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Which motherboard was it? - by bogaboga (Score: 2) Thread I would like to know which motherboard you’re talking about so that I can avoid this nonsense…and here’s why: - …To my great annoyance, when I tried to boot to this OS, a message said that it was not installed. It turns out that motherboard comes with an install disk for this GNU/Linux OS — that you can only run from Windows… Doesn’t this state of matters boarder on the brink of insanity? |
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Re:Which motherboard was it? - by Lehk228 (Score: 2) Thread |
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Bad Article. Poster didn’t bother to RTFA. - by LurkerXXX (Score: 5, Informative) Thread The poster of the story didn’t even bother to read the link he provided… You can install it from a USB drive from the source. Asus simply doesn’t provide that installer on their install CD. This is a non-story. The distro doesn’t need windows to install. The distributor was just being cheap. |
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Port the code then - by eggman9713 (Score: 4, Informative) Thread |
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give me a break - by Sir_Lewk (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread Second, if distributing GPL’ed software by means that completely preclude it from being used without Windows is not a violation of the GPL, should it not be? No. Stop being absurd. There are plenty examples of GPLd programs meant only for windows. While this might be a little silly in this case there is nothing “wrong” with it and you need to stop getting so upset about it. |
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It’s not about money savings, it’s about rationing - by PugPappa (Score: 4, Insightful) Thread |
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While I am all for green energy, save the Planet - by Orion Blastar (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread etc, I don’t want it done via taking away rights and freedoms and forcing people to not use electronic devices until off-peak hours. I also don’t want it done in a way, like cap and trade, that makes energy use so expensive that it costs jobs and forces poor people to go without electricity. This “Smart Grid” has a way of spying on a home owners (or renters) privacy as well as shutting off devices so that they cannot use them until off-peak hours. Can you imagine your washing and drier being shut off, and you need to get three loads of clothes done, and you are forced to wear dirty clothes until the washer and drier can be turned back on. Not only that but sweating it out during the summer when the A/C is turned off by the grid and possibly dying of heat stroke and freezing to death in the winter when the heater is forced off until it turns back on during non-peak hours. I got a feeling there will be a lot of death by the smart grid lawsuits if this thing passes. |
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Re:While I am all for green energy, save the Plane - by horatio (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread This “Smart Grid” has a way of spying on a home owners (or renters) privacy as well as shutting off devices so that they cannot use them until off-peak hours. Exactly. I don’t want the power company, or the government, controlling when and how I use appliances in my house. MY house, MY appliances. STAY OUT. Smart-meter my ass. |
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Dumb - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 4, Insightful) Thread Smart appliances are a truly dumb idea. What things in your home consume the most power? Tier 1 Tier 2 Can you wait for off-peak power for any of those? Of those things, what can really be delayed? The fridge? Not if you dont want you food to spoil. So there was what? Just the dishwasher? This whole idea sounds like some dumb-ass’ PhD topic. Fascinating in theory, doesn’t work in reality. |
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How long will peak rates be around for? - by DigitAl56K (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread As a single guy (rare for Slashdot, I know..) I don’t use much energy at home during the day because surprise surprise I’m out at work. On the other hand, I’m sure there are many people who have families where one adult is home part of the day and probably takes care of cleaning, laundry, etc. during that time, probably watches TV and/or uses the computer, has kids to entertain, needs air conditioning in the summer, heating in the winter, etc. It doesn’t seem like smart electronics are going to substantially change these behaviors. Great, the dryer wants to wait until off-peak to dry my clothes, but I have 3 loads of laundry to get done.. What may change things is something that we’ve discussed here several times: Electric cars that have the ability to return electricity to the grid during times of high demand. Hopefully this or other means of localized power storage will reduce the need for “peak” pricing in future. Hopefully devices will also consume less power in future. For example, if you’re spending time online with your notebook you aren’t drawing anywhere near the 100-200w you would if you were using a desktop system (my Eee 1000HE netbook draws 9-12 watts). I would rather see us find ways to better match power availability to demand instead of a short-lived period of doing the inverse. Electric cars are a great way to do so because it’s a natural leverage of developments in our lives that are already taking place with widespread support. |
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Maybe it’s just an occupational hazard. - by Shag (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread Here’s the straight-talk version: “Welcome to NASA. We’re going to send you into space, but this involves sitting you atop something that’s basically a big stick of explosives. We’re aiming for a controlled burn, and most of the time we get that part right, but as you’re probably aware, every now and then something does blow the heck up. Now, as you might imagine, if you are sitting atop a big stick of explosives, and it blows the heck up, you probably go with it. We’re going to try to give you some kind of an out so that the explosives can blow up without you doing the same, but we want you to know it’s not really going to make your odds all that much better.” I mean, seriously, folks. People don’t sign up to be astronauts without grasping that there’s a very real risk of death at pretty much every point in the mission. |
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Risk? - by Runaway1956 (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread How much risk is acceptable? Is the Air Force suggesting that space exloration should be 0% risk, or less? If so, then we should probably ground all aircraft, scrap all automobiles - you get the idea. Let’s face it. Sitting on top of tons of explosive, and lighting them off, is going to be risky. Minimize the risk, yeah, but there will always BE RISK. It doesn’t matter what kind of engine you are using, or what kind of fuel it is using. A crash within the first minute of flight is often quite deadly in aviation simply because the pilot has so few options for ditching or bailing out. The same will always be true of spaceflight. If we want 0% risk, we had better get started on that space elevator. Of course, there may be some hidden risk at some point in that ascent - but at least we won’t be blowing it up to use it. |
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Re:Risk? - by Entropius (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread The Air Force doesn’t seem to be making a moral judgment. They’re doing what any good scientist or engineer will do: “If you do this, this will happen. I’m not telling you what you *should* do, but simply what will happen if you do it.” |
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More Broadly… - by fuzzyfuzzyfungus (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread |
