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User: Mr.+No+Skills

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Comments · 401

  1. Second Try, Right? on Microsoft Working With Suppliers on Designs for Watch-Like Device · · Score: 1
  2. Re:Why not? on Microsoft Game Director Adam Orth Resigns Following Xbox Comments · · Score: 1

    Does someone risk employment discipline when commenting publicly about their employer - of course. Common sense. Worth firing? Not sure, there may be other history at play that we wouldn't know about.

    What is hard to find is an explanation of why "always on" is good or bad (pros and cons) that triggered this issue. I watched the IGN video (a great example about what's bad about anyone being able to report news on-line; what a slog waiting for mostly-amatuers to get to the point), and I can't figure out what XBox owners don't like about this fixed-to-the-TV device being plugged into the wall. Seems it evens out content downloads and other software related patching. Is it just the hassle of some complicated reset process if its offline from a power outage?

    By the way - thanks for the non-anonymous posting. This thread seems to be loaded with Acs and I can't filter them out.

  3. Missed but Not Missed on The End of the Dr. Demento Show On Radio · · Score: 1

    I didn't know it was still on, but that's mostly because I don't know what's on radio anymore except for the morning news station. I guess I'll just go out back and eat worms.

  4. Re:duh on The iPad As In-Car Entertainment System Killer · · Score: 1

    Most of us don't buy enough hardware to have a good sense of manufacturing defects directly. We get this indirectly from media sources, and human nature amplifies dissatisfaction more than satisfaction. I'm a somewhat recent Apple convert (about 5 years now), and a long time purchaser of computers of all kinds. While there have been some well known issues (the 24 inch screens currently, and I personally had to deal with the "expanding capacitor" issue on my iMac G5), my opinion of Apple is much higher than all the other personal computer manufacturers for build quality, service, and design. Admittedly, Apple doesn't really bother with the low-end market, so comparing the engineering art in an iMac to a mass market Dell desktop isn't a fair fight. But, I think "urban myth" is really too strong a description. My one motherboard issue was superbly handled by Apple Care, and my Apple laptops have lasted much longer than comparable Dell or Sony products I have purchased. I don't think my experience as been atypical, and any other PC manufacturer would have a list of quality snafus to point to - in most cases many more.

    It's also interesting to look at the trigger for your comment. Even if you buy into the argument that Apple's quality is the best, comparing it to the quality of Ford is funny. Even the best personal computers last on average three years? Cars sit outside for years and years, have long term warranties, and lots of legislation controlling defect repair. The smallest manufacturing defect (Toyota comes to mind) get magnified into horrible PR nightmares that cost millions and millions to resolve. I'm guessing Apple wouldn't hold up well in a real comparison to Ford, or any other car company.

    PS: Great Twain quote.

  5. It's About _All_ Jacks on Is the Line-in Jack On the Verge of Extinction? · · Score: 1

    It has nothing to do with the line in jack. It has to do with the desire to eliminate all jacks except USB/FireWire. Simplifies manufacturing and design costs, maybe? But, lots have disappeared; parallel, serial, keyboard, etc. All replaced with one do-everything digital jack. As others have pointed out, an audio/USB is a $10 purchase and up, depending on your needs.

  6. Re:Like Simone on James Cameron On How Avatar Technology Could Keep Actors Young · · Score: 1

    Which was somewhat similar to another movie which name escapes me. Late 70s? Early 80s? Scanned actors then killed so the studio could use their likenesses without having to pay them. Maybe it was a made for TV movie...

  7. Re:Wrong Question on How To Stop Businesses Storing SSNs Indefinitely? · · Score: 1

    This may change over time. Red Flag rules and other identity theft laws in the US are increasing the liability for whomever is the source of the leak. Holding on to personal identifiers for people you have no active business with is increasing your corporate risk. At some point, most likely after an embarrassing information leak, a bunch of lawsuits that crush a company will cause others to reconsider not purging old information from their databases.

  8. Re:Broken by design. on How To Stop Businesses Storing SSNs Indefinitely? · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is bad policy, since many potential hospital "customers" don't have an SSN. Hospitals have to service newborns, visitors, illegals, etc. Using SSN as the unique ID doesn't work, and they usually have work-arounds for this.

