This is so they can sell your browser history while telling you they're not selling your browser history. It also makes it legal to sell you out after the government revokes the right to sell that crap in 4-8 years.
The unwashed masses wish to speak with each other in a public format. 80% of the unwashed masses are already on Facebook, so it's quite difficult for other social, semi-open services to get a foothold.
I feel exactly the same way. But corporations make the laws, we can't get around that. Format shifting can be moral and hell, if it doesn't make money, we're going to get screwed in the process.
I have several hundreds of dvds including most of the useful Disney collection a ton of recorded TV and I have kids.
Instead of $40 a month in cable box rental, I rent a single $5 cable card and pay for a modest cable package. I also own a silicon dust tuner and couple of Roku devices.
Because all my content is on my own devices, I don't worry about shows being dropped or inaccessible. I don't worry about the shows leaving Netflix. I get to pick my stream speeds. If I need a 128kb Thomas the Tank Engine stream on an overburdened wifi at an airport with 6-hour delays to settle down 30 rowdy children, that's my superpower.
I funnel Youtube through a channel, my kid can watch approved content without being able to follow links to other less reputable content.
When we vacation and wind down at hotels, go on car trips, All my movies and tv show recordings are at my disposal.
Sure, I can add stuff I don't own, or share my content with others, but I don't really need to, I think cord shaving is a good place to be and if things get bad with net neutrality, I have some personal defense.
They already could be doing this without glass, The business is already doing this. Security footage makes it to the net every time something interesting happens.
You don't assume the business or the guy tapping away on his phone at the next table is recording you because he's not. There are far less glassholes than assholes who hate people for wearing glass.
Re:Obligatory reminder that an alternative exists
on
OpenSSL 1.0.2 Released
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· Score: 1
It's back to the future, future year, WTH isn't every communication secure? It's not a problem with overhead anymore.
Right to free speech doesn't mean you can go around saying what you want without repercussions. It means the government can't stop you or hold it against you. Corporations can mostly do what they want minus some fairly flexible laws around eavesdropping and discrimination and a few other choice things.
People HATE changes, until they've been around long enough not to be "change" anymore. It's simply not time for metro yet, that will come much later. That said, I think it's impossible to site windows 8 as "the" smoking gun. It's the #1 thing people are going to complain about because it's just that different.
What's killing pcs? For the general public, tablet saturation, large phones, slowing pace of software complexity. You can run office from a web browser now. You can do 90% of what you want conveniently from a tablet without burning your lap. your 3 year old hard drives don't fail like they did back in the days, Consoles are still in full force. Where is the pc's place? The number of things you need a pc for, (specifically a new pc) is shrinking quickly every day. Sure/.ers sue pc's and can use all the power they can wrap their hands around, but grandma is just as well off reading emails on her ipad mini, kids are living off their cell phones, the market is shrinking as portable solutions get faster and portable software catches up.
My freaking phone has a 5.5 inch display, 2GB of ram, 80GB of storage and a quad core 1.6GHz processor. What I do for a living requires a pc and I prefer 27" lcd's to my 5.5, but it's not like I break out my laptop on vacation anymore ya know?
I think you're going to see the market move over slowly to keyboarded tablets as people don't need more horsepower, use more cloud storage and want light weight and long battery life.
If you don't back up, you'll have to start backing up to restore. If you do backup, you need to test your backups today. For the love of god don't just assume your stuff comes back out ok.
Picking your boss. If you're not up a creek looking for work, that interview is to let you meet your managers, talk to some workers about the managers.
When I started working it was "If I can just get in the door"
When I was in my 20's it was "What cool things will this job do for me"
Now That i'm in my 30's its "Will I be able to work with these people"
I just started working from home. Every little noise was killing me. I left the house before noon on day one and came back with a pair of Bose QC 3. They're expensive but they really work wonders. They completely remove low frequency and reduce mid and upper ranges to a calm level. I can still hear people in the room talking, but it's more like they're mumbling to themselves.
The QC 15's are cheaper, have the same active nr, but also completely cover the ear and have good passive nr. I would have gone for this, but I didn't want something bulky and hot over my ears all the time.
Are they worth $300? As a college student, probably not. Mid and high reduction isn't any better than covering your ears with your hands. As an adult trying to work from home, They're worth it, not a great deal but helpful none the less.
Sure, they're going to sue. It's one of our core values you know? Life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness and the Ineffable right to drag anyone you disagree with though court, beat them up with your abundant supply of money and time until you get your way or they give you a fat check to make you go away.
It's the schools job to keep the place safe and clean and educational. That means they need to kick out asshats and verified wolf criers, and they had damn well do their job or they'll end up with a wholly different six-pack of lawsuits when then fail to kick a real pedo teacher to the curb.
My favorite part is where they're saying the principal violated their privacy by making them log in to facebook at the school. You posted a severely damning lie about an agent of the school on a pseudo-public social website and now you're worried about your privacy?
Suspended for 10 days is a puny slap on the wrist. Yes Honor Roll students screw up too, and just because they generally do the write thing doesn't mean they shouldn't be punished, people need to wake up, children need appropriate and sane levels of discipline or they turn in to jack-asses later in life.
