydia Hosts Shut Down as Jailbreaking Fades in Popularity (macrumors.com) · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    .. are leaving or have already left apple's walled garden and moved to Android-based devices.

    iphones primary user base is people that barely know how to install an app, and jailbreaking would be like brain surgery for them

  10. You've explained it perfectly.. on A 14-Year-Old Asks: When Should I Get a VPN? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Far too many novice users have no understanding what a VPN is. And/or they assume you have to pay for one from some provider.

    I myself use OpenVPN to tunnel to my home network when I am using my cell phone to provide access to my laptop, to protect my activity from my cellular carrier (I am not technically "allowed" to "tether") - it doesn't cost me anything, and as a bonus I can access devices on my home network such as IP cam's, etc without having to setup individual port-forwarding in the router.

  11. "Commercial Speech" enjoys less protection on Ask Slashdot: Is Deliberately Misleading People On the Internet Free Speech? · · Score: 1

    http://www.lawpublish.com/amen...

    Advertising Is Protected by the First Amendment
    The question is often asked: Does the First Amendment protect advertisements? Advertising is indeed protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. However, advertising or "commercial speech" enjoys somewhat less First Amendment protection from governmental encroachment than other types of speech. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), for example, may regulate speech that is found to be "deceptive."

  12. Is it a magical place?

  13. Re:New Android on Android O Is Officially Launching August 21 (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 1

    You get that ability by buying the phone from someone OTHER than a cellular carrier. Either directly from Google for their direct branded phones, or from an independent electronics retailer that is not associated with a cellular service.

    For instance: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c...
    lists a variety of LG, Motorola, and Samsung phones. Unlocked, no carrier bloatware.

    (I have no association with B&H)

  14. Depends on the type of payment. My solution: on Ask Slashdot: How Safe, Really, Is Paying For Things Online? · · Score: 1

    Don't give your bank account number to anyone to withdraw from directly, online or off. (That includes paypal)

    Instead - use your BANK'S billpay service (almost all banks and CU's offer one), where you enter your bill account number on your bank's service, and then tetll your bank to send payment(s) in the amount you specify on the date you specify, and the biller (nor anyone that hacks their database) never has access to withdraw money from you.

    For services that want a credit card and won't bill you, either

    1. If you don't have good credit, buy prepaid reloadable visa or master cards, use a unique one for each biller. Reload them with JUST enough to cover the next month or two of charges.

    2. If you have good credit, get a card from either BofA or Citibank - both offer a service where you can generate disposable numbers with a short expiration and chosen charge limit to use either for one-time payments or for recurring charges. You can always deactivate one of these to block future charges. BofA calls theirs "shopsafe", Citi calls it "Virtual Account Numbers"

    NEVER give your hard credit card number to anyone online, nor to anyone for any sort of recurring billing. If its compromised, they have to cancel it, and you have to wait to get a new one in the mail.

    If somewhere you want to buy from accepts paypal only (such as most eBay sellers), use paypal's "check out as guest with a CC" option and then use either of the two credit card options above (prepaid card, or virtual card)

  15. Too bad its a finance story, and not a tech story on T-Mobile Rolling Out 600 MHz Low-Band Wireless (yahoo.com) · · Score: 2

    and contains no concrete details at all.

  16. I use google voice for voicemail and have the voicemail from my cell carrier disabled.

    For my GV setup, all callers except a few direct family and friends get bunted directly to voicemail without it ever ringing anyway. If anyone else wants to get in touch with me, they need to leave a message anyway. If the message doesn't say who they are and what they want, I'll just ignore it. If it does, then I can decide I'm not interested and still ignore it.

    For some reason, so far, most don't want to leave me message and just hang up.

  17. Well, I would love to do this, but on Tesla's Highly-Anticipated Solar Roofs Go Up For Pre-Order Today (inhabitat.com) · · Score: 1

    $50k for a new roof is not remotely comparable to the ~$7K it cost a few years ago for a traditional roof (paid for by insurance, due to hail damage)

    Even if it could completely eliminate my electric bill (which is unlikely)(and which would require the additional $7k battery) that only saves me $100/mo - which means it would take be 47 years to pay this off, and even then only if the financing rate was 0% (also unlikely)

    As wonderful as an idea as solar roof is, at the prices so far, its completely infeasible for anyone in the middle-class.

    As was said elsewhere, a neat toy for the super rich. One can only hope that if lots of said super-rich install these, and want to sell excess power back to the utility, that it might actually drive electric costs down for everyone else. But that's unlikely too, since the power utilities will have to upgrade facilities for bi-directional power, and will want to recoup that cost, and still make money.

  18. Google/Alphabet is the on Slashdot Asks: Which Tech Giant You Can't Live Without? · · Score: 1

    only one of those that is really important to me. I already have nothing to do with Amazon, and very little to do with MS or Apple. Facebook is convenient for keeping in touch with certain people, but I could live without it. Google(Alphabet) you'll have to pry from my cold dead hands.

  19. I saw this post via RSS, in Feedly. on Slashdot Asks: Do You Still Use RSS? · · Score: 1

    Its far more convenient to look at news from multiple sources in one interface.

    There are also a bunch of sites I see articles from via RSS, in Feedly, that I would never bother visiting individually.

  20. It won't do any good. on Kill Net Neutrality and You'll Kill Us, Say 800 US Startups (google.com) · · Score: 1

    Pai is fully bought and paid for by the entrenched incumbent telecom providers,and is going to do exactly what they tell him to do no matter what the facts are.

  21. Re:We need free bandwidth on Kill Net Neutrality and You'll Kill Us, Say 800 US Startups (google.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you think these companies don't pay for their Internet connections, you are deluded.

  22. Yes. If you want to keep it private, then on Should Archive.org Ignore Robots.txt Directives And Cache Everything? (archive.org) · · Score: 1

    don't publish it openly in the first place.

  23. Re:Ps my school includes e-books in tuition. It wo on States Are Moving To Cut College Costs By Introducing Open-Source Textbooks (qz.com) · · Score: 1

    Are they in an open format that you get to keep a permanent copy of if you wish? Or, ff you decide not to keep them, can you sell them to someone else?

  24. Cue the outrage from on States Are Moving To Cut College Costs By Introducing Open-Source Textbooks (qz.com) · · Score: 1

    established textbook publishing monopolies that feel they are entitled to live richly off the backs of broke college students.

  25. Or just on 'Social Media Needs A Travel Mode' (idlewords.com) · · Score: 1

    don't bring any devices with you, and if someone asks for your Facebook password reply with "Whats a face book?"