Bill Gates, Entertainment God? 381
ppgreat sent in a wired story about the home of the future sort of story discussing A/V in a Microsoft Media Player 9 future. As seems to always be the case, there's a lot of cool stuff in there, but more than a few eyebrow raises.
Bill Gates, Entertainment God? (Score:4, Funny)
Mike
Re:Bill Gates, Entertainment God? (Score:2)
I Prefer to think of him as my own personal jesus (Score:2)
nah hes a chocolate jesus (Score:2, Funny)
Make me feel good inside
Got to be a chocolate Jesus
Keep me satisfied"
-tom waits
Re:nah hes a chocolate jesus (Score:2, Funny)
Should I be worried that I recognised all of the musical references in this thread?
Re:I Prefer to think of him as my own personal jes (Score:2)
Guess that's what I get for having that third pint at lunch.
Entertainment God? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Entertainment God? (Score:3, Funny)
bill gates, god? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:bill gates, god? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:bill gates, god? (Score:5, Funny)
What about: "God help us, Gates is more powerful than the President!"
Re:bill gates, god? (Score:5, Funny)
How about, "Bill Gates was struck down by a bolt from a clear sky, which is generally considered to be the Wrath of God."
Re:bill gates, god? (Score:4, Funny)
"What the hell?!!! I swear to God, I'm going to kill Bill Gates for this."
Thanks, but no. (Score:2, Funny)
l33t? Not as bad as Big Brother Gates. (Score:5, Interesting)
nstead of traditional locks, there's an electronic kiosk with a touchscreen...
It's blue with a message for you "Explorer has caused an exception fault ..." This might be because your taxes or some other bill was late or deemed incorrect.
The lights and heat automatically fine-tune to your preference the moment you cross the threshold.
A cross licensing agreement with your power company insures maximum profits for them rather than comfort for you.
A screen on the wall in the foyer reads your email aloud as you hang your coat.
It's hotmail telling you about penis enlargers over and over again. You have 137 new messages since leaving work.
Run a chicken pot pie beneath the barcode reader on the microwave and it sets the time and temperature. Break out the food processor and some baking material; your home recognizes RFID tags in the bag of flour and offers to help. "How about ...
The next sentence is a paid comercial advertisment for food you don't want to buy. What you eat is sold to the highest bidder by Microsoft and they irritate you out loud trying to get you to buy something different. You also had to repeat the word "delete" several times for this while you were hanging your coat and walking to the kitchen before you gave up in disgust and told the computer to "shut up". The computer asked if you were sure.
And digital media is everywhere. "Suspicious Minds" greets you in full-home surround sound. The family's collective music library is accessible from any room, on every device.
True, any "trusted" device will be able to talk to the media server and it will be able to display exactly what M$, RIAA and the MPAA want you to see. Once the hardware lock in is achieved, the eHome experiment will be obsolete. You will only be able to run one version of Word that you pay for by the minute. Options like search and replace costs extra. No material deemed "copyright infringing", including your own media, will work. All your old movies, songs and pictures are now "obsolete" and unnecessary because you can rent anything you want that the media cartels feel it's profitable to make available. It will look very much like cable TV and broadcast radio. Equipment that records music that can be played on such a system will be tightly controled through patenets, copyrights and laws like the DMCA.
Oh yeah, your house will be listening to you. The listening devices can cancel the noises the system creates so that your voices can be recorded loud and clear. Carnivore was just the beginning, though it will still be searching your email, search fees added to your taxes, of course.
oh no! (Score:2, Funny)
"Somebody cracked into my front door."
I hope this happens becuase I can't wait to read the security patches for the front door on the "Update" pa
Why Bill Gates? (Score:2)
Re:Why Bill Gates? (Score:5, Insightful)
Owning stock trumps a title.
Re:Why Bill Gates? (Score:5, Funny)
Owning stock trumps a title.
It certainly doesn't hurt Gates to have The One Ring, either.
Re:Why Bill Gates? (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe his title is "Chairman and Chief Software Architect." In the organizational scheme of the company, Ballmer still reports to Gates.
Eyebrow raises (Score:2)
All on Windows (Score:2, Funny)
Hmm.. (Score:2)
And, if you could integrate other OSes into it (read: Mac OS X), then it'd be freaking heaven.
