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User: josquin9

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  1. Re:If I buy something of value on How a Fight Over Star Wars Download Codes Could Reshape Copyright Law (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised Disney doesn't have a separate package for Redbox that omits the digital license. A Redbox ad in the previews section of those disks should be enough of an enticement for them to be willing to select those over the standard ones. .

  2. Re:I think it might stick on How a Fight Over Star Wars Download Codes Could Reshape Copyright Law (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    While I agree with your logic, your conclusion goes against one of my three rules:
    1.) Never get involved in a land war in Asia.
    2.) Never go up against a Sicilian when death is on the line.
    3.) Never oppose Disney in court when Intellectual Property rights are involved.

  3. I haven't seen a video rental store in some time, though. Just Redbox with their few dozen titles at most of the grocery stores around here. I'm sure there still are video rental stores somewhere, but most of the small ones were bought out by the big chains, and then the big chains closed most of their stores when Netflix and Amazon prime became popular. The "long tail" is gone in many areas. It's almost impossible to find DVD's to rent that are more than a year old. Amazon offers some older titles, but charge two to three times what the local stores used to. Sure, you can watch a movie in minutes, but your microwave popcorn doesn't show up for two days.

  4. Re:Meh on Star Wars: The Last Jedi Has Critics In Raptures (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Matrix II was a perfect sequel for the great third movie that they didn't make. Neo using his matrix ability to fry the bots that were attacking them outside of the matrix was a perfect setup for taking the mystery deeper. Was there a matrix within a matrix? Was humanity ever not living in the matrix? Was there never a human society in "the real world"?
    Instead they stopped asking tough questions and just turned it into a stock war movie where a small, stalwart band of resistors, hopelessly out manned and out gunned, manages to defeat an immensely powerful enemy. It's a the movie type we've seen since the '40's, only with cyberpunk trappings.

  5. Re:Meh on Star Wars: The Last Jedi Has Critics In Raptures (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Remember, though: the original Star Wars was an homage to the space opera serials of the '30's and '40's. That's why it started at 'Episode IV'. There was no intention ab ovo to make it a franchise. It was more of an inside joke for movie geeks that happened to work out well for them once they realized the marketing potential of the universe.

  6. Yes, but, aside from the labor component that has theoretically been accounted for, those costs shouldn't change. They're not variable, once the phone is in production. They're just unknown one time costs at the time of budgeting. But Apple will have to do the same design and QA/QC either way, since those are based on the consumer protection laws and norms of the purchaser's country.

  7. If something is not profitable enough, then that is still a form of charity. For example, suppose that my market rate is $50/hour. An organization tells me that they could really use my services, but all they can afford to pay me is $10/hour. If I accept their offer, then I am essentially giving them the equivalent of $40/hour in charity.

    Based on your first example, I don't think you understand what "charity" means. It's not an imposition, as you imply. If you lowered your price it would mean that you took $40 of value in some form other than immediate monetary compensation. Whether it's a public relations coup that you think you will benefit from at a later date, a warm fuzzy feeling inside, or the reduction in stress from knowing that you won't be inconvenienced while checking out with a credit card because of slow internet, you will have found some offsetting value.

    If it's just a reduction of value imposed by the government, it a tax, a fee, or "taking". Charity is not coerced.

  8. Re: The Self Reward Syndrome on Activity Trackers May Undermine Weight Loss Efforts, Says Study (sciencedaily.com) · · Score: 1

    I thought "calories" were a measure of tastiness.

    Hence my mother's diet advice: If it tastes good, spit it out.

  9. Re:WTF Is the Submitter Smoking? on Avoiding BlackBerry's Fate: How Apple Could End Up In a Similar Position (marco.org) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ". . . machine learning is a core competence of Google."
    And monetizing consumer data is their core business model.

    I will admit that Google's results are often better. However, my privacy has value to me as well, and the cost/benefit doesn't work out in my head. I'll stay with the company that's not trying to build a model of me to sell to advertisers as long as I the service is available. I'm not confident it will be long, since the large population of users that haven't consciously considered the long-term ramifications of so much of their personal data being harvested have established a standard that doesn't weight privacy very highly.

      I'll enjoy the availability of alternatives while I can, though.

