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User: Admodieus

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  1. Sure, the sins of 1994 are gone but... on "Microsoft Killed My Pappy" · · Score: 1

    ...there has been plenty of new ones to maintain the level of outrage and frustration. Remember PlaysForSure? How about the switch from Windows Phone 7 to Windows Phone 8, leaving its best loyal customers (and buyers of the relatively new Lumias) in the dust? The XBox One DRM fiasco?

  2. Two-factor on GoDaddy? on Developer Loses Single-Letter Twitter Handle Through Extortion · · Score: 2

    If your account has two-factor enabled, any account change will require entry of that limited-time token. Now, if the person doing the social engineering was able to access the account in the first place with only the last four digits of the card number, then they may have also been able to bypass this or turn it off with the help of the customer support rep. But I didn't see any mention of this in the article and wanted to point it out for those who use GoDaddy and are afraid of a similar situation occurring.

  3. It's the other factors. on Office Space: TV Documentary Looks At the Dreadful Open Office · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem with open office floor plans is that every other office accommodation is also affected, but in a negative way - at least at the companies I've seen or worked in. Conference rooms are downsized as well and are given uncomfortable chairs (such as bar tools). Quiet places or "phone booths" are moved to reservation systems. Kitchens, cafes, and cafeterias are no longer respites from work, but just another area to hold meetings. Any office implementing an open floor plan should also set aside traditional offices, cubicles, or booths that can be rented out, ad-hoc, when a serious conference call or task comes up that requires undivided attention. Moreover, these workspaces should be equipped with all of the necessary amenities (laptop dock, second monitor, etc.) so that workers can truly come and go at a whim. Having to pack up my desk and wander the halls for half an hour just so I can hear myself think over the lady having the daily conversation with her college-aged daughter or the guy slurping his coffee is not productive at all.

  4. In other words... on Apple WWDC: iOS 5, Lion, iCloud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...he introduced the Apple community to Android, Windows Phone 7, Linux, Windows, and OS X Snow Leopard.

  5. Typical Ryan Block Garbage on Is Bill Gates the Cure For What Ails Microsoft? · · Score: 1

    He says Bill Gates needs to come back, and then states Gates listened to J Allard about the Xbox, Microsoft's only real consumer success story in the last decade. Doesn't that mean that maybe J Allard should be the new CEO of Microsoft? Or can Block not connect the dots he himself puts down on the paper?

  6. Can't wait to see the backlash.... on Google Launching Music Service Without Labels · · Score: 4, Insightful

    from old media, over me accessing songs I own from wherever I am, or any device I have.

  7. Re:This didn't release yet? on Mozilla To Release Firefox 4 Next Month · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I was on a Firefox forum the other day and saw Beta 10 tossed around frequently and just dove right into my post.

  8. This didn't release yet? on Mozilla To Release Firefox 4 Next Month · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Wasn't this supposed to be the answer to Chrome - yet Chrome has shipped several iterations in the time it took them to get from 3 to 4? I think Firefox is on beta 10 or whatever. For a while, I maintained that I would switch back to Firefox once it matched the speed and minimalist interface that Chrome had, as I didn't like using a browser from Google. Now? Not so sure anymore - I'm so used to Chrome and it fits my workflow so well. It will take a lot to get me back.

  9. Re:Android is overrated on Android vs. iPhone — Who Wins In 2011? · · Score: 1

    I see people switching to iPhone from Android with some frequency, but I've never seen anyone go the other way _and like it_.

    Really? In the past 6 months, I know about twelve people who have left their iPhones behind and went to an Android device, instead of upgrading to an iPhone 4 when their contracts were due. I realize this is anecdotal, but I see more people switching from iPhone to Android than the other way around.

  10. It's simple: Performance on Why Wave Failed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The poor performance of Wave when it first debuted quickly killed any hype it had going. Everybody was eager to try it out, then realized it ran like a dog in pretty much everything except Chrome (and even sometimes in Chrome, too.) That and the fact that it was a standalone app - I wanted to be able to work with my Google Docs, share items from my Reader, and work on emails from within Wave, spreading information between all three if I desired.

