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User: Dixie_Flatline

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  1. Re:Great for Canada on Canada Upholds Net Neutrality Rules In Wireless TV Case · · Score: 1

    Videotron (in Quebec) will give you a discount if you bring your own modem.

  2. Re:What? on Canada Upholds Net Neutrality Rules In Wireless TV Case · · Score: 1

    It's a miracle because those commercials are lip-service. There are a bunch of things they could legislate fairly quickly that would force competition in the space, but it's unclear that they're really interested. They're budging a bit because popular opinion is so vociferous, but they're not what I'd call a tech-savvy government. They're decidedly anti-science and they're incredibly secretive. They don't even LIKE the CRTC.

    That said, I don't really have a good sense of what the other parties would do. In general, they tend to be even MORE protectionist (Bell, Rogers and Telus are garbage, but they ARE Canadian) even at the expense of competition.

    But this is what you get when most of the people running for office (and winning) are old white lawyers. They don't know what's going on, and they're not interested in learning. The current Minister of Science and Technology was an *insurance broker*. I'm sure he's doing what he can, but it's a deep pity that there aren't any scientists or technology people in those Ministerial positions.

  3. Re:to apple fan boys on Apple Posts $18B Quarterly Profit, the Highest By Any Company, Ever · · Score: 1

    Yeah, the specs don't really tell the whole story. When you go through the benchmarks, the A7/A8 chips really clean the floor with the Snapdragons, and they do it at a lower clock (and a lower voltage; performance per watt on the A7/A8 is much better). The cameras on the iPhone is of a comparable or higher quality in all those cases (keeping in mind that megapixels is perhaps the worst way to rate a digital camera; my 12.1MP Nikon D3s will crush any phone camera without any effort).

    My screen isn't as high DPI, but I'd be hard pressed to tell any difference without a microscope. Numbers being bigger for the sake of being bigger doesn't impress me. Also, it chews up a lot more battery.

    I get TouchID, an implementation of biometric access that currently isn't well matched on the Android side. (I've heard Huawei has a good implementation? They're not a very prolific brand in NA, so I haven't read anything except occasional offhand remarks.)

    The only thing that the Android phones tend to have is more RAM, but by virtue of a completely different multitasking model and garbage collection scheme, additional RAM is less relevant to iOS. (The lone exception being webpage reloading, which I'll cop to as being an annoyance.)

    So yeah, my iPhone 6 runs faster than basically anything else on the market (http://www.anandtech.com/show/8554/the-iphone-6-review/5) and will have the legs to take me to 4 years, even if it'll feel pretty dated by then. I don't really think you can legitimately claim that just because the specs of a few phones were *higher* that they were meaningfully *better*.

    Oh, and I don't have to talk to my carrier about my phone, like, ever. That alone is a virtue that's hard to pass up because fuck those guys. :)

  4. Re:to apple fan boys on Apple Posts $18B Quarterly Profit, the Highest By Any Company, Ever · · Score: 1

    In this case, I mean 'OS Support' when I say 'support'. I'm definitely not worried about needing hardware repairs.

  5. Re:to apple fan boys on Apple Posts $18B Quarterly Profit, the Highest By Any Company, Ever · · Score: 1

    To a certain extent, I DO like these announcements merely because they really tweak the noses of the people that have been beating the 'Apple is Doomed' drum for a while. So yeah, there's a small bit of enjoyment that I get that Apple's numbers are so astronomical--I'll cop to that. That's the same thing that's happening with Daring Fireball. Gruber is obviously an Apple partisan, but he complains about as much as anyone I've heard about quality and direction.

    But Apple has a good brand and it's drawn customers in. It's what every company hopes to do, really.

    But there are lots of other examples of this. Ford vs. Chevy (or Ford vs. Holden, if you're in Oz) is a good one. People become partisan over all sorts of things.

  6. Re:to apple fan boys on Apple Posts $18B Quarterly Profit, the Highest By Any Company, Ever · · Score: 1

    I don't know why you think I'm getting ripped off. I paid $600 for a phone that will get software updates for four years. The hardware will last for four years. My last iPhone did.

