Slashdot Mirror


User: CanEHdian

CanEHdian's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
633
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 633

  1. Re:Well, well, well. on A Failure For SpaceX: Falcon 9 Explodes During Ascension · · Score: 2

    Isn't funny that Musk's name isn't mentioned in the Summary or article? Every other time SpaceX is mentioned, his name is featured prominately.

    That's because we were able to include "Microsoft" in the summary. Every time you can combine "Crash" or "Failure" or the like with "Microsoft", the /. crowd is satisfied.

  2. Re:The possible long "O" Pron[o]unciation on Australia Passes Site-Blocking Legislation · · Score: 1

    an Aussie

    You know where the modern term Aussie comes from? Aussie is a resident of AUS, which is the same as USA except the A isn't at the end, it's at the front, because they're on the other hemisphere. But the sphere of influence of Hollywood is the same, so are the people that are calling the shots behind the scenes.

  3. Sad part: nobody cares on UK's Legalization of CD Ripping Is Unlawful, Court Rules · · Score: 1

    The real reason is that nobody (present company excluded) cares about these things. They just do what they want to do. And if they can't: all you get is *shrugs*. But then the "blokes" will have their ales and discuss "footy".

    It's about time politicians, at a sufficiently high level, start feeling that it'd be more to their advantage to listen to consumers, than it is to keep collecting from their "campaign-donating", "wining-and-dining", "meeting-and-greeting" corporate media-industry lobbyists.

  4. Music Download Festival! on Police Scanning Every Face At UK Download Festival · · Score: 1

    Maybe their paymasters thought it was a Music Download Festival and thought it'd be a good idea to have incriminating evidence complete with mugshots (nice for the world-wide facial recognition database) of the perpetrators of these heinous crimes against the hard-working, living-off-scraps music community.

  5. Re:Surprise! on Restaurateur Loses Copyright Suit To BMI · · Score: 2

    The Copyright Industry has tons and tons of money to bribe politicians... ^H^H^H^H^H make "campaign donations". Further, they can invite politicians to cool events, for free, with a guest they can impress (and what THAT might lead to later that night!) and made to feel important, get a meet & greet with the celebrity performer, etc. What do you got?

  6. Re:Windows Media Center on Windows 10 Release Date: July 29th · · Score: 2

    Windows 10 Home users will have updates from Windows Update automatically available. Windows 10 Pro and Windows 10 Enterprise users will have the ability to defer updates.

    So Windows 10 only gives you the "install ALL updates automatically" option. Wow. Great. What an improvement! Especially with Microsoft's flawless update history.

  7. Re:I've already uninstalled the windows 10 nag ico on Windows 10 Release Date: July 29th · · Score: 1

    I seriously hate how updates work with windows.

    If you hate it now, wait until you see how it works in Windows 10.

  8. