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  1. Re:2 Billion - It is small change on Asus CEO On Windows RT: "We're Out." · · Score: 1

    Your missing the point. MS has offerd to billion to help make this deal happen. If it turns out that Micahel needs 3 or 4 billion more to get this done, MS would pony it up. In exchange for this vote of confidence in Michael Dell, they may already have a deal in place that Dell will sell WinRT tablets and laptops. If there is not an actual deal in place, Michael still has to condiser the posibility that MS may back out or not further shore up the buyout if Dell shows a lack of confidence in WinRT.

    Condider this a gift. From me to you. If someday I ever need a favor....

  2. Re:Words on Google's House of Cards · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Much like classic FORTH programming widh disk blocks. 1 BLOCK = 1K = 16 lines of 64 characters. Any word/function/definition needed to fit in 15 lines of text (The 1st of the 16 lines was used for comments). You had the ability to extend a definition beyond one screen of text but it was usually considered bad form. Typically if it would not fit, it was natures way of telling you that you did not undertand the problem well enough to code a proper solution. Clarity comes as you are forced to break things down into there smallest components.

  3. Re:The betting pool is now open... on Microsoft Prepares Rethink On Windows 8 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Microsofts snot does not always turn to honey.

    Zune ... failed

    Play4Sure .. failed

    WinCE .. failed

    Win8 Mobile ... failing

    WinRT ... failing

    Surface ... failing

    xbox/xbox 360 ... if you uncook the books and stack up all the costs and losses releated to the xbox line they are still a decade from turning a profit.

    search ... still losing money after more than a decade.

    MS is sure their future in the consumer market is tied to the 30% take the get with an app store. This means
    1. The Modern Intreface must be maintained.
    2. The legacy desktop and non-app store installation must go away.
    3. The start button must go away to facilite point 1 and 2.
     

  4. Re:Advantages? on BitTorrent Opens Up Its Sync Alpha To the Public For Windows, Mac, and Linux · · Score: 1

    With 2 computers involved no advantage over rsync or Unison as far as speed of transfer. If you have 3 or more computers this is a better option. This works just like any other torrent. If a file is on computer A, and computers B and C need it. As B gets part of it and C gets a different part of it, then B and C can help update each other in the case of A's pipe being saturated. If you are trying to sync A, B, C, D, E, F, G and H, then it will be MUCH faster and much less complex to maintain.

    Once you add in features like read only folders, the ability to exclude any one particular file or folder from being accessed, and being able to issue a good for 24 hours only key, you have a LOT of advantages over rsync. If you want sync copies of files on computer A to computer B, then rsync is the right tool for the job. If you need to do more than that, then maybe bittorrent-sync is the right tool for the job.

  5. Re:Yes, I'm sure that will do on Microsoft Mulling Smaller Windows 8 Tablets · · Score: 1

    50k apps, but that is only if you count apps in other languages. Apps in english are around 35k and this is after MS promised 100k apps by Feb 1.

    Not exactly a roaring success

  6. Re:Two Reviews Worth Reading on GNOME 3.8 Released Featuring New "Classic" Mode · · Score: 1

    To each his own.

    I run fluxbox and I always have a dock on the right side of my screen where I run dock apps. http://dockapps.windowmaker.org/. On a wide aspect display I don't miss the 68 to 72 pixels they take up. At a glance I can see if anyone has IMed me and what time it was (wmmsg), switch keyboard layouts and see which one is active (wmkeys), So what me volume levels are and change/mute them (wmix), have my favorite net streaming radio stations available (pywmradio), have full control over audacious (wmauda), constantly monitor the status of 6 hosts (wmpiki), plus have some eyecandy with wmdots, wmcube, and wmxss.

    And though Gnome 2 applets suck, I can assure you that old fashioned dock apps for the wharf, slit, dock or whatever you want to call it works quite well. You just do not get this level of information density with Unity or the Gnome shell. It is amazing what can be done with a 64x64 canvas.

    Not all applets suck, not all DE's are created equal.

  7. Re:Obscurity on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 1

    Here let me fix that for you

    Dilbert Fast. It's for people who know it exists. Which obviously was not me.

    That however is not the case any longer. Thanks for the tip. To bad you decided to be snotty while helping me out at the same time.

  8. Re:Obscurity on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 1

    Your missing the point. Piracy is a tax on "quality" and "popularity". If you have a "product" and you make money by selling it or some service related to it, you rely on the fact that the more people know about it, the more potential customers there are in the pool, the more actual product you will sell. There will be people who are not interesetd. There will be people who are intereseted but your product is not "good eough" for them. There will be people who are not willing to part with their money at the price point you have set. Then there is the final class of people. People that will pirate the prouduct if a way can be found to do so that is significantly cheaper than purchasing the product.

