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User: horza

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  1. Re:I'd take this with a pinch of salt on TorrentFreak Blocked By British ISP Sky's Porn Filter · · Score: 1

    Well it has some facts quite easy to check. For instance is Childline really being blocked? The Cameron-filter was touted as stopping children "accidentally" coming across images of hardcore pornography. In which case why are "Web blocking circumvention tools" censored? There is too much of a discrepency between what Mr Cameron described to us why it was needed and what it actually does. Either Mr Cameron lied or the ISPs have radically over-reached in the level of national censorship. Some investigative journalism should dig it out, though the only paper brave enough to print the truth these days is the Guardian and you would consider than a well known left wing newspaper.

    Phillip.

  2. Re:corruption on Nokia Takeover In Jeopardy Due To Alleged $3.4B Tax Bill In India · · Score: 1

    All that would be needed to complete the coup would be for India to announce Elop had been secretly lined up to be India's Minister for Communication at some exhorbitant salary a year ago, and the long game of establishing TNC (Tata Nokia Communications) has finally fallen into place.

    Phillip.

  3. Re:should != is. Mathematical machines ARE patenta on Microsoft Makes an Astonishing $2 Billion Per Year From Android Patent Royalties · · Score: 1

    "No sane system" is your opinion and that's fine. "Only in the US" is a mistatement of fact. That's not true.

    It's not just my opinion, but that of most of the world. And even then that of many within the USA. The only exceptions I think are Japan and South Korea (well that's what Wikipedia tells me).

    The law is that new machines can be patented and it doesn't matter if the multiplication operation is done by a lever, a gear, on an X86 instruction.

    There is a difference. A lever says apply force at this vector and this physical object will produce X result. An X86 instruction, which is just an abstraction of machine code, simply toggles 0 and 1s and is completely generic.

    Don't think about it as "changing the law", think about it as harmonising it with the rest of the world. As for the consequences (or traps), you can see that Europe has actually benefited rather than suffered since the inception of software so you don't need to worry that much.

    Phillip.

  4. Re:common misconception. basic laws not patentable on Microsoft Makes an Astonishing $2 Billion Per Year From Android Patent Royalties · · Score: 1

    "Most games are 95% art, 5% math, and 100% software."

    You know it should add up to 100%? The game is generally a user taking the part of a character in a story. The storyline cannot be protected, but the diaglogue can be copyrighted. The art is also copyrighted so nobody else can copy the characters you created. The math cannot be protected, but your actual bytecode implementation of that math can be copyrighted.

    No patents are necessary for software, and haven't been since software was invented.

    "Gravity isn't patentable. An elevator is."
    "Momentum isn't patentable. A brake system is."

    As long you have a novel mechanical effect that nobody has ever thought of. However, the important bit is the "including mathematics"

    "Division isn't patentable. eBay's feedback system is."

    No sane system would allow such a patent. Only in the US.

    "Light reflection isn't patentable. The way Blender simulates reflection is, if it's novel."

    Again it breaks down into two parts: the mathematical algorithms used and the software written to implement those algorithms. Neither should be patentable. The latter is copyrighted and protected under the GPL.

    Phillip.

  5. Re:Why not just build on VP9? on Cisco Releases Open Source "Binary Module" For H.264 In WebRTC · · Score: 3, Informative

    Why isn't this comment already rated -5 Troll? Pathetic even for a troll, 1 second Google search shows it is BSD licensed.

    Phillip.

  6. Re:Welcome to the rest of the world on Battlefield 4 DRM Locking Out Part of North America Until EU Release · · Score: 1

    So true. Whilst companies put in draconian DRM there will always be superior pirate versions out there, and the risk to the companies is that otherwise legitimate users then 'forget' to then buy a copy to put straight into the bottom of their cupboard. Remember those games where you had to have the original CD in to play it? A real pain. Or the one that tied a game to a specific CPU, meaning if you put in a faster processor you had to buy a new copy of the game? Or the one where you needed to be connected to the Internet to play offline games, meaning you can't play on your laptop on those long boring travels. 9/10 the pirate version is better.

    This is where Steam got it right. It's easier to buy the game officially than it is to pirate it. Click click, play. If I change computer then one click on my games library and it's installed again. It took a while to earn people's trust but now they have it I hope they continue.

    Phillip.

