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User: Omestes

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  1. Re:weather.com would launch a 20yr sat for 1/10th on Landsat 8 Satellite Successfully Launches Into Orbit · · Score: 1

    Then companies took it to 700000000 bps, after building the web atop the old gopher-carrying net.

    Using lines laid with public dollars, and protected with limited monopolies. Also, often building off research done at public universities, with government grant money.

  2. Re:Sigh...... on AMD Next-Gen Graphics May Slip To End of 2013 · · Score: 0

    Don't take this as an attack; I'm curious why you actually need an 8000 series card, and why you need water cooling on your present card?

    I have a single, stock cooled, non-OC 5770, and can run pretty much every game on maximum settings (or rather, any game that doesn't choke on AMD GPUs). Why would you need much more, unless you're using your GPU for calculation, or mining bitcoins or something? I used to be a big graphics bleeding-edger, but thanks to everything being tied to ancient console hardware, I pretty much stopped caring. Early in the next console generation I'm sure I'll grab a decent 6000 or 7000, or maybe hop to Nvidia,, I'm getting a bit sick of bad support and game bugs, though it would pain me, I've been using ATI and AMD exclusively for over a decade (Actually since 3DFX crapped out, something about underdogs, and not being Intel).

    After "hardcore" PC games died off, it was about not having to upgrade for years, but even then, now my aging 5000 series is perfectly fine. The only motivation I can think of is just pure masochistic (I mean it in a nice way) geekery. Because I can.

  3. Re:Capitalism is failing on Eric Schmidt To Sell Up To 42% of Stake In Google · · Score: 1

    Capitalism is equal and fair, provided sales are transparent. This is where government regulation can help. Weights and Measures. Clearly defined products. Legal recourse for breaches of contracts. The government fails when it trys to regulate or manipulate prices. Or trys to ban products, regulate what can and can't be sold, and when it prevents failed business models from suffering their well deserved fates.

    This is what I meant by an edge definition. There isn't a purely capitalistic country on Earth, and probably never has been one for any significant period of time. On the other hand, pretty much every country on Earth has some flavor of socialistic policy, stretching back a very long time. Capitalism by this definition is a myth, and as much a utopian ideal as Communism.

    Probably because when societies don't ban dangerous products, misleading or harmful and exploitative practices, things go bad pretty quickly, and people force their governments to protect them (as is their right, and as is the function of government). Personally, and I really don't want to get into it, I think that any economic theory is perfectly fine, until the second it hurts the only thing that matters, people. People are more important than commerce and capital. People need commerce, obviously, but it can go bad. Government exists to keep it within bounds, providing maximal benefit and minimal harm. Where these bounds exist are debatable, and these definitions vary from culture to culture, and time to time. There isn't one true definition, rule, or set of standards.

    But actually we're just having a semantics fight now... Your thinking of economic philosophies (laissez faire, in particular, it seems), which generally are political philosophies as well. You'll find there are several competing economic philosophies. All them them have about as much force as the various competing political philosophies, meaning not much. They are all utopian, and sound very nice as a philosophy, but don't take into account that the world is a messy, chaotic thing with more factors than anyone can ever truly foresee.

  4. Re:Capitalism is failing on Eric Schmidt To Sell Up To 42% of Stake In Google · · Score: 1

    You can be a capitalist while being a socialist, they aren't mutually exclusive domains. Many of the socialist countries in the world also have capitalist economies... Hell, the biggest communist country on earth is becoming a bigger capitalist country than the U.S. Hell, capitalism existed in the U.S.S.R.

    As you point out, capitalism is how money works. Where there is currency or trade, there is capitalism, no matter what the government is.

    Socialism is a political philosophy, and capitalism is an economic theory. Unless we take capitalism as what the edge cases define it as, of course, meaning no taxes, no laws, and no regulations, then they are not in opposition.

    Personally, the market should be as free as possible, until it negatively effects individuals or society. Society is the sum of all the people within it, not just certain classes, or those who have more money/power, and government exists for the benefit of society, by the permission of society, and not for certain individuals or classes of people.

  5. Re:iFirstPost on Woz Says iPhone Features Are 'Behind' · · Score: 1

    Then again, if you like hacking your phone, that won't bother you. I'd rather just use my phone.

    Eh, it is a problem, but I think your taking it a bit far. My old Motorola Droid was stuck on Froyo for over two years, but was usable the whole time. I didn't have to "hack" it, it made calls, it did "smart" stuff like browsed the web and GPS, I could still install around 90% of apps... It worked fine. The only thing I missed is shiny new stuff. It really is no different than Apple not supporting older iPhones with new OS updates (even if they could handle 90% of the features), except here the blaim lies on my carrier, and there the blame lays on Apple.

