Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 12557
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2025/05/25 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/25    

2004/3/8 [Politics/Domestic/Crime] UID:12557 Activity:high
3/7     Orange gives away free bike with cell phone contract in
        netherlands:
        http://snipurl.com/4yfp [gizmodo.com]
        \_ Cool, how many of us are in the netherlands?
           \_ perhaps I should have changed the description to:
              "be jealous of people in the netherlands:"   -op
              \_ right. in america, i'm what you call a "liberal," but
                 if i had to live in the fucking netherlands i'd turn into a
                 raving freeper in about a week.  they have a 70% income
                 tax in the higher tax brackets, most housing is owned by
                 the government, and the crime is so bad in some parts of
                 rotterdam and amsterdam that the cops just leave at night
                 for their own safety.  fuck the netherlands.  i'll buy my own
                 cellphone contract, bycicle, car and maybe a boat with the
                 cellphone contract, bicycle, car and maybe a boat with the
                 money i save by not paying their income taxes.
                 \_ Where is crime bad in Amsterdam? I bet the worst
                    neighborhoods there are safer than most of America.
                    You are wrong about the housing, too. Most Dutch own
                    their own house. And the top rate in the Netherlands
                    is 60%, not 70%. The Economist Intelligence Unit
                    called The Netherland the best place in the world
                    to do business last year. In short, everything you
                    stated about The Netherlands is wrong.
                    \_ Most of America is incredibly safe.  Our crime is very
                       highly concentrated in high density urban areas.  We
                       used to call them slums or ghettos.  The top bracket
                       percent isn't as important as how much money it takes to
                       get to that bracket.  If 95% of the population is paying
                       over 30% and most of those hit the 60-70% range, thats
                       truly horrible.  If only 1-2% hits the 30% and very few
                       of those hit the 60-70% mark then it's a lot less than
                       in the US.  Let's get some facts before declaring
                       either way.  This is to the parent and grandparent of
                       my post.
                    \_ Actually, crime has been getting pretty bad in the past
                       decade ever since the easter bloc countries joined
                       the EU. Violent crime isn't as bad as it is in the
                       US, but property crime is pretty bad. Holland is also
                       very socialistic and there are pretty heavy taxes
                       levied on everything (including watching TV). As a
                       result the government has gotten progressively
                       poorer since the early 80's. And yes, I was born
                       and raised there.
                       \_ Violent crime is worse than before, but still better
                          than any American city, certainly not so unsafe
                          that police are unwilling to patrol it. I think
                          this guy is a freeper pretending to be a liberal.
                           \_You may be right about this guy being a freeper.
                             Your "any american city" comment is ridiculous.
                             There are plenty of US cities that have almost
                             NO violent crime.  Just not big ones.
                             \_ Depends on how you define "city" I guess.
                                I do not consider the likes of Sunnyvale
                                a city. Neither does the BBC:
                                http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/153988.stm
        \_ But they don't say anything about the bike or cellphone.  Would you
           want it if the phone and bike both sucked?  I know the bluetooth
           charger/cradle is cool, but why not just give people a kit to strap
           on to their existing bike?
           \_ yeah, that's what I need.  Some dweeb on a bike yapping away
              on his cell phone instead of watching where's he going.
              \_ Getting hit by an idiot on a bike is going to be about as
                 painful as being in a car getting hit by an idiot in another
                 car.  But you won't have to get your car repaired.
                 \_ Are you kidding?  At minimum you're looking at a good
                    dent and several ugly scratches.  And woe to the
                    pedestrian run over by a cell-phone distracted bicyclist..
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5/25    

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Cache (723 bytes)
snipurl.com/4yfp -> www.gizmodo.com/archives/orange_gives_free_bike_with_new_plans.php
SUNDAY, MAR 7 2004 Orange Gives Free Bike With New Plans filed under cellphones The Dutch division of Orange, the European wireless provider, has a ingenious free bike promotion for new subscribers of a two-year service contract. Bluetooth connection to allow use of the bundled wireless headset for completely hands-free communication. Considering the number of Dutch commuters that use bicycles almost one-fourth of the workforce, this sort of promotion can make everyone happy: eco-friendly power with a greater degree of safety for the riders. It doesnt get much better than that. Thanks, Dave! Read Read - Oranges Promotional Site Dutch Email this entry to a friend Email this entry to: Your Name: Your email address:.
