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Media Microsoft

NPR's Car Talk Switches Back To RealAudio 377

taped2thedesk writes "Today, NPR's Car Talk, a 'call in talk [radio] show about car mechanics', announced they were switching back to RealAudio, after dumping it for Windows Media a few months ago. When the show switched to Windows Media, Real took notice and convinced the show to switch back, by addressing various listener complaints about their player (many of which were fixed in RealPlayer 10). The hosts say: 'We believe [Real have] made a serious and successful attempt to address those things that our listeners complained about most... They even offered to serve the audio for free online, which defrays an expense we'd otherwise have to cover.'"
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NPR's Car Talk Switches Back To RealAudio

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  • so wait, we're cheering the fact they switched from one bloated media player to another bloated spyware infested media player?

    I realize there are alternatives, but most people are unaware.

    Mike
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:04PM (#8771248)


    This is very nice, but I still wish Real would die slow and horrible death, with their marketing department who created StartCenter getting leprosy and plague and being sold into slavery and having to toil 20-hour workdays, and with children of their children being exterminated from the face of the Earth, so that any genetic knowledge that existed of StartCenter and default message preferences being selected for you right beneath the scrollable window would be erased from the face of this planet, and all the other marketers attempting even something close to this would shudder, knowing the fate of Real Networks.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:04PM (#8771250)
    ...but then again, what do I expect for my tax dollars?
  • Choose wisely... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by baudilus ( 665036 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:04PM (#8771254)
    What a choice. DRM Whore or Spyware/Adware hijackery. That's like having to choose whether to be shot in the face or stabbed in the back.
  • What's so hard... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NemosomeN ( 670035 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:06PM (#8771270) Journal
    About offering multiple streams? It's not like it will cause bandwidth problems (You're only going to be listening to one stream at a time no matter what anyway...). I dunno about liscencing fees, but I do know there are free [beer] alternatives.
  • Something is wrong (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:08PM (#8771289)
    Why not just put a link to a .mp3 or .ogg file.
  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:08PM (#8771296) Homepage Journal
    Wow. First Microsoft adds a project to Sourceforge and now Real has admitted that not everyone likes being bombarded by pushy bookmarks and shortcuts of unusual size. What next? SCO admiting that maybe they didn't invent sliced bread?

    Maybe RealPlayer 10 is crammed with Spyware(tm). I mean, if they give away the player and it doesn't blast you with ads and Real is footing the bandwidth for NPR, what's the business model?

  • by 74nova ( 737399 ) <jonnbell@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:09PM (#8771307) Homepage Journal
    i think i am cheering because real listened to them and fixed it. not to say that real is a good/bad/indifferent company, just the fact that they actually listened to cartalk and fixed some stuff is cool. i didnt know there were alternatives until this thread, but i dont do a lot of realaudio or quicktime stuff.
  • by DeepDarkSky ( 111382 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:11PM (#8771324)
    er...sponsorship wouldn't fix.
    Hosting the show's audio for free is as good as paying the show to stay with them.
  • by geoswan ( 316494 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:12PM (#8771338) Journal
    Maybe I haven't been keeping up to date. But wasn't there a problem where earlier versions of realplayer were reporting back to headquarters what its users were listening to?

    Does the current version still do this? It is not listed in the user complaints they responded to. Maybe this is the core way they make money. If so I can understand why this might be a complaint they don't want to make changes to please their users.

    But some open-ness about it would be a good thing.

    Or maybe they made this change a long time ago? Well, a lot of us don't hang on their every announcement...

  • by Saucepan ( 12098 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:13PM (#8771353)
    Real's own consultants warned them well in advance about the long-term consequences of their anti-customer behaviour. Real ignored these warnings, and then ignored the resulting customer outrage for nearly five years as they built up one of the worst cases of company bad-will in software history.

    While I personally am downloading their new software to see if they have learned their lesson, I can hardly fault others for writing this off as too little, too late.

  • by mattkime ( 8466 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:15PM (#8771382)
    let people choose their favorite player
  • If a mainline vendor like RealNetworks can produce a flagship product that is so close to spyware, consumers can expect rough times ahead.