  7. Re:Welcome to the rest of the world on Battlefield 4 DRM Locking Out Part of North America Until EU Release · · Score: 1

    Exactly. 14 years, as envisaged by everybody that put in place the framework for copyright, is perfect. I don't think Origin would have a problem having exclusivity on Battlefield 4 for the next 14 years. Valve might still be selling the original Counterstrike 1.6 in a box set but it hardly sustains their company any more.

    The perversion of copyright law is quite tragic, and definitely detrimental to our society.

    Phillip.

  8. Re:Freedom isn't free on Ubuntu's Mark Shuttleworth Wins Austria's Big Brother Award · · Score: 1

    Unity is getting slow. I get crash errors ever 10 mins, no idea what is crashing but it doesn't affect my usage apart from having to keep closing those error boxes. I would LOVE to get involved and try the latest Ubuntu but I really don't want to install spyware on my machine.

    Remember all those Ubuntu apologists before? "Why worry about it, it's as simple as apt-get remove somewierdname". Next version is suddenly more integrated and you can no longer simply apt-get remove the package. Gullible fools.

    However KDE looks awful. It is so unpolished. And there are loads of UI bugs that make it unpleasant to use. The final straw for me was double-clicking on a movie residing on my NAS, and KDE deciding to spend 5 mins copying the whole thing to /tmp before attempting to play it.

    So far XFCE is shaping up to be the next popular desktop. I've moved several people to it and they love it. It feels a little basic for me but then what is the alternative?

    The best things that could happen:
    a) Canonical back-tracks and decides not to screw over its user base
    b) KDE has a massive sprint to fix UI, and forgets trying to aim for QT 8.0 which works on smart watches
    c) developers shift from Unity to XFCE and it starts to take over
    d) a new contender emerges

    So far (d) looks the more likely, despite so much time and effort already sunk into and currently wasted in (a) and (b).

    Phillip.

  9. Re:$400 billion / year is "essentially zero"? on How To Lose $172,222 a Second For 45 Minutes · · Score: 1

    Er we were not fine. I'm not sure who you know that went through the post WW2 years in Britain but according to my grandparents it was pretty austere. A large chunk of debt was to the USA / Canada, and we only finally paid your WW2 loan off in 2006. If you don't mind your future generations being under the yoke of debt until 2075 or so then go ahead...

    Phillip.

  10. Re:Economics 101 on The Ridiculous Tech Fees You're Still Paying · · Score: 1

    People staying at luxury hotels often aren't paying. If you are on a company card you don't care about phone/internet prices, and you don't bother looking at the prices on the restaurant menu. On business trips people can run up $10,000 a month on a mobile phone bill and not blink because it's the "company that pays". A company like Apple has to launder all that tax it's avoiding, so why not burn off some in 'expenses' for top executives? Luxury hotels, yacht and jet charters, etc are great black holes to throw money at whilst having an awesome time.

    Phillip.

  11. Re:The enigma on Frameworks 5: KDE Libraries Reworked Into Portable Qt Modules · · Score: 1

    I totally agree. With the Unity spyware I will be moving away from Ubuntu, so I was trying different distros. I tried not long ago the latest KDE and the word "clunky" is so apt. It looks unpolished. There were lots of annoying quirks and bugs (I didn't make a list). It's not very nice to use. I really don't understand it. I suffered through the KDE 4.0 mess, and it rapidly improved from there into something approaching nice with 4.2... then just stagnated on the usability front. Such a waste considering the effort that has gone into the back-end.

    I am moving friends and family away from Microsoft Windows and Ubuntu onto Xubuntu at the moment. Most of them are on laptops and they are impressed with the increase in speed. It does feel a little basic, but a new convert told me yesterday "it doesn't feel like I am booting a laptop, it seems like I am turning on my telly with a remote control. It loads so fast!".

    I would like one of 3 things to happen:

    a) KDE have a massive push on the usability front
    b) Unity make the spyware opt-in rather than opt-out (though it's probably too late for many people)
    c) momentum grows behind xfce4

    Or maybe somebody will create a new desktop based on the QT libraries?

    Phillip.

  12. Re:About as well as any other UK privitisation on UK Gov't Outlines Plans To Privatize Royal Mail · · Score: 1

    British Leyland is no longer costing the government a fortune. British Airways has gone from a loss-making airline to one that provides considerable employment. BP is doing well, as is Rolls-Royce. BT has done ok, though giving exclusive area franchises for cable providers hampered competition and this lack of competitiveness has left them still too powerful.

    Phillip.

