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User: Mousit

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  1. Re:here comes another round of litigation on Microsoft Taking Aggressive Steps Against Linux On ARM · · Score: 1

    As for tablet and such devices, yes it's true that Apple ones come with Safari and generally make it difficult to install other browsers (though they are now available, if in more limited quantity and not quite the same as the 'native' on-device Safari browser).

    It wasn't very difficult for me to open Safari, download Firefox, open the disk image and drag Firefox to my Applications folder. Firefox even popped up a modal dialog box on first launch asking if I wanted to make it the default browser.

    Yes, note the part I conveniently highlighted for you. I'm well aware that desktop/laptop Macs have no problem installing competing browsers. By "tablet and such devices" I was specifically referring to iOS devices, which are a different story.

  2. Re:here comes another round of litigation on Microsoft Taking Aggressive Steps Against Linux On ARM · · Score: 2, Informative

    Apple doesn't manage to "get away" with anything. Bundling Safari with OS X is substantially different from bundling IE with Windows, and do not try to confuse the two.

    OS X comes on Apple hardware, which Apple manufactures, and you're free to not buy such Apple hardware. Third-party sellers of the "authorized Apple reseller" type are also free to sell you other hardware, not just Apple hardware. This is in fact one of the biggest differences of all, since Microsoft is a purely software company that does not produce its own hardware (in the computer biz anyway, I know they make some peripheral hardware).

    Back in the day (and far more recently than just the IE case itself, really), MS's contracts with OEMs were vastly different. Windows came on everything. Microsoft didn't make its own hardware at all, but it made sure everyone else's hardware came with Windows. OEMs had to sell Windows pre-bundled, and they weren't allowed to offer you competing OSes due to the nature of their contracts with MS (remember the days before Dell sold RedHat Linux systems?). HP computers came with Windows and IE. Dell computers came with Windows and IE. Acer, IBM, Compaq.. you get the picture. It didn't matter WHAT brand you bought, they all came with Windows and IE. This not only was a problem for Netscape and the other browsers, but was also a problem for competing OSes, and remained so well after the Netscape case. Not just Linux, but many other operating systems that have come and are now more or less gone in the same manner as what happened to Netscape, like OS/2 and BeOS. In fact litigation from Be was one of the things that helped bring this OEM contract bullshit to light, though like Netscape before it, it came too late to save Be. Litigation from IBM over the OS/2 debacle is famously well-documented and I shouldn't need to explain it. Dell itself also brought litigation alongside RedHat.

    As for tablet and such devices, yes it's true that Apple ones come with Safari and generally make it difficult to install other browsers (though they are now available, if in more limited quantity and not quite the same as the 'native' on-device Safari browser). However, those are Apple devices, not, say, HP devices with iOS on them. You're free to buy non-Apple devices. Just like if I bought a Microsoft-made Zune, I'd expect it to come with IE only. Yes I realize these days "Windows phones" aren't made by Microsoft. However, I can buy a Motorola with Windows Phone, or I can buy a Motorola with Android, or.. Yeah.

    So please, don't compare apples to oranges (ha). Apple's no saint to say the least and they do pull a lot of ugly shit, but the "Safari bundling is the same as IE bundling!" line is old, tired, and it's bullshit.

  3. Re:I must be old now; just don't be an idiot on Picture Blocking Beer Cooler Keeps Your Face Out of Embarrassing Photos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You don't have to be an idiot for a picture to be a problem. After all, there was the somewhat recent case (even featured here on Slashdot, sorry I'm too lazy to dig up links) of the kindergarten teacher that was fired over a photo of her at a party, drinking from a cup that allegedly contained alcohol (gasp). She was of course legal, and was doing nothing unusual, merely smiling and drinking, but it was deemed "inappropriate" for her position, whatever the fuck that means.

