More NFL Players Attack Microsoft's $400M Surface Deal With The NFL (yahoo.com) 236
An anonymous reader writes;
"These tablets always malfunction," complained one NFL offensive lineman in January, foreshadowing a growing backlash to Microsoft's $400 million deal with the NFL to use Surface tablets. Friday the coach of the San Francisco 49ers and their controversial quarterback Colin Kaepernick both complained they've also experienced problems, with Kaepernick saying the screen freezes "every once in a while and they have to reboot it."
Friday Microsoft called their tablet "the center of the debate on the role of technology in the NFL," saying they deeply respect NFL teams "and the IT pro's who work tirelessly behind the scenes to help them succeed." It included quotes from NFL quarterbacks -- for example, "Every second counts and having Microsoft Surface technology on sidelines allows players and coaches to analyze what our opponents are trying to do in almost real time." But Yahoo Finance wrote that "The quotes read like they were written by the Microsoft public relations team," arguing that Microsoft's NFL deal "has been a disaster... The tablets failed to work during a crucial AFC Championship game last January -- again for the New England Patriots... sports media interpreted that the malfunction benefited the Broncos on the field, giving the team an unfair advantage -- the very last thing Microsoft's tablets, meant to aid coaches in their play calling, should be doing."
The NFL issued a statement calling Microsoft "an integral, strategic partner of the NFL," adding "Within our complex environment, many factors can affect the performance of a particular technology either related to or outside of our partner's solutions."
Friday Microsoft called their tablet "the center of the debate on the role of technology in the NFL," saying they deeply respect NFL teams "and the IT pro's who work tirelessly behind the scenes to help them succeed." It included quotes from NFL quarterbacks -- for example, "Every second counts and having Microsoft Surface technology on sidelines allows players and coaches to analyze what our opponents are trying to do in almost real time." But Yahoo Finance wrote that "The quotes read like they were written by the Microsoft public relations team," arguing that Microsoft's NFL deal "has been a disaster... The tablets failed to work during a crucial AFC Championship game last January -- again for the New England Patriots... sports media interpreted that the malfunction benefited the Broncos on the field, giving the team an unfair advantage -- the very last thing Microsoft's tablets, meant to aid coaches in their play calling, should be doing."
The NFL issued a statement calling Microsoft "an integral, strategic partner of the NFL," adding "Within our complex environment, many factors can affect the performance of a particular technology either related to or outside of our partner's solutions."
Considering they fail at nearly sixty times... (Score:4, Insightful)
the rate as our iPads, I believe that. Of course, they're real computers and more complicated, but sixty times more is just killing our IT department.
Re: Considering they fail at nearly sixty times... (Score:4, Interesting)
For us, it was only about eight-fold more often, but since we do medical billing software, it doesn't take long at all to pay for an entire replacement. Currently, we provide one spare for every four iPads. For our older software that runs on Windows, we proved one spare Surface for every Surface used. It's painful maintaining that many extra devices.
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Re:Considering they fail at nearly sixty times... (Score:4, Insightful)
At this point, from a PR perspective, I bet M$ is wishing everyone was still calling them iPads....
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Of course coaches maltreat tablets. The question is why the NFL didn't anticipate this and buy them ruggedized laptops.
Re: Considering they fail at nearly sixty times... (Score:4, Funny)
The question is why the NFL didn't anticipate this and buy them ruggedized laptops.
There are about 400 million reasons.
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Considering most business will BUY technology they need rather than being paid to use sub-par garbage for advertising purposes.....
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They are supposed to be ruggedized. Apparently, they're not ruggedized enough.
Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:5, Informative)
Why not use something airline pilots are already using? [wikipedia.org]
Good enough for commercial aviation, good enough for pro football?
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:5, Funny)
I think there were 400M reasons why they could not do this...
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:5, Informative)
I think there were 400M reasons why they could not do this...
Exactly.
I also like Microsoft's PR spin on this:
I can guarantee you that no football player anywhere has ever said that.
