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User: zyzko

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  1. Licensing issues on Microsoft Urged to Open Source Classic Visual Basic (i-programmer.info) · · Score: 1

    Not going to happen. Microsoft even removed VB6 from MSDN downloads years ago citing expired licenses as a reason and said that it's ok to use it as long as you have the license and got it for an example on MSDN CD set, but no downloads any more. If they can't even keep the thing downloadable for their paying customers I bet it is going to be "a little bit" far fetched to think that they would go through the trouble of open-sourcing it.

  2. Re:Good'ol Stephen Elop on Microsoft To License Nokia Brand To Foxconn, Says Report (techtimes.com) · · Score: 1

    Well, then Elop failed because Microsoft did not acquire Nokia's patent portfolio (fully). They received about 8500 design patents related to phones, but the crown jewels (technology patents) are firmly still in Nokia's hands. Microsoft received a 10-year license as part of the deal, with right to renew (for more money).

    For shareholders who bought Nokia for 60 € / share of course Elop was a disaster (although Nokia was already going downhill, and nobody can say for sure if they could have recovered with different strategy to their former valuation as a mobile handset company), as well as for those 10's of thousands that were laid off (it is not nice being sacked against your will even if you do get re-employed in near term future).

  3. Re:That'd be sooo Microsoft on Linux Kernel 4.6 Officially Released (softpedia.com) · · Score: 1

    You are not then dealing with Excel only, file systems functions and tons of other stuff people use are Windows features exposed to the VBA scripting engine through ActiveX / COM. If your macro involves CreateObject() you are quite likely using something else than just Excel features.

    I've seen my fair share of very crazy stuff done from withing Excel VBA engine, including commanding AutoCAD. It can be quite powerful "scripting tool" but it really should lack "save" feature so those horrible hacks do not live on...

  4. Re:Europe as usual is in trouble? on Ted Cruz Drops Out Of The Republican Presidential Race (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    So I'm curious how do you see a Europe in crisis?

    Not the person you were replying to, and I do not agree to "Europe as usual in trouble" as a status quo, but there is a a-kind-of crisis in Europe in a same way there is a crisis in US now: The nice times of last ten - twenty years are over (in a openness sense, both the USA and Europe have had their share of financial crises, now the effects are showing, with added bonus of the de-stabilization in near-east and north Africa), in US the other presidential candidate is openly (I'm not saying seriously...) suggesting building a wall on one border of the country, in Europe those walls are already being built in some places. The refugee crisis has waken up a lot of demons in a lot of places, and it is not looking good. Not unsolvable by any means, but some people rather would like to see the situation to remain unsolved to push their agenda. The EU and especially the opinion about EU is a lot different compared to what it was like in 2006, or 1996.

  5. Re:Great on Microsoft To Unify PC and Xbox One Platforms (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    Those (on purpose) exclude the cost of OS. The first one says that "just take Windows 8.1 from machine you own" (which is just going back to upgrading your existing PC, not building new one for gaming) or "buy the key for $20 from ", the rest say that the OS is not included on purpose. The fact is that if you buy Windows officially for a barebones home-built PC it will set you back ~$80+.

    Of course there is SteamOS and Linux...

  6. Re:not illegal. Different countries have different on Geoblocking, Licensing, and Piracy Make For Tough Choices at Netflix (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    Translation cost is not the issue here, the actual cost is the printing (more pages in more languages cost more, but then again, it also costs extra to print many kinds of different manuals). Deliberately leaving out for an example English (the US is usually not the origin country for imports) is. So:

    1) Make sure you leave out English where it is not a major (first) language. Do the same for user interface. This prevents imports from cheaper countries in Asia.
    2) If you want to prevent selling to neighboring countries select the languages appropriately. I have seen cases in Finland where an appliance sold in Finland includes manuals and UI translation in Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian and Danish, but the model sold in Sweden has for an example only Swedish, Danish and Norwegian or the other way around - this combined with selecting which markets you want to sell which model to you can easily create semi-artificial market segmentation.

