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User: i_b_don

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  1. Re:so on Iran Tests Naval Cruise Missile During War Games · · Score: 1

    Are you kidding? The REAL intention is to drive up oil prices for the simple reason of making more money. Throw a little bluster in the mix and bam 10% more profits on all oil exports. They have good PR at home and make more money. Where's the downside???

    Iran has no intention of doing any of these things it's talking about. The lies are so blatant. Let's quit pretending like this is a real pissing contest and just see it for what it is.

    d

  2. Re:Depends on how you look at it on Australian Government Bans New Syndicate Game · · Score: 1

    The difference is making money. Yes, taking GPL code and distributing it is the same as DLing movies and then selling those movies to other people.

    d

  3. Judging only by the summary... on Man Changes Name to "Mark Zuckerberg" After Facebook Sues Him · · Score: 5, Funny

    This Mark Zuckerberg guy sounds like the biggest douche ever.

  4. Re:What about the Tea Party Movement? on Time's Person of the Year Is "The Protester" · · Score: 1

    Yeah... heh heh... Those stupid conservatives! What iiiiiidiots! They don't even know how to use a homopho--- homophone? what? wtf is a homophone? (*goes to google and looks it up*) Yeah! Stupid tea party! /s

    d

  5. Re:Why Small Modular Reactors? on In Nuclear Power, Size Matters · · Score: 1

    I don't get why you think building 100 smaller plants is standardizing but building 10 large ones isn't. None of these are going to be done on a mass manufacturing scale where parts are "tooled up for high volume manufacturing". In both cases a large engineering company like Parsons or GE will come in do a design that must be approved. Scale won't change things too much in that whole process. You won't save much money either way from an engineering or building perspective, but if you look at it from a site to site perspective, getting 100 smaller nuclear plants sites picked out an approved it'll be 10 times harder than getting 10 large ones approved. These days, that's where all the stress and headache is so I don't see why anyone would think smaller is better.

    d

  6. Re:Why Small Modular Reactors? on In Nuclear Power, Size Matters · · Score: 1

    Well whatever. Permitting problems are often a sign of a community or a group of people that are fighting back by using lawyers. That's not always bullshit but sometimes it is.

    d

  7. Why Small Modular Reactors? on In Nuclear Power, Size Matters · · Score: 1

    I looked all through out the article and I couldn't find any arguments for "small modular" vs "massive". With all the permitting problems and the like, small and modular seems much harder to pull off. I'd rather have more eyes on a single large facility making sure nothing goes wrong and that security is foolproof than 100 sites scattered around hoping none of them have a Homer Simpson running them.

    d

  8. Re:New power source? on GE To Turn World's Biggest Civilian Plutonium Stockpile Into Electricity · · Score: 1

    o_O

    You sir win the prize for the least interesting person to talk with here.

  9. Re:Keep the wreckage! on MythBusters Bust House · · Score: 1

    They'll give you the money... weather or not you choose to fix your minivan is up to you. Seriously, if you are a good sport about this they'll easily throw in extra. You can always claim all sorts of crap like emotional destress and try to squeeze more money out of them... but if it were me, I'd take the money, plus a little, and get some extra perks on the show. Meet the hosts, that type of thing.

    d

  10. How much Energy??? on Boeing Delivers Massive Ordnance Penetrator · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much energy this is...

    Does someone know how to convert this to Megawatt or gallons of gasoline of energy?

    d

  11. Re:Money... on What's Keeping You On Windows? · · Score: 1

    Ah... thank you for admitting to conspiracy to commit fraud. The black helicopters will be there shortly. If you don't wish to be tasered and "fall down" a few times on your way to booking you must go out in your front yard, lie down on your stomach with your hands and legs spread. Stay like that until we arrive.