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news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/153988.stm
The nine American cities in the survey all came in the top 12 of the poll. San Diego had the lowest rate with 8 homicides per 100,000. The UK Home Secretary, Jack Straw, said it was one league table in which the UK was happy to fall near the bottom.
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gizmodo.com
Ah, but you see, it's not a console, it's a game receiver service. Well, crazy or not, the Phantom's going to have a 40gb hard drive upon which you will store games that you have downloaded from your broadband internet connection. Perhaps the weirdest thing of all is the "controller" - if you can call it that. Apparently you'll be able to play multiplayer with the Phantom against fellow gamers on their PCs. Microsoft refused to develop a keyboard, insisting that the Xbox was for the livingroom, damn it, and no one uses a keyboard in the livingroom. PC crammed into a handheld case, powered by a Via Eden 533 MHz chip with 128MB of ram and a 20GB hard drive. Not only that, but the form factor looks horrendous, with an immobile screen that juts up in such a way as to prevent any sort of easy storage (which might be important in a portable gaming device, I think). Who the fuck do these people think are going to make games for these 1823192837 different devices? The first, the X505, is a 185 lbs featherweight with a 11GHz Pentium M, and averages (it's wedge-shaped) only a half-an-inch thick. The big mammajamma of a laptop is the VAIO A series, with a wide-screen 1,920 by 1,200 17-inch display, TV tuner, and built-in DVD burner all wrapped around the latest Pentium M (Dothan, the Intel chip we like) chipset. Prices on the A series climb to as high as $2,800, while the X505 series prices even higher--all that small technology costs $3,000. MovieBox, that makes a great case for why college kids should stop smoking pot. Geoff wants to build a digital film distribution system that's like iTunes Music Store for movies, basically, and while is ideas are fine, technologically, he never quite explains to us how the movie industry will shake off fifty years of encrusted paranoia to embrace something as piratey as digital distribution. The MPAA is old, Geoff, and sort of sketched out by change and new ideas, and they won't deliver movies over the internet for the same reason you can't convince your dealer to deliver to you: it's a good idea, but why should he have to change when you keep buying his product? Besides, even if Apple or someone wanted to get in the movie business, the MPAA would just pull the same sort of bullshit scare tactic/price hike/DRM customer cockpunch game that the music industry continues to do, despite the fact that people want to buy their product for a fair price/use. Just a few days ago, see, Intel made modest headlines when they announced plans to scrap future Tejas and Jayhawk roadmap (the next iterations of its Pentium4/Xeon architecture) to instead build a dual-core version of its wildly popular Pentium M chip. Don't let that news slide past without notice--Intel essentially said, "We blew it," and have conceded the next 6 to 18 months of innovation to AMD and others. Now add into that news that Michael Fister, head of the Itanium project is leaving, and, well, crazy things are afoot. Down the line, the green Mitsubishi V401D has a 2-megapixel camera with multiple lens covers, plus powers up the camera as soon as it is flipped open. An SD card slot boosts internal storage, should it be needed. The brown V401SA is from Sanyo, with a 13 megapixel camera, built-in FM radio, and 12MB of on board memory. The baby pink V402SH is a Sharp handset, with a terrestrial analog TV tuner and a 13-megapixel camera. The LCD can be flipped around to use a camera viewfinder when closer, too. The orange V601T is the Toshiba karaoke phone we talked about a couple days ago, with the T4G graphics accelerator and, once again, 13-megapixel camera. Finally, the silver V602SH stands out as the world's first handset to feature an optical 2x zoom for its 202-megapixel auto-focus camera, as well as the ability to connect to a TV to display pictures. 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Not only is this a solid progressive scan player, but it can play files burned to CD and DVD+R in most major formats, including DivX (3/4/5), VCD, SVCD, ASF, and XviD. The only complaint most people seem to have is its inability to play subtitles from external SRT files, but unless you watch a lot of anime or foreign flicks without the subs burned it, you'll probably be able to live without it. Oh, and it can be region unlocked with the remote--no firmware hack needed. Also, and I don't recall where I heard this, but some are saying that Infinium is claiming not to have been able to get a broadband connection to the floor, so they weren't demo'ing their 'games downloading service' (sort of the whole point of the Phantom). That doesn't bode very well at all, especially when plenty of other booths had broadband without issue. Even when the PC is powered off, the box can be used as a home stereo, playing CDs and even MP3s, all controlled by the snazzy front-mounted LCD panel. 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