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6026
General Software Discussion / Re: Windows 8 to offer nine versions for sale
« Last post by 40hz on March 02, 2012, 06:22 PM »
I understand the ARM and Enterprise editions (and that Microsoft has traditional done this with Office, but why so many Home/Pro editions? Help me understand this.

It's a strategy called "nickle & dime-ing the customer" where I come from. In this case, the official term is "Anytime Upgrade."

Poor Microsoft. They so wish they will be allowed to get away with what Apple gets away with.

It's good to have a dream! :-\
6027
Living Room / Re: Anyone else noticed this?
« Last post by 40hz on March 02, 2012, 11:45 AM »
Ok. This is what I'm talking about. Closed FF. Then this weirdness just happened again when I opened FF:

dc.gif

Wasn't doing it before.  :-\
6028
GoG does it again.  :-* Cyan's portfolio of interactive puzzle/adventure games goes on sale. Most are priced@ $2.99 per title. The massive Uru will set you back $4.99.

Here's your chance to stock up, or just add that one missing title (like Uru?) to your collection.

Details here

6029
Living Room / Re: Stiff sentence for sending child to wrong school district
« Last post by 40hz on March 02, 2012, 07:47 AM »
The woman has committed no crime. The prosecutor should be shot for concocting such a stupidly trumped up charge.

Actually she did. At least according to current laws.

Just to keep the record straight ... The statement you quoted above was mine, not Target's.

Having a law against something doesn't make it a crime, as the books are full of special interest/blue 'law' nonsense. Just because there is a text based rationalization...doesn't make it (criminal) 'right' ... I just further proves how totally broken the system really is. Murder is a felony. Rape is a felony. However, Florida has decided that letting your tag get 6 months out of date...is now also a felony ... Which is completely stupid. As it detracts from the whole point of having certain acts identified as felonies.

I hear you. But definitions are important when dealing with the law. A criminal is someone who has violated the provisions of a law. It has nothing to do with whether they caused any harm or did any wrong. Which is something you always need to keep in mind. Because the only thing you can be prosecuted for is breaking a law.

Way back in my civil activist days we got instructed by some very smart attorneys who explained to us that the only thing that can make you a criminal, or make some act a crime, is a law. Which is a lot more than a simple text justification for something. One of the attorneys likened it to a magic spell. Something that moved reality in accordance with one's will. The example she gave was how one on quiet afternoon approximately 500,000 otherwise harmless heroin addicts became criminals overnight after an Act of Congress. As did marijuana users a few years later. And as did alcohol drinkers a few years earlier.

The attorney said that while we may disagree or dispute the morality or justice of a statute, it doesn't change the fact that a law establishes "a new reality."

And our agreement or disagreement with that reality doesn't factor into the 'justice' system's function - or the actions they're allowed to take in response to a violation.

As she so nicely put it: Maybe you think your reality or morality is superior to theirs. Maybe you refuse to accept their definitions of what's real. But if you do, just keep one thing in mind. The law is a form of magic. And those who write and enforce it are magicians. They alter reality. And if you think that's all just a pile of bullshit, try walking away from an armed police officer who just has given you an order to 'stop.' I think you'll be amazed at  how quickly and definitively his 'reality' overrides your 'reality.'

She made two suggestions for more effective confrontation:

  • Given the choice, "bust balls" rather than break laws. It makes it difficult for them to hit back without bringing the issue to the fore. Something they're usually loathe to do since they count on public inertia and short attention spans to smooth things over. (Out of sight - out of mind.)
  • If you decide you really must break the law, pick your venue and make it worth it. Because going to jail is no walk in the park no matter where they send you. And this country loves to put people in jail.

Wise words. Especially if you're trying to force an issue or foment change. Not to say you should never break the law. But it will make you a 'criminal' even if you are doing no wrong. Our jails are full of 'criminals' who have done no wrong. Just as our businesses and institutions are loaded with people who do nothing but wrong and cause harm to others - but have committed no crime.

Far from ideal. But that's the way it works. :)
6030
Living Room / Re: Stiff sentence for sending child to wrong school district
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 10:47 PM »
...and what about the child?  After being in the system, there is a higher than normal chance that he will stay in the system, either as a dependent of the social services program, or incarcerated just like his mother.

Spot on. My GF works for our state's social services department. She can tell you all about how well that version of cat's cradle works out for many kids.

No simple solutions here. Best you can hope is that the chosen remedy isn't worse than what it's meant to cure.