  13. Re:Linus an example of ... on Linus Responds To RdRand Petition With Scorn · · Score: 1

    Does no damage what so ever. Making a joke is hardly being an abusive asshole. I don't think anybody talented would want to work with a sensitive flower such as yourself, but that's besides the point. It was about a 3rd party making an attack on the Linux kernel, which he refuted. If the guy isn't "ignorant" then he can prove it. Otherwise take it on the chin and admit you might be wrong. It's not like he was being rude to his colleagues.

    Phillip.

  14. Re:After 3 iPhones, I switched to Windows Phone 8 on Microsoft Drops Price on Nokia's 41-Megapixel Phone · · Score: 2

    I'm not an idealogue, I just buy a lot of phones. Yes I buy Android on lower spec'd hardware like that, either for holiday where I don't want a $900 phone stolen or for presents. It's slow but incredibly cheap, very good value. I gave my old S2 to my girlfriend and the battery didn't last a day. I bought a cheap battery off eBay, put a custom rom on, and now it lasts for 3 days no problem. Android isn't a flash media centre on those specs, like my Note 2, but it's perfectly usable.

    Not only does Microsoft produce poor software, slow, bloated and locked down, but the Microsoft tax directly affects the prices of the device. You are trying to argue why wouldn't you buy a WinPhone, but the argument is more why would you?

    Phillip.
    PS yes I accidentally wrote 0.5MB instead of 0.5GB. Apologies.

  15. Re:After 3 iPhones, I switched to Windows Phone 8 on Microsoft Drops Price on Nokia's 41-Megapixel Phone · · Score: 3, Informative

    Microsoft Windows 8 has mimimum requirements of 4GB of flash, 1GB of RAM, and a dual-core processor. The latest Android requires 340MB of RAM and 0.5MB of flash. Windows Phone is bloated, buggy, and an awful UI that cannot be changed (unlike Android where you can put any launcher, or indeed custom rom, instead).

    People are not buying Microsoft Windows phones. The reason is that both the hardware and the software is inferior.

    Phillip.

  16. Re:It's not the camera. It's Windows on Microsoft Drops Price on Nokia's 41-Megapixel Phone · · Score: 0

    The Nokia 41Mpx with Symbian costs $480, with Windows 8 it costs $910.

    You are paying the usual $200 per handset for your Windows 8 license. Where does the extra $230 go?

    Phillip.

  17. Re:After 3 iPhones, I switched to Windows Phone 8 on Microsoft Drops Price on Nokia's 41-Megapixel Phone · · Score: 0

    Well obviously Win8 is better than iPhone. Apple is riding off 6 year old design and tech. Even Symbian makes for a more usable phone that either of those two though. Win8 is bloated, unattractive, and has no apps.

    At the moment the only two serious contenders are Blackberry, with their superior QNX underneath, and Android with its wide range of handsets and weight of apps. At the moment, anybody would be mad not to buy an Android handset for personal use.

    Phillip.

  18. Re:Suddenly, the money is in hardware. on Official: Microsoft To Acquire Nokia Devices and Services Business · · Score: 4, Informative

    Microsoft crushed its competition via illegal and immoral tactics by controlling the underlying operating system. Throwing up fake error messages when running rival products to make them seem unstable, using hidden APIs to give their own products an unnassailable advantage, even pretending IE was built into the OS to ensure it came pre-bundled onto every computer. The one I didn't like was when a new company announced a great new product, Microsoft would fake having the same product coming out shortly after. Everybody would wait for the "official" Microsoft version, the new company would go bankrupt, and Microsoft would buy them for pennies and release their software.

    On an even playing field Microsoft has never done so well. On phones and tablets their propensity to launch slow and buggy products has come back to bite them. The Xbox did ok but they took an awful hit to get it where it is today. The best product they ever made was their mouse, so I guess they can do hardware :-)

    Phillip.

  19. 1st place is Samsungs to lose on Samsung Offered StackOverflow Users $500 For "Organic" Publicity · · Score: 1

    As far as I'm concerned, the Samsung Galaxy S and Note series blow the competition out of the water for value for money. They are currently well ahead of the pack. The risk/reward of a stunt like this simply isn't worth it. If they want to attract people to their platform, unlock their phones and spend that money on giving out prizes for xda developers for adding cute new features to custom roms.

    Phillip.

  20. Re:Apropos lowest retail cost on Study Finds 3D Printers Pay For Themselves In Under a Year · · Score: 1

    Eyeglasses are a great idea! My friend has 2 kids that break the frames all the time, she would pay for the 3d printer just with replacing those.