    The reason why those profit margins are a good thing are because it means Apple isn't concerned with me buying a new phone from them every 18 months to stay afloat. They don't have to track my personal data or advertise to me to make money. Apple making money means that I can be sure that when I want to buy another phone in 4 years, they'll have something good for me to buy and they'll still be around for me to buy it from.

    Contrast that with Android phones. They only promise support for 18 months, even on Nexus devices (though they MAY support them longer than that). There are dozens of phones that have fallen by the wayside. Sure, I can buy a new $150 Motorola every year or two, and it would be a good phone, but I could also just buy my top-of-the-line iPhone and keep it a little longer, and it means that I get a really exemplary phone every once in a while.

    I understand the decisions that lead you to chose Android devices, but it's not wrong to chose Apple even BECAUSE they're making money. It's a short term pain that has (for me) been a long-term win.

  7. Re:18B on 75B on Apple Posts $18B Quarterly Profit, the Highest By Any Company, Ever · · Score: 1

    Well, clearly it's what the market will bear. By definition, it's not overpriced. Overpriced items don't sell.

    That is, 75 million phone buyers have decided that the phone price aligns with its value in their hands, whatever that value entails.

    In my case, I buy phones to last for four years. That's what I did with my iPhone 4, and that's what I'm planning with my iPhone 6. The $600 I paid is a mere $150 when amortised over that time. And I can rely on there being 4 years of software updates and support from Apple. I can count on the hardware lasting that long, because it's really solid hardware. In what universe is that not good value for money?

    My $600 pocket computer is only overpriced if you consider it far more disposable than it actually is.

  8. Re:18B on 75B on Apple Posts $18B Quarterly Profit, the Highest By Any Company, Ever · · Score: 1

    Given that Apple's OSes are free, I don't know that you can claim that. They basically have a 0% margin on most of their software. They underwrite their software development with hardware sales. Basically, when you buy an Apple product, they're selling you both at the same time. I'm sure if you work in the R&D and the software costs, the margins come down.

  9. Re:The solution is obvious on Google Explains Why WebView Vulnerability Will Go Unpatched On Android 4.3 · · Score: 2

    You're talking like Google's a minority player in this deal. Google's the big dog here. Google dictates terms, and this one isn't so onerous. They patch the OS and they send the patch to a bunch of handset makers. They integrate the patch and push the update. This isn't a fundamental system overhaul, it's a bug fix. Unless the phones are incapable of receiving an update at all, they should be able to get this no problem. If there are costs, Google can offer to defray them. This is about building a brand and taking care of your customers. All this is doing is further pushing the perception that Apple takes care of its customers and Google and it's partners don't. Samsung is the only one that could theoretically afford to turn Google down because they could switch to Tizen, but they're getting drubbed by Apple at the top end and Xiaomi at the bottom; I don't think they're in a position to make a afuss.

    But if that's what they want, that's fine--I'm an Apple shareholder (20 whole shares!) and that just makes my stock more valuable. And I own an iPhone and will continue to buy them. Whenever I look at Android, one of my big concerns is how long I'll get updates. If this is the sort of thing I can expect--buy a new phone for the latest security patch--I'll continue paying $700 for an iPhone and getting updates for 4+ years, thanks. I'm sure I'm not the only one.

  10. Re:The solution is obvious on Google Explains Why WebView Vulnerability Will Go Unpatched On Android 4.3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apple released a security patch for iOS 6 when that SSL vulnerability was found. It was a deprecated OS running on a MINORITY of Apple phones and they issued an update anyway. (http://support.apple.com/en-ca/HT202920)

    Why are so many people excited to give Google a pass over this? Support your customers or don't, but be up front about how long they're going to get to see updates. If you're going to drop security support after 18 months, at least let everyone know so they can make an informed decision.

  11. As an active user of both... on Twitter Moves To Curb Instagram Links · · Score: 2

    Twitter's request is asinine. Twitter is only set up to share with other Twitter users. When I post something to Instagram, I get to share with people on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr. I do occasionally use VSCO and send things to each service individually (usually when I want to preserve the aspect ratio of an image; the lower res square that Instagram demands doesn't always work best).

    If Twitter wants people to use their service for images, they have to make it easier to share outside of their network. People interested in sharing usually want to cover all their bases, not just one population.