    The only real message here is that Verizon sucks. Other carriers DO update phones, even if they are over six months old. If it wasn't for me getting a damn good deal by sharing an account with the whole of my family, I'd jump ship overnight. With Android everything is a manufacturer problem (Asus sucks.) or a carrier problem (Verizon sucks.), not an Android problem. With iOS everything is an Apple problem. The commonality is that the mobile market is really really bad. I really dislike the fact that is the market of planned obsolescence and sneaky ways of forcing people to upgrade or upgrade in mid contract. You need a new phone every six months, really... We'll work on making your old one crap, so you can stick it in a landfill and cough up another $200 for us, plus fees.

  6. Re:iFirstPost on Woz Says iPhone Features Are 'Behind' · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the almost never rebooting bit?

    Huh? When do you ever have to reboot a smartphone? I think I had to reboot my last two phones twice, total not each. Which, to me is a problem, since the only time you need to reboot is when your carrier decides to update, and carriers hate updates.

    . My Android friends have all switched to the iPhone over the past 3 years.

    And I've noticed the opposite. 3 years ago all my friends had iPhones, now they all have something made by Samsung. Rival anecdotal experience: game, set, match.

  7. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    Even though it runs on the exact same hardware, and has the exact same functionality?

    If I hack OS X to run on my current computer, is my current computer no longer a PC? Or is Not-PC only bestowed with magical Apple pixie dust?

    The "Mac is not a PC" stuff is marketing.

  8. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    So, again, the term is pretty much meaningless then? The term is no longer useful when it covers almost everything, you might as well just count "stuff", so we can figure out that rocks outsell Apple by a large factor.

    I'd say your technically correct, but not semantically correct. A computer is generally defined as something where the processor can be interacted with by the user via some form of interface. Further there is a class problem; my car isn't a computer just because it has some processors sitting in it, my car is a car with a microprocessor in it. Saying a car is a PC is not something we would pretty much ever do. It isn't a "natural" expression, so probably isn't actually a valid use of the term.

    Almost everything in my house is a PC, since I own them (they aren't shared), and they have a microprocessor. Meaning the TFA is dumb, since they should have counted pretty much everything, and not just tablets plus desktops.

  9. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    I don't think your criteria of expandability works. The majority of computers sold today have little no no expandability; try swapping out the processor in your laptop. There are external peripherals, but so are there too for tablets.

    The problem is that the term made sense when it was coined, started making less sense in the late 80's and 90's, and now probably makes no sense whatsoever.

    But running with it, since TFA decided it was a useful and meaningful term; expandability isn't just hardware, it also would be software. Most tablets might be capable of running arbitrary code, but by design they are barred from doing it. You can hack/unlock them, but their primary purpose is different than a PC, or desktop. They are less "general" than a standard PC.

    Please don't take it that I'm really invested in this, I think that this debate means the term has pretty much become useless.

    People who would consider the Chromebook to be more "PC" than an iPad are odd. The only thing I can see is that a Chromebook has a traditional form factor, so their definition of a PC would be "screen + keyboard = PC", which is less useful than my own definition.

  10. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    Not as defined by Apple. They were very careful to distinguish the two:

    But in the last couple years since the Intel switch, they both would be John Hodgman, but wearing different shirts.

  11. Re:PCs are toys, and tablets are general purpose on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    "General use" describes what people do with a device, not what CPU it uses or what OS it runs. There are already people who use tablets as general-use devices. And there are people who use PCs as glorified web-terminals.

    This is for very limited uses of the term "general". I'd say only around 30% of my computer use can be shifted over to a tablet at this time, and my use is rather limited compared to some. For some people, and many here on /., this figure will be much smaller. For my parents, a tablet might be able to handle around 100% of their normal use. General means it can be used for almost anything, need a port, add a port, need to access the GPU, go for it, need to use it for encoding stuff, no problem. There are many things you CAN do on a tablet, but not easily (try coding on one, or processing large amounts of RAW files, or writing a novel, or playing any game more sophisticated than Angry Birds, or transcoding video, or...). This would limit its claim to being "general purpose". They are designed for media consumption, and light tasks. A PC, even a MacBook Air, and designed for a larger feature set, and by design, have ways of extending their use beyond what the designers intended.