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
and unfortunately 100% impossible without OSS and BSD or linux.
Microsoft will never go against the Media lords so you will never legally buy the media integration that this "house" supposedly has.
your only chance at this stuff is build it yourself or hope that someone else in the OSS world does...
If you read the article you will notice at the end that it mentions the harsh reality that the MPAA nad RIAA wont allow microsof
Clippy in the kitchen (Score:5, Funny)
From the article:
Break out the food processor and some baking material; your home recognizes RFID tags in the bag of flour and offers to help. "How about focaccia?"
I wouldn't want Clippy (or any of his pals) monkeying around with anything I was going to eat: he would probably still be mad from the gazillionth time he was 'killed' and would add a bunch of habaneros or something.
Re:Clippy in the kitchen (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Clippy in the kitchen (Score:2)
I would like to see someone hack Q3A to include Clippy as one of the bad guys. I would love to blow the shit of him with the BFG 9000....
Not interested at this time: DRD (Score:2)
It is probably not much to worry about in any case. Looking at Gates' book called "The Road Ahead" that came out several years ago, it is clear to see that Bill Gates is no Alvin Toffler.
The "Microsoft Living Room" might end up being shelved with the other failed predictions like the "Personal Helicopter in Every Driveway" from Popular Mechanics, or Popular Science's "The New Age of the
Entertainment God? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Entertainment God? (Score:2)
Xbox? (Score:4, Funny)
not to nitpick, but the Xbox is now 199$, they could have paid a nerd a pizza and ran the thing on linux and freevo and have it cost less, isn't it what Microsoft is all ab.... heum.... nevermind
Re:Xbox? (Score:2)
Just to nitpick some more, I believe it is $179 now (along with the PS2)
Re:Xbox? (Score:2)
Upgrade PCs (Score:3, Funny)
Only Microsoft (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Only Microsoft (Score:2)
Oh great it reads my spam to me. (Score:2, Funny)
Message one from Edgardo Smith, subject Drop all Debt y ddrf.
Drone on...
Message two from Spetic King, subject your septic system needs this!
Drone one....
Maybe not (Score:4, Insightful)
This article [businessweek.com] from the current issue of BusinessWeek summarizes the situation well.
Re:Maybe not (Score:2)
It was an interesting article, but it repeats as facts the record industry's equation of downloads equalling lost revenue, which isn't true.
The REAL question (Score:4, Funny)
You've got to hand it to him (Score:5, Insightful)
At the end of the day, you've really got to hand it to Bill. You don't become the richest person on earth by standing down by the train station and begging for money. You get there by being damn smart in everything you do, and the type of genius thinking that's going on at Microsoft regarding eHome is proof of how he got there. Ideas are cheap, actually getting something out the door is what really puts your balls on the line, and Microsoft is actually out there and doing it. Microsoft is always the one making us talk about them, what they're doing next. No other guy (expect perhaps Larry Ellison) causes such a stir when he talks.
Sure, Microsoft is a monster which breaks the law repeatedly, and does us all a world of harm in a lot of ways, but you have to give credit where it's due. Everything in this article sounds cool.
And what is perhaps most funny is that, at the end of the day, Microsoft may well be on our side when it comes to the way Hollywood wants to sell us our entertainment in the future.
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:4, Insightful)
Bill Gates has been a vicious, tenacious, dangerous, and violent pit bull for his entire career. When people were building a software community of openness and sharing, he came along to poison the well by actually charging MONEY for his pet project--DOS. Without Bill Gates, where would we be? Not paying $700 for a bloody office productivity suite, that's for sure; but possibly without that suite existing at all. Without the dirt, money-grubbing, and sliminess that MS stands for, we probably wouldn't be nearly as far along on the development curve. Stuff like this house are an excellent example of pushing the envelope, for the sake of finding out what directions to take research next.
Kind of embodies the US capitalist idea in many ways, both the good and the bad.
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe - but really, which would you prefer? I for one would rather be a few years behind the technology curve and live in the kind of society that encourages sharing, than having the technology we have available today but having all the associated garbage from MS, SCO and the like.