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Re:The Air Force is right. - by Entropius (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread I worked at Marshall Space Flight Center — the facility where the Ares is being developed — for a while as part of an undergrad summer research project. While it may not be polite to say such things, AC’s criticism of NASA’s affirmative action policies is spot on. My boss and his officemate were both affirmative action hires. My boss couldn’t remember his computer password and called IT every time he crashed WinNT and needed to reboot. His officemate just put his on a stickynote on his monitor. When he got a new computer he had to get me (an undergrad) to make him a desktop shortcut to Solitaire. I have no idea what that guy did other than order office supplies. My boss often skipped work to play golf, leaving me in charge of the lab. I wound up growing samples in a gas deposition chamber and giving them to him to catalog and characterize. At one point I asked him how the characterization was going, and he said that the Raman spectroscopy lab was buried under a backlog of debris from Columbia (which was earlier that year). At the end of the summer I had a chat with *his* boss, who told me that there was no such backlog… and then we found all the samples I had painstakingly grown and labelled lying jumbled in the bottom of a drawer of his. While it makes me sad to say it, I’ve seen Marshall Space Flight Center incompetence with my own eyes. I’m from Huntsville, the city where MSFC is located. When I was growing up Real Science got done there — my high school English teacher is the guy who built the Lunar Rover. But it’s gone downhill. I also know the guy who’s in charge of systems integration for the Ares project. He’s a young-earth creationist. I have little faith in the engineering acumen of anyone who can accomplish such a massive feat of ignoring experimental evidence. |
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Re:Better solution: read only media - by Enleth (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread Been there, done that, works great. A few years ago, I set up a bunch of thin clients for general browsing, chatting and homework at a school dorm - they were (were, as I have no idea if they’re still in use, but they were absolutely maintenance-free, so I guess they should be) running Linux, with the kernel and boot config (generated on the fly) loaded from a read-only TFTP server and / mounted from a read-only NFS share. On each boot, the init scripts would finish generating a machine-specific configuration in Such a configuration is absolutely invulnerable to users, rootkits, viruses and any other riffraff known for breaking things in computers. Even in the unlikely event that someone gained root privileges on a client, they would actually gain nothing and even that nothing would vanish after a reboot. |
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Why? - by rysiek (Score: 5, Funny) Thread ”…interview with security expert Joanna Rutkowska (which is unfortunately split over 9 pages)” Why oh why did they split Joanna into 9 pages?! Thats so cruel! Also, First Post |
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Well… - by afabbro (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread She runs three separate virtual machines, designated Red, Yellow, and Green, each running a separate browser and used for increasingly sensitive tasks. And in the article: I totally don’t care about a compromise of my “Red” machine—in fact I revert it to a known snapshot every week or so. I care much more about my “Yellow” machine. For example, I use NoScript in a browser I have there to only allow scripting from the few sites that I really want to visit (few online shops, blogger, etc). Sure, somebody might do a man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack against a plaintext HTTP connection that is whitelisted by NoScript and inject some malicious drive-by exploit, but then again, Yellow machine is only semi-sensitive and there would not be a big tragedy if somebody stole the information from it. Finally, the “Green” machine should be allowed to do only HTTPS connections to only my banking site. And as long as your bank is never hacked and serving up malware, that probably works well… |
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Re:Well… - by mlts (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread This is something I’m wondering. Perhaps the best thing would be for the “Red” machine to be completely rolled back when done using, and have a virtual share mapped for any data that is worth saving. |
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Re:Well… - by lagfest (Score: 5, Informative) Thread Already exists for windows: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/sharedaccess/default.mspx And it’s free. |
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Black Puddings - by wjh31 (Score: 5, Funny) Thread |
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Could be worse. - by bobdotorg (Score: 5, Funny) Thread I hear that the Port of Buenos Aires was sent 31 shipping containers of British food. |
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Re:Could be worse. - by bobdotorg (Score: 5, Funny) Thread
Yes. Although they sometimes call it pudding. |
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Re:Could be worse. - by dkleinsc (Score: 5, Funny) Thread Reminds me of the old saw: |
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Wow. Truth really IS so much stranger than fiction - by Datamonstar (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread |
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Re:Science, lol? - by radtea (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread Do people even know what they want from a partner? Yeah, they do. 99.9% of women want “a good man who loves to laugh and is fun and just an ordinary guy.” I’m a divorced man in a small (~100,000) town and have used online dating sites off-and-on for about five years—mostly Plenty Of Fish, but also LavaLife and OkCupid. I’ve met two absolutely wonderful women this way—both of whom were so wonderful that after a year or three with me their careers took them off to bigger, far-distant centres, although in both cases we’re still friends. I’ve also met the biggest collection of flakes, losers, liars, bores and nutjobs you could possibly imagine, and I am currently ready to slap anyone whose entire self-description is, “I love to laugh, like long walks on the beach and am just looking for an ordinary guy.” Seriously, have you ever met anyone anywhere who doesn’t like to laugh? It’s what we laugh at that’s interesting, and hardly anyone ever says what that is. The trick for all these sites is to weed out the common things that everyone has, and to reduce people who have zero self-awareness to abject silence until they come up with sufficient self-knowledge to say something about themselves that isn’t woefully banal. OkCupid’s system of questions does that, although I can think of some simple improvements that would make it better. The key thing is to focus on the concrete. There should be very nearly zero abstraction in any of the information gathered from users, and the site should then generate the abstract categories the user is assigned to based on that information. For example, don’t ask people what their “body type” is (abstract category) but what their height and weight are, how fast they can run or walk a mile, how many miles they run or walk each week, when was the last time they walked more than a mile, or biked more than a five miles, or swam more than 500 m, and so on. Then generate the abstract category for them: “couch potato”, “morbidly obese”, etc, rather than letting users define “athletic” or “slim” or “average” any way they want to (I’ve seen morbidly obese people, who have posted pictures of themselves, categorize themselves as “average”.) Mostly, these sites are selling fantasies to liars (women) and idiots (men), so doing anything that would provide more accurate information about what differentiates one person from another is counter-productive relative to their business model. The few honest, intelligent people out there have to wade through a huge amount of dross to find each other. Fortunately, that is still possible, and despite their flaws these sites remain a sensible component of anyone’s search for companionship. Just be prepared to do a lot of filtering by hand. |