    It doesn't matter what any one individual uses it for, or what they want out of it, since that way a PC is a completely subjective term, and thus meaningless. It is the actual design of the device, and its intended uses. I can use my PC as a server right now, with very little effort, I can't do that on an iPad or Android tablet, without actually working around the inbuilt limitations of the hardware and OS.

  12. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    So basically the term is meaningless? Almost everything with a processor and some sort UI is a PC.

    So then my question is why doesn't TFA include most TVs and DVD players, graphing calculators, high end remote controls, a large bevy of modern cars, almost all airplanes, every ebook reader, consoles, every mobile phone made since the 90's, and some wrist watches.

    Sure, the user experience is locked down on most of these these devices, but all of them could run binaries as well, with a small bit of hacking.

    The difference between a 286 and an Android/iOS tablet is in the form, accessibility of hardware, and accessibly of running said binary. By default most tablets won't ever let you touch the hardware, and won't let you run an arbitrary binary without working around the design of the device or UI.

  13. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    So, if I share my tablet (or desktop) with others, it no longer is a PC?

    If I own a giant server/super computer, and I'm the only person who uses it, it is suddenly a PC?

    Is my pocket calculator a PC, since it is mine (it is in my pocket afterall), and it can do basic computations?

    So, basically the term is completely meaningless.

  14. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A Mac is a PC. Especially now that there is NO difference, whatsoever, in hardware. Back in the PPC days, you might have a case, but I doubt it, since they were personal computers just like Windows and Linux boxes. Unless what GUI something uses defines whether something is a PC or not, and then, is anything not running whatever UI existed when the term was coined actually a PC either? The only difference between a Mac and a Linux or Windows box is what OS they have.

    The consumer can be wrong, and various companies have abused the term to help them along. This doesn't actually change the meaning of the word, since there really isn't a way of defining that doesn't include Macs. Unless, of course your only definition of "PC" is "not a Mac", which is kind of stupid.

    That said, I don't buy tablets being PCs, because they aren't "general" or generally extendable, which I would consider being important to being classified as a personal computer. If I did accept them, then I have to include phones, consoles, most modern televisions and bluray players, most routers, or basically anything having a CPU and an operating system.

    Calling tablets PCs runs into the "Pluto problem", if we let them be a PC, then pretty much everything has to be a PC, and the term loses what (very little) use it once had.

  15. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 1

    Don't forget most current Bluray players, and most televisions. By some definitions of PC, we're pretty much awash in them, making the term all-but useless.

  16. Re:So tablets at PCs now? on Apple Now the Top PC Vendor, For Some Values of PC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So anything with a CPU and some flavor of user interface is now a PC? Don't forget most DVD or Bluray players, and most televisions too (our televisions all have a nice GPL notice in the back, viva Linux).

    This TFA is pretty stupid. I love my Nexus 7 (10" Transformer less so), but I wouldn't consider it a PC. I see PCs as general computing devices, with their primary attribute being the term "general". Right now there is a very large amount of things that I just can't do on my tablet, or phone that I can do on my PC. Further, PCs are expandable, and extensible (both of these being somewhat prerequisites to "general"). Sure, some computers have limited, and mostly unacceptable, hardware (Macs), but even then there is a very large pool of peripherals, and they still have a very large ability to modify the software for almost any task. Tablets don't really do this, there are abilities that they are not going to really support, either by design or intrinsic factors.

    My Nexus is a toy computer. I love it, but it isn't an actual PC.

    Yes, being literal, it would be a PC, since it computes, as in crunches numbers, and it is personal, as in I own one. I think the term has evolved beyond this though.

    Even dumber, considering a Kindle a PC is just... I don't even have words. A Kindle, a normal Kindle, is a dumb device that is only good for a single purpose. A Fire, or the various Nook flavored bargain tablets, might be PCs, if we accept full tablets as PCs.

  17. Re:Sounds about right on OUYA Android Game Console Available In June · · Score: 1

    Seems like you'd be the perfect market for a DS/3DS or PSP/Vita? Do you have one?

    I have an original DS (for backward comparability with GBA games), but I almost never use it either. For some reason it feels bad to use it at home, and on the go my phone is more convenient than dragging another gadget with me. It does sit on a shelf mocking me though, since I spend a good amount of time and money getting every Final Fantasy and Zelda game for it, and never really use it.

  18. Re:Sounds about right on OUYA Android Game Console Available In June · · Score: 2

    I think the appeal will wear off, and people will set aside for their existing game consoles and phones.

    I hate gaming on my phone. I do, but only games that are very quick and casual, and only when I'm someplace without anything else to keep me amused. My 10" tablet is a bit better, but still not as useful as a PC or console, touch controls suck for 90% of games. I generally use my phone of tablet for games, not because they are good, but because they are there.