In this particular case I think some form of supervised release would have been preferable and worth a try. Unfortunately, the drug charges are federal and and are burdened with mandatory sentencing rules a judge is required to follow. So much for creative or innovative sentencing, right?
 :(
6031
For someone who doesn't want to argue you sure post a lot with multiple paragraphs.

Sorry. I was just trying to share. I'll try to be more careful next time about using multiple paragraphs when you're around. It's just the way I think - and write. I don't mean anything personal by it. (BTW, I hope you don't find parentheses equally annoying. I use a lot of those too when I post.)  ;)

As soon as I saw a Linux thread I knew it would degenerate to be honest.

Interesting...

Still, like the guy hoping the football would not be pulled away this time, I tried to give the OP the benefit of my experience.

confused.jpg
"Sorry. But you just lost me here..."

Um...this isn't a competition. There's no ball. No score. No winners or losers. And nobody is trying to "pull" anything away from you that I can see. So I'm not sure where you're  coming from when you say something like that. But as far as offering the benefit of one's individual experience to the OP, well...that's exactly what everybody else is trying to do too, isn't it? So if I'm missing something here, please let me know ok?

(With apologies for using multiple paragraphs again.) :)
6032
@40hz The "attitude that holds Linux back" is not Linux that is Linux. It's Linux that tries to be Windows. It's like calling elevator music "Smooth Jazz" to make it seem fashionable. To compete with Windows for Windows users is futile. Linux needs to be something different. The Windowsalike distro, in my opinion, is for those who must use something Linux when they don't want to. Therefore the rest of the OS environment is kept as painless as possible. In such cases the user should try to run the needed app in a VM in Windows. If the user really wants Linux, he/she should be prepared to learn some scripting.  The more solid the distro the better. I've seen plenty of people crying on forums about broken Mint. I haven't seen anyone crying about broken Mandriva.


Unless I'm running a business on the Linux distro I have no need to buy support or have any interest in the status of the company.  The package tool is standardized. I don't think APT is going away.


@Miles - I don't want to get into a drawn out debate over the relative merits of one distro vs another. Lets leave that for the acolytes and evangelists. Apple already has that well covered too. ;D

My point was it's better to start off with one of the mainstream and broadly adopted distros to get your feet wet rather than opting for a  lesser known one if you're looking for minimal starting hassles. You seem to really like Mandriva. Fine by me. Whatever works best for you. I've used almost every version of it since back when it was still Mandrake. And I personally stopped being impressed with it quite some time ago for reasons far too picky to be worth getting into. It's a fine distro. Nuff said.

As far as broken Mint installations, I haven't experienced that where I am. Mint just seems to work for the people I deal with. But I have no strong axe to grind about it either way. And I'll drop it like a bad habit the minute it stops working for me as well as it currently is. But either way, I'm not seeing anybody who's crying about a broken Mint. And FWIW, I hardly hear anybody even mentioning Mandriva much, other than to talk about the soap opera it's become business-wise. So I guess what's popular depends on where you live. In my neck of the woods it's Debian and Debian-based distros for the most part - with a few VCIWs singing the praises of Suse. And where it's not mostly Debian-based (i.e. servers) it's BSD before it's RedHat.

To your philosophical point about how it would be better for Linux to pursue it's own paradigm and totally ignore Windows I'll have to agree. Partly. But not completely. Because there's a lot to be said for familiarity. And most people don't give blort about any of the technical or design stuff most of us mutants live for. And pursuing perfection in the computing world is like chasing clouds. Good exercise. But it won't help you get your chores done.

Ten years ago I would have agreed with you 100% that Linux absolutely needs to go its own way. I'm not so insistent any more. Mainly because it can't. There's too much existing technology and daily practice for it to divorce itself from history. 20 years ago it might have had a better chance to do that. With each passing day it becomes less likely and desirable for it to do so because it can't exist as an island. Not with Windows still holding +80% of the desktop and paradigm.

But maybe a lot of my opinion is shaped by the fact I've learned to become a pragmatist over the years. As a network integrator and system support tech, I really don't have much choice to be anything but. I have no philosophy to espouse other than the need for alternatives to be made available. That and a belief that the correct solution is the one that works for the person using it.

Pretty sad huh? That's what happens when you start getting old. ;D :Thmbsup:
6033
Watching this thread with great interest...

