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User: adamstew

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  1. Re:android has more then 1 appstore IOS and window on Why Microsoft Office For iOS Will Likely Never See the Light of Day · · Score: 1

    Windows phone will not allow you to run apps unless you get a developer account from Microsoft...see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4229029/can-you-install-you-own-apps-on-your-windows-7-phone. Apple has the exact same policy...you can install your own apps if you get a developer account. Otherwise you can only install apps from Microsoft's app store.

    Some android devices do come locked to a specific app store. But most of them don't. For the ones that do, it's often trivial to unlock them. But I don't see how android is relevant since the discussion was about how you shouldn't be comparing Microsoft's desktop operating system to Apple's smartphone/tablet operating system.

  2. Re:android has more then 1 appstore IOS and window on Why Microsoft Office For iOS Will Likely Never See the Light of Day · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apples and Oranges. You are comparing Microsoft's desktop operating system with Apple's mobile operating systems. If you compare Apple's Desktop operating system (OS X) to Microsoft's Desktop Operating System (Windows 8) then you still have the same 3 options: Apple's App Store, Steam, and any website.

    If you compare Microsoft's MOBILE operating systems (Windows 8 RT and Windows Phone) to Apple's mobile operating system (iOS), you end up with the same comparison: You are able to get apps from the sanctioned app store of the vendor.

  3. Re:China on iOS 6 Adoption Rates Soar Following Google Maps Release · · Score: 5, Informative

    This article from an iOS advertising platform company pretty much confirms that: http://insights.chitika.com/2012/ios-6-adoption-post-google-maps/

    Basically, when google maps was released for iOS 6, their data shows that it had no immediate impact on iOS 6 adoption and continued to have no impact for 5 days afterwards. Once the iPhone 5 was released in China, then there was a nice little spike in iOS 6 usage.

    Basically, if you look at it week-by-week, it could look like Google Maps caused a spike in iOS 6 adoption, but when you look at it day-by-day it tells a different story.

  4. Re:Microsoft's Windows 8 Numbers Meaningless on Steve Jobs Was Wrong About Touchscreen Laptops · · Score: 1

    Okay... That still puts Windows 8 usage at less than half of what Windows 7 usage was at this same point in time (5% vs 2%).

  5. Re:Microsoft's Windows 8 Numbers Meaningless on Steve Jobs Was Wrong About Touchscreen Laptops · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fact: Microsoft is selling exponentially more licenses with Windows 8 than it did with Windows 7.

    Huh? Microsoft themselves has already admitted that Windows 8 sales are at nearly the EXACT same pace as Windows 7 sales.

    Okay... How about actual web usage: http://www.zdnet.com/statcounter-windows-8-license-sales-not-yet-translating-into-usage-7000008148/

    Even though Microsoft sold as many licenses of Windows 8 as they did of Windows 7, Windows 7 saw much higher actual usage after one month on the market compared to Windows 8 after one month on the market. Windows 7 made up 4.93% of internet users 1 month after launch compared to Windows 8's 1.31% 1 month after launch. That paints a pretty bleak picture of actual Windows 8 usage. Even Windows Vista managed to get nearly 2% of web browser share after the first month.

    So lets assume that both statistics are correct. Microsoft sold 40 million licenses of Windows 8, the same as Windows 7 for the same time period AND Windows 8's web usage 1 month after launch is only 27% of Windows 7's web usage 1 month after launch. Let's add in a few more facts, like NewEgg saying that windows 8 sales are slow and that sales of Windows devices are down 21% from last year since the launch of Windows 8. Based on these facts, we can extrapolate a story.

    The story I extrapolated is this: Microsoft sold 40 million licenses of Windows 8 in several ways: 1) end users taking advantage of the cheap $40 upgrade option that has never been offered before, 2) the volume license sales of Windows that are now Windows 8 licenses that are almost ALL being downgraded to Windows 7 because Microsoft no longer sells Windows 7 licenses, and 3) a whole TON of licenses to OEMs so they could get the initial supply of Windows 8 devices in to sales channels for launch.