    There's a plethora of such cases. Or the numerous stories (again, featured on Slashdot too) of companies that troll social networking sites (or employ third parties to do so for them) to look up info on applicants and potential hires. Simply being at a party, drinking, is often frowned upon as the companies have outright stated when interviewed on this subject. There's also the issue of not everyone in your social circle may respect your wishes about no pictures (yes, I think that makes them jackasses), and this is especially true of parties where attendants may not all be your personal friends. Friends of friends, acquaintances, the types that are even more especially likely to not know and/or respect your picture wishes.

    All of this, of course, are symptoms of a much larger blight on our society, but nonetheless, the point still stands: a picture of you drinking at a party does not necessarily have to show you being an idiot, to affect your life. Especially your professional life.

  4. Re:+ 5000 jobs, - many more. on Justice Dept. Files Antitrust Complaint Against AT&T and T-Mobile Merger · · Score: 1

    Sure, they'd hire 5000 new people, but how many would they fire from T-mobile in the process? My money is on a good deal more than 5000.

    AT&T laid off 6000 people just this past spring (in April they announced they'd made 5,900 cuts during the first quarter, but I don't have the press release handy). Between 2006 and 2010, they've cut over 37,000 jobs. Plus as you say, how many would get the chop during the merger to "eliminate redundancies in the workforce" as one of the favored sayings goes.

    So yeah I'm with you, "bringing back" 5,000 call center jobs (which I'd be willing to bet only pay close to minimum wage, too) would be an insulting token gesture, at the very best.

  5. Re:Data plan cost the same on Unlocked iPhones in US For $649 · · Score: 1

    True enough: the easy way would simply be to not have a cell phone. The practical way? Not so much. I actually make use of it for my day-to-day needs. Yes, yes, twenty years ago we all made do without cell phones and didn't think a thing of it and life went on. We aren't living twenty years ago though. A century ago we made due without telephones at all; is that the easy way too?

    Here in my area, I have a choice between AT&T and Verizon. That's.. it. No Sprint. No T-Mobile (well, okay, it sort of works here). No smaller providers like MetroPCS (though they're looking to come here soonish, at least). Verizon is just as well known for requiring onerous plans and expensive data packages, and most certainly, their pre-pay is absurdly unreasonably priced (and that's even compared to AT&T!).

    I'm on pre-pay, and I have no contract. It's not so much obnoxious contract terms as obnoxious business practices. I don't like doing business with the devil but my choices are limited.

    So, yeah, it's quite a revelation that one certainly could choose to go without AT&T service, but going without cell service isn't quite the "easy way" it once was. Plus the idea that one might have a plethora of other options to choose from, everywhere in the land, is studiously ignoring the reality of the U.S. cellular "market".

  6. Re:Data plan cost the same on Unlocked iPhones in US For $649 · · Score: 2

    Another piece of the answer is: pre-pay and pay-as-you-go plans.

    AT&T is well-known to use a database of IMEI numbers to detect iPhones and other smartphones, so that it can force them onto specific plans and to require the addition of expensive data packages. This also includes entirely rejecting detected smartphones straight off of pre-pay plans and requiring them to go post-pay only, though they just this past April finally added a pre-pay smartphone plan (however, only a single AT&T-branded smartphone is currently "authorized" to use it!) However, their database almost exclusively consists of AT&T-branded or otherwise carrier-locked-to-AT&T phones.

    Thus, it's also rather well-known that non-AT&T-branded phones, and iPhones from other regions (purchasing unlocked iPhones from Canada where they've been available direct from Apple for a long time is not uncommon in the States), are rarely if ever detected. I fully suspect that these unlocked U.S. iPhones that Apple is now selling directly are similarly not on AT&T's IMEI list. This is good for people who don't need an expensive airtime plan or data package (hey they have wifi for data; not everyone needs a constant cellular connection).

    I've got quite a few friends with non-AT&T iPhones on AT&T's pre-pay, without issues. Hopefully now, when they desire to upgrade their hardware, they won't have to go through the trouble of importing or otherwise doing any magic handwaving in order to get a phone they want while avoiding the smartphone detection.

    I'll politely leave off the rant about what greedy, rip-off bullshit it is that AT&T has such detection systems, or that anyone should EVER have to go to such trouble to avoid a thing like that.

