The problem with local storage is that you're responsible for securing your local device. That makes you much more susceptible to a direct, targeted attack. It also makes you beholden to the security of the various systems you use.
Correct usage of Keepass will likely give you a more secure password database than Lastpass's vault. The non-standardization and decentralization of that method will make you less susceptible to mass database leaks. Even if you use Dropbox (which has some serious security concerns itself) and that service were compromised the attacker would have a hard time getting all of Keepass vaults out. So, that argument holds.
Where it fails is if you are targeted, and even worse if you are not an advanced user. In a hand-spun system like this you are the one who has to monitor for intrusions, and you are the one who has to design the security and maintain it. If you store your password database in Dropbox I believe the exploit of stealing a machine authentication token will still allow an attacker to gain access to your files, which may allow them to begin cracking your password without your knowledge. Once they've gotten a copy of your encrypted file it does not matter if you change your password because it won't change their copy. This becomes a real problem if you're not an advanced user whose setup strong encryption on your database or if you've used a weak password, let alone the issues with a standard user using and maintaining such a system.
Targeted attacks are scary. One can assume that if a victim is targeted it is because the attacker knows there is value in the additional work. If we assume that the effort to decrypt a Lastpass vault is not significantly less than any other strongly encrypted container then we can infer that a compromise of Lastpass (or 1Password, or other such services) would be comparably expensive because each vault has an unknown value. Long story short, I'm far more concerned with a targeted attack than I am a database leak in this case. I'd rather have a service focused on security monitoring for intrusions, even if that doesn't excuse me from maintaining a reasonable level of security on my own devices.
This wouldn't terribly shock me, but it also wouldn't concern me much if it were to happen. While the data in a Lastpass vault is quite desirable, it's also much more securely stored than your average data set. Even if someone managed to get a dump of their entire data set they'd have to decrypt each vault individually. If you follow their recommendations then your vault is likely not easy to crack.
Most of all, I wouldn't be concerned because as Lastpass has shown in the past they take communications seriously. When they noticed strange traffic they immediately told their users to change their vault passwords. This is different than waiting for a whistle blower to come forward and then announcing the breach, or even waiting until an investigation proves there was no breach. That previous incident may have shook the faith of some, but the way the company handled it increased my faith in them.
Should a major breach happen I would simply change my vault password and then begin changing the passwords I have stored in the vault. Since Lastpass would alert me early on that the breach happened, by the time my vault was cracked - if at all - the passwords within would be useless.
I don't get this attitude that the lawyers are the only winners. Sure, they're the big financial winners here. This was never a case about lost funds, though. It was a case in which the students sought both relief from invasive practices and a punitive sum to discourage further similar actions. They won on both counts, and since no school district wants to shell out over half a mil because they spied on their students it should be a win for the privacy of teens everywhere.
You're assuming that AT&T commissioned the survey and the report and not Apple. If Apple commissioned the report and the Yankee Group are shills as alleged then that quote is perfectly acceptable.
I would say that if anyone commissioned a report like this it would be Apple, not AT&T. Why? The first hint is that the report this is based on is called "Why iPhones Matter." Next is that AT&T now has Android phones, so why would they try to defame phones in their lineup? More hints show up in the article. Even more in the public summary of the report, which focuses largely on how much more consumer driven the iPhone platform is. Here's that summary:
However, even if neither Apple nor AT&T commissioned the report or the survey, the information about how the Yankee Group conducts their surveys is telling about the quality of the data. Surveys are fickle things and how you collect the data is very important. Since we don't have access to the data (unless someone wants to fork over the money to buy it) we can't know for sure. The sampling could have failed to be sufficiently random. The questions could have been skewed such that respondents would give more favorable responses to the iPhone, or less favorable responses to Android devices. Seeing the dramatic gap in customer satisfaction, even as Android phones gain popularity (I base this claim on the increasing sales volume), made me question this survey. Realizing that this is the group that had Laura DiDio spreading FUD about Linux doubles my doubts about the legitimacy of those numbers.