    It's incredible that a company should have to back down from a series of agressive marketing techniques in this way: it suggests they have either seriously misunderstood their market, or that they are under serious pressure to exploit it harder, even at a high cost in credibility.

    I suspect that it will eventually become standard procedure for software to become fairly agressive in taking over the desktop, uninstalling or crippling other products, redirecting browsers, etc. The techniques currently used by the most evil spyware trojans (like CoolWebSearch) will probably become mainstream as companies look for a way, any way to keep their software visible on the users' desktops.

    Or maybe I'm just being pessimistic.
  • by Monsieur Canard ( 766354 ) * on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:16PM (#8771391)
    I agree that something about this is setting off my spydar, but I'm still willing to give them a chance.

    Granted, I don't plan on installing this anytime soon (I get my Car Talk fix on the radio - part of my Saturday morning ritual), but I'll gladly sit back and let others install it ("Tragedy is a paper cut on my finger. Comedy is when you fall down an open sewer and die" - Mel Brooks).
  • realplayer 8 (Score:2, Insightful)

    by bstil ( 652204 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:17PM (#8771415)
    Someone mentioned Real Alternative a few weeks ago. It was a godsend, because I now refuse to install realplayer.

    I still have my downloaded REAL PLAYER 8 installer from circa 1999, with REAL JUKEBOX. That's the only RealPlayer I install. It's great, just before the REALONE player. But I still get annoying "a new version of real player is available" messages.
  • by Cyberllama ( 113628 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:19PM (#8771436)
    Translation: Preserving our monopoly by any means necessary.

    But I suppose dirty tactics are fair game when you're competeting with Microsoft. . .

    Still, I wouldn't let any Real software touch my computer with a ten-foot pole. It's disgusting how it takes over once you give it a foot in the door. I use the Real Alternative [free-codecs.com].
  • by blackmonday ( 607916 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:19PM (#8771437) Homepage
    it will double the encoding work. NPR isn't the wealthiest broadcasting organization around, and it will cost more money to encode and serve multiple stream formats. They're trying to keep it simple.

  • Streaming Audio (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Outosync ( 214525 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:21PM (#8771465)
    I'm still suprised mp3 streaming audio hasn't become more popular then Real or WindowsMedia. I have no trouble finding quality open source server software to broadcast live mp3 streams and the bandwidth usage(for me at least) is very acceptable.

    It annoys me that sites like NPR and Air America Radio use Real, not to mention other news sites.
    Thank goodness for RealAlternative :)

  • Or.... (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:23PM (#8771479)
    If you use linux, or use real alternative, then you don't have to worry about any of that junk....

    But real audio is much friendlier to linux users than wma (Also real audio sounds better!)

  • Bangs head on wall (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Junior J. Junior III ( 192702 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:24PM (#8771486) Homepage
    ARG! MP3! OGG! Quicktime!

    Why do they have to force us to use shitty proprietary players? I could give a crap about Car Talk, but there's some good shows on NPR that I WOULD love to listen to if I could, but I refuse to pollute my Windows box with RealPlayer.

    Won't someone please think of the end-users?
  • by discogravy ( 455376 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:32PM (#8771577) Homepage
    However, MP3 is a patented format [mp3-tech.org] that is not Free (as in Freedom). I am sure that I am in the minority here, but I can't help but feel that in some way I am being slighted.

    Yeah, they're only using the de facto standard in digitized audio: they must really be out to fuck you over.

    Mp3 has been a standard -- not an agreed-upon standard, but a "well, everyone can listen to it and it works well enough" standard for years; the "decision to standardize on MP3" as you put it, was made ages ago, and just about the only thing that has even come close to putting a dent in mp3 is wma's ubiquitousness and windows not including an mp3 encoder by default (ie, you have to BUY one, because windows media player won't just use LAME -- and 99% of users wouldn't know LAME's use if you explained it to them in 78-point font.)

  • Not pirating (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:33PM (#8771589)
    Only in a DRM Crazed company's wet dream is reverse engineering "pirated".