  7. Re:Truth in advertising? on On Monday, AT&T Customers Enter Era of Broadband Caps · · Score: 1

    It's like a car manufacturer advertising that their latest pickup is great for heavy construction use... then in the fine print they note "Warranty invalid if used for heavy construction use".

    Which they do, extensively, and have for years. Think of all the commercials for performance cars that show speeding (indeed outright racing), drifting, stunt turns, etc. through the middle of a city's downtown/urban center. All underlined by the tiny print "Professional driver on a closed course. Do not attempt." Think they'd honor their warranty--or for that matter an insurance company honor their contract--if you went out and actually used the car the way they show in their commercials and had a wreck?

  8. Re:Oohh.. on Supreme Court: AT&T Can Force Arbitration · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sigh, replying to an AC, but...

    It is the land of laws indeed, except the court in this case ruled against those laws, not in favor or "according" to them. Had you actually RTFA'd, you'd have seen that California has consumer protection laws that ban this sort of practice. All the lower court rulings upheld California's state laws. AT&T continued to push it higher and higher to get their favored ruling. The Supreme Court most certainly did have plenty of latitude in the law's interpretation, as their ruling was that the Federal Arbitration Act takes precedence over California's own state laws.

    Yes, this is yet another ruling that very explicitly overrides the sovereignty of states' rights in favor of federal. In fact, quoted right there in TFA, is Justice Breyer's dissenting opinion that, quote "[R]ecognition of that federalist ideal, embodied in specific language in this particular statute, should lead us to uphold California's law, not to strike it down."

    But the erosion of states' rights and sovereignty is certainly nothing new, particularly to California itself. The application of federal interstate trafficking laws to medicinal marijuana grown and sold entirely within the state of California was another huge example of the Supreme Court's willingness to trample state sovereignty.

  9. Re:How silly on AT&T Lowers Data Access To Just $500/GB · · Score: 1

    Actually I use no data, and have no data plan at all. I certainly wouldn't be on PAYG if I needed lots of data, I'd just be screwing myself over going that route.

  10. Re:How silly on AT&T Lowers Data Access To Just $500/GB · · Score: 1

    "And given that pay-as-you-go pricing is what the poor and people living paycheck to paycheck use...

    And people with bad credit.

    And people who simply use a phone so rarely (but need the available-anywhere nature of cellular when they do need to make that phone call) that PAYG is as much as ten times cheaper than post-pay. I pay less than $100 per year for my PAYG service, which gets used mostly when I travel (hence being cellular comes in handy), but I like maintaining service so I have a fixed phone number.

  11. Re:for pete's sake on AT&T Lowers Data Access To Just $500/GB · · Score: 1

    wait a sec here. You may not know that ATT will not sell you a smartphone without a dataplan. Additionally, they required having the plan to maintain phone service. Not sure if this is still in effect, but it was as of last year.

    It is not only still in effect, it applies to bring-your-own phones as well, not just the ones they sell you. You can buy your own unlocked smartphone and if they detect it as a smartphone (they do this by IMEI database last I heard, so not all smartphones will get detected) on their network, they will force a data plan on you. They will literally just add the "service" to your account and begin billing you.

    Pre-pay customers will be forced into monthly data packages too, or in some cases certain smartphones are blocked from pre-pay entirely and can only be used post-pay.

  12. Re:for pete's sake on AT&T Lowers Data Access To Just $500/GB · · Score: 1

    I would actually like to live without it. I'm one of those rare, freakish people (at least, that seems to be how I'm regarded based on how the plans seem to work..) who would actually like to have a smartphone for local use (to use basically as a PDA as well as a normal phone) but don't need, want, nor care about always-on data access. What data I might use I can already achieve with available wifi networks (like at home), which 99.9% of the smartphones on the market now can utilize.

    The problem? I CAN'T choose of my own volition not to pay the exorbitant fee. The big boys (and many of the smaller carriers too) require a data plan if you have a smartphone. AT&T and Verizon will flat out force one on you if you don't sign up for one yourself, and will just begin charging you (how this is legal is beyond me). This applies to both post- and pre-pay customers alike. In fact AT&T will just outright block some smartphones from being on pre-pay at all, period. They require them as post-pay only, with the high-cost data plan attached.

