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User: CastrTroy

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  1. Re:It's 2014 on Bug In Fire TV Screensaver Tears Through 250 GB Data Cap · · Score: 1

    Also, if you call your ISP and ask to cancel because you're switching to TekSavvy, you'll be able to get that unlimited (or 270 GB in my case) upgrade for free. Actually, by calling and asking to cancel, I made my bill cheaper, and got the bandwidth/throughput that I wanted.

  2. Re:Similar bug in iOS on Bug In Fire TV Screensaver Tears Through 250 GB Data Cap · · Score: 2

    Yeah, Wife and kids. I tried to convince them otherwise, but they simply had to have Apple. I got a Surface 2 (rt) and personally I like it a lot better than the iOS Devices. It was a toss up between Windows RT and Android. The only thing that really compelled me about Android was that there was more apps. Other than that, I didn't really care for Android that much. On a phone it's great, but on a 10 inch tablet, it's kind of lacking. You can only have 1 app on screen at a time. No native connectivity to shared folders. Updates to the OS are at the discretion of the device manufacturer.

  3. Re:Similar bug in iOS on Bug In Fire TV Screensaver Tears Through 250 GB Data Cap · · Score: 2

    Haven't really looked into it too closely, but for some reason it requires that I have 4 GB free to do the update. And the download time for the download part of the update definitely seems like it takes longer than doing a 32 MB download. Perhaps the behavior is different on iPod touch and iPad because they aren't downloading the files from the cellular network, and therefore they assume they can use lots of bandwidth.

  4. Similar bug in iOS on Bug In Fire TV Screensaver Tears Through 250 GB Data Cap · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I have experienced a similar bug in my iOS devices. Everytime they do a small update to iOS, you're required to redownload the entire operating system, separately for each device you own. We have an iPad and 3 iPod touches (kids...) in the house, and every time Apple issues an Update to iOS we go through quite a lot of extra bandwidth. It's also annoying that we have to clear off 4GB on the device to install the update, as they only come with 12 GB of useable space to begin with.

    I know that this isn't really a bug, but just goes to show you how little most device and app designers think like regular people. It's as if the people testing the devices just use the internet in the office and don't think about the consequences of using too much data, and that they only use the 64 GB versions of the devices where it's much less of a problem to clear off the required space for upgrades.

  5. Re:What I've seen at some intersections... on Unintended Consequences For Traffic Safety Feature · · Score: 1

    I've actually seen some very odd traffic signals. One near my house has the walk signal constantly flashing during low traffic times, when people tend to go too fast. It's a 4 lane road to accommodate traffic, but on weekend mornings it's almost empty. So cars will go quite fast down the road because they feel they have a lot of space. I think that the idea is that drivers will see the flashing hand going the same direction they are, they slow down, as they anticipate a yellow. That is one possibility, but it's also just as likely that people will speed up to make sure they don't get caught by the light.

  6. Re:Myths are socially hilarious on Alleged 'Bigfoot' DNA Samples Sequenced, Turn Out To Be Horses, Dogs, and Bears · · Score: 5, Informative

    Relevant XKCD

  7. Re:Can I play Descent on it? on FreeDOS Is 20 Years Old · · Score: 1

    Last time I tried, I had to use DosBox and FreeDos (or maybe DOS 6.22) on a VM to run Descent and the Devil level editor. The game would only run on one, and the level editor on the other. I can't recall which was which. I used a floppy image on a file to share data between the two. Pretty nostalgic going back and playing that old game.

  8. Re:Tradition on Windows 9 To Win Over Windows 7 Users, Disables Start Screen For Desktop · · Score: 1

    No, actually typing isn't more work. I can type the first 3 to 5 letters of a program name (which is usually enough to narrow down the possibilities enough) way easier than I can move my hand over to the mouse, and click through the hierarchy of menus (or scroll through the huge list if you don't organize things) I like I had to do in Windows XP.

  9. Re:Tradition on Windows 9 To Win Over Windows 7 Users, Disables Start Screen For Desktop · · Score: 1

    I think that people are just being babies and looking for something to complain about. I'm not a big fan of the Windows 8 interface, especially when you don't have a touch screen (actually, I think it's awesome when you do have a touch screen), but after using it for a little while, I found that the interface didn't really hold me back at all. You hardly even see the start screen in your normal day to to day work when you're running desktop applications. It shows up when you push the start key, but after you've typed in the name of the program you want to run and clicked on it (which is so much easier than previous versions because the click target is now huge), you are sent right back to the desktop. Plus with more and more devices coming out with touch screens, there's less of a reason to turn back now.

