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So when is android going to support RCS standard? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
RCS in the UP is no more secure than SMS. Stop spreading misinformation. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I agree that google has a habit of doing that... however they tried to let the carriers handle it. But it was going nowhere and actually looked like RCS was going to fail until Google took it by the reins in 2019.
Like you say, I really hope they figure out a good open standard between the two of them, but my concern is that Apple just doesn't have much incentive to do that. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
RCS is the long-delayed upgrade for SMS/MMS (Apple probably had to be forced into it, maybe by the Chinese market). Unlike SMS/MMS, it's data based, so it will always work on cellular data or wifi data.
It improves over SMS/MMS in various ways: Better quality pictures/video, typing and message received indicators, better group chat functionality, etc.
Additionally, Google Messages has added a layer of End to End Encryption on top of the RCS standard. However, Apple will not participate with Google's version. So there will only be E2EE when everyone in the group uses Google Messages. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Lol so looks like US and Philippines problem then 😂 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
How? You could still message people with androids and there is still massive 3rd party messaging apps. Signal, WhatsApp, telegram, etc. Seems like a far cry from monopoly. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
lol rcs between iPhone and android will be over data much like iMessage Facebook messages and others. If data isn’t available it will fallback to sms | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
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Is Microsoft math solver as good as Wolfram Alpha or SymboLab? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Stunning breakthrough. Apple clearly back on innovation path | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Wait, so I have a calc app on my phone but on their own tablet they didn’t have one? I’m so confused. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Don’t need to now. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Because I thought iOS was the same on phone and tablet in the same ecosystem. I’m mostly confused about the decision to implement such a basic thing only now. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I can’t tell if you’re being deliberately obtuse.
The comment I originally responded to claimed that “we” were fine with only having 3rd party apps.
“We” were not fine with that, because they were either laden with ads or overpriced. Especially when an ad-free native app has been included with iOS at zero cost since its release. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
We call it "Dezimaltrennzeichen", and i think it's beautiful. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Probably gave the task to GPT4 to code it as an entry test to the iOS 18 ecosystem. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Here is the real free one:
https://apps.apple.com/be/app/calculator-plus-v2/id1181465428
Otherwise - pay VPN / DNS blocker once (like AdGuard Pro) and forget about the ads in apps | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
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Or time moved faster and is slowing down | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
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Ok, but let's also update them saying we won't profit off of customers' work either. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Time to buy divinci or an entire MacBook and Final Cut…. 💸💸💸💸💸 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Fuck Adobe, forever and always. Pirating Adobe is always morally correct. Piece of shit greedy fucking evil scumbags | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
this is where past trust issues become a factor.
tl:dr Fuck you Adobe | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Don’t believe everything a company tells you | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Don't pirate Adobe, support other companies instead. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Too little to late….
More and more companies & designers are using alternatives that are a fraction of the cost. Their subscription model is turning away more than a few… The majority of their users never even use the few features they offer alternative software doesn’t… | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
🤣 that’s what the AI told them to say to trick the chumps based on the high probability it would be believed... | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Oopsie, we mean we *won’t* do that. Okay? We promise we either will or we won’t. It’s definitely one of the two. Don’t worry about it, your privacy is important to us. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
Did they cross their fingers while writing that up? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Yeah the whole subscription model of this era is terrible. Just let me pay one price and own the software. Commit to a certain amount or time frame of updates before the stuff I bought is no longer supported and I gotta buy a new one.
No more of this perpetual charging me and not letting me actually own what I pay for. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Oh shucks, I’ve already cancelled my subscription. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
They didn’t change shit. Just reworded it to do the same thing. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Is this comment sarcasm? 🤔 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
What features?
The only thing Adobe has done in years for photoshop is add AI fill, but with other AI generative tools, you just get an image from that.
I mean ya its not in the program, but its not a big deal. Those others tools are better at generating AI content anyways.
They've been coasting for years on all their products.
I still have my old CS6 collection and to be honest, when I go back, I dont really lose that much. Theyve just played themselves.
