Perhaps so, but do consider this : if you have say a hundred friends (a fair percentage of whom will be using android ) who have you in their contacts, ( not them in yours which ofcourse is under your control) , it would be trivial for Google to know your contact number with a high level of certainty
Yes and hence the ridiculous provisions in the TPP (as if a secret international treaty wasnt creepy enough)
For example,
"The TPP requires that signatories hold civilly liable any person who “circumvents without authority any effective technological measure that controls access to a protected work,”[115] or otherwise makes available devices or products or service that are intended to circumvent[116] or have only limited commercial purpose other than to circumvent[117] or are primarily designed to circumvent.[118] There is no requirement that the infringing party be aware of their infringement in order to be held civilly liable (no knowledge requirement). The TPP requires that signatories provide for criminal penalties for persons who engage in these activities and are found “to have engaged willfully and for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain.”[119]
This is obviously counter to the prevailing thought flow here, and I'm more than willing to admin that companies can exploit both H1B Visas AND the employees hired under it, but I've never seen/.ers discuss much about how it would affect overall competitiveness of American companies if they could not hire cheap labour from developing countries and bring them in. Some points I see, qualitatively are:
1) Companies in developing world will have a huge cost advantage in IT, and the more significant IT costs are to an industry/company the more significant this advantage/disadvantage will become.
2) Knowledge is generally free of country barriers, and I think most people here would want it that way, which means it is foreseeable that IT products & companies can develop in developing countries at a much lower cost and export it cheaper compared to the same product made say in developed countries. H1B to some extend mitigates this risk in developed countries, and also pulls out the better talent from the developing countries inhibiting , also to some extend, actual product/mature IT product companies growth in these companies. I'm talking about something like having an MS or GGL in US with H1B talent being more competitive to a potential Indian MS or GGL - you dont really hear about (yet) an Indian company with a fully developed OS or IT Product as much as its industry size suggests.
I'm sure there are counter points that would likely mitigate against these risks, but I think these points could have a real , if not absolute impact to the industry as well, and in that sense, H1B might be doing good for the developed countries ( since we're talking about H1B, I suppose I should just come out and say the US..)
Woah.. lets not go on to full Singapore bashing mode.. the country (city-state) has achieved some incredible things.. not least of which is continued economic prosperity amidst the carnarge, as well as an incredibly safe, stable and clean living habitat for the populace. Ofcourse there are gripes, freedom of speech does not stand up to the western definition of it..but atleast they are pretty honest about it.
The city and its government has punched far above its weight. I think it would only be fair to analyse the state of affairs in that context.
"Contract manufacturers can generally produce computers more cheaply because their entire operations are narrowly focused on finding efficiencies in manufacturing, as opposed to large firms like Dell, which must also balance marketing and other considerations."
- So Are Marketing and Other (Design, Reliability, QC? ) considerations no longer important?
AFAIK, they've not given a reasonable justification to the multiple issues raised on their machines, so why are they still being used by the US Gov?
I'm just being naive, amn't I?
I can't help think that they've been pretty much forced to expand their services while they can.
Even now, if I were to buy a book, I'll just google it and find the amazon link from there. Thats advertisement expense that Amazon is losing right there - more importantly Amazon has stopped being my first resort for book searches though majority of my purchases might be still from there. Amazon would probably want to gain that "first site you go to" share. And if they stick arnd with just books, whereas google offers everything (including Amazon links - which obviously they cant afford to take out), they might start to lose a bit of relevence. And obviously google's plan to scan the worlds books is a very visible threat.
Revenue Battle:Content Provider vs Search Engines
on
A New Search for MySpace
·
· Score: 3, Interesting
This could be the begining of a trend where content providers start to demand more share of the monies to be made of the internet - obviously now only second-tier providers with aggregated content/large-scale hosting have the leverage but perhaps in the future....
I think it has more to do with the fact that since no politican can afford to be seen lobbied by a porn cartel, they have to come up with fairer solutions...
One of the reasons that I stopped going to ask.com was that I thought the site had too many ads! Ofcourse that was a long time ago, and yeah the competition massively improved...
Symantec seems to be pulling a lot of crap these days, that is charecteristic of a company struggling to stay relevant and by making up for the degradation of quality in its products by othe means (like the other big one) - writing threat exaggeration articles trying scare customers, bloated inefficient personal antivirus solutions, and now vulnerabilities!
Perhaps so, but do consider this : if you have say a hundred friends (a fair percentage of whom will be using android ) who have you in their contacts, ( not them in yours which ofcourse is under your control) , it would be trivial for Google to know your contact number with a high level of certainty
Yes and hence the ridiculous provisions in the TPP (as if a secret international treaty wasnt creepy enough)
For example,
"The TPP requires that signatories hold civilly liable any person who “circumvents without authority any effective technological measure that controls access to a protected work,”[115] or otherwise makes available devices or products or service that are intended to circumvent[116] or have only limited commercial purpose other than to circumvent[117] or are primarily designed to circumvent.[118] There is no requirement that the infringing party be aware of their infringement in order to be held civilly liable (no knowledge requirement). The TPP requires that signatories provide for criminal penalties for persons who engage in these activities and are found “to have engaged willfully and for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain.”[119]
From wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It's signed but not yet ratified. It's only 16 countries or so not the whole world.