Oh, yeah, Gates is smart. Got to hand it to him. He's not stupid. But that, by itself, is meaningless. I don't perceive being smart as being any more worthy of respect than being attractive, or being wealthy, or being fluent in 8 languages. It's what you do with those assets that matters. Gates hasn't used his smartness well. He used it selfishly in fact. Though I appreciate his business acumen, I don't think I could ever respect him for it.
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:2)
Part of me wonders if we would have progressed beyond a command-line text-only interface by now if it weren't for Microsoft. If you work with that postulate, then it becomes a "ends/means" question. Does Bill Gates' destruction of the software industry as a cooperative venture justify his creation of the software industry as a profit-making (and therefore STRONGLY developed) entity? Not an easy question, if you look at it honestly.
Now on a totall
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you really think Microsoft were the only company that could have made the GUI a success? The GUI existed before Gates, before Jobs. They were the first to bring it to the mass market, nothing more. Does Bill Gates' destruction of the software industry as a cooperative venture justify his creation of the software industry as a profit-making (and therefore STRONGLY developed) entity?
Strongly developed in what way? Economically? Yes. Socially? No.
Now on a totally tangential note, there's one thing that I respect Bill for fully. He has given a LOT of his own personal money to education and charities, and the only reason it's been made public (in the past) is that as Chairman of MS, he's required to divulge his finances to a greater extent than most.
Yeah, but remember where that money came from. It's good that he's not establishing a dynasty - he's too smart for that. However, I still can't respect him no matter how much money he gives away, as in some ways, that money simply was not his to start with.
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:5, Interesting)
Today who made their carreer because of Microsoft? In the absence of MS who would rise to power? I shudder to think if it were Ellison in Gates position or Steve Case....
It reminds me of a story I read where someone travels back in time to avert a disaster and each time a bigger disaster results from the intervention until finally the person goes back and allows the first disaster to take place. Lesser of two evils I guess.
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:3, Interesting)
Say that Digital Research had gotten the bid for DOS. No other inserted change needed.
Then computer software companies would consider Apple, and Apple pretty much like the current one, but about 10 times a large, to be the evil monster. And they'd be right. GNU would still have been built, and so would Linux, but they wouldn't have been forced along quite as quickly. The PC Clones might still be the major alterntive to Apple, but perhaps not. Commodore m
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:2)
I know there would have been alternatives like Amiga, but apparently none of those had the necessary marketing. On the other hand it would be nice if we didn't have to carry
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:3, Insightful)
Uhhh, people were already paying for CP/M and paying lots. MS-DOS was cheaper and that was one of the (many) reasons for its success. Also DOS wasn't Bill's "pet project". IBM had approached Microsoft for a copy of Basic and idly mentioned they were al
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:2)
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:2)
Re:You've got to hand it to him (Score:2)
Yeah, MS may have done the computing world more harm than any other single software company in history, but Bill Gates is really smart and nothing can be all bad, right? I say we approach MS with more objectivity by forgetting all the awful things they have done and focus instead on all those shiny half baked goodies they produce
Oh, and I'll probably get modded down for saying this
In a half dozen years, we're all suspect (Score:2)
And isn't that ironic......don't ya think.
With all that high-tech media on the walls (Score:2, Funny)
(Also rumored that the reason Gates built most of his house underground was to avoid pouring more money into windows.)
Trust Microsoft with my home? No thanks! (Score:2)
Re:Trust Microsoft with my home? No thanks! (Score:2)
+5 insightfull say I...
Artisan's Terminator 2: Extreme Edition (Score:5, Interesting)
It doesn't matter to me whether it's Microsoft, Apple, or whoever that's doing it. I'm just glad someone is trying to move us forward.
Microsoft haters: this post does not address the fears you have of whether or not Microsoft will take over the living room and it's not meant to.
Re:Artisan's Terminator 2: Extreme Edition (Score:2)
The market chooses where to go, not technology or big companies.
If someone comes out with a 10000 to one lossless compression for movies, the market still decides whether or not it will be adopted.
Bill Gates is no Entertainment God... (Score:3, Funny)
Smart Ovens (Score:4, Interesting)
No more "9 minutes in a low-wattage microwave, 5 in a powerful one, rotate 1/4 turn after 3 minutes" just a high density coding letting the oven set itself. Heck if developers were clever the coding could even be stenographically embedded in the packaging artwork so it'd be invisible to the consumer, not distract from the pretty pictures.