    So lets go over these sales paths:

    1) The end user upgrades are legitimate sales of Windows 8. However, I would expect these numbers to be much higher than the initial Windows 7 upgrade sales simply because of the huge discount that didn't exist for the Windows 7 launch. The $40 upgrade price is either a 60% or 80% discount depending on whether you would buy the home or professional edition. I would expect to see a small rush of people buying to take advantage of the lower price...even over the normal PC enthusiast sales of people who must have the latest-and-greatest. The $40 upgrade option would also explain why direct to consumer upgrades of Windows 8 are selling at a faster pace than Windows 7 did. When you give a very hefty discount to pretty much everyone, people are going to jump on the deal.

    2) volume license sales: Business need Windows licenses and you can only buy Windows 8 now. So even though the business is installing Windows 7 with those Windows 8 licenses, they are still being counted as a "Windows 8 sale". These are licenses Microsoft would've sold whether Windows 8 was released or not. Also, i'd be curious to know whether Microsoft is including any previous Windows 7 licenses with Software Assurance as a "Windows 8 sale" as well.

    3) OEM sales: This is where I bet Microsoft sold the bulk of their Windows 8 licenses. OEMs had to buy their initial set of licenses to cover their initial stock of Windows 8 devices being shipped to sales channels. World wide PC sales for 2012 are expected to be around 350 million units...or about 30 million PCs per month. I would also expect the sales numbers t

  6. Re:It doesn't compete with tablets on Why Microsoft's Surface Pro Could Fail · · Score: 2

    It matters if those licenses that Microsoft has sold to the OEMs in the first month haven't made it to the end users yet. If end users aren't buying computers with Windows 8 on them, then the pace of Windows 8 license sales will slow as OEMs aren't going to keep buying licenses at the same pace. The OEMs will still have enough licenses in their inventory of licenses to put on PCs as they are actually sold to end users.

  7. Re:Excellent News! on Windows 7 Is the Next Windows XP · · Score: 2

    You should try ninite pro. You can create a login script or a scheduled task in activate directory for all your machines that will wake up every day or two and run ninite pro. This will then check all of the following and make sure it's updated to the latest version...all in the background without any user interaction or admin rights required:

    * All major 3rd party browsers (Chrome, Safari, Firefox and Opera)
    * All major IM apps (Skype, Pidgin, AIM, Yahoo, Google Talk, etc.)
    * All major media apps (iTunes, VLC, Quicktime, Winamp, etc.)
    * All major browser plugins (Flash, Java, Silverlight, etc.)
    * PDF readers/creators (Adobe Reader, Cute PDF, OpenOffice, etc.)
    * Major antimalware softwares (Microsoft Security Essentials, Avast, AVG, Spybot, etc.)
    * A lot of 3rd party utility softwares (ImgBurn, TrueCrypt, Evernote, Google Earth, 7zip, WinRAR, FileZilla, Notepad++, Putty, etc.)

    It wakes up, detects what is installed (whether ninite installed them in the first place or not), determines what softwares has updates, installs them, disables any crapware installs that might be included (browser toolbars, etc.), will prevent any automatically placed desktop shortcuts from being placed, and prevent all of those stupid "auto-update" apps that everything installs but needs admin rights to actually update.

    It all runs in the background, no user interaction required, the user isn't even aware it happens. It creates a log file of all the updates. The Ninite software itself isn't actually installed on any of your workstations or servers...it's a simple exe file that can be dropped in to a shared network drive and it runs from there. It will also cache any downloads it must do so that other machines running ninite don't have to redownload an update that's already been downloaded saving bandwidth.

    I basically created a scheduled task to run the ninte on all computers every 2 days using group policy and active directory. Did that about 5 months ago and it's been working flawlessly ever since.

  8. Re:No doubt... on First iOS Malware Discovered In Apple's App Store · · Score: 2

    Kind of. It's a one-time request per App you install. It's more like Facebook's system of a user authorizing a Facebook app to access their data. The first time an App requests a particular type of data, UI from facebook pops up and says "here is what the app is requesting, do you want to allow it?"

    The way it works on iOS 6 is similar. The first time an App wants to access a protected type of data from the phone, UI from iOS pops up and asks if it's okay. It happens the first time and once you give permission you don't need to give it again. You can also revoke permission later from the device settings as well.

