Jayne: Anybody remember her comin' at me with a butcher's knife? Wash: Wacky fun.

'Objects In Space'


Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


Tom Scola - May 07, 2009 3:18:25 pm PDT #9911 of 25501
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

You will have to create a whole new account:

    • Create a temporary, generic user account with admin privileges. Call it "admin"
    • Log off completely as yourself, and log in as admin
    • Create a new user account, ita.
    • From the command line, type "sudo mv /Users/itasurname /Users/ita"
  1. Type "sudo chown -R ita:ita /Users/ita" (This make take a while to complete).
  2. Log off as admin, log in as ita, make sure everything is OK
    • Delete the itasurname and admin accounts (if desired).


§ ita § - May 07, 2009 3:25:55 pm PDT #9912 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Thanks. I tried something like that, differing because I'd renamed the user directory to "ita" beforehand.

Looking good so far.


Vortex - May 07, 2009 4:54:00 pm PDT #9913 of 25501
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Grrr. I downloaded AVG 8.5 and now I get all of these popups. Very irritating, even after I uninstalled AVG.


§ ita § - May 07, 2009 9:27:01 pm PDT #9914 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Kindle DX. It looks all ST:TNG. But definitely not something you can stuff in a pocket or smallish bag. Expensive for bedside reading.


Jessica - May 08, 2009 3:45:32 am PDT #9915 of 25501
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

I did the math for a Kindle DX plus NYT subscription, and it pays for itself (in savings over a paper newspaper subscription) in 2.7 years for most of the country and 4.5 in NYC.

Then I realized that didn't make sense for anyone sharing a house, because it's really difficult to separate out the Week In Review and hand it to someone if you're reading the paper on a Kindle. So not really worth it for most people.


Gris - May 08, 2009 4:17:26 am PDT #9916 of 25501
Hey. New board.

I think the killer feature of the DX for a lot of people, which they're not hitting hard enough, is the native PDF support without scrolling. That's means business and technical journals that are available in PDF (a LOT of them) will work on it, and it has a large enough screen to make it worth it.

Not something I need. Not something the average consumer needs, necessarily. But definitely something a large number of really geeky potential buyers were looking for.

The next killer feature, if they can work out deals, will be college textbooks.


Jessica - May 08, 2009 4:23:26 am PDT #9917 of 25501
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

The next killer feature, if they can work out deals, will be college textbooks.

I just wonder how useful a textbook with a lot of graphs and illustrations is going to be in black and white. (Ditto for business & tech journals.)


Steph L. - May 08, 2009 4:26:47 am PDT #9918 of 25501
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

The next killer feature, if they can work out deals, will be college textbooks.

I just wonder how useful a textbook with a lot of graphs and illustrations is going to be in black and white. (Ditto for business & tech journals.)

Not to mention how much students mark up/highlight their textbooks, make notes in the margins -- yes, I'm sure the Kindle can have a function that allows for that, but will it work as well as a visual study aid?

And also, I remember needing to flip back and forth within one textbook, or multiple textbooks, which seems like a pain in the ass on a Kindle -- I really loathe editing in Word (versus on hard copy) for that very reason.

It doesn't seem practical for students. Not to mention prohibitively expensive.


Jessica - May 08, 2009 4:30:15 am PDT #9919 of 25501
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

The other thing to consider w/ textbooks is that students offset the cost by reselling them at the end of the term. You can't do that with a Kindle.


Gris - May 08, 2009 4:39:21 am PDT #9920 of 25501
Hey. New board.

I just wonder how useful a textbook with a lot of graphs and illustrations is going to be in black and white.

When I think back to my CS, psychology, math, and even engineering textbooks, at least the high-level ones, I don't remember color illustrations. My Physics 1 text had them, as did my big biology reference text, but most of the ones for 100+ level classes (grad school allowed, which most students were taking by their junior year) were black and white. My teachers also published course notes in PDF format (usually from powerpoint slides), which may have been in color but I always printed them out on black-and-white laser printers with no problems.

Maybe I was the exception rather than the rule, though. But I've gotten a lot of "Could I get my textbooks and journal articles on there?" from people in education grad school, too, which is again very text-heavy.

As for note-taking, the features on the kindle aren't bad. I never use them, but my GF uses them all the time. If you make a highlight and note, it appears as a footnote that you can either see on the same page (in a box at the bottom) or navigate to and read separately. All of your highlights and notes also appear in a separate "book" called "My Clippings" that can be saved to your computer and printed / edited / whatever.

For flipping back and forth, it's not as easy as a real book but it's remarkably easy to set dozens or hundreds of bookmarks to various passages, which can be highlighted to remind you which is which, and the search function adds a powerful tool to the index, especially in books that have mediocre or hard to navigate indexes.

I don't think it would work for every student, by any means. But it would've worked great for me - with anything approaching a decent discount over the normal price I would've saved a lot of money over four years, and I wouldn't have had to get rid of my textbooks (which I often miss) when I moved, because they wouldn't have weighed 10 pounds each and required a giant bookcase.

ETA: Yeah, the reselling thing is a big problem. I'd like them to enable that, too. There were several books I had no interest in keeping, for sure, and a few of them got sold, which was nice.