This bill is definitely for trolling. Though, I figured it was to try to make the proposed soda tax (which does have a chance to pass) look bad. After all, if we start taxing sugary drinks the next logical step is outright bans on basic spices? Right? Not so much.
Very good point. The industry definitely wants sites to do their policing for them. Though, I think that is just the first part of the attack. Think of what we saw with p2p suits. First they demand filtering, then they claim the filtering isn't doing enough, then they shutter the service. I don't see them trying this sort of strategy against Google, since they would have the resources to fight against it. I do see that becoming an issue against other services, leaving them at the mercy of the Copyright industry.
They will need to prove the damages to the court in order for this suit to have any bite to it. I trust that slashdotters are savvy enough to realize that the Copyright industry has yet to give up on the idea of using lawsuits to "send a message." This isn't about a single judgment, it's about a broader attempt to leverage the legal system to maintain the status quo. The evidence of that is in the fact that the suit does not limit itself to that video alone. They are trying to obtain a judgment that would significantly increase the liability of any such site.
I think that Vimeo is a target because their content is of higher quality than many of its peers. It's also far more likely to be unique and not to infringe. Yet, the suit seems to imply that the intent of the video was to encourage the kind of infringement that doesn't seem to happen at that site. The quality of the content is in large part because it is unique and largely non-infringing. At least, that has been my experience with that site's content.
Vimeo reaps what they sew and they should have had someone on their staff that was smart enough to know that it would be trouble to make such a video without obtaining permission first. It's clear that the one video is infringing, but the amount of damages they are liable for is largely dependent on whether Capitol can successfully prove that this video encouraged further infringement. I disagree with your take on the DMCA, it provides the only protection for Vimeo here and Capitol is trying to use other areas of Copyright law to circumvent that protection. Capitol has its work cut out for it there.
No, I think you read too much into my opinion. I believe that it's a closed case from a legal standpoint. The court shouldn't take much interest in an opinion like mine.
Much of what I wrote is not about the case or what I think the outcome should be, but rather my belief of why Capitol is bothering with such a case. I don't know that the law should be changed to protect Vimeo. I do think there's value in trying to understand the motives of Capitol.
It's important because it will continue. If you or I generate unique amateur content and we lean even the slightest bit too heavily on a copyrighted work then the industry has stated they will go after us. That's the message they're sending in this suit.
I don't find the lawsuit itself particularly interesting. From the sound of it, I believe Capitol will win on at least one count of copyright infringement. The video itself obviously infringes, though I don't see how it does any damage to Capitol's property. Still, their hook is compelling from a legal point of view. Check out this excerpt from NewTeeVee:
The difference, according to Capitol, is that not only has Vimeo not tried very hard to protect copyright owners, but it actively encourages infringement. Capitol alleges that Vimeo’s use of copyrighted material is “not an accident,” claiming that the web site contains “a massive amount of content that features, and draws most (if not all) of its appeal from, the use of copyrighted works.” As a result, according to the complaint, Vimeo is not only aware of copyright infringement happening on its system, but “actively promotes and induces that infringement.”
What's interesting about this is that Vimeo's appeal is the high quality of its unique, user generated content. Just like in the video, the compelling element is not the song but they way in which their employees are lip syncing. I would go so far as to say that it's more interesting than the original video, though I haven't seen that in a decade. Vimeo is one of the user generated content sites that is relatively free from blatant copying. Perhaps copyrighted works are used as background music for these videos, but they are rarely, if ever, the central focus.
That's why Vimeo is being sued. Not because their site is rife with copyright infringement. Not because their site encourages infringement over unique content. Specifically because the community at their site has flourished into one that consistently puts out unique user generated content of high quality. Vimeo is like YouTube with the noise turned down. This scares the pants off the content industry.
As the trend towards Internet Television strengthens the monopolies of the content industry weaken. Quality user generated content is a direct competitor to professionally generated content. The content industry has a long history of using the legal system to ensure that they squash the competition. That's what they're doing here.