  11. Re:Just hilarious on Leaked MS Presentation Shows App Store Plans For Windows 8 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The difference here is that you can still install applications from outside the app store on Windows (and Android for that matter), where on iOS you can't. That's why everyone was worried about the next version of OS X moving to a more iOS-focused paradigm; Apple has final cut on everything.

  12. All comes down to budget on IT Infrastructure As a House of Cards · · Score: 5, Informative

    In most organizations, the IT department is treated as pure cost instead of something that provides strategic value. These IT departments have no chance of getting a budget approved that will allow them to "start over" on any part of their implementation; hence the constant onslaught of temporary fixes and patches.

  13. Re:And one to go on Atlantis Blasts Off On Final Mission · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I love the shuttle program, but I would never wish something to go wrong on a mission just so they can launch another shuttle.

  14. Re:Menu Bar..? on Mozilla Reveals Firefox 4 Plans · · Score: 1

    Exactly right. Of course, most people don't realize this, and are content to bash Microsoft for purposely trying to make them unhappy and confused.

  15. Missing the Point on Talk of an Apple Search Engine To Thwart Google · · Score: 1

    This isn't about taking market share away from Google, or Bing, or whatever; it's keeping Google out of what Apple views as an increasingly important source of market research. Right now, every natural search performed on the iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad goes through Google - so Google can view that data and use it to refine/improve/develop their own competing smartphone OS. By further locking in users to their own search engine, Apple effectively closes the pipeline of free research to Google - unless users explicitly go to the webpage of their search engine, which will only be done by a small, small number of users.

  16. Universities aren't taking it seriously either on US Not Training Enough Cybersecurity Experts · · Score: 3, Informative

    At my current university, there are two undergraduate networking courses and one undergraduate security course. There's one network course in the graduate curriculum, but that's meant as a recap of the two undergrad ones if you didn't get your undergrad here. I would love to load up on network and security classes, but there's simply none being offered.

  17. Incorrectly assigning blame on Professors Banning Laptops In the Lecture Hall · · Score: 1

    As a current college student, I use my laptop (OneNote ftw) often for note taking. However, during a really boring class, even I'll start surfing the web. I notice a lot of students playing games, watching movies, doing online shopping, etc.

    However, instead of just banning laptops, there's a lot that the professors and university can do to make students want to pay attention. First off, Powerpoint has ruined the university lecture. Most textbooks will come with companion slidesets for each chapter, so often a professor will just throw those up on the board and reiterate the same content TO THE WORD that is in the chapter. You're basically paying whatever your university's undergraduate or credit rate is for an audiobook of that textbook.

    Also, a lot of professors these days come unprepared for lecture, especially because they feel like they can just use the textbook powerpoint as a crutch if the need arises. I can't tell you how many classes I've sat in over the past year where the professor is teaching material out of order or not relevant to the current reading or homeworks.

    Lastly, many professors have become incredibly boring and prone to ramble about personal anecdotes. I just had a server technology class where the professor droned on every class about some single incident in his own experience that wasn't even related to servers half the time. He also spent a good amount of time talking about the Toyota issue. Why would I want to pay attention to that?

    If the university wants to ban laptops in classrooms, they should look inward and reevaluate their own faculty first. If they still want to ban technology in the classroom, extend that to the professor as well - I'd gladly pay attention to see how many of these professors and doctors can't swim without their beloved Powerpoint.

  18. Security Essentials on Microsoft VP Suggests 'Net Tax To Clean Computers · · Score: 1

    There's no reason for a Windows user not to be running anti-virus nowadays. Microsoft Security Essentials is so lightweight and unobtrusive that most users I install it for don't even know it's there. And it's free.

  19. Re:Being the new default doesn't hurt either on Bing Gains 10% Marketshare · · Score: 1

    And I have to add the Bing search engine provider add-on in Firefox. And in Safari, I can't even change my search engine provider. This is just par for the course.

  20. Re:Disgusting, But Totally Ineffective Microsoft on Reports of IE Hijacking NXDOMAINs, Routing To Bing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I thought that was the ignorance siren that I heard. Where do I start?

