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User: gnupun

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  1. Re:Fucking luddites on Debian's Systemd Adoption Inspires Threat of Fork · · Score: 1

    But who decided systemd is right, and init/upstart is wrong? The decision seems very arbitrary, fascist and non-community oriented.

  2. Re:Clone? on Apple's Next Hit Could Be a Microsoft Surface Pro Clone · · Score: 0

    Apple didn't have the first tablet. Microsoft has been trying for decades

    Those pre-ipad tablets with their styluses are about as ancient as an apple newton. That's not a fair comparison.

    Apple was the first company to get tablets noticed by general consumers,

    That's because it had a great design, unlike its predecessors.

    The Surface Pro was an incremental step from the many different types of convertable laptops.

    Wrong. The surface pro is MS playing its usual game of cloning a market leader (embrace), in this case the iPad, and adding features to it (extend), i.e. a keyboard.

  3. Clone? on Apple's Next Hit Could Be a Microsoft Surface Pro Clone · · Score: -1, Redundant

    Wait a sec, isn't surface pro just a clone of iPad with a keyboard and mouse attached? Who's copying who?

    But let's say apple did clone (stuff they already invented) the surface pro. Won't that hurt the market for ipads? So no, they won't do something stupid like that.

  4. Re:Remove It on Debian Talks About Systemd Once Again · · Score: 0

    What if I want a straight text log file that requires no other tools? Why would anyone even have a binary log on a *nix system?

    What if you want to filter or search the log? Binary logs would be much easier to deal with in that case instead of having to write a text parser to process the text file.

  5. Re:So they just reinvented Pogoplug? on Eggcyte is Making a Pocket-Sized Personal Web Server (Video) · · Score: 1

    Pogoplug costs $50/year. Why should you pay that much to store on your own device? You can get get your own shared hosting webserver for that much money.

  6. Re:False sense of security on Eggcyte is Making a Pocket-Sized Personal Web Server (Video) · · Score: 1

    As soon as any of the data leaves the device, you've lost control of it.

    Even if it's encrypted?

  7. Re:Solution looking for a problem. on Eggcyte is Making a Pocket-Sized Personal Web Server (Video) · · Score: 1

    Lots of storage and the ability to share data with other computers and only a select group of people (i.e. exclude strangers, and companies like dropbox, facebook etc.)

  8. Re:They're hiring you... on Ask Slashdot: Handling Patented IP In a Job Interview? · · Score: 2

    If they want the use of your patented IP, they can license the technology or buy the rights to the IP from you.

    Companies pay millions to license patents from other companies. But they only pay $2,000-$6,000 for a single patent belonging to their employee. Guess which payment model the company will choose?

  9. Re:Why..... on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    Why wouldn't people just use the system of "where your customers pay you" for any multinational company to determine "where to tax is owed"? Much simpler and fairer between different nations.

    Not fair. You should also take into account where the employees work, the raw materials (if any) come from, factories (if any) exist, managers work, middle managers and upper management exist to make a clear assessment.

  10. Re:Leeching on MAVEN Spies Mars' Atmosphere Leaching Out Into Space · · Score: 1

    Do other planets, such as mercury, pluto and neptune, leach atmosphere or is mars the only planet in our solar system that does this?

  11. Re:expletive deleted on Millions of Voiceprints Quietly Being Harvested · · Score: 1

    Yep, all they have to do is install microphones at all public places (along with cameras) and they can now track everyone's position, along with what they are talking.

  12. Re:That's not the reason you're being ignored. on Flight Attendants Want Stricter Gadget Rules Reinstated · · Score: 1

    They are trying to defend their mostly useless jobs.

    Eliminating these jobs just promotes lawlessness in the skies. Who is supposed to handle it if someone faces a problem, or there is a fight/argument between two passengers?

  13. Hell, I bet you could live quite a comfortable life on the talk show circuit afterwards anyway. Who the hell needs billions upon billions?

    Only a total moron would sacrifice billions for a few million.

  14. If I invented the single most money-making device in over a century, exceeding even personal computers, I wouldn't open source the specs even if I had an established patent.

    This invention would make electric cars extremely useful. Eventually people are going to take a peek at it (maintenance and technicians). And if it isn't patented, someone could reverse engineer, manufacture and sell it without paying him anything.

  15. Re:Steve Jobs' products changed the world? on The Cult of Elon Musk Shines With Steve Jobs' Aura · · Score: 1

    There was nothing about the device itself that was really new, nothing that it could do which you couldn't do as well or better on another phone,

    Have you actually tried using a cellphone prior to the iphone? 5 to 7 tiny buttons are all you get to control the device. These multi-button controls are a lot slower than the iphone and require memorization and they are vastly limited in their capabilities and features.

    The iphone changed all that... vast number of functions available at a tap of your finger. Most of all, its screen was 3 times larger than a dumbphone. It was a game changer. Google cancelled their Android phone (which at that time looked like a blackberry phone) after seeing the iphone launch, and then copied the iphone.

  16. Re:Nothing on The Cult of Elon Musk Shines With Steve Jobs' Aura · · Score: 2

    They're both innovators, with the blood testing inventor doing more work. Whereas Musk recognized a good idea and spent millions backing and managing the production of such cars.

    You do realize manufacturing cars requires a ton of capital. All inventions are kinda obvious once you seen them in action and know about their internals.