    The Authorities

  12. Couldn't have happened to a more schmuck company on Rambus Loses $4B Antitrust Case · · Score: 1

    nuff said

  13. Re:.... and it's not the only leech on Rambus Loses $4B Antitrust Case · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Please, MS has NOTHING on Rambus when it comes to using the courts.

    d

  14. Re:It's time. on Barnes & Noble Names Microsoft's Disputed Android Patents · · Score: 1

    Of course refusing to sell a book based upon content of the book is censoring that book. Is refusing to loan out a book in a public library censoring that book? Of course. Does it matter that you can go down the street to the local bookstore and buy it? No. The library is still censoring that book.

    I tend to agree that the use of the word implies that what Amazon did was stronger than what they did.... or to put another way, they censored stuff that 99.9999% of the people in the US feel is objectionable and we don't mind it being censored. If some people write books on "how to torture small animals" I hope they censor those books too. I don't hold any animosity toward Amazon for CENSORING the books they did.

    I think it's better to point out how stupid and over the top the guy's language by simply stating what Amazon's crime was rather than going off on this word. It's like calling a guy a convicted criminal because he got a J-walking ticket. While it may be factually true, it implies more than the reality of the situation. Pointing out how stupid the statement is is more useful than going off on the definition of "convicted criminal".

    d

  15. Re:Recording on Ask Slashdot: What's a Good Tablet/App Combination For Note-Taking? · · Score: 1

    I agree with you that the students will never go back and listen to the lecture. However there was one time when I really saw the value of recording a lecture... Back in early 2000's I was taking satellite graduate classes and they streamed their videos over the web. They also recorded and stored them on a server so the students could refer back to them and watch them at a later time if they couldn't watch them live.

    There were many times when studying with other students where we would pull up the lecture and watch a specific part again to get a better understanding of how the teacher was solving a particular problem. However this required several things: First the notes and times based upon the specific notes were covered in the class so we could find the relevant parts of the lecture, and second, enough detail in the recording to be useful. This is totally the way to study if you can manage it, however just bringing a tape recorder to class won't provide you with the same tools.

    d

  16. Re:It's time. on Barnes & Noble Names Microsoft's Disputed Android Patents · · Score: 1

    "Censorship is the suppression of speech or other public communication which may be considered objectionable, harmful, sensitive, or inconvenient to the general body of people as determined by a government, media outlet, or other controlling body"

    Amazon Kindle = "media outlet"

    Amazon reportedly is removing all works that contain references to incest or m/m rape or something like that.

    Honestly I don't know if I care at all about this, but the GP's usage of the word "censorship" is accurate with the definition of the word and your outrage is stupid. You can point out that what they are censoring is totally worth censoring and they should be applauded for it or take more of a "who gives a crap if they censor this stuff" attitude, but either way, the original language was not out of line.

    d

  17. Re:Actual analysis on China Building Gigantic Structures In the Desert · · Score: 1

    This one? http://tinyurl.com/ckxrbvr

    Paint ball field.... and it looks fucken awesome!

  18. Re:Shockingly, lower price means cheaper experienc on Reviews of Kindle Fire Are a Mixed Bag · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, the answer for me is "neither". I will not buy a tablet that doesn't have a very quick touch to response rate and I will not buy a "walled garden" tech toy. I *want* to buy a tablet, but for what I want to use its not worth $500. $200 is a good price point for me and I'll pay more if I perceive the value is there.

    However, I absolutely won't purchase something slow and clunky and that's exactly what a B&N nook color felt like to me. I'm afraid from the reviews that that is what the fire will feel like also. So, as much as people say that sluggish performance is not a deal breaker, it is for me and I believe it will keep android devices from succeeding in the market place unless do better.

    When it came to android phones, I waited until the Nexus One appeared because the G1 seemed sluggish when I played with it. The Nexus One was the first android phone IMO that succeeded with a good responsive UI. This also correlates to when Android really started take off in the market place. Perhaps history will still repeat itself.

    d

  19. Re:My favorite quick look so far... on The Elder Scrolls Return With Skyrim · · Score: 2

    Holy crap... it's the Call of Duty RPG.

