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User: brantondaveperson

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Comments · 1,666

  1. Re:Good on Hotel Charges Guests $500 For Bad Online Reviews · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    No - have you ever considered being a better husband?

  2. Re:its why devs cringe. on PHP Finally Getting a Formal Specification · · Score: 1

    The whole semantic-whitespace thing in Python is genius if you think about it. I mean, it's horrible - awful to use, makes a hash of copy&paste and makes emailing code around (which I guess is a bad idea but anyway) impossible. BUT, and this is the genius part, one of the endless will-never-be-settled arguments that programmers love to have is the one about indentation. If you build a position on this argument actually into the syntax of the language, then the language will always be part of the argument and thus will always be talked about. And thus always popular.

    Prior to Python I would have thought that such an achievement would be impossible, but the genius of actually making *whitespace* part of the language definition pulled it off.

    Genuis truly is the only word for it.

  3. Re:Formal specifications are pretty useless for th on PHP Finally Getting a Formal Specification · · Score: 1

    Doubtless true - but imagine how much better the world of practical day-to-day computing would be if we *could* prove compilers to be correct. I don't disagree that formal methods are more or less useless for real-world problems today, but does that mean that we shouldn't continue to investigate them? I hated my formal methods class when studying Computer Science at uni as much as the next guy (well, I guess some people probably enjoyed it), but unless there's some reason that such methods can never be applied to compiler-correctness-proof (halting problem kinda thing), then surely it's worth continuing to look into it?

  4. Re:No matter how common you think it is... on Ask Slashdot: When Is It Better To Modify the ERP vs. Interfacing It? · · Score: 1

    What's a plz? Expand if you would be so kind.

  5. Re:Thankfully those will be patched right in a jif on Old Apache Code At Root of Android FakeID Mess · · Score: 1

    Well no, the excuse will be that google don't want to backport fixes from their 4.2 branch back to their 2.2 branch. And I can't blame them, such backporting is usually alot of work and everybody hates doing it. Plus of course there would be no direct revenue from the engineering effort, other than a certain amount of 'goodwill' (which can apparently be put down on the balance sheet, but that seems a bit nuts to me).

    So there's two problems, one - the new Apps/OS won't fix on your device and two - no-one wants to backport the fixes to the old Apps/OS.

    Result: Useless device that is not fit for the purpose that it was originally sold for. Does the US have 'not fit for purpose' laws? Perhaps you can return it?

  6. Re:Oe noes! "Naughty" language! on Linus Torvalds: "GCC 4.9.0 Seems To Be Terminally Broken" · · Score: 1

    Yes, that's right. Words don't mean anything.

  7. Re:Meh on How Stanford Engineers Created a Fictitious Compression For HBO · · Score: 1

    Troll? Joke? Fundamental mis-understanding regarding the nature of information?

    Insufficient information to tell.

  8. Re:Not surprised on Popular Android Apps Full of Bugs: Researchers Blame Recycling of Code · · Score: 2

    perhaps by adding a "revoke right" option and an "always ask" option

    You mean, just like iOS? Actually, Apple may very well have a patent on that which might explain why Google hasn't yet adopted this obvious paradigm.

  9. Re:Solar power? on Google Offers a Million Bucks For a Better Inverter · · Score: 1

    But I don't get it - why convert DC to AC, when all you're likely to do in the end is convert that AC back to DC somewhere else to actually power something?

  10. Re:meh. on How One School District Handled Rolling Out 20,000 iPads · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not an argument pro or anti Apple per se, but standardising on a device means less time spent working out how to set up each device and worrying about app compatibility, and more time spent actually teaching. And a 'good' Android device that's robust enough to handle kids pugging in the USB charger (for instance...) isn't all that much cheaper than an iPad. In actual fact, I don't even know of one that's as solid as the iPad is.

    Now, the role of eduction is the debate that's worth having here - Apple v.s Google is a distraction - is having these types of devices in schools a good thing? And if it is, exactly how ought it to be used? Hard questions - and ones that we're only now starting to look at. Ubiquitous tablet computing is very new - but it's not going away and we do need to teach our children how to use it well.

  11. Re:Mission creep. on How One School District Handled Rolling Out 20,000 iPads · · Score: 1

    It astonishes me that you appear to actually be serious. Yes, I can see people sending their kids to Home Depot so they can hide amongst the shelves and do their homework. Good plan.

    And yes of course homework might involve the internet, just as once homework may very well once have involved looking something up in an encyclopaedia.

  12. Re:cause and/or those responsible on Russian Government Edits Wikipedia On Flight MH17 · · Score: 1

    Pretty sure the replies to this are failing to notice that the AC is trying to make a joke. It's not a funny or a clever joke by any means - and it adds nothing to the conversation - but I don't think he's being serious.

  13. Can someone explain... on Coming Soon(ish) From LG: Transparent, Rollup Display · · Score: 2

    ..the appeal of a transparent display?

    So I can see what's behind the display? As if we don't have enough issues with sunlight reflecting from display surfaces, now we're going to let the light coming from *behind* the display further reduce its readability?

  14. Re:Problem solved. on Avast Buys 20 Used Phones, Recovers 40,000 Deleted Photos · · Score: 2

    You mean like an iPhone? (as stated several times elsewhere on this thread).