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“twice as many women…” until now! - by whoever57 (Score: 5, Funny) Thread
A new meaning was given to the term “slashdot effect” today, as hordes of |
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There’s also okcupid - by Colin Smith (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread Run by a couple of maths grads. Last time I looked they were using a regression analysis to match people. The site’s also free.
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Re:It’s the number of zeros that matter - by johnlcallaway (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread |
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Easy for you to say - by StarKruzr (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread
This is a very facile thing for someone in your position to say. For many of the rest of us “experiencing life” all by itself simply means interminable years of crushing loneliness. I have started to come to the following realization: Happiness is guaranteed to no one. The best one can expect out of life is that you can always find some way to respect yourself and say “I did something with my life that I can look myself in the mirror and approve of.” That status of self-respect is prerequisite for happiness, but it is by no means a guarantor. There is every chance that you’ll just get out there and do your thing and live your life and be alone and lonely right up until the day you die. |
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100 years ago… - by Techmeology (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread |
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Re:Was Copyright or Technology Better Understood? - by meringuoid (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread If Stalin had been replaced by some humane Communist who wasn’t prepared to liquidate millions of kulaks in the cause of collectivising Soviet agriculture and freeing up labour for industrial work in the cities building tanks, well… I have a funny feeling that quite a lot of us would be speaking German today. Mind you, if he’d been replaced by some moderate Communist who wasn’t monumentally gullible and who actually read Mein Kampf before signing treaties with Hitler, then the Soviets might have been better prepared for a fight in the first place. |
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They don’t even go back far enough. - by symbolset (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread I will only say this, that if the measure before us should pass, and should produce one-tenth part of the evil which it is calculated to produce, and which I fully expect it to produce, there will soon be a remedy, though of a very objectionable kind. Just as the absurd acts which prohibited the sale of game were virtually repealed by the poacher, just as many absurd revenue acts have been virtually repealed by the smuggler, so will this law be virtually repealed by piratical booksellers. At present the holder of copyright has the public feeling on his side. Those who invade copyright are regarded as knaves who take the bread out of the mouths of deserving men. Everybody is well pleased to see them restrained by the law, and compelled to refund their ill-gotten gains. No tradesman of good repute will have anything to do with such disgraceful transactions. Pass this law: and that feeling is at an end. Men very different from the present race of piratical booksellers will soon infringe this intolerable monopoly. Great masses of capital will be constantly employed in the violation of the law. Every art will be employed to evade legal pursuit; and the whole nation will be in the plot. On which side indeed should the public sympathy be when the question is whether some book as popular as Robinson Crusoe, or the Pilgrim’s Progress, shall be in every cottage, or whether it shall be confined to the libraries of the rich for the advantage of the great-grandson of a bookseller who, a hundred years before, drove a hard bargain for the copyright with the author when in great distress? Remember too that, when once it ceases to be considered as wrong and discreditable to invade literary property, no person can say where the invasion will stop. The public seldom makes nice distinctions. The wholesome copyright which now exists will share in the disgrace and danger of the new copyright which you are about to create. And you will find that, in attempting to impose unreasonable restraints on the reprinting of the works of the dead, you have, to a great extent, annulled those restraints which now prevent men from pillaging and defrauding the living. - Thomas McCauley on copyright, 1841. |
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Re:They don’t even go back far enough. - by girlintraining (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread That’s a lot of words to say this: Go too far and the public will stop respecting the law(s). |
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Re:They don’t even go back far enough. - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread It took 160 years, but everything he said came true. |
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Thank you everyone who made this possible - by pizzach (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread |
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I knew it - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 5, Funny) Thread |
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It’s a CONSPIRACY! Or… not. - by girlintraining (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread Umm, guys? Indie titles get crapped on because they’re small, not because of some conspiracy. Large businesses simply don’t want to expend the resources and time to make things available for the “little guys”, because the net return is so much lower. I mean, hey — if I can corner 90% of the market by setting up my distribution platform to, say, seven businesses, why should I make that same effort fifty or a hundred times more just to get that extra 10%? I think, if I were in that position, I’d just move on to the next thing and save my money. And yes, it’s all electronic. That doesn’t make it zero-cost; There’s administrative costs to everything and those costs don’t go up in a linear fashion as you add more members. |
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Re:It’s a CONSPIRACY! Or… not. - by gandhi_2 (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread xbl has done a pretty good job of streamlining the indie-game process. They’ve made it simple enough that allowing indie-devs to publish games equates to almost NO EXTRA WORK on the part of MS. Which is smart. Of course there are admin costs, but dev fees and sales quite handily make up for that. The fact is, putting a limit on the number of indie games is an active act, requiring work. The end result can only have lead to lower indie sales. I agree with you that some people look for the conspiracy everywhere, but in this case MS took an action that would lead to less indie sales. I can only think that was in response to some external stimuli (major game publishers). |
