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User: Jerslan

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Comments · 161

  1. Re:Awww on Microsoft Embraces Git For Development Tools · · Score: 1

    You're thinking of Windows ME ;)

  2. Re:UMAD? employer's just jelly. on Employee Outsourced Programming Job To China, Spent Days Websurfing · · Score: 2

    Wally would be too lazy to find a contracter overseas to do his work for him... He would also not want to get a good review since he always strives for mediocrity (it's not like they're going to fire him, so why put forward any real effort).

    Instead, I think Wally would just browse the internet for cat videos and let Dilbert and Alice pick up his slack (like they do).

  3. Re:a bit of latency on C Beats Java As Number One Language According To TIOBE Index · · Score: 1

    Except that Android, iOS, and probably even Windows Phone are what drove C to the top of the pile.... All those cross-platform game engines are written in C because that language is supported on all 3 platforms.

  4. Re:C? on C Beats Java As Number One Language According To TIOBE Index · · Score: 2

    He meant name three advantages, not disadvantages and feature bloat ;)

  5. Re:First post on Samba 4.0 Released: the First Free Software Active Directory Compatible Server · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because Windows isn't always the best tool for the job? Because having a diverse ecosystem of IT appliances that can all share authentication and other such services is a VERY valuable thing?

  6. Re:Don't be so radical on RMS Speaks Out Against Ubuntu · · Score: 1

    Yes, I can see how a very rational assumption would infuriate you. Especially since it hurts your own argument.

    They only way this would be un-ethical is if Canonical was forcing people to use Ubuntu and making the "feature" impossible to remove (at least without significant effort).

    You have a choice to NOT use Ubuntu if you don't want to. Does that make their inclusion of Amazon search to their desktop unethical? Hardly. There are plenty of alternatives out there (Debian, Fedora, Linux Mint, Gentoo, CentOS, etc...). If Amazon search becomes the price of entry into the Canonical/Ubuntu "eco-system" then that's the price you agree to when you choose it.

    You're are right about one thing though. Ideally it should be an option on first-time set up. Maybe if RMS suggested such a course of action, Canonical and others would listen to him instead of dismissing him as a crazy person ranting about his own personal paranoia.

  7. Re:Don't be so radical on RMS Speaks Out Against Ubuntu · · Score: 0

    Aside from flat-out removing the package as the AC suggested, there's more than likely an easy way to disable it in system settings.

    If my Grandmother cared enough about her privacy that she didn't want searches to show Amazon shopping results, she probably would Google how to turn it off. She's not the most tech saavy, but Google isn't *that* hard to use. Also, if she were using Ubuntu it would probably be on a system I set up for her, and not one she did herself.

    Do you routinely run local searches in Ubuntu's GUI for whatever depraved porn you have? Do you include PII as search terms? No? Then whatever you are searching for probably isn't anything that really matters in terms of Amazon knowing more about you ("resume.docx" This guy must want resume writing software! or maybe Microsoft Word! Oh, wait this is Linux.... He can't use any software we sell.... Hmmm.... Maybe sell him a printer and some resume paper? Yeah, that's the ticket!).

    The point is that it's not permanent, it can be removed/disabled, AND it's not really any more invasive than your average Google Search.

  8. Re:Don't be so radical on RMS Speaks Out Against Ubuntu · · Score: 1

    QFT Was about to say something similar... Why not just disable it? Surely it's not *that* hard. At worst it should be editing the source, removing that particular piece, and recompiling... Which in the magical fantasy land that RMS lives in, everyone and their Grandmother knows how to do.

  9. Re:Is this even a legitimate voting app from Faceb on Facebook Users Voting On Privacy, Instagram, Other Issues · · Score: 2

    A google search showed me that apparently they publish their Facebook API's to GitHub... Link

    Doesn't make it any less fishy, but it's more info about them...

  10. Re:Well, at least they have artists in Iran on The Secret To Iranian Drone Technology? Just Add Photoshop · · Score: 1

    Correction, we did it because the British wanted to protect BP and misled us with misinformation indicating that Iran's government was unstable and about to go Communist (playing off the ridiculously strong anti-Communist sentiment in the US at the time) and give all those "valuable oil resources" over to the USSR.

    We were played as pawns in someone else's game. Not the other way around. Doesn't make what we did right, but that is the truth of the ordeal.

  11. Re:Well, at least they have artists in Iran on The Secret To Iranian Drone Technology? Just Add Photoshop · · Score: 1

    As opposed to the Western Expansion and Manifest Destiny just over a century earlier that lead to the near complete destruction of several unique and indigenous cultures?

    It was more heinous than that? Really?

    American History is no more bloody or filled with acts we would now call "criminal" than any other country to have ever existed. Does that make our past actions right? Hell no, but they happened and there's not really a lot we can do about many of them now. Stop playing the blame game. How this fight started. Who started this fight. If you wanted to you could probably link all of it to the Crusades or Roman Expansion.... None of that should matter more than what we do going forward.

  12. How about this... on Ask Slashdot: How Should Tech Conferences Embrace Diversity? · · Score: 1

    we stop racism by NOT CARING when all speakers are white or black or Muslim or Christian or gay or straight or male or female... Diversity exists naturally, and can't be forced or legislated (when it becomes blatant discrimination).

  13. Re:What I'd like in the new series on The New Series of Doctor Who: Fleeing From Format? · · Score: 1

    One could argue that rehashing classic episodes is pure laziness on the part of the writers. I'd prefer to see more original stories than rehashes (especially if they're as fan-pandering as the ones you describe).