Put a self-setting item into a smart-oven, it reads off the directions and 4 cycles and however many minutes later your whatsits comes out perfectly cooked.
The last line says it all ... (Score:2)
Heh.
Old news, once a year (Score:4, Insightful)
Always interesting, always, controversial, and always full of a bunch of half-baked ideas. No problem--that's what showcases are for!
I'm about the last person on the planet to defend MS, but the idea of creating a 'what if' house once every year or so is brilliant. The answer to some of those "if" questions is often bad ('if we did this, it would SUCK!!!!') but asking them as an exercise is exactly, precisely how we move the state of the art forward.
Re:Old news, once a year (Score:5, Funny)
Just like the Architect said... (Score:2)
The Home of the Futurix is older than you know. I prefer counting from the emergence of systemic anomaly to the emergence of the next in which case this is the fourth version.
The first Home of the Futurix I designed was quite naturally perfect. It was a work of art. The inevitability of its doom is apparent to me now as a consequence of the imperfection inherent in every human being to not b
... but all I want (Score:2)
Microsoft XH Security Flaws. (Score:2, Funny)
Dateline: Billmond, Washinggates.
"Microsoft revealed today that its Windows XH home security system, installed in many homes through 1997, has a security flaw in which doors open for anyone who walks up to the door backwards. Microsoft says that this OS is too old and it will refuse to fix this security flaw.
Microsoft is hoping that the old Windows XH home software users upgrade to the new version of the OS that has Digital Rights Management in
yawn (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the same "smart automated house of the future" concept that has been touted fruitlessly since the 1950's. If there were any real demand for this, we'd all have homes like this already.
(see also: videophones, flying cars)
humm (Score:2, Insightful)
No problem... (Score:2)
Either that, or the walls are built from sturdy UPS bricks for backup power and insulation.
E-Mail read to us? (Score:5, Funny)
I hope they come up with a better protocol than SMTP in the future..
The solution to the problem is simple... (Score:5, Insightful)
Once he has them under his control, he can then offer their content under a single pricing model in which all of the content would be available anywhere in the home just by a clicking on a selection.
By doing this, the consumer has no need to buy, copy, sell, trade, etc. content and, as the content owner, the money just rolls in. Make the assumption that a household could only absorb, say 2,000 Hours per month of content, distribute royalties based on the percentage of time the consumer is accessing the material (or from the total number of hours and keep everything over 2,000 hours).
As for independent content developers, they could submit material to the network and get paid a royalty based on its popularity. This could spur on many more small projects like the "Blair Witch Projects" and "Clerks". Maybe music would become much more varied because just a few suits aren't deciding what gets played.
This creates a problem for the major content owners. Consumers are happy, producers and artists are (very) happy and Bill is not only an Entertainment God, he is richer than Him. So, they have no other choice but to offer their content to Bill for distribution on his network. They will get royalties for their material and hopefully a much larger customer base.
Everybody's happy?
Of course, I could be smoking something,
myke
Re:The solution to the problem is simple... (Score:2)
Yeah, I mean, look at how well AOL's purchase of the Time-Warner empire went...
Streaming video solutions.. (Score:2)
Sage TV [www.sage.tv] allows similar streaming to any PC on a LAN, including anything connected to a TV or HDTV. In addition, it's got most of Tivo's bells and whistles. Fast Forward, Instant Replay, Integrated Episode guide, etc. It'll even allow recording of as many channels as you'd like (limited only by how many capture cards you decide to cram into your PC.
Re:Streaming video solutions.. (Score:2)
You've already lost the race without clearing the Gate($)...
The goal is to be free of the GRIP of Gate$...
Technology sometimes is ahead of praticality (Score:5, Interesting)
In the event of a power failure, you're stuck in the house with no air, heat, or way out.
. . . lights dim, and a recipe shines down from above on your black Corian countertop as the oven begins to preheat.
Just like MS to naturally assume it knows the best course of action for me. I would hope that the house would ask me to do these things just in case I change my mind.