    150 million wasted on the latest rebranding of their failed search product. No effect on marketshare

    Actually, it stole a percentage point of Google's market share last month. I don't think anybody expected it to gain 70% market share overnight. Except maybe you?

    Mass numbers of suspicious posts on Net messageboards all parroting the same talking points: "I'm a long time Google users and I decided to give Bing a try and By Golly! I'm switching!"

    Suspicious? Really? I saw somebody the other day on a Macbook Pro using Bing willingly. It's anecdotal evidence. There's nothing suspicious about it. It happens to some people, not everyone. I'm sure there are people who used Live Search before and switched to Google or Yahoo.

    Paying floundering Yahoo to use their search engine

    I won't argue with the state of Yahoo, but this has the potential to double the usage of Bing, and make it a much more formidable opponent to Google. It was a good deal.

    * Putting up fake news story items on Microsoft web pages that are really nothing more than hidden Microsoft search links attempting to inflate the search marketshare

    Haven't seen an example of this yet. Provide one and I'll yield this point.

    * And now this crap The rate Ballmer is throwing billions at their failed search efforts looks like it may actually outdo Microsoft 8 year long Xbox fiasco for.

    Read the first few comments - it goes to your default search provider, which is Google if you set it to. And I hate to be the bearer of bad news for your anti-Microsoft sentiments, but the XBox division is doing pretty well for itself right now. They've made Sony a laughing stock this generation.

  21. Re:Blackboard execs should all be killed on Blackboard Patent Invalidated By Appellate Court · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I want to run away from their product even if the patents are not invalidated. They're all pieces of crap that rely heavily on Java applets and fail to support updates for browsers when they come out, like Firefox 3.5, Safari 4, etc. I remember two years ago, there was a period of time where they told users not to upgrade to Firefox 2 or IE7 because they didn't have support lined up for them yet.

  22. Re:Great startegy on Windows 7 Pre-Orders Top Vista's In Just 8 Hours · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So you would have preferred Microsoft follow up an OS that was not received well publicly with another OS that wouldn't be received well publicly? I swear, the company can do nothing right for some people. Science forbid a company deliver a product that is better than its previous one, which garnered many customer complaints. The reason pre-orders have exceeded Vista so quickly is because of the huge price drop Microsoft gave to pre-order customers. Many people were going to buy 7 anyway; why not pre-order it and save half the cost (or more)? I didn't know common sense when it comes to discretionary income was news.

  23. Nothing to do with Vista or 7 - it's IE 6 on Most Companies Won't Deploy Windows 7 — Survey · · Score: 1

    When a company considers migrating to Windows 7, the only thing preventing the project from getting the green light is not the price of hardware that is needed to run it (which is cheap these days) or the security aspects (quite good) - it's the fact that Windows 7 comes with the standards-compliant IE 8. In other words, IE 6 is gone for good. Almost every company runs at least one web application or portal that only works in IE 6 because of years of standards breaking on Microsoft's part. If they migrated to 7 as well as IE8, many of these applications and portals would break. The developers behind these applications (sometimes within the company) would rather not redesign the site to work in IE8/Firefox/Safari/Chrome; instead, they tell management that any migration away from XP and IE6 is suicide. Despite IE8 having a "Compatibility Mode" as well as the fact that it defaults to the old IE6 standards when visiting Intranet sites, many companies are too afraid of breaking their mission critical web applications. The problem with migration to 7 is a browser issue, not an OS one.

  24. Re:Streisand Effect for Opera on Microsoft Will Ship Windows 7 in Europe With IE Unbundled · · Score: 1

    Actually, I think it'll end up hurting Opera. There's a lot of user dissatisfaction with IE; in fact, there's so much that users will go and actively seek out another browser (hence, why Firefox became popular). Chrome, while still not as fully fleshed out as Firefox, is a better browser for many activities that everyday users care about (email, Youtube, etc.). Users will be more content with Chrome than they would have been with IE, and thus will not seek out Firefox or Opera.

  25. Re:They're called digital cameras on Polaroid Lovers Try To Revive Its Instant Film · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But that's not the niche they're going for. They are looking for the people whose heartstrings they can tug on in order to sell these things. They're not even thinking about law enforcement and its applications, even though your point is valid.