Even though I don't quite agree, you're definitely on the crux of the problem. I say they weren't actually creating interference, just talking idiotically on the channel as was their right on their own property. I'm sure they were staying within their regulated wattage allotment per individual station.
Marriott's behavior smacks of shadiness and price-gouging, but they ware well within their rights on their own private property. Doing this in a public space might be interfering with common services, but in this context Marriott was simply regulating congestion on their internal network. There's only so many channels of available spectrum, especially at 802.11b/2.4ghz. It's simplex communication; more than a few hosts talking at once will absolutely saturate the pipe. You can throw more access points on different channels at the problem but eventually crosstalk and back-off timers bring things to a halt.
Could the hotel/conference center have 86'd a disruptive patron with their own security and not the police? If so, it's a private space and internal network regulation at ISO Layer 2 and above is a private matter. If they're not interfering with somebody's communication on a Layer 1, laws-of-physics level, I consider it to be outside the FCC's purview. I doubt they were disrupting cell service, so usb-connected MiFis likely worked just fine.
I hate attaching civil rights and civil liberties to corporate persons, but the fact of the matter is that this decision, if upheld, could be misapplied to the use and management of WiFi in many other contexts.
Mod parent up. This is not trolling, this is Real Talk. Cruise some gun messageboards or conservative-leaning political forums if you don't believe me. So, mod parent up.
Note: it's not an exclusively racial phenomenon, it's also a good stand-in for hating and fearing the poor folks in general.
From the statement: "They tell us that if you send or receive an email from outside the US, it will be read. If it's encrypted, they keep it for five years, presumably in the hopes of tech advancing to be able to decrypt it against your will and without your knowledge. Groklaw has readers all over the world."
For me, HTC's strength was their continued devotion to physical QWERTY siding keyboards. I'm simply not going to be SSH-ing into a server with a touchscreen.
Two things have sunk this affection. First, HTC (like the rest of the industry) is moving away from physical keyboards. Second, the last QWERTY I got from them crapped out in a really disappointing way. I had a MyTouch 4G slide, also known as the HTC Doubleshot. Really nice phone, decent modding community. The thing is, it's got a design flaw. The flex cable between the front and back halves of the phone failed, causing a whole basket of things to go wrong. When I disassembled the unit, I could clearly see how the edge of a metal bracket was rubbing against the cable every time the phone was opened or closed.
If you've got a HTC Doubleshot, it's just a matter of time before it fails. I'm sure the design engineers recognized this problem but they likely had their fix overruled to save production cost or hustle the unit out the door. Worse, it could have been planned obsolescence, given that the problem manifested a month after the warranty expired.
Meanwhile, my HTC Dream is chugging along with new old-stock units available for $90, and HTC has walked away from the one thing they did better than the rest of the industry .
It seems to me an eInk display is a good idea here because of its performance under open sunlight.
The Nook is rootable, fits in a cargo pants pocket, and has incredible battery life.
There's waterproof cases to be had on eBay, but I prefer a pleather booklet cover. The Nook's front face seems pretty watertight and I use a drybag for watertight storage.
It's only barely useable for browsing, but it's a beast for ePubs and passable for PDFs.
Wouldn't it have been traditional for them to make the SDK available before the OS dropped, to make sure there was a base of current apps in place when devices started shipping?
I can only imagine the SDK was available to certain select developers for months, while the Nexus 7 was in testing and such-like.
I wish I had mod points today. The Linux From Scratch project is an excellent learning tool, for understanding Linux internals as well as Unixish thinking in general.
Well, at least we know how they're monetizing this admittedly slick database; they won't allow you to submit a removal request until you provide your facebook credentials. To even reach the text below, you need to unblock Facebook in NoScript: ______ Removal Request
What’s the matter? You’re brave enough to steal music, movies and programs but only because you thought you weren’t going to get caught? Well whoever told you that was completely wrong and now your information has gone public. Are you afraid of media companies finding out that you’re a pirate or are you afraid of your friends finding out exactly what you’ve been downloading? Whatever your reason may be, the internet is no place for secrets. Even if you use every precaution in the book, there’s always a chance that someone like us will figure out what you’ve been up to. Because, the reality is, if man made it...man will get around it...and man will figure out how to exploit it. It’s just human nature.
Anyway, like we said before, luck is on your side today because we’re actually nicer than we let on. I never said we wouldn’t bust your chops about it, but at least we’re offering you a chance to redeem yourself — The details can be found after logging in to your Facebook account.
It's a weak signal, but I seem to be doing okay. The big problem is that Channel 2 CBS is VHF (and staying VHF I believe) while most HD channels are on UHF spectrum. And you're right, they're very low power.