    Welcome back to reality.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:39PM (#8771652)
    With closed technology, they make it harder for average joe to save the show (security through obscurity). They sell their old shows through Audible.com.
  • by Luscious868 ( 679143 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:46PM (#8771707)

    The O'Franken Factor is a joke. It'll be off the air in less than a year. Mark my words.

  • by _KiTA_ ( 241027 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:49PM (#8771745) Homepage
    Let me get this straight.

    1. They start working heavily with the open source community through Helix [helixcommunity.org], including making a free Linux player that handles real (which, btw, is probably where the people who made the Real Alternative got the material to make the codecs).
    2. They remove the bloat and ads from their software as a direct result of people's complaints. Not only that, they let you turn off all their popups. Name 3 other free closed source softwares that allow you to do that.
    3. They're working with the Doom9 community [doom9.org], which is probably the biggest internet community about audio/video matters.

    And none of this is good enough? Christ, that's as pig-headed as idiots [microsoft.com] who keep chanting that Linux is just a hobbiest server OS [microsoft.com] and will never be useful on the desktop.

    For the record, I hated Real too, but since they seem to be genuinely giving it a real effort, I figured I'd give them another try. So I downloaded and installed Real 10 just now. Fiding the free download off their website was trivial -- it was in big bold blue letters on the side of their downloads page. Who would have trouble finding *that*? Yah, it's not as big as the big graphic showing their pay version, but hey, they have employees to pay. Get over it.

    Install was easy -- It did ask to take over all my media files, but I just turned them off, then went into advanced, and turned on DVD playback for Real -- Real does a much better job on DVDs than WMP, for sure. Only other annoyance during install was they asked me to register. This is not unlike other media players [winamp.com] that I use regularly, so I did. A quick click to turn off the popups from their quick-launch app, and I'm done. Not exactly the nightmare of previous Real installations.

    So yeah. I can see people complaining about Real because of what they did in the past, but jesus, they're giving it an honest effort here, and remember, any time Real wins, Microsoft LOSES. =)
  • by Aphrika ( 756248 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:52PM (#8771775)
    Thing is, Windows Mediaplayer isn't a DRM whore. Sure, it's capable of DRM functions - much like Quicktime, Real and any media format worth it's salt nowadays. And that DRM isn't there for the consumers, it's there to make large corporation use their media player over others because of it's 'secure' features.

    In fact, you strip away the Windows/Apple/Real logos and put the players and capabilities side by side, and they're pretty much like for like. Oh, except for Real's sucky spy/adware...
  • by mypenwry ( 465737 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:52PM (#8771778)
    RealPlayer is a commercial virus. No matter how much they have changed it, no matter if they crawl across broken glass to kiss my feet and beg me, I won't ever install it again!

    If my only option for a site serving streaming media is RealPlayer, I will just skip on by and not watch / listen. There are too many alternatives on the web; I can always find somethign as good or better that won't force me to install RealPlayer.

    RealPlayer lost my trust a long time ago and there are too many options that are far more consumer-friendly for me to bother to give them a second chance.

    Fuhgettaboutit.
  • by Ed Avis ( 5917 ) <ed@membled.com> on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:53PM (#8771794) Homepage
    Mozilla people here and on Bugzilla constantly told me it wasn't Mozilla and that it was impossible for an application to crash Windows 2000
    This is quite right. Well, it's not impossible as you have found, but if it happens it indicates a bug in Windows 2000 or in some device driver. There may be a bug in Mozilla too - but the bug in the operating system or driver is much more serious and should be addressed first. It will probably be much easier to find the bug in Mozilla, if there is one, once the OS or driver bug is fixed.

    Some other examples of the same principle:

    'gcc reliably crashes when building this code' => there is a bug in gcc, not your code;

    'my web browser crashes when viewing this page' => the fault is with the web browser, not the page;

    'my computer crashes when I scroll the mouse wheel in a particular way' => the computer or operating system is faulty, not the mouse.
  • by painandgreed ( 692585 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:57PM (#8771829)

    Maybe RealPlayer 10 is crammed with Spyware(tm). I mean, if they give away the player and it doesn't blast you with ads and Real is footing the bandwidth for NPR, what's the business model?