  17. Re:A Harder Read than Advertised on AnandTech's Intro To Semiconductor Tech · · Score: 1

    But it is self-explanatory: semi means partial (compared to copper/other metals that fully conduct electricity and insulators don't conduct any), and conductor means well, conductor of electricity. Semiconductors can either be conductors or insulators depending on many factors.

  18. Re: Oracle on Google Takes the Fight With Oracle To the Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    if you *must* use the API to do that, then the API's copyright is not enforceable against those using it to achieve that functional purpose.

    Does Android *have* to use Java APIs to accomplish its tasks? No. They can (and should) design their own APIs, something different from the standard Java API.

    If you want to own every way to do achieve a particular functional result, you need a patent.

    I assume you're writing about utility patents. Those are given only to unique, not-seen-before type inventions. There is nothing that remarkably inventive about a String, Hashtable or Set class that deserves a patent.

    I think APIs deserve a new type of protection, somewhere between copyright and a design patent. Something like this would express exactly what parts of the API can be copied and what parts cannot.

  19. Re:"illegal downloading" on FBI Says It Will Hire No One Who Lies About Illegal Downloading · · Score: 1

    Are you living in the stone ages or the agrarian age? No! All important work done today is intellectual; machines do all the grunt work. So all these people doing intellectual work need to get paid... hence it's illegal downloading.

  20. Re:It is stealing on FBI Says It Will Hire No One Who Lies About Illegal Downloading · · Score: 1

    You're right, when you download a file, the original copy disappears in a cloud of smoke. You've deprived its owner of his copy. That is theft.

    You are leeching off people who do pay for the product (an illegal freemium model). So the manufacturer either bears the cost (i.e. takes a hit) or he increases the product price to meet a sales target (in which case you've stolen from legit buyers).

    Or worse, if you would never have bought a copy in the first place, then you've stolen the profit the media company would never have made. That is theft.

    If you benefit from a commercial product/service that you don't pay for, that is theft. Most packaged products in your grocery/mall store would be worthless if they didn't have huge amount of IP to design and manufacture the product. So what you're paying for is essentially the IP involved in creating these products. If IP is worthless, you should be able to legally shoplift these products by just paying the cost of materials and $0 for any IP costs.

    It's important to pay for all copies so that media companies can keep getting rich and not pay the artists because the media companies hold all the rights and make all the money. That is theft.

    Why don't people like you buy books/music directly from the authors/musicians' websites and cut out the middlemen (publishers, bookstores)? Anyway, the days of authors/musicians getting only 10-12% are long gone. They can easily make 50-70% by selling their stuff online (via itunes of amazon store).

  21. Re: Oracle on Google Takes the Fight With Oracle To the Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    You can't copyright words (like "tree" or "exclamation") of the English language. You also cannot copyright short phrases (because there's a good chance someone else will come up with it without copying from you). However, anything longer that took some creativity to create is certainly copyrightable.

    If you imagine a single method like getID() to be similar to a word (or a short phrase) of the English language, it can't be copyrighted. But when you have hundreds or even thousands of such API declarations that are closely related to each other, some would argue they are similar to a book or a short story and therefore copyrightable.

  22. Re: Oracle on Google Takes the Fight With Oracle To the Supreme Court · · Score: 0

    That was a case of Lexmark trying to copyright the handshake protocol to keep third parties from producing compatible printer cartridges.

    Are you stating google apps can't call Linux system APIs except through Java APIs? Java is not a system API... it's a middle layer between the apps and the system.

  23. Re: Oracle on Google Takes the Fight With Oracle To the Supreme Court · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Since it's copyrighted, but not patented (or patentable), you could redesign Linux or *BSD APIs that are similar in principle and operation as the POSIX APIs, but not a complete copy.

    Just because it affects your pet project does not make it legal.

  24. Re: Oracle on Google Takes the Fight With Oracle To the Supreme Court · · Score: 0

    The purpose of copyright is to protect creativity, not work. The "sweat of the brow" doctrine has been rejected [wikipedia.org] by the US Supreme Court. The creativity should be what lies behind the API, not the API itself.

    LOLOL, API design creativity is second only to language design creativity. If it was so trivial "sweat of the brow" type issue, why didn't google completely design their own API instead of simply lifting it?

    Implementing API can be "sweat of the brow" type work, but designing non-trivial API is difficult without creativity.

    The API itself allows for NO creativity, since even the slightest deviation causes it to fail. Therefore APIs should not be copyrightable.

    When MS cloned Java as C#, they tweaked the language grammar and keywords, and completely redesigned the API (although it was still inspired by Java API). Why didn't google redesign their API like MS? Your "slightest deviation causes it to fail" argument is bullshit.

  25. Re:17 USC 102(b) on Google Takes the Fight With Oracle To the Supreme Court · · Score: -1, Troll

    Do these restrictions apply to APIs?

    * idea - (Abstract) Patents deal with ideas, concrete API code does not.

    * procedure, process - The body of code implementing the API is the procedure/process and these are copyrightable.

    * system, method of operation - This is again more related to patents and implementing APIs rather than APIs themselves.

    concept - No one is trying to protect the concept embodied in the API, just the code.

    * principle, or discovery - Aren't books/articles relating to scientific principles (textbooks) and discoveries copyrighted?