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Re:It’s a CONSPIRACY! Or… not. - by drinkypoo (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread I feel like you’ve missed the mark substantially. The problem isn’t with the idea that these are conspiracy theories, but with the idea that a conspiracy theory is automatically flawed. In reality, any time two people get together to bone at least one other person out of something, it’s a conspiracy. Don’t attack the idea that Microsoft’s plans for world domination are conspiracy theories; that is precisely what they are. However, they are also well-founded. It would not surprise me at all if Microsoft were deliberately throttling game submissions to serve first-string developers. The most successful indie developers will have the opportunity to be sucked up into the system that pays Microsoft a fat licensing fee for every title sold. Microsoft isn’t in business to help indie gaming, they’re in business to make a profit. The indie games available on Live are only there so long as they support the bottom line in some way. |
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I can relate to that… - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 4, Interesting) Thread |
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Fire their asses. Simple as that. - by EWAdams (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread You’re allowed to hold any idiot opinion you want in the USA. You are not allowed to express it on the job. Workplace harmony trumps freedom to be an asshole. This was settled long ago; it’s a dead issue. It goes double for cops, who need both to be sensitive to the public AND to have the full confidence and support of their fellow officers. Don’t like it? Go be a cop in Saudi, where I’m sure you’re allowed to be as racist as you like. |
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Seems pretty obvious - by MikeBabcock (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread If a man goes to a private website like say, Playboy in private and then discusses it in front of female co-workers, they may be charged with harassment. Guess what, just because its a private website, magazine, or bar doesn’t mean you should repeat those thoughts or experiences or stories in front of your co-workers who could most obviously be offended. |
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Cry me a river - by WiiVault (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread |
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The Solution Here - by fragmentate (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread A lot of people misinterpret what “freedom of expression” means. People believe they have the write to “express” themselves as they please in the workplace. That simply isn’t the case. Our rights — our freedoms — are protected against government interference not private interference. Your employer — even a government office — can silence you. There are laws for the workplace that take precedence over your rights. The law protects employees against being discriminated against or being harassed because of their ethnicity, religious beliefs, disabilities, sexual orientation, and gender. Those aren’t rights, however. You don’t have a right not to be harassed. You are protected by laws. Quite simply, these officers are out of line, and have broken laws. They don’t have a choice but to change their behavior. If they want to frequent this site from home in their private time that is when their right to express themselves is enforceable. However, we all know there are consequences to actions in our private lives as well. But trying to make people behave to serve their best-interest is just a futile effort at protecting “stupid.” The comments about this story are already ridiculous (search news.google.com, and blogs.google.com). Everyone thinks they know their rights, but I can tell by the comments none really know what their rights are, or what a right is. |
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CIT and moral hazard - by benjfowler (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread Congrats on Red Hat reaching the big league. I’ve got a couple of mates who work for Red Hat, and they say business is booming in the downturn, because they’re picking up a lot of business from people looking to save money through Red Hat’s Open Source-plus-support way of doing things. I wish Red Hat luck. Sadly, this doesn’t seem to have been the case with CIT, whose criminally incompetent management decided that letting the Government bail them out, was a better business plan than running their business as a going concern. Too bad Anglo-American culture is far too tolerant of failure, particularly in the business world. The fat cats need to be taken down a few pegs — and serious repercussions for failure are needed. The big problem with the government bailouts on both sides of the pond, is that the captains of industry are scum, by and large; and will find a way to be “too big to fail”, and profit by bludging off people who pay their taxes and do the right thing. Thankfully, the chaps in charge in the US have let CIT fail. After all, private business are full of people who preach the benefits of free markets in the good times. The Obama administration are wise enough to allow them to be destroyed by the remorseless logic of the free market when they are too weak to survive. |
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de-spin - by girlintraining (Score: 5, Informative) Thread Red Hat has made it onto the S&P 500, an important measure of the stock market. First, the S&P members are selected by committee, not by merit alone. Companies are (usually) included because they have a high liquidity and are “representative” of their industry. Not that Red Hat being selected isn’t good news, just understand they’re not selecting it because of the “runaway success of Linux”, but because Red Hat is representative of the overall health of this segment of the industry. |
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Re:de-spin - by morgan_greywolf (Score: 5, Informative) Thread For Red Hat to be representative of their industry, they need to be a healthy and profitable company. While I agree that this doesn’t necessarily point to Linux as a being a “runaway success”, it is significant to note that Red Hat’s flagship product is a distribution of Linux and the various open source tools from GNU, X.org, Gnome, X.org, etc, and that their other products that help to boost their profitable, like JBoss are also open source tools. So yeah, it’s a big win for open source because it shows that you can make it to the S&P 500 by being an open source company. That puts things in proper perspective. |
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Index funds - by andhar (Score: 5, Informative) Thread Inclusion in the S&P 500 could mean some index funds will have to acquire some shares. Inclusion in an index is usually seen as positive, and falling out of an index is seen as negative, when index funds have to sell. |
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Re:Index funds - by tnk1 (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread Yes and no. Directly, no effect on Red Hat. Indirectly, Red Hat probably has a stock reserve that it maintains. Improving the price of their stock means that they can actually buy things with that stock, usually this is in the form of acquisitions. Many buyouts are done in the form of stock swaps. Additionally, it makes their stock more attractive to give to employees/executives because its not some fly-by-night operation any more. Not that it was before, but some people like their certifications and industry recognitions. In the end, it could potentially have a net positive effect on Linux, particularly if they use any advantage in a way that will help Linux, either directly or incidentally via side-effects of their corporate strategy. A lot of what-ifs, but in the end, its nice to put a capstone on Linux success in the business world. |
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The arugment - by FlyingGuy (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread All of the wireless carriers, when you boil it down, offer the same thing, dial tone over a radio. At some point, in any competitive environment you have to be able to differentiate yourself from the other carrier, so really what are the options?