    It is a tax on popularity. 10 people know aobut your product, 0% piracy, 0% profit. 1 million people know about your product, 1% piracy and some profit. 100 million people know about your product 2% piracy and even more profit. Much like a store with zero customers has zero shrinkage. Nothing is ever damaged by store employees or customers, nothing is stolen by store employees or customers. Shrinkage is a tax on doing business and handeling physical product in a retail space. Pircacy is a tax on doing business and handeling digital products.

    98% of musicians have never been heard of by even 100,000 people. Obscurity is hurting their record sales far more than any pircacy would. I am not justifying piracy anymore than I am justifying shirinkage. However in the real world both are a cost of doing buisness. Both are a "tax" on being popular.

  9. Obscurity on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Piracy is a tax on being popular.

    The less popular you are, the less of a tax it is.

    It costs goodwill, it cost money, and it is for the most part not effective. What is effictive is to find a way to make money even with pircacy out there.

    Read some posts at TechDirt. Find out if freeimum, or posting a comment or a product at thepiratebay or something else would work for your business.

    There was an article about a director who made $60,000 last year on a project and spent $30,000 if it trying to deter piracy. She could have doubled her money by doing nothing. That was a case study. http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1999-12-29/

  10. Re:Fool me once... don't get too comfortable on Google Launches 'Keep' To Rival Evernote · · Score: 2

    Yes they know they will loose a lot of us Google Reader users trust But not many people used Google Reader. The total number of Google Reader users who will drop all Google based products plus everyone the can influence to do that same thing, is not a very large number. If it costs them 100,000 users I would be surprised.

  11. Re:Buntu's Track Record. on Canonical Announces Mir: A New Display Server Not On X11 Or Wayland · · Score: 1

    Yes, pulse works much better now. But it was the Pulse community improving pulse. It was not Ubuntu. Ubuntu came out. Took credit for Pulse, told the Ubuntu community that they would have the problems with Pulse fixed in a release or two. They did not fix it in a release or two, or three, or four.

    It is typical of Ubuntu "iniatives". They announce some great linux feature that they probably borrowed from Fedora. Claim how bullet proof they will make it, address a few issues for a relase or two. What about the more difficult features to fix? Better hope they are addressed upstream. Because Ubuntu has announced a new set of iniatives they are going to focus on, leaving the current set abandoned.

  12. Re:Buntu's Track Record. on Canonical Announces Mir: A New Display Server Not On X11 Or Wayland · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My points are valid. I remember when Ubuntu took up each of these issues and adopted or created software to solve these issues.

    Network manager is far from perfect. Try setting a static IP address for you wired adapter with network-manager. Or getting a working bridge going. Or having a wi-fi connection active upon booting a computer but before logging in. When Ubuntu adopted network manager and people filed bug reports and brought up those shortcomings. Ubuntu said it wold get taken care of in the next couple releases. They did not.

    They said we would have grub to desktop graphic boots. Did they work on it for a bit. But even now, most desktops do not have a graphic boot from grub. Forget about that as an out of box experience with a Nvidia card. From not working in GRUB you move to not working in Plymouth Again Ubuntu did not create these technologies, but they did adopt them, set as a goal what they wanted to do with them. Then they fell short, got bug reports, promised they would fix it in a release or two. After a release or two, they announce another half baked initiative and move on.

    Does pulse audio work? Yes, Does it still have issues? Yes. Can it be a pain to get software designed to work with OSS or ALSA working with it yes it can. I have every right to complain. Ubuntu promised 6 years ago when they adopted it that they would get it all fixed and sorted out. They have not.

    You mention Unity and Upstart. Upstart still is not delivering on Ubuntu's promised sub 10 second boot times. Which by the way, were promised with graphic boot screens as well. Still not happening. What about 200,000 million users by 13.10? Again another half baked promise.

    Ubuntu has done a lot. The Linux desktop is better off than it was in 2006. Ubuntu has helped improve some of these projects. But so far, every time Ubuntu announces an initiative and makes some big claim about what they will accomplish, they end up doing a half baked job when you look at how well they have met their objectives.

    200 million users by October 2013
    10 second boot times
    Desktop looking better than OS X
    100% graphical boots on all Linux systems.
    Network manager as robust as OS X or Windows XP network manager
    Pulse Audio as robust as OS X or Windows XP sound system.

    I am not the one making these promises. Ubuntu is. They are the one telling us we should all hop on board and promote Ubuntu to all of our friends. All of this great stuff they are doing.

    What I see are half-baked half-fulfilled promises. Being told we are a community, and the minute the majority of us don't like something like the close button being moved to the left side of the window, or Unity. we are told Mark is in charge and it is not a community decision. I see the word Linux purged from anything Ubuntu is involved with. I am tired of being lied to and treated like the ugly girlfriend that Ubuntu want to have sex with but will not hold her hand in public.