My main problem is how to maintain complete MS Office compatibility, so I need to check Libre Office. Once I've solved that, I really have no truly compelling reasons to stay on Windows, though I will need Windows for quite some time no matter what. :(

 



If Libre doesn't float your boat, you can always install and run Office inside Linux using WINE or purchase a copy of Codeweavers CrossOver and run it under that.

Alternatively, Softmaker Office is highly MS Office compatible and has native versions available for Linux. This is what I usually prefer to use.

 :)
6034

Well then!  This might be the first install, if the VM doesn't get there first.

I'd go live-CD before I went virtual if I just wanted to experiment. VMs introduce occasional complexities that may skew your first impressions.

Just my 2ยข. :)
6035
Living Room / Re: Stiff sentence for sending child to wrong school district
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 03:58 PM »
The woman has committed no crime. The prosecutor should be shot for concocting such a stupidly trumped up charge.

Actually she did. At least according to current laws.

In the USA, publicly funded schooling is compulsory for all children. Usually between the ages of 5 and 18 although the exact years may vary slightly depending on which State you reside in. (In the USA, public education is still mostly regulated by State rather than federal law.)

So why do some people consider what this woman did as being criminal?

Some background:

In Connecticut, public education is funded out of collected property taxes. The state sets a minimum annual expenditure per student for education. Local municipalities may spend as much over that minimum as they like however. So the bigger the town's property tax base (i.e. the wealthier it is) the better funded the schools should be. At least in theory. Although that's pretty much the case in practice too.

My town just finished building a new elementary and middle school. And extensively renovating one of it's three high schools. Total cost was in excess of $1 billion dollars. And that has not included additional millions spent on expanding and renovating its 14 other schools. We currently have: 10 elementary, 3 middle schools, and 2 standard + 1 alternative high school. The proposed annual school budget for 2012-13 is just shy of $150 million to service a student population of about 9,300 students.

The schools are well equipped, well maintained, and have (for the most part) a competent and dedicated staff of teachers working in them. Student to teacher ratio is about: 18:1 for elementary; 12:1 for middle; and 10:1 for high school.

Needless to say, my town is a good place to send your kid for public schooling. So much so that houses and rentals command a premium price because they get you access to this school system.

Unfortunately, our property tax assessments can also cause nosebleed. But even that isn't an issue for many residents. I heard a parent of school children once state (at an open town budget meeting) that she didn't care if the taxes doubled. Because it would still be a bargain. She had four kids in public school, and had worked out that buying all four a comparable private education would cost her in excess of $40K per year. When asked if she would still feel the same way once her kids were out of school, she said in a serious voice, "Oh, I won't care. As soon as my youngest is finished with high school my husband and I plan on moving."

In a nutshell, my town has put itself in the education business. Something which has pretty much split the town into two political groups: those with school children who are benefiting from high property taxes; and those without who aren't - but are still required to pay them.

And this is generally the case throughout this region. Education budgets and budget hearings are often very contentious political issues in these parts.

This situation is further exacerbated by the fact that many municipalities (my town is one) don't allow the taxpayers to directly vote on the school budget. The taxpayers only get to elect the School Board. The School Board itself is who gets to vote on the school budget. (Note: in towns that do have public voting on the school budgets it's not uncommon for there to be four or five separate votes before a budget finally gets passed. It's enough of a problem that several municipalities are trying to change their local laws to no longer allow a public voting on school budgets.)

----------------------------------------

And into this political firestorm comes Ms.Tanya McDowell. She lies about her place of residence in order to enroll her son in school in a town where she isn't a legal resident - an act which is a direct violation of existing law. A law that up until recently wasn't taken too seriously because most people felt it was always better to have a kid attending school than worry about where he attended it.

But with worries about a diminishing economy, increasing unemployment, high taxes, and a less humane attitude on the part of many people, Tanya McDowell's fib became a lodestone for all the frustrations people had about funding a very expensive educational system. So she got selected to be the poster child for what can happen to you when you break the rules about where you send your child to school.

This might have been resolved quietly, with some token penalty once the furor died down. Most people didn't want to see her punished all that much if at all. They just wanted a message sent that what she did was not acceptable.

But unfortunately, certain community and political factions picked up on her case, weighed in, and turned it into a debate about race, privilege, and inequalities in the public education system. Then the NAACP got involved. Next Al Sharpton showed up. And in the meantime, her story had become national news. After all that, nobody involved was about to back down. There was too much "face" at stake to do otherwise.