  10. Re:I don't think... on Why Some People Think Total Nonsense Is Really Deep (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    The term "atheist" was applied to Christians in the Roman Empire, not because they didn't believe in any God, but because they objected to others' belief in gods that didn't coincide with their conception of divinity. They were opposed to one or more gods. In the modern era, where monotheism has become dominant in many parts of the world, the meaning has evolved, but the bit in "History of the World" where Mel Brooks made fun of the Jews only being able to afford one god was kind of accurate. For the most part, Romans were okay with whatever tribal or local gods people prayed too, as long as they also publicly supported the standard pantheon, by which they proved their respect for the culture and their participation in the Empire. Those who refused (Christians and Jews, primarily) were seen as subversive for not falling in line with the dominant tradition, similar to the way some people are currently painting Muslims in many parts of the world.

  11. They are well within their right, but . . . on Yahoo Denies Ad-blocking Users Access To Email (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 2

    my first thought is that this is evidence of a finance department coup meant to oust an ineffective marketing department.

    Bad idea that shows no understanding of the marketplace in which they operate. I feel confident that there were better ways that they could have chosen to wind down a non-profitable service that would have had less of a negative impact on their overall corporate reputation.

  12. Re:Doctors are not that naive on AMA Calls For Ban On Direct-To-Consumer Advertising of Prescription Drugs (ap.org) · · Score: 1

    Actually, there's quite a lot of information available both online, and in the inserts that come in the drug packaging. If more people had a general understanding of statistical terms and concepts, there wouldn't be as great a need for protecting them from the surface-level misrepresentations.

    That said, I agree that people shouldn't have to suffer just because of the state of the educational system in this country at the time when they were coming through it.

    If only we could just get the other AMA, the American Marketing Association, working on the side of good . . .

  13. ReI believe your comment is correct, :Who is evil? on Windows 10's Privacy Policy: the New Normal? · · Score: 1

    For years people have made the claim, with a good deal of justification, that people did not have the patience to learn new software in order to switch to a new platform. More recently, though, people have been eased into the idea through their smartphones. People regularly try out multiple apps to access all manner of functionality, and don't think twice about it. I suspect that this attitude could be harnessed by the Linux community, particularly by using the ubiquity of Linux on smartphones to encourage people to install apps they are already familiar with onto a desktop running a free, secure OS that doesn't spy on them. It's not a movement at present, but it's much more doable than in years past. The environment and infrastructure for showing people that linux apps can be just as easy to use as Windows apps is finally in place.

  14. The problem has been compounded, though on Can Bad Scientific Practice Be Fixed? · · Score: 1

    For a study to be funded, it must be ground-breaking. For a study to break new ground, it must be non-obvious. For it to be non-obvious, it must be, to some degree, counter-intuitive. To be counter-intuitive,it must, to some degree, be illogical (at least from a standard perspective.)
    Since scientists can improve their chance of getting funded if they are studying illogical things, there's likely going to be a strong bias toward studying things that aren't true . Some of these things will not b shown to be conclusively wrong, either due to poor design or willful negligence of proper methodology.Unfortunately, this does not get caught by the peer review process, because "peers"can exhibit the same behaviors as movie critics (you can always find one willing to make a positive comment just to see their name in print, or be able to add a line to their vita.)
    Because of the proliferation of "journals" in the Internet era, there is a "news cycle" view within the scientific press now, where each publication is trying to be first to report new discoveries.
    Preliminary studies that would never have been published in the past are presented in the same format that well-studied research streams were previously, so that the start-up journals can appear to have the same legitimacy as the leaders in the field.
    The popular press, desperate for sensational headlines, jumps on these illogical theories with scant research and inconclusive results and treats them like news, simply to fill the requirement for 24-hour reporting.

  15. Re:You're not supposed to ask that on Ask Slashdot: Gaining Control of My Mobile Browser? · · Score: 3, Funny

    Given a choice between trusting my data to a hipster company motivated by profit, but convinced that it is a still a trendsetter, and a company whose entire business model is based on the collection and distribution of information that it collects by looking over people's shoulders, I actaually feel safer with the deluded hipsters. Even if they are no more trustworthy, their reach is not as great, so I'm willing to bet the fallout will be (marginally) easier to contain.

