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Not if you still have older CRT monitors or plasma screens.

Also login / lock screens are essentially just screen savers


Screen blanking and DPMS power-off accomplish the same goals, with considerably less energy usage.


Didn’t it used to be necessary to exercise the pixels to keep them from burning in, rather than just turning off the screen? Or is that a thing that started with plasma TVs.


I'm curious as to what law, exactly, they would be breaking. Sabotage in the US code is defined mostly in terms of war material and damages done to physical "national defense" properties. Certainly an employee would be fired and sued by the company, but is deliberately changing a routing policy (and not something like a worm or virus that deletes or otherwise degrades hardware and software) a crime?


IANAL but I would assume computer fraud and abuse act:

(5)(a)knowingly causes the transmission of a program, information, code, or command, and as a result of such conduct, intentionally causes damage without authorization, to a protected computer;


In the cases cited under the CFAA (such as https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=124545279862007...) it seems the employee deleted data and private info. In this case, no data was deleted or other computing property damaged it just became unreachable.


The recent Van Buren decision would make that unlikely.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27389500


That’s the one.


Proof of intent is a significant burden placed upon prosecution. If that can be overcome, there’s legal precedent for criminal conviction namely under the CFAA.

https://tadlaw.com/can-charged-crime-sabotaging-employers-co...


There is Phil, the free crossword maker http://www.keiranking.com/apps/phil/ but I haven't had the best luck with its automated fill. Lately I've been using Crossfire http://beekeeperlabs.com/crossfire/ to make puzzles and its auto fill is quite versatile, even if some of the choices can be iffy (but easily fixed with some manual tweaking). You can even provide your own custom dictionary for it to use in the fill.


The Phil auto-fill button doesn't do anything for me. Crossfire looks like it has this feature though, and it's probably a lot faster than mine


Check out the writings of Clarice Lispector, especially The Passion According to G.H.


Yes, such a good recommendation. Reminds me of Bernard Berenson's epigraph for that particular book: "A complete life may be one ending in so full identification with the non-self that there is no self to die."


Funny that it was inspiring in its frustrating designs / lack of features, rather than a "positive" sort of inspiration.


Failure can be a source of inspiration, after all.


Spite is a great motivator


Sinclair was an expert at that. He guided many an industrial product designer to fortune by showing them exactly what not to do.


Sinclair made computers which a kid like me, not from a rich family, could afford. Yeah the computers were of cheap quality with a crappy keyboard - but he changed home computers from being a plaything for the rich to be available to everybody. A lot of clever design went into making them as cheap as possible.


I can't tell - are you praising Sinclair, or shredding him? (I'm on the wrong side of the pond to have any real knowledge of him.)


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Hero worship because he brought computers to the masses. The cost cutting was the point - there were already computers that cost the same as a nice TV, this was a computer a kid could get for Christmas. For many of us that oppertunity was the start of a lifelong passion.


Dude, he's just died.

There's definitely a time for robust debate about his legacy and potential flaws, but that time and place should not be this thread.


When should we schedule the full, honest picture, if not now, when he's on people's minds moreso than he will ever be again?

I love the positive remembrances here. I also appreciate the full picture, like the joke about the "Sinclair digital penis" in another thread.

Sinclair did well for himself & his family. He did a lot of good in the world, from the people he introduced to tech.

Neither he nor his legacy are harmed in the slightest with an honest recounting. Instead, the memory is improved with realistic texture.


> When should we schedule the full, honest picture, if not now, when he's on people's minds moreso than he will ever be again?

I don't know (and I know very little about him, tbh), but I was raised to not speak ill of the dead, and it's stuck.


This isn't the time and place for polite shallow mutterings either. We're not at the funeral here, or barging in on the bereaved. If we're going to have a discussion thread about his legacy, it should be a fair one.


Yeah it is. The guy had a rabid cult following much like Musk does today. He had many financial victims with poorly engineered products.

He made a very valuable contribution to the industry however.

People have rose tinted glasses about it but the reality was products not turning up, not shipping, not working and a sour taste for many against technology.

He even bought faulty RAM in which was discarded for the Spectrums and sold the ones that booted.

The only reason it worked out for a lot of people is we have pretty strong consumer protection laws here!


He brought faulty RAM that had errors just in a single half and then he used just the other (correct) half - nothing wrong with that.

Such cost cutting made it affordable to a large number of people - had it costed a couple of time more it could be a hard sell for my Eastern European parents. Fortunately, that didn't happen and now, 40 years later, I have a nice career and I'm still enjoying dealing with computers just as when I was a kid with ZX Spectrum.


Actually that’s not strictly true. Test methodology was “see if it worked and ship”. Many many of the computers were returned and replaced immediately. And a lot of the new ones you got were the broken ones which were sent back and the chips replaced. I’ve seen a new one which still didn’t work which had been reworked at least once and sold as new again.

My father had a nice business for a few years doing adhoc repairs and then started his own PC import business in the end with the cash he earned fixing people’s stuff. That was a world of difference.

Agree with your comments about affordability. As you say about Eastern Europe, even the clones were more expensive I understand.


It's not that unique in the computer business. I used to build PCs for a shop during the 90s internet craze. When we got a box of Quantum Bigfoot HDDs we'd be lucky if half of them worked. Someone who cared about quality wouldn't put that crap in a computer. But it was cheap. The soundcards we sold were so cheap they were cut diagonally to save on PCB material.

Though this shop just did it for profit margin. Sinclair did it to make computers available to the masses.


> It's not that unique in the computer business.

Yes, it's very common. Even companies like Intel sometimes test a CPU at umpteen GHz, then retest the ones that fail at umpteen/2 GHz and sell them at a lower price if they work reliably at the lower speed.


Yet he still kick started the computer industry in the U.K. and was the reason many of us are on the obscene wages we currently are.

People can have great legacies in spite of their flaws. This is true for all of our heroes.


And yet, the 48K is in history books, and is fondly remembered by many of us tech geeks who cut their teeth on that machine.

It doesn't matter everything else didn't work out, I'd be pretty damn happy with that legacy.


Yes and no. The 48k was a bit of a disaster to start with. Lots of failures, bugs galore, a full recall due to power supply shock hazard. Not to mention the horrible keyboard.

When you look at the microscopic view of owning one computer from him that worked it does somewhat rose tint the overall view of things which was not good.


> Not to mention the horrible keyboard.

There were lots of home computers available with proper keyboards. As a kid I couldn't afford any of them.

That horrible keyboard did me just fine.


these are extremely minor issues when you look at the bigger picture - you could argue that Clive kick started the multi billion pound games industry by getting young people interested in computer games

sure it would have happened anyway, but he definately made it happen earlier

almost 100% of the people who work in IT (in the UK) over a certain age had one of his affordable computers


Yet the commoditization of computers he brought forth was a genuine gift to the people that opened a lot of doors for many. He has positively influenced the lives of many.


Maybe he didn't make a lot of money but he sure managed to inspire people.

I know which I'd want to be my legacy.


Also he did a bunch of ventures and one succeeded, and some bombed. Isn't that a celebrated rite of passage in SV?


Such a game does exist - check out the Pilotwings series for SNES and N64


Check out "The Loser" by Thomas Bernhard. Not a biography, but an excellent novel inspired by Bach


Oh, "Der Untergeher". Read it in German, if you can. It's... memorable.


Interesting podcast covering the influence of these computational propaganda campaigns and their effect on the human mind https://soundcloud.com/inpatientradio/neural-narratives-comp...


Make sure you calibrate your time machine offsets properly, as a day during the Cambrian Explosion is about two hours shorter than today.


You think that's air you're breathing now?


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