    Some of us might actually like to live without a data plan; we just aren't allowed to have what we desire. Do I consider a smartphone a human right? No, of course not. However, I do think it ought to be MY choice to own one without using cellular data on it, if I want to use it that way. Unfortunately that is not a choice readily on offer in this closed "market".

  13. Re:So what? on AT&T Lowers Data Access To Just $500/GB · · Score: 1

    As already pointed out in other comments Wal-Mart just resells T-Mobile network access.

    As for MetroPCS, it has already been reported that their "unlimited" internet is actually a subset of Internet access. They actively block streaming sites, VoIP, and other things. In their base plans they even block IM networks and the like. They use a tiered pricing system. Base for SMS, talk, some web and YouTube. Next tier, IMs and e-mails. Next tier, audio downloading/streaming, etc.

    The reality is the "deal" is no better than what the big boys are offering, and in some cases significantly worse.

  14. Re:Reverse the tables on Netflix Compares ISP Streaming Performance · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...Well, lets let your customers decide for themselves with more facts who they want"

    Though unfortunately for many customers (the majority I'm sure), "who they want" is a choice between that ISP or nothing, so it doesn't help them too much to simply tell them hey, they're getting screwed.

    However, I would like to see this broken down into smaller areas. By region, or even by city, rather than just the ISP as an overall average. I'd be very, VERY curious to see if the very same ISP performs significantly better in areas where there's some actual competition going on.

    That would be nice to wave around "look here, here's measured evidence of what they're doing in areas they don't have to compete".

    As an aside, I already kind of see this in my area. I have Time Warner broadband. In my personal location, they're the only choice; even DSL is not available to me. The highest service available is 15Mbps and I average 5-8 most of the time. However, in the sections where Verizon FiOS is also available and competing? Why, suddenly Time Warner's got a 50Mbps service available which averages 35-40! Imagine that..

  15. Re:My grandmother is one of them... on 60% of AOL's Profits Come From Misinformed Customers · · Score: 4, Informative

    The worst part of all is she doesn't even have to lose her "experience" to get off dial-up.

    AOL has a FREE level of service under their "AOL for Broadband" setup, and you can convert existing dial-up accounts to it. I did this for my grandmother. She was on AOL Dial-up for years and years (she actually used it though, because in her area broadband was unavailable until late 2008). Finally DSL became available and she was happy to jump onto it (finally she could watch those videos the younger grandkids send). So I helped her convert her AOL Dial-up to a free AOL for Broadband account. She kept her e-mail address (and all the remotely stored e-mails), kept her links and shortcuts.

    In fact, she kept everything, because you can still use the AOL Client to connect to a AfB account. It just doesn't dial anymore, it merely connects to the account over your existing broadband.

    In effect, her "experience" literally did not change. She still loads up the AOL Client, and accesses everything through it. She lost nothing (the free AfB accounts do lose some services compared to paid, but nothing she used or was even aware of). The only difference is now she has 15x the speed of dial-up, and she pays $15/mo for it instead of $25.

    Plus I got her a wireless router so she can use her laptop away from the phone line, which to her was probably the most glorious thing of the whole change. :)

  16. Re:Windows for SCADA? WTF?! on Malware Targets Shortcut Flaw In Windows, SCADA · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Starting to wander a little off-topic here but I couldn't resist one more answer. :) I wasn't aware of the lack of timing requirement, hmm. Certainly our company didn't interpret it that way, so we're actively implementing patches on the month-behind schedule, and this includes our control systems too. We can do this because every server type (data ack, database, human interface server, etc) we have operates in tandem with an identical twin, in standard failover configuration. So we patch the backup, and initiate a controlled failover to it. Problem? Fail back. Works? Patch the other side now. This is how most every SCADA control system I've worked with has operated, even the old 1970s paired-mainframe-based system we had at the company when I first started here.

