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User: yelvington

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  1. Ridonculous on Netflix Comes To Linux Web Browsers Via 'Pipelight' · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At some point you just spend $130 and buy an Android tablet at wally world. Or a $50 Roku.

  2. Re:Mod down original article on The Steady Decline of Unix · · Score: 1

    Whoever even bothered to write the article in the first place needs to lose his license to write tech journalism.

    If you start applying standards to tech journalism there won't be any left.

  3. Wrong question on Windows: Not Doomed Yet · · Score: 1

    The right question is: How do we erase this scourge forever, including all of the compromised bot-infested Windows machines around the world?

  4. Re:amazon on Ask Slashdot: Linux Friendly Video Streaming? · · Score: 2

    Amazon's streaming service is flaky with linux. The issue is DRM which for some reson is not supported in the linux version of the flash player.

    Amazon video works fine under Ubuntu. Use Firefox, not Chrome.
    From the FAQ

    Why can't I watch videos on my Chrome browser in Linux?
    The Flash Player Plugin in Chrome removed support for Digital Rights Management (DRM) in Linux as part of the upgrade from 11.3 to 11.4. This upgrade was bundled with the latest Chrome 22 update for Linux. If you applied the Chrome update, you are no longer able to watch DRM-protected content, such as movies and TV episodes. Trailers are unaffected as they do not use DRM. To get around this issue, you can use a different browser, such as Firefox. For information on Chrome and the Flash Player plug-in, see: https://support.google.com/chrome/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=108086.

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?ie=UTF8&nodeId=3757

  5. To be clear... on Wikimedia Foundation Launches Wikivoyage · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wikivoyage is largely a fork of Wikitravel, which has been around for years, but is under the control of a private business.

  6. Re:inaccurate slashdot summary; not a new result on Students Calculate What Hyperspace Travel Would Actually Look Like · · Score: 1

    (2) if it exists, it violates causality;

    That would seem to be a problem, but maybe it contains its own solution.

  7. Re:Why do we need a desktop client? on Ask Slashdot: Current State of Linux Email Clients? · · Score: 5, Informative

    I want my mail and calendar wherever I am. So why keep multiple copies of gigabytes of mail on multiple machines.

    Somebody should invent IMAP.

  8. Not so shocking as it seems on New Jersey Residents Displaced By Storm Can Vote By Email · · Score: 3, Informative

    Absentee voting already works this way pretty much everywhere in the United States:

    First, you have to already be registered, so the notion that nonexistent people are suddenly able to vote is nonsense.

    Second, you must file a request to get the absentee ballot. In most states you do not have to show any form of ID to do so, but your name is checked against the registration records before any ballot is provided.

    Third, you fill out the ballot form, sign it, and mail it in. Note that the signature means your ballot is not really "secret."

    Fourth, the forms are checked against the registration rolls again when they are counted, and signatures also may be checked (usually a sampling are spot-checked). In many places, absentee votes are counted AFTER the live votes and they may even be skipped if the number of absentee votes would not change the outcome of the election. If a voter has voted at his or her precinct, and an absentee ballot from the "same" voter shows up, that's an obvious case of fraud and the ballot is set aside.

    There is no reason to imagine that email makes this any less secure than the snail mail system.

  9. Re:Valid price comparison? on ARM-Based Chromebooks Ready To Battle Windows 8, Tablets · · Score: 1

    How does this compete with netbooks, such as an Acer Aspire with Windows 7 Home Edition for under $238?

    I just checked Acer's website and the range of list prices for Aspire models is $349.99 through $1,299.99.

    This is absolutely right. $249 LIST is a breakthrough price, even though some people are too thick to see that. Occasionally you'll find an 11.6 Acer on clearance or special in that price range (and if you do, BUY IT and install Linux), but over $300 is more typical.

    The 11.6 size is a sweet spot. I have an Acer 1410 and my wife has an AO725, both running Ubuntu. It's rare that either of us does anything that couldn't be done with the Chromebook -- except for moving photos from an SD card to a hard drive. I know it's simple to plug either into a Chromebook. What I don't know is whether the ChromeOS UI plays nicely with external storage.

  10. Re:Can you still run the Amazon applications? on Adventures In Rooting: Running Jelly Bean On Last Year's Kindle Fire · · Score: 2

    No. You probably can install a Kindle reader app, but you can't watch Amazon video on a rooted device.

    But as a Kindle Fire user and a veteran of much smartphone hacking ... I don't see the point in ANY of this. What are you actually gaining? What does "fully functional tablet" mean? If you don't like the Kindle launcher, install something else. I use http://golauncher.goforandroid.com/ on my KF.

  11. Re:Post bigotry here on US House Science Committee Member: Evolution Is a Lie From Hell · · Score: 1

    Standards are well accepted on the Internet...

    Tell me sir, what flavors of html and css your browser support? Which versions it supporys correctly? What addations to those standards ithas made for its own use?