I feel bad for Vimeo. They made an innocent video to show what a fun-loving bunch of wacky kids they are at their little Web 2.0 start up. They probably thought that like other various mashups and non-malicious infringements that their video would either fly under the radar or become a success such that the content owner would appreciate the attention drawn to their work and see the positive aspects of it. What they didn't realize is that they've become the nemesis of big business. Big business does not treat its adversaries well.
Get a display with the highest pixel density you can find then run it at a resolution that is lower than native, but still at the proper aspect ratio.
What I've seen from this with my coworkers is that they often are horrible at selecting an alternative resolution. If your monitor's aspect ratio is 16:10 then it will likely look like crap if you choose a 16:9 resolution and worse if you select 4:3, yet I see people do that. 1366x768 is junk and you'll be hard pressed to find a good monitor that will show that aspect ratio well.
I've found that a monitor with a native resolution of 1680x1050 is passable when running at 1440x900. Someone who doesn't have great eyesight to begin with probably won't notice any problems with the image on that setup. Likewise, I'd imagine that a monitor made to run 1920x1080 could probably run this or 1680x1050. I wouldn't use those resolutions, but I also don't want to rip my eyes out if I sit down at a computer setup like that for a few minutes.
You could be right, those reviews could come from hundreds of excited children. More likely, I would guess that fans of all ages have submitted reviews for the movie after only reading the books. It's common that excited fans will rate movies highly before they see them, and this is hardly the first instance. I don't think there is any long term damage done, either.
The reviewer cited -- the one that only read the books -- is easy to deal with anyway. Flag the review as "This is not a review." It isn't actually a review of the movie, so it should be removed. After a few people have flagged the review it will go away.
What better way to spend election night than to watch with elation as the Fox people have to call state after state for Obama? Grab a beer and tune in to Fox. Maybe every now and then tune in to another organization to see if they've already called states for Obama that Fox is waiting to call because they just can't stand it.
Yes. You may immediately think "Google" and be able to type in the appropriate search, but not everyone is so astute. That's why we have/., and putting it on the front page does better to ensure that everyone who might think to ask will see it.
There's also something to be said for the potential for variety of information you'll get here versus Google. Maybe not so much for the quality...
I agree, that's the primary difference. I think his assertion that GPL advocates only care about code and not projects is a fallacy.
He sets up this straw man where GPL-ers worship code so much that they won't go in and change each others' code. Is this really a problem? I always noticed a lot of good coding flowing backwards on GPL projects, how could the two scenarios coexist?
Anyway, in talking a lot about how GPL advocates care so much about the code he cites an example of how an entire project would be consumed by another project. So, does that mean that if a project is used in another project it's no longer a project? Instead it's reduced to meaningless code that only GPL advocates care about?
Probably not, but I doubt it gets the 18.2 mpg it would take to get worse gas mileage per passenger than the 747-400.
Then again, for all I know the fuel consumption of the 747-400 was measured while the plane was empty aside from the flight crew. If so, I would imagine that it would not get the same ~91 mpg per passenger with the added weight of a full crew, 419 passengers, and all of their luggage and amenities.
That figure is assuming a full plane of 416 passengers. If you assume a full Prius, 5 passengers, then the 45 mpg highway [2008 EPA estimated mileage] for the vehicle becomes 225 mpg per passenger.
I agree with gp that the scrolling isn't as efficient as alternative methods.
With the old method of handling tabs (resizing them to oblivion) I could typically keep track of what page was open and where. Often the custom site icons would help with this.
My alternative of choice would be to simply add a new row of tabs. That way they are all still visible and you can easily switch from one to the other. This would solve most of the usability problems with either of the other two methods.
Another suggestion I could make is to have variable sizing in the tabs. This would allow a website with a short title tag to have a smaller tab, saving space. A minimum and maximum size could be put into effect so that each tab is easily clickable without letting one or two tabs dominate the others.