    We are a central control center though, the HQ for utility company as a whole, not an individual generation plant. So our system setup may indeed be very different from the individual plants we operate, so I can't speak for how the plants manage their DCS control systems directly. Our major SCADA upgrades though are on a yearly basis, unlike OS patches.

    I see a few people all replied to my air-gap comment, but I'm lazy and don't need to make three replies! ;) I didn't mean to imply it operated in a vaccuum, totally networkless. I merely meant air-gapped away from the Internet specifically. Communications between facilities is indeed vital, it's just that going the Internet route to achieve that is flat out "wrong" and really, I think should be completely banned, by regulation or otherwise.

    We do indeed have inter-facility communications all over the place, to all of our various power plants we operate and control, to all our individual substations, all that stuff. However, it's done via private networks. We have our own microwave communications system licensed throughout the state and probably 90% of our communications to our assets is via this. The rest is through dedicated leased lines. We also communicate realtime with the state's central control authority, and that's done via a private frame relay circuit that THEY actually had installed at our facility (along with their equipment) because they actually require this from all utilities under their authority, to communicate to them. They did it right, basically.

  17. Re:Windows for SCADA? WTF?! on Malware Targets Shortcut Flaw In Windows, SCADA · · Score: 5, Informative

    Security and vulnerability assessment used to be this poor, but that has undergone significant changes, particularly in this decade. I can't speak for all vendors, but the one we use has security testing, vulnerability assessment, and full patch updates implemented as a standard part of their maintenance contract with their customers.

    They have an internal process to verify all patches on the systems they support their software on (RHEL, SuSE, Windows Server 2003, 2008, Windows XP and Vista, with Windows 7 certification coming) and ensure they do not break the SCADA servers or clients, and they release this information to their customers relatively quickly (we usually are about one month behind, implementing patches that've been vouched safe within about 30 days of the patch release, but this process is faster for zero-day and other such critical things).

    They do not "assume" anything for their customers. However they do strongly encourage air-gap, and frankly so would I. A SCADA system controlling the power grid should never have an Internet connection. It should never need one. If it must have this, you have something seriously wrong with your design.

    Furthermore, I would add that recent (within the last two to three years) updates to CIP and NERC compliance specifications actually require patches to be kept up to date, and also require you to full document the fact that you have patched your servers and workstations. If you have not applied a patch, you must have documentation explaining why (this is why our vendor has their patch vouching program, so you have documentation on why they said don't install something). There are very heavy fines for not implementing this, and can even lead to certification revocation, which means you can't do business.

  18. Re:Windows for SCADA? WTF?! on Malware Targets Shortcut Flaw In Windows, SCADA · · Score: 5, Informative

    They're talking about the master/control side of things, the main servers and the operator consoles that people sit at and view indications, and control things. That is where Windows is often run. Embedded devices to this day remain highly proprietary in SCADA systems, though we are seeing more Linux-based embedded devices now.

    The server end though is very often a Windows shop. However, forms of *nix are not uncommon at all either and in fact UNIX types used to be the norm for servers in SCADA, but that's been going away for quite a while now. I'd say it's about 50/50 these days between Windows and *nix. Most of the *nix stuff is now AIX or some flavor of Linux (RHEL being the big one). That's on the server side. The actual consoles where the operators sit are about 90% Windows though, if not higher, and that's most likely where you're going to see this virus come into play in the first place because of some stupid user plugging in an infected USB device.

    Though a proper SCADA shop should have their SCADA system locked down. We certainly do. All USB ports are secured and thumbdrives are not allowed, and disabled from being attached. An operator that can just walk up and stick a USB drive onto a console is a big, big no-no.

  19. Re:A lot of power on High-Temp Superconductors To Connect Power Grids · · Score: 2, Informative

    It really depends on where you look, to be honest, and surprisingly the state of New York isn't necessarily all that huge as you might think. It's not even ranked second or third in energy usage.

    To add to your perspective, the state of Texas produces and consumes--by a wide margin for both--far more electrity than any other state or territory in the United States. Full summer peaks can reach average state-wide usages of around 97GW.

