There Is No Insurance For Sad Love And Heartbreak
happy birthday love quotes for
bugfaceuk
Apr 9, 08:33 AM
Hardcore Gamer? You've lost your way.
Hehe. You're  funny. 
Hardcore gaming is playing a lot of games, the hardware bragging  & taxonomy of gamers is a penis envy thing. 
I'm off to play with my  9.7 incher.
love quotes for him. love
intoxicated662
Mar 18, 02:17 PM
You get what you deserve and for those of you who kept  telling others about an Unlock and to suffer the consequences,  KARMA.
stcanard
Mar 18, 12:13 PM
But it can be fixed by possibly: Encrypting (or Changing the  way it is encrypted) the AAC file on the transfer from itms to the player. 
or force the player to send the authorize code to apple to wrap on <i>  their</i> servers before send it back to the player.
If they do the  server fix it'll take more than a day. 
And it will take Jon a day to  figure out how the iTunes client generates that key and spoof it. Again by  definition DRM has to be insecure, because the client must have all the  information necessary to break it.
In interviews Steve Jobs has gone on  record saying that unbreakable DRM is impossible. What you're seeing from Apple  is a "good enough" strategy. After all, they don't really care, it's only there  to appease the RIAA.
Does anybody have more of an idea on how the DRM  wrapping is done and how the undrmed file is transfered?
There's a good  overview of what's happening at Ars.
Basically the issue (and I hadn't  thought about this) is that the song has to be individually encrypted for each  client; that's how its made playable on your system not other people's. Because  they're using Akamai to cache and distribute the files they can't distribute  pre-encrypted ones! (The analogy is it would be like libraries carrying a copy  of the book for everyone who might borrow it). Apple can't link everything back  to their servers as you'd bottleneck it. 
Instead its your copy of iTunes  that's actually adding the DRM (and that's probably why the new Motorola phone  won't let you buy directly from the store, it can't add the DRM).
It's an  interesting problem. I would bet you will find this hole in WMA stores for the  same reason. Of course Jon prefers to target the source that will get him  headlines.
Apple will make another "good enough" fix to block it for  another 6 months. But they really don't care. Although externally they "care", I  bet internally it doesn't particularly bother them because ITMS is so big that  the record companies can't afford to pull out of it.
d0minick
Mar 18, 06:04 AM
Until then I'm stuck because I believe in playing by the  rules, no matter how F-d up they are...
How could you be the real IT guy  if you believe that? Never meant an IT guy that had to "tweak" a few things to  get a system to work, the best toys do what the manufacturer never  intended!
R.Perez
Mar 13, 03:48 PM
That would destroy the local ecology (yes, there IS ecology  there) as well as a number of historical and archaeological sites, and  obliterate native-owned lands that provide subsistence in the form of pine nuts  and springs among other things. There is nowhere in the US were a 100x100mi  solar array would be acceptable.
None of the studies I have read  proposing this, have suggested the sort of ecological impact you are implying.  This is pure, unadulterated, BS.
dante@sisna.com
Sep 12, 06:34 PM
Except the quality just won't be there yet with this device.  As everyone runs out to buy flat screen TVs this year and next, they're going to  get home and want to play iTunes movies only to be completely dismayed by the  640x480 content/quality. 4:3 resolution, yuck :confused: 
I know it's  802.11 and certainly features an HDMI out, but streaming 720p HD TV takes about  480 Mbps of bandwith, according to  Ars:http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7681.html Even 802.11n would  have trouble with an uncompressed 720p signal, so quality will most likely be  compromised as streaming video is increasingly compressed.
I'm happy to  ditch Comcast's 25 shopping channels, in favor of a paid siubscription model,  but I'm guessing that the cable & satellite companies are going to do HD a  heck of a lot better than Apple.
Actually, HDMI allows the  display (TV, monitor,etc) to decrypt and decode the HD content at full  resolution. That means the content is still encrypted even after leaving a PC,  iTV, etc. so you can't copy it.
Without HDMI, signals are reduced to  Standard Def. For copy-protection reasons, HD signals never leave any compliant  device - players and monitors alike - meaning no key, no HD.
So, without  HDMI, even HD-DVD discs on an xbox, for example, will only look as good as DVDs  because the hardware is programmed to reduce the resolution to SD.
I  think Apple will have a wireless solution out to handle the streaming content:  if not, that is what Gigabit ethernet is for on the device. Home Theatre  enthusiasts will gladly string cat 5 cable for this: most homes in the past 8  years are wired for this anyway.
Evangelion
Jul 12, 06:47 AM
Way, costs about $1 for Apple to fix it. Great!
So  what?
You cannot put a price tag for components such as CPU and GPU that  get updated with every single hardware revision. Yes, in time they become more  capable with every revision, but the relative price of such components does not  change that much.
So you are saying that dual-core Core Due CPU costs  Apple about as much as the G4 did? back when Mini had G4, the CPU was bottom of  the barrel, with prices to match. The Core Duo (or solo for that matter) are  actually very good CPU's and they do cost more than the G4 did. SO-DIMM is also  more expenside than regural DDR-SDRAM is.
The built-in wireless on the  other hand is something of extra value; however, Apple cuts its own costs of  eliminating an option, so it should not cost the customer that much  extra.
Why not? The customer receives more, why shouldn't he pay more for  it? "because it doesn't cost that much more to the company!" Well boo-hoo! I bet  that a car with 2-liter engine doesn't REALLY cost that much more to make than  similar car with 1.6-liter engine, yet we have to pay more for the bigger  engine. By your logic they should cost the same?
And how about the  remote?
You should compare dollars to dollars when you say one is cheaper  than another. You buy items with dollars and that's it. You look at the numbers  and say that smaller value is cheaper. Didn't your mother teach you  that?
OK, compare the prices then. You will see that you could buy a Mac  Mini for $599 back then. And guess what? You can buy a Mac Mini for $599 even  today! True, you can't get one for $499, but at this point I feel compelled to  ask: So what? Since when did Macs become the rock-bottom computers with prices  to match?
Hell, I have been watching some old Stevenotes recently. And I  remember him introducing PowerMacs with prices starting at $1499. Why aren't we  whining because PowerMacs are more expensive today?




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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