    But this is what's wrong with Twitter's current managementâ"they don't understand their own service and the people that use it. And they don't seem to get that if you want to grow, you have to reach outside of the network and bring people in, not broadcast to the people that are already there. I have friends that have joined Twitter because of my own active cross-posting (using third party tools)â"if Twitter made that part easier, maybe they could convince people to give them a shot. (That and doubling back and making third party clients easier to develop again; the official app is trash compared to Tweetbot. If they want ads, just make it part of the stream that the clients can't skip. It's not so hard.)

  12. Re:Not about code on Blackberry CEO: Net Neutrality Means Mandating Cross-Platform Apps · · Score: 1

    The key elements of Apple's monopoly power are there though: they can effectively set prices in the market, they have the ability to raise or lower production to affect prices and availability of the good, they can suppress or increase the market by withholding or releasing products. This last one is important.

    I'm not sure I buy this. Apple's control extends only to their own product. There's a active market below Apple's pricepoint (though there's not much profit there, I'll grant you). When Apple's prices change (actually, has that happened in the last few years? I think the price has been steady for a while) the market doesn't reconfigure around that price. Apple certainly has a monopoly on Apple phones, but I'm not sure that's particularly insightful.

    In theory, someone could also release a product that's priced ABOVE the iPhone (perhaps as a Veblen good) as long as they can make a sufficient appeal to the wealthy that their product is superior. (I know about Vertu, but I haven't seen anything that makes me think that anyone thinks their phones are better than even ordinary Android phones.)

    If Apple disappeared tomorrow, the world would still have smartphone manufacturers. The only way this monopoly argument could hold water is if we decide that Android and the handsets it runs on should be considered a completely different category of product.

  13. Re:Not about code on Blackberry CEO: Net Neutrality Means Mandating Cross-Platform Apps · · Score: 2

    What?

    Sorry, this makes no sense to me. Why should Apple be forced to open up its protocol? Why is that necessary for the public good? As people are always delighted to point out, Apple's market share is by no means the majority. Apple isn't a utility.

    If people don't like iMessage or people they know aren't on iMessage, then they can use something else. I chat with friends on Hangouts (which, if I'm honest, is the worst of all the chat apps out there), WhatsApp (some clumsy UI elements, but lots of good features) and Facebook Messenger (surprisingly good, despite the fact that Facebook is behind it; also the one I'm least likely to trust privacy-wise). I don't demand that my friends only use iMessage. I'll find a way to chat with them one way or another.

    If I happened to have a friend with a BlackBerry, I'd use the BBM app. Or ordinary texts. There's plenty of interoperability here.

    If Apple didn't allow the BBM app (or any other chat app) on their phones in order to ENFORCE iMessage use, maybe you'd have a point.

    BlackBerry missed the boat about a dozen times at this point and that's their fault, not Apple's.

  14. Re:Crunch all you want... We'll make more! on Drug Company CEO Blames Drug Industry For Increased Drug Resistance · · Score: 2

    In India, until March of this year, antibiotics were an off-the-shelf drug.

    http://bsac.org.uk/news/major-...

    You can't blame the doctors there for this one.

    But as usual, things are probably a mixture of things. In India, antibiotics were easy to get, and waste at the plants was an issue. In North America, over-prescription and people not taking the full course of drugs when they ARE required is an issue. In all places, prophylactic use in animals is definitely an issue.

    Put all those things together, and here we are. But it's nice to see this guy cop to his industry's (and his own, by implication) complicity in this problem. They're making drugs to help people, and the part that HE can control is how safely they manufacture the drugs. The agriculture and medical industries will have to be dealt with separately (and probably through legislation).

  15. Re:Holy Carp! on Drug Company CEO Blames Drug Industry For Increased Drug Resistance · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's even worse than that. India JUST banned the sale of antibiotics off the shelf this March. Until recently, you could just walk in and grab them. http://bsac.org.uk/news/major-...

    There are way too many things wrong with that, but among them is that a lot of unused antibiotics probably wound up in the trash.

  16. Re:Makes sense. on Google Throws Microsoft Under Bus, Then Won't Patch Android Flaw · · Score: 1

    Not only does Apple support MOST of its devices for about 4 years, the first iPad's abnormally short update lifetime is still longer than Google's official support lifetime of 18 months.