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:5, Funny)
"Footballs, like any business, requires a world-class suite of Productivity Solutions running on the best-selling operating system family out there. When I'm on the side of the football field area, I like that I can squirt a game strategy right into my spreadsheet, and it will calculate how I can sell the highest number of touched downs for the highest levels of productivity." -- NFL sports player
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So that's what they did with the Zune team.
Now the article all adds up.
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:4, Interesting)
It included quotes from NFL quarterbacks -- for example, ". . . having Microsoft Surface technology on sidelines allows players and coaches to analyze what our opponents are trying to do in almost real time."
Yeah, the opponents were probably getting frustrated at theirs failing as well.
Jokes aside, I have a Surface Book which I haven't had any problems with so far, though I tend to use it more in notebook mode than as a tablet. I'm wondering if this has more to do with them using a poorly coded application that crashes or hangs all the time. iPads would probably make more sense though as there's probably less that can go wrong given how the OS tends to limit what apps can do and heavily restricts background processes.
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I thought the quote meant the devices had weak security.
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I think there were 400M reasons why they could not do this...
Reply to This
I first read that as a clever pun on the Airbus A400M (as in they wouldn't want to crash an A400M), as well as the $400m price for the deal.
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:4, Insightful)
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It's all about $$$, is Apple willing to shell $400m for such privilege?
Nah, Apple will build a (walled) garden around the NFL, and make the NFL pay for it.
Oblig. wall jokes aside, it's all about the $$$ until the client decides the product is bunk and demands the vendor deliver on promises, backed by a team of legal sharks.
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What can the NFL say? "We want the $400 millions dollars you gave us back!"
People pay for usable tech, loser companies have to pay companies to use their "tech"
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple doesn't need to, their devices have mindshare.
MS is incapable of marketing effectively to end users (except XBox), so they must buy their mindshare.
So the coaches dislike poor Surface marketing? (Score:3)
It sounded more to me like they were complaining about random hangs and reboots--not sure how better marketing is going to fix that.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Coach: Throw the bomb.
QB. On 3rd and 4?
Coach: No, that one!
Re:Why not use what's good enough for pilots? (Score:5, Funny)
Apple's willing to let their competitor spend 400m to promote the iPad instead.
Apple doesn't have to pay its customers. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because their computers, you know, actually work.
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Why not use something airline pilots are already using? [wikipedia.org]
Good enough for commercial aviation, good enough for pro football?
They are. Delta for instance issues Surface tablets to all pilots in lieu of the old hardcopy manuals and charts. It's not just iPads being used this way. Also, note the Wikipedia alert that the article you linked is "written like an advertisement".
Product placement (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a product placement, not an actual solution.The NFL is counting it as advertising revenue. Therefore, no one cares what the end users and support staff think about it.
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Therefore, no one cares what the end users and support staff think about it.
To the contrary, such a resounding failure shows that at least in some cases, end users' opinions do matter. I personally don't give a flying intercourse about National (ie, USian) Football (ie, handegg) League, nor of any other football (real or american) league, but plenty of people Microsoft would want to market Surface to do care.
Re:Product placement (Score:5, Funny)
It's a product placement
Too bad most of the broadcasters covering the games refer to them as iPads.
Re:Product placement (Score:5, Interesting)
Too bad most of the broadcasters covering the games refer to them as iPads.
I was watching the playoff game where the Surfaces weren't responding... the television crew correctly referred to them as "Microsoft Surface" multiple times while discussing the problems.
In the end, it doesn't really matter if this is an innate problem with the Surface, or if it's a problem with the supporting network infrastructure. Microsoft obviously pictured this as a huge PR opportunity, so they should've considered the possible issues and taken steps to deal with them ahead of time. Certainly stadium wifi congestion has been a known issue for quite a while - why didn't Microsoft think about it?
Re:Product placement (Score:5, Informative)
I'm going to guess that those who complain about them don't (or even can't) distinguish crashes or freezes from connectivity issues [networkworld.com]. This isn't really a new story, as these sorts of glitches have been happening on occasion since being introduced. Given that these things obviously rely on wireless info feeds, and (as you indicated) that such wireless or communication systems fail in stadiums on occasion [espn.com], I'm not sure I'd be so quick to blame the hardware or software.