I've got a smeller UHF/VHF antenna in addition to my large UHF antenna, and they're both run into a UHF/VHF signal combiner. Then the signal goes through an inline amplifier and is connected to my 3 ATSC tuners via a splitter. I'd like to get a better VHF non-combo antenna, then I'm sure CBS would be no problem.
it's usually a balancing act for me between picking up CBS2 and WGN9.
I've been monkeying with OTA HD in Chicago for a couple of months now. I'm very close to downtown, meaning I get strong signals from the transmitters on the Sears Tower and the Hancock.
I'm absolutely delighted that I'm no longer paying $100 a month for cable from Comcast. I've got an RSS feed from TVTorrents that brings me The Daily Show, Colbert, and Mad Men That's really all I need, and in a pinch I'd consider purchasing them through iTunes. I mostly watch PBS and the subchannels are real nice.
The thing is, it's a dark art getting all the major channels coming in at once. And with HD, if there's signal problems, you don't just get some fuzz, you lose your connection entirely. If a connection is marginal, you get artifacting, stuttering, and audio drops, producing something that's just unwatchable. I suspect that lots of folks in the Wilmington test were getting by with marginal signals, and they're now SOL.
That said, Vista Media Center with TV Pack 2008 is a hell of a DVR setup.
You've got broadband in Jackson? Thank your lucky stars, man. When I moved out of southern ohio Jackson County didn't even have a practicing primary care physician. For all I know that's still the case.
I'd probably buy an NHL season pass via Xbox Live if if the content was HD and at least price-competitive with an NHL cable subscription.
Or, I'd be motivated to buy an AppleTV. I think most iTunes tv content isn't HD yet.
I'm not so sure about buying a Slingbox.... then again my nerdy coworker just showed me a Slingbox session streaming through his Treo phone and now i kind of want one.
HDHomerun devices are very mature at this point. Integration with the "Google Channels" API just got support for subtitles.
This device will likely support HDHomerun as a OTA tuner out of the box.
Hamstrung by my typo, here.
Even though I don't quite agree, you're definitely on the crux of the problem. I say they weren't actually creating interference, just talking idiotically on the channel as was their right on their own property. I'm sure they were staying within their regulated wattage allotment per individual station.
Marriott's behavior smacks of shadiness and price-gouging, but they ware well within their rights on their own private property. Doing this in a public space might be interfering with common services, but in this context Marriott was simply regulating congestion on their internal network. There's only so many channels of available spectrum, especially at 802.11b/2.4ghz. It's simplex communication; more than a few hosts talking at once will absolutely saturate the pipe. You can throw more access points on different channels at the problem but eventually crosstalk and back-off timers bring things to a halt.
Could the hotel/conference center have 86'd a disruptive patron with their own security and not the police? If so, it's a private space and internal network regulation at ISO Layer 2 and above is a private matter. If they're not interfering with somebody's communication on a Layer 1, laws-of-physics level, I consider it to be outside the FCC's purview. I doubt they were disrupting cell service, so usb-connected MiFis likely worked just fine.
I hate attaching civil rights and civil liberties to corporate persons, but the fact of the matter is that this decision, if upheld, could be misapplied to the use and management of WiFi in many other contexts.
that Tor is an insecure means of communication.
Dehumanizing Work Is Dehumanizing.
Mod parent up. This is not trolling, this is Real Talk. Cruise some gun messageboards or conservative-leaning political forums if you don't believe me. So, mod parent up.
Note: it's not an exclusively racial phenomenon, it's also a good stand-in for hating and fearing the poor folks in general.
And that's the story of how Bender's great-grandpappy was born.
From the statement:
"They tell us that if you send or receive an email from outside the US, it will be read. If it's encrypted, they keep it for five years, presumably in the hopes of tech advancing to be able to decrypt it against your will and without your knowledge. Groklaw has readers all over the world."
For me, HTC's strength was their continued devotion to physical QWERTY siding keyboards. I'm simply not going to be SSH-ing into a server with a touchscreen.
Two things have sunk this affection. First, HTC (like the rest of the industry) is moving away from physical keyboards. Second, the last QWERTY I got from them crapped out in a really disappointing way. I had a MyTouch 4G slide, also known as the HTC Doubleshot. Really nice phone, decent modding community. The thing is, it's got a design flaw. The flex cable between the front and back halves of the phone failed, causing a whole basket of things to go wrong. When I disassembled the unit, I could clearly see how the edge of a metal bracket was rubbing against the cable every time the phone was opened or closed.
If you've got a HTC Doubleshot, it's just a matter of time before it fails. I'm sure the design engineers recognized this problem but they likely had their fix overruled to save production cost or hustle the unit out the door. Worse, it could have been planned obsolescence, given that the problem manifested a month after the warranty expired.