    And on top of that, they even pushed out iOS 6 security updates when that SSL bug popped up. That was a security patch for an OS and device that was basically EOL.

    If you toss your phone after two years, that's your problem. My iPhone 4 was working great when I gave it to my Mom in September after getting my iPhone 6. Maybe she'll only get a year or two out of it, but six years is about as long as anyone ever owns a computing device these days.

    I buy Apple phones specifically because I KNOW I'll get 4 years out of them. Don't pin any of this crap on Apple, because it's just not true.

  17. Re:Why only in Tech? on Intel Pledges $300 Million To Improve Diversity In Tech · · Score: 1

    100% true.

  18. Re:Produce More Qualified Workers to Not Hire on Intel Pledges $300 Million To Improve Diversity In Tech · · Score: 3, Informative

    Something that helps a lot (in all industries, including academia) is stripping names and gender/race identifying characteristics from resumes and papers. When those documents are assessed in a context absent the nature of the writer, they're considered more equally. They've done experiments where the same paper has been submitted with male, female and neutral names, and the female names see more critical judgement and a higher rate of rejection. This is for exactly the same paper, remember.

    The problem isn't overt racism, it's subtle, institutional discrimination that most of us suffer from. Even female researchers and professors are guilty of discriminating against other women.

  19. Re:Why only in Tech? on Intel Pledges $300 Million To Improve Diversity In Tech · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The CEO of Intel can't affect those industries, except, perhaps, indirectly and through example.

    All of those are good questions. Those are all places where we should be striving to see a better mix of genders and races. You tell ME why those industries aren't trying to change. Could it be the institutional sexism that's so pervasive in our culture, starting when children are young, allotting toys on a gendered basis? Is it because we don't discourage construction workers in many of our cities from catcalling really offensive things, making women wonder why they'd ever want to work on a site like that? Is it because when women DO go into the armed forces, they're raped or sexually assaulted at distressingly high rates? Is it because we tell men that caring for children is women's work, and simultaneously tell them it's a horrible thing to be feminine?

    By the time someone is looking for a job, it's probably too late. The people that want to be in construction have already made their choice, male or female.

  20. Re:Which Apple are you talking about? on Tumblr Co-Founder: Apple's Software Is In a Nosedive · · Score: 1

    Well, except for that 64-bit processor that was 2 years ahead of everyone else's

    You mean the Intel Xeon? How was their Intel Xeon in any way special when compared to anyone else's Intel Xeon? Or do you mean the Intel i7, which was also the same i7 that was available to everyone else?

    Uh, no. The A7 and A8. The ones that Apple developed themselves. The ones that Qualcomm dismissed as a gimmick while desperately trying to get out the door themselves and only just achieving this year.

    Or the fingerprint sensor that works quite a lot better than any current competing models

    And how many have you tried? Every iPhone user I know regards the fingerprint sensor as a nice "gee-whiz" addon but not anything important.

    I've tried the ONE other that's on the market. On the face of it, it's a poor system, and much slower. The swipe action requires a lot more precision and a specific orientation. I've unlocked my iPhone upside down.

    It seems like it's a triviality, but because of it, I can have a 15-ish digit passcode and unlock my phone and buy things from the appstore rather quickly. I feel like I'm in the dark ages every time I use my (3rd-Gen) iPad. It's a small change, but it's one that I quickly wanted on almost everything I owned. I'm not made of money, though, so replacing my iPad will have to wait.

    Or the custom timing controller they built so they could release a 5k iMac for the same price that Dell is selling (a not-yet-available) a 5k monitor.

    It's rather silly to compare an extant product to one you insist does not exist. More useful would be to note that the 5k iMac is a product with nearly no market and nearly no sales. In fact it is one of the only non-touchscreen all-in-one units on the market today.

    Right, but for the same price as the Dell monitor, you can buy the iMac. It's like you get a computer for free.

    Or the rather cleverly designed Mac Pro.

    Clever in what way? We've seen cleverly designed workstations before that at least used novel hardware. Intel CPUs and GPUs in a fancy box are still Intel CPUs and GPUs.