    The key hanger is also a great one, I just spent a couple of hundred bucks getting kitchen and bathroom stuff: wall-mount spice racks, toilet roll holder, coat hooks, key hangers, soap dish, soap dispensor, ice-cube trays, fruit bowl, vase... each is only $15 or so but once you've bought 20-30 items it adds up a lot.

    My girlfriend would definitely be printing a new back for Galaxy S2 every month. She's already ordered a couple, which are around $30 each once she finds the design she likes and adds p&p.

    I would believe the printer could pay for itself, if I could be sure of a good free database of objects.

    Phillip.

  21. Re:I guess Snowden saved Manning's life then. on Bradley Manning Convicted of Espionage, Acquitted of 'Aiding the Enemy' · · Score: 1

    Two politically motivated crimes. The first the leak of intelligence in an apparent bid to prevent Middle Easterns getting killed. The second the massacre of 77 people, mostly children, in a bid to sway people against allowing Middle Eastern people to settle in Europe. The latter got a sentence of 21 years. Let's see what Mr Manning gets. On the one had he betrayed the confidence of his employers and his country. On the other the extraordinary level of torture the US inflicted on him, the kind of behaviour no civilised society should allow. It would be fair 20-30 years, but 5-10 years taking into account time served.

    Phillip.

  22. Re:Don't worry Nokia on Nokia: Microsoft Must Evolve To Make Windows Phone a Success · · Score: 1

    It's what everybody predicted when Elop jettisoned everything that was unique about Nokia and turned them into a corpse trying to flog a dead OS. Their patents flogged to trolls, Maemo and even the low-end Symbian in the bin, QT offloaded, they have zero intellectual capital left. The number of MP in the camera is not going to make me buy their phone. The share value has been trashed, the good engineers jumped ship, and now it's just a question of how many pennies on the dollar Microsoft can pick Nokia up for. The great thing for Microsoft is that with the exclusive agreement Nokia is now worthless. They will probably buy them up for $1 on the grounds of paying all the severance packages and debts. Love my last Nokia phone, but it was sadly the last.

    Phillip.

  23. Re:Successful? on Eben Upton Muses on the Raspberry Pi, Scratch and, His Love For Parallela · · Score: 2

    No wonder you are posting that drivel as anon. Those USB sticks are terribly under-powered, I have a $99 one lying in a drawer as it couldn't handle playing back non-H264 video. There is no way they can handle the kind of uses I hear the Pi is being used for. Even high bit-rate video make the thing blisteringly hot to the touch.

    And Android is poor for a general purpose educational device. You can't drop straight into C, Python, etc. You can get some hacks but they are no substitute. As an educational tool, Android is a very bad joke.

    The Pi is a great device at a great price, but please keep Android the hell away from it.

    Phillip.

  24. Re:How about alt roots instead? on Citing Snowden Leaks, Russia Again Demands UN Takeover of Internet · · Score: 1

    Interesting points apart from the fact they are *all* wrong. Nobody freaked out about a headscarf, have you ever seen a niqab? And yes you do ban the yamaka if banning all overt religious symbols from school. Large catholic crosses are also banned. Finally, the low rating of the President has nothing to do with gay marriage. Around half the country is against gay marriage, a large number of them not practicing Catholic. It has zero effect on the President though, it's not the USA, the fact is he has reneged on all his promises and dropped the economy into the crapper. The guy is the most disasterous President in a century.

    Your previous post about the French in Africa are correct though, and guilt in North Africa has led to their present massive immigration problems. Most cities are now majority muslim, Catholics a minority. The US hardly believes in not torturing people though. Look at what they did to Manning, and what they plan to do to Assange and Snowdon. I'd rather live in France than the USA.

    Phillip.

  25. Re:Political Correctness has no place in Kernel De on Kernel Dev Tells Linus Torvalds To Stop Using Abusive Language · · Score: 2

    If I walked into an interview, and saw someone being publicly berated for a stupid technical mistake, then I would be much more likely to consider that position. As I am good at what I do, I don't want to have to carry dead weight on my team. Of course there is a difference between a techie berating somebody for performing way below their potential, and a management type humiliating somebody for their own ego trip. The latter would not be acceptable. Linus definitely falls into the former though. If he thought I had to up my game, then I would take it on the chin and do it.

    Phillip.