  13. Buntu's Track Record. on Canonical Announces Mir: A New Display Server Not On X11 Or Wayland · · Score: 1, Interesting

    This will go nowhere. Cananonical has "completion" issues. Look at their past track record on linux. The focus on a feature for a release or two and then either declare it done or stop talking about it. They were going to make everything easy, printing, wifi, audio. Pulse Auido is still far from perfect and network manaeger still has issues. Then we have 10 second boot times, better looking that Mac, Desktop notifications, Wayland and 200 million users by October 2013.

    Back in October of 2011 I predict the death of Wayland on my blog which I almost never post to. http://elder-geek.blogspot.com/2011/10/ubuntu-is-failure.html

    Unity is still here, but instead of fixing it for the desktop, more work will go into making it run on other platforms. I love Linux with all of my heart. But Ubuntu is so preditible on how they are going to fail. They never complete anything that they start. Linux will be safe in the long run from the Distro that strives to remove the word "Linux" from their users minds.

  14. Re:Yeah .... just in my experience. on Mark Shuttleworth Addresses Ubuntu Privacy Issues · · Score: 1

    Five year support on LTS is a killer feature.

    If you want to use .deb packages and would like up-to-date packaegs for software like libreoffice and firefox then Ubuntu is the way to go.

    Drop 12.04 on the machine, and you have a system that will be easy to keep updated till 2017. With the option of upgrading on 2014 if it looks good. There are a lot of PPAs out there to keep many poplular LTS software applications up to date.

  15. Re:If a technology is outdated, outsource it. on COBOL Will Outlive Us All · · Score: 1

    You're missing the main point - programmer productivity. You know how hard it is to surf porn on a VT100?

    Cypher did it

  16. Re:The funny thing at my university on Professors Rejecting Classroom Technology · · Score: 1

    I was surprised with the problems students were having with programming at the local community college. Isuse with cause and effect, sequencing. If I you gave them the sequence of opening the door, walking through it, then closing the door, they would be able to immediately spot sometghing out of sequence. However if you asked them to add some numbers, divied to compute the average then print the results, it seemed 60% of the class could not understand what the sequence should be or why it mattered.

  17. Re:New Low: Publishing Troll Submission on Does US Owe the World an Education At Its Expense? · · Score: 1

    This whole thing was designed to by Obama to create a flame war. When the average American is talking about illegal immigrants, immigration, and border issues. They are talking about people entering the country over the boarder via Mexico without a visa or permit to be in the United States.

    There are many other immigration issues that could be looked at. Right now the only reason to bring any of them up is to deflect the conversation away from "illegal immigration" via Mexico. The Democratic politician believe if we can grant amensty to those aliens, they will have a permanent underclass that will always vote for them. If the boarder can be left open as well, this group will only grow in size. The Republican politician are divide. Some want to hop on board the grant amnesty train and hope to pic up some good will or not be seen as being mean. Some are willing to make this concession IF something is really done to block the boarder in the future.

    If the past is any indicator of the future, in 1984 President Reagan allowed amnesty with the agreement that it would be a one time deal, that enforcement of deporting future illegals would a priority and measures would be put in place to make it harder to cross the border illegally. As it turns out it is not looking to be a one time deal, more of a once a generation deal, nothing will be done to prevent more people from showing up the same way and enforcement will continue to be anemic.

    What chafes my fanny is the attitude of the Mexican government. They expect the US to treat their citizens very well. Whereas an American is not even allowed to own property in Mexico, they can only rent it.

  18. Re:Pirates will still run rampant on WotC Releases Old Dungeons & Dragons Catalog As PDFs · · Score: 1

    Work for hire. Like a cartographer drawing a map for someone.

    You pay them "X" to produce a work for hire. I guess the theory here is lack of creativity. You look at the land and draw a usable map. Pretty much any map maker could draw the same map. As opposed to an author writing stories and dialog that would be almost the same.

    If they were hired to do write these "manuals", they may not have any rights to profits. I also agree that Hasbro has finally figured out there choice was to cash in on the PDF market or continue to let pirate downloads be the only source for PDF's.

    I swear sometimes corporations are like prostitutes that want marriage outlawed because they are against anyone getting sex for free on general principle.

  19. Re:MS's gaming strategy has been weird for years on Will Microsoft Sell Off Its Entertainment Division? · · Score: 1

    They saw XBOX pay per view. They saw someone making a netflix service. They saw that the XBOX would be the must have item in every room in America. Did not matter that a $400 XBOX cost $530 to make. Once they owned that market, then every TV show or movie streamed would have to disgourge part of their profit to Microsoft. They would make a killing.