With all of those factors except the cool factor being pretty much equal this is how they differentiate themselves from the next carrier. They go to the handset manufacturers and ask, “Hey what do you have that is really cool?”, the look at whats out their and evaluate it and then pick the best platform that will allow them to create the best combination of experiences that add up to the all important cool factor. Lest anyone be confused, the carriers invest a LOT of money in brining this handset to market and its is not like they make a lot of money on the handsent. They make the money on the service they provide be it providing higher bandwidth, storage services, fancy voice mail or whatever. It is their money they are spending to do all of this, and the notion of creating a network that lets all this cool factor happen just to have someone else duplicate it, or worse duplicate it badly and sell at a lower price point is NOT a winning business model, in fact it is a model for going out of business. |
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NO COMPROMISE ON THIS - by erroneus (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread It simply can’t be allowed. What we need is the exact same deal that exists for POTS. The phone company pulled nearly the same crap with phones years ago until the government stepped in and said “no more!” In this day where people are increasingly dumping POTS for mobile phone services, it won’t be long before we’re trapped in the same situation. The time for action is now rather than later… truly, the time for action was at least 10 years ago. As it stands, phone makers have a technological means of restriction in that AT&T and T-Mobile operate on GPRS while Sprint and Verizon operate on CDMA. But really, those could be pluggable modules installable at manufacture time. Not sure that would be terribly hard to overcome. But when handsets are “free” (as in freedom) I think we will see not only a drop in prices of the phones but also of services. The control of phone prices and availability by the carriers has raised prices, nearly eliminated the used handset market, has essentially prevented a 3rd party phone market and created a disincentive for people to change carriers because they know it means buying another new expensive phone. This is a rather perfect example of anticompetitive behavior that should make Bill Gates envious. |
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Re:Understandable - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread “but Verizon does make a valid point.” No they don’t. They along with other mobile providers in the US are among the very few carriers of any sort of consumer service in the world that enjoy this sort of exclusivity. This shit wouldn’t fly if you could only use Samsung TVs on Comcast. Nor would it fly if Earthlink required you to use a Dell computer to access their dialup service. |
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Re:Hmm - by rsmith-mac (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread
None that own their own networks, which I suspect is the the other half of the point. Letting their vassals have their “exclusive” phones doesn’t really change anything for Verizon. |
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Re:continued crappy service & coverage - by tomz16 (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread All this does is allow infighting for handsets but doesn’t solve the problem of crappy service over the US. If the war torn middle east and mount everest can get cell coverage why can’t we get decent coverage in maine. Mount everest has people on it 1 month a year, there are over a million people in maine at any given time! I can’t use my phone is 1/2 the counties here and that’s with the AT&T. DING DING DING DING… There’s your problem! GSM service in North America is a complete joke in my experience. ESPECIALLY once you venture out of any major city or highway! Just look at the coverage maps for each carrier! I’ve had both a CDMA and GSM work phone for many years. Traveled through much of the US. I always chuckle when I see some reviewer favorably comparing the two, ESPECIALLY on coverage. I was actually up in Maine (Bangor and Bar Harbor) just last week. I had my personal verizon phone with me, and a GSM work phone. The GSM phone had a t-mobile sim but all of the carriers seem to mutually roam in Maine. The phone could associate with banner (company) : Cingular (AT&T), US-890 (Unicel), and T-mobile (T-mobile). It autoregistered to any one of those networks depending on the strongest signal. All THREE of those GSM networks combined were completely dwarfed by Verizon’s native CDMA coverage. I mean it wasn’t even remotely close! Hell, I had full EVDO revA coverage in areas that couldn’t even get a regular GSM/GPRS signal. In my experience, GSM in Canada is no different. For example, I continued up to Cape Breton after Maine. At one point, the closest GSM tower (Rogers) was a hundred miles away! Full CDMA coverage almost all the way up there, and many spots with EVDO! So… In my opinion, the easiest way fix to your problem with coverage in the boonies is to go visit a verizon store, and just bite the bullet on the BS craptacular locked-down handset they will give you. At least you’ll be able to use your phone to… you know… make phone calls… |
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Glad to be off that treadmill - by HangingChad (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread A Microsoft spokesperson told me that customers will need to buy a SharePoint server, which ranges from $4,400 plus CALs, or $41,000 with all CALs included, if they want to share documents created using the online version of Office 2010.” I am so happy to be working in an office free of the MS strangle hold. CALs always struck me as the most insidious of their macabre licensing circus. First you pay for the software, then you pay again so people can use it. What a racket. For the $41,000 you’re paying in CALs I can cover an employee salary for 8 months (that would be one of the lower level people). We don’t have any problems getting our work done at the office without Microsoft. We have corporate Gmail and use GoogleDocs, so far with zero problems. If we have super sekret corporate information we can’t trust to Google, we can store them in the truecrypt file container. We can send out pdf’s to clients and customers, everyone can read them and they format just fine. Plus I really like that we don’t have to fit either our business processes or development processes to MSFT models. It’s a lot more open and a lot more productive. You don’t realize how much time you spend dancing on Microsoft’s string until you get away from them. And, as an extra bonus, I can blow your ROI and TCO numbers out of the water. Just about any metric you want to use. And I never have to make the painful choice between layoffs and new servers. We can upgrade on our schedule, patch on our schedule, work the way we want to. If we need more capacity, we just stand it up. If we don’t need it we can turn it off and it’s not wasted money sitting there doing nothing. And it’s not just a small office. If you set it up right, you could do the same thing with almost any size organization. The only consistent pain in the rear problem we have regularly are those damn webinar programs. GoToMeeting and crap like that. Many of those are Windows only. That’s kind of annoying. |