I've seen that, as an MMO developer, whenever an ISP has a problem, people immediately blame the developer for whatever lag or disconnectivity they're experiencing. I think it's human nature to blame the software or hardware sitting in front of them rather than some invisible infrastructure sitting in-between.
I'd agree though, that this is something that Microsoft should have considered. It was risky to push something like this when there was a chance for very public and visible failures like that, even if it's not necessarily Microsoft's fault. Moreover, I really dislike the NFL pushing tools like this on the teams. They should have an opportunity to use their choice of technology when it comes to tools used in course of the game (within reasonable limits, of course). This is nothing like "official coffee of the NFL". This is a tool that can actually make an impact on the game if it succeeds or fails.
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I am an actual "networking professional", and I can tell you, that there is often very little distinction between network infrastructure that isn't responding, and hardware that is on the verge of locking up. The only real way to tell is to "reboot" and see if it goes away. And that does make it look like it is the device, and not the network (to the untrained).
We issue troubleshooting tips based on how easy they are to complete by the end user, and then assess from there. We don't tend to have easy tools t
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They can distinguish one thing...they can't fucking work. Who gives a shit whether it's a crash or freeze.
Just to clarify, I'm not blaming the coaches or players for that. I agree that from their perspective, if it doesn't work it doesn't work, and that's all that matters to them.
Dumbshit.
Feel better after lashing out at a random stranger on the internet? Happy to help you out with that.
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At the risk of stating the obvious... an application should never, ever be able to bring down the OS. If it can, it's a flaw in the OS.
But in this case, do we really know what's going on? I've heard conflicting explanations. Just because a player says "we have to reboot" doesn't necessarily mean the OS isn't responding - they probably don't know how to kill an unresponsive app (how would you get to the task manager in tablet mode anyway, if that's still how it works?), so rebooting could just be a quick-and
Re: Product placement (Score:2, Troll)
That horseshit hasn't been true in the last 70 years it's not true today no matter how many times you repeat it
Re: Product placement (Score:2, Funny)
You are kidding right? You must not be in tech/software support. Hell a few lines of code in Linux will bring it to its knees faster the Kaepernick hearing the national anthem.
Re:Product placement (Score:4, Funny)
> That's a relatively new phenomenon and probably took many hours of re-training to achieve.
Lemmee guess...
Step 1) The tablets are first deployed. TV commenters call them "Ipads". Nasty letters from Microsoft legal.
Step 2) The tablets are reported to freeze/crash/etc. TV commenters call them "Ipads". Nasty letters from Apple legal.
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Step 2) The tablets are reported to freeze/crash/etc. TV commenters call them "Microsoft Surface" to get back at Microsoft.
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It's a product placement, not an actual solution.The NFL is counting it as advertising revenue. Therefore, no one cares what the end users and support staff think about it.
If they can reduce reliance on ads maybe they will be allowed to reduce the turnaround time on plays and not have 6 second plays followed by 5 minutes of advertising?
Theres a joke: Football players run miles in training; they run for 6 seconds, have a 5 minute break, run another 6 seconds and so on until they've run a mile!
Football is slowed down so much for the sake of advertising with these huge breaks between plays while the players just wander about and slowly slowly organize themselves for the next pla
Re:Product placement (Score:4, Funny)
Football is slowed down so much for the sake of advertising with these huge breaks between plays while the players just wander about and slowly slowly organize themselves for the next play.
That's why i like the non-stop action of soccer. 22 people randomly kicking a ball around until eventually someone accidentally kicks it into the goal.
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Football is slowed down so much for the sake of advertising with these huge breaks between plays while the players just wander about and slowly slowly organize themselves for the next play.
That's why i like the non-stop action of soccer. 22 people randomly kicking a ball around until eventually someone accidentally kicks it into the goal.
Or theres Rugby LOL. Soccer vs Rugby; Soccer is 90 minutes spent pretending you are hurt. Rugby is 80 minutes pretending you aren't hurt!
Ice hockey is pretty good too for non stop action.
