I don't understand your altruistic blame on the evil corporations. Don't blame them. Blame the mind numbed ribots like me and many millions more who are willing to pay it.
I don't know what you do for a living. But, let's just say you were a salesman. If you had a customer willing to pay you nore, would you not price your product accordingly? Who in their right mind wouldn't? Corporations aren't there to have a good time. They are made up of people who have risked and invested in themselves and sell a product for whatever people are willing to pay.
I quit going to Walmart, not because they are evil money grubbing pigs (they are). But, just like anything else in life, they will test the bottom and keep lowering standards as long as people are willing to participate. Well, I'm not. Eventually, maybe enough people will di as me and they will be forced to offer better a better customer experience.
So, the number of people doing that with cable tv or traditional media is reaching a critical mass. It's going to show the providers where the bottom is.
That was the most "on point", accurate, elegant and articulate comment that I have ever read on Slashdot. It was beautiful.
Do these leftists not know that it is this administration that gave away the Internet, that has manipulated the currency, lied to the American people over and over again? Yeah. I get this is not an American only forum. But, the thread pretty much is. If you're commenting on it, I assme you have a stake in this race.
You need to be driven by and enjoy solving problems. Without that passion, you will probably not make it.
Also, the sad reality where I am employeed is that there is more to get done than I can do. So, being able to settle for "a" solution that buys you time can be a necessity. I'm a perfectionist. So, that's a bitter pill for me to swallow.
That is why I chose not to buy an android phone this Christmas when I upgraded my phone. I really wanted a bigger screen and less headache than I associate with the iPhone. But, at the last moment, I decided I didn't want to provide my phone number to Google.
True. They probably have my phone number already. But, I didn't want to hand it to them.
I've found that technical skills come in last place over people skills and your ability to learn the functional side of the problem. Where I work, I was given a hint on how to advance my career. My managers told me that they can go out and hire programmers and people with technical skills all day any day. But, they can't go out and hire people who know our business. Therefore, solving business problems and helping end users be more productive is really a factor of your business knowledge more so than your programming knowledge. Knowing the business and solving business problems are what makes you valuable and respected where I work. So, if you can learn enough technical skills to solve business problems, then I think you should be fine. BTW, I'm 49. I finished my BS in CS when I was 41. I've been working for my current employer ever since.
It seems inevitable that any given project has the potential to reach a point where the critical mass of users find it satisfactory. Perfect? No. But, good enough. At that point, the project vision may only be 50% reached. At that point in the project's life cycle, it seems there would naturally be a growing resistance to change by those who have grown comfortable with it. At that point, there's going to be some push back from both sides. If there's a name for this phenomena, I haven't heard it. But, it seems to be the natural order of things.
So, the battle ensues. Should Shuttleworth continue innovating? Should end users complain when he makes the next leap forward? I think both are a foregone conclusion.
If I had to guess, Shuttleworth is not going to be happy until he makes Apple look foolish.
I think Shuttleworth is executing his vision just fine.
Admittedly, this is just speculation, but I'll bet the very ones calling for higher taxes are the ones hiding their money, like Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, Michael Moore, George Clooney, Tom Hanks and so on.
Don't have to worry about any investigations though, I'm sure Congress and the Administration keep their money there, too.
I always resent when a company does this. This is akin to leaving a job for more pay, then your employer offering you more money to stay. It's insulting.
Microsoft should release it with their own patented "non-rounded corners". Then, no one will ever be able to compete with either Microsoft or Apple, unless of course some smart aleck comes up with a "jagged corner" patent or something.
I think ease of use is the wrong criteria. You choose a mirrorless camera for it's size, flexible lens (you can use a Panasonic lens on an Olympus body) options and live preview, not for ease of use. I have owned both. I liked the Panasonic GH2. The movie mode is second to none.
For a mu43 lens, I don't have any personal experience with it, but I read great things about the Panasonic 20mm f1.4. It should be pretty good in low light. You do need to determine what you think you'll be shooting before you pick a lens.
In the end, I ended up with a D7000. It's good for indoor (low light) sports, which was my primary need. But, if I didn't have that specific need, I'd just get the Fuji x100. Ken Rockwell raves about it.
When will Hollywod ever learn that we don't want to pay 2.99 per episode for a show with DRM restrictions that force you to re-purchase the damn video for every device you have, and that paying $14 for a digital download when the DVD is selling at Wal-Mart, Best Buy, and Target for $10 is price gouging.
Easy...., when people lose interest and quit making these things profitable.
Two things would satisfy me, neither of which would happen.
1. Figure out who broke in and see if they can limit the fallout. 2. Assume the attacks were vigilante in nature, admit they have made mistakes in customer service and offer the OtherOS back as well as make an effort to foster a better relationship with users going forward. In other words, don't punish users because some people choose to pirate.
I wrote a Firefox extension a while back that allowed you to block results based on text within the results. It would also let you highlight based upon text. I called it "GoogleCleaner". It's not compatible with the current version of FF. But, you can fix it.
I was modded down for agreeing with you. Ha. I should have known better than to post something conservative (or agree with something conservative) on Slashdot.
Oh well, I still agree with you. And, I stand by that.
I don't understand your altruistic blame on the evil corporations. Don't blame them. Blame the mind numbed ribots like me and many millions more who are willing to pay it.
I don't know what you do for a living. But, let's just say you were a salesman. If you had a customer willing to pay you nore, would you not price your product accordingly? Who in their right mind wouldn't? Corporations aren't there to have a good time. They are made up of people who have risked and invested in themselves and sell a product for whatever people are willing to pay.