    The point with manuals is nowadays gone because nearly everything is available online, and even printed manuals are now largely universal (my latest purchase, an Onkyo home theater amplifier, had sections "US model" and "Asian model" when describing features), but sometimes manufacturers still play games with localization and target specific countries only with specific models, and buying the better price/value sister model from neighboring country may result in not getting the localization done for your country. You could argue that they are different products, but if the only difference is price, one letter in product number and you can get the translation back by flashing the "universal" firmware makes you wonder what is the real purpose of this "differentation".

  7. What, when Apple has dropped DRM from videos bought / streamed from iTunes?

  8. Re:The studios may not have a choice on Geoblocking, Licensing, and Piracy Make For Tough Choices at Netflix (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    "Lilyhammer" also lagged behind a long time in Finland (only first season was available) because YLE (the Finnish public broadcasting company) had bought distribution rights to it in Finland (I guess due to some partner deal with NRK, the Norwegian equivalent).

    This just proves that Netflix is playing two different games to make sure that if in either one they do not have a winning hand, they still have the option to win in the other:

      First (and traditionally) they are a distributor, and their strength has been large catalog. They still try to do this, but have to fight the content owners / producers. This whole VPN / proxy busting being the example of problems they face.

    Secondly they are also a producer with their own exclusive catalog (Netflix originals) and here they are playing the same game as cable companies, and as witnessed they use same tactics to sell exclusivity even to their own shows and are happy with it (they get more money!). Here their advantages beside exclusivity are ad-free shows (I wonder how long this will last, or at least they "test" ads...) and ability to watch whole seasons at your own pace (and with this they have already tested weekly episodes to keep people subscribed, example: Better call Saul at least in Finland was released one episode per week- again, I am interested to see if they move to traditional model with their A-list shows such as House of cards).

  9. Re:not illegal. Different countries have different on Geoblocking, Licensing, and Piracy Make For Tough Choices at Netflix (thestack.com) · · Score: 2

    Companies have tried that with physical goods also - when "region locking" has not been possible manufacturers have tried all kinds of soft tricks (making sure official manuals are not available in many languages to prevent "grey imports" as they call it in one package, placing selling restrictions "suggestions" to retailers to prevent selling to exporters) and not-so soft tricks (refusing to honor warranties on products not imported via "authorized" channels per serial number etc.).

    Some practices have been disbanded as being illegal from consumer protection or anti-competitive point of view, some tactics can be still used - the most common being that if use do not honor manufacturers wishes regarding what you sell (you want to import a new product from another country not yet on "official" catalog for your country) or at what prices you can lose all kinds of perks associated with "official" status and suddenly there are all kinds of difficulties getting stuff for resale for you and you have to resort to using "side channels" for all of the inventory of that brand.

    Nearly all "luxury brands" from toys (Lego) to fashion (nearly all high-end clothes brands, bags and jewelry, watches) and electronics (camera manufacturers were the traditional bad guys here, I do not know what is the status nowadays with Canon and Nikon, Apple is quite "sensitive" on pricing). The goal here is the same as with TV - selling "exclusive" rights means more money for everybody because margins are higher and prices can be adjusted market by market. The producer also gets control of their brand (only available from X!). They also like to pretend this is a win for consumer (scare-ads of portraying buying from non-official sources as illegal and shady - from "Official" sources you get the best service and genuine product, guaranteed!), but ultimately losers are consumers and retailers who would like to sell as many brands as possible (like Netflix, although they also have their own exclusive production now so they are also a producer...).

  10. Re:Avast does that also on AVG Forces Chrome Extension On Users, Extension Is Woefully Insecure (google.com) · · Score: 1

    To be fair, from the summary: "The installation process is quite complicated so that they [AVG] can bypass the Chrome [Store] malware checks, which specifically tries to stop abuse of the [Chrome] Extension API."

    Sound like they specifically targeted Chrome to go around those checks, but either Firefox does a better job at stopping unauthorized installs or they did not bother to do the same with Firefox.

  11. Re:"We're stronger than ever" on Groupon Is Closing Operations In 7 Countries, Laying Off 1,100 · · Score: 1

    The snake oil part is where Groupon salesperson is selling the idea to the restaurant, bowling alley or carwash that they will get you as a valuable returning customer by offering you a good deal this one time.

  12. (It's like antilock brakes, they increase the stopping distance for those who properly apply brakes, but reduce it for those that don't, but nowadays everyone has to adapt to a different technique that is a greater stopping distance.)