Re: Product placement (Score:5, Funny)
You must watch a different soccer, the one I watch stops the game every nanometer of ball travel for some bitch to fall on the ground all Nancy Carrigan style
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Try women's football (soccer). Lots less diving and cheating, much more fluid play. They don't have as many pro teams yet, but the last few World Cups had some great games.
It seems like a lot of sports have gone that way. The more money in them, the less interesting they become to watch.
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Given that the game has 1 hour of actual playing time and maybe 7 or 8 seconds of action per play and about 2 plays per minute that doesn't add up to much action in a game that drones on about 3 and a half hours. I've taken to DVR recording the games now and I start watching them after half time has ended. I fast forward through all the timeouts and commercials and generally I catch up to real time about the last few minutes of the game. I'm an Atlanta Falcons fan and generally all their games come down
11 minute of action per game (Score:2)
Given that the game has 1 hour of actual playing time and maybe 7 or 8 seconds of action per play and about 2 plays per minute that doesn't add up to much action in a game that drones on about 3 and a half hours.
"1 hour of actual playing time"? Try 11 minutes [qz.com] of actual football action. While the sport has some pretty amazing highlights there is a TON of waiting around while nothing actually happens.
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This may be true, but when it takes a pitcher (baseball) longer to throw a single pitch than it does to coordinate 11 (22 if you're counting both sides) from the completion of the last play to the start of the next that is ridiculous. Put players on base, and the time goes up excruciatingly so. Throw the damn pitch already; it shouldn't take two minutes to toss a ball 60'6".
Re: Product placement (Score:2)
Football isn't "slowed down". It was designed to support TV ads. It's a lazy spectator's sport. The whole ecosystem is designed from the ground up to be a show with branding, ads, and stuff to buy.
No other sport fits the schedule of television as well as American Football. Nor has anything enjoyed its success. Comparatively, Pro Wrestling is a distant second.
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Baseball is all about story telling. You can tell a complete story between pitches. Sometimes two. It often takes longer to toss a pitch than it does to run a play or two in football.
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They're probably contractually obliged to use them. Having said that if you tape a bit of paper to the front you should be OK. You're still technically using it, just as a clipboard.
Aside from wi-fi (Score:2)
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They run exactly one application. They are locked down to run nothing else. They boot into the application. What is it that this application does? It shows overhead pictures of plays so that players and coaches can review the on-field strategy.
Prior to the NFL's decision to use tablets, the pictures were printed in the team booth and delivered to the sidelines by runners. Why replace something that works with something new? Product placement $$.
In short it was a technical decision made by the marketing
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I can't remember the last time I had to hard boot a computer that I own either Mac or Linux. At work they've got Win 7 Pro on all our stuff and it's generally stable enough as I think it's been about 2 years since I had to hard boot one. When we had Vista about 50 percent of them where down at any one time. Win 7 was the best thing ever to happen to our IT guys.
as a surface pro owner... (Score:2)
Yep. they do. Not worth the full MSRP, but worth it used a year later for 50% the price as long as you understand the the things are as stable as a low end windows laptop.
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The last driver update seems to have solved the only freeze problem that I've been having with my Surface Pro 4, which was wake from sleep.
https://technet.microsoft.com/... [microsoft.com]
MS is Making Progress (Score:4, Funny)
Up until now everyone in the NFL and media has been referring to them as iPads. Microsoft has finally figured out how to get people to refer to their hardware by name.
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Go see your doctor about a sense of humour transplant as yours doesn't seem to be working.
NFL cares about money nothing else (Score:2)
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Also, there's only about 11 minutes of action per game:
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB... [wsj.com]
I enjoy watching games, but only with it pre-recorded. It takes about 30 minutes per game (I watch penalty determination, reviews, and injuries alongside the brief actual game play).
Or, and I really like this, I let the game play at real time and pick up a bit between plays and clean during commercials. I can get 2 hours of stuff done during one game, and some exercise (running in from the kitchen to catch the start of
I am amused by this. (Score:4, Insightful)
I used to be a football fan. I used to go to games. Then it slowly dawned on me that my favorite team wasn't owned by people who cared about winning. It was all about money.
