Slashdot Mirror


User: ChunderDownunder

ChunderDownunder's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
3,381
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 3,381

  1. Re:Remember Oliver North on AMD Not Trying To Get Its Chips Into Low-Cost Tablets · · Score: 1

    The market for second hand is about collapse now you can 3D print them

  2. Re:AMD != More_Bang_ForBuck on AMD Not Trying To Get Its Chips Into Low-Cost Tablets · · Score: 1

    They have been working on ARM cores but focussing on the 64bit server farm NOT consumer devices.

  3. Re:Low end can become high end on AMD Not Trying To Get Its Chips Into Low-Cost Tablets · · Score: 1

    Intel has been placing bets in a number of mobile Linux projects for some years now - including Android, Meego, Tizen, Firefox OS, Chrome OS. They have cash to burn in competing with ARM but so far haven't emerged triumphant in anything but a niche.

    Intel's biggest enemy in consumer electronics is themself. It has maintained 2 separate product families - Atom (budget energy conscious) vs Core (performance). At what point, in competing with ARM, does Atom become good enough for all but the most high-end of workstations? In which case people simply stop buying $1500 Core i7 laptops because a $400 hybrid tablet/netbook running Windows 8.x with an Atom does all the average business user could ever need...

    So AMD are somewhat safe to wait-and-see so long as Atom remains only a peripheral competitor to Snapdragon, Tegra, Exynos and Apple A7. The greater fear would be that the Windows market will diminish as iOS and Android gain market share over traditional PCs, in which case even MS has a problem!

  4. Re:On-campus groups on New Facebook Phone App Lets You Stalk Your Friends · · Score: 1

    Well sure but teenagers exhibit shyness, which is one reason proximity-based hookup apps exist in the first place.

    I remember also that popular classes either had 200 or more people in the one lecture hall (too many to remember faces or engage with all of them) or were scheduled in smaller rooms across different days and times.

  5. On-campus groups on New Facebook Phone App Lets You Stalk Your Friends · · Score: 1

    In my younger days, we didn't have mobile phones, let alone facebook.

    How to meet your future spouse (2014)

    1. Enrol for a first year university subject with a broad cross-section of students e.g. Psychology or Italian for Beginners.
    2. Join your professor's facebook group.
    3. Enable proximity.
    4. Study in a large communal area near the cafeteria.
    5. Your phone beeps...

    So while the article mentions 'friends', enabling proximity for classmates would be a quick way to break the ice with a large group of people.

  6. Re:Dalvik or recompile on Intel Pushes Into Tablet Market, Pushes Away From Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Google Play is a competitive marketplace.

    Any vendor that doesn't cross compile risks losing market share to one that does.

  7. Re:In plain English, what's a FreedomBox? on All Packages Needed For FreedomBox Now In Debian · · Score: 1

    my linux distribution already includes the kitchen sink for many of these services.

    Perhaps they're not packaged in a 'personal' context to enable you to run the next facebook on chrooted debian running on your smartphone, using various peer-to-peer encryption protocols. Is that the intent? Or a full-blown linux server that runs in a Hyper-V container from you Win 8 Pro desktop? Sounds very "hand-wavey'.

    So, I'm just curious as to why a project with vaguely defined goals and no obvious roadmap or system architectural document ends up as a front page Slashdot submission?

    I have coding skills, I can't contribute docs for a project that can't elucidate its purpose to laypeople on their homepage.

  8. In plain English, what's a FreedomBox? on All Packages Needed For FreedomBox Now In Debian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A 3 sentence description that doesn't use meaningless mumbo-jumbo vision statement as found on the linked wiki?

    (a summary of its goals and how it compares to prior art?)

  9. Re:Duh on Study Finds US Is an Oligarchy, Not a Democracy · · Score: 2

    Australia? hardly. We exported Rupert, remember.

    Try our neighbours across the Tasman Sea.

  10. Re:Imperialist bullshit. on Climate Scientist: Climate Engineering Might Be the Answer To Warming · · Score: 1

    China has some of the worst pollution on the planet, due largely to their improving living standards.

    So even if climate change turns out to be "absolute crap", developing nations have a vested interest in clean technologies.

  11. Re:Stay away from my school please on Phil Shapiro says 20,000 Teachers Should Unite to Spread Chromebooks (Video) · · Score: 1

    It's a platform that restricts the available choice of software, forcing content to be rewritten for a web interface.

    Pre-existing content isn't an issue just for Chrome OS. e.g. A friend's grandchildren were forced to use an iPad for classroom use. Turns out they couldn't do a homework exercise because the educational material targeted flash.