    That's especially impressive to me considering the Texas grid is almost isolated, so it can't easily call in outside power from other states like New York can.

  20. Re:i ignore voice mail on Time For Voice-Mail To Throw In the Towel · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry if my being financially responsible is offensive "cheapass" to you. Though I guess you missed the part where I said "PAYG works well for me" because I actually can perform simple math and figure costs.

    No, as a matter of fact I'm paying vastly less now (and I'm paying quarterly, I might add, not monthly) than I ever was on a monthly service. There is no monthly service currently offered to me that is less than, or even equal to, what I pay right now.

    I don't even have a shitty phone, either. I bought my own, unbranded retail handset with the features and things I wanted.

    Some of us just happen to have different needs, that don't always include using a phone much. I use may 20, 25 minutes of airtime per month. However I have found it useful to at least have a cell phone available to me, so PAYG works just fine, and I'm not "getting raped" by the cell company. At least, not any more than I would be if I were on their monthly service.

    Less, in my case, in fact.

  21. Re:i ignore voice mail on Time For Voice-Mail To Throw In the Towel · · Score: 1

    On most networks, if you're using prepay or pay-as-you-go, ANY airtime costs you money. Including checking your own voicemail.

    I very rarely get calls or use my phone, so PAYG works well for me; however, in the rare instances I have a voicemail I'll actually use a landline phone if one is available to call my number and check my messages, rather than spend money calling voicemail from my phone.

  22. Re:Could it be their service? on Charter Files For "Prearranged Bankruptcy" · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hell, some people were lucky if they even got shitty service. My grandmother's really getting into the whole technology thing with gusto, and was after HDTV and high-speed internet. Guess what? Charter did not offer either option to her entire town (a close-in, well-established suburb of Dallas). In fact, they had no plans to EVER offer either one in "that market" as they put it. Suddenly I realized why so very, very many houses around there had sprung up satellite dishes.

    She even went up to the Charter office, and the girl that she talked to there actually said she was telling customers to get satellite. So that's what my grandmother did. She'd been a Charter customer literally since they became available in her area, even before they ever went public. Decades. Not anymore. She's a happy DirecTV customer now, with all her HDTV and her DVR. Loving it.

    She got AT&T DSL too, not the greatest choice but it's pleased her.

    Looking around at all the other dishes in the area (a lot of them are DISH network, I notice, which is owned by AT&T, so probably a lot of DSL customers too), it's not at all hard to see that Charter is hemorrhaging customers in that market, and I have little doubt that it is by far not the only place where they're making such stupid, asinine decisions that are forcing customers to leave them in order to get the service they clearly want.

  23. Re:Not to supprised. on Feds Say They're Ready For Monday's IPv6 Deadline · · Score: 1

    And hell, if you want to venture into consumer space, try every internet-enabled game console, TiVos, consumer IP phones, etc. I have never seen any of these that support IPv6, and I have a suspicion that the network chipsets in them don't have lower-layer support for it either. These could perhaps be upgraded via software patches, but it would be a question of whether they could handle it (re: like the underpowered Cisco router CPUs).

    Home routers that support it are few and far between, with Apple's AirPort being the only one with full and total support that comes to my mind.

    Granted, these bits and bobs can be handled with a home router that supports v4-over-v6 tunneling, but still, the total lack of support in such consumer things will be a very significant issue when trying to eventually get Joe Public himself to switch to v6.

  24. Re:How about NTFS read-write? on OS X Snow Leopard Details · · Score: 1

    The corporate world in particular vastly prefers 1st-party/native support over an unsupported, 3rd-party add-on that makes no guarantees.

  25. Re:How about NTFS read-write? on OS X Snow Leopard Details · · Score: 1
    Absolutely. That's what the thread parent already mentioned. Though I believe he was specifically going on about wanting native support for such things, which is what I was talking about myself.

    Still, it is good that there's third-party methods available. I'd just like to see something integrated and supported by Apple. The lack of read/write NTFS as a feature specifically within Boot Camp itself quite surprised me.