I think it better to think about internet longevity in terms of 'half life': a certain amount of the information recorded will decay over a certain amount of time. Few people will ever completely disappear. But that doesn't mean that people beyond a certain point will be easy to find.
If only I could switch back to the classic inbox view...of two revisions ago, when I liked the service.
http://lavabit.com/ is looking more and more interesting.
Personally I split the difference; there are some web oriented IDEs that give you features like autocomplete, debugging options, and integrate with your software repository. At the moment I'm using Jetbrain's Webstorm, but there are plenty of options out there that aren't WYSIWYG editors.
This. Again, since that was me and I didn't realize I wasn't logged in.
Considering this same group harassed members of a pro-porn Facebook group, and then got their group deleted (despite it not violating the ToS) and then gloated about it, my only problem with this story is that the group got restored, honestly.
http://violetblue.posterous.com/my-letter-to-facebook-about-removing-the-our
As if a trip to the electronics store wasn't frustrating enough. Once they start making clamshell packaging out of this, no one will ever be able to get anything open.
"We ran a story about this in December, and I haven't seen a flood of hacked readers anywhere so I doubt that tablet makers have anything to worry about."
Slashdot readers are much more likely to either already have a tablet, already dismissed the need for one, or already hacked the one they have. I'm not saying that NPR is going to cause B&N to run out of stock, but they did just expose the idea to a new segment of people, who might just be interested enough to try. It also represents the idea of rooting a device starting to drift out of nerd circles, which is interesting and probably a good thing.
RTFA:
"Joule began to generate buzz toward the end of 2010. When U.S. Senator John Kerry toured the company’s labs in October, he called the technology “a potential game-changer.” He noted, ironically, that the company’s science is so advanced that it can’t qualify for federal grants or subsidies: The government’s definition of biofuels requires the use of raw-material feedstock."
I'm not saying that they're totally on the level, and that this will all work as advertised. But they're not tapping into the ethanol subsidies currently, apparently.
The trick is, you can't judge the success of this strategy on the sales of Settlers 7. Sure, there might be an uptick in sales for this game, because they can't pirate it, but what happens when users frustrated by this don't buy Settlers 8? Will people blame that on DRM?
According to the link you posted to Charlie's diary, the book's still haven't been restored. Was this done overnight, or did you fall for Amazon's statement that they were going to restore the books?
The Premier/Diebold machines were "conditionally certified," and the Secretary of State's office is going to provide a list of things they have to do to be recertified. That list is supposed to be available on the department's website, but it wasn't there when I last checked this afternoon.
Those machines were the only ones to receive this rating--everything else mentioned in the report, including Boulder's optical scan machines that they've been using for years, were decertified with no path to reinstatement outside of the courts.
This isn't about securing elections. This is about getting the whole state, particularly the metro counties where electronic counting was used, on Diebold machines.
The only open source solution I'm familiar with is JMeter. I haven't worked with it much, but in the few projects I've used it, it's been helpful. I't part of the Jakarta project. You can find it at http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/index.html
>>What i want to know is if anyone here has EVER seen actual 640x480 (720x480 if using a DV camera) 30fps cleanly being done?
640x480, using standard codecs (Polycom and Tandberg, various models) point to point or multipoint using bridging hardware, over a private network, yeah. I used to support it for a living, and still work for the company. Codecs over public internet or computer to computer over any network, no. The compression needs are just too high. Though I've not seen any computer based codecs using top of the line 64 bit hardware yet.
I think it better to think about internet longevity in terms of 'half life': a certain amount of the information recorded will decay over a certain amount of time. Few people will ever completely disappear. But that doesn't mean that people beyond a certain point will be easy to find.
If only I could switch back to the classic inbox view...of two revisions ago, when I liked the service. http://lavabit.com/ is looking more and more interesting.
Personally I split the difference; there are some web oriented IDEs that give you features like autocomplete, debugging options, and integrate with your software repository. At the moment I'm using Jetbrain's Webstorm, but there are plenty of options out there that aren't WYSIWYG editors.
This. Again, since that was me and I didn't realize I wasn't logged in.
Considering this same group harassed members of a pro-porn Facebook group, and then got their group deleted (despite it not violating the ToS) and then gloated about it, my only problem with this story is that the group got restored, honestly. http://violetblue.posterous.com/my-letter-to-facebook-about-removing-the-our
As if a trip to the electronics store wasn't frustrating enough. Once they start making clamshell packaging out of this, no one will ever be able to get anything open.
"We ran a story about this in December, and I haven't seen a flood of hacked readers anywhere so I doubt that tablet makers have anything to worry about." Slashdot readers are much more likely to either already have a tablet, already dismissed the need for one, or already hacked the one they have. I'm not saying that NPR is going to cause B&N to run out of stock, but they did just expose the idea to a new segment of people, who might just be interested enough to try. It also represents the idea of rooting a device starting to drift out of nerd circles, which is interesting and probably a good thing.
RTFA: "Joule began to generate buzz toward the end of 2010. When U.S. Senator John Kerry toured the company’s labs in October, he called the technology “a potential game-changer.” He noted, ironically, that the company’s science is so advanced that it can’t qualify for federal grants or subsidies: The government’s definition of biofuels requires the use of raw-material feedstock." I'm not saying that they're totally on the level, and that this will all work as advertised. But they're not tapping into the ethanol subsidies currently, apparently.
The trick is, you can't judge the success of this strategy on the sales of Settlers 7. Sure, there might be an uptick in sales for this game, because they can't pirate it, but what happens when users frustrated by this don't buy Settlers 8? Will people blame that on DRM?
Is there a way to do this for RSS feeds as well?
According to the link you posted to Charlie's diary, the book's still haven't been restored. Was this done overnight, or did you fall for Amazon's statement that they were going to restore the books?
The Premier/Diebold machines were "conditionally certified," and the Secretary of State's office is going to provide a list of things they have to do to be recertified. That list is supposed to be available on the department's website, but it wasn't there when I last checked this afternoon.
See http://www.denver.rockymountainnews.com/documents/2007/2007-12/20071217/20071217premier.pdf, which is a copy of the letter to Premier from the SoS.M
Those machines were the only ones to receive this rating--everything else mentioned in the report, including Boulder's optical scan machines that they've been using for years, were decertified with no path to reinstatement outside of the courts.
This isn't about securing elections. This is about getting the whole state, particularly the metro counties where electronic counting was used, on Diebold machines.
The last prompt in the flow is "Press nine to opt out, or hang up now and no changes will be made."
Tricksy little bastards. Just another reason to change providers, on top of their spectrum lawsuit and the NARAL text message mess.
Remember this? http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/07/01/14 47232&tid=158&tid=17
I had been thinking about setting up a Skype In number too. Guess I'll go for Gizmo instead.
The only open source solution I'm familiar with is JMeter. I haven't worked with it much, but in the few projects I've used it, it's been helpful. I't part of the Jakarta project. You can find it at http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/index.html
>>What i want to know is if anyone here has EVER seen actual 640x480 (720x480 if using a DV camera) 30fps cleanly being done?
640x480, using standard codecs (Polycom and Tandberg, various models) point to point or multipoint using bridging hardware, over a private network, yeah. I used to support it for a living, and still work for the company. Codecs over public internet or computer to computer over any network, no. The compression needs are just too high. Though I've not seen any computer based codecs using top of the line 64 bit hardware yet.