    Don't worry about that arm... it'll grow back in a few minutes.

    Bummer. I actually think this degrades games. I liked the old games where when you got injured you'd have to limp back to town and get healed... all the while hoping you don't run into a large sewer rat or something else. It gave the games a bit more excitement IMHO.

    d

  20. Re:My favorite quick look so far... on The Elder Scrolls Return With Skyrim · · Score: 1

    Say some more please. What do you mean by "dumbed down". Are you talking about character interaction? Combat? depth of stats? quests? or perhaps just general world interaction?

    d

  21. Re:IW completely ignoring the community on Modern Warfare 3 Released · · Score: 1

    Back when CS first came out I used to play a lot. CS of course only had dedicated servers and I jumped around from server to server caring only about who had the lowest ping... and then I stumbled on some servers that were run by good admins. Those servers were well regulated and managed by a handful of people who enjoyed playing there. They kept the cursing pre-teens away and banned, hackers cheaters or anyone who couldn't play by the rules. One server I finally landed on in particular was refreshingly fun to play on and like Norm entering Cheers, the regulars all knew who each other was and were friendly to each other. I spent way to many hours on that server eventually becoming a regular and helping admin it myself.

    That's what a good dedicated server should be... a bastion of fun where regulars can go to create a positive online gaming experience. In an internet filled with people trying to rise out of you by using racist, homophobic, and crude language, filled with assholes and the like, it's good to allow people to create communities where they can have a positive impact and feel like you're part of a shared gaming experience. This is what a dedicated server allows players of a game to do, create a community. With random matching, the odds are you'll never run into the same person twice and everyone just becomes "random internet player".

    If you think it's much better being an anonymous member of the infinite horde then I'm guessing that you've never had an actual positive online community experience, and that... that's kind of sad.

    d

  22. Re:And, for an extra bonus point... on Slashdot Asks: Whom Do You Want To Ask About 2012's U.S. Elections? · · Score: 1

    The southerners were arguing that their slaves, while property, would still count toward representation within the congress. However beyond that issue... they were property and of course they weren't given the right to vote.

    People compromise the less of evils in order to get things done. We may not have had a country if that compromise wasn't made. The constitution was written so that it could be changed, and that's exactly what happened to erase the compromise from our laws.

    d

  23. Re:You're about 35 years late. on DOJ Drops FOIA Rule To Permit Lying · · Score: 1

    Much as I agree with you, you must take things on a case by case basis. In many cases he's let us down. In this case he hasn't. So criticize him where it's warranted, but reward him with praise when it's also warranted.

    So good job Obama!

    Now... about the other 99 things that need improvement....

    d

  24. Re:What? on The Story Behind the Demise of the Microsoft Courier Tablet · · Score: 1

    Except if you do anything different that that. In my case, it's reinstalling the OS. Once I do that I lose all my ratings on music, all files that are tagged as audio books I need to tag again as audio books and group together, all files on my ipod must be dumped and re installed, thus losing all my ratings. And finally, podcasts. If I switch between operating systems and I don't package things up BEFORE I make the move, I lose all my setup podcasts and I have to go find them again. Why is this? Because of their fucken DRM. I can't just take the configuration file from the old files and copy them to the new and have everything "just work".

    I've reinstalled my OS twice in the past year. Once when I got windows 7 (while upgrading my system) and once when I got an SSD. Yes, I should have learned my lesson the first time, but when I'm transferring over everything else, itunes gets forgotten and I get burned.

    d

  25. Re:Losing Allard was a real loss to MS on The Story Behind the Demise of the Microsoft Courier Tablet · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I do this type of stuff for a living. Designing the next generation Cisco router is hard. Major design hurdles in heating and power. Designing new asics running faster than anything before it. Packaging everything together with the reliability that an enterprise customer demands... that's hard. Creating a mini-PC in a box by subbing out all the hard parts to other companies (graphics processor, micro processor, memory, etc...) just isn't as hard.

    d