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User: SeaFox

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  1. Re:And how, exactly is this better.. on Intel Releases $99 'MinnowBoard Max,' an Open-Source Single-Board Computer · · Score: 2

    It's probably a hell of a lot more powerful, and being an Intel x64 chip you have a larger variety of operating systems you can run on it.

  2. Re:This is a repost from yesterday on Intel Releases $99 'MinnowBoard Max,' an Open-Source Single-Board Computer · · Score: 1

    What about the accepted submission from the 31st?

    http://hardware.slashdot.org/s...

  3. Re:Who? on Why No One Trusts Facebook To Power the Future · · Score: 1

    ^ THIS.

    Facebook only own the social experience of people who let it own them.

  4. Re:What's a good no-nonsense registrar? on British Domain Registrar Offers 'No Transfer Fees,' Charges Transfer Fee · · Score: 1

    What's a good no-nonsense registrar for major TLDs? It doesn't have to be super cheap. I want to dump Network Solutions because they gave me an unsolicited domain (I had .com and .net; they gave me a useless .info) which they then expect me to pay to renew.

    What happens if you simply refuse to pay the renewal on the .info one and only pay the .com/.net ones?

  5. Re:Typical corporation bullshit on British Domain Registrar Offers 'No Transfer Fees,' Charges Transfer Fee · · Score: 1

    Sign here to be bound by terms we can change any time.

    How can that be legal?

    It only becomes illegal when a court decides it is. And that requires someone to invest the time and money in taking the corporation, with their high-priced lawyers on retainer, to court. And the people who are effected by this rarely have the time or money to do that, they're too busy struggling to maintain their lives as they are.

  6. Re:Typical corporation bullshit on British Domain Registrar Offers 'No Transfer Fees,' Charges Transfer Fee · · Score: 1

    You have to know about those terms changes, and companies aren't required to be real proactive about telling you in the U.S. They may simply send you an email saying "we've recently updated our terms and conditions" with a link to the current terms and conditions on the website, but no info on what was changed. So now you have to read through pages and pages of text looking for the new info, assuming you can even understand the legalese.

    The acceptance of terms is always simply continuing to use the service, it's not a opt-in affair. If you don't read the terms changes, don't get the email, don't understand what's changed as long as you don't leave you've agreed to them.

  7. MS is walking a fine line as it tries to transition from a company that sees users as the target to be exploited and a company that sees users as the customers.

    Really? With Microsoft's new focus on social and free-to-use cloud services, I see them as following Facebook and Google and going the other direction.

  8. Re:Business opportunity on UK Government Pays Microsoft £5.5M For Extended Support of Windows XP · · Score: 1

    Why is no other company writing patches for an operating system they don't have access to the source code for? Gee, I wonder.

  9. Re:Personal Experiance on Study: Exposure To Morning Sunlight Helps Managing Weight · · Score: 1

    I also wrote a program to adjust my video cards 'color temperature' setting depending on the time of day (but it only worked on XP)

    Perhaps you'd like to investigate this then.

  10. Re:Personal Experiance on Study: Exposure To Morning Sunlight Helps Managing Weight · · Score: 1

    A few years ago I started using a couple plug strips each with 6 'daylight' florescent bulbs during the winter (in Seattle).

    "Daylight" florescent bulbs are just regular fluorescent bulbs with a color temperature of a bluer tone than normal. The actual light spectrum they put out isn't going to be vastly different. It's not the same as those sunlight-mimicking bulbs you're referring to.

    Have you tried this same routine with normal color florescent lights by the same manufacturer to see what happens?

  11. Re:Benjamin Franklin on Study: Exposure To Morning Sunlight Helps Managing Weight · · Score: 1

    Early to rise, early to bed, makes a man healthy, but socially dead.

  12. Re:DynDNS and a real NAS on Western Digital 'MyCloud' Is Down 5 Days and Counting · · Score: 1

    They send you an email with a link to take you right to the captcha page, you don't even have to remember or set reminders on your calendar app.

    I seem to remember it's like $15 a YEAR with the discount they offer on those email renewals notices. If you can't be bothered to visit a site for less than three minutes once a month, you should just pay the fee.

  13. This just in... on OKCupid Warns Off Mozilla Firefox Users Over Gay Rights · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Companies are made up of many, many people and some of them may have disagreeing opinions. And people are not the company.

    OKCupid is only providing support for the idea an employer has a right to control their workers personal lives when they're off the clock, and being wage or salary has nothing to do with it, as folks here like to drag into the situation. Even if I'm a salaried worker I'm not "at work" 24/7. I have specific hours I'm doing my job, and hours I'm not. We are human beings and have our own opinions on issues, sometimes unpopular opinions. If you don't like the ideas of a single person you have an issue with the human, not the company. There's no reason to take any action against Mozilla just because you don't like their new CEO. Now, if his personal beliefs begin to shape corporate policy or find their way into product design, then you have an issue with Mozilla the company.

  14. Re:DynDNS and a real NAS on Western Digital 'MyCloud' Is Down 5 Days and Counting · · Score: 1

    Great. Explain to your technically illiterate parents, friends and neighbors how to implement DynDNS, how to poke holes in their firewall, and how to implement a web-based TLS-using file server.

    The point of these devices is that a lay person can plug it in to their home network, put in a username and password, then access their 4TB drive anywhere on the world.

    I'd suggest that people that technically inept probably don't need 24/7 around-the-world access to those files on their own internet connected storage system. Four terabytes? What would be making up all these gigs that they need to be able to get this easily all the time. Whatever files they need access to that way they could probably fit on a thumb drive -- they wouldn't even have to worry about an Internet provider working properly then. And even if this is a cloud-access-is-a-must issue, Dropbox or a dozen other service providers could fill in just as well with something run in a professional hosting environment.