  9. Re:I thought apps needed permission to see contact on First iOS Malware Discovered In Apple's App Store · · Score: 1

    They are doing it in iOS 6, which hasn't been released yet. It is in Beta and should be released in the next couple of months.

  10. Re:No doubt... on First iOS Malware Discovered In Apple's App Store · · Score: 1

    They are starting to do this with iOS 6. I have they beta on my device and anytime an app wants access to your contacts, calendar information, reminders, and/or photos the OS asks the user if it's okay for the app to access such things.

  11. Re:That's easy. on Witness Ridicules 'Hands-On' Reviews of Surface · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That makes about as much sense as someone saying that they got to sit in a parked sports car that didn't have a steering wheel and they weren't allowed to turn on the stereo or push any buttons.... but since the car was parked on the road it's a "road test".

  12. Re:They're just targeting those who commit crimes. on Subject To a "Stop and Frisk"? There's an App For That · · Score: 2

    A cop stopping and frisking every person that they walk past as a "stop and frisk" is definitely very illegal and unconstitutional. It's not a matter of frisking some people and frisking everyone. They are not allowed to stop and frisk ANYONE without probable cause.

    The reason it's different for driving is because you don't have a right to drive. You are licensed to drive, that license can be revoked, and one of the conditions of receiving that license is that you are required to stop for a police officer checking to see if you are still meeting the requirements of having your license...or are even properly licensed.

    They still can not search your person or your property (vehicle) without probable cause. But they are allowed to stop you and ask you questions. They can also look at what's in plain site in your vehicle.

    The basic rundown of a sobriety checkpoint is: Cars are stopped, the officer may or may not ask for your license, registration, and maybe proof of insurance. The officer may also may or may not also ask you some questions. The whole point is to check to see if you show signs of being intoxicated...Are you slurring your speech, can they smell alcohol on your breath or from the car, can they see any open containers in plain sight, etc. Once they see any of those signs of the driver being intoxicated, they have their probable cause and can then proceed to search you (breathalyzer, sobriety test, etc.) and your car.

    They don't have to stop every car, but they aren't allowed to choose cars to stop based on profiles or demographics (race, gender, sports cars, etc.) They could choose to only stop every 4th car, as an example. They can also choose to stop cars outside of their current pattern if there is a reasonable suspicion to stop it... swerving, driver appears to be nodding off, sees what looks like an open container in the cup holder, etc.

    The main difference is: As a person, you have a right against search and seizure without probable cause. As a driver, you are licensed, and they are allowed to stop anyone or everyone to check to make sure that they are properly licensed to drive and meeting all the requirements of maintaining said license.

    Some of these requirements may be more strict in some states. Some states have given people more rights to privacy from police officers while they are driving.

    Disclaimer: IANAL.

  13. Re:Common Sense on SAP VP Arrested In False Barcode Scheme · · Score: 2

    UPC barcodes don't work that way. UPC barcodes have two pieces of info encoded on to them as one 12 digit number: Manufacturer and Product. My understanding is a little rough, but the first digit of the code represents what type of code it is (coupon, product, etc...) The next 5 digits are a unique number assigned to each manufacturer, the next 5 is a unique number assigned by the manufacturer to that specific product, and the last digit is a basic checksum to detect errors in scanning or manual entry.

    In order to generate a product description and price, the register has to look up the 12 digit number in the store's computer database and retrieve that information. None of that information is encoded in to the actual barcode itself.

    probably what he did is find another lego product with a lower price and just put it's UPC code on the more expensive product.

  14. Re:Easy solution on Why Verizon Doesn't Want You To Buy an iPhone · · Score: 2

    Web page hits =/= bandwidth consumed. Surfing the web does consume bandwidth, but compared to other types of applications that can consume bandwidth, it's consumes a relatively small amount.

    When compared to things like streaming radio, skype, netflix, video conferencing, etc, web surfing doesn't consume that much bandwidth.

    It's entirely possible that android users typically tend to have high-usage of those high-bandwidth applications.

    Also, here is an article that I found that also says that android users use more bandwidth: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2374032,00.asp It is 2 years old, so it may not be as relevant.

