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  1. by definition this cannot last on Tesla Motors May Be Having an iPhone Moment · · Score: 1

    Not at that price at least.

    If people are buying them because they're novel and start talk then they simply will become more common until they aren't novel and don't start talk.

  2. There is space above and below the package there on Apple Updates MacBooks and Mac Pro Desktop With Haswell, "Unified Thermal Core" · · Score: 1

    There could be room for a 2nd package.

    But I didn't know about the E5 V2. Maybe you're right and Apple is using that. E5-V2 has 4 DDR3 memory channels, Apple would only have to put two DIMMs on a memory channel to have 8 DIMM slots. They have two DIMMs on a memory channel in the current MacPro.

    But I suppose it's more likely Apple is going to just stick with 4 DIMM slots, given that memory per DIMM availability probably has at least doubled since Apple selected 8 DIMM slots for the last Mac Pro (2010? 2008?).

  3. the old Mac Pro had 4 RAM slots also on Apple Updates MacBooks and Mac Pro Desktop With Haswell, "Unified Thermal Core" · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the one CPU config. That is, one CPU socket package, 6 or 8 cores. If you got the two CPU socket version with 12 cores, you got 8 RAM slots.

    The model pictured is one with a single CPU socket and has 4 DIMM slots. It's quite possible that the two CPU socket version of this Mac Pro will have 8 RAM slots also.

    I checked, there is no 12 core version of Xeon E5, so presumably to get the 12 cores on this one will use two packages as the last one did.

    I don't have any problems putting stuff next to cylinders. I have a coffee cup on my desk, it isn't causing any untoward issues.

    This thing has no HDDs. No amount of flash would be enough for video editors, and not even 4 internal HDDs would either. So you will use a Thunderbolt external HDD or RAID array. I just hope those get somewhat cheaper soon.

  4. 8GB costs $100 more on Apple Updates MacBooks and Mac Pro Desktop With Haswell, "Unified Thermal Core" · · Score: 1

    You cannot add it later. You have to configure to order.

    The Air had 2 or 4GB CTO (configure to order) 2 years ago, 4 or 8GB CTO this year and I think last year was 4GB or 8GB CTO also.

  5. it was a charge card on Salesforce, a Pillow Maker and a $125k AmEx Bill · · Score: 1

    Back when credit cards were still charge cards too. When revolving credit cards (where you don't have to pay each money) changed their names to credit cards (credit is a positive, charge is a negative), AMEX kept the charge card description.

    AMEX reminded me of this twice when I didn't pay in full at the end of the month. They said they didn't work that way and I wouldn't be able to charge anything until I paid it off. I replied that I didn't mind because I only used it on corporate trips and I didn't have another one for months, by which point the company would have reimbursed me and I would pay AMEX.

  6. I'm pretty impressed with the passports on Smartphone Used To Scan Data From Chip-Enabled Credit Cards · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was very much against them, in fact swearing I would smash my passport's smart chip when I got a new passport that had one.

    But having read it with my phone, I'm impressed. You need key data from the printed page to make the NFC work and as you mention, the passports are unreadable when closed.

    I think it's really well done. I'm a bit unsure quite what it's good for since it is slower than swiping it, I can only figure it was done just because putting that much info in a barcode was infeasible.

    Now let me submit my pic as a link to a PNG or whatever instead of printing out a picture, having them scan it back in and turn it into a JPEG2000.

  7. what app is he using? on Smartphone Used To Scan Data From Chip-Enabled Credit Cards · · Score: 2

    I have a VISA card with NFC and multiple tag readers for my phone and none of the tag readers can get any info like that out of the card. I've got apps that can read fare cards, passports, etc. but I can't find anything on my credit card.

    What am I missing?

  8. mine goes 100,000 miles on Will Future Tesla Cars Use Metal-Air Batteries? · · Score: 1

    That's how long it takes to consume the metal spark plug electrodes.

    Also, I have to stop and put in liquid every 300 miles or so, but that is immaterial to my range calculations.

  9. Tesla doesn't use LiFePO on Memory Effect Discovered In Lithium-Ion Batteries · · Score: 1

    And besides that, if you look at the charts, this doesn't cause a loss of capacity, even an apparent loss of capacity. Instead the voltage just reads high during charging. It appears it can foul up capacity remaining estimates, but not actually change the capacity remaining.