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Details at Eleven - by thethibs (Score: 5, Funny) Thread |
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Google charges too, for corporate Docs accounts - by themeparkphoto (Score: 5, Informative) Thread |
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Source? - by jamesl (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread And the source of this important information on pricing of an unreleased product? Microsoft spokespersons with the knowledge and authority to speak about such things have a name and title. |
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Re:A Bad Idea - by MightyYar (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread Cloud computing is a bad idea. Isn’t that kind of a sweeping statement? Might it not be a good idea for some people? It gives software companies an unprecedented level of control over our data. It rather depends what you put on there and what kind of business you are, doesn’t it? It also depends on your backup strategy. If they up the price of their service, you can migrate away. If they shut it off completely with no warning… well, you were keeping backups, right? I would not endow them with this level of trust Who’s talking about trust? You use their service and you keep backups. You don’t “trust” anyone. If you are looking for an alternative, might I suggest http://www.openoffice.org/ [openoffice.org] Please tell me that your whole post wasn’t just a plug for a free office suite that everyone on Slashdot is already aware of? Anyway, other than saving a few hundred bucks per seat, OpenOffice isn’t a “solution”. It still requires more support compared to letting Google/MS be your IT department. |
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Wait, what? - by TheRaven64 (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread
So, he’s dereferencing tun, and then checking if tun was NULL? Looks like the compiler is performing an incorrect optimisation if it’s removing the test, but it’s still horribly bad style. This ought to be crashing at the sk = tun->sk line, because the structure is smaller than a page, and page 0 is mapped no-access (I assume Linux does this; it’s been standard practice in most operating systems for a couple of decades to protect against NULL-pointer dereferencing). Technically, however, the C standard allows tun->sk to be a valid address, so removing the test is a semantically-invalid optimisation. In practice, it’s safe for any structure smaller than a page, because the code should crash before reaching the test. So, we have bad code in Linux and bad code in GCC, combining to make this a true GNU/Linux vulnerability. |
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Re:Wait, what? - by pdh11 (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread
No. Technically, if tun is null, dereferencing it in the expression tun->sk invokes undefined behaviour — not implementation-defined behaviour. It is perfectly valid to remove the test, because no strictly conforming code could tell the difference — the game is already over once you’ve dereferenced a null pointer. This is a kernel bug (and not even, as Brad Spengler appears to be claiming, a new class of kernel bug); it’s not a GCC bug. But as other posters have said, it would indeed be a good security feature for GCC to warn when it does this. Peter |
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Re:Wait, what? - by johnw (Score: 5, Informative) Thread First, NULL is a preprocessor construct, not a language construct; by the time it gets to the compiler the preprocessor has replaced it with a magic constant[1]. Which must be either “0” or ”(void *) 0”. The standard requires that it be defined as some value that may not be dereferenced, which is typically 0 (but doesn’t have to be Not true - the standard requires NULL to be defined as one of the two values given above. and isn’t on some mainframes There are indeed some platforms where a null pointer is not an all-bits-zero value, but this is achieved by compiler magic behind the scenes. It is still created by assigning the constant value 0 to a pointer, and can be checked for by comparing a pointer with a constant 0. |
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Re:Wait, what? - by TheSunborn (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread I think the compiler is correct. If tun is null, then tun->sk is undefined and the compiler can do what even optimization it want. So when the compiler see tun->sk it can assume that tun is not null, and do the optimization, because IF tun is null, then the program is invoked undefined behavier, which the compiler don’t have to preserve/handle. (How do you keep the semantic of an undefined program??) |
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Re:Serious bug in gcc? - by Bananenrepublik (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread They were writing nonsense. GCC makes use of the fact that in the C language any pointer that was dereferenced can’t be NULL (this is made explicit in the standard). People use C as a high-level assembly where these assumptions don’t hold. This is why code that doesn’t assume this breaks. This issue came up a few months ago on the GCC lists, where an embedded developer pointed out that he regularly maps memory to the address 0x0, thereby running into issues with this assumption in the optimizers. The GCC developers introduced a command-line flag which tells the computer to not make that assumption, therefore allowing the compiler to be used even in environments where NULL pointers can be valid. Now, the exploit uses this feature of the compiler (or the C language, if you will) to get the kernel into an unspecified state (which is then exploited) — the NULL pointer check will be “correctly” optimized away. But in order to do this it first has to make sure that the pointer dereference preceding the NULL pointer check doesn’t trap. This needs some mucking around with SELinux, namely one has to map memory to 0x0. This is a beautiful exploit, which nicely demonstrates how complex interplay between parts can show unforeseen consequences. Linux fixes this by using the aforementioned new compiler option to not have the NULL pointer check optimized away. |
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‘It’s a paper’s duty to print the news&raise h - by D4C5CE (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread
That much for the sad state of “the Fourth Estate, more important than them all” (Edmund Burke)
Wilbur F. Storey, 1861 |
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of course they didn’t want it - by dnwq (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread |
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They had no choice “not to want it” - by D4C5CE (Score: 5, Interesting) Thread
How would it deserve keeping its present government contacts (while putting them to no use, let alone snitching whistleblowers to them!) and readers by holding back The News?!