  10. Re:Ego on Google, Detroit Split On Autonomous Cars · · Score: 1

    The problem with that is that you have to get your plans approved by 300 separate city councils. By going the other way and getting a car that works on all roads, they don't have to ask the cities for permission. Building a quality rail system is actually quite expensive, especially if the city was badly designed in the first place. Plus, there's a large number of people who don't want to take public transit even if it is good. The car is a sunk cost. The will own the car regardless of whether or not the public transit is available. The cost of public transit for the end user is cheaper than owning the car, but often times isn't cheaper than the incremental cost of driving the miles if you're already paying for the car. Most people will choose to take their own car even if it's just 5 minutes quicker than public transit, or if they have some other reason to justify it, like making it easier drop by the grocery store after work for a copy things they need.

  11. Re:Ego on Google, Detroit Split On Autonomous Cars · · Score: 1

    I think your last two points hit the nail on the head. It's the same reasons they decided to make an operating system for phones. They want people to be using their online services all the time. If autonomous driving ever really starts working, to the point where we don't have to pay attention to the road, then they will have reached their goal. We'll be able to browse the web while our cars drive us to work. The may even have a device in the car like a tablet. They can sell us more apps, books, music, movies as well.

  12. Re:His choices... on The Internet's Own Boy · · Score: 1

    Just want to chime in as another vote here. I think it's a very vocal minority that make Aaron Schwartz into the poster boy he is. It helps his case that he was well known personally by a lot of prominent bloggers. I think many of the supporters are too closely connected to him to look at the situation in an objective manner. I don't really blame them. I'd probably be doing something similar if one of my friends had something similar happen to them.

  13. Re:How about fixing the site first? on YouTube Introduces 60fps Video Support · · Score: 1

    This. Youtube isn't much good for watching anything other than short clips because it will often stop playing in the middle of a video, and be unrecoverable without reloading the whole page, and then you have to search for where you were. I have a fast connection, Netflix and other video sites have no problems. I can download a 2 hour movie in 10 minutes on bit torrent. But for some reason Youtube can't play 360p videos properly.

  14. Re:Concerns about online voting on Norway Scraps Online Voting · · Score: 1

    Sounds complicated. Just finished a provincial election here, and paper voting makes things so much simpler. Walk 5 minutes down the road to the nearest school. Present voter registration card and ID, or proof of address (bank statement, etc.) and ID, get your ballot, fill it out, drop it in the box, walk home. It would probably be at least as complicated to do it online, and I still would feel less assured that my vote was being counted correctly. Total time to vote by paper was like 15 minutes.

  15. Re:Probably? on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    According to the first link I found on Google, there was 2.4 million deaths in 2010. Saving 100,000 lives would mean there would be 4% fewer deaths. That's a pretty good outcome. But how long would that last? Everybody dies eventually. When you save a life you're really just putting off death.Is prolonging death. Eventually those people would die. You could probably put off death for a few years, bring up the life expectancy by a few years, but eventually the number of deaths would approach what it was at before.

  16. Re:Because I'm lazy on Why Software Builds Fail · · Score: 1

    My favorite example of this is warnings about using a variable without it being assigned a value which can usually be made to disappear by assigning a value of null to the variable. The variable is null in either case, but explicitly assigning null makes the warning disappear. A null reference exception would occur either way. Also, the warning still appears even if the use of that variable is an if statement checking if the value is not null.

  17. Re:Consoles work without Internet on The Rise and Fall of the Cheat Code · · Score: 1

    Well, obviously the saved game would be stored locally on the machine, so you could still play without an internet connection if you wanted. The reason for connecting to the cloud is for backing up in case the hardware dies.This is added functionality, and not really necessary to play the game. It also wouldn't have to sync every 24 hours. You could sync your saved games once a week or once a month and not lose that much play time if you aren't a heavy gamer. Allowing the user to copy the saved games to an SD card as the Wii did definitely caused some problems with piracy. Had they just eliminated the ability to transfer saved games to/from removable media, they would have cut out a lot of piracy.

  18. Re:They can't sell cheats anymore on The Rise and Fall of the Cheat Code · · Score: 1

    I think a lot of the problem has come with game ratings. The old Mortal Kombat blood code is a good example. The SNES version had no blood, and no cheat to obtain it, mostly likely because Nintendo demanded it. The Sega Genesis version on the other hand had a cheat code to enable blood. Having hidden content that you have to type in a secret code to get to probably makes it difficult to give ratings to games, even if the cheats only reveal things like infinite lives. The existence of cheat codes would probably leave them questioning what else what hidden in the game.