  10. uh-huh on Corruption Allegations Rock Australia's CSIRO · · Score: 2

    And yet here is the other side of the story.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Australian_inventions

    Wi-Fi being on that list.

    CSIRO talks out of two sides of its mouth. It wants to take credit for Wi-Fi. They promote themselves this way, and you even see the Science Minister of Australia (Evans) stating "It's hard to imagine an Australian-invented technology that has had a greater impact on the way we live and work".

    But then in technical circles where they face informed response, they play things down.

    And no, CSIRO did not discuss with IEEE the use of the patent prior to its inclusion in the standard. The standard was published in 1997 and CSIRO didn't pipe up until later. They were not even on the 802.11 committee. This is standard submarine trolling.

    And their FRAND terms? They wanted $4 per device. This would amount to more than the entire cost of a WiFi chip.

    http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/04/how-the-aussie-government-invented-wifi-and-sued-its-way-to-430-million/

  11. this isn't a precedent on Bitcoin Exchange Mt.Gox Suffers Serious Attack, Instawallet Offline · · Score: 1

    Brazil confiscated huge amounts of money 23 years ago.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-21876149

    'In her first act, Zelia, as she was known, went on national television to tell the country that all bank accounts were being frozen and that no-one could access more than 50,000 new cruzados in the currency of the time (a sum then worth about $1,250).'

    This isn't a new thing, you just didn't know about it before. It's not necessarily going to shake all confidence in the system just because you suddenly found out about confiscation.

  12. They'll monetize the world's problems... on Geeks On a Plane Proposed To Solve Global Tech Skills Crisis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What is it they think SV CEOs and VCs really know how to do well actually?

    It isn't solve the world's problems, it's monetize them.

    It's more along the lines of turning what used to be a one-time $35 dollar product you purchase into a $8/month for-the-rest-of-your-life monthly service fee.

  13. it's the first on Florida House Passes Bill To Ban "Internet Cafes" · · Score: 1

    It's presumably for the type of machine that buys back cell phones.

    http://www.ecoatm.com/

  14. Re:Ahh, Pentium. on Intel's Pentium Chip Turns 20 Today · · Score: 1

    No, Slot 1 was to allow them to put the cache on the same board as the processor soldered down so they could sell you the cache RAM instead of empty sockets you could fill with cheaper SRAM from another company.

    And yeah, once they moved the L2 cache RAM on-die, there was no advantage to slot 1 anymore and a ton of downside in the cost of it. So they dumped it.

    Intel has frequently leveraged their CPU dominance to try to become the #1 seller for other items on the motherboard too. They did it with their special gigabit ethernet chips that attached to the FSB instead of PCI for example.

  15. Re:66MHz? Nice for you Rockefellers on Intel's Pentium Chip Turns 20 Today · · Score: 2

    Also couldn't afford the RAM, IIRC.

    The RAM speed was tied to the CPU speed (FSB speed), and since the fast CPUs were expensive to buy, the RAM which was only needed for them was overpriced too even though it was only barely faster than the RAM for the 60MHz models.

  16. 66MHz? Nice for you Rockefellers on Intel's Pentium Chip Turns 20 Today · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The rest of us made do with 60MHz versions.

    It really had to hurt Intel to have to back down on clock speeds for once. They didn't do that again until NetBurst burst.

  17. Standardized DRM doesn't mean everyone will use it on Defend the Open Web: Keep DRM Out of W3C Standards · · Score: 1

    Administering DRM is a hassle for the provider as well as the user. Companies aren't going to throw on DRM just for the heck of it.

    Other content simply won't be provided on the web without DRM. It'll either come through your browser, a browser extension or a separate app. Adding DRM to the standard will give the best possible situation for this too.

  18. Not putting in DRM isn't going to eliminate DRM on Defend the Open Web: Keep DRM Out of W3C Standards · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not going to knock DRM off the web.

    So why not put in a way for it to be done in a standard fashion?

    Putting the ability to serve DRM content into HTML is not going to close the web.

  19. no, it's not dead on The Nielsen Family Is Dead · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's dumb. The main value of Nielsen is not that it measures popularity. It measures viewership of the shows (and thus ads) that air on TV.