    The heat dissipation design is really clever. I had a PowerMac G5, and the bloody thing (while gorgeous--one of the loveliest industrial designs in the last 20 years) was insanely loud. I've worked with a few sound engineers in my time (I'm in the games industry) and they hate how loud the computers are.

    I think between the longevity of their products and the high quality of the releases at the start of the generation, there's much less of a penalty to being an early Apple adopter than there ever was

    I encourage you to think about that in more depth. Apple tends to push arguably the shortest generation time of any hardware vendor today. My non-apple laptop is 7 years old and runs fine. I don't know anyone who is currently using an apple laptop that is more than 3 years old, and it isn't because they did anything incredible hardware or software-wise in the past 3 years. Similarly their workstations - which you can't buy for less than $2,500 - also are designed to be replaced completely in bewilderingly short time spans.

    I think you're misreading my statement. It used to be that buying Gen 1 of any Apple product was a recipe for disaster. You always waited for the next revision because the first one would have an irritating problem. Now, I feel like Gen 1 of Apple's hardware is a lot less worrisome from that perspective.

    But to speak to your point, while Apple does frequent updates, they support old hardware for a long time. My iPhone got OS updates for four years--they're the only ones in the industry that do that. My 5 year old iMac is still getting OS updates. They're not really designed to be replaced quickly, it's just

  21. Re:Which Apple are you talking about? on Tumblr Co-Founder: Apple's Software Is In a Nosedive · · Score: 2

    Well, except for that 64-bit processor that was 2 years ahead of everyone else's. Or the fingerprint sensor that works quite a lot better than any current competing models. Or the custom timing controller they built so they could release a 5k iMac for the same price that Dell is selling (a not-yet-available) a 5k monitor. Or the rather cleverly designed Mac Pro.

    Apple consistently puts out really high quality hardware still, I think. Apple used to really consistently lag behind in performance-per-dollar, and I think between the longevity of their products and the high quality of the releases at the start of the generation, there's much less of a penalty to being an early Apple adopter than there ever was. Of course, this all relies on you being willing to give up the control of expandability and repairability. There's certainly a trade-off there that has to be considered; I 100% respect anyone that makes decisions based on that criteria.

    But the software is noticeably worse. I had a problem the other day where I couldn't drag and drop files in my Finder in Yosemite. Turned out I needed to delete some sort of Finder plist file; something migrated badly from Mavericks and screwed me up. And ever since installing Yosemite, I've been plagued with random kernel panics. I actually don't use my desktop machine much anymore, but I used to keep my account logged in even when my partner was using the machine. I've used it a bit more in the last couple of weeks, and I've made sure to log myself out because I was suspicious that I had some rogue process running causing the crashes. Well now when she logs back in after I've logged out, Yosemite will log her out after a minute or so. Then she goes back in again and it's fine.

    Everyone has a completely different list of software problems now. It's madness.

    Meanwhile, my iPhone 6 replaced my iPhone 4 (only because the iPhone 4 wasn't eligible for OS updates anymore), the iMac and Mac Mini hardware have no trouble at all, and our two iPads are rock solid. Hardware-wise, I haven't had to warranty anything from Apple in the last 6 years. Now I'm just faced with weird random problems with OS X crashes and dumb iOS bugs.

  22. Re: noooo on 2014: Hottest Year On Record · · Score: 1

    Your viewpoint is, ironically, too narrow itself. Ecosystems are hard. They're big, and complicated and saving them is going to be difficult. Those ecosystems are things that we rely on as a species, so it's hard to tech your way out of the mess entirely.

    For example, take the Great Barrier Reef. It's immense. It protects an enormous part of Australia's coastline. Artificial reefs that we build aren't as effective as natural ones at least partly because natural ones regenerate, given the right conditions. Additionally, they act as fish nurseries and give refuge to species that we eventually want to eat. As the population of the planet grows, it becomes ever more important to protect these areas to ensure long-term benefit to us. (Also, I beleive that it has its own inherent worth, beyond what we can exploit or derive from it.)

    Heating of the oceans drives acidification. Acidification is bad for animals that make shells...the acid eats away at them. Additionally, the corals have evolved to live in a certain temperature band and so there are just issues with forcing them to live at different temperatures.