  14. Re:New Doctor is mostly disappointing on The New Series of Doctor Who: Fleeing From Format? · · Score: 2

    In the original run, Companions very VERY rarely died (only one I can think of off the top of my head is Adrick). A few were psychologically scarred by their time with the Doctor (ie: Teegan), but for the most part they all lived "happily ever after" (well, to some extent anyways).

  15. Flamebait on The New Series of Doctor Who: Fleeing From Format? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This article is nothing more than flamebait.

  16. George Takei has made similar posts. Facebook wants to charge him for the amusing lolcats and whatever else he posts. When he posts about his book? Yeah, then it makes sense to charge him, but for the other stuff? Not so much.

    His current solution was to tell everyone to add his page to their "interests" and then you start seeing his posts in your news-feed again.

    Article about both Cuban and Takei's frustrations

  17. Re:I RTFA on Software Uses Almost 1/2 the Storage On 32GB Surface Tablet · · Score: 1

    Apple seems to think so (I don't know about Android).

    One of the shiny new features with the launch of iOS 5 (over a year ago) was the ability to backup to iCloud if you wanted to. You also have the option of doing the backup via iTunes. The big question is whether having on-device restore functionality makes sense on a mobile device. Shouldn't your goal be that this should only be something you need to do sparingly? Why would you devote such a huge chunk of available disk space to something that the average consumer should (ideally) never have to use? It makes no sense.

    Apple has iCloud for free which does give you so many GB of storage for photos, documents and some other stuff. Media purchased via iTunes is available via iCloud and for $25/year all your other music (regardless of where/how you got it) can be too.
    Android has Google Drive and other Google cloud services that let you do the same things and probably a few more.

    The big point here is that Microsoft is still stuck in the past, doing a lot of the things they used to, because in the PC world it worked... That doesn't mean it'll work well (or be a good idea) in the Mobile world.

  18. Re:Cryptographic lockout on Apple Considering Switch Away From Intel For Macs · · Score: 1

    But what if I'm chronically locking myself out of the house and don't have a conveniently open window to climb through?

  19. Re:I RTFA on Software Uses Almost 1/2 the Storage On 32GB Surface Tablet · · Score: 2

    Why not do what Apple and Android do with recovery with back-up and restore being "in the cloud" or via a PC? Would shave 5GB off that 13 and make a lot of people happier.

  20. Alvin Draft/Matic DM03 on Ask Slashdot: The Search For the Ultimate Engineer's Pen · · Score: 1

    It's a 0.3mm mechanical pencil intended for drafting and such... I've used these since College and have yet to find anything even close to their level of quality. Available on Amazon and the refills can be pretty cheap... I got a pretty decent supply (I've barely dipped into it in 2 years) for maybe $12.

  21. Re:Weathermen on Scientists Who Failed to Warn of Quake Found Guilty of Manslaughter · · Score: 2

    You can see a hurricane and tell what direction it's heading (roughly). It's fairly easy for a decent meteorologist to predict this stuff. Earthquakes are different. Having lots of small quakes, *typically* indicates that a "big one" isn't near (as the small quakes relieve some of the pressure). Unfortunately it looks like this was one of those *atypical* instances. IANAG, but have been living in CA for the past 5 years, so I've learned at least the "common knowledge/wisdom" about Earthquake prone regions.

  22. Re:no sympathy on Zero Errors? Spamhaus Flubs Causing Domain Deletions · · Score: 3, Informative

    Except that it's an opt-in w/ verification mailing list, so they already come to him since they have to request to join the list in the first place and then verify via e-mail that they own the account.

  23. Re:Why is the Obama administration objecting ? on Supreme Court To Decide If Monsanto GMO Patents Are Valid · · Score: 1

    So basically the "Conditional Sale Exemption" does for Patent Law the EXACT opposite of what "First Sale Doctrine" does for Copyright & Trademark Law..

    That's a lovely bit o' legal inconsistency right there :P

  24. Re:Keep it rolling boys on Automated DMCA Takedown Notices Request Censorship of Legitimate Sites · · Score: 1

    It is time for Americans, to build a completely free and unregulated internet. One not subject to government control, and for the luv-o-jebus utterly inaccessible to large corporate interests. It should be free, open and paid for by donations from users who want to circumvent the increasingly pay-per-screw models being inflicted on the users by the monolithic service providers of the world. Most important, it should route around existing systems of control and manipulation. There is no sane argument against having a free and unrestricted system of communications among people.

    So... Who owns the copper and fiber lines necessary for such a network to exist? Who is arranging for them to be buried in public and/or private lands? Copper and Fiber sometimes run through parks and residential areas, so you would have to make arrangements with whichever government (state, local, federal, whatever) that owns it, potentially millions of private home-owners, and/or corporations that own large plots of land. That Copper and Fiber costs money to lay down and maintain (sometimes things break and need repairing/patching), who pays for this? Who owns all the switches and routers and dns servers necessary to make the internet work? The Home systems are relatively cheap compared to their Enterprise and Backbone-level brethren. Do you expect people to donate Billions of dollars in total (possibly nearing the Trillions of dollars)? That sounds pretty crazy.

  25. Re:Stereotypical Garnishes on Seaweed is Good for You and Can Be Tasty, Too (Video) · · Score: 2

    American's think everything tastes better with Ketchup on it.

    FTFY