    To bad the XBOX got the stink of death about it The XBOX 360 has never been ubiquitous enough that Microcoft could dictate a cut of netflix profits. Their dream never came to be.

  20. Re:Xbox is finally making money on Will Microsoft Sell Off Its Entertainment Division? · · Score: 1

    Don't forget the wite off of 1 billon plus for xbox 360 repairs. They figured out what it would cost for 2 years to cover all the repairs and wrote it off at one time. This way a year later it stil lcost 500 million but the did not have to figure it into the mix. It was reported the year before.

  21. AKA Computer Voo Doo on Virus Eats School District's Homework · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You were the last compentent person to touch their system. The only one who knew how to make changes. They know they changed nothing. How could this problem exist, it requires a change to have been made?

    Computer Voo Doo. It has to be the change you made 2 years ago that caused the virus today.

    Ah, Voo Doo, I know thee well. Many of my customers have claimed I have practiced the art.

  22. Obligatry Dilbert Strip on Anthropologist Spends Three Years Living With Hackers · · Score: 5, Funny
  23. Re:Regular universities don't sell you the knowled on Rise of the Online Code Schools · · Score: 1

    While in college I was the only student that learened to code "old school". I have written out a lot of code in the past on paper. Even now, I still doodle out pseudo code on paper and then sometimes refine it into actual code.

    We had an intructor at one point asked for a simple 10 line progam be written down on a test. Out of 60 students I am the only one that was able to produce running code. Everyone else was so used to relying on Intelesense that their code was riddled with syntax errors. They were to used to relying on the IDE to provlde the proper name of the function and the order and type of paramaters it needed.

    What has made me a better programmer? A combination of reading on problem solving, data structures, writing maintainable code AND actually having to read and fix code that I wrote more than 5 years before, as well as porting other peoples software. A "trick" is no good if you can't modify it 5 years later without spending a week reverse engineering it.

  24. Re:Regular universities don't sell you the knowled on Rise of the Online Code Schools · · Score: 1

    I started out coding as a hobby in my teens. I have something most kids in there mid 20's do not have when they get out of college.

    Perspective.

    How do I know my code is maintainable? I a have looked at code I have written 5 years ago, 10 years ago, or longer and had to maintain it. I have adjusted my coding paractices accordingly. If something I wrote 5 years ago is broke or needs to be modified and I can't figure out the logic, flow of the program, the data structures, etc by the comments, variable and function names, then I have done something wrong.

    The more I have to revrse engineer my work, the more I suck at maintainability. When I code nowdays, I can read it 5 years from now just fine. Most college students I have delt with can fix code they wrote last term. Actual coding practices related to maintainabilty are taught be the threat of an employer drop kicking you to the street. Not by theory taught at College.

  25. Re:Regular universities don't sell you the knowled on Rise of the Online Code Schools · · Score: 2

    The "Highly skilled mentors and teachers" had this point of view.

    20% of the class will pass no matter what, so ignore those students. Do not answer their questions. It is not about improving them or preparing them for employment or future studies. The short tem goal is of getting the most students to pass the coruse. Providing any mentoring to those students who will pass anyways is a waste of time.

    Then there are 20% who will fail no matter what. They will not grasp the material in the 10 or 12 weeks they have to work through it. Once again, ignore these students, since we are not willing to cheat on their behalf, we cant save them, they are a waste of time as well.

    That leaves 60% of the class who may fail or pass. All of these students can be helped to the point to where they will at leat pass. Focus all of your energy on these students. If you do, you can have 75% to 80% of your class pass every course.

    In my case, since I was in that first 20%, I got nothing. I was told my questions were not going to be answered because they would confuse other students. No recommendations on what I could study to further my understanding of the topic. No critique of my code. Any investment in me would be a waste of time.

    As it turns out. I did not get along well with the faculty. For what I was paying in tuition and books, I wanted some value for it. I read the book already. The teacher just repeated what was in the book for the slower students and proctored and corrected tests to prove I had read the material. I expeted more value for my money that that. I kept pressuring the faculaty to share with me some of that "Highly Skilled" stuff they were so famous for.

    I think this is a reflection of the institution I was attending. I think other institutions may be better, but I am not sure how much better.

    Also, I went to college in my mid 40's. I have a world view that is jaded by 25 years of work experience. I was paying for the education myself and expected I would learn something more that if I just read a book on my own. Another issue is I have worked for bosses from hell, been fired, dealt with plant closures, family members dying, etc. I am not intimadated by a professor who is 2 years older than me, does not like me, and thinks no matter the quality of the work I turn in, that giving me an F will put me in my place. It is the other way around. If I did a half assed job like they were doing, my employer would fire me. I am paying a PREMIUM for their time and attention. They had better provide some value for it or expect to hear from me about it.