    Having a good, big, screen and a proper input method is what is attractive.

    You can get that with a console, but I'm probably not going to spend $400-500 for the next generation, hell I can't even justify spending $200-300 for the current 10 year old hardware (why bother, I have a good PC already).

    I'm getting one so I can emulate old games, on my actual TV, with a real input method. Also for streaming via Plex and Netflix.

  19. Re:new tvs can "run" netflix and amazon on OUYA Android Game Console Available In June · · Score: 2

    Why would you buy a full new TV, when you could buy a $100 box?

    Also TV OSs are generally locked down crap.

  20. ...it has to do with good programming practices.

    If good practices involves planned crashes for innocuous user behavior, I'd hate to see what bad ones are.

  21. Re:Need for padded poles. on Details of Google's Project Glass Revealed In FCC Report · · Score: 2

    I highly doubt that. People don't _need_ directions very often.

    I live in a very large, sprawling (17,000 sq. mi according to Wikipedia.), city. I know less than 20% well enough to know exactly where I am going without looking it up. We like to go new places, and eat at new restaurants, so I generally have my phone's GPS sitting around when we go places. Even when I know roughly where something is, by cross streets, I often use GPS for the exact location. So, around twice a week, we do use GPS. A couple of times a year, we also travel, and we use GPS almost 100% of the time when doing so.

    People use GPS more than you think.

    I'm not saying that your wrong, people will use it for idiotic reasons. Hell, my mind is still boggled that people are allowed to have TVs in the front of their cars. People do all sorts of idiotic things while driving. I've almost been killed by several women doing their make up, a guy reading the paper, and god knows how many people texting or reading on their phones. A HUD won't really be any worse than what we have.

  22. Re:Concerning Blu ray on Next-Gen Console Wars Will Soon Begin In Earnest · · Score: 1

    No one ever plans a product around caps. Developers tend to completely ignore that they exist.

    I'm lucky that my home internet (Cox) doesn't have a cap. But my mobile provider (Verizon) sure does, which they inflicted on me the second I signed a new contract. This means pretty much all the cool new "cloud" stuff isn't usable to me or many other people, unless we're okay with massive overage fees, or coughing up an extra decent amount of change monthly.

    Hell, Steam goes on, even with much of the East Coast (I think) running with caps.

  23. Re:Speechless on Apple Granted Trademark For Its Stores · · Score: 1

    He might be... But I wouldn't be surprised if Apple eventually hits the very profitable, yet minority, share in mobile, that they have in desktops. Apple will have a nice 10% of the market, and make 25% of the cash, and the various Android manufactures will own 80%, with the rest (MS, RIM, whatever else) will sit with an a small minority.

    Apple only really dominates a single market (the US), and has been falling in the the global share for awhile now.

    Apple probably won't die. And probably won't stop making good profits. But they probably won't be #1 after short while.

  24. Re:You do not always want "as much aperture" on RIM Unveils BlackBerry 10, Its Big Turnaround Hope · · Score: 1

    One of my favorite landscape lenses is a 70mm prime lens. I also usually pack a 70-200. I also shoot wide but there is a ton of great isolated shots you can get using a telephoto lens for landscapes. There's really no one focal length that is for landscapes - they are all useful.

    Outside of specialized contexts, you are correct. You have to admit that 70mm is a bit unusual for that purpose though. I'm not judging, all that matters, in the end, is the results. And a good-excellent tele will always be better bad-standard wide.

    And like I said while you have f/1.4 "just in case" what you DON'T have is any kind of macro ability, which is far more useful occasional feature to have in landscape shooting!

    I admit, going through my catalogs, my most used lens for landscapes is actually my 100mm macro. I'm mainly a macro shooter, so its the lens on my camera, and thus I use it. I like the 24mm better, since it doesn't compress backgrounds as much, and has less of a finicky focus (its a macro so focusing over macro distance is a bit of a pain). I'm not a fan of carrying a whole lens bag with me when I go on walks, so I generally stick to whatever ends up on the camera.

    I wish there was a good zoom that could go wide, and do tight macros, without sacrificing the quality of a good prime. Someday there will be an 18-100 that can do 1:2, is fast enough, and has good IQ (and costs under 10 grand). We'll all probably be dead by then, but my children will be happy.

  25. Re:A store cannot look like a store? on Apple Granted Trademark For Its Stores · · Score: 1

    Oddly, a long time ago I went to a Gateway store in San Diego, and it looked very much like an Apple store, before there were Apple stores.