I realized i'm talking to the "the source becomes the documentation" (yes, that was an actual slashdot comment) crowd here but it seems like if you wanted to play a computer game enough you bought it at launch for the benefit of having fun and it's really this much time and effort at some point you have to see some diminishing returns on this. I mean more time and effort trying get it and get it to work than it's worth. Keeping in mind I've only purchased one game pre-launch in the past ten years (Skyrim) so maybe I just "don't get it" but seriously... screw EA and their stupid game roll out schedule/DRM. Play something else. The new Rise of the Triad looks cool...
Seems clear EA doesn't really want your money...
I'm not sure which part you're referring to. To be more specific I live in Placerville. It's up hi-way 50 about 40 miles (I only say that because we're sometimes confused with grass valley, of which I cannot speak). Ten more miles up the freeway in Camino there's fast cable internet as well. And that's some pretty non-existent population density right there. No idea how it ended up this area has such great HD TV/fast internet. It's not a rich/upper class area either. In fact if not for el dorado hills el dorado county would be one of the lower average income counties in the state...
If you're referring to multitude of broadband provides sacramento seems to have I'm not sure why that is exactly. I know there cable, dsl, line-of-site microwave, the previously mentioned fiber and at one point there was very limited availability on some kind of 4G for the home service which I don't know if it still exists or not. As I said i don't know why this multitude of choices happened to sprout up in sacramento and not in other cities/regions. Of course in most areas of sacramento as far as I know it's really just the the DSL/Cable choices and I assume as every place else the cable co has dominance in market share anyway. But at least if you're not happy with the service you have some legitimate threats when expressing dissatisfaction.
I would like to agree with this. I live a relatively small town about 40 miles outside of Sacramento, California. Very low population density. For some reason cable internet runs around 35Mbps consistently and we have a ton of cable channels all in HD (internet only comes to around $50/month.). I have no idea how it's possible to maintain all that infrastructure given the miles of cabling to subscriber ratio. I mean granted the alternative is DSL that's less that 5Mpbs...or dial-up...but it still seems some how ridiculous this town has what it has given the population (and for TV there's always satellite). I would also mention the internet does not ever go down and when it does it's usually back up pretty quickly (we have the occasional big snow or wind storm knocking out lines). I believe there are places in silicon valley with few options.
I'm not trying to defend the local cable monopoly I'm just saying it seems affordable and in some places it is in fact delivered reliably/affordably/at acceptable speeds.
And may I add in my experience there seems to be absolutely zero demand for gigabit speeds. I'm a power user and I barely utilze the whole 35Mpbs. I think until there's a demand for even 10Mbps+ speeds the speed is most likely not going to change (and if people are moving to 3G/4G networks on tablets/phones anyway there's the demand for fiber-in-the-ground will be that much lower. Presumably.).
As a side note their are about 5 different ways to get broadband in Sacramento, at least of them being fiber.
Not that i know where heathen was coming from specifically or anything but technically he didn't mention an open/closed/any form of specific driver, just that the installer didn't like his card for some reason. Could have an X thing or some unrelated issue that just made it seem as though the card was the culprit. And for the record, regardless of real reason, installer crashing is a valid reason for abandoning an install of something imho...
I don't know if I qualify as a cord cutter: cable internet is cheaper if you get it bundled with TV service where I am so I got the bare minimum tv service with internet. My cable box (can't get TV without their box) hasn't even been connected is nearly a year (set it up in case visitors were insistent). I calculated out the tv portion to be about $10 / month.
I use my xbox for comcast video on demand service which thanks to a recent update now provides an HD option. So to me comcast on demand is just another streaming service for the the channels I pay for (boradcast+cspan) as well as the channels I don't (almost all the basic cable ones like BBCA and comedy central) as well as HD quality which I also didn't sign up for/pay for.
Uhh compromised? Not one single republican voted for it. Who compromised and who were they compromising with? That doesn't make sense. 100% of one party passed the the bill but it was a "compromise". Wow. You're too smart for me.
Also, Democrats were elected to a super majority, and now Republicans have the house. But they weren't voted in. Doesn't count unless it was for a Democrat I guess.
This is the reason I'm kind of interested in this: I have I think ~180 steam games, very few of which run on linux natively. Hypothetically I could take my really low end laptop I bought in 2010 for $300, connect it to my TV via HDMI and play all that whole library of games (with valves new super-special gamepad) via the stream-over-network feature. Based on the promo materials/FAQs I've read I've been lead to believe this is an achievable scenario. So silent low end laptop in gaming room, noisy high end gaming PC is different room. Sounds good to me...?