Yeah, call me naive for not figuring that out sooner.
The labor disputes weren't enough for me, but when the owner started threatening to move to Florida I started getting turned off. They didn't move to Florida, but they did move to Tennessee.
The only good thing about sports in my opinion for the last 15-20 years is when there's a good scandal and NFL coaches turning on a major sponsor ranks right up there.
They can't give teams their choice of technology because of sponsors who bought the whole league. They can't give teams full control of their devices because there are too many cheaters. They make billions annually but even partnered with Microsoft they cannot satisfy their coaches with their technology.
Hearing stuff like the announcers referred to their Microsoft Surfaces as iPads for the first couple of seasons is just icing on the cake.
Some have said it's just problems with wireless connectivity and thousands of fans in the same place all using their cell phones but couldn't they overcome that if it is what the problem really is?
Re: I am amused by this. (Score:2)
And now they are here in TN they suck so bad I can't remember wanting to watch them
2005? Maybe
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Some have said it's just problems with wireless connectivity and thousands of fans in the same place all using their cell phones but couldn't they overcome that if it is what the problem really is?
No... Just take a look at how often the NFL still has problems with wireless headsets and this is something that the people who put on concerts have solved long ago.
Re:I am amused by this. (Score:5, Insightful)
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An inside perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
I knew somebody involved in making specialized software for the NFL. Their company wanted to use iOS, but the Microsoft Surface deal got made and there was pressure from above to move everything to the Surface. (Apparently, individual teams still hold a certain degree of autonomy, so it wasn't absolutely required in all places.) The product was already pushing the technology bounds of what the iPhone could do and development for the Surface was still pretty raw back then. And the football teams that used the software much preferred iOS too. So there was a lot of unhappiness all around.
But a more interesting aspect was the monetary arrangements. The company was developing for peanuts, below their costs. The NFL really takes advantage of the fact that both everybody wants to work with them for the prestige, and that the NFL is a non-profit. When I asked why he was willing to do all this at a loss, he said was because other sports venues like Major League Baseball and the NBA are not non-profits and actually pay well. They take their cues from the NFL. So if you can get in with the NFL, you can make the big money later by selling to the others.
And he suspects the Microsoft Surface deal itself was structured along the lines of this thinking... Microsoft basically giving away Surfaces to the NFL wanting both publicity and hoping to later actually sell to markets that actually pay money.
It's the stadium stupid (Score:4, Interesting)
I've never used one of these devices but I'm gonna guess Microsoft doesn't handle bandwidth congestion issues well. That, and these millionaire football folks all have 1 gig bandwidth with 1 ms latency at home, and have never experienced network lag in their lives.
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Here's what $400 MM buys you in viral marketing (Score:3)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
http://www.usatoday.com/story/... [usatoday.com]
It's not freezing... (Score:4, Funny)
Is it all the tablet's fault? (Score:2)
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The software should be smart enough to recover without rebooting.
And you have just hit on the difference that makes all the difference.
If Windows in a mobile application is finicky about re-establishing broken network connections, then that would be the kiss of death in a crowded WiFi environment.
Can anyone with Surface Pro 4 and W10 experience, who is not a shill, speak to how robust the WiFi/network hardware and software stack is under iffy WiFi conditions?
Windows 10 (Score:2, Informative)
Awww, I feel bad (Score:2)
Aww, that's so awful for the Patriots. While the tablets may be to blame, it's hard for me to feel too bad for a team with a history of "communication issues" [nbcsports.com] for visiting teams.
My .02, get rid of tablets, photos, phone calls, headphones, and anything else other than the coaches and players on the playing field and sideline talking to each other in person. They can all carry around clipboa
The same as Apple 20 years ago (Score:2)
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They're using Surface tablets?
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It'll be Obama's 2 terms all over again.
The republicans will forget they are there to serve the American people and instead just be obstructionist jerks.
Re: The Donald (Score:4, Interesting)
The highest service Congress can perform with a bad president is to not pass stupid stuff the president wants just to look like they are achieving something. Our constitutiion has checks and balances to try to limit damage from one branch going off the rails.
