Re: data storage (again)

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True, but A doesn't send data to C so that B can retrieve it.  It goes from A to B with no storage at C.

Next, WiFi cameras?  Wow!  I can have photos of the Grand Canyon because Joe Megapixel just took a photo?  I'll never have to pay for a flight to anywhere again?  I'll miss the experience of seeing it live, in person?  What a deal!

Guess what!  Colossus and Guardian are not real.    People, human beings, program all this stuff you are dreaming about.  You know, programmers that are real live living people.  So in effect someone I don't know and have never met, and most likely will never meet will be responsible for my data.

Wow !  The camera will critique my photos?  Maybe the programmers think like you do and not like I do.  All my photos would look like you shot them.  The comments on the weekly gallery are examples of this.  Some like the way a photo was presented while others are not quite so pleased with the photo.  They enter comments that differ. 

Several years ago a programmer  had a hand in writing a payroll program for a large corporation.  He created a fictitious employee and for years put the less than half a penny, like if the real pay was $167.964,  the .004 into the phony employees account and wrote the check.  All the safe guard at that time didn't catch him.  (He started bragging one day and got caught)

Although they are both works of fiction, the movie "Enemy of the State" and the book "Broken Window by Jeffery Deaver can show what people that want to get your data can do.

Bob



lookaround360@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Guys,

A gazillion financial transactions a second are transmitted digitally
and you can't trust The System? As one of seven billion citizens what
are the odds that you will get mugged on line compared to anywhere else?
Your personal data is more likely to benefit you.

What if, to give an on-topic example, anyone could look at all your
pictures any time they needed a picture for an illustration?  What about
a real-time photo request directly to your camera? Odds are someone with
a live camera would holler Bingo!
Kaa ching - a few pennies in and out the bank accounts.


 What if your camera critiqued your pictures: "If you think that last
shot was good try it like this." It pulls one by one of your fave
photographers off the Cloud for an example. Or "You already took this
picture a zillion times.  Try something new?"

AZ


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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [SPAM] Re: data storage (again)
From: Bob <w8imo@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, August 04, 2009 11:46 am
To: List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students
<photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Prior to my retirement three years and four days ago, I saw "off line"
storage schemes at many of my Customers.  I don't remember any of them
using the INT_ER_NET but rather they used an INT_RA_NET.
Having been in the information technology business for forty years and
having seen what my Customers did to store data and knowing what I know
about data security, there is no way I would send my info to a 'cloud'.
The toaster and green home are the least of my concerns.  I am more
concerned about big brother,  account numbers, and the info that
identifies me and me alone.  Storing in a cloud is to me, like saying,
""Here you are identity thieves. Anything else I can do to help you be me?"
And as Roy said, if my ISP or access point goes down, I can still work
off line.
Bob
PhotoRoy6@xxxxxxx wrote:
    
Some on Motley Fool have been pushing investments in companies that
are expected to run the cloud.
However I see the two problems with the cloud.One you have centralized
access to all info which Big Brother might make use of and two what
happens when your cloud fails, is offline or your access method goes
down? You will get no work down, not be able to work the toaster or
have your state of the art green home run efficiently. People using
image programs like Photoshop are going to have to have access to the
fastest communication links possible as a lot of manipulations are
very intensive.The cloud is like any other technology - a two edge sword.

Roy



In a message dated 8/4/2009 10:04:14 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
lookaround360@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:

    Storage and software from the "cloud"; processing power will be
    shared with other computers



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                           /////
                          ( O O )
--------------------oOOO-----O----OOOo-----73 de w8imo@xxxxxxxx------
             I plan to live forever.  So far, so good......
    



  

-- 

                           /////
                          ( O O )
--------------------oOOO-----O----OOOo-----73 de w8imo@xxxxxxxx------
             I plan to live forever.  So far, so good......



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