People who buy digital content.
I made a huge mistake of buying several episodes of my favorite show from Amazon Instant Video, counting on being able to watch it whenever I wanted.
But no, it turns out that the way the system works is that I can only access my content when the vendor wants. I haven’t been able to watch my shows for days. I just spent an hour doing my hair without any show to watch.
Serves me right for doing something as stupid as buying digital content.
This is, of course, a pretty minor inconvenience. But imagine a whole university completely cut off from all of its textbooks because something is malfunctioning on a server somewhere. That would not be as minor. >
It’s stupid if you buy digital content that can only be kept on the buyer’s servers, or that requires said servers to be online and answering for you to use your stuff.
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And that’s exactly what I did. Idiot.
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Think of it this way – you learned your lesson with something as insignificant in the grand scheme of things as a TV show, and you’ll be able to use this experience to prevent larger blunders like your university switching to online textbooks 😉
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This is, of course, a pretty minor inconvenience. But imagine a whole university completely cut off from all of its textbooks because something is malfunctioning on a server somewhere.
“Ed Tech.” is such a fad driven wellspring of terrible ideas…
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Why are you spending an hour doing your hair?
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It gets so matted that I need forever to prepare it for the steampod. I almost broke the steampod’s little brush today.
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All aboard the Jolly Roger, where you liberate your purchased content from the hands of the New Intellectual Property Regime …
Otherwise, your hair must be a rather tortured thing — I sense it needs to stage palace revolts on occasion so it will get the attention that it craves. 🙂
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