I don't know how well this could be implemented, but you could group tabs as later Windows versions allow you to do with buttons in the taskbar.
Of course, you could also offer easy to find options about how tabs are handled. I think that's the biggest gripe that gp had. You should be able to like the scrolling while others should be able to dislike it. Choice is a good thing.
The word is right, but its use here is pretentious at best. Why say trebled when tripled is the same length and more effectively conveys your meaning? I think it's because the average Joe knows what tripled is but many will either have to look up trebled or assume it a mistake. The submitter wanted to feel superior, intelligent, and verbose. Instead I think they just come off as trying to hard and conveying too little.
I would assume that a user that set their account up this way would understand what they're doing. Otherwise they would miss a lot of mail of this sort. As such I wouldn't even take these users into account, they're not the problem.
To clarify, it's not that these users don't matter. It's that if a user only allows whitelisted addresses through and doesn't whitelist your address/domain then you won't get through. That's not a problem with Hotmail, it's a problem with users only allowing whitelisted addresses/domains. You can't change it, so you shouldn't concern yourself with that problem when you're trying to address problems that affect those who don't do this.
Actually, you'll find that there's a certain spin in the summary that was posted. The article is actually trying to cast doubt on the rumor. The spin is that the article is purely about doubt of success. It's true that the article focuses on this, but there are not-so-subtle clues in the article as to its real intent.
from the article:
Sony, which is refusing to comment on the story, does have a patent on technology which would tie a piece of software to an individual piece of hardware. But technology and desire are not the only parts of the puzzle. Whether the company would be prepared to take on retail, consumer goodwill and, most likely, the U.S courts, is another matter.
...
Another senior manager at a third party publisher said, "I know that Sony is very upset about the used games market. But this story seems a bit far-fetched."
"Yes, if I actually want to see a particular movie I will go to the theater because I get to see it sooner, and before anyone can spoil it for me around the water cooler."
"The time between theater and DVD release doesn't really harm the theaters."
I think you contradicted yourself. Will you really still go see a movie in the theater if it's simultaneously released to DVD?
Then again, I agree with everyone who says that theaters need to just make their quality of service better and people would be more interested in going. I like the idea of theaters becoming a niche market where you're paying more for the experience than you are for the movie. Things like combining theaters with restaurants and the return of the high class theater are ideas that appeal to me.
The problem with local storage is that you're responsible for securing your local device. That makes you much more susceptible to a direct, targeted attack. It also makes you beholden to the security of the various systems you use.
Correct usage of Keepass will likely give you a more secure password database than Lastpass's vault. The non-standardization and decentralization of that method will make you less susceptible to mass database leaks. Even if you use Dropbox (which has some serious security concerns itself) and that service were compromised the attacker would have a hard time getting all of Keepass vaults out. So, that argument holds.
Where it fails is if you are targeted, and even worse if you are not an advanced user. In a hand-spun system like this you are the one who has to monitor for intrusions, and you are the one who has to design the security and maintain it. If you store your password database in Dropbox I believe the exploit of stealing a machine authentication token will still allow an attacker to gain access to your files, which may allow them to begin cracking your password without your knowledge. Once they've gotten a copy of your encrypted file it does not matter if you change your password because it won't change their copy. This becomes a real problem if you're not an advanced user whose setup strong encryption on your database or if you've used a weak password, let alone the issues with a standard user using and maintaining such a system.
Targeted attacks are scary. One can assume that if a victim is targeted it is because the attacker knows there is value in the additional work. If we assume that the effort to decrypt a Lastpass vault is not significantly less than any other strongly encrypted container then we can infer that a compromise of Lastpass (or 1Password, or other such services) would be comparably expensive because each vault has an unknown value. Long story short, I'm far more concerned with a targeted attack than I am a database leak in this case. I'd rather have a service focused on security monitoring for intrusions, even if that doesn't excuse me from maintaining a reasonable level of security on my own devices.