Powered by four PCs running Windows XP, it features dozens of networked monitors, Xboxes, appliances, and consumer electronics devices scattered everywhere.
Exactly how much is all this stuff going to cost me? Why do I need 4 computers? Is there failover/backup capability? I would think 1 main and 1 backup ought to be able to run the house.
Due to limits imposed by the operating system, there's no way to play its stored shows on another screen or TV.
Let me get this straight: I can play copyrighted music in any room but not play free, broadcast TV from any monitor?
Like it or not, the path Microsoft takes will determine the future of digital media - thanks to its dominant desktop market share, the company's actions set the pace for the industry.
That is, until you buy a new washer and dryer and the whole house shuts down until you can prove to MS that you haven't moved houses.
Reminds me of a story (Score:5, Funny)
God damn it... clippy have escaped into my kitchen (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh for gods sake... I see that in Bills vision of the future we are all incompetent invalids. Come on... I like living my life, I like, you know... doing things the old way. It gives me pleasure to the little things. I know it all comes down to choice, do what make you happy. But I still see Bills vision of the future as somewhat, soulless.
Re:God damn it... clippy have escaped into my kitc (Score:2)
That's because the ANTI-CHRI$T has no soul....
Entertainment God, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Emerging solutions (Score:2)
Regardless of products offered by Microsoft, some people will be unhappy with them and that will cause the development of alternative technologies (codecs, distribution networks and players).
Hollywood will eat itself, and MS will... (Score:2)
If Hollywood in the form of the RIAA and the MPAA carry on the way they are, and continually push the limits to edge so that finally one has to have permission to play any song or watch any movie (I'm being overly melodramatic here) Hollywood will die because consumers generally get irritated with things that are restrictive.
The Microsoft home will almost certainly be an absolute desaster in the first two iterations until Microsoft "get's it", but will then catch
unlimited choice for consumers?? (Score:3, Funny)
Gates probably has the same idea of "unlimited choice" as Henry Ford: "any color so long as it is black".
In a related story.... (Score:2)
The local Fire Department said that overclocking could have been the cause of the blaze.
War is Fun (Score:5, Insightful)
To go along with your total security on your MS server, presumably. More to the point, the only way these goals are compatible is that producers have the unlimited control to degrade their information and I have unlimited choice to not buy value-diminished products.
The record labels have seen what can happen when consumers gain total control
Do they mean what happens when producers strong-arm a technology into the market, and then realize they've given away something they don't want anyone to have due to their failure to understand technology?
the film studios aren't about to let file-sharing ruin them.
Thank God they developed unbreakable CSS encryption before they strong-armed DVDs into the market.
Like it or not, the path Microsoft takes will determine the future of digital media
I like not believing this is true. I could be wrong but then I'm in denial about a lot of unpleasant realities.
That's when the eHome division, which Poole helped start, teamed up with Hewlett-Packard and Samsung to unveil the Media Center Edition PC.
It's like a digital media hub. That Microsoft spirit of innovation marches on!
Scott Dinsdale, an executive VP of the Motion Picture Association of America, told the crowd that Microsoft and HP were using the Media Center Edition to "build a business on someone else's back." Asked to summarize Hollywood's attitude toward the PC, he said, "You don't screw with me, I won't screw with you. Don't play a movie on a PC ever again, and I won't say a word."
I think I'll just enjoy sitting back and watching this fight from the sidelines. That is possibly the most arrogant and stupid thing I've heard from the MPAA, which is saying a lot. A lot a lot.
Eisner added, "We will not let the fear of piracy prevent us from fueling the fundamental impulse to innovate. If we don't provide consumers with our product in a timely manner, the pirates will."
You could have read that sentiment on Slashdot years ago and got a real jump on the market, Michael. Must I be surrounded by idiots? Must they be running things?
Who needs M$?? Just use this!! (Score:2)
or this,
http://freevo.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net]
or this,
http://pvr.forceconstant.com/ [forceconstant.com]
and just for fun and as a FU Bill, why not this?
http://www.target-earth.net/xbox/hardware.html [target-earth.net]
Wishful thinking (Score:2)
I've always thought of him as something more like the devil, actually.