    Also, in terms of copy protection, I don't know why saved games are even exportable on current consoles. Really they should just be backed up to the internet so that people don't have to worry about backing them up. They should also sign the files with some kind of key, similar to how the executables are signed already to restrict what can be run. Perhaps they should just use whole disk encryption on the hard disk because now the game is stored on the disk, and any file can be tampered with, leading to vulnerabilities.

  19. Re:They hate our freedom on San Francisco Bans Parking Spot Auctioning App · · Score: 2

    Not that familiar with their public transportation situation, but if selling access to parking spots is anywhere near profitable and worth your time, I would say there exists at least a bit of a problem with "too many cars". If you can afford to pay for the parking spot, and afford to own the car to occupy the spot, plus have the free time to vacate the spot reasonably quickly when somebody has bought it makes it seem unlikely that somebody could do this for profit. Most people probably just use it to make back a little bit of the money they had just spent on parking. If spots really are that scarce, upon selling the spot, you wouldn't be able to find another one to occupy to make a second sale.

  20. Re:They hate our freedom on San Francisco Bans Parking Spot Auctioning App · · Score: 2

    Or they need better public transportation so people don't have to drive their cars everywhere.

  21. Re:So what? on First Phone Out of Microsoft-Nokia -- and It's an Android · · Score: 1

    Well Microsoft has a pretty good history of offering long term support, which is something severely lacking from many Android offerings. I bought a computer 8 years ago with Windows XP, and they only recently stopped putting out updates for that. And if I bought a copy of Windows 7 or 8, I could continue using the same hardware with updates for quite a few years to come. I wish the same could be done with a phone. With high end phones priced at over $500, is it too much to ask that we get software updates for a few years? The last laptop I bought cost less than that, and came with Windows 7, so I'm expecting quite a few years of software updates on top of the 2.5 I've already got.

  22. Re:I don't understand how this is a "record" on Fabien Cousteau Takes Plunge To Beat Grandfather's Underwater Record · · Score: 1

    When you think about it, it makes it quite a bit more clear why going to Mars would be quite hard mentally for the astronauts. Sure they've spend long amounts of times in the space station, but they are always in contact with the people on earth. On a trip to Mars, the astronauts would have long periods of time where they would be unable to communicate with earth. They could set up relay satellites which would help a bit, but you still have the problem with the communications round trip being anywhere from 6 to 44 minutes depending on planetary alignment.

  23. Re:Management botched it again on Prisoners Freed After Cops Struggle With New Records Software · · Score: 1

    Doesn't have to be bad, just different. Just look at the amount of complaining that goes on here about Windows 8, or the Ribbon UI. I'm don't really want to discuss the merits or problems with the above, but even for people who use computers every day, for many hours a day, simply changing the user interface, for better or worse, can significantly impede people's ability to get work done.

    Most people would probably say that the current UI of (Insert Word Processor Here) is better than WordPerfect 5.1, but once you knew how to use it, you could get a lot of work done really fast. If you made the switch from WP 5.1 to a current office suite, you'd probably be quite slow for the first little while, as none of your keyboard shortcuts would work, and you'd have to get used to using the mouse for many tasks you could previously do with a couple keystrokes.

    People are insanely productive in things like Vim and Emacs, even though they effectively have no UI at all. The people working with the old system knew the ins and outs of the system, and probably didn't even have to think when doing most tasks; they were running on autopilot. Changing the UI, even if it's to a good one, will slow things down significantly.

  24. Re:FYI: remove from Youtube not from 'Google' on Google: Indie Musicians Must Join Streaming Service Or Be Removed · · Score: 1

    I think the only reasoning I can see for this is because many people I know just stream YouTube videos and use it as a music player. That's a lot of bandwidth for people who really just wan to listen to the music. By forcing bands to also include the music in their music service, it gives the listeners another avenue for listening to the music without wasting so many resources. Youtube is fine for posting videos of your cat. But I always caution people against using it in commercial ventures, because of the problems like this which can arise.Same goes for things like using an email address from a domain you don't own. Things may be fine now, but there will come a time when the terms of service change for the worse, and you will be stuck with it because you are too entrenched in the service being provided.

  25. Re:pure rubbish on Cable Boxes Are the 2nd Biggest Energy Users In Many Homes · · Score: 1

    These boxes are dinosaurs

    I think this is actually part of the problem. The cable box I use is probably close to 10 years old. And that's how long I've owned it. The actual date they started manufacturing the model could be close to 15 years old. In terms of technology, they are dinosaurs. There really isn't any reason for these boxes to use more than 5 watts, or maybe 10, but they are ancient designs. Just look at the size of them. The whole what they are doing could probably fit in an HDMI dongle, for for some reason my cable box is the size of a VHS player.