Slashdot Mirror


User: Collin

Collin's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
41
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 41

  1. You can only ask for discounts on a voice call on New Chrome Extension Automatically Negotiates With Comcast For Rate Discounts (fiercecable.com) · · Score: 1

    I haven't been with Comcast for about year now, but whenever I ask about promos or discounts on chat, they pretty much automatically tell me to call in to the billing/sales voice line and that they don't have the authority to make plan changes via chat. Perhaps some others can chime in with their experiences.

    So by my experience, this automatic negotiator bot is a no go from the git go because you can't negotiate via chat.

  2. Now they will have two fiber networks? on Comcast Brings Fiber To City That It Sued 7 Years Ago To Stop Fiber Rollout · · Score: 1

    So, the only way to get Comcast or AT&T to build a fiber network in your city is to build your own fiber network and then that will force them into competing by building yet another fiber network. Now the city has two or three fiber networks and most other cities still have none.

    If only they could come to the conclusion that they could build a fiber network first in a city that doesn't have any at all. But that would just make too much sense.

  3. It's the exceptions that crash the system... on Algorithm Challenge: Burning Man Vehicle Exodus · · Score: 1

    Your assumption is that all license plates have the same format. They don't. Different states do them differently. In California, there are 7 digit places in the format:
    NAAANNNN (Where N = numeral, A = Alphabet character). So right off the bat, your system fails because all California plates don't end in a letter. Ok, so you say, change it to the second (or third or fourth) character instead. But then some other state might have a different format, then you need manpower to adjudicate exceptions, which takes more time and slows up the line, etc.

    You also assume that each segmented population can be processed through within the time allotted. Some segments may have more members than others, making this another bottleneck to work through.

  4. Re:Brake Pedal on Prototype Volvo Flywheel Tech Uses Car's Wasted Brake Energy · · Score: 2

    This is less likely to be due to mechanic performance limits but rather due hybrid drivers trying to optimize gas mileage via slow, smooth acceleration.

  5. What happened to Google and Oracle? on NYT: Healthcare.gov Project Chaos Due Partly To Unorthodox Database Choice · · Score: 1

    A few weeks ago, the press did a bunch of reporting that the Gov had reached out to Google and Oracle to come help fix their website. Haven't heard anything else since. Anybody know what happened with that move?

    Given what was in this article, I wouldn't be surprised if the Google engineers showed up, looked at the mess and said, "yeeah. good luck with that." and walked out. Maybe even said, "We'll help you if we get to throw out everything and rewrite it clean in a couple of months and host it on the Google-plex."

  6. Re:industrious dad on Industrious Dad Finds the Genetic Culprit To His Daughters Mysterious Disease · · Score: 4, Interesting

    i agree...the summary sounds like he's a regular guy with no biology training that self-taught himself so that he could help his daughter, leaving out these tidbits from the article: "...who had trained as a clinical geneticist..." "...Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, where Rienhoff trained as a geneticist..." "Rienhoff had long been tapping experts such as Dietz for assistance..."

    I'm not taking anything away from the dad's effort and dedication to his kid, just the "industrious dad" angle.

  7. Phone tech support? on Google Loves The Internship; Critics Not So Much · · Score: 2

    Of all the glaring tech and business inaccuracies, this one stands out the most: one of the team challenges the interns must face is going on the Google tech support phone lines to give good customer service. I wonder if anybody ever told Vaughn during a script review that THERE IS NO PHONE SUPPORT AT GOOGLE. Or EVEN DIRECT EMAIL SUPPORT. Or maybe the idea of such a huge, profitable, reputable and non-evil company not having personalized tech support was so unthinkable that nobody ever bothered to check.

    I understand why they don't have it, because of the high-costs of humans versus help pages and forums, but sometimes you really do need direct help.

    Example: when I first got my Google Voice account, friends would complain that calls to the number would not go through. A bit later, I got some calls from wrong numbers. I started talking to the wrong number callers and found out they were dialing their intended number correctly, and that number was my Google Voice number. Finally, at one point I got a call and it was the daughter of the 90 year-old lady who has had my Google Voice number for 50 years or more. I have no idea how Google issued me a duplicate number. Since GV didn't have phone or email support and obviously there is no self-help page for "My Google Voice number is a duplicate for an old lady's," I had to settle for making a forum post and hope a Googler would see it and respond. None ever did, but the problems went away and I'm left wondering if I'm screwing over an old lady's incoming phone calls (and wondering if she's getting some of my calls) by keeping this GV account. If somebody can prove me wrong by pointing out Google Voice direct support contacts, please do so.