So...did Tanya McDowell break the law?

Yes, she did.

Was she convicted of what she was charged with?

No
she was not. She plead under the Alford Doctrine - that weird little legal fiction that allows you to plead guilty while still maintaining you are innocent. This is the so called "I'm guilty but I didn't do it!" plea.

How stiff a sentence did she receive?

12 years, suspended after 5 years served. Plus she was ordered to pay "up to" $6200 reimbursement to the City of Norwalk where he son was attending school.

Was that sentence just for sending her child to the wrong school?

No. Once you read past the headlines you'll discover her twelve year sentence also included time for her guilty plea on four separate counts of possession and sale of drugs.

Did she deserve to go to jail?

Purely on the charge of sending her kid to school where she shouldn't have? I personally don't think so. And neither does anybody else I've talked to.

As far as the drug possession and sale charges go, reaction is mixed. Almost everybody I talked to thought 12 years was very harsh, but that automatically suspending it after 5 actual years served was reasonable. I still think it's a little heavy. But I'm dubious about the value and effectiveness of incarcerating people for long periods of time unless they've committed an act of extreme violence and we're concerned they'll do it again if released. But that's just me.

 8)

6036
Can I put Mint on it as a dual boot easily?

Can't be that difficult. I'm doing it. ;D

More seriously, the Mint installer is Windows 7 aware. Just select the "alongside Windows" option and Bob's your uncle. See below:

mint.jpg

In my case, I just threw in a spare 250Gb hard drive. But it will also detect unallocated space on your existing drives and can use that too. Installing Mint is almost too easy. "It's butterscoth baby! Pure butterscotch."

Keeps the Windows bootloader too. You won't even see GRUB until you tell it to boot into Linux.
 8)



6037
@Stephen - So much wickedness in the world.  ;D
6038
Living Room / Re: Stiff sentence for sending child to wrong school district
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 10:47 AM »
^There is low-income housing in the area. Unfortunately it's administrated by each town individually. (This is New England after all!) You have to first get your name on a public housing list. Many towns only open their list for registrations once a year. Once on the list, you wait for a unit to become available. Sometimes you'll wait for years depending upon which municipality you want to live in. Towns with low crime rates, public beaches, and good school systems have very very very long waiting lists.

Considering the mayor of Norwalk started this whole mess for her, and has been pretty vocal about his justification for doing so, she won't be seeing any favors from the city. If she were to apply you can be 100% sure it will be handled by the book. Which, in this case, means a multi-year wait.

Also can't speak for the rest of the nation, but CT isn't CA. Judges and legislators don't get very creative here. Such behavior would be frowned on and considered 'inappropriate' by most of the general public. What can I say? It's New England.  :-\
6039
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: 7 Days of Free Downloads from VideoBlocks.com
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 10:24 AM »
@Curt -  :)
6040
Living Room / Re: Cannot Unsee!
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 10:09 AM »
@daddydave - that is too brilliant!

Love it! :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:
6041
Living Room / Re: Cannot Unsee!
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 10:07 AM »
Re: Amperman

Looks a little like he's about to put his foot in his mouth... :P

(Sorry. Couldn't resist.. ;D )

Cool avatar BTW. Runs circles around mine. Good name for it too! :Thmbsup:
6042
Living Room / Re: Stiff sentence for sending child to wrong school district
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 09:40 AM »
@zridling - +1! I'm starting to feel that way more and more lately.  :(
6043
I want IainB to start a blog, that once a week dissects (as is his wont) some late breaking web issue. The mind boggles... ;D

P.S. I hope they never abolish orgasm. It's still the cheapest form of entertainment going.  ;)
6044

I haven't dabbled now for a good few years so I would be really interested to know how you get on with things like video, sound and printer support - in particular printer support, esp. as many printers are now network ready and often all in one.
-Carol Haynes (March 01, 2012, 02:26 AM)

Most driver hassles are a thing of the past with the newer distros. I haven't encountered any serious issues getting most printers (or anything else really) to work under Linux for a few years now. True there are a few multi-device office all-in-ones that you can still get a headache over. But they're the same flaky models that were also a royal pain in ass to work with under Windows, so no difference there.

I've actually resurrected a few mothballed Windows-based devices that won't work with Win7 by hooking them up to Linux boxes. One nice thing about Linux. Once a driver is worked out, it stays available in the distro repositories pretty much forever. So if something ever does work under Linux, it will almost always continue to work until it breaks - or you can no longer get ink cartridges for it. ;D
6045
Living Room / Re: Paypal: Censors in the name of Profit
« Last post by 40hz on March 01, 2012, 06:35 AM »
Hmmm... Icky issue...

