Sorry for your troubles, but you're something of an outlier.
Aemon Send a noteboard - 31/05/2012 07:31:53 PM
There have been several studies / surveys done on advertised speed vs actual speed, and the vast majority of people reported getting close to what they're supposed to. To add my own personal anecdote to the mix, I'm something of an internet geek (I work for Cisco), so I usually test the speed wherever I'm at. Every home connection I've tried has been solid.
As for technological apologism, I'm definitely guilty of that, and have no problem admitting a bit of bias. I do think that history has, thus far, supported my position, though. There were a loooooot of disgruntled internet users, back in the day. Connections were slow, unreliable, sites were poorly designed, buggy, service was expensive. . .the list goes on. That's kind of the phase we're in now, with cloud computing. Don't get me wrong, I'm sure it will never be perfect, and I think it will be a very long time before hobbyists stop maintaining their own computing setup. But I definitely think we'll see comfortable, functional, pleasant cloud computing go mainstream before too much longer. The advantages are real and proven; we just have to figure out the right implementation. We (as a collective society) have, over the long run, usually done a pretty good job with that.
As for technological apologism, I'm definitely guilty of that, and have no problem admitting a bit of bias. I do think that history has, thus far, supported my position, though. There were a loooooot of disgruntled internet users, back in the day. Connections were slow, unreliable, sites were poorly designed, buggy, service was expensive. . .the list goes on. That's kind of the phase we're in now, with cloud computing. Don't get me wrong, I'm sure it will never be perfect, and I think it will be a very long time before hobbyists stop maintaining their own computing setup. But I definitely think we'll see comfortable, functional, pleasant cloud computing go mainstream before too much longer. The advantages are real and proven; we just have to figure out the right implementation. We (as a collective society) have, over the long run, usually done a pretty good job with that.
Why does Blizzard insist on making me sign onto their servers ... seriously. ? !
30/05/2012 12:22:14 AM
- 1028 Views
It's to stop "pirates." And by "pirates," I mean, "people who play used games." *NM*
30/05/2012 04:31:22 AM
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Scary that in order to curb one practice - they are alienating a whole section ...
05/06/2012 08:30:15 AM
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Close... it's for control, for a variety of reasons. "piracy" and the used game market are the tip
07/06/2012 03:21:58 AM
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Fair enough. I guess used-game concerns are more of a console thing. *NM*
07/06/2012 03:54:47 AM
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too fucking true. which is why I went to play Reckoning (fuck you, Blizzard)
30/05/2012 01:58:56 PM
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You know that entire studio shut down last week, right? No more Curt Schilling for you. *NM*
30/05/2012 04:47:40 PM
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*sob*
30/05/2012 07:03:42 PM
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He shoulda cut himself on the ankle and worn white socks again ...
05/06/2012 08:33:46 AM
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why was it a poor business choice? The game sold well
05/06/2012 07:58:13 PM
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You need to have followed the whole story a bit more to understand.
05/06/2012 09:14:48 PM
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It's made me furious too
30/05/2012 02:44:58 PM
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criminals? what laws, exactly, have been broken?
30/05/2012 03:51:39 PM
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Re: criminals? what laws, exactly, have been broken?
30/05/2012 06:59:49 PM
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I guess my thing is that no one makes you buy that car that requires my million dollar gas...
30/05/2012 07:03:02 PM
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Wow - you just outlined TORT reform in it's most basic premise ...
05/06/2012 08:00:04 AM
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You know the prototypical hot coffee case was warranted, right? The plaintiff won.
06/06/2012 10:52:52 AM
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Be careful -- the fanboys might hear you...
30/05/2012 04:56:15 PM
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The funny thing is...
30/05/2012 07:48:49 PM
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The difference I see is that Steam has an offline mode that (mostly) works. D3 has none. *NM*
30/05/2012 08:09:40 PM
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yah...I only recently got into Steam. and ONLY because I've been moving a lot
30/05/2012 09:01:31 PM
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It's still a good thing, the problem is that we're in a period of transition.
30/05/2012 09:26:46 PM
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The biggest issues I see right now are bandwith caps & speed.
30/05/2012 09:44:10 PM
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Oh sure, I agree. We're definitely not there yet.
31/05/2012 01:17:58 AM
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Re: Oh sure, I agree. We're definitely not there yet.
31/05/2012 02:02:55 PM
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Sorry for your troubles, but you're something of an outlier.
31/05/2012 07:31:53 PM
- 887 Views
are you unaware that some people do drive to the bus-station anyway?
31/05/2012 02:36:22 AM
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I don't think I've ever used an analogy on the internet that people didn't complain about.
31/05/2012 04:46:17 AM
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lol, yah, I just couldn't help it for the sake of the continuity of internet stereotypes *NM*
31/05/2012 02:17:05 PM
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Re: It's still a good thing, the problem is that we're in a period of transition.
31/05/2012 01:35:33 PM
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Re: It's still a good thing, the problem is that we're in a period of transition.
31/05/2012 07:22:13 PM
- 694 Views
Stuff like D3's always-on DRM and phone home schemes in no way contribute to that future.
07/06/2012 03:26:08 AM
- 842 Views