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Comment Re:Fuck Smart TVs. (Score 1) 62

I think we are in a sort of agreement. There is certainly must be firmware that makes the TV function as a TV as we and Grandma knew it (volume control and channel change). But it is all the "app" crap that people ought to be able to opt out of. I guess you can, but I think you have to be tech savvy to do so. I argue for the "dumb" tech-knowledge option and it be made clear. There is a difference between the firmware and apps.

Comment Re:Fuck Smart TVs. (Score 1) 62

I have never installed any software on it ... There were a few obvious bugs in the UI at the start, so I downloaded firmware update and updated via USB stick. ... Now those are gone, so why would I care about software support? ... The TV still needs to run OS (in LG's case, the WebOS, which is Linux-based - you can jailbreak it too if you want).

But you did install software, the firmware update. Sounds like a lot of software futzing to me. Grandma just wants to plug the thing in and watch.

Comment Re:Don't forget touchscreens. (Score 1) 218

Continued rant...
Touch screens are fine in airplanes, spacecraft, factory floors, tablets, etc where you are not in imminent danger of crashing in the next few seconds. In a car, in traffic, you have to make a decision not to crash every few seconds - you can't take your eyes off the road, and can't be messing around with your infotainment system.

Comment Re:Don't forget touchscreens. (Score 1) 218

I am totally with you on the touch screen issue.

To use them you have to take take your eyes off the road, and fiddle with some poorly designed graphical user interface that some d:ckhead designer thought was cool. Touch screens have their place, but not in a car.

A knob is simple to understand and use. You don't have to take your eyes off the road to find and use it.

A pet peeve of mine...

Comment Re:Not a good approach (Score 1) 45

Yes, the style BS. That was the crap I'd have to endure, when there was an official company standard that nobody followed anyway. My ethic there was to code in the same format / style when working on other peoples code, even if it was stupid and ugly. (I'm was the Linux / K&R stylist, not the stupid and ugly White smith style ;) I liked straight forward code, not tricky.
I found during code reviews, during presentation, I'd find bugs, not the reviewers.

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