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User: Sczi

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Comments · 189

  1. The march toward fascism on Legislation In New York To Ban Anonymous Speech Online · · Score: 1

    It's all part of the long march toward fascism. Make every stupid little thing illegal so the government always has some surface justification to bother any person at any time.

  2. Re:To Quote Woody allen on Vaccine Could Cut Heroin Addiction · · Score: 1

    Yes, even cyanide.

  3. Re:To Quote Woody allen on Vaccine Could Cut Heroin Addiction · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have, and if you haven't, then I dare you to take one. Bring snacks and a helmet.

    The idea behind methadone is that you're not supposed to keep using it. You use it when detoxing to gradually step down, but surprise surprise, heroin addicts don't use it as intended.

    Everything in moderation, including our excesses.

  4. Re:Is this news? on Shmoocon Demo Shows Easy, Wireless Credit Card Fraud · · Score: 2

    As a non-idiot I knew this was possible. I fight Chase regularly on this, they send a new card with the stupid chip, I call and roast em, they mail me a new one without the chip. But they tell me at the time that it is a one time only deal and sure enough they send another later in the year on a different card. Yes, because of mergermania I now have three credit cards but they are all Chase. They simply refuse to allow you to permanently opt out of this madness.

    Stop! Hammer time!

  5. Re:If you enjoy your job, then why not? on Do Companies Punish Workers Who Take Vacations? · · Score: 1

    Just be aware that there are ups and downs to every country. I've never been to the USA, but I suspect the political correctness is much worse here. You're expected to fit in, be polite and avoid open conflicts, and that includes the workplace.

    In other words, JWSmythe should probably avoid Sweden.
    Seriously, you have no idea.. I know JW, and the bloodpressure thing doesn't surprise me at all =]

  6. Re:mailwasher on Ask Slashdot: Spoof an Email Bounce With Windows? · · Score: 1

    Question: How does MailWasher work?

    Answer: MailWasher works directly with your email server, exactly like your email program does. But there is one important difference: you can tell MailWasher to delete a message at the server, without downloading it - or you can bounce an email back to the sender so that it looks as though your address is not valid.

    I haven't used it in years, but it seems to still work how I remember.

  7. Re:I can't fault them for doing so.. on S&P's $2 Trillion Math Mistake · · Score: 1

    I had to rant a while back (also every day before and since, but this one day in particular). What I came up with is that they should all live in a big dormitory and wear dickies with a name badge. Public service indeed.

  8. I had a feeling on Are 'Real Names' Policies an Abuse of Power? · · Score: 2

    When facebook was still .edu only and decided to open up, one of the details I learned (wasn't on it) was that most people use their real name. I thought "oh there's no way that will fly once they open up", but they had already achieved a certain critical mass where new sign ups just figured that's the way it works, and that's the way it is, so they went along with it. I could almost see it in the .edu only context, but it still astounds me to this day that relatives of mine who will bitch mercilessly about the man trying to get over on them and whatnot will post their whole life up for the world to see under their real name. Nothing GOOD ever happens from people finding you by your name, it's usually something crappy. Like if you've got a really popular online persona and you apply for a job, you can point to sourceforge or whatever and take credit for the good. But when has an HR person ever went scrounging for an applicant's real name, found pics of them drunk and pissing off a bridge, and given them the job because of it. The disconnect from people who seem like they should care a lot, according to their own standards, is striking.

  9. Re:Cave? on Amazon, Google Cave To Apple, Drop In-App Buttons · · Score: 1

    I've gone to web sites on my iphone and had them pop up "install my app" messages. These tend to be free, but if one were a paid app, would Apple still get their cut?

  10. Re:Short games are fine, but... on Developer Panel Asks Whether AAA Games Are Too Long · · Score: 1

    Particularly due to having small children, I appreciate a good and proper PAUSE button, which multiplayer games generally won't have.

  11. Re:Please listen on Fonolo Lets You Bypass Company Phone Menus · · Score: 1

    Yes, believe it or not, Mr.BigBank, your phone system is not so integral to my daily existence that I would memorize it in the first place, so how bout we just skip the BS please. Also, let's go ahead and read that script at about double the speed you're reading it at now, so I don't fall asleep waiting for you to get to my option.

  12. Meanwhile, 20,000 foster kids age out, yearly on Infertile Daughter To Receive Uterus From Mother · · Score: 1

    That's in the US alone! And this is part of why I am staunchly pro-choice.

  13. Re:WTF? on Nissan LEAF Leaks Speed & Location To RSS Feed · · Score: 1

    Zawinski's Law in action

  14. Re:Dreamweaver vs Homesite on Ask Slashdot: Web Site Editing Software For the Long Haul? · · Score: 1

    Homesite still is homesite. I prefer it a million times over any dreamweaver. Unfortunately, it's showing its age a bit and has a few annoyances. But I don't do wysiwyg. I also wouldn't recommend it to anyone not at least semi-invested in ColdFusion so you can single step and break point and whatnot. It is very good for coding html by hand, though.

  15. as a parent this is relevant to my interests on Why Doesn't 'Google Kids' Exist? · · Score: 1

    Suppose the US passed a law tomorrow that all US web users can only reach web servers hosted in the US, would it even be possible to say that any telecom company with lines going between the US and another country will block any http requests where the client is inside and the server is outside? Because if it is (and I suspect it is possible right now with existing technology) then have the US select a port besides 80 (any futzing about with 80 would lead to first amendment groups being total turds about it), give it a new 3/4 letter protocol name. Give a year or so to grandfather in existing kid safe sites like nickjr.com and pbskids.org. Since only US servers would be possible, the US would have jurisdictional authority to persue abusers and/or deal with non-compliant sites. Foreign sites could easily host on the channel by having servers inside the US. Google could index it all day long, and theoretically it's already been vetted. The last piece would be to allow users to choose if they want to block access to port 80 either to their house or their kid's pc or whatever. I suppose a certain critical mass of content would be necessary before it becomes a realistic option to block 80. Maybe sites available on the new port would require something similar to an ssl certificate, except not for encryption, just for identification purposes and to make then centrally revokable.

    I think culturally this idea has a few things working for it. For one, I would hope that btards and anonidiots would have better things to do than hack nickjr's front page to put up some boobs or something, but I've given up trying to predict what the less mature black hat script kiddies think is funny. Maybe it would lead to a new crop of white hats who strive to find and report vulnerabilities. And if you report it to the site owner and they don't care, you'd have the option of reporting to the govt who could then threaten to revoke their license (kicking them off the new port but leaving 80 intact of course). Maybe Youtube could implement something like the moderation algorithm that has been kicked around on here.. you upload a video, you think it's kid safe so you flag it.. if 95% of random voters agree, then your video is made available on the "clean version" of Youtube.

    I could go on, but you get the idea.. 1, set up a new thing, 2, block foreign servers (establish enforceable jurisdiction), 3, content providers provide content, 4, consumers have a choice, 5, uses mostly existing technology, 6, not too big a pain in any one person's ass.

  16. Old program called mailwasher I think? on Ask Slashdot: What To Do With Other People's Email? · · Score: 1

    My wife used a windows app called I think MailWasher many years ago. It would view the email still on the pop server and then somehow view the email (or maybe just headers? i forget) and selectively bounce them a few different ways. Seems like something like that could be useful. Doesn't seem like that sort of thing should even be possible, tho, and I suspect it generated "fake" bounce messages. Now with so many different mail servers with each one generating its own 550's, do any companies really thoroughly process their bounced emails, so would it even have any effect? It would be a great place to put filters, though. Google could just make a new rules interface or maybe easier would be to add bounce actions to the filters to prevent the email from even landing in your inbox. It sure would suck to accidentally black list something important with it.

  17. OS/2 Warp just skyped me from beyond the grave on Talking To Computers? · · Score: 1

    It wants to subscribe to your newsletter.

    I did a tech support stint at IBM back around 1995, and I got a copy of Warp 4 for $55 that was well supported on my PC, and I'll be damned but that voice control actually worked as advertised right out of the box. Doesn't surprise me big blue never gave up.

    But I'm one of those people who thinks talking to computer and computers talking back is just a step below black magic, so I had to burn that computer, and unfortunately, I'm pretty sure Watson is a sign of the coming apocalypse, so that sucks.

  18. Re:Option? on Microsoft Kills AutoRun In Windows · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I just installed server 08 r2 x64 an hour ago, no extensions, ran windows update, still no extensions.

    Btw, you don't need "now" as it is implied by /p

  19. Re:The meaning changes again. So what? on App — the Most Abused Word In Tech? · · Score: 1

    Indeed, make sure to use the correct saw horse, intake manifold, casserole dish, or sewing needs to suit your particular application.

  20. Re:So, let me get this straight... on Bufferbloat — the Submarine That's Sinking the Net · · Score: 1

    Yes, but only for a few seconds. That's the idea.

  21. Re:"Planing?" on France Planning Non-Windows Tablet Tax? · · Score: 1

    That's just wrong, considering you have another substitute for “the dishes need to be washed“ - it's “the dishes need washing” rather than “the dishes need washed”

    This is participle country, boy. Why don't you take your yankee gerunds and ride on outta here?

  22. Re:Makes the rest of us suffer... on IT Worker's Revenge Lands Her In Jail · · Score: 1
    The systems belong to the PHBs.

    I dunno, sounds like the admin owned it for quite a while

  23. Re:I love capitalism on Race On To Fingerprint Phones, PCs · · Score: 1
    I personally think there should be a constitutional amendment protecting privacy.

    Indeed. I've been saying this for a while now. I have no idea what it would look like, though. Could it pass constitutional muster? Would it have teeth?

  24. Re:And who ... on FCC Begins Crafting Net Neutrality Regulations · · Score: 1

    No, it doesn't. It means they have the option (or perhaps duty) to block content they KNOW is unlawful, as determined by a party authorized to investigate, ie, law enforcement armed with a subpoena. This thing about how forced neutrality equals government takeover is specious at best and intentionally misdirecting wharggarbl at worst. It means ISP's are allowed, and in some ways encouraged, NOT to use DPI at all.

  25. Re:FAIL on AMD's Phenom II 965, 3.4GHz, 140 Watts, $245 · · Score: 1

    Where are you shopping? Pricewatch shows the 920's best price at $275, and Newegg has it at $279. Add in an expensive motherboard and expensive RAM, and you have an expensive system, that 95% of users wouldn't be able to tell the difference. At 130 watts, btw. On the other hand, the 3.0ghz AMD 95 watts at $169, 785g motherboard with infinitely better onboard video, multi-media crap onboard, etc, and you have a killer all around system for like 400 bucks. I do wish AMD had an answer to triple channel ram, though. Intel definitely dominates the high end right now. I'm still kicking around an AMD 939 2.2ghz dual that I wish would get hit by lightning or something so I could muster up an excuse to replace it. I'm on an AMD 2.8 quad (45nm) with 8 gigs of 1066 ram and raid 0, and for most tasks, I can't tell a bit of difference. I suspect upgrading to an Intel 920 would be similar.

    What's up with Newegg, btw? They're either getting hit with a dos, or it's really time to upgrade.