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User: scragz

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  1. Re:I'm a TMo Customer... on Leaked AT&T Letter Damages Case For T-Mobile Merger · · Score: 1

    I'm a T-Mobile customer and the behind-the-scenes changes are already happening and affecting me. A few months ago they discontinued the pseudo prepay plan I was on and made me pay a deposit. This month I had a bunch of dumb stuff happen that required a lot more minutes than I normally use. I called them to see about ordering more and their brand new policy is that you have to sign up for a new two-year contract just to add minutes to your plan for the month or you get charged $.49/minute (!!!) if you go over. The entire reason I went with T-Mobile was so I could own my own phone and not enter into any contracts with these evil mobile phone providers!

  2. Re:Dear Paypal... on PayPal Accuses Google of Poaching Mobile Payment Trade Secrets, Personnel · · Score: 2

    Prior art only applies to patents, not trade secrets. They are pretty exactly opposite sides of the IP landscape. There could be some algorithms behind the scenes or in any other number of secret locations that would still be secret.

  3. Re:Too late; dead to me on RadioShack Trying To Return To Its DIY Roots · · Score: 1

    The "Radio Shack" brand is crap, and I don't think they can salvage it. I think their best best is to throw it away and launch a giant rebranding and "we used to suck and we're honest about that but we're better now" blitz.

    How about just "The Shack"? It's real clean.

  4. Re:CEO Can't Figure Out How RadioShack Still In Bu on RadioShack Trying To Return To Its DIY Roots · · Score: 1

    If the CEO has that to say then I don't know why anyone would go there.

    (but seriously, everything there is so expensive and shoddy, the salespeople actually are that creepy, and hobbyists can usually afford to wait a couple days or even weeks to order the exact right parts for significantly cheaper from internet / China)

  5. Re:Friend takes a picture... on The FSF's Campaign Against the Nintendo 3DS · · Score: 1

    There are multitudes of cases where this nonsense falls apart and someone would have a good chance for a lawsuit on the off chance they have an army of lawyers to go up against Nintendo's. That's the problem with any of this, these giant corporations are becoming invincible because no-one but other giant corporations can challenge them. Just like Lodsys only suing smaller developers; granted they are dicks, but they have a good point that these big companies can wantonly do whatever they want and nobody has the funds to buy enough laws and lawyers to put up a fight. We can have our petty human lawsuits with each other, but only a god can go up against a god.

  6. Re:a judge with common sense on Oracle's Android Claims Cut By 98% · · Score: 1

    Everyone says how the patent system is broken so they leave it to the courts to figure out. Now it would be great if the courts are also saying there are too many patents for them to deal with. Progress!

  7. Re:KeePass on LastPass Password Service Hacked · · Score: 1

    Looks like you just found out the big problem with Chrome OS. You barely run Linux then, in the sense of being a distro that has WILDLY different build requirements from all other desktop distros. It's almost like saying, "Sure I run Linux, the DD-WRT distro, just give me a link".

  8. Re:Unfortunately... on 'Motherlode' of Data Seized At Bin Laden Compound · · Score: 1

    By exploited, do you mean murdered?

  9. Re:Xubuntu for me on Ubuntu 11.04, Slackware 13.37 · · Score: 1

    I made the switch after the latest Ubuntu a few months ago would barely even run on my relatively recent box (2007 AMD something). XFCE actually runs at the speed I believe this hardware should run. More importantly, everything seems so reasonable instead of forcing all these new paradigms on everyone when we mostly all just want a desktop that works and stays out of the way. It really has come so far since I last gave it a serious whirl in ~2004. Bonus: all the good stuff out of GNOME, like the GUI admin tools, still integrate fine.

  10. Please win back the long-time users on Firefox 5 In Aurora Channel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've been with Phoenix/Firebird/Firefox from the beginning; custom builds, bug reports, tech evangelism, extensions/userscripts; I have made more than one offline XUL application for personal use (JS application programming before it was cool!); the whole ten meters. It had been so good for so long.

    In 2008 a few things happened. 1. The extremely sensible and welcome features added in the 2.x release cycle, coupled with the unique browser landscape, ended up derailing the original goals of the project (streamlined browser, minimal yet viable for mainstream use, with robust extension capabilities for anything else anyone could want) back into some ridiculous browser arms race; 2. I switched to OSX and I think the memory problems are even worse there; and 3. Chrome started shaping up to be everything I wanted technically, with its new extension and built-in userscript support (even if it was inferior), its sandboxing, and its sort of remotely sane memory usage, even if it didn't have the warm fuzzy feeling I had from my closeness to the Mozilla project.

    I am still so guilty about my switch to Chrome but I spend so much of my life in a browser window that I really had to go the practical route.

    And since then it's just been getting worse and worse, with all resources going into either JS performance to keep up in benchmarks or features to be able to add some more bullet points to a release announcement. All anyone wants is better memory management, and then tab sandboxing would be nice after that since Flash/Silverlight can really bring down an embedding process. Give us some core improvements that aren't marketing driven and move all the AWESOMENESS into extensions that can be disabled after install! That's all anyone (on /.) wants.

  11. Re:Xfce on GNOME 3 Released · · Score: 1

    After a miserable time with GNOME in my last Ubuntu install (maverick), I ended up rediscovering XFCE after a ~7 year break. Back then it was absurdly minimalistic, but it has matured into just about everything I want from a Linux DE. Everything is extremely reasonable with just enough options for customization, and all of the GNOME applications and admin tools integrate perfectly. My primary box is OSX but Xubuntu is my goto from now on for other GUI boxen.

    As far as this RADICAL DEPARTURE for the new GNOME...didn't they make a big hoopla and piss everyone off a few years ago when they made Nautilus open a new window for every folder you opened? And then at some point they reverted to the default being something sensible. I dunno; maybe this new interface will turn out to be really cool but I couldn't run the latest 2.x on a decent c. 2007 box so I'm not even going to try.