This wouldn't terribly shock me, but it also wouldn't concern me much if it were to happen. While the data in a Lastpass vault is quite desirable, it's also much more securely stored than your average data set. Even if someone managed to get a dump of their entire data set they'd have to decrypt each vault individually. If you follow their recommendations then your vault is likely not easy to crack.
Most of all, I wouldn't be concerned because as Lastpass has shown in the past they take communications seriously. When they noticed strange traffic they immediately told their users to change their vault passwords. This is different than waiting for a whistle blower to come forward and then announcing the breach, or even waiting until an investigation proves there was no breach. That previous incident may have shook the faith of some, but the way the company handled it increased my faith in them.
Should a major breach happen I would simply change my vault password and then begin changing the passwords I have stored in the vault. Since Lastpass would alert me early on that the breach happened, by the time my vault was cracked - if at all - the passwords within would be useless.
I think a key difference is that my.mp3.com required that you prove ownership of the CD, but they did not use your file for streaming.
Also important is the ruling allowing for remote storage of DVR content in the CNN v CSC Holdings case. So there's precedent both ways here.
I don't get this attitude that the lawyers are the only winners. Sure, they're the big financial winners here. This was never a case about lost funds, though. It was a case in which the students sought both relief from invasive practices and a punitive sum to discourage further similar actions. They won on both counts, and since no school district wants to shell out over half a mil because they spied on their students it should be a win for the privacy of teens everywhere.
You're assuming that AT&T commissioned the survey and the report and not Apple. If Apple commissioned the report and the Yankee Group are shills as alleged then that quote is perfectly acceptable.
I would say that if anyone commissioned a report like this it would be Apple, not AT&T. Why? The first hint is that the report this is based on is called "Why iPhones Matter." Next is that AT&T now has Android phones, so why would they try to defame phones in their lineup? More hints show up in the article. Even more in the public summary of the report, which focuses largely on how much more consumer driven the iPhone platform is. Here's that summary:
http://www.yankeegroup.com/ResearchDocument.do?id=53903
However, even if neither Apple nor AT&T commissioned the report or the survey, the information about how the Yankee Group conducts their surveys is telling about the quality of the data. Surveys are fickle things and how you collect the data is very important. Since we don't have access to the data (unless someone wants to fork over the money to buy it) we can't know for sure. The sampling could have failed to be sufficiently random. The questions could have been skewed such that respondents would give more favorable responses to the iPhone, or less favorable responses to Android devices. Seeing the dramatic gap in customer satisfaction, even as Android phones gain popularity (I base this claim on the increasing sales volume), made me question this survey. Realizing that this is the group that had Laura DiDio spreading FUD about Linux doubles my doubts about the legitimacy of those numbers.
This bill is definitely for trolling. Though, I figured it was to try to make the proposed soda tax (which does have a chance to pass) look bad. After all, if we start taxing sugary drinks the next logical step is outright bans on basic spices? Right? Not so much.
Very good point. The industry definitely wants sites to do their policing for them. Though, I think that is just the first part of the attack. Think of what we saw with p2p suits. First they demand filtering, then they claim the filtering isn't doing enough, then they shutter the service. I don't see them trying this sort of strategy against Google, since they would have the resources to fight against it. I do see that becoming an issue against other services, leaving them at the mercy of the Copyright industry.
They will need to prove the damages to the court in order for this suit to have any bite to it. I trust that slashdotters are savvy enough to realize that the Copyright industry has yet to give up on the idea of using lawsuits to "send a message." This isn't about a single judgment, it's about a broader attempt to leverage the legal system to maintain the status quo. The evidence of that is in the fact that the suit does not limit itself to that video alone. They are trying to obtain a judgment that would significantly increase the liability of any such site.
I think that Vimeo is a target because their content is of higher quality than many of its peers. It's also far more likely to be unique and not to infringe. Yet, the suit seems to imply that the intent of the video was to encourage the kind of infringement that doesn't seem to happen at that site. The quality of the content is in large part because it is unique and largely non-infringing. At least, that has been my experience with that site's content.