    Forest. Trees.

  12. SoftLanding Systems on Ask Slashdot: What Distros Have You Used, In What Order? · · Score: 1

    SLS (SoftLanding Systems), the very first Linux distro, downloaded at 1200bps from Sunsite. Recompiled the kernel every week from alpha sources. Ran it on a '386, then upgraded to a fire-breakthing 33-mhz '486.

    Then RedHat on a Pentium.

    Then Mandrake when I couldn't get RedHat to run on a particular box.

    Then Ubuntu.

    Then Android. Does that count?

  13. Re:I don't get it on Ubuntu Gnome Remix 12.10 Arrives For Testing · · Score: 2

    I've been a Linux user for a few years now and while I've seen great strides made in desktop aesthetics and usability, I still can't with a pure conscious say that any of the DEs are as good as or better than what comes on Windows or OSX. Windows is without a doubt snappier and the taskbar has a lot of nifty and intuitive features.....

    I know YMMV, but my experience has been exactly the opposite. Every time I boot my wife's Acer laptop into Windows 7, I'm just appalled at how spongy the UI feels, how slow it is to load programs, and how truly awful the fonts look. I suppose I could get used to it if it was my only option, but I find nothing "intuitive" about anything in the system, and anything I remember from the XP era just gets me into trouble.

    As quickly as possible, I get back to the safety, security, performance and -- yes -- usability of Ubuntu.

    I'm not pleased by Unity, but I am able to restore and reconfigure Ubuntu to a proper working desktop that acts mostly like Gnome 2. I'll be keeping an eye on the Gnome Remix. It may become a future option.

  14. Re:XDA Developers on Google Unveils Nexus 7 Tablet, Nexus Q 'Social Streaming Device' · · Score: 1

    Oh, I can beat that. Sort of.

    I followed Tmobile's advice on Tmobile's website, followed the link to LG's website to upgrade the OS. The upgrade failed and locked the phone in "upgrade" mode. I managed to roll back and found myself having a phone with no baseband (software radio), so it's not a phone.

    And I can no longer flash anything. At all. So basically I have an Android equivalent of an iPod.

    Out of warranty. Insured, but I know what insurance means: "Give us another $130 and we'll find a reconditioned phone to ship to you."

    I bought a $30 crap phone from Amazon and said to hell with it.

  15. Amazon Silk on SPDY Not As Speedy As Hyped? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Amazon's Silk browser, used in the Kindle Fire, implements SPDY and a reverse proxy cache in the Amazon cloud that is supposedly capable of predictive retrieval and caching. While it occasionally is faster than HTTP, on the whole it doesn't seem to mesh well with my browsing habits and I've disabled the so-called "accelerated page loading" on my KF. Judging from comments in the Amazon forums, my experience is not unusual.

  16. Time for Maslow's Cluebat on Ask Slashdot: Tips For Designing a Modern Web Application? · · Score: 1

    ... For the general public, it will be a site where they can view upcoming events, filter them by type, date etc. and view details of events they're interested in. There will also be an admin section ...

    There is no earthly reason any of this requires writing code. This isn't 1999, people.

  17. Re:Editor AI on Could a Computer Write This Story? · · Score: 2

    No, I'm serious. there are somethings computers can do and some they can't. You can't tell a computer to watch news come in and output a newscast.

    Actually ... you can,sort of.

    Voice recognition -> extracting facts from text -> story generation. All three are currently functional processes (varying degrees of quality). Having C3PO observe an arbitrary event, "understand" by inferring meaning (mathematics, probability, context database) and generate a report is not nearly so far out of reach as we might imagine. It is currently out of reach because each step introduces error rates that would result in hilarious crap, so the short-term R&D focus tends to be on domains of information where data is already encoded (such as sports and business information).

    In the near term, I think the interesting opportunity is likely to be machine intelligence aiding humans in the process of reporting and analyzing. Some of this is already going on in lab situations; I've seen a system at Northwestern University "read" a brief political story and quickly connect the actors and actions with data about political contributions and connections.

    Since all of this is based on machine learning, the interaction with human journalists has the potential to make the AI smarter over time, sort of how Google Translate has mutated from hilarity to utility in just a few years.

  18. Re:XMPP PubSup on Firefox's Web Push Notification System Announced · · Score: 1

    Discussed in the documentation, but this is Slashdot, so nobody will read that.

  19. Re:WebSlices on Firefox's Web Push Notification System Announced · · Score: 1

    No. This is not HTTP server push. Has nothing to do with HTTP server push. Has nothing to do with Web Slices, either. This is more like dynamically assigned micro-mailboxes for message passing. Read the docs.

  20. Re:Mobile vs Desktop? on Feature Phones Make Java ME, Not Android, the #2 Mobile Internet OS · · Score: 2

    The graph is crap. Note the lack of any explanation of methodology -- or even a clear explanation what's actually being measured.