    Could be advertising. Besides the publicity of Car Talk going back to them, it lets the Real sales guy go to other people and say "look who else uses us." When I used to help with a small local magazine, we gave certain stores free ads just so other stores would read our magazine and see that they were advertising with us. That way they felt we must know what we're doing if the other store was advertisign with ut. Competition would feel obligated to advertise to keep up with the other businesses advertising. Later, after we'd established ourselves, we could go back to the first advertisers and either cut off the free ads or at least work out some kind of deal.

  • by lemox ( 126382 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @02:58PM (#8771840)
    Dude, realplayer has been like that for a loooong time. They practically paved the way for all the invasive crap we see today. There's no "eventually", what you're talking about has already happened, and the backlash is finally catching up to the companies. The fact that RealNetworks finally took the hint and backed off is a good thing.
  • by someguy ( 23968 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:03PM (#8771903)

    Maybe RealPlayer 10 is crammed with Spyware(tm). I mean, if they give away the player and it doesn't blast you with ads and Real is footing the bandwidth for NPR, what's the business model?


    Well, the concerns and responses as addressed on the cartalk website do mention not installing any software that you don't want installed.

    The business model that RealNetworks is fulfilling by footing the bill for the cartalk stream is one where they generate large amounts of good karma with consumers. By getting cartalk to switch back they're going to get the invariably occuring coverage to spread the word about how good those guys over at Real are. In addition, with the cartalk site expounding the changes found in RealPlayer 10 it's showing what's changed to groups of people that were complaining in the first place and re-earning a spot on those users' hard drives for the company's software. Once they've gotten their foot in the door with cartalk listeners it snowballs into more support for a) other sites which use Real feeds and b) more support for the idea of going with Real for streaming audio when a site is confronted with having to decide what format they're going to go with.
  • by GarfBond ( 565331 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:06PM (#8771937)
    Isn't it obvious? Subtler, quieter ads that try to convince you to buy RealPlayer Plus, Superpass, or Rhapsody (the latter of which is the only one I found even worthwhile, as it's pretty damn good at music. Think iTunes store, all of it, streamed for a flat rate. It does have the inherent downsides of streamed music, but eh). The only way they can get you to try these is if you use the program that carries it through.

    There's also the sale of their Helix server, but that costs a shitload of money, and it doesn't matter if they're hosting cartalk for free.
  • by Ed Avis ( 5917 ) <ed@membled.com> on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:22PM (#8772120) Homepage
    *For you* Mozilla was the application that triggered the OS bug, that does not mean that it was Mozilla's fault. There may well have been a memory leak in Mozilla, however your report that your system crashes does absolutely nothing to help the Mozilla developers debug this. I don't mean to belittle the problem but the sad fact is that a report of 'my particular PC crashes' is of no use to the application developer, unless it's a program that does hardware access or exotic device driver access. It might, however, be helpful to the author of the operating system or device driver, who will have access to the same hardware and may be able to download the application and reproduce the crash.

    I have to ask, in all the time you spent asking the Mozilla developers about this problem, did you do anything to report it to the vendor of the operating system or device drivers you are using?

    "Bug in the graphics driver or Windows' graphics subsytem is rather irrelevant" - no, the bug is in the operating system. It is not irrelevant.

    I'm glad that you were able to stop triggering the OS bug by changing to a newer version of Mozilla, one that is less memory-hungry. I am sure there are many bugs that were fixed in Mozilla that stopped it stressing the system so much. But this means that a chance of fixing the real, underlying bug is lost. It may still exist and be biting some other user running a different application.

    You have a too low opinion of Windows 2000 and an operating system's job. If the machine crashes this indicates either faulty hardware, or faulty operating system (including device drivers). Always.
  • by FallLine ( 12211 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:29PM (#8772188)
    While I agree with much of what you're saying about NPR, namely that it's a far better newsource than anything else on radio or TV right now, its liberal bent is my biggest complaint about it. That, and those Fund Drives. I'm a generous supporter (despite the fact that I disagree with their political biases), but I find that the repetitive talking during the Fund Drives drives me to turn my radio off. It really drives me up the wall. I grant it's probably necessary the way they do business right now, but I'd think they could find some way at least to allow paying users such as myself to avoid it. Perhaps they could offer a two-tier service using satellite radio or something: one free with fund drives and another where you pay some fee to listen...