Meanwhile, my HTC Dream is chugging along with new old-stock units available for $90, and HTC has walked away from the one thing they did better than the rest of the industry .
It seems to me an eInk display is a good idea here because of its performance under open sunlight.
The Nook is rootable, fits in a cargo pants pocket, and has incredible battery life.
There's waterproof cases to be had on eBay, but I prefer a pleather booklet cover. The Nook's front face seems pretty watertight and I use a drybag for watertight storage.
It's only barely useable for browsing, but it's a beast for ePubs and passable for PDFs.
Wouldn't it have been traditional for them to make the SDK available before the OS dropped, to make sure there was a base of current apps in place when devices started shipping?
I can only imagine the SDK was available to certain select developers for months, while the Nexus 7 was in testing and such-like.
Predator Drone Operator Mode: Unlocked!
I wish I had mod points today. The Linux From Scratch project is an excellent learning tool, for understanding Linux internals as well as Unixish thinking in general.
Can you point to documentation on CCF? I'm not seeing reference to it on the FreeBSD wiki.
Well, at least we know how they're monetizing this admittedly slick database; they won't allow you to submit a removal request until you provide your facebook credentials. To even reach the text below, you need to unblock Facebook in NoScript:
______
Removal Request
What’s the matter? You’re brave enough to steal music, movies and programs but only because you thought you weren’t going to get caught? Well whoever told you that was completely wrong and now your information has gone public. Are you afraid of media companies finding out that you’re a pirate or are you afraid of your friends finding out exactly what you’ve been downloading? Whatever your reason may be, the internet is no place for secrets. Even if you use every precaution in the book, there’s always a chance that someone like us will figure out what you’ve been up to. Because, the reality is, if man made it...man will get around it...and man will figure out how to exploit it. It’s just human nature.
Anyway, like we said before, luck is on your side today because we’re actually nicer than we let on. I never said we wouldn’t bust your chops about it, but at least we’re offering you a chance to redeem yourself — The details can be found after logging in to your Facebook account.
Unpaid interns are worse than scabs.
They are, however, great examples of the invisible hand in action during a down market.
Oranges were first domesticated in China and SE Asia.
Your cultural chauvinism is showing!
It's a weak signal, but I seem to be doing okay. The big problem is that Channel 2 CBS is VHF (and staying VHF I believe) while most HD channels are on UHF spectrum. And you're right, they're very low power.
I've got a smeller UHF/VHF antenna in addition to my large UHF antenna, and they're both run into a UHF/VHF signal combiner. Then the signal goes through an inline amplifier and is connected to my 3 ATSC tuners via a splitter. I'd like to get a better VHF non-combo antenna, then I'm sure CBS would be no problem.
it's usually a balancing act for me between picking up CBS2 and WGN9.
I've been monkeying with OTA HD in Chicago for a couple of months now. I'm very close to downtown, meaning I get strong signals from the transmitters on the Sears Tower and the Hancock.
I'm absolutely delighted that I'm no longer paying $100 a month for cable from Comcast. I've got an RSS feed from TVTorrents that brings me The Daily Show, Colbert, and Mad Men That's really all I need, and in a pinch I'd consider purchasing them through iTunes. I mostly watch PBS and the subchannels are real nice.
The thing is, it's a dark art getting all the major channels coming in at once. And with HD, if there's signal problems, you don't just get some fuzz, you lose your connection entirely. If a connection is marginal, you get artifacting, stuttering, and audio drops, producing something that's just unwatchable. I suspect that lots of folks in the Wilmington test were getting by with marginal signals, and they're now SOL.
That said, Vista Media Center with TV Pack 2008 is a hell of a DVR setup.
You've got broadband in Jackson? Thank your lucky stars, man. When I moved out of southern ohio Jackson County didn't even have a practicing primary care physician. For all I know that's still the case.
I'd probably buy an NHL season pass via Xbox Live if if the content was HD and at least price-competitive with an NHL cable subscription.
... then again my nerdy coworker just showed me a Slingbox session streaming through his Treo phone and now i kind of want one.
Or, I'd be motivated to buy an AppleTV. I think most iTunes tv content isn't HD yet.
I'm not so sure about buying a Slingbox.
Funny, Lockheed Martin seems to be in the news quite a lot of late.
This just gave me an excellent idea for a remake of "Turk 182"
That made money, right?
If this content was distruted as multicast streams rather than unicast traffic there would be much less load on the backbone.
Multicast streams wouldn't be completely on-demand, but there's ways around that.
-carl
There's a mistake here. World of Warcraft is actually predicted to be the next GORF
-carl