Vimeo reaps what they sew and they should have had someone on their staff that was smart enough to know that it would be trouble to make such a video without obtaining permission first. It's clear that the one video is infringing, but the amount of damages they are liable for is largely dependent on whether Capitol can successfully prove that this video encouraged further infringement. I disagree with your take on the DMCA, it provides the only protection for Vimeo here and Capitol is trying to use other areas of Copyright law to circumvent that protection. Capitol has its work cut out for it there.
No, I think you read too much into my opinion. I believe that it's a closed case from a legal standpoint. The court shouldn't take much interest in an opinion like mine.
Much of what I wrote is not about the case or what I think the outcome should be, but rather my belief of why Capitol is bothering with such a case. I don't know that the law should be changed to protect Vimeo. I do think there's value in trying to understand the motives of Capitol.
It's important because it will continue. If you or I generate unique amateur content and we lean even the slightest bit too heavily on a copyrighted work then the industry has stated they will go after us. That's the message they're sending in this suit.
I don't find the lawsuit itself particularly interesting. From the sound of it, I believe Capitol will win on at least one count of copyright infringement. The video itself obviously infringes, though I don't see how it does any damage to Capitol's property. Still, their hook is compelling from a legal point of view. Check out this excerpt from NewTeeVee:
What's interesting about this is that Vimeo's appeal is the high quality of its unique, user generated content. Just like in the video, the compelling element is not the song but they way in which their employees are lip syncing. I would go so far as to say that it's more interesting than the original video, though I haven't seen that in a decade. Vimeo is one of the user generated content sites that is relatively free from blatant copying. Perhaps copyrighted works are used as background music for these videos, but they are rarely, if ever, the central focus.
That's why Vimeo is being sued. Not because their site is rife with copyright infringement. Not because their site encourages infringement over unique content. Specifically because the community at their site has flourished into one that consistently puts out unique user generated content of high quality. Vimeo is like YouTube with the noise turned down. This scares the pants off the content industry.
As the trend towards Internet Television strengthens the monopolies of the content industry weaken. Quality user generated content is a direct competitor to professionally generated content. The content industry has a long history of using the legal system to ensure that they squash the competition. That's what they're doing here.
I feel bad for Vimeo. They made an innocent video to show what a fun-loving bunch of wacky kids they are at their little Web 2.0 start up. They probably thought that like other various mashups and non-malicious infringements that their video would either fly under the radar or become a success such that the content owner would appreciate the attention drawn to their work and see the positive aspects of it. What they didn't realize is that they've become the nemesis of big business. Big business does not treat its adversaries well.
Get a display with the highest pixel density you can find then run it at a resolution that is lower than native, but still at the proper aspect ratio.
What I've seen from this with my coworkers is that they often are horrible at selecting an alternative resolution. If your monitor's aspect ratio is 16:10 then it will likely look like crap if you choose a 16:9 resolution and worse if you select 4:3, yet I see people do that. 1366x768 is junk and you'll be hard pressed to find a good monitor that will show that aspect ratio well.
I've found that a monitor with a native resolution of 1680x1050 is passable when running at 1440x900. Someone who doesn't have great eyesight to begin with probably won't notice any problems with the image on that setup. Likewise, I'd imagine that a monitor made to run 1920x1080 could probably run this or 1680x1050. I wouldn't use those resolutions, but I also don't want to rip my eyes out if I sit down at a computer setup like that for a few minutes.
You could be right, those reviews could come from hundreds of excited children. More likely, I would guess that fans of all ages have submitted reviews for the movie after only reading the books. It's common that excited fans will rate movies highly before they see them, and this is hardly the first instance. I don't think there is any long term damage done, either.
The reviewer cited -- the one that only read the books -- is easy to deal with anyway. Flag the review as "This is not a review." It isn't actually a review of the movie, so it should be removed. After a few people have flagged the review it will go away.