I quit going to Walmart, not because they are evil money grubbing pigs (they are). But, just like anything else in life, they will test the bottom and keep lowering standards as long as people are willing to participate. Well, I'm not. Eventually, maybe enough people will di as me and they will be forced to offer better a better customer experience.
So, the number of people doing that with cable tv or traditional media is reaching a critical mass. It's going to show the providers where the bottom is.
That was the most "on point", accurate, elegant and articulate comment that I have ever read on Slashdot. It was beautiful.
Do these leftists not know that it is this administration that gave away the Internet, that has manipulated the currency, lied to the American people over and over again? Yeah. I get this is not an American only forum. But, the thread pretty much is. If you're commenting on it, I assme you have a stake in this race.
You need to be driven by and enjoy solving problems. Without that passion, you will probably not make it.
Also, the sad reality where I am employeed is that there is more to get done than I can do. So, being able to settle for "a" solution that buys you time can be a necessity. I'm a perfectionist. So, that's a bitter pill for me to swallow.
That is why I chose not to buy an android phone this Christmas when I upgraded my phone. I really wanted a bigger screen and less headache than I associate with the iPhone. But, at the last moment, I decided I didn't want to provide my phone number to Google.
True. They probably have my phone number already. But, I didn't want to hand it to them.
Here goes my karma....
But, I agree completely, it's just poetic justice. And, it's less scum to worry about.
I've found that technical skills come in last place over people skills and your ability to learn the functional side of the problem. Where I work, I was given a hint on how to advance my career. My managers told me that they can go out and hire programmers and people with technical skills all day any day. But, they can't go out and hire people who know our business. Therefore, solving business problems and helping end users be more productive is really a factor of your business knowledge more so than your programming knowledge. Knowing the business and solving business problems are what makes you valuable and respected where I work. So, if you can learn enough technical skills to solve business problems, then I think you should be fine. BTW, I'm 49. I finished my BS in CS when I was 41. I've been working for my current employer ever since.
"The merger will provide a stronger rival to MySQL, so reassuring users who are worried about Oracle's future plans for the database"
Aren't they the same guys that sold MySQL the first time? How will the new alliance be any more reassuring?
It seems inevitable that any given project has the potential to reach a point where the critical mass of users find it satisfactory. Perfect? No. But, good enough. At that point, the project vision may only be 50% reached. At that point in the project's life cycle, it seems there would naturally be a growing resistance to change by those who have grown comfortable with it. At that point, there's going to be some push back from both sides. If there's a name for this phenomena, I haven't heard it. But, it seems to be the natural order of things.
So, the battle ensues. Should Shuttleworth continue innovating? Should end users complain when he makes the next leap forward? I think both are a foregone conclusion.
If I had to guess, Shuttleworth is not going to be happy until he makes Apple look foolish.
I think Shuttleworth is executing his vision just fine.
Admittedly, this is just speculation, but I'll bet the very ones calling for higher taxes are the ones hiding their money, like Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, Michael Moore, George Clooney, Tom Hanks and so on.
Don't have to worry about any investigations though, I'm sure Congress and the Administration keep their money there, too.
I always resent when a company does this. This is akin to leaving a job for more pay, then your employer offering you more money to stay. It's insulting.
Microsoft should release it with their own patented "non-rounded corners". Then, no one will ever be able to compete with either Microsoft or Apple, unless of course some smart aleck comes up with a "jagged corner" patent or something.
I think ease of use is the wrong criteria. You choose a mirrorless camera for it's size, flexible lens (you can use a Panasonic lens on an Olympus body) options and live preview, not for ease of use. I have owned both. I liked the Panasonic GH2. The movie mode is second to none.
For a mu43 lens, I don't have any personal experience with it, but I read great things about the Panasonic 20mm f1.4. It should be pretty good in low light. You do need to determine what you think you'll be shooting before you pick a lens.
In the end, I ended up with a D7000. It's good for indoor (low light) sports, which was my primary need. But, if I didn't have that specific need, I'd just get the Fuji x100. Ken Rockwell raves about it.
When will Hollywod ever learn that we don't want to pay 2.99 per episode for a show with DRM restrictions that force you to re-purchase the damn video for every device you have, and that paying $14 for a digital download when the DVD is selling at Wal-Mart, Best Buy, and Target for $10 is price gouging.
Easy...., when people lose interest and quit making these things profitable.
Agreed. Mod parent +1.
I don't have a way to mod you up, but I would if I could....
I already cancelled my Netflix account.
Two things would satisfy me, neither of which would happen.
1. Figure out who broke in and see if they can limit the fallout.
2. Assume the attacks were vigilante in nature, admit they have made mistakes in customer service and offer the OtherOS back as well as make an effort to foster a better relationship with users going forward. In other words, don't punish users because some people choose to pirate.
This is just fucking sad.
Maybe, Charles Rangel...
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/rep-charles-rangel-ethics-trial-underway-defiant-democrat/story?id=12150323
I wrote a Firefox extension a while back that allowed you to block results based on text within the results. It would also let you highlight based upon text. I called it "GoogleCleaner". It's not compatible with the current version of FF. But, you can fix it.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/google-results-cleaner/
I was modded down for agreeing with you. Ha. I should have known better than to post something conservative (or agree with something conservative) on Slashdot.
Oh well, I still agree with you. And, I stand by that.
Thanks for clarifying this for gp. You are absolutely correct.
Why? Because they have different views from you?
I don't want to speak for parent, but I think he meant it as a joke (think mafia tactics).
This is too funny. Good job.