Mac Linux and Windows can all deal with Windows network shares quite adeptly. I'm going to assume if you're going to go cross platform and gmail, you expect to use google apps as an office replacement as well.
Can it work? Absolutely. Should it be done? Probably not.
Road bumps and Walls to expect: Start getting people to use google apps office equivalents, solve those problems first. If everyone can stomach google apps, then consider the email. Have your Exchange server toss up a test group of email up there. If the above worked, you might be able to get away with it, but keep in mind:
Bifurcating support is expensive in both time and money. Users on each disparate system will not be able to self help people on other systems. Getting people spun up on new/different systems will be very painful for them, and you. AD integration is nearly a waste of time on anything but Windows. Software AND patch management on a Windows network can be trivially easy with very little setup, not quite so much on the other platforms. Wine is purely reserved for one off scenarios, if a large part of your plan is wine, you'd be better off with windows or RDesktop and a terminal server.
It would be so easy, I assume they're talking about the use of tantalum (refined coltan) capacitors. They put out better punch in a smaller package, but when it comes to something the size of a ps3, real estate isn't all that important.
Bluecoat, the maker of my companies choice web-filtering software puts a transparent proxy in between the users and the web. The boxes are able to man-in-the-middle the web sites cert and create a new locally signed certs. (authorized via GPO)
if you inspect the cert it initially looks fine, until you peek under the hood and see the details.
They claim to be able to do the same with ssh... I'm glad ssh warns you of such travesties.
It's certainly not taking over a banks website, but a real world example about how insecure SSL can be in the right environment.
We deal exclusively with Dell, (about 800 end user units and 75 servers) their business support is indeed top notch. I was somewhat dismayed when I called in on my parents home system a year ago and ended up in India with someone reading from a script in broken English without any idea how to troubleshoot.
It depends on who you are, what you bought, what time you call and luck of the dice....
This is so they can sell your browser history while telling you they're not selling your browser history. It also makes it legal to sell you out after the government revokes the right to sell that crap in 4-8 years.
The unwashed masses wish to speak with each other in a public format. 80% of the unwashed masses are already on Facebook, so it's quite difficult for other social, semi-open services to get a foothold.
I feel exactly the same way. But corporations make the laws, we can't get around that. Format shifting can be moral and hell, if it doesn't make money, we're going to get screwed in the process.
Silicon dust makes some stand alone multi-tuner boxes that can save to a Windows share and work pretty well.
I'm using one with a Plex server.
The act of circumventing the DRM is illegal. That's why the "rip" otherwise they'd just call it copying your content to a device.
Most people are ready to accept that ripping is illegal but you're not going to get busted for ripping, you get busted for sharing.
I use Plex, but it's just about the same thing.
I have several hundreds of dvds including most of the useful Disney collection a ton of recorded TV and I have kids.
Instead of $40 a month in cable box rental, I rent a single $5 cable card and pay for a modest cable package. I also own a silicon dust tuner and couple of Roku devices.
Because all my content is on my own devices, I don't worry about shows being dropped or inaccessible. I don't worry about the shows leaving Netflix. I get to pick my stream speeds. If I need a 128kb Thomas the Tank Engine stream on an overburdened wifi at an airport with 6-hour delays to settle down 30 rowdy children, that's my superpower.
I funnel Youtube through a channel, my kid can watch approved content without being able to follow links to other less reputable content.
When we vacation and wind down at hotels, go on car trips, All my movies and tv show recordings are at my disposal.
Sure, I can add stuff I don't own, or share my content with others, but I don't really need to, I think cord shaving is a good place to be and if things get bad with net neutrality, I have some personal defense.
Wonder what the average age distribution is on slashdot...
They already could be doing this without glass, The business is already doing this. Security footage makes it to the net every time something interesting happens.
You don't assume the business or the guy tapping away on his phone at the next table is recording you because he's not. There are far less glassholes than assholes who hate people for wearing glass.
It's back to the future, future year, WTH isn't every communication secure? It's not a problem with overhead anymore.
relevant XKCD http://xkcd.com/1357/
Right to free speech doesn't mean you can go around saying what you want without repercussions. It means the government can't stop you or hold it against you. Corporations can mostly do what they want minus some fairly flexible laws around eavesdropping and discrimination and a few other choice things.
Constitutional rights don't translate in to private corporation -> employee/customer rights
http://www.npr.org/templates/s...
"What most Americans generally don't know is that the Constitution doesn't apply to private corporations at all."
I forget about /. for a few years, come back and it just feels like home.... :)
They're still WAY better than lifehacker.
that and unlimited data has become a 4 letter word.
it's honestly a little worse, at least termination fees are slightly lower than the cost of a new handset.
They're simply doing this wrong. There is an easy, beneficial solution.
If you want to stop "contracts", offer to finance the phone and put them on pay as you go.
They leave, they stop paying the pay as you go but still pay monthly+interest for the phone.
It is what it says, no one gets screwed.
I HATE cellphone subsidy, there's no reason to wrap the equipment in with the service, especially on GSM.