    Anyhow, I saw the Internship movie on a preview and found it mildly amusing and pretty much like all the reviews said: standard, run-of-the-mill buddies out of water comedy filled with standard archetypes and a non-techies perception of techie companies. I also did wonder if Google sponsored the film because it was so sanitized.

  8. Re:kits for sale online on Keyless Remote Entry For Cars May Have Been Cracked · · Score: 1

    the ones at your link are kits for installing a remote unlock system on your car, not for unlocking cars that you don't own.

  9. Re:Except it's not "a new one" on Israeli Army Retweeting 1967 War As It Happened · · Score: 1

    even closer to the "live tweeting a past war" idea is Real Time WW2 Tweets, which has been going on since August 31, 2011.

    So, new to the OP, not really a new idea though.

  10. Re:TWEET AOC ABOUT IT on Ask Slashdot: Portable High-Resolution External Displays? · · Score: 1

    I tweeted this to @AOCusa, so maybe if enough people get on their case about it, they will make a 1080P version: "@AOCusa Please make your 16" USB Display with a higher-res panel (1600x900 or 1080P). Great idea, but 1366x768 too low to add much value."

  11. Re:USB displays on Ask Slashdot: Portable High-Resolution External Displays? · · Score: 1

    well, they do have a 1080P 21" version, so it's unlikely bandwidth is the gating issue. DisplayLink has been doing this for a while with USB video adapters. I am not exactly sure how they implemented the link protocol, but it likely isn't pushing raw pixel data since it needs special drivers. It likely sends API calls for the chip at the other end to execute and only sends raw pixels for bitmap areas like photos or videos.

  12. USB displays on Ask Slashdot: Portable High-Resolution External Displays? · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'll take my guess at what the OP is asking. He refers to USB-powered displays, but complains that they are too low-res. They really are a great idea and I could see a bunch of uses for them.

    Here is a 16" USB-powered display, which combines a DisplayLink USB display adapter with a flat-panel LCD display. The problem is that its pixel resolution is only 1366 x 768, which is pretty low density for that panel size. It's like a typical entry-level 15.6" laptop panel. If you look at 15.6" laptops, they start at 1366x768, then as you move up the model range, the pixel res goes up to 1600x900, then further up, 1920x1080 is about as high as it goes at this size.

    I suspect that the OP would like a product just like this display, but with a 1600x900 or 1080P display panel like those used on higher-end laptops. This would totally make sense, but some quick searches didn't turn anything like this up on Amazon. So his real question is if anybody knows of one of these types of displays that has a higher-res panel. Personally, I'd consider one of these as well for on-site video editing.

    There is a similar 21" USB-powered display which does run 1080P but it's up to the OP as to whether he still considers that portable or not.

  13. past history on Using Graph Theory To Predict NCAA Tournament Outcomes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    wouldn't running the algorithm against past years' records and testing against past tournament results be the best possible test to tune the algorithm?

  14. Online updates on The 5-Year Console Cycle Is Dead · · Score: 1

    Another factor is updatable firmware and OS over the internet. The console makers of this generation can fix bugs and add whole new capabilities that they could not do prior to this generation. Think of how Sony has kept the PS3 updated as a blu-ray player with compatibility fixes, adding lossless audio, 3D support, etc. Or how all the console makers have added Netflix streaming client capabilities, something that wasn't even on the horizon when these models were designed. Or how Sony and Microsoft were able to add motion control abilities. All this adds of to being able to extend the life of the current generation in ways that would have required a whole new platform before.

    A good follow-up question would be: what astounding new capabilities would it take to motivate a next-gen console?

  15. Let them build what they use on How Should I Teach a Basic Programming Course? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When I was in 6th grade, computer class used Apple II's and we learned out of the Kids and the Apple II book, which took us through the basic language from the ground level and, looking back, I think it did a decent job of teaching us programming concepts in a fun way. I think this background gave me a good foundation of programming that helped me even through college C++ classes.

