Luckily for me, I work just beneath a specialist green bean importer / distributor.. I get all the fresh coffee I want (usually 1-2kg at a time) - and its usually roasted / ground the same day! Much better than ANY of the muck you can buy in a supermarket!
Indeed.. I have a couple of hundred games on Steam now and their service has generally been exemplary. I can still download, access and play games that I purchased in 2004.
Re: Case in point #3 through 5000: Google, once people wake up!
The thing with Google is that I know they are harvesting my data - and I am guilty of letting them do that. For that priveledge, they give me some great things for FREE - we have Google maps / streetview - including on my phone which runs a Google operating system (that I get FREE, remember when sat-nav was expensive?), A secure modern browser which is FREE, a fantastic search engine which is FREE, many of Googles services that rely on the harvested information are genuinely useful, etc etc...
In the case of LG in this story, the data was harvested WITHOUT permission or knowledge, overstepped the bounds of what might be acceptable and served no useful function for the end user (Most people would agree that additional advertising on your TV is excessive).
Google is very transparent about what they collect and how they use the info - LG has been dishonest and overstepped the mark.
Unless you know of some magical new OCR technology then OCR is NOT feasible for this type of job. For it to work with 4pt text the OCR software would be very inaccurate. Modern OCR software uses predictive technologies such as dictionary checking, grammar checking, near-neighbor analysis etc in order to get good results. It expects text within certain size constraints in certain fonts and of a certain quality. A SSL key printed at 4pt might get 30-40% accuracy at best. Then you would have to compare each and every character by hand - that means looking at two separate images to make sure the OCR is correct.
Much quicker to have it blown up and have a typist copy it by hand. A good typist could get 98% or above accuracy at a fair speed - and they would not need to look at two separate images.
Disclaimer: I work on the development of a document management system with OCR capabilities and have studied many OCR technologies as part of my work.
OCR is not a perfect technology. Especially on 4pt text with mixed characters and no "dictionary" words it can check against. It would be just as quick to have the data typed in as it would be to manually check it after OCR.
Hell, I used to build shockers from disposable camera flashes when I was at school! Never got me suspended, but did get me in a lot of trouble. Them things gave a massive jolt!
If you are using Linux then that is your issue. The Netflix workaround cannot use hardware acceleration thus heating your laptop up. You could use caffeine to automatically disable your screensaver whilst watching.
Once Netflix goes to HTML5 hopefully this will all be fixed!
Never had audio issues - sounds better on my 5.1 system than stereo downloads. As for image - that is rarely an issue either. Perhaps your broadband is not up to par?
I no longer download TV / Movies and use Netflix almost exclusively. Along with another service which unblocks all regions of Netflix I have all the TV / Film I can consume.
Unfortunately, Netflix have no offline option - so if I am travelling I have to break the rules :(
All in all, it costs me less than £10 / month or half the price of most DVDs or a trip to the cinema!
On the post: Keurig Will Use DRM In New Coffee Maker To Lock Out Refill Market
Re: Re:
On the post: 'State Secrets,' Non-Denials And Lies: How The Government Tried To Bury Its 'No Fly' List Screwup
Re: Re: In other words...
On the post: 'State Secrets,' Non-Denials And Lies: How The Government Tried To Bury Its 'No Fly' List Screwup
In other words...
On the post: Professional Wrestling Just Bodyslammed Their PPV Business Model
Lets hope..
On the post: You Don't Own What You 'Bought': Disney And Amazon Play The Role Of The Grinch In Taking Back Purchased Film
Re:
On the post: United Airlines Nearly Kills Pet, Aims For Streisand Glory Instead Of Paying Vet Bill
Re: Re: Re: Where can I donate?
http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2003652872_webhouse05m.html
On the post: Facing Backlash And A UK Govt Inquiry, LG Now Claims To Be 'Looking Into' Its Smart TVs' Data-Slurping Habits
Re: Case in point #3 through 5000: Google, once people wake up!
In the case of LG in this story, the data was harvested WITHOUT permission or knowledge, overstepped the bounds of what might be acceptable and served no useful function for the end user (Most people would agree that additional advertising on your TV is excessive).
Google is very transparent about what they collect and how they use the info - LG has been dishonest and overstepped the mark.
On the post: Turns Out Paul Hansmeier's ADA Lawsuits Were Filed Without Knowledge Of The Plaintiffs
Re: And they'd have got away with it too, except for you meddling kids!
On the post: Cablevision Realizes It Argued Against Its Own Interests In Aereo Case; Flips Sides
Sounds like a shrewd move...
On the post: Lavabit Tried Giving The Feds Its SSL Key In 11 Pages Of 4-Point Type; Feds Complained That It Was Illegible
Re:
On the post: Lavabit Tried Giving The Feds Its SSL Key In 11 Pages Of 4-Point Type; Feds Complained That It Was Illegible
Re: Re:
On the post: Lavabit Tried Giving The Feds Its SSL Key In 11 Pages Of 4-Point Type; Feds Complained That It Was Illegible
Re:
Unless you know of some magical new OCR technology then OCR is NOT feasible for this type of job. For it to work with 4pt text the OCR software would be very inaccurate. Modern OCR software uses predictive technologies such as dictionary checking, grammar checking, near-neighbor analysis etc in order to get good results. It expects text within certain size constraints in certain fonts and of a certain quality. A SSL key printed at 4pt might get 30-40% accuracy at best. Then you would have to compare each and every character by hand - that means looking at two separate images to make sure the OCR is correct.
Much quicker to have it blown up and have a typist copy it by hand. A good typist could get 98% or above accuracy at a fair speed - and they would not need to look at two separate images.
Disclaimer: I work on the development of a document management system with OCR capabilities and have studied many OCR technologies as part of my work.
On the post: Lavabit Tried Giving The Feds Its SSL Key In 11 Pages Of 4-Point Type; Feds Complained That It Was Illegible
Re: Where is a scanner w/ OCR when you need one?
On the post: Lavabit Tried Giving The Feds Its SSL Key In 11 Pages Of 4-Point Type; Feds Complained That It Was Illegible
On the post: PA School Being Sued For Suspending 7-Year-Old Student 'Armed' With A Novelty Buzzing Pen
On the post: MPAA & RIAA Return To Blaming Google For Their Own Inability To Innovate
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Current prices where I live are around £1.37/litre or over $10 per (us) gallon!!!
On the post: Netflix Uses Piracy As Market Research, Isn't Afraid Of It Because It Knows It Can Offer A Better Service
Re: Is Netflix really better?
Once Netflix goes to HTML5 hopefully this will all be fixed!
On the post: Netflix Uses Piracy As Market Research, Isn't Afraid Of It Because It Knows It Can Offer A Better Service
Re:
On the post: Netflix Uses Piracy As Market Research, Isn't Afraid Of It Because It Knows It Can Offer A Better Service
Netflix have a valid point...
Unfortunately, Netflix have no offline option - so if I am travelling I have to break the rules :(
All in all, it costs me less than £10 / month or half the price of most DVDs or a trip to the cinema!
On the post: PA Hospital First To Open Inpatient Treatment Program For Addiction To The Internet
You should think yourselves lucky..
He is therefore going to make us all do without porn :(
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