People HATE changes, until they've been around long enough not to be "change" anymore. It's simply not time for metro yet, that will come much later. That said, I think it's impossible to site windows 8 as "the" smoking gun. It's the #1 thing people are going to complain about because it's just that different.
What's killing pcs? For the general public, tablet saturation, large phones, slowing pace of software complexity. You can run office from a web browser now. You can do 90% of what you want conveniently from a tablet without burning your lap. your 3 year old hard drives don't fail like they did back in the days, Consoles are still in full force. Where is the pc's place? The number of things you need a pc for, (specifically a new pc) is shrinking quickly every day. Sure /.ers sue pc's and can use all the power they can wrap their hands around, but grandma is just as well off reading emails on her ipad mini, kids are living off their cell phones, the market is shrinking as portable solutions get faster and portable software catches up.
My freaking phone has a 5.5 inch display, 2GB of ram, 80GB of storage and a quad core 1.6GHz processor. What I do for a living requires a pc and I prefer 27" lcd's to my 5.5, but it's not like I break out my laptop on vacation anymore ya know?
I think you're going to see the market move over slowly to keyboarded tablets as people don't need more horsepower, use more cloud storage and want light weight and long battery life.
If you don't back up, you'll have to start backing up to restore. If you do backup, you need to test your backups today. For the love of god don't just assume your stuff comes back out ok.
Picking your boss. If you're not up a creek looking for work, that interview is to let you meet your managers, talk to some workers about the managers.
When I started working it was "If I can just get in the door"
When I was in my 20's it was "What cool things will this job do for me"
Now That i'm in my 30's its "Will I be able to work with these people"
I just started working from home. Every little noise was killing me. I left the house before noon on day one and came back with a pair of Bose QC 3. They're expensive but they really work wonders. They completely remove low frequency and reduce mid and upper ranges to a calm level. I can still hear people in the room talking, but it's more like they're mumbling to themselves.
The QC 15's are cheaper, have the same active nr, but also completely cover the ear and have good passive nr. I would have gone for this, but I didn't want something bulky and hot over my ears all the time.
Are they worth $300? As a college student, probably not. Mid and high reduction isn't any better than covering your ears with your hands. As an adult trying to work from home, They're worth it, not a great deal but helpful none the less.
Sure, they're going to sue. It's one of our core values you know? Life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness and the Ineffable right to drag anyone you disagree with though court, beat them up with your abundant supply of money and time until you get your way or they give you a fat check to make you go away.
It's the schools job to keep the place safe and clean and educational. That means they need to kick out asshats and verified wolf criers, and they had damn well do their job or they'll end up with a wholly different six-pack of lawsuits when then fail to kick a real pedo teacher to the curb.
My favorite part is where they're saying the principal violated their privacy by making them log in to facebook at the school. You posted a severely damning lie about an agent of the school on a pseudo-public social website and now you're worried about your privacy?
Suspended for 10 days is a puny slap on the wrist. Yes Honor Roll students screw up too, and just because they generally do the write thing doesn't mean they shouldn't be punished, people need to wake up, children need appropriate and sane levels of discipline or they turn in to jack-asses later in life.
Mac Linux and Windows can all deal with Windows network shares quite adeptly.
I'm going to assume if you're going to go cross platform and gmail, you expect to use google apps as an office replacement as well.
Can it work? Absolutely. Should it be done? Probably not.
Road bumps and Walls to expect:
Start getting people to use google apps office equivalents, solve those problems first.
If everyone can stomach google apps, then consider the email. Have your Exchange server toss up a test group of email up there.
If the above worked, you might be able to get away with it, but keep in mind:
Bifurcating support is expensive in both time and money.
Users on each disparate system will not be able to self help people on other systems.
Getting people spun up on new/different systems will be very painful for them, and you.
AD integration is nearly a waste of time on anything but Windows.
Software AND patch management on a Windows network can be trivially easy with very little setup, not quite so much on the other platforms.
Wine is purely reserved for one off scenarios, if a large part of your plan is wine, you'd be better off with windows or RDesktop and a terminal server.
Today's dollars? no. But the way that it's going, I'm betting 10 years from now that'll get you a Heath Bar....
It would be so easy, I assume they're talking about the use of tantalum (refined coltan) capacitors. They put out better punch in a smaller package, but when it comes to something the size of a ps3, real estate isn't all that important.
Bluecoat, the maker of my companies choice web-filtering software puts a transparent proxy in between the users and the web. The boxes are able to man-in-the-middle the web sites cert and create a new locally signed certs. (authorized via GPO)
if you inspect the cert it initially looks fine, until you peek under the hood and see the details.
They claim to be able to do the same with ssh... I'm glad ssh warns you of such travesties.
It's certainly not taking over a banks website, but a real world example about how insecure SSL can be in the right environment.
We deal exclusively with Dell, (about 800 end user units and 75 servers) their business support is indeed top notch. I was somewhat dismayed when I called in on my parents home system a year ago and ended up in India with someone reading from a script in broken English without any idea how to troubleshoot.
It depends on who you are, what you bought, what time you call and luck of the dice....
Or Google Maps Even
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=60.964,+101.86&ie=UTF8&ll=60.963631,101.859055&spn=0.010102,0.016522&t=h&z=16