    The kind of people you're talking about leave their broadband modems on the floor under desks for months with static electricity and dust. They mount equipment in cabinets with no ventilation (and no access at all when something stops working sometimes), and bypass the Windows scandisk when it triggers itself (because it takes so long~). Do these sound like folks who should be hosting their own servers?

    I feel if you want to host your own node on the Net, you learn how. And if you don't want to learn how, you let someone else host it. A half-assed "I bought this but can't even tell what plugs go where unless I call support" solution isn't doing you any favors.

  15. Re:DynDNS and a real NAS on Western Digital 'MyCloud' Is Down 5 Days and Counting · · Score: 1

    Pointy-clicky-typey last time I checked. And it requires knowing your IP address - most tech illiterates probably couldn't even tell you their machine's name, let alone it's IP address (which would be usually set by DHCP and therefore liable - thought not likely - to change).

    You check a PC's IP address to figure out the IP numbering scheme in use. Most consumer routers have no issue with a single device setting it's own IP address on the network -- provided it's not trying to use one already handed out by the DHCP server. I have to talk people through setting up port forwarding for cellular microcells quite often. I generally have them use the LAN IP .200 or above in the port forward setting to put it far beyond what will realistically get used by the router handing out addresses. Then their wireless carrier has to talk them through setting up a static LAN address on the microcell with the IP, SN, and DG I've provided to the customer.

    Joe Sixpack just did port forwarding.
    And he could have probably done it himself if he'd just RTFM.

    And implementing the web-based TLS-using file server? I'd certainly never recommend putting your own out there on the internet over using a third party's service and letting them deal with the security hassles (assuming they can do so without a week's downtime, of course).

    Judging by the frequency of articles on Slashdot about the turnkey "internet of things" getting hacked, it doesn't look like they're taking security seriously, either.

  16. DynDNS and a real NAS on Western Digital 'MyCloud' Is Down 5 Days and Counting · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Cut out the middleman and no downtime from corporate ineptitude.

  17. Slow News Day on KDE and Canonical Developers Disagree Over Display Server · · Score: 1

    Is there an actual story here, or it just about two different groups of open-source developers having a difference of opinion on whether display servers are important or not? The summary doesn't suggest this disagreement is having any real ramifications on Ubuntu/Kubuntu.

  18. Re:Personal criminal liability applies on They're Reading Your Mail: Microsoft's ToS, Windows 8 Leak, and Snooping · · Score: 2

    Even if this is illegal on paper, I don't expect to see anyone who works at Microsoft be arrested for this if they go to the EU.
    There are laws, and then there are laws that actually get enforced on individual people who work for big businesses. This is one of those laws that gets resolved with a fine against the corporation, not by tossing people in jail.

  19. New Firefox Sync pairing method? on Firefox 28 Arrives With VP9 Video Decoding, HTML5 Volume Controls · · Score: 1

    What happened to that new, easier method of Firefox Sync device pairing that was supposed to come out in Firefox 27?

    The big issue with the current method is to add a new Firefox instance to the group, it pretty much requires you to have access to both your new device and an existing device simultaneously. Unless you save the authentication key file it's impossible to sync different Firefox installs on a dual/multi-boot computer or recover your saved passwords and bookmarks if a device is non-usable from damage or outright lost/stolen.

  20. It's really saying something... on IBM Distances Itself From the NSA and Its Spy Activities · · Score: 1

    When a company would rather work with Nazis than the NSA.

  21. Not sure about "usually".. There are some change, but overall I'd say there's a long way to go.

    I wasn't talking about YIFY's encodes specifically. Although anyone who thinks 900 MB for a 720p feature length movie is good is smoking something, even without 5-channel audio.

    I'm even seeing two-CD encodes still (movie broken into two 700MB AVI files) with recent films. Ignoring that folks are more likely to be playing right from the PC hard drive or a flash stick, are people still seriously debating the cost difference between a DVD-R and a blank CD?

  22. We're talking about a pirating scene that still thinks Xvid/AVI is a great format to use. I bet they play them on their Pentium 4s running Windows XP, too.

  23. Re:Apps on VLC Finally Launches App For Windows 8 · · Score: 0

    yea i just serviced a windows 8 box that was infected. i go to the control panel wtf no real settings. i go to metro can find a setting tiles or even a app tile there hidden in the next window but ok. i finely figure out i had to hover the left side to get the settings

    Why are you servicing Windows 8 computers when you clearly know nothing about them?

  24. Re:Help, I'm being harrassed on an app on my phone on Yik Yak, After Complaints From Schools, Suspends Its Service In Chicago · · Score: 1

    The whole point of this app is that it's location-based - it connects you to people in the immediate vicinity.

    Maybe I'm becoming an old fuddy-duddy, but I'm having trouble seeing what use this app is over a regular IM or texting session, unless you're toothing (which wasn't even a real thing).

    People don't want to talk to random strangers nowadays, they want to talk to their friends, regardless of how far away they are. That makes the question of who's around you kinda inconsequential. I thought it had already been well-established people didn't want random folks to be able to message them. That's why every proprietary IM network makes people ask for authorization to add someone to their buddy lists now (I remember when AIM still didn't) and have controls to only allow messages from people on their buddy lists.

    Just like the original sarcastic replier, I have to wonder why this bullied person doesn't just stop using the app and chat with their friends on some other platform they are all likely already a part of.

  25. Re:Spin? on WSJ: Americans' Phone Bills Are Going Up · · Score: 2

    WSJ is in the back pockets of big businesses. How can we be sure this is not anti-competition (i.e, pro-oligopoly) propaganda?

    Yes, the WSJ is helping big business by pointing out to their customers the major carriers are raising rates on them. That makes perfect sense. -_____-