Whichever candidate gets elected this time around, an obstructionist congress would be an excellent thing to have.
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No, adults that look at each idea on its own fucking merit instead of partisan assholes is what is needed.
And what about Wi-Fi (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd love to see a more thorough technical analysis done. Put a debug tool that monitors the system in real-time. Analyze every sports stadium and their network and equipment infrastructure. And put out a whitepaper that details everything.
Do we know if every NFL stadium has dedicated AP equipment with isolated and prioritized vLANs routing on-the-field device data directly to-and-from their supporting hardware infrastructure? Do we know if every device works with a clean OS install before every game? Are the servers consistent in every stadium? For all we know, someone may have patched two switches together across an old 100Mb link just to get things operational, or someone's running the hosting software on some old P4 server that can't handle the demand, or someone swapped the away team's AP with a cheapo D-Link unit they got at Target, or sixty thousand smartphones are choking the Surface tablet traffic.
It's easy to blame things on Microsoft, especially when your profession is football and not IT. But, in my experience, more often than not, someone screwed up the infrastructure side of the equation.
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My money is on wifi not working right.
Wifi is a crapshoot in crowds that size, especially when you consider that > 90% of the fans in the stands have smartphones, all of which at least have wifi on and most of which probably have some setting that automatically connects them to open networks. At a minimum there's a bunch of RF noise from this alone.
It's worse if you consider the number of stadiums that install wifi -- I've never been to one where it worked well and in many it doesn't work at all. And s
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stop going techno-nerd on it.. they failed (Score:2)
Unless support wasn't part of the deal that was signed, then it clearly is Microsoft's fault. And the NFL's. They are the ones who agreed to the deal.
And these three words: User Acceptance Testing
I have a feeling this was technical people saying "it should work" and sales people saying "it's flawless" and the NFL saying "this will be great" and people getting bonuses and high-fiving each other.... and NOBODY actually trying it out in a real setting ahead of time.
Serves them right.
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Re:Hardware or Software? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not hardware and Windows is not solid -- at all.
My mouse stops working. I remove it and put it back and it works again. The hardware has not stopped, the mouse didn't overheat. It's just the OS that decided not to see it anymore.
Now, it's on the back of the CPU, so I decide to connect it to front USB ports -- just to make testing easier.
It doesn't work. A balloon states it is searching for a driver for the mouse. What for? Does Windows have different drivers for the same mouse if we plug it on different USBs? Why the f*? I do it at home in Linux all the time, I can connect the mouse to any of the USB ports. It works instantly. Why not in Windows (which idiots say it's easier)?
After some time I get tired of waiting for the driver to install, because the minutes go away and nothing happens. I look at the screen and there's a message inside the balloon: "Click here for more info". OK, please tell me because I may be stupid since I'm not able to use the fine Microsoft software: how can I click on anything without a mouse?
Well, I kinda feel the OS has won and put the mouse back on the same port it was connected to. Then it works and I quickly click on the balloon -- only to learn that there's an explanation about Windows not being able to get a mouse driver (online or from Windows Update, AFAIR).
Duh, we have security standards, of course the PC won't reach Microsoft. The IT people cannot allow that. But how would I know if I didn't click on the balloon? And no, I can't do it without a mouse! Nobody can!
And you know what? There's a message asking if I want to quit retrieving the mouse driver from Windows Update? Well, that won't work, so only a stupid user would insist on that (oh, wait, this is Windows, stupid user is the standard). So I click on quit or cancel or whatever, thinking I'll have the opportunity to locate the very same driver that is in use to see the mouse at the back of the CPU tower. (I did that before, it's not cool to look for a needed piece of software in your own machine -- the OS should know where it is... but... *sigh*).
Except no. You say you don't want Windows to get the driver from some online repo and that's it. End of story, no further dialog. You just stay there looking at the screen -- without a mouse pointer!
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Ya, I know I've noticed this too. Mice works flawlessly on Linux and Mac OS X yet plugging in a standard mouse like a Logitech or Microsoft and it screws up on searching the drivers. It's a mouse, which is a standard HID compliant device. No special drivers should be needed for regular use. Sure, some extra fancy buttons MAY not work without the special driver.