  9. Re:A good application on Microsoft Surface To Coordinate SuperBowl Security · · Score: 1

    I agree with the other reply poster. I'm not sure how this is really any leap past the more traditional projection with a large screen and more common pointing devices. It's sure out of reach for people with mobility issues to stand up and wave their arms around, and leaning over a table obviously only lets a few people look down.

  10. Re:Whiskey Byproducts on Power In Scotland From Tides and Whiskey · · Score: 1

    I was thinking "vomit and pregnancy", but same joke I guess...

  11. Re:Whatever, it's a great service on Pandora Trying Out Invasive Commercial Breaks · · Score: 1

    I believe the problem with Payola (historically, although the "tuning out" may be a current issue) is that record labels essentially froze out smaller artists, since there's only so much air time. As a smaller artists (label or independent), you couldn't get your song on the radio without paying up, since the major promoter was already doing this. An extension of going after monopolistic practices, I guess.

  12. No Deadlines for EMRs on Electronic Medical Records, the Story So Far · · Score: 1

    The executive order requires interoperable systems for healthcare data, but does not require EMR applications. It says any system the fed buys must be able to share data with other systems, but not that any particular system is purchased for any purpose.

    Also, does not apply to the private sector, although there are obviously many political movements to provide incentives and mandates in this direction.

    The OP is a little misleading. The standards are being developed by HITSP (www.hitsp.org), the money is coming from the proposed 20-25B$ Obama wants to spend on this little pork project (and other legislation on the fed and state level similarly).

    Your tax dollars at work. Note that the market has largely rejected the current generation of vendor products, since they do little to help the physician in their workflow.

  13. Re:Obama on Electronic Medical Records, the Story So Far · · Score: 1

    Check Bush's state of the union address from 4 or 5 years ago. A 12 year plan to move to nationwide EMR records for everyone. Established the office of the national coordinator for healthcare IT which is the administrative arm to make this happen. This launched the National Healthcare Infratructure Network project (currently in its second revision), the Healthcare IT Standards Body (to harmonize competing HIT standards and establish new ones), the Certification Commission for HIT (to certify products for operating on the national infrastructure) and a number of other projects.

    Obama would be smart to not throw all this out, but the knee jerk reaction is anything Bush did is bad.

  14. Re:OT : Why cancel analog? on Conflict of Interest May Taint DTV Delay Proposal · · Score: 1

    Because they couldn't think of a method for making digital signals backward compatible with the analog signals. Since they are separate frequencies, providing both would take up a lot more bandwidth for TV. So, the plan is:

    1) Deploy Digital on a separate set of frequencies.
    2) Work through a transition period where both are available.
    3) Have a cut off date where the old analog signals are shut down.
    4) Re-allocate the old frequencies for another purpose.

    We've been in step 2 for some time. Step 3 starts next month. Step 4 was decided some time ago through traditional lobbying and political payouts.

  15. Re:Misdiagnosing stupidity as malice on Conflict of Interest May Taint DTV Delay Proposal · · Score: 1

    I think the heat is coming from:

    1) Anything related to the FCC is a sore subject, since it seems like they have been operating at the whim of companies for a while and not in the interests of average citizens.

    2) A call to delay the DTV transition seems like a very odd call given the effort and lead up to this point in time (and its priority to other crises, unless the "war on analog transmissions" is on the horizon). To have an announcement like this influenced by someone with a financial stake or friends with a financial stake is problematic.

    So, we are judging him for what he does, and his team choices don't quite seem to line up with "change" (unless "change from George Bush" was the only requirement) and some of them seem flat out bad. And, he seems to be getting some bad advice at the same time, which he is acting on which is also concerning.

    I'm still waiting for that train...

  16. Re:Server management on Microsoft Tag, Smartphone-Scannable Barcodes · · Score: 1

    You don't need a "bar code reading PDA", bar codes can be read with a camera just fine. I just aim the bar codes on a book or CD at my web cam and the catalog software reads the code and sends it to Amazon for the detailed information (Delicious Library is the software, if anyone cares).