    "Tekniikan maailma" which is a leading and highly respected auto/general tech magazine in Finland tested this back in the day when ABS was a new thing. Rally drivers who are by definition should have excellent driving skills and reactions time were just barely able to mach ABS in straight braking distance. When other factors such as random timing requirement (even though they knew to expect it at some time) or requirement to steer during braking to avoid collision ABS beat every rally driver.

    And tech has evolved since. I really don't believe you or any other Internet Guy who thinks they can "apply brakes properly" can beat professional drivers.

  13. Re:Statists will not go quietly into the night on Finnish Police: If You See Uber Car, Call 911 · · Score: 1

    Insurance is mostly for the car damage (both cars) and it is required by the law.

    Not true. The mandatory insurance covers also healthcare expenses. Sure, in typical setting nowadays the costs of the twisted metal are greater and few broken bones and a night in hospital is indeed covered from our tax-funded healthcare system.

    BUT when someone is seriously injured, and suffers a trauma that causes disability and makes then unable to work or a need to train themselves to a new profession, our system definitely does NOT cover those, and those and funded from your insurance. And these are the big bucks, google what courts have awarded for loss of ability to work in these cases... (And if you are uninsured or there is malice the common insurance pool which pays these damages will go after you for those damages...)

  14. Re:Well, sure, but... on Genetically Modified Rice Makes More Food, Less Greenhouse Gas · · Score: 1

    Companies making GMO seeds have already resorted to very slimy tactics regarding their product - even if the patents expire they can use dirty tricks like making their seed incompatible with pesticides other than their own, use licensing clauses to prevent usage of their seeds with other products, make slight modifications and patent the modification again (we have seen pharmaceutical industry doing this - sometimes succeeding, sometimes not) - so I'm not confident at all that patent expiration will solve anything.

    I'm with parent - GMO is OK for me as food, I'm not afraid of it and in fact when properly used it could solve many yield problems and reduce waste / energy needed to produce food. BUT the business around GMO seed is just evil, and therefore right now GMO is not helping where help is needed the most (third world countries - in fact it can make situation there worse).

  15. Re:I never understand the point of that on HP R&D Starts Enforcing a Business Casual Dress Code · · Score: 1

    This is not restricted to military. I was raised (given the basic instructions on what to do where) in 1980s and then at home and in elementary school the rules were simple:

    - Man wearing hat indoors is not considered a gentleman. In classroom wearing hat was prohibited. Normally one should take hat off instantly when going indoors.
    - You don't eat with hat on. Even outdoors when you are primarily eating (sitting down).
    - You never, ever wear a hat to a place of worship. You also respect rules of the religion regarding clothing when visiting a church / temple of not your own religion.
    - When raising a flag or singing a national anthem you take off your hat. You do this out of courtesy even when abroad and a foreign flag is raised / anthem is sung in event you are participating in.

  16. Re:so lets have a breakdown on Apple's "Spring Forward" Event Debuts Apple Watch and More · · Score: 1

    HBO is experimenting. It is available in Nordic countries (hbonordic.com) on iOS, Android and web already. This "HBO Now" is instead available only in North America.

    So different offers whatever suits them in different markets...

  17. Re:Wonder what brand is best now... Intel? on Samsung Acknowledges and Fixes Bug On 840 EVO SSDs · · Score: 1

    840 and 840 EVO are using TLC NAND which is "early SSD" all over again in some respects, and the bug itself is not in the wear-leveling, but on read-retry on cells which are not written to for a certain period of time. Agressive wear leveling (by shifting the data around) can get around this problem, but it is not desirable, especially on TLC NAND which has fewer P/E cycles than MLC or SLC.

    So hopefully the fix is really in the read calibration to get "right" results from cells without retries, and not a workaround which would lower the life expectancy of the drive.

  18. Re:Why not create a new API version function? on Possible Reason Behind Version Hop to Windows 10: Compatibility · · Score: 1

    The "real" functions people are joking about when talking about PHP mostly come directly from mysql API.