    Hell, I think even regular old ads would be better. I find them far less disturbing for some reason.
  • by orthogonal ( 588627 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:43PM (#8772372) Journal
    While I personally am downloading their new software to see if they have learned their lesson, I can hardly fault others for writing this off as too little, too late.

    While I admire the parent poster's fair-mindedness in giving Real another chance, I can't advise anyone else to emulate Saucepan (12098).

    Why can I not? Because several versions of RealPlayer ago, I recall that Real has also claimed that they'd realized their mistakes and that their then-current version wasn't full of annoyances and spy-ware. So, trying, like the parent poster to be impartial and fair-minded, I installed that version -- only to discover that it hid anti-privacy settings deep in its settings UI, and that it attempted to phone home regardless of those settings, and that it hijacked extensions and ran unnecessary processes and in general was ill-behaved.

    And on actually using it, I found that its main UI gave over as much screen real (no pun intended) estate to advertisements as to whatever I was playing, and that it wouldn't start without bombarding me with ads, and that when I actually did play any media with it, the playback quality was abysmal compared to its competitors. Oh, and .... BUFFERING .....

    Real has claimed once too often that it has corrected its excesses for me to spend another half-hour installing it, and another week uninstalling it and resetting all the various settings it mucks with to status quo ante.

    With apologies for invoking Godwin's Law, I've just finished reading William L. Shirer's The Nightmare Years: 1930-1940, in which he recounts reporting on Nazi Germany first for the Chicago Tribune and later for CBS Radio (in fact, Shirer and colleague Edward R. Murrow pretty much pioneered the format used by radio and TV news to this day, of having an "anchor" in one place with correspondents reporting in from the field).

    Naturally, Shirer recounts, as does any history of that period, Adolf Hitler's various speeches, in each of which Hitler would claim his latest territorial demand would be his last: first he wanted nothing more than the Rhineland, then his claims ended with the Austria Anschluss, then absorbing the Sudetenland would settle his claims, then Danzig (Gdansk) and the Corridor, etc., etc. In each speech, Hitler would claim he was working for peace -- and that it could be attained by granting his latest -- and, he claimed, final -- demand.

    Real's actions, while nothing compared to Hitler's of course, do seem to follow the same pattern: we are told that each new version is that last we will need, and that each news version "fixes" Real's anti-social and sneaky behavior. But with each new version, we find that somehow, despite Real's protestations to the contrary, the anti-social behavior remains. I'm sorry, but the little bit of content that can only be played using RealPlayer just isn't worth the aggravation -- or the chagrin of finding, on installing RealPlayer, that I've been tricked once again

  • by srwalter ( 39999 ) * on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:49PM (#8772453) Homepage Journal
    Wow, user apps can crash your OS? Sounds like you shouldn't take out your anger on Real Player just yet.
  • by Ed Avis ( 5917 ) <ed@membled.com> on Monday April 05, 2004 @03:59PM (#8772543) Homepage
    If the Mozilla developer had been sitting next door to you he or she could have come over and witnessed the crash, and maybe done something (although to my mind 'something' is most likely to be sending a good report to the operating system's developer). But from halfway round the world, with only a report of 'my PC crashes when Mozilla runs', it is almost impossible to do anything. So it is understandable that they choose to focus on bug reports which show things that are definitely Mozilla bugs (whereas yours _could_ be a bug in Mozilla, but is definitely an OS bug too).

    So essentially it's this assertion of 'if anybody involved had made a modest effort they would have found it' - this really is not possible when you can't reproduce the bug. In such cases, you are the only person with access to the hardware and setup that breaks, so rightly or wrongly it is down to you to make the modest effort.
  • O'Franken Factor (Score:3, Insightful)

    by rueger ( 210566 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @04:09PM (#8772627) Homepage
    Listening to Air America helped me understand one thing. All these years I though that it was the right wing assholes on talk radio that annoyed me.