If I bought a PS4 or Xbone I would have to start over buying new games/rebuild the frineds list (I assume). With SteamOS, again making assumptions, I've got my whole existing library that won't be obsoleted witch each iteration. Does that answer the question?
There was enough interest to write a wiki about it (button press event). And Linux is Linux. A TFTP daemon should be trivial to setup. Beyond trivial. "Just use the DNSMasq TFTP deamon" would have been much snarkier/more accurate reply. And what? Linux seeing a mounted USB storage device is beyond the scope of...linux? Really? None of what I described are in any way "fringe" and all those things individually are covered in wiki, albeit inaccurate/incomplete.
And if it's useful to anybody the router is an Asus RT-N16. Several years old, says "works with DD-WRT" ont he actual box but still only supported in the daily builds with limited documention in this main forum thread.
As somebody who spent about 3 weeks (I'm kinda new to linux) trying to get OpenWRT working on my router I would like to disagree. I can't speak to DDWRT's organization but the OpenWRT community seems completely dead to me: the wiki is outdated/inaccurate/contradictory (often on the same page) and the forum seems dead as well except from one or two threads. Good luck finding any help from that "community" *.
I was exploring DDWRT at one point and that documentation said OpenWRT packages will work with DDWRT. I don't know if that's true, partially true or untrue but I don't think I'm ever going to bother with OpenWRT again. If that is true of DDWRT at least for my purposes DDWRT will be just as flexible as OpenWRT. Also from what little I observed the DDWRT forums seem to have constant activity, the supported hardware list is much larger and the documentation much more complete/better written. In fact if you dig deep enough you'll find that OpenWRTs seeming officially supported hardware list is maintained by a completely different entity then that of the people in the forums and the forums is actually the place the look for your router.
* First I had to figure out my router would only run with the bleeding edge daily builds. Then I was trying to setup using local storage on router's USB port(s) then I was trying to get tftp-hpa configured, then I was trying to make the local storage/tftp daemon start/stop with a button press. Too much to ask I guess. Probably a little different if I had only wanted router functionality.
I think I know what you meant but I don't think a console "upgrade" has ever been truly successful. Whether you're talking sega cd/32x/32xCD, that tubo graphics cd thing (turbo duo was it?), that high resolution attachment for the wii remotes...or possibly the kinect. It just fragments the user base.
Maybe if they had some ridiculously easy parts upgrade system/method. Easier than installing toner/ink cartridges in a printer in other words (power off, open panel, pop out old, pop in new, close panel/power on). Anything short of that and it's too hard...
I don't know if this steam box will ever be as easy to work with as a console made specifically for the one purpose. But for the extra effort I bet you'll get a lot. Which is why I'd much rather buy or build a steam box and utilize my game library than buy an xbone/ps4.
I don't see what the big deal is with the ribbon. It seems like they just took vertical menus that mainly consisted of words and flipped them 90 degrees horizontal (and put more emphasis on pictorals) so it had more of tabbed look. It's really not that. Lots of web sites etc. use that tabbed way of navigation and it seems fine.
Also, for the record, there is way to complete turn off the ribbon and bring back the old vertical menus.
It occurred to me one to my science classes in high school had us read Jurassic Park. Seems like old Michael Crichton knew how to include interesting details in that book and it's no a bad book to boot.
I disagree with the idea that the prequels could only be a fill-in-the blank affair: the same could have been said for the LotRs trilogy but it still managed to be turned into something enjoyable with near-universal appeal (Pippen and Merry seem to have their own following, for instance) even though whether you read the book(s) or not the ending seemed like a fore-gone conclusion.
I can think of at least two examples of this: Untangle and Asterisk. Asterisk seems to have the right idea with free versus supported models.Maybe one of those two could be a model? There's also Redhat with their...would clone be the right word?... unofficial community version, CentOS. I've heard stories of customers with mixed RHEL/CentOS environments getting indirect support from redhat with a CentOS issue.
Since not a single republican voted for the ACA I don't think the republicans got "what they wanted".
Also, Obama doesn't want what Canada has: In Canada's system everybody, from the PM down to the normal citizens, use the same system. That would never happen in US. As Obama said when he was trying to pass it he is perfectly happy with his own health care. Healthcare isn't his problem, it's "the problem of uninsured". He and everybody else in power would continue going to their private doctors. Only the rest of us would deal with the the health care system.
And lastly I think he's happy with what was passed. My personal theory on the ACA is that it was about creating a new union, public or other wise, out of the country's doctors/medical providers thus creating a permanent voting block for his party long after he is gone from office (or at least revenue stream via union dues). Obviously a ridiculous notion.
