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"Willfully" requires proof which I'm pretty sure you don't have. Was it intentional, or a mistake that was released? You *may* be right. But *may* don't cut it in a court of law (and I'm putting it this way SPECIFICALLY because you are making a *legal* type argument). I stand by my original statements. I might be what you are saying, but it also might be the result of bad process/ineptitude. You do NOT have proof either way, unless you are materially involved (which I seriously doubt).
If its proven that this was with malice and forethought, I'll be behind your statements all the way. But *until* it is, I'll wait for a determination of the truth rather than jump to a conclusion, which is what everyone is basically doing.
modified 9-Jul-12 16:59pm.
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satovey wrote: It is unlawful to install software on a device that prevents that device to be
used as intended. CISCO may have utilized their auto update program to do this,
but they still violated the law in doing so.
I doubt any of that is true in general although maybe it is true in your jurisdiction.
As a commercial transaction, a sale is usually only beholden to whatever commercial protections are explicitly in place.
In terms of such protections (where I live) if they exist at all, then it is up to the consumers to take action to enforce those rights.
satovey wrote: the developers who participated in this criminal activity
There are certainly jurisdictions where there are no protections at all and there are probably very few if any at all where it is "criminal".
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So when does the class action lawsuit begin?
This is clearly an act of fraud and theft. CISCO sold equipment to individuals and businesses and then without informing the owner of said equipment, took possession of that equipment against the wishes of the rightful owner.
While the owner may still have physical possession of the equipment, CISCO installed software that prevents the owner from utilizing the equipment as originally purchased. This action violates a number of Federal and State Laws.
1. CISCO installed software onto a computer that damaged the computer. Such actions violate Federal Laws against hacking and no doubt a number of State Laws.
2. By making the device unusable as originally purchased, CISCO breached the sales contract which it had entered with the customer.
3. CISCO is violating contract law by placing owners of these devices under duress by demanding compensation (more like protectionism here) in the form of spying on owners of the devices and demanding the ability to disable the devices without due process. This is a violation of the Constitution itself.
All owners of affected devices should file suite against CISCO demanding a full refund of the purchase price in addition to damages that resulted in loss of business and internet access due to CISCO infringing upon the rights of device owners.
This should effectively put CISCO out of business. Anyone who thinks that doing so is to harsh a punishment of a corporation that treats them like property (slaves) in this manner, needs to have their heads examined.
These actions are so contrary to liberty, freedom and the American way, CEO's and other executives should be imprisoned for their crime.
For those who think that these actions are not illegal, you should consult your States contract laws as well as computer hacking laws.
What is truly sad, is the fact that programmers actually went along with what is clearly criminal computer hacking.
<edit>
When suing, injured parties should also demand that CISCO pay for a replacement product that IS NOT a CISCO device (IE. a device manufactured by a CISCO competitors).
Scott A. Tovey
modified 9-Jul-12 14:45pm.
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Ward Bell produced a short video introduction jsFiddle, one of his favorite free tools for JavaScript developers. Spend a few minutes watching to learn about this great tool for prototyping and experimenting HTML, CSS and JavaScript in a real-time environment. Ward, you rosin up your bow and play your fiddle hard....
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Today, you’re spoiled for a choice of technologies to help you produce some user experience namely for mobility. Since the introduction of the iPhone and iPad it’s arguably put something we’ve all kind of known into the mainstream hands, which is “experience matters”. Businesses are now keen to ensure that the next piece of software they produce works like it would on an iPad or iPhone. But which platform presents the best opportunities for the future? What mobile platforms do you think will succeed?
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802.11ac devices communicate exclusively on the 5GHz frequency band, which is much less crowded than the 2.4GHz band where older wireless networks compete with baby monitors, microwave ovens, and Bluetooth headsets for bandwidth. It's also based on an incomplete IEEE standard.
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Barkeep is "the friendly code review system" — a fast, fun way to review code. Engineering organizations can use it to keep the quality bar high. With it you can watch commits made to any Git repository, see diffs, write comments, and have those comments emailed to your fellow committers. Two coders walk into a bar...