What better way to spend election night than to watch with elation as the Fox people have to call state after state for Obama? Grab a beer and tune in to Fox. Maybe every now and then tune in to another organization to see if they've already called states for Obama that Fox is waiting to call because they just can't stand it.
Yes. You may immediately think "Google" and be able to type in the appropriate search, but not everyone is so astute. That's why we have /., and putting it on the front page does better to ensure that everyone who might think to ask will see it.
There's also something to be said for the potential for variety of information you'll get here versus Google. Maybe not so much for the quality...
I agree, that's the primary difference. I think his assertion that GPL advocates only care about code and not projects is a fallacy. He sets up this straw man where GPL-ers worship code so much that they won't go in and change each others' code. Is this really a problem? I always noticed a lot of good coding flowing backwards on GPL projects, how could the two scenarios coexist? Anyway, in talking a lot about how GPL advocates care so much about the code he cites an example of how an entire project would be consumed by another project. So, does that mean that if a project is used in another project it's no longer a project? Instead it's reduced to meaningless code that only GPL advocates care about?
Right, but the summary was written in English and refers to a legal proceeding. Since when did classicist mean "one who ignores context?"
Probably not, but I doubt it gets the 18.2 mpg it would take to get worse gas mileage per passenger than the 747-400.
Then again, for all I know the fuel consumption of the 747-400 was measured while the plane was empty aside from the flight crew. If so, I would imagine that it would not get the same ~91 mpg per passenger with the added weight of a full crew, 419 passengers, and all of their luggage and amenities.
That figure is assuming a full plane of 416 passengers. If you assume a full Prius, 5 passengers, then the 45 mpg highway [2008 EPA estimated mileage] for the vehicle becomes 225 mpg per passenger.
I agree with gp that the scrolling isn't as efficient as alternative methods.
With the old method of handling tabs (resizing them to oblivion) I could typically keep track of what page was open and where. Often the custom site icons would help with this.
My alternative of choice would be to simply add a new row of tabs. That way they are all still visible and you can easily switch from one to the other. This would solve most of the usability problems with either of the other two methods.
Another suggestion I could make is to have variable sizing in the tabs. This would allow a website with a short title tag to have a smaller tab, saving space. A minimum and maximum size could be put into effect so that each tab is easily clickable without letting one or two tabs dominate the others.
I don't know how well this could be implemented, but you could group tabs as later Windows versions allow you to do with buttons in the taskbar.
Of course, you could also offer easy to find options about how tabs are handled. I think that's the biggest gripe that gp had. You should be able to like the scrolling while others should be able to dislike it. Choice is a good thing.
The word is right, but its use here is pretentious at best. Why say trebled when tripled is the same length and more effectively conveys your meaning? I think it's because the average Joe knows what tripled is but many will either have to look up trebled or assume it a mistake. The submitter wanted to feel superior, intelligent, and verbose. Instead I think they just come off as trying to hard and conveying too little.
I would assume that a user that set their account up this way would understand what they're doing. Otherwise they would miss a lot of mail of this sort. As such I wouldn't even take these users into account, they're not the problem.
To clarify, it's not that these users don't matter. It's that if a user only allows whitelisted addresses through and doesn't whitelist your address/domain then you won't get through. That's not a problem with Hotmail, it's a problem with users only allowing whitelisted addresses/domains. You can't change it, so you shouldn't concern yourself with that problem when you're trying to address problems that affect those who don't do this.
from the article:
"The time between theater and DVD release doesn't really harm the theaters."
I think you contradicted yourself. Will you really still go see a movie in the theater if it's simultaneously released to DVD?
Then again, I agree with everyone who says that theaters need to just make their quality of service better and people would be more interested in going. I like the idea of theaters becoming a niche market where you're paying more for the experience than you are for the movie. Things like combining theaters with restaurants and the return of the high class theater are ideas that appeal to me.
wtf? What am I smoking?
125,000 * 60 = 7,500,000