Show them the "IT Crowd" episode entitled "Jen the Fredo".
Besides being one of the best geek sitcoms ever (and conveniently on Netflix) that episode I think does a perfect job of demonstrating the appeal of the pen-and-paper RPG.
I've had quite enough conservative trolls spewing their vitriol against liberals, progressives and Democrats, that they then follow-up with a complaint that its the liberals censoring and rating them because they're called on their personal attacks and petty insults.
And other conservatives? Resounding silence.
I don't know which conservatives you've been referring to. If Rush Limbaugh is an example he was calling for Akin to drop out for like a week. Romney called for that as well. No idea where this "silence" is coming from. Maybe you just mute all conservatives?
I disagree that a bad Windows 8 will result in consumers/developers leaving Windows. If no other reason the simple fact is there is simply no alternative: Macs are too expensive (I've tried many times to convince family members to switch, always came down to cost). Linux is just a hopeless mess (ex. Less than a year ago there was a thread on slashdot about the state of audio drivers in Linux and not being able play two audio streams at once. An issue resolved in Windows more than 15 years ago...)
PC gamers will continue to game on windows, normal users will continue to get their hotmail and check the weather on windows, and few businesses will want to take to the training time/money of switching to a different OS and compatibility issues that go along with it, although I suspect businesses would have stayed on 7 for several more years even if 8 had a traditional UI.
In a way Dr. Who is a "super hero" in that he can travel through time and seems amazingly good at avoiding death no matter the circumstance. And at least to my spoiled American eyes has an incredibly low production value. And yet the writing is amazing the latest doctor seems to be winning best actor awards. They do a lot with the budget/production they have in other words.
If a show could be made along those lines - low budget/production values but super-great acting/writing - I think just about any super hero show could work. There's a lot of "if" in that statement however.
Two things about that: 1. Try RDP'ing (remote desktop) into the VM and make it full screen 2. apparently Win 8 prefers something greater than 800x600. That's what my Win 8 VM defaulted to apparently and I never tried making it larger.
I realized i'm talking to the "the source becomes the documentation" (yes, that was an actual slashdot comment) crowd here but it seems like if you wanted to play a computer game enough you bought it at launch for the benefit of having fun and it's really this much time and effort at some point you have to see some diminishing returns on this. I mean more time and effort trying get it and get it to work than it's worth. Keeping in mind I've only purchased one game pre-launch in the past ten years (Skyrim) so maybe I just "don't get it" but seriously... screw EA and their stupid game roll out schedule/DRM. Play something else. The new Rise of the Triad looks cool...
Seems clear EA doesn't really want your money...
I'm not sure which part you're referring to. To be more specific I live in Placerville. It's up hi-way 50 about 40 miles (I only say that because we're sometimes confused with grass valley, of which I cannot speak). Ten more miles up the freeway in Camino there's fast cable internet as well. And that's some pretty non-existent population density right there. No idea how it ended up this area has such great HD TV/fast internet. It's not a rich/upper class area either. In fact if not for el dorado hills el dorado county would be one of the lower average income counties in the state...
If you're referring to multitude of broadband provides sacramento seems to have I'm not sure why that is exactly. I know there cable, dsl, line-of-site microwave, the previously mentioned fiber and at one point there was very limited availability on some kind of 4G for the home service which I don't know if it still exists or not. As I said i don't know why this multitude of choices happened to sprout up in sacramento and not in other cities/regions. Of course in most areas of sacramento as far as I know it's really just the the DSL/Cable choices and I assume as every place else the cable co has dominance in market share anyway. But at least if you're not happy with the service you have some legitimate threats when expressing dissatisfaction.
I would like to agree with this. I live a relatively small town about 40 miles outside of Sacramento, California. Very low population density. For some reason cable internet runs around 35Mbps consistently and we have a ton of cable channels all in HD (internet only comes to around $50/month.). I have no idea how it's possible to maintain all that infrastructure given the miles of cabling to subscriber ratio. I mean granted the alternative is DSL that's less that 5Mpbs...or dial-up...but it still seems some how ridiculous this town has what it has given the population (and for TV there's always satellite). I would also mention the internet does not ever go down and when it does it's usually back up pretty quickly (we have the occasional big snow or wind storm knocking out lines). I believe there are places in silicon valley with few options.
I'm not trying to defend the local cable monopoly I'm just saying it seems affordable and in some places it is in fact delivered reliably/affordably/at acceptable speeds.