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The challenge of making a website work well in every browser through which it might be viewed has become much harder. The key to ensuring that this challenge doesn't leave the web designer pulling out their hair is defining what we mean by 'work well'. Don't resort to workarounds to make your site look pixel-perfect in IE6, says Jack Armley. Instead, it's better to try to understand what your users need to achieve from it. Friends don't let friends fret over IE6.
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Terrence Dorsey wrote: The challenge of making a website work well in every browser through which it might be viewed has become much harder.
Because the people who make browsers don't really seem to care much about following W3C standards.
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Resulting in developers who don't care much about browsers and find more interesting ways to waste their time.
At least artificial intelligence already is superior to natural stupidity
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The announcement early yesterday morning of experimental evidence for what’s presumably the Higgs particle brings a certain closure to a story I’ve watched (and sometimes been a part of) for nearly 40 years. In some ways I felt like a teenager again. Hearing about a new particle being discovered. And asking the same questions I would have asked at age 15. “What’s its mass?” “What decay channel?” “What total width?” “How many sigma?” “How many events?” With Mathematica, I may have been able to make some small contribution to what has now been achieved.
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Rumors of a 7“ iPad have been rampant for months, but this week they’ve really picked up steam as stories at the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg have all but confirmed it. But despite everyone calling it ”the iPad Mini“, I remain unconvinced. A 7” iPad has never made sense to me for one reason and one reason alone: interface. Mini-iPad, you complete me!
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Terrence Dorsey wrote: A 7” iPad has never made sense to me for one reason and one reason alone:
interface
Anyone who's used a 7" Android tablet (I have the Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus) can attest to the usability issues of trying to cram a tablet UI tuned for a 10" screen into 7". It's awful. Truly painful.
Scaling up to provide a thin, light device that's a larger iPod is the only way it would work. All I want is a device that works in exactly the same way as my iPhone but with more screen space. I don't want a cramped iPad.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Watch out for further discussion of device sizes in tomorrow's newsletters.
Director of Content Development, The Code Project
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By trying to combine what people do on their PC with what they want to do on a tablet, Microsoft feels it is offering the best of both worlds.The problem with that, as I’ve said before, is that people interact differently with a tablet than they do a computer. So, in reality, you don’t get the best of both worlds, but rather a mishmash of each. Surface doesn't redefine the tablet, it merely presents a different interpretation.
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Enterprise and Small Business Server are both going away; four new versions of Windows Server remain with the new release, which could be released to manufacturing real soon. Here's Microsoft's new SKU/licensing chart for the four editions of Windows Server 2012. Which one will you boot?
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When you say "boot", do you mean "kick out?". If so, I'll hold my tongue for now.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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The experiment: in three days, update Microsoft's branding and messaging. I decided that Microsoft needs a brand that represents the future. Be slightly aggressive. Promise to deliver the future today. Be almost science fiction. This is the Microsoft I think we all want to see more of.
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Don't like our pig? More lipstick, quickly!
At least artificial intelligence already is superior to natural stupidity
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Git allows groups of people to work on the same documents (often code) at the same time, and without stepping on each other's toes. It's a distributed version control system.
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Knowing that Git is not the only one: you have Bazaar and Mercurial too for instance, as well as SVK (to some extent I agree). My favorite remains Git though.
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I find this interesting and always wanted to learn git, i can't find a motive to downvote this post, so i give you a 5.
I'm brazilian and english (well, human languages in general) aren't my best skill, so, sorry by my english. (if you want we can speak in C# or VB.Net =p)
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Sentenryu wrote: i can't find a motive to downvote this post, so i give you a 5.
Thanks for +5
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I don't know about the stepping on each other's toes bit. At the end of the day, if the project is not well planned and several people have modified the same file, it comes down to a merge. Sometimes this is easy and can be automated. Sometimes, it is very complex: that is when the toe stepping starts. It is the same in every source code control system and GIT is no different from the rest. It is a problem that has been there since source code control systems began.
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