    Ad rates are tied to Nielsen ratings. And this has not changed. So the Nielsen family is as relevant as ever.

    Sure, Hulu stats matter too, to fix the price of ads that air on Hulu.

    It's amazing how many people think that somehow because they don't watch TV that it is not longer relevant what TV ratings are.

  20. tap to turn WiFi On/Off? on Samsung Unveils the Galaxy S4 · · Score: -1, Troll

    Not on Android. There was no way to turn on WiFi with a single click until Android 4.2.2, and even in Android 4.2.2 is it a press and hold, not a tap.

    I agree with a lot of the other stuff you say, especially the widgets. I don't need an RSS reader, but many things like the weather app actually showing the weather on its icon instead of having to click it is big. Android does it well, Windows Phone 8 might even do it better. iOS doesn't do it at all except for the date icon on the Calendar.

    I don't find Android's alphabetical list all that great because sometimes the app's name is not completely obvious. In particular some apps have Play in front (Play Books, Play Magazines) and others don't (Currents). Where is Contacts? Oh, it's under People. And if you want to play a video clip you just took, it's under Movies & TV. Oops, I mean Play Movies & TV.

    And while you're totally right about letting you link you own mail app up to the infrastructure, I cannot share a picture (or video or anything) over Google Talk (helpfully called Messaging, not to be confused with Messenger or Talk), I can only share it over SMS (Messenger) or Google+. Google still has some work to do on this front too.

  21. Re:Gobble bobble wobblywob? on Bitcoin Blockchain Forked By Backward-Compatibility Issue · · Score: 1

    That doesn't seem right to me. The hardware just brute forces hashes over and over. Once a hash collision is found, then any old CPU and software combo can go through the trouble of minting the coin from it (building the chain). You could even just hand the known solution as a "try this first hint" to the latest version of the bitcoin mining software whatever it is.

    So I don't think there would be much problem upgrading these ASIC/FPGA mining systems.

  22. I'm only surprised they bothered to label it on China Using 'State Secrets' Label To Hide Pollution · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Come on, the issue here isn't abuse of a state secrets process.

    The issue is the Chinese government (national level) is not based upon any principles of openness. They hide anything and everything that might threaten their place in power. The only time it comes out is when trying to keep it secret would hurt even more (i.e when a coverup is exposed).

  23. Microsoft demoed at E3 this two years ago on Kinect Can Detect Clenched Fist · · Score: 2

    The did it at E3 2011 where Kinect Fun Labs was showed.

    The guy demoing it waved his fists around and it tracked them. When he put fingers out on one hand he was able to draw lines on the screen, it saw the finger out.

    In that case and this one too it was clear that this was so close to the limits of what Kinect can resolve that it wasn't going to be reliable in normal use. But it did work on stage.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jso9r6DI9E&t=3m20s

    MS claimed they would ship this, even named it "Kinect Finger Tracking". But it didn't ship yet. It's likely the current hardware just isn't reliable enough at it.

  24. linux is first? on First Debian/Ubuntu Bootable ARM64 Images Released · · Score: 1

    'Linux is once again the first platform that has software ready to run on a new architecture when released'

    It's the first you've seen. That doesn't mean it's necessarily actually first. It's just linux "shows its work" as it goes along. MS is not going to do the same.

    It's great to see multiarch rolling along.

  25. I understand the concept on iOS 6.1.3 Beta 2 Patches evasi0n Jailbreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But if you have a problem with a device that is a walled garden, why did you buy it?

    If you buy DRMed content expecting it'll be cracked, that works, until it doesn't. Meanwhile, you bolster the financial argument for selling DRMed content by buying it. And you diminish the importance of offering unrestricted content.

    If you buy a walled garden device expecting it'll be cracked, that works, until it doesn't. And again, you bolster the financial argument for selling walled garden devices.

    And then after a while, you find that the DRM isn't being cracked so easy anymore. And the walled garden devices you have been buying stop being cracked so easy too, maybe at all. And meanwhile the devices you can control are gone, because no one bought them. Companies got the message they don't need to offer more open devices, and so they didn't.

    If you want to be able to buy open devices in the future, buy open devices today. Don't buy closed devices and then complain when they are re-closed.