  15. Re:Still More Than Google Makes On Apple Devices on Google Earns $2 Per Handset; Apple, $575 · · Score: 1

    The article you linked to actually says the complete opposite. It says "Apple Inc., maker of the iPad, 40.5 million shipped worldwide, 62 percent share". That would mean that all other tablets shipped would fall in to the 48% share. Which would mean that the iPad out sold all other tablet devices combined.

  16. Re:I wish they wouldn't on Firefox Demos Prototype Metro Interface · · Score: 2

    This is NOT true in the consumer preview. You could disable Metro in the developer preview via a registry setting, but it is NOT possible to disable metro in the consumer preview via a registry setting. The only way to disable it in Consumer preview is with a 3rd party application hack.

  17. Re:Or, you know on For Windows 8 Users, Stardock Revives the Start Menu · · Score: 1

    hahaha. You're funny. You can't turn Metro off. You can sure switch to the desktop, but the instant you try to open a start menu (lower-left click or by pressing the windows key) you are taken right back in to Metro.

  18. Re:It boils down to user-type on For Windows 8 Users, Stardock Revives the Start Menu · · Score: 1

    That's just it. Microsoft isn't offering a choice. There is absolutely no way to disable the Metro interface in Windows 8 without this 3rd party hack.

  19. Re:Registry on For Windows 8 Users, Stardock Revives the Start Menu · · Score: 1

    That registry hack was available in the developer preview, but has since been removed as an option from the most recently released consumer preview. You can no longer apply that registry hack to get windows 8 back to sanity in the consumer preview. They are forcing this garbage on people.

  20. Re:Interesting grounds... on Cook County Judge Says Law Banning Recording Police Is Unconstitutional · · Score: 2

    I'm pretty sure the judge's intent was that with this law, a convenience store owner could be arrested and charged with a felony because a policeman walked in to his convenience store and his cameras caught it on tape.

  21. Re:3G users? on After Complaints, AT&T Solidifies, Increases Data Limit · · Score: 3, Informative

    it's a 3GB limit for 3G users and a 5GB limit for 4G LTE users

  22. Re:Prices ARE different on Why Do All Movie Tickets Cost the Same? · · Score: 1

    I would presume that the movie distributors require a minimum ticket price for matinee and for evening showings. They probably even have different minimums for different geographic areas.

  23. Re:No better CAS topology experts? on Apple, Android Devices Swamp NYC Schools' ActiveSync Server · · Score: 2

    Exchange CALs are licensed per user and not per device. Each user can have any number of devices hooked up. If they are already properly licensed for each of their users, then all devices that any of those users brings are already licensed.

    Also, even if they had met their limit on CALs, they are so cheap for the education market, Microsoft practically gives them away.

  24. Re:Siri and translation on Google Improves Android Translator To Battle Siri · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Siri isn't even just voice recognition. It uses voice recognition as the input for it to perform tasks or lookup trivia type questions for you. Things like "schedule a meeting with my boss tomorrow at 10 about next year's budget". That's all you need to say, and Siri will create a meeting invite in Exchange, inviting my boss for a meeting at 10... it'll title the meeting "Next Year's Budget".

    You can use it for voice dictation... Just about every text input field, now has a microphone that simply lets you say what you were going to type... and the voice recognition is VERY good.

    So while google is using voice recognition, it is using it for two different applications. It's like saying Microsoft Word is competing with Adobe Photoshop because they both use the mouse as an input device. You can't even use Siri for translation. But it wouldn't surprise me if Apple added a similar type of translation feature to Siri... although I doubt it would show up in a conversationalist way... More like "translate 'where is the nearest hospital' in to french".

  25. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) on Thunderbolt vs. SuperSpeed USB · · Score: 1

    Exactly. The day thunderbolt was announced, I read it and thought to myself... that would be the perfect cable for a laptop docking device. One cable to handle your video, network, a backup hard drive, keyboard, mouse. Right now, when I bring my laptop in to my desk, I plug in power, ethernet, firewire 800, a USB cable and a video cable. I would buy a Thunderbolt "docking station" that hooked all of that up with just two cables... Power and everything else.

    Finally, another application that I haven't heard people talking about is external PCI-E enclosures for laptops... One machine can now be your portable computer and your desktop workstation and allow you to plug any expansion cards that would normally require a desktop in to your laptop... Video cards, high-end audio cards, USB 3.0 cards, video capture cards, etc.