    On top of all that, jellyfish don't have any issues with rising temperatures or acidification because they have very few hard parts, and they compete with other sea life at all tropic levels. They eat eggs and larvae and adult fish and invertebrates. Suddenly animals around the reefs are under competitive pressure as well. Jellyfish don't really have many natural predators--it takes ecosystems to keep jellyfish levels where they are.

    I'm not a marine biologist, and this is just grazing the surface of what I've read. While I agree with you that tech will help, we've got so much to do on so many fronts. Out survival depends on the survival of a lot of things. We like to think we're important, but we're really just a disruptive force, not a particularly useful one. The planet would do no worse with humanity gone, but if you could wipe out all the insects with a snap of your fingers, humanity would almost certainly disappear.

    So, think bigger. I think we're mostly on the same page, honestly. But if what you hear is unrelenting gloom and doom, it's because when you start looking at the massive scale of disruption that we're faced with, it's sometimes hard to think of a way that we can legitimately fix it. We're really in a bind. I hope you're right, and we can just think our way out of this mess, and I hope you're part of that solution. We kind of need everyone on board.

  23. Issue is continuity of experience on Apple Faces Class Action Lawsuit For Shrinking Storage Space In iOS 8 · · Score: 1

    Here's the issue as I see it.

    I owned an iPhone 4 for all four years of its lifeâ"release to EOL. It was the 16GB version and I got by by managing my music playlists carefully and occasionally offloading the photos. Even in iOS 7, this was fine. When I was deciding which iPhone 6 to buy, I figured that I'd pretty much work the same way I always had. Sure, I can't carry as much with me, but I'm rarely away from home so long that it matters, and I was already planning to buy the iCloud storage package.

    Even still, the space problem on my 16GB iPhone 6 is getting on my nerves. I've had to delete and restore my music at least once. Connecting to my Mac first uses a bit less space, but not so much less that I don't have to delete things. The iCloud photo system now works well enough that I'm definitely saving space there, but as a whole I'm running much closer to my limits. I get low space warnings from time to time, and I've started to monitor whether or not I REALLY need certain apps on my phone.

    I would've paid the extra $100 for the upgraded version if I'd known the delta between 16GB on iOS 7 and 8 was so large. Apples cloud services just aren't good enough for me to rely on, and I cross into the USA all the time, so I go fairly long periods without reliable mobile data frequently (I had to have a GPS app that relies on stored data, I can't stream music or podcasts, etc.)

    When availability is a bit better, I may sell this one off to someone that more easily gets by on 16GB, but Apple shouldn't have put me in this position in the first place. I use and enjoy their products, and I'm willing to pay for what I needâ"I'm just irritated that what I need changed with no behavioural change from me. It's all on Apple here.

  24. Re: what else is new on Being Colder May Be Good For Your Health · · Score: 1

    The Celsius scale isn't that arbitrary. The freezing and boiling points of water are well covered. As well, 1 calorie is the amount of energy it takes to heat 1ml (1 cubic centimetre) of water 1 degree Celsius.

    Ultimately, everything is arbitrary, sure, but that's a poor argument to put forthâ"some systems are more consistent than others. Use the system with the greatest internal consistency.

  25. Re: I love Shashdotters, but.... on How Amazon's Ebook Subscriptions Are Changing the Writing Industry · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but this system is taking that sales part away. Books take time to read, and the alotment of funds comes out of a small fixed pool. Where once an author would be able to hustle and just make sure they were good and that people knew about their new work, this pool makes sure that they take less away. Exposure means a lot less with a system like this. The great writers draw people in, and the crap writers get an equal cut of the pie.

    And then these authors WILL get new jobsâ"as you suggestâ"and we won't have quality books to read any more. This move is ridiculous and short-sighted. There should be caps, or ways for the user to distribute funds, at least. If I get 3 books through this system one month, and one is great, one is okay and one is terrible, I should be able to split the money to reward the great writer and leave the others with less. Quality would be favoured again, hacks would be driven out, and we'd actually be able to encourage better writing than the current system allows forâ"how many times have you bought a book on a whim and then discovered that it was actually terrible and you'd been suckered. With a post-reading money distribution scheme, I'd be able to punish bad writers with slick advertising campaigns for eating my time.