Henry Louis Mencken |
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Domestic traffic too - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 5, Informative) Thread From EFF.org The undisputed documents show that AT&T installed a fiberoptic splitter at its facility at 611 Folsom Street in San Francisco that makes copies of all emails, web browsing, and other Internet traffic to and from AT&T customers, and provides those copies to the NSA. This copying includes both domestic and international Internet activities of AT&T customers. As one expert observed, “this isn’t a wiretap, it’s a country-tap.” Of course, we may never know all the details thanks to Bush, Obama and all the other assholes that voted for FISA2008:
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Re:I question a key point from TFA - by Kreigaffe (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread You’re right on both parts, essentially. I think they also were monitoring calls originating in the US that were made to foreign numbers they believed to have ties with terrorism, too, but honestly it’s hard to really figure out what the truth is and was with so much fear-mongering and hyperbole going on. Oh, and the program itself wasn’t really new, it’s been around forever. Bush & Co. just tweaked the rules around a little bit — a move that I think was less about invading the privacy of Americans (which they’ve been able to do for several decades now) and more a matter of removing a bottleneck. The whole secret wiretap deal has to be approved by a secret court, I think there’s a 24 or 48 hour window in which they can start a wiretap and then seek approval by this secret court. Well, in the wake of 9/11, they were using this quite a bit, and I’m of the belief that they circumvented the court not because they wanted to be Big Brother but because they knew that most these wiretaps would NOT result in any information but felt that at the time it was best to cast as wide a net as possible, immediately, and later worry about narrowing things down from “possible” to “likely”. The secret court, of course, only would be able to review so many requests for secret wiretaps at once, and if you’re looking at a list of 1,000 possibles and you think 100 of them are pretty likely, let’s say it would take a week for a court (and you) to go through and decide which of those 1,000 were the ones you wanted.. well, I believe the idea was simply to not worry about the time limit due to the huge volume and keep all the wiretaps in place until some sort of review could be done, rather than potentially miss out on valuable information because of a paperwork bottleneck. Not that I really care for the idea of secret courts or meetings or wiretaps or anything, but overblown fearmongering and fingerpointing pisses me off even more. Especially when it’s hypocritical fingerpointing. It’s not like the democrats in power were oblivious to what was going on (see also, criticism of the information on WMDs before the Iraq War from the democrats when in fact they had access and agreed with the intelligence reports at the time.. fucking i’ll-have-my-cake-and-eat-it-too bullshit). |
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It is the LAW people - by SmallFurryCreature (Score: 5, Insightful) Thread You see a lot of kiddies complaining along the lines of “a rave shouldn’t be illegal”. But in britain, it is. Yes, really. Not concerts or parties, but raves. The reasons are probably that overtime raves became a problem for some and they wanted something done against them. The other side was not intrested in fighting it and so things got passed into law and voila, you got a specific type of party made illegal. England, believe it or not is still democracy. More so now then in the last couple of decades because it is no longer ensured who is going to win an election in a region. Safe seats aren’t that safe anymore. If YOU don’t fight for your rights, then someone else wins with their rights. The problem with raves is simple, it is the struggle between the neighbours who want a quiet night and the party people who don’t. Both have rights but they can’t both excersise them fully without restricting the other. So either the ravers turn down the music or the neighbours give up their quiet night. Ideally, both sides should work this out but as you can see on this side, working things out ain’t part of human nature. The anti rave laws have come into being to deal with “illegal” events being held at random location with absolutely no care being given for the consequences. This doesn’t just upset the neighbours, it upsets others in the entertainment industry. Not entirely fair is it that a local pub has to spend a fortune on sound isolation but a random group can just hold a rave anywhere, break every law that exists, not pay taxes and get away with it? The law didn’t come into place because YOU played techno in your yard and the neighbour complained. It came into being from 1000+ parties being held in location with no fire safety, no securty, causing serious disturbances. Not just noise, but traffic and things like fights breaking out. The ravers suffered the public wrath and did NOT regulate themselves to fit into society. Of course, that is not a rebel thing to do but it is the thing to do if you don’t want society to turn against you. Because as silly as this story is, the average voter (that is people who actually do vote, not just people who can vote) doesn’t give a shit. They just see the tabloids depiction of ravers as crazed druggies, heared from someone at work how a rave is a warzone and are all in favor. Democracy is just another word for dictatorship of the many. The raves that got out of control created these laws, which weren’t oppososed by the ravers themselves and now you got this silly situation. Most laws are silly, but exist because people are silly. If a lot of rave parties didn’t cause such a nuisance (you could hold a rave party the same as any other concert and follow laws of fire safety, drugs laws and noise pollution) then there would be no desire to have them restricted. There are laws that says you can’t drill into your wall after or before a specific hour in a building that isn’t standalone. Why? Because someone found it neccesary to drill all night in an apartment block. Well not SOMEONE. A LOT of someone’s. The apartment block is actually a good example, an old flat might easily have several hundred of apartments and drilling in one sound through the entire building. If a person only drill once every 3 years, it takes less then 1000 people to have drilling going on day in day out. That is the reason there are rave laws and lots of others. Because without them people just can’t be consider the affect their action have on others. Want to protest that? Then don’t say “it shouldn’t be illegal”. You should made sure when the laws were introduced that it didn’t become illegal by doing the same thing the petitioners did. Make your case and show that YOUR case benefits the greater good (gets the most people to vote for you). |