    Now I know that talk radio is intensly irritating, even if I agree with the politics!
  • by bugsmalli ( 638337 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @04:55PM (#8773068)
    Brother, AMEN to that! I would like to try the Real Alternative but that would belie the fact that I want Real closed and out of business (I AM pissed at them). What kinda morons are running the company? I cleaned atleast 20 desktops of friends and collegues who were suddenly besotted with popups and whatnots thanks to GAIM installed by RealCrap ONE. Sheesh, talk about pissing customers off. I wish there was a website of all popular websites that use RealMedia without alternatives so we can say, "look, unless you provide an alternative, we shall boycott your site". I wish I had the time to compile that list but if anyone can, I will help.
  • its liberal bent is my biggest complaint about it

    I know that's the conventional wisdom about NPR, but I just don't hear it. Perhaps it's the case on PHC or some of the other weekend fare, but as for ATC and morning edition (I commute 2 hours every day) it all sounds fairly balanced to me. I don't agree with every opinion expressed, and that's how it should be. And besides, whenever a story is not presented in a completely equal way, some listener is ready to write in explaining the inequity, and then they read the letter on the air.

    I guess my point is, at least they try to be fair, and are ready to air criticism if they are less than fair. I imagine if they really were so liberal, Mr. Franken et al would not feel the need to start their own left-wing radio.

  • by afidel ( 530433 ) on Monday April 05, 2004 @10:28PM (#8775989)
    God, you people act more like sheeple than geeks. I've had RealOne installed since Oct 02 and I haven't seen a single peep from it since the initial install, other than the videos it's supposed to show me. Do the advanced install, or go through the preferences menu after a normal install and turn all the crap off. It's not like actual malware where stuff is inaccessible without regedit, just click the freaking boxes!
  • by superyooser ( 100462 ) on Tuesday April 06, 2004 @02:14AM (#8777229) Homepage Journal
    Why are all the complainers here hell-bent on holding grudges? Real has done a superb job in addressing all of the complaints, and yet you react as if they've poured salt on your wounds.

    Some people are complaining that Real waited too long to make the changes. It's like someone posted above (who got modded flamebait by a seething troll moderator), they're damned if they do and damned if they don't. One thing I've learned about on Slashdot: There are certain companies and individuals that people love to hate, and they will keep hating no matter what.

    What are the "evils" of Real? They put icons on your desktop and other temporary, minor inconveniences. Gasp! High crimes and misdemeanors!

    No, here's what you do: Pay attention to the checkboxes during the installation, and delete the desktop icons when it's done. Is that such a horrible nightmare that four years later you're still kvetching about it? I've been using RealPlayer continuously since it first came out and I haven't had any experiences that were particularly terrible. Just turn off all the annoying stuff when you first start it up, and it's fine. As for buffering problems, QuickTime is much worse than RP in my experience. In recent years, I haven't had any buffering problems at all in RP.

    we are told that each new version is that last we will need, and that each news version "fixes" Real's anti-social and sneaky behavior. But with each new version, we find that somehow, despite Real's protestations to the contrary, the anti-social behavior remains.

    Anti-social?? Arrgggghhhh!

    GET
    A
    LIFE

    You are being totally ridiculous. You're taking this WAY too seriously. It's just a media player!

    The Nazis didn't invent lying. The Communists lied. The Trojans lied. The Egyptians lied. All in various and sundry ways. And history, in some ways, repeats itself. There is no point in relating Real, Inc. to Adolf Hitler's regime except to insinuate that they both share some extraordinary kind of evil. Your disclaimer informing us that you were not doing what you so clearly were doing was itself deceitful propaganda more worthy of association with Nazi propaganda than anything Real has done.

    I don't mean to be an apologist for Real, but I feel that I must counter the mindless, compulsive bashing going on. There's a true mob mentality in here, and it's scary.

Real Programmers don't eat quiche. They eat Twinkies and Szechwan food.

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