And may I add in my experience there seems to be absolutely zero demand for gigabit speeds. I'm a power user and I barely utilze the whole 35Mpbs. I think until there's a demand for even 10Mbps+ speeds the speed is most likely not going to change (and if people are moving to 3G/4G networks on tablets/phones anyway there's the demand for fiber-in-the-ground will be that much lower. Presumably.).
As a side note their are about 5 different ways to get broadband in Sacramento, at least of them being fiber.
Not that i know where heathen was coming from specifically or anything but technically he didn't mention an open/closed/any form of specific driver, just that the installer didn't like his card for some reason. Could have an X thing or some unrelated issue that just made it seem as though the card was the culprit. And for the record, regardless of real reason, installer crashing is a valid reason for abandoning an install of something imho...
I don't know if I qualify as a cord cutter: cable internet is cheaper if you get it bundled with TV service where I am so I got the bare minimum tv service with internet. My cable box (can't get TV without their box) hasn't even been connected is nearly a year (set it up in case visitors were insistent). I calculated out the tv portion to be about $10 / month.
I use my xbox for comcast video on demand service which thanks to a recent update now provides an HD option. So to me comcast on demand is just another streaming service for the the channels I pay for (boradcast+cspan) as well as the channels I don't (almost all the basic cable ones like BBCA and comedy central) as well as HD quality which I also didn't sign up for/pay for.
So I guess I'm the one really being subsidized.
Also, Democrats were elected to a super majority, and now Republicans have the house. But they weren't voted in. Doesn't count unless it was for a Democrat I guess.
This is the reason I'm kind of interested in this: I have I think ~180 steam games, very few of which run on linux natively. Hypothetically I could take my really low end laptop I bought in 2010 for $300, connect it to my TV via HDMI and play all that whole library of games (with valves new super-special gamepad) via the stream-over-network feature. Based on the promo materials/FAQs I've read I've been lead to believe this is an achievable scenario. So silent low end laptop in gaming room, noisy high end gaming PC is different room. Sounds good to me...?
If I bought a PS4 or Xbone I would have to start over buying new games/rebuild the frineds list (I assume). With SteamOS, again making assumptions, I've got my whole existing library that won't be obsoleted witch each iteration. Does that answer the question?
Here are some links/more info:
http://store.steampowered.com/livingroom/SteamController/
http://store.steampowered.com/livingroom/SteamOS
http://store.steampowered.com/livingroom/SteamMachines/
There was enough interest to write a wiki about it (button press event). And Linux is Linux. A TFTP daemon should be trivial to setup. Beyond trivial. "Just use the DNSMasq TFTP deamon" would have been much snarkier/more accurate reply. And what? Linux seeing a mounted USB storage device is beyond the scope of...linux? Really? None of what I described are in any way "fringe" and all those things individually are covered in wiki, albeit inaccurate/incomplete.
And if it's useful to anybody the router is an Asus RT-N16. Several years old, says "works with DD-WRT" ont he actual box but still only supported in the daily builds with limited documention in this main forum thread.
As somebody who spent about 3 weeks (I'm kinda new to linux) trying to get OpenWRT working on my router I would like to disagree. I can't speak to DDWRT's organization but the OpenWRT community seems completely dead to me: the wiki is outdated/inaccurate/contradictory (often on the same page) and the forum seems dead as well except from one or two threads. Good luck finding any help from that "community" *.
I was exploring DDWRT at one point and that documentation said OpenWRT packages will work with DDWRT. I don't know if that's true, partially true or untrue but I don't think I'm ever going to bother with OpenWRT again. If that is true of DDWRT at least for my purposes DDWRT will be just as flexible as OpenWRT. Also from what little I observed the DDWRT forums seem to have constant activity, the supported hardware list is much larger and the documentation much more complete/better written. In fact if you dig deep enough you'll find that OpenWRTs seeming officially supported hardware list is maintained by a completely different entity then that of the people in the forums and the forums is actually the place the look for your router.
* First I had to figure out my router would only run with the bleeding edge daily builds. Then I was trying to setup using local storage on router's USB port(s) then I was trying to get tftp-hpa configured, then I was trying to make the local storage/tftp daemon start/stop with a button press. Too much to ask I guess. Probably a little different if I had only wanted router functionality.
* Upgradeable
I think I know what you meant but I don't think a console "upgrade" has ever been truly successful. Whether you're talking sega cd/32x/32xCD, that tubo graphics cd thing (turbo duo was it?), that high resolution attachment for the wii remotes...or possibly the kinect. It just fragments the user base.
Maybe if they had some ridiculously easy parts upgrade system/method. Easier than installing toner/ink cartridges in a printer in other words (power off, open panel, pop out old, pop in new, close panel/power on). Anything short of that and it's too hard...