Wait, what do I need them for again? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I don't believe it | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I fully switched to resolve 6 months ago and I can't believe this thing is free. Fusion alone is mind blowing for what you can do. I would say for amateurs you would be insane to pay for another editor. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Adobe owns millions of stock images and videos, they don’t need to take user images, and training on the stuff they own puts them in a much better position legally than companies like OpenAI. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
>I still have my old CS6 collection
What do you use it on? My 2014 MacBook Pro is on its last legs but apparently CS6 is not compatible with the newer Macs... | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
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Their customers butt-fucked themselves. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
We need to have automatic payouts to consumers based on the amount of data leaked, like per kB. Right now there is only incentive to look like they aren't careless and even that's iffy. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
E pluribus, Anus. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
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Doesn’t surprise me. Oracle Java licenses are a huge PITA. Easily hundreds of thousands a year in license costs. I’d migrate away to literally a bowl of steamy Chipotle turds if I had any say in it. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
That's okay. The majority of the economy that runs on Java services, almost all non-Oracle, will keep quietly running the world. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
I guess companies will start moving to OpenJDK now.
It’s not gonna be their first ride. They lost the database market to MS SQL, MySQL and other open source databases. When they bought MySQL, companies/individuals moved to MariaDB and AWS Aurora. Their cloud market share is laughable compared to AWS, Azure and GCP. My company moved from PeopleSoft to Workday.
They are still making money, their stock is up but I wouldn’t bet on them. Oh, and Larry Ellison is a right-wing nut and election denier. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
All 3 billion of them | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Microsoft followed Amazon into the cloud space because many companies got sick of licensing games played by IBM, Oracle and MS and fled their data centers to the cloud, where the licensing is not their problem. Azure is doing well but is not a leader in cloud space. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
🎵The Java police are inside of my GETS🎵 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
But wouldn’t it be easier than migrate the whole codebase to another language?? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I wouldn’t put cloud in the same league as open source software, at least from the licensing point of view. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Weight, are the owners *that* far right? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
All of our stuff was scanned by IT months ago to verify the Oracle version wasn't being used. There are so many alternatives I'm not sure what they hope to accomplish. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I worked at a FAANG company for almost a decade as a software engineer and software engineering management and as I was leaving there was an internal decree to move off Oracle owned Java products ASAP because they were getting more and more demanding and shady | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
What wrong with NS? It seems far ahead of its competition. It’s slow to navigate but it’s a very impressive piece of software. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
This is specific to Oracle JDK, not the Java programming language.
You can program in Java and use a freely licensed JDK, like the popular GPL-licensed OpenJDK, just fine. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
In what world did they lose the db market? People always say this shit but as of 2023 35% of enterprise dbs ran oracle. Oracle is still probably the best and if you have actual critical data you usually run oracle. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Red Hats owned by IBM these days and they aren't much better then Oracle but id still rather deal with their shittness over Oracles. But point is you can really escape shitty software companies in the enterprise tech space. And yeah the writing my have been on the wall but that's not always the case, look at what just happened with Broadcom and VMware. VMware will probably be dead outside a few very large companies in the next few years because of them and it all basically happened over night. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I love Formula 1, just love it man.
I don’t even necessarily dislike Red Bull racing or max Verstappen or Sergio Perez
But I will NEVER buy a god damned piece of anything that says ORACLE on it
Fuck Oracle. Fuck scan-ip, fuck Larry Ellison, fuck tnsnames.ora, fuck Oracle.
And I hope Larry Ellisons piece of shit yacht sinks.
Fuck that fuck head. Fuck everything he fucking owns
- just a guy working in integration. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
No java codebase will be rewritten, ever. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
> fuck tnsnames.ora
K, now I know you have legit seen some shit. I salute you, fellow survivor.
And I’m sure you know Oracle is an acronym for “One Rich Asshole Called Larry Ellison”. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
> Fuck Oracle. Fuck scan-ip, fuck Larry Ellison, fuck tnsnames.ora, fuck Oracle.
Oh lawd! Help this man speak loudah! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
You sound like an idiot making statements like that. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Perl is written exclusively by angry bearded people in windowless offices who will give you an FTP link to their 138-page manifesto when you ask them why they don't just use Python like a normal person. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I don't disagree and to my understanding IBM let's red hat operate fairly independently but I wouldn't trust IBM to do the right thing in the long run. Right now supporting open source benefits Red Hat/IBM, they are selling tools that rely on those projects. If that is to change they'd stop on a dime. My point was you can't really escape using software from a big bad tech conglomerate because they are everywhere and have their fingers in everything. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I've never heard of a tech company running Oracle. More often it's Postgres or MySQL/MariaDB, and I can guarantee you it's critical data. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Except we'll never use Oracle for anything. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Tldr: oracle sucks and everyone in the industry knew this would happen | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
how many of those companies you mention are in the Fortune 500? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Google runs Oracle db, primarily due to their acquisitions of other companies who ran EBS prior. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I worked for Sun for several years prior to the acquisition. I loved it. I loved it when they included PostgreSQL with Solaris, and I loved it when they vowed to include Oracle DB licensing with every server, no charge, full indemnity, and I loved it when they open sourced SPARC, Solaris, and Java.