    But I'm not writing to specifically recommend that book, but to share my observation about that time period of learning. Sure, we had our share of boring calculator programs, and I wrote a fair amount of spaghetti code, but the most fun we had was when the teacher assigned us to write an adventure game, in the vein of choose your own adventure. Since textual and graphical adventure games were what we liked to play at the time, it was a real thrill to be able to try to create even a pale imitation of them.

    But then things got too complicated. Games got to good so it wasn't really possible to imitate them on a low level. If you learned C or C++ in class, it was really difficult to create games or GUI apps without learning all these other tools and platforms. Programs had to be compiled and took all the immediacy out of trial and error programming.

    Years later, when the web came along and everybody was hand-coding or frontpage-ing static HTML pages for their "homepages," I never got into that. I knew that the professionally done sites like yahoo or amazon weren't using static HTML but had server generated pages. When PHP finally came around with the ability to programmatically generate web pages, I felt a thrill just like back in the BASIC adventure game days. I could create media the same way those "in power" created it.

    Today's kids are voracious consumers of media, but they like to create it too. Whenever tools come along that let them create media "just like the pros," they jump on it. For example, when CD burners came around, everybody made mix-CD's just like the compilation CDs sold commercially. When sound and video editing came out, kids jumped on that, first using DVD burners and then YouTube.

    Following this observation, kids nowdays live on the web. To them, Facebook is professional media. If they could create dynamic sites like Facebook, they would feel the thrill of creative programming and be able to connect with the reason for why people program computers.

    For this reason, I think one of the web-oriented languages like PHP or Ruby is a great way to introduce programming to students. They can build pages like what they use and see the results in their web browser immediately without compiling and feel the thrill of creating again.

  16. Why Buffalo? on Buffalo Tech Gets New Trial On Wi-Fi Patent · · Score: 1

    I've wondered this since Buffalo routers disappeared from store shelves due to the lawsuit. Are Buffalo routers somehow more infringing on this patent (valid or not) than the million other brands of wifi gear on the store shelves? Since they are all based on the same standards, it would seem like they should all be infringing as well and should be sued also (or at least supporting Buffalo in the fight).

    Have the other companies signed their own licenses or is CSIRO just targeting Buffalo to set a precedent? If the latter, why not go for an even smaller wifi gear maker?

  17. Tivo PC is from NERO not TIVO on TiVo PC Could Be a Game-Changer · · Score: 1

    I mentioned this the first time Tivo PC hit the front page.

    The author of the article totally missed the point of Tivo PC, but (like most everybody else here) also missed that, from all evidence, Tivo, Inc. has very little to do with the Tivo PC product. I couldn't find any mention of Tivo PC on Tivo.com, but it's on the front page at Nero.com.

    It looks like Nero came up with their Liquid TV DVR product and then decided to license the Tivo name and user interface so they could stand out from all the other free/pay DVR products already in the market. So all the strategic concerns about Tivo's intent basically go out the window.

  18. Re:Scribd Sucks on iPhone Antitrust and Computer Fraud Claims Upheld · · Score: 1

    i'd even prefer PDF. the scribd reader sucks even worse than loading up a PDF.

  19. Look at it from Nero's point of view on Nero Unveils LiquidTV, TiVo For Your Computer · · Score: 1

    Everybody that is asking "why would tivo do this?" is looking at this from the wrong perspective. It's not Tivo that is doing this, but Nero. Look at it this way and it makes much more sense:

    Nero had this idea to make their DVR software into a standalone product, but it's already somewhat crowded with pay and free solutions (as everybody has already pointed out SageTV, BeyondTV, Windows MCE, MythTV, GBPVR, etc.) so how can they differentiate their product? Latch onto the most recognized PVR solution, Tivo! Since many have pointed out that this product doesn't seem to make a whole lot of sense strategically for Tivo, but that also means that it doesn't hurt them to license their user interface and guide service to Nero for use in a PC DVR product. They get some subscription revenue and maybe some customers for their hardware products if people get annoyed with the maintenance required on a PC. They are already running the servers anyway so a few more data users wouldn't hurt. Nero gets to promote this a Tivo for PC, remove the responsibility of running high-uptime servers for guide data, web scheduling, etc. Clearly this strategy has worked because they are getting a lot of publicity that they wouldn't have gotten for just another PC DVR product.

