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User: pushing-robot

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Comments · 2,199

  1. Re:Koo Koo Kachoo on 35,000 Walrus Come Ashore In Alaska · · Score: 1

    Eggman seems like a nice fellow so far. I don't think we can take the walrus's word on this, even if he is part of the maker movement.

    And what did he call himself? A "Freedom Fighter"? That's basically another word for terrorist.

  2. Re:Not a problem. on Are the World's Religions Ready For ET? · · Score: 2

    "Zero- versus One-based numbering".

  3. Re:That's the market system... on Grooveshark Found Guilty of Massive Copyright Infringement · · Score: 0

    Yes, the system is so horrible these days. Why don't you go to your grandfather and say "Record companies are so unfair now! They let me listen to any song I want at the push of a button, but I have to listen to an ad every fifteen minutes or else pay them money!"

    Actually, make sure your grandpa has his cane before you say that.

  4. Re:Why? on Grooveshark Found Guilty of Massive Copyright Infringement · · Score: 5, Funny

    Because my Altavista bookmark is forwarding me there now. When did this happen?

    Oh well, I guess I'll try that new "Hotbot".

  5. Re:What's so hard about using the time-honored on At CIA Starbucks, Even the Baristas Are Covert · · Score: 4, Funny

    They tried that, but the customers all fought for ticket number 7.

  6. At the very least on Nixie Wearable Drone Camera Flies Off Your Wrist · · Score: 1

    I can see military uses for a tiny lightweight personal spotter like this.

    Otherwise, if it's cheap and it can track its 'owner' well enough it could be the next fad for YouTube clips.

  7. Re:In space on The Physics of Space Battles · · Score: 1

    Unless they use laser mics or some equivalent technology.

    Which would probably be a good idea for situational awareness.

  8. Re:Simple. He's Immortal on How Did the 'Berlin Patient' Rid Himself of HIV? · · Score: 1, Funny

    He was not the Juan.

  9. Not a thorough analysis on How Did the 'Berlin Patient' Rid Himself of HIV? · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does the subject possess any mysterious rings, amulets, or lamps?
    Does he make sacrifices to chthonic gods, and if so, which?
    Did he recently undertake a quest to bring together a collection of ancient magic gems?
    Is the hospital frequented by a wizard or a druid cult?

    I appreciate the work they did, but when they don't even consider the patient being swapped with his twin from an alternate dimension it's hard to call it rigorous.

  10. Re:OK on BlackBerry Launches Square-Screened Passport Phone · · Score: 1

    Not in your pocket, apparently.

  11. Re:Well of course. on Physicist Claims Black Holes Mathematically Don't Exist · · Score: 1

    No, that's the one we're currently in—hence all the apparent giant black holes.

  12. Re:Hmmm ... on Physicist Claims Black Holes Mathematically Don't Exist · · Score: 2

    Pfft, my psychiatrist does that all the time.

  13. Well of course. on Physicist Claims Black Holes Mathematically Don't Exist · · Score: 4, Funny

    Respectable mad scientists have known for years that supposed 'black holes' are really just wormholes to the goatee universe.

  14. Re:Emma Watson is full of it on Emma Watson Leaked Photo Threat Was a Plot To Attack 4chan · · Score: 1

    I know I give mine the finest cashmere tea towels to wear.

    ...wait, what were we talking about again?

  15. Re:I bet Putin couldn't go to the moon on Russia Pledges To Go To the Moon · · Score: 2, Funny

    sorry guys watched iron sky with vlad now hes raving about moon nazis gtg my bad

  16. Until we have independent testing... on Users Report Warping of Apple's iPhone 6 Plus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'll assume option '3' for the moment:

    Out of a sample size of ten million people, chances are very good that some of them will do very stupid things (and then claim they didn't).

    Mind you, I'm perfectly willing to accept that the phone has a defect in design or construction, but I've had enough experience in troubleshooting and repair to lose all trust in humanity.

  17. Re:is that an iPhone in your pocket? on Users Report Warping of Apple's iPhone 6 Plus · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hate it when my Schwartz gets all twisted.

  18. Re:good on Mangalyaan Successfully Put Into Mars Orbit · · Score: 1

    But the US and Soviet Union were doing all this and more in the seventies with vastly inferior technology and far more unknowns. Lets face facts: If North Korea managed to produce an Apple II clone in 2014, you probably wouldn't be saying the west needs to get over their 'patriot peens' and accept Kim Jong-Un as a capable computer builder.

    That said, this is a huge step for India's fledgeling space program and I hope that by 2030 or so they will indeed have caught up with the US and Russia.

  19. Re:Mind boggling on Now That It's Private, Dell Targets High-End PCs, Tablets · · Score: 1

    The vultures will come in, swoop down, sell off the real estate and set up lease back scams saddling the once well engineered company with ugly ongoing operating costs.

    Yes, you see, that way it comes under the monthly current budget and not the capital account!

  20. Re: Other hackable things on Apple's TouchID Fingerprint Scanner: Still Hackable · · Score: 4, Informative

    So... get an iPhone, set a complex passcode, and use your fingerprint the rest of the time?

    You can hold home+power for a few seconds to reboot the phone, and your passcode is required to unlock the phone after a reboot/shutdown.

  21. Re:Law Enforcement on Apple's TouchID Fingerprint Scanner: Still Hackable · · Score: 1

    Per XKCD, it's far more likely they'd forcibly put each of your fingers on the phone than do something elaborate with your printed fingerprints.

    However— IIRC there's a lockout after a certain number of attempts, and IIRC from the first video it can take several tries to fool the sensor. So with ten fingerprints to choose from, not to mention different *parts* of each finger you could have used, it's less than probable they would succeed.

    (And the look on the officer's face when he realizes you used your nose: Priceless.)

  22. But... on "Big Bang Signal" Could All Be Dust · · Score: 2

    Is it, at least, magic dust?

  23. Uh... on Google Partners With HTC For Latest Nexus Tablet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google Nexus products so far:

    1 by HTC
    3 by Samsung
    2 by LG
    2 by Asus

    This is hardly a new thing.

  24. Re:a collision wouldn't surprise me on 2 Mars Missions Set For Arrival, Both Prepare for Orbital Maneuvers · · Score: 1

    No, if the two probes fell in love, a jibbering Roman god poked at them with a spear, the whole lot were then swallowed by a cross between a police constable and a space hopper, followed by dramatic music and a cut to a documentary about historical figures knitting, then it would be worthy of Monty Python.

  25. Re: Because of Apple engineering on Why the iPhone 6 Has the Same Base Memory As the iPhone 5 · · Score: 1

    Memory chips, NAND and DRAM, are usually quoted in Gb. Not GB. I WISH flash was at $0.125/GB.

    Apple probably pays close to $50 for 128 gigs... Still a huge markup, but it's meant to offset the low (by Apple standards, at least) markups on their base models.

    You can look up BOMs for more accurate estimates of product costs and margins... Just keep in mind that they don't include any company expenses (retail, transportation, support, R&D, sales & marketing, management, legal, and so on).