Still, I find censorship at the payment level completely distasteful. These kinds of things should be at the edge, i.e. at the publisher level.



There's an argument that what isn't legal or acceptable in the physical world doesn't magically become legal and acceptable when it's put up on the web. Political and thought-crime aside, I find I largely agree with that argument.

I try to use a real-world transform to see if what is happening on the web represents a change, or is just a legitimate and rational extension of an existing meme.

In this specific case, I think there's enough legal precedence and public understanding to not get overly concerned.

Let's go real-world for a minute. Somebody like MasterCard or Amex wouldn't be considered an accessory to an illegal act just because somebody used one of their cards to purchase the means necessary to commit a crime. Or to receive payment for it.

But Mastercard would be considered an accessory if they deliberately courted such businesses (Open a MasterCrackDealer account today!) - or showed a pattern of knowingly and deliberately processing payments for something they had reason to believe was illegal.

So in PayPal's case, yeah...they do have something to be concerned about here.

But it would have been better if they just put their cards on the table and simply said: Look people, there's some stuff going on that we don't want to be involved with. So if you're into that sort of thing you're going to have to get somebody other than us to process transactions for it.

PayPal is a private business. They're not a government agency. They have the right to decide what business they will carry. I don't have a problem with that.

What I do worry about is how pressuring PayPal might open the doors for a convenient way for governments and interest groups to effectively censor materials not quite so broadly offensive as what PayPal is now refusing to handle. Especially when you consider how almost anything you can think of (or do) is likely to be illegal in some part of this world.

Tough call this story. I agree with PayPal not wanting to handle this type of business. But I also fault them for not having the kahunas to originally say what the real reasons for that decision were.

At any rate, this is a potential bellwhether that bears watching because of the opportunity it provides for future legal abuses.
 
Onward!  :Thmbsup: 8)

6046
Because if you don't you'll eventually end up morphing into a BOFH!!!!!

I fear it's far to late for me...
.
.
.
The PFY rolled his eyes, threw his hands in the air, and gave me the finger. He's a good kid.  :)

Sounds like a good one. And apparently somebody taught him the recognition sign of the Master 32nd Degree Sysadmin - so he's cool by me!  ;D
6047
Official Announcements / Re: I want to try an experiment on the site for March 2012
« Last post by 40hz on February 29, 2012, 07:26 PM »
Project Wonderful sounds okay, even wonderful, but I don't trust it to make money.
Do 'we' have any facts about it?

Check with app103. IIRC she's worked with them.
6048
FARR Plugins and Aliases / Re: New FARR wiki: BookOnAStick
« Last post by 40hz on February 29, 2012, 07:18 PM »
@oblivion - have you tried getting it to work with Zim Desktop Wiki or WikiPad?

Both work similarly to WOAS in that there's no database. Just plain text files storing the information plus markup. And both are open source so you can get at the underlying code.
 :)
6049
Living Room / Re: Anyone else noticed this?
« Last post by 40hz on February 29, 2012, 07:04 PM »
I've had it happen. Lost both dividing lines and, on a few occasions, all the non-text elements on the main forum index page. (On gHacks too come to think of it.)

It seemed to be a problem with something in my profile or Firefox's settings. But I'm a professional network administrator, so I opted for a simple "joott maneuver" which "cured" the problem each time. As a result, I never bothered to try to get to the absolute bottom of it. And it doesn't seem to be happening any more so it's hardly worth the time to me. (I just started sitting down with O'Reilly's Java programming books so I have much bigger headaches right now.)

@SB - some of us don't have that much free time on our hands... ;D

Gotta love that Joott Maneuver! :Thmbsup:
6050
There are times when CLI/scripting really is easier than a GUI ... Especially if you have to drill through 900 dialogs to find setting X.

...or you just want to write a nice script, chron it, and maybe get home before 9:00pm some night for a change. ;D

Because if you don't you'll eventually end up morphing into a BOFH!!!!! :tellme:

I liked Mint

Me too. It's the only distro I've ever used that was able to recognize and configure my antique Belkin FD9050 USB wifi adapter right out of the box.

That alone was proof enough to me Mint is the ideal first distro for most users. Such attention to detail! :Thmbsup:
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