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Ya, I know I've noticed this too. Mice works flawlessly on Linux and Mac OS X yet plugging in a standard mouse like a Logitech or Microsoft and it screws up on searching the drivers. It's a mouse, which is a standard HID compliant device. No special drivers should be needed for regular use. Sure, some extra fancy buttons MAY not work without the special driver.
What Windows version? Was it the OEM install? Installed from scratch? Upgraded?
What I find is that if common USB devices (keyboard, mouse) are not being detected and installed properly by any of the USB ports then that Windows computer typically does not have the right versions of the chipset drivers and/or the USB drivers installed. It's interesting that people here are willing to put a tonne of effort to get Linux to work but aren't willing to go through basic troubleshooting steps, such as downloadin
Re:Hardware or Software? (Score:4, Interesting)
It doesn't work. A balloon states it is searching for a driver for the mouse. What for? Does Windows have different drivers for the same mouse if we plug it on different USBs? Why the f*? I do it at home in Linux all the time, I can connect the mouse to any of the USB ports. It works instantly. Why not in Windows (which idiots say it's easier)?
I can't speak to the Surface; but my work laptop, a Samsung RV511 running Win 7 Pro, has 3 USB ports. Two on the left side, and 1 on the right. I can plug something into either of the Left ports with no complaint; but if I plug that same device into the Right-hand Port, it acts like it has never seen it before. And vice-versa with something that was originally plugged into the Right-hand Port being moved over to the Left. It's a Brand New Day.
All I can think of is that those two sets of Ports are probably on two different USB Controllers (remember, this is a LAPTOP. It isn't like we're talking on-board-ports vs. ports-on-a-PCI-card), and Windows is too retarded to poke around in its own Current Configuration to see if the damned DRIVER is actually ALREADY INSTALLED. Even if it had to make a redundant copy of the Driver, at least it could do it SILENTLY, rather than acting like a horse that was approached from the wrong side (horses have no Corpus Callosum; so each hemisphere has its own visual-record and memory); IOW, it freaks out...
Say what you will about Macs and OS X, at least they don't do retarded shit like that! Glad to see Linux is also smart enough to recognize things that have been plugged in elsewhere before ON THE SAME COMPUTER.
Re:When I am doing something important... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh sure. Now you want the NFL to teach linebackers words.
Re:When I am doing something important... (Score:4, Funny)
"Oh sure. Now you want the NFL to teach linebackers words"
Now, now. Those guys are college graduates. They know lots of words. Mostly short ones. But words nonetheless.
Re:When I am doing something important... (Score:5, Informative)
FWIW, Belichick was using a clipboard and a pencil on the sidelines today instead of a tablet. I assume it worked. The Patriots won.
Re:MS bugs laughable compared w/other systems (Score:4)
I've run into numerous bugs on Linux. I've been using it since 1999 since I finally gave up on Amiga hardware developments and moved on. During that time it has improved by leaps and bounds and has always been very stable but did suffer a lot from lack of driver support by hardware makers. It has been years since I had to hard boot a linux box though even when programs crashed. I've had to use Xkill a few times or open a terminal and kill a choked program by hand. These are generally bugs not in applications and not in Linux itself but you can see by the Kernel change log that developers are constantly chasing bugs.
Re: (Score:2)
hmmmm....typo explains it. Should have left out the "not" before applications. What happens when I'm tired and posting. At least my dyslexia is mostly under contorl.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm forced to use Microsoft software at work. I encounter multiple bugs every hour, some quite serious.
I can confirm that
At home, I have the luxury of using Linux. I can go literally years without encountering a software bug.
I can NOT confirm that. Random example pulled out of my ass:
$ systemctl service_that_does_not_exist disable
$ echo $?
0
$
HTH
Re: (Score:3)
How about not complicating a game about couple of guys throwing a ball around to the point where you need a convoluted IT infrastructure to support it?
"Disaster"? (Score:2)
Windows 10 is a disaster, the Surface is a disaster, yet their stock just hit an all-time high.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.