Instead of traditional locks, there's an electronic kiosk with a touchscreen, a biometric scanner, and a smartcard reader
While this system in some ways may protect better than conventional key-locks, sometimes you want low-tech. This sounds too easy to break (especially the touchscreen), and frankly it seems easier for me to click a key in the lock than align my eyeballs to a scanner.
A screen on the wa
What happens if you ever need an upgrade? (Score:3, Insightful)
I dont know about you, but not being able to sell you house easily because it's 'smart' features are 2 years out of date doesn't soud like a happy situation to me.
Once again I disagree with a Wired article (Score:5, Insightful)
Determine the future of digital media? No more than, say, the big three automakers working together can determine the future of the automobile. Even in California with its oppressive, draconian smog laws, it's still legal to make your own car, starting with raw ore if you like. Similarly, in the software world, we will still be able to create our own operating systems and digital media players. The question is, will it still be legal to use them? Hell, it's not legal to use them now, though it's not like when I wore my faded DeCSS mirror shirt (thank you copyleft) onto Beale AFB here in sunny Sutter county I was thrown into the lockup or anything.
I don't agree with the FUD in the article either, though I'm not sure why I'm mentioning it since it isn't written by the author; Still, it's included.
Sigh. Their product will not be the only thing that's left. That's dumb. Of course it will still be free, they want everyone using it; People creating and distributing content for it ALREADY have to pay for tools and/or licenses. So what's new?
Also quoted in the article is a ray of hope.
I couldn't have said it better myself.
Holy shit (Score:2)
Four?! Misterhouse can easily run on one - and one that's quite a few years old, too. Granted, I'm sure MisterHouse isn't as fully scaling as this is, but just imagine the power consumption of 4 modern x86 systems running constantly (especially in addition to whatever systems you already have).
We're talking about an extra 100$/month, or more, for power (depending on where you live).
MPAA's attitude (Score:3, Interesting)
Just thought I would point it out, for those too busy to read all the way through.
Bill Gates a.k.a. the god of shit (Score:2)
further email problems (Score:2, Insightful)
Even if you have no secrets at all from your wife or SO, what if you have kids? Now no-one can send you email with vulgar language in...
graspee
Re:Bill don't make any more Win Medias... (Score:5, Informative)
In fact, it's the same place in both 8 and nine, AFAIK.
Are you trolling, or just objecting to DRM being there at all? If it's the latter, you have to realise that having it there, and able to be turned off is a quite reasonable compromise to both the users, and to the content providers [who otherwise wouldn't share their content for -reasonable- fear of pirating.]
Re:Bill don't make any more Win Medias... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bill don't make any more Win Medias... (Score:2)
DRM must be in the control of the user, whether the user is the record company ripping the music, the shitty punk band ripping tracks from their own CD, or the user who decides to only user products that do not support DRM and loses out on many legal music choices.
What you're saying is that locks on cars cannot be in the control of the consumer for them to work. That is completely wrong. Locks on cars need to be available to those authori
Re:Bill don't make any more Win Medias... (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess what you're looking for is basically this question, that's answered in their technical FAQ for DRM whose answer is pretty logical:
----
Q: Will I still be able to play MP3s on my PC?
A: You will. NGSCB will bring additional capabilities to the PC but will not interfere with the operation of any program that runs on current PCs. The nexus and nexus computing agents are designed never to impose themselves on processes that do not request their services; nexus-related features must be explicitly requested by a program. So the MP3 player you have today should still work on a next-generation PC tomorrow.
----
But of course, it's more fun with conspiracy theories, especially on Slashdot.
Re:Bill don't make any more Win Medias... (Score:2)
Clearly the user option has to be there, until users get used to playing nice, then the 'option' will be our way or the highway.
This is a classic tactictic used on many fronts.
Re:Locked down? FUCK THAT. (Score:2)
Theoretically, this will sell more Windows products.
Hollywood, OTOH, DOES want to lock down everything. Rent a new 'play' for each device, no copying/sharing, blah de blah.
If we're going to bitch in here, let us at least bitch at the right Evil Entity.
Re:Can we blame Bill for the porn now, too? (Score:3, Funny)
Because all the girls have WINMAIL.DAT tattooed on their forehead?
Re:So sorry Bill, (Score:2)