    (time passes)

    After attempting to read the articles, the one is a 404 and the other one is just rehashing a bunch of drama about Ubuntu using their own fancy new crapfest and GNOME being offended. From what I gather from other comments, the new interface puts a big focus on an Expose-like interface triggered by a hotspot in the corner? That's actually how I set it up in OSX for easy mouse navigating; like cmd-tab except mouse-oriented.

    Executive summary: XFCE good! GNOME keeps getting worse but might have some good ideas!

  12. Re:Easy solution on Google Fights Back Against Android Fragmentation · · Score: 2

    Allow the manufacturer to customize the hell out of it, but write into the license agreement that all functionality must work a vanilla install that is made available OTA. That way a user can go into the update menu and select "update to latest Google version of Android supported by your phone's hardware WARNING: ALL MANUFACTURER CUSTOMIZATION WILL BE LOST". When on vanilla, make the latest manufacturer switchover available. If they did this, how many of us would still be on 2.1 or 2.2? That would be the best of both the worlds.

    It could be YEARS before Vanilla is released. They're only on Gingerbread!

  13. Re:Long term hotmail users? on Some Hotmail Accounts Wiped · · Score: 1

    it's unbelievable that no OS I've seen has an intelligent backup service

    Time Machine on OSX is really impressive.

    As far as the OP, mbox and maildir are both plain-text-based and have been around for ages. Thunderbird uses mbox.

  14. Re:whoop dee doo on Google Quashes 13 Chrome Bugs, Adds PDF Viewer · · Score: 2

    Netflix streaming said Chrome was incompatible last time I tried to use it. I've also had a lot of warnings on various sites that "all features may not be supported". As Mozilla knows, evangelism with major sites is as important as rendering bugs to the end user (me!). Usually everything just works or would work if they would unblock it.

  15. Re:I was thinking the same thing on Initial Reviews of Google Wave; Neat, But Noisy · · Score: 1
  16. Re:MIT Gaydar should be Facebook app on MIT Project "Gaydar" Shakes Privacy Assumptions · · Score: 4, Funny
  17. Re:To quote Adam Savage: on Browsing Frugally Without Wasting Bandwidth? · · Score: 1
  18. Re:And how is this N3rd N3ws ?? on What RSS Feeds Do You Use? · · Score: 2, Funny

    On topic, a nice RSS feed-providing website for women I fell in love with recently is geeksugar...

    Why would we want to read about women you recently fell in love with?
  19. Re:Awesomebar? on Firefox 3 Beta 5 Released · · Score: 1

    Or check out bookmark keywords. I have it setup for "w something" would do a wikipedia search for something, g is google, az is amazon, etc. Also works with delicious and the delicious extension (adds shortcut:w, etc. as a tag in delicious). I use these exclusively and get rid of the search bar.

  20. Re:Scruffy seconds. on Creative Goes After Driver Modder · · Score: 1

    I heard a couple years ago from the pro-audio guy at Guitar Center that Creative was going to buy M-Audio. I am *so* glad that that wasn't true. I've had an M-Audio card (Audiophile 2496, I believe) for recording for almost five years now (Creative Audigy 2 barely lasted two years), by far the oldest piece of hardware in my current box and I've never had any problems with it. Even had a Linux-compatible logo on the box.

    Without the need for doing recording and the like, aren't the onboard soundcards good enough for most people? Did they get rid of the problems with them picking up noise from other parts on the mobo?

  21. Re:Copyright? Maybe not, but maybe trademark? on Blizzard Sues Creator of WoW Bot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They should terminate his subscription post haste. I don't have the terms handy but that would be pretty crappy if they stated that Blizzard could sue you for playing a game in a way they didn't like.

  22. Re:That's the beauty of open source... on From GNOME to KDE and Back Again · · Score: 2, Informative

    When I used KDE I really liked being able to script all the applications through DCOP. Aside from not really having time to play around with all that any more, the main reason I ended up switching to GNOME was that KDE was really buggy then. I still remember liking Konqueror a bunch and Kmail. Heck, most of the applications were designed well, and super-customizable, they would just crash all the time.

    Nothing beats Konqueror as a file manager with being able to use the network URLs (I can't remember what they call it). It is still the best Linux FTP client I've seen. Put it in vertical split mode, put your local dir on the left and you can just type your FTP address in the URL bar on the right. I think you can even bookmark the pairs. I don't remember if it would link them so you change directories in both of them at the same time; most Windows clients can't even manage that (except FTP Voyager).

    I remember one other thing that bugged me was Firefox not fitting in with everything else. There was a bunch of buzz about a Qt port with a good amount of work done on it but they must have gotten bored 70% of the way through.

  23. Re:Thanks for the review! on The Ruby Programming Language · · Score: 1

    For anyone else with programming-inclined progeny, take a look at one of why's other projects, Hackety Hack. It's an interactive Ruby environment for beginners.

    In the 1980s, a language called BASIC swept the countryside. It was a language beginners could use to make their computer speak, play music. You could easily draw a big smiley face or a panda or whatever you like! But not just BASIC. Other languages like: LOGO and Pascal were right there on many computers.

    In this century, you may have dozens of programming languages lurking on your machine. But how to use them?? A fundamental secret! Well, no more. We cannot stand for that. Hackety Hack will not stand to have you in the dark!!

  24. Re:A friend got Rockband on Rock Band Drum Kit Modded · · Score: 1

    Tremolo is amplitude; that would be vibrato.

  25. Re:Why do analysts bother anymore? on Microsoft/Yahoo! Merger a Good Idea? · · Score: 1

    And so, by not telling them that they can't, it would be liberal.