If they’d only open sourced Solaris x86 back around 1999 instead of 2005, we’d possibly have never seen Linux at all, but they felt too threatened by x86 eating SPARC sales right in the peak of the dot com bubble.
After the acquisition, I’d seen photos of formerly happy Sun customers delightedly taking their SPARC machines to the landfill.
I later worked for Oracle for almost 1.5 years and had the most toxic boss I’ve ever encountered in nearly 30 years before moving to an Oracle partner. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Freaking Oracle innovates with its lawyers the way Sun innovated with tech. Can we have Sun back please!!?! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
So at least some non-trivia percent of all the insane healthcare costs is directly due to Oracle?! Not surprising at all. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Because they don’t know. I worked at a fortune 100 company where we blocked oracle software and its websites with security software as if it was malware.
All it takes is them having proof of one of your IP addresses downloading from their site and they will come in to try and squeeze you. This has been the oracle go to for years | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Thats a feature! "Easy and simple licensing" they claim. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The only common denominator is that nurses and doctors will complain about whatever EMR they’re using at the time and say the one at the other place is much better. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Corporate greed going after corporate greed....This is called a feeding frenzy. LOL | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
With so many alternatives, I'm still surprised Java is so popular. For the last decade, it felt more like it was in survival mode. The best major changes that have been made also just feel like catching up, not innovating. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I felt this 🤣 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Oracle, pioneer in screwing customers! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Microsoft terms once said students can get the software cheap but cannot ever work on a product which completes against Microsoft.
Sun had some bad licenses/ terms in the late 90s too. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
But he will die. He’s 79 - a heck of a lot of time left.
Death is the great leveler. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
It’s not just Java. A client of mine did an acquisition of another company whowais paying 150,000 a year for NetSuite software. Oracle has a transfer clause in their contract that if the company sold more than 50% of ownership, the license is void and a new contract needs to be negotiated. Oracle sent my client a bill for $900,000. needless to say, they moved off NetSuite almost immediately. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
We use Corretto or OpenJDK. Fuck oracle | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The company I work for tried to switch our ERP to Oracle. The CIO spent like 3 years pushing this agenda and getting everyone to stop supporting the original ERP. It never worked. We had a third party conduct an investigation and found that Oracle completely lied to us about their capabilities and ability to scale to a company as massive as ours. At the end of it, every single person with our company who touched and promoted Oracle was fired, including the CIO and the chain of managers under him.
Now the New Big Thing for the company is Salesforce, and I'm starting to hear horror stories about that, too. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I was brought up as an Informix DBA therefore I was literally trained to hate Oracle. I used to think it was just fanboyism or a rivalry... then I had to use it. I'm 100% convinced that it's engineered to sell consulting and only gets into enterprises via bribery. Tasks that take 20 minutes with literally any other DBMS takes two fucking days of pain with Oracle. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
So Java has reached the final phase of enshittification. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I hope you like registry edits! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I have to use some java-based apps for work that need java 1.8 so I've started installing the Temurin JRE/JDK. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
But if it's another company's software, wouldn't _they_ be the ones bundling Oracle JDK, hence them being liable for licensing it?
It's not the end user who pays the licensing fees for libraries (at least not directly). I don't see why a runtime would be different? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
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I work Data Protection within a cybersecurity role in my day job. All I gotta say is: Bravo. Very impressed with what Apple has done here. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-10-06 |
u/luckylebron also claims to work in cybersecurity and is saying the opposite (and getting downvoted), who is right?
[https://www.reddit.com/r/technews/comments/1dcvru3/comment/l8165rs/](https://www.reddit.com/r/technews/comments/1dcvru3/comment/l8165rs/) | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Apple’s PCC isn’t reliant on OpenAI infrastructure. They may/may not be running their models, but they certainly aren’t offloading compute. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
This details how they guarantee that doesn’t happen: https://security.apple.com/blog/private-cloud-compute/ | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
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When will it work on my phone? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The test version will become available in the autumn | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
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