Yet.
This is obviously counter to the prevailing thought flow here, and I'm more than willing to admin that companies can exploit both H1B Visas AND the employees hired under it, but I've never seen /.ers discuss much about how it would affect overall competitiveness of American companies if they could not hire cheap labour from developing countries and bring them in. Some points I see, qualitatively are:
1) Companies in developing world will have a huge cost advantage in IT, and the more significant IT costs are to an industry/company the more significant this advantage/disadvantage will become.
2) Knowledge is generally free of country barriers, and I think most people here would want it that way, which means it is foreseeable that IT products & companies can develop in developing countries at a much lower cost and export it cheaper compared to the same product made say in developed countries. H1B to some extend mitigates this risk in developed countries, and also pulls out the better talent from the developing countries inhibiting , also to some extend, actual product/mature IT product companies growth in these companies. I'm talking about something like having an MS or GGL in US with H1B talent being more competitive to a potential Indian MS or GGL - you dont really hear about (yet) an Indian company with a fully developed OS or IT Product as much as its industry size suggests.
I'm sure there are counter points that would likely mitigate against these risks, but I think these points could have a real , if not absolute impact to the industry as well, and in that sense, H1B might be doing good for the developed countries ( since we're talking about H1B, I suppose I should just come out and say the US..)
The link represented as a UN FAO article is by syngenta. Pesticide manufacturer. just saying..l
If there is a sentence the Canadian government is telling its citizens it would be " FUCK YOU !! "
For one, a it enables a fairly simple and quick Remote wipe: delete the encryption key and remote wipe is done in a second.
Woah.. lets not go on to full Singapore bashing mode .. the country (city-state) has achieved some incredible things.. not least of which is continued economic prosperity amidst the carnarge, as well as an incredibly safe, stable and clean living habitat for the populace. Ofcourse there are gripes, freedom of speech does not stand up to the western definition of it..but atleast they are pretty honest about it.
The city and its government has punched far above its weight. I think it would only be fair to analyse the state of affairs in that context.
One fifth of the US IT spending may buy a lot more in China.... both in labour and in material...
"Contract manufacturers can generally produce computers more cheaply because their entire operations are narrowly focused on finding efficiencies in manufacturing, as opposed to large firms like Dell, which must also balance marketing and other considerations." - So Are Marketing and Other (Design, Reliability, QC? ) considerations no longer important?
AFAIK, they've not given a reasonable justification to the multiple issues raised on their machines, so why are they still being used by the US Gov? I'm just being naive, amn't I?
hooray..lets have it...chairs all around..here you go..two for you...Redmond Cherry or Vista White?
I'd like to think of VMware in a different mould than MS, but i'd still hate to take this info in w/o some third party verification.
Gizmo project? http://www.gizmoproject.com/
I can't help think that they've been pretty much forced to expand their services while they can.
Even now, if I were to buy a book, I'll just google it and find the amazon link from there. Thats advertisement expense that Amazon is losing right there - more importantly Amazon has stopped being my first resort for book searches though majority of my purchases might be still from there. Amazon would probably want to gain that "first site you go to" share. And if they stick arnd with just books, whereas google offers everything (including Amazon links - which obviously they cant afford to take out), they might start to lose a bit of relevence. And obviously google's plan to scan the worlds books is a very visible threat.
This could be the begining of a trend where content providers start to demand more share of the monies to be made of the internet - obviously now only second-tier providers with aggregated content/large-scale hosting have the leverage but perhaps in the future....
Pretty rudimentary but it comes with windows....
I think it has more to do with the fact that since no politican can afford to be seen lobbied by a porn cartel, they have to come up with fairer solutions...
better get those UV filtered sunglasses out next time you're watching soccer..
One of the reasons that I stopped going to ask.com was that I thought the site had too many ads! Ofcourse that was a long time ago, and yeah the competition massively improved...
I agree. Can we have a poll between the two :).
then again I wonder how much effect the fact that the runner up didnt have the graphic ad had to do with it..
Greed.
Symantec seems to be pulling a lot of crap these days, that is charecteristic of a company struggling to stay relevant and by making up for the degradation of quality in its products by othe means (like the other big one) - writing threat exaggeration articles trying scare customers, bloated inefficient personal antivirus solutions, and now vulnerabilities!
Scarily enough, I can actualy imagine that scenario :-s
One would hope the course content would be available for the public to understand/critique.
http://www.nod32.com.sg/home/home.php