    Actual measured usage of the Web by mobile devices (i.e., phones and not including tablets) puts Android collectively slightly ahead of the iPhone. Rim has fallen to about 4-5% and everybody else is not worth talking about. The reason Blackberry scores so low is that most Blackberry devices suck at Web browsing. They're still very good email tools and that's what they're used for in corporate settings.

    If you include tablets -- which typically are used in lieu of laptops or desktops -- then iOS takes about 60 percent and Android between 30 and 35 on the mainstream, non-geek sites that I measure.

    As for the heaviest users of smartphones -- it's not geeks, but rather teenage girls. They're spending most of their time in the Facebook app and not even showing up as Web users.

  21. Sorry, but this is bull on Feature Phones Make Java ME, Not Android, the #2 Mobile Internet OS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have access to a great deal of actual and current mobile usage data, and this is just completely at odds with reality. "Feature phone" owners in the United States typically do not have data plans and do not use the Internet.

    Actual measured usage of mobile Web services by "feature phones" is slightly above that of Windows Mobile, which is to say "irrelevant noise at the bottom of the chart" in the range of 1 to 2 percent.

    Grandpa's Jitterbug may in fact run J2ME, but Grandpa doesn't use it.

  22. It's working exactly as designed on Dell and Baidu Introduce a Smartphone With Forked Version of Android · · Score: 2

    From http://source.android.com/faqs.html#what-kind-of-open-source-project-is-android

    Why did we open the Android source code?

    Google started the Android project in response to our own experiences launching mobile apps. We wanted to make sure that there would always be an open platform available for carriers, OEMs, and developers to use to make their innovative ideas a reality. We also wanted to make sure that there was no central point of failure, so that no single industry player could restrict or control the innovations of any other. The single most important goal of the Android Open-Source Project (AOSP) is to make sure that the open-source Android software is implemented as widely and compatibly as possible, to everyone's benefit.

    "No central point of failure, so that no single industry player could could restrict or control the innovations of any other."

    Seems pretty clear.

  23. Don't trust reviews written by morons on Kindle Fire and Nook Upgrades Kill Root Access · · Score: 3, Informative

    I bought the NC because I could get it cheaper than the Kindle Fire and the reviews for the Fire said it was crap.

    You made a mistake relying on bad reviews written by morons. I've looked at a lot of them. They're mostly immature Apple fanbois trashing the competition and/or ignorant "tech journalists" who are cutting and pasting other peoples' reviews. 90% of what you see on tech blogs is pure plagiarism with a lame excuse link buried at the bottom.

    The truth is that the Kindle Fire is a really pleasant device, a great bargain, well-supported by Amazon (three OS updates so far) and with the 6.2.1 OS, quite snappy.

    I have a Fire, and my daughter has the Nook Color. In terms of performance, responsiveness and usability, the Kindle is head and shoulders above the Color (which is last year's model). A much faster dual-core CPU is the biggest reason, but the display is also much brighter. The Nook Tablet, which is about $50 more, is arguably better hardware, but it's more limited on the media and software side. Both support Netflix. The Fire has more apps and the Amazon music and video, which is important if you are a Prime member but maybe not all that big a deal otherwise. The Fire lacks SD card support and has no microphone like the Nook Tablet.

    For books, the Nook Android software is easily obtained and sideloaded on the Kindle Fire without rooting, so you have a choice. I'm not so sure that can be done the other way around.

    The Kindle Fire 6.2.1 upgrade wipes and reconfigures the Android /system partition. This is an easy way to do the upgrade, but if you rooted your Fire in order to install the Google app framework, you'll suddenly discover that calendar and contact sync has gone away. Most of the other Google software works without requiring rooting, and it's simple to pull a backup off your Android phone that can be installed on the Kindle Fire.

    The culprit here isn't Amazon, but rather Google, which is responsible for making its apps unavailable on the KF platform and for requiring that its application components be installed on the system partition. The only way to make the system partition writeable is to root the device.

    There are some parts of the Fire UI that needed some work; the carousel in particular was jerky and not always responsive. That's fixed in 6.2.1. I also see reports that the Kindle Fire doesn't like flaky, crappy wifi routers (and there are a LOT of crap routers out there). I don't know how much of that might be fixed in the upgrade. My routers all work fine.

  24. Re:World's simplest? on Kindle Touch Gets World's Simplest Jailbreak · · Score: 1

    GetJar.com. Not nearly as complete as Google Market but it does have some good stuff.

    I rooted my KF to install the Google services -- not sure why they need to go on the system partition, but there you go.

    Amazon really needs to either deal with Google, or provide proper support for calendar and contact sync.

  25. Re:Mixed feelings on Facebook Releases JIT PHP Compiler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's a step forward for us who rely on crammed share hosting providers, but I strongly believe that PHP has to be phased out in favor of more recent techologies that enforce a clearer (eg DRY, separation of content and logic etc) way of thinking.

    Programming languages don't create programming messes. People do.