  12. Re:ya ya.. on Heartbleed Coder: Bug In OpenSSL Was an Honest Mistake · · Score: 1

    Unit tests?

    Advocates of TDD would stress a complex suite of tests that self-document assumptions and side-effects - especially prior to refactoring code to bug fix and add new features, as specified in the summary.

  13. Re:How do you figure? on How Cochlear Implants Are Being Blamed For Killing Deaf Culture · · Score: 2

    Don't you mean Deaf One-armed Leper?

  14. Re:Not in Canada, eh on Australia Declares Homeopathy Nonsense, Urges Doctors to Inform Patients · · Score: 2

    Even in Quebec?

  15. Re:Sad, and not black and white either on Isolated Tribes Die Shortly After We Meet Them · · Score: 1

    Not helpful??

    Think of the plants in the rainforest with which local tribesmen use to treat illness. Synthesising these compounds may be crucial in treating the next batch of superbugs.

    Think of terra preta, a fertile soil mix found in the Amazon, whose synthesis could be the key to 21st century crop yields devastated by climate change.

  16. Re:Bu the wasn't fired on Mozilla CEO Firestorm Likely Violated California Law · · Score: 1

    Telefonica, the main Firefox OS licensee.

    As well as their native Iberian peninsula, Portugal & Spain (where Geeksphone originates), a main market is in same-sex-marriage friendly South American nations, e.g. Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay.

    So there's potential backlash in these markets where FFOS handets are to be introduced.

  17. Re:Why are you using the touch interface with a mo on Windows 8.1 Update Released, With Improvements For Non-Touch Hardware · · Score: 0

    The 20th century called - how often does the typical user *need* to shutdown?

    An ACPI device should, when idle, suspend to RAM after 15 minutes and hibernate after an hour.

    I have a fossil-fuel guzzling noisy desktop PC in my sleeping quarters that I shutdown every night but a modern PC should snooze on minimal juice.

  18. Re:Non-touch devices aka on Windows 8.1 Update Released, With Improvements For Non-Touch Hardware · · Score: 1

    Laptops running Windows make up more than 1% of the PC market. MS aren't just pitching to replace the hundreds of millions of ten year old office PCs running XP.

    By 2015, the percentage of Windows laptops sold without a touch-screen will be single figures, as the differential between the cost of production diminishes and manufacturers compete based on value-added features.

    Watch the TV ad for Windows Surface Pro. A boss buys his entire staff a tablet, so they enjoy a 'fringe benefit' of a lifestyle device outside work hours. This tablet also docks to a keyboard, so that they can run standard business programs; a free gift of a convertible tablet enslaves the corporate user to be connected to the workplace 24/7 - evil genius.

  19. Re:It's a start on Windows 8.1 Update Released, With Improvements For Non-Touch Hardware · · Score: 1

    Another promising idea killed off by improper sandboxing? :(

    How is 'Little bits of random HTML' any more insecure than browsing the web using IE 11, I wonder...

    I'm cheering for Mozilla at this point. Latest builds of Firefox for Android promise seamless integration of HTML apps. If they did the same for Windows, you'd see the HTML5 market expand.

  20. Re:WHO on Ties of the Matrix: An Exercise in Combinatorics · · Score: 1

    graduations, weddings, funerals, job interviews where you don't want to scare HR with your forest of chest hair.

  21. Re:Stupid on To Reduce the Health Risk of Barbecuing Meat, Just Add Beer · · Score: 2

    Kunstmann from Valdivia, Chile do a tasty blueberry beer.

  22. Francesinha on To Reduce the Health Risk of Barbecuing Meat, Just Add Beer · · Score: 1

    Since we're discussing Porto, try the local delicacy which is an artery-hardening meat sandwich featuring beer gravy!

  23. Re:Why the search? on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 1

    Well in the case of the govt. of Australia, where this cynical newspaper article originated, it's a massive PR exercise.

    "See, our defence force do good, noble, things in their spare time", when they're not implementing the government's polarising 'stop the boats' agenda.

    Do they have a clue if and where the plane sank? Hardly...

  24. Power over Ethernet? on Tesla Model S Has Hidden Ethernet Port, User Runs Firefox On the 17" Screen · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a very slow way to charge your sportscar when all you have is a Cat5 cable. :)

  25. Re:Oh Crap on Hacker Holds Key To Free Flights · · Score: 1

    I'd be more concerned about lax security allowing travel using stolen passports.

    e.g. the two Iranian passengers on the missing Malaysian aircraft, travelling on euro passports stolen a year earlier.