I don't know if this steam box will ever be as easy to work with as a console made specifically for the one purpose. But for the extra effort I bet you'll get a lot. Which is why I'd much rather buy or build a steam box and utilize my game library than buy an xbone/ps4.
He/she may or may not be referring to the slashdot beta page (which I for one don't like).
I don't see what the big deal is with the ribbon. It seems like they just took vertical menus that mainly consisted of words and flipped them 90 degrees horizontal (and put more emphasis on pictorals) so it had more of tabbed look. It's really not that. Lots of web sites etc. use that tabbed way of navigation and it seems fine.
Also, for the record, there is way to complete turn off the ribbon and bring back the old vertical menus.
It occurred to me one to my science classes in high school had us read Jurassic Park. Seems like old Michael Crichton knew how to include interesting details in that book and it's no a bad book to boot.
How long before all our water is alcohol?
Or is this a reference to something else?
I disagree with the idea that the prequels could only be a fill-in-the blank affair: the same could have been said for the LotRs trilogy but it still managed to be turned into something enjoyable with near-universal appeal (Pippen and Merry seem to have their own following, for instance) even though whether you read the book(s) or not the ending seemed like a fore-gone conclusion.
VBScript still works, even in HTML5-based applications. Just sayin.
I can think of at least two examples of this: Untangle and Asterisk. Asterisk seems to have the right idea with free versus supported models.Maybe one of those two could be a model? There's also Redhat with their...would clone be the right word?... unofficial community version, CentOS. I've heard stories of customers with mixed RHEL/CentOS environments getting indirect support from redhat with a CentOS issue.
Since not a single republican voted for the ACA I don't think the republicans got "what they wanted".
Also, Obama doesn't want what Canada has: In Canada's system everybody, from the PM down to the normal citizens, use the same system. That would never happen in US. As Obama said when he was trying to pass it he is perfectly happy with his own health care. Healthcare isn't his problem, it's "the problem of uninsured". He and everybody else in power would continue going to their private doctors. Only the rest of us would deal with the the health care system.
And lastly I think he's happy with what was passed. My personal theory on the ACA is that it was about creating a new union, public or other wise, out of the country's doctors/medical providers thus creating a permanent voting block for his party long after he is gone from office (or at least revenue stream via union dues). Obviously a ridiculous notion.
Show them the "IT Crowd" episode entitled "Jen the Fredo".
Besides being one of the best geek sitcoms ever (and conveniently on Netflix) that episode I think does a perfect job of demonstrating the appeal of the pen-and-paper RPG.
I've had quite enough conservative trolls spewing their vitriol against liberals, progressives and Democrats, that they then follow-up with a complaint that its the liberals censoring and rating them because they're called on their personal attacks and petty insults.
And other conservatives? Resounding silence.
I don't know which conservatives you've been referring to. If Rush Limbaugh is an example he was calling for Akin to drop out for like a week. Romney called for that as well. No idea where this "silence" is coming from. Maybe you just mute all conservatives?
I disagree that a bad Windows 8 will result in consumers/developers leaving Windows. If no other reason the simple fact is there is simply no alternative: Macs are too expensive (I've tried many times to convince family members to switch, always came down to cost). Linux is just a hopeless mess (ex. Less than a year ago there was a thread on slashdot about the state of audio drivers in Linux and not being able play two audio streams at once. An issue resolved in Windows more than 15 years ago...)
PC gamers will continue to game on windows, normal users will continue to get their hotmail and check the weather on windows, and few businesses will want to take to the training time/money of switching to a different OS and compatibility issues that go along with it, although I suspect businesses would have stayed on 7 for several more years even if 8 had a traditional UI.
In a way Dr. Who is a "super hero" in that he can travel through time and seems amazingly good at avoiding death no matter the circumstance. And at least to my spoiled American eyes has an incredibly low production value. And yet the writing is amazing the latest doctor seems to be winning best actor awards. They do a lot with the budget/production they have in other words.
If a show could be made along those lines - low budget/production values but super-great acting/writing - I think just about any super hero show could work. There's a lot of "if" in that statement however.
Two things about that:
1. Try RDP'ing (remote desktop) into the VM and make it full screen
2. apparently Win 8 prefers something greater than 800x600. That's what my Win 8 VM defaulted to apparently and I never tried making it larger.
Never did solve the no start button thing.
Please, for the love of CowBoy Neal, MOD PARENT UP
One voice of reason in a sea of insanity that is "discussion"...
Any chance you can come and be my manager?