  19. Re:Finlandization is moral debasement on 3 Decades Later, Finnair Pilots Report Dramatic Close Encounter With a Missile · · Score: 1

    This is still pretty far-fetched from your original assertion of saying as his opinion that Finland should never do or say anything that could be construed as being antagonistic to Russia. If that would be the case, he would not assess the situation against what Kremlin says the situation is, would he?

    Saying that he doesn't support stronger and more permanent NATO bases in Baltic countries is a very different thing. Finland still has politicians and public figures who think that the best way would be the official line from 30-40 years ago which indeed included "pragmatic" stance towards Soviet Union but Tuomioja in his old days is now much more honest and direct than before, and Finland is highly divided when it comes to NATO so his comment is perfectly reasonable coming from person (and party) who is opposed to applying for NATO membership.

    For comparison, look at the comments from Paavo Väyrynen (also former foreign minister).

  20. Re:Finlandization is moral debasement on 3 Decades Later, Finnair Pilots Report Dramatic Close Encounter With a Missile · · Score: 1

    This is simply not true. Just by using Google translate on his home page (www.tuomioja.org) you can see that on his analysis on the situation at Ukraine he puts Russia as supplier of weapons and as part of the ongoing armed conflict. A fact which official Russia (and their supporters) still firmly deny. I can understand your ...umm...criticism with Tuomioja because of his background, but what you say is simply not true.

  21. Re:Too good to be true? on OnePlus One Revealed: a CyanogenMod Smartphone · · Score: 1

    This has been used already by Nokia in Symbian devices and also on N900 (Maemo).

    Granted, memory might have been even more expensive then (even relatively to requirements on what is considered much) and this could have been seen as a "smart choice" and not so surprisingly what happened was that Nokia would squeeze the fast "application" memory to a bare minimum, and it left users complaining that their "C-drive" is full on their mighty 16 GB device with 13 GB free. No premium manufacturer concerned with user experience today would do this (unless they can get away with it transparently and hide the fact from the end user) .

  22. Re:Knowledge is Power on Should Patients Have the Option To Not Know Their DNA? · · Score: 1

    Those cases where forewarned doesn't help are definitely at issue. The classical example is Huntington disease. It's an autosomal dominant death sentence and there is no treatment or way to alter the course of the disease. Some people don't want to know. There is actually a very elaborate three-phase commit for testing/getting results for Huntington disease, and geneticists won't perform the test on a minor.

    On the other hand - in case of Huntington's there is a 50/50 chance of your children inheriting it from you if you have it. So it can be argued that is it not ethical to test yourself if one of your parents has it in case you are planning to have kids?

    I can understand some people do not want to know and still have kids and are ok with that, however I would not be in the case of Huntington's specifically (no cure, very, very nasty disease - although depending on the repetition count of the gene pattern that causes the disease the age and severity of when the disease manifests itself vary).

  23. Re:If it's not broke, don't fix it on Routing and DNS Security Ignored By ISPs · · Score: 1

    Managers?

    I see this all the time with tech-oriented people as well. They say that we don't need IPv6 because IPv4 and NAT works just fine, and XP is the best thing ever and it is just greed by Microsoft to not support it. What separates tech people and managers is that managers count money. IPv6 and DNSSEC implementation cost money.

    Techies who oppose these often cloud their inability or non-desire to learn something new and "complex" in "if it works, don't fix it". Which of course also comes down to investment - if you have to invest your time to learn something new with no immediate (as in pay raise *now* opposed to "able to get a job in 2 years") reward it is easy to write off improvement as unnecessary.

  24. Re:When you have a bad driver ... on Is the Porsche Carrera GT Too Dangerous? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yeah, every *novice* race driver claims that they can stop faster without ABS.

    This has been debunked even on 20 year old ABS systems. In Finland - with professional rally drivers. Yes - on perfect conditions when the driver has the power to start whenever he likes - the non-ABS braking distances were a little bit shorter. But when you introduce even 1 unknown variable (not knowing when to start braking, unknown traction below the wheels, distraction during braking) even the professionals failed to stop faster on non-ABS car.

  25. Re:Punitive, intentionally vindictive - Democrats on Lockheed To Furlough 3,000 On Monday, Layoffs Also Kicking In · · Score: 0

    Thank you for the Washington Times link - the comment section is pure entertainment. I particularly like the piece about Obama being gay whose male lovers were shot before he was elected.