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RTFA - misleading summary - by Cougem (Score: 5, Informative) Thread |
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Re:RTFA - misleading summary - by Anonymous Coward (Score: 5, Informative) Thread Apparently, they had caused problems before and were told to get a license before having the next party. They acknowledge this by saying they pointed the speakers away from the village to reduce the noise. If you have ever lived in the country, you know how far sound travels at night. Pointing the speakers in any direction would have little effect. They knew they had caused problems before, and were told they had to get a license befoe having another party. They failed to observe the warnings. Enough is enough. I would have them boiled in oil. It is amazing how Slashdot publishes articles with such misleading descriptions. It is becoming a useful exercise to try to analyze the facts as stated, then figure out what to look for to find the truth. Mike Monett |
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Sure, yeah, I can believe that - by TheModelEskimo (Score: 5, Funny) Thread |
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Started with a barbeque, but.. - by andersa (Score: 5, Informative) Thread Frankly I am old enough and bitter enough to just want kids like that off my lawn, my neighboors lawn, and if they are loud enough, the field next to it as well for that matter. From BBC news - “But local people, fearing a rave was going to take place after previous events with loud music at the same premises, alerted the police.” In other words, this bunch were notorious around town for partying all through the night, playing loud music and generally being a pain in the ass to everybody else. They may have been just barbequeing when the police showed up, but the locals knew what was comming and decided enough was enough. |
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Development schedules - by BuR4N (Score: 4, Informative) Thread |
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Re:Development schedules - by cheesybagel (Score: 3, Informative) Thread |
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Is it worth it? - by Tubal-Cain (Score: 3, Interesting) Thread |
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Re:Is it worth it? - by burning-toast (Score: 3, Interesting) Thread I’m of the opinion that setting foot on the moon the very first time was the most expensive time considering it took the entirety of human knowledge up until that time to make it happen (plus a bit of fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants engineering). Each trip after that would only require a fraction of the original research as it’s a matter of tuning or tweaking a somewhat known quantity (albeit still expensive). |
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GLXP is unwinnable - by QuantumG (Score: 4, Interesting) Thread My last rant on the subject: > Nice YouTube video on the Google Lunar X Prize competition: Heh, I remember this video. It’s about as realistic as the prize. 1. Interest in launch watching goes up 100,000% This video, most graphically, demonstrated to me that the GLXP is a |
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More ambitious? - by Hurricane78 (Score: 2) Thread More weapons, combinations, drugs, little things, cool story, and sheer fun, like in, you know, System Shock 1?? I find it annoying, that BioShock is so dumbed down. As if they wanted to have dumber clients/buyers/players on average. It’s all about money, I guess. So beef up the graphics (remember how they talked about the water FX half the time of the hype videos?). I give credit for the athmosphere and Big Daddy / Little Sister thing though. But I miss all that love of details. I’d even give most of the graphics to have that back. Oh, and the psychology is SS1/2 was really creepy, with things like Shodan sending all the cyborgs in when you angered him, with things like finding a log, listening to it while seeing an image of the women talking, and then looking up into a air duct and finding the severed head of her. Then throwing that head onto the attacking buggy medical robot. With things like getting halucinations, being on heavy drugs, drunk, hooked to a freaking cyberspace machine, pushing anti-radiation medicine into you, always in fear of a cyborg killing you while logged in. And then Shodan telling you some shit about you being an insect insulting a god. Grow! Do something better. Beat that! |
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Never fired anybody? EVER? - by TheModelEskimo (Score: 2) Thread |
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Re:Never fired anybody? EVER? - by Hurricane78 (Score: 2) Thread Or maybe it’s a lie. Or maybe they do not exist long enough. I know that before all that, there was Irrational Games, and Looking Glasses. If you always close your company and make a new one when you would have to fire people, of course you will never have “fired” someone (at the current company). But I must say, that as usual, it’s EA’s fault again. Oh, and the idiots who buy EA games like |
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Re:Never fired anybody? EVER? - by maugle (Score: 2) Thread |
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Re:Never fired anybody? EVER? - by TheModelEskimo (Score: 2) Thread |
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Signal to Noise ratio over time
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