  15. I take your point, but "using programming tools that were higher quality than those today."? What tools were these?

  16. Re:AI is always "right around the corner". on By 2045 'The Top Species Will No Longer Be Humans,' and That Could Be a Problem · · Score: 2

    "that can recognize your commands and search the internet for what you requested"

    Unless you talk a little bit too fast, or don't have an American accent.

    "or translate your statement into any of a dozen foreign languages"

    Generally very badly, with no understanding of what you said and therefore isn't going to replace human translators anytime soon.

    "has a camera that can recognize faces,"

    Which is also quite a stretch, given how often it 'recognises' patches of lichen on a wall as a face.

    "can connect to expert systems that can, for instance, diagnose diseases better than all but the very best doctors"

    Really? First I've heard of this one. Citation needed I think.

    "Oh, and your cellphone can also beat any grandmaster in the world at chess."

    As above. And anyway, if the grandmaster followed the same instructions as the computer, it would win right back. Does that mean anything though?

  17. Re:ROM on 3D Printed PiGRRL - Raspberry Pi Gameboy · · Score: 1

    "A hippie guitarist who has visited your small town for years has gone rogue and launched ICBMs toward your town."

    10/10 for completely whack game plot :)

  18. Re:See even Microsoft thinks MacBook Airs rule! on Microsoft Wants You To Trade Your MacBook Air In For a Surface Pro 3 · · Score: 1

    PC's don't come with Adobe CC out of the box either, so it's no comparison. iPhoto blows the socks off any photo editing / management app that you can get for free for Windows. By miles. Quite apart from the fact that normal people can use it, it actually manages to organise your photo library in a sensible way without requiring you to dick around with folders.

    Whether or not Lightroom is better or worse than Aperture is a matter of opinion. I've used both, and rather prefer Aperture, but Lightroom does have more features. Aperture's organisation of photos is far superior - but it depends on how you like to look after your photo library.

    And of course, Photoshop is available for both Mac and Windows, so there's no argument there either.

  19. Re:Adding to the list... on Even In Digital Photography Age, High Schoolers Still Flock To the Darkroom · · Score: 1

    Our limited education tax dollars have no business funding something so useless to modern society as art.

    Seriously?

  20. Re:Containment by default on Google Engineer: We Need More Web Programming Languages · · Score: 1

    OS X has sandboxing by default out of the, er, box.

  21. Re:This act is highly illegal on Registry Hack Enables Continued Updates For Windows XP · · Score: 1

    Ha - awesome. You insulted me. Good job.

    So the thing is this - the ease with which it's possible to fake your system's credentials to receive support for which you haven't paid is irrelevant. It simply doesn't matter how easy it is - the only thing that matters is whether or not you do it knowingly. If you, with intent and planning, put that number 9 into a registry key with the aim of extending the support beyond its legitimate date, then yes you have committed a crime (*)

    Why is this not obvious?

    * Now, to be clear, I don't know if it's a crime or just a civil matter or whatever - and it's highly unlikely that you will be pursued for committing this heinous act - but the point I'm trying to make is that intent is the issue, not that it being easy to do makes it ok.

  22. Re:As Jim Morrison said... on Misogyny, Entitlement, and Nerds · · Score: 1

    Most women I've met fall under one of two categories,

    Seriously? Most women you've met fall under two categories? For real? And let me guess, do those categories happen to be slut and not-slut? Let's read on...

    ... already taken ... or boyfriend hopping ...

    Well I'll be. How about that. Your attitude to women is quite frankly pretty shocking, except of course it isn't because I hear it all the time. Listen carefully. Women do not fall into 'one of two categories'. Not even most women. There is no 'they'. I mean, are you trolling or something? Do you really believe this shit? How old are you?

  23. Re:This act is highly illegal on Registry Hack Enables Continued Updates For Windows XP · · Score: 2

    Why do slashdotters find these issues so hard to understand. The law is all about intent. If you intend to access services to which you are not entitled, the ease with which you do so is entirely irrelevant to the discussion of whether or not your actions are legal.

    You can type in eighteen "plain text" keystrokes (whatever that means - aren't all keystrokes plain text? Anyway) and log into the Attorney General's gmail account. Well, if you knew the password you could. But the action is trivially simple. And that doesn't matter. And why would it? Would you want the law to be based on how difficult an action is to undertake? It's pretty easy to pull a trigger you know...

  24. Re:This act is highly illegal on Registry Hack Enables Continued Updates For Windows XP · · Score: 1

    OH come on - just because something is easy to do automatically makes it legal. Is that your argument?

    If you're not authorized to receive upgrades and/or support, and you knowingly misrepresent your system in some way in order get those upgrades and/or support. Well of course that's illegal.

    If they're so special and secret, they shouldn't be something you can update.

    Do you really believe that? If your life is so special and precious, it shouldn't be something I can so trivially extinguish with this here handgun.
    Oops - And I told myself I wasn't going to use analogies, which inevitably end up driving the conversation in the direction of whether or not the analogy holds.
    Sigh.

  25. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation on Botched Executions Put Lethal Injections Under New Scrutiny · · Score: 1

    And they say that it's nothing to do with revenge...