    What remains to be seen is how deep the Tivo software goes. Did Nero just restyle their menus with Tivo's lame left-right hierarchical menus or did they actually port the entire code base so that multiple season-pass recordings will prioritize the same way, cut off show overlaps the same, etc. I'm guessing the former, surface level only. For example, nothing is mentioned about interoperability with Tivo hardware like streaming between units.

    I also wonder if they took the lamest parts of the Tivo software and interface, for example:
    - crazy annoying menus that won't even let you wrap around from the top to the bottom and vice versa
    - forcing everything into this hierarchy that forces way too many keystrokes to get to other places in the menu structure, or even to just delete a show.
    - pause buffer limited to 30 minutes
    - no scheduled recording markers in the program guide
    - no ability to look into the recent past of the program guide (was there a new episode of Fringe tonight? dunno, you can't go back an hour or two in the guide to see if there was)
    - must copy the show from unit to unit rather than streaming it (actually, since Nero's sw makes no mention of interoperability from pc to pc or pc to standalone unit, this won't be an issue)

  20. RF emitter? on A Super-Efficient Light Bulb · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A while back Cringely had a post about what sounds like a similar tech from Fusion Lighting and one of the drawbacks that he pointed out was that every one of those bulbs became a RF emitter in the 2.4Ghz range and thus would interfere with WiFi and the other numerous devices that use that unlicensed spectrum. This sounds very similiar, but so far no mention of the interference problem. Anybody know if this has the same issues? If it does, then it could be a polluter in both the visible light (as pointed out by many posts above) and RF ranges.

  21. Re:Why the loud music? on Can Time Slow Down? · · Score: 1

    i think they went to an amusement park that had the drop apparatus and the music was from the park so they had no control over it.

  22. Display decay time on Can Time Slow Down? · · Score: 1

    This may have been an artifact of the camera used to shoot the video or the encoding process, but it looks like another possibility is that when they speed up the changing of the numbers, it gets to be higher than the LEDs can turn on and off distinctly, so it would not be possible to distinguish numbers, even with a high speed camera.

  23. Re:Impressive on Linksys Adds Linux WRT54G Model Back · · Score: 2, Informative

    because the wrt54g had to compete with the rest of the cut throat wireless router market, which drove its price down. now that the 54GL is a specialty item, it does not need to compete (they have the cost-reduced 54G for that) so the price can remain high.

    the magic of the WRT54G was not just that it was flashable to improved firmware. the real magic was that it was flashable, in combination with the fact that the hardware was easily available at numerous retail and online outlets, which also competed with each other.

    does anybody really think that the 54GL model is gonna show up in Staples' Sunday newspaper ads with for $40 after rebate? and that we could take that to Circuit City and price match, etc? No way. We'll be lucky if these kind of places even stock it at the list price.

    the WRT54G's price has held steady at around $40 after rebates for probably over a year now. Meanwhile, wireless routers from Dlink and Netgear (not to mention the lesser brands) have droped to the $20 range and even free after rebate. One could look at this two ways: either the hacker community was supporting sales of the 54G at the higher price point, justifying its higher price relative to the competition, or Linksys was unable to support lower prices due to the cost of the RAM/flash hardware and thus had to go to the new cost-reduced model to be competitive on the consumer front.

    I'm quite certain that we'll be paying higher prices for the 54GL version that we're used to.

  24. Re:Full list of affected cameras on Digital Camera Failures · · Score: 1

    a friend has a Canon A40 that exhibits the exact same symptoms described, but Canon says it is not on the list, so they won't do anything about it. Anybody else out there? If so, start bugging Canon and maybe they'll realize there is a problem.

  25. age on Apple Campus Missing From MSN Earth · · Score: 1

    how old are the msn earth photos vs the age of the apple campus?
    the infinite loop campus has been around for at least 5 years, so msn must have some really old satellie images.

    "Never ascribe to malice that which can adequately be explained by incompetence" (or in this case, outdated photos)