    On some level, to Apple, I'm a customer. To Google, I'm just a product.

  16. Re:Once Upon A Time In 1980 At Boeing Airplanes on The Open Office Is Destroying the Workplace · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of "Brazil" (the Terry Gilliam one, not the courntry.)

  17. I've worked in cubicle farms most of my career. on The Open Office Is Destroying the Workplace · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Every manager I've questioned about the shortcomings of cubicles has said that it's good for intra-office communication and creative collaboration . . . before walking into their private office and shutting the door behind them. Even in an organization where they made a point that managers didn't have private offices (though, senior managers and executives, of course, still did) most of the managers camped out in the few small conference rooms where employees were supposed to be able to go for "spontaneous collaborative sessions."

    I guess this meant that they realized that they have nothing to offer intellectually or creatively to the work of the office.

  18. Re:My take on this final installment (Spoilers) on Ars: Final Hobbit Movie Is 'Soulless End' To 'Flawed' Trilogy · · Score: 1

    I remember the eagles bringing the bear into the fray, but, not having read the books, I didn't realize that it was Beorn.

    That would have been a nice bit to make clear.

  19. Re: Yeah right on AT&T To "Pause" Gigabit Internet Rollout Until Net Neutrality Is Settled · · Score: 1

    If their positions weren't protected by the FCC, they would be worried about competition. If they were worried about competition, they would be doing everything in their power to differentiate their service from any potential competitors by using their economies of scale to provide the fastest, cheapest service available. Competition inherently lowers the percentage of profits to very low levels. We can look to the first world countries that we used to be able to count ourselves amon and see the levels of service and pricing that would develop in a competitive market.

    I can't believe the hubris of claiming this is a market driven policy. AT&T is bascially saying, "Capitalism, Capitalism, Capitalism . . . unless I lose my monopoly, in which case, Central planning, Central Planning, CENTRAL PLANNING!"

    AT&T and Comcast are doing everything the can to prevent market pricing, and claiming that there's a market-based reason for it.

  20. That's odd on BBC: ISPs Should Assume VPN Users Are Pirates · · Score: 1

    Most companies keep their pirates in the finance department.

    I'm suddenly remembering that it's been a while since I saw "Month Python's TheMeaning of Life".

  21. Re:Super-8 home movies on Ask Slashdot: What Old Technology Can't You Give Up? · · Score: 1

    The HP12C was still being recommended in 2008 to MBA students. I've got a "Platinum Edition" from earller this century. So, if they are defunct, it hasn't been long.

  22. Re:The VCR on Ask Slashdot: What Old Technology Can't You Give Up? · · Score: 1

    Develop an eidetic memory.

  23. Re:Pen on Ask Slashdot: What Old Technology Can't You Give Up? · · Score: 1

    Dip pens or fountain?
        I won't even discuss the expressionless abominations that are ball-point and roller-ball.

  24. Re:Simple on Ask Slashdot: What Old Technology Can't You Give Up? · · Score: 1

    I remember getting pages of largely unformatted text as letters when I was in college because my father used vi as his word processor of choice and then just piped the output to a dot matrix printer. He used vi for correspondence for the rest of his life into the current century. He was a Unix/Xenix guy from the word go, and thought C was for people who were too lazy to organize their thoughts well enough to code in Fortran and Cobol.

    I miss him. He was a great guy.

  25. Re:My opinion on the matter. on Choose Your Side On the Linux Divide · · Score: 1

    Who cares? The people paying for the retraining, not only directly, but also indirectly through lost productivity. The people who's business is slowed because it takes longer to fix issues while the IT staff is getting up to speed on the new system.

    If the new system won't be so much more efficient that it more than makes up for all of those lost hours of productivity, then the switch doesn't make sense. Lots of people outside of IT are affected by changes to systems like this. All of those wasted cycles represent workers not able to use their computers to get the work of the firm done. How much does it cost a company if a system change like this mean that the Pittsburgh, Atlanta, and Mobile offices are down for a couple of hours because IT has never experienced a problem like this before and is having to fly by the seat of their pants to come up with a solution?

    People who rely on their computer systems and need them to be up and running as much of every day as is possible. That's who cares if IT is learning a new system "on the job."