    So, still not seeing the advantage of this over normal bar codes. I understand color adds some additional "bits" to the info, but bar codes can be printed on any printer and there's a monstrous industry built around small to high cost readers.

  17. Re:Damn... on Obama Proposes Digital Health Records · · Score: 1

    I doubt the money is to write new applications from scratch. This is being pushed because the average person outside healthcare doesn't understand why there is all the manual process when compared to banking through an ATM machine (hint, its unlikely your ATM machine will kill you) and there are large companies looking to make a killing dipping into this 25B kitty for the next few years. Since the previous several hundred billion has been thrown down the wall street commission structure without much control, this mountain will be doled out in an accountable and traditional fashion. Most likely free or low cost loans to purchase and train on existing products, probably those certified as EMRs by the federal CCHIT group.

    Of course, like all this emergency spending, you have to wonder where all the holes are for the money. Total Health IT spending in the US annually is most likely around 20B, so increasing this means that a lot of new employees need to come into the picture (which is part of the intent, no doubt), but as others have pointed out in this thread there a lot of learning curve out there for EMR products.

    So, we'll have a feast for the next few years hiring, training, and implementing the current generation of products which are fully rejected by the market they serve (EMR adoption is http://govhealthit.com/Articles/2008/02/Market-watcher-sees-steady-rise-in-federal-health-IT-spending.aspx and http://govhealthit.com/online/news/350171-1.html) and assuming this is half of healthcare.

  18. Re:Hasn't this already been done? on Obama Proposes Digital Health Records · · Score: 1

    Actually, insurance companies have of copies of their customers medical _claims_, not their medical _records_. A claim contains a few simple codes to indicate reimbursement, and often deviate quite a bit from what actually happened since the claim is fudged to get paid, not trying to document comprehensive medical information.

    You could also get into people moving between insurance companies and paying out of pocket and paying because of car insurance etc etc...

    An insurance company contains information about your health the same way your credit card company contains information about your automobile maintenance...

  19. Re:exatly on Obama Proposes Digital Health Records · · Score: 4, Funny

    Add some extra space for buffering, swap space, and so forth, and you're talking about a Terrabyte of data per year for the X-Rays at a large community hospital. MRI, CT, Ultrasound, Angiography, and all the rest will add more, of course.

    The hospital I used to work at stored about 2.5 terabytes of images per year.

    Christ!!! That's almost $250 a year for storage!!!!! Or, $75,000,000,000 if you're the govment!

  20. Re:One problem. on Microsoft Engineers Invent Displays That Top LCDs For Efficiency · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's really unfair. Their hardware is way more reliable than their software.

    If they've figured out how to put a lens in front of an LED I can't see how reliability will be a problem.

  21. Original Documentary on British "X-files" Released to Public · · Score: 1

    And the original video footage, from 1970. http://ufoseries.com/

  22. Re:Yeah but what if... on Online Nicknames Google better than Real? · · Score: 5, Funny

    Or, uncommon, but clearly bad for landing a new job?

  23. Re:No. on Games All Downhill Since Pong? · · Score: 1

    It wasn't the first to have multiplayer gaming by a long shot, but the ease of the multiplayer scenario was probably the turning point in the social aspect of gaming. I mean, when doing a system-link with Halo (Combat Evolved) who knew that in just a few years time we would expect every FPS to have a multiplayer component?

    Halo was expected to have multiplayer because Half-Life (or at least Counter-Strike) turned gaming into a team or social event. Halo's contribution was to legitimze the X-Box as a game platform - once Microsoft bought Bungie and shut down Halo as an OS X game.

  24. Re:The writing's on the wall on Google to Offer Online Personal Health Records · · Score: 1

    As a regular Altavista user I remember jumping immediately to Google because of the result ranks were much more on target. Altavista seemed to be ranked by "last page indexed".

  25. Re:no thanks on Pay-For-Visit Advertising · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously, if you want anonymity, buy stuff at a brick-and-mortar store, and pay cash.

    I think the point of concern with some is that even this will stop working if you carry a cell phone with you. They watch you coming in and going through the checkout line even if you pay in cash.