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Comment Surprised It's Only 2/3rds ... (Score 4, Interesting) 217

Having long ago worked for not-even-close to the largest or most sophisticated marketing emailer (on behalf of Fortune 500 clients) waaaay back in 1999, the use of "spy" pixels (aka beacons, etc.) was de rigueur. So much so that firms couldn't compete without even that very basic tracking functionality in place.

Even assuming that by now a lot of what was once outsourced may have been taken in-house with turnkey emailing solutions, I find it hard to believe that adoption of this technique isn't closer to 100%.

Comment Re:macOS? (Score 1) 40

The first set of patches relate to Adobe Acrobat and Reader for Windows and macOS, including Acrobat / Acrobat Reader versions 2015 and 2017, as well as Acrobat and Acrobat Reader DC.

Mac OS X/macOS has been able to read PDFs (Preview and even Quick Look) and create PDFs (Print->Save as PDF) for over a decade. Who the fuck installs Adobe Reader on a Mac?

There's much that Preview cannot handle with respect to PDFs that forces people to install Adobe's software to fill those gaps. Many of those holes result from features of PDF that I wish people wouldn't use, but do (e.g., PDF Forms).

Comment Re:VHS archiving (Score 5, Informative) 125

Is it really worth the effort and cost in archiving? To be honest, I don't see the value or the point other than for that feel good feeling of archiving something obscure for the future in the off chance that someone may find it and watch it. There's a lot of old content that just needs to die and be forgotten. If it's worth remembering, someone already digitized it.

Off the cuff, I'd imagine that a great deal of news footage from the era in question was recorded to tape (rather than film) that is subject to the stresses of time and the elements. Materials such as these beholden to the limitations of the medium under discussion aren't just about "that feel good feeling of archiving something obscure".

Businesses

Abit To Close Its Doors Forever On Dec. 31, 2008 195

ki1obyte writes "Earlier this year the Taiwanese firm Abit, once a leading-edge maker of computer mainboards and other components, was slated to shut down motherboard production by the end of 2008 and focus on consumer electronics devices. Now X-bit labs reports that Abit will cease to exist entirely after midnight on the last day of 2008 because the owner of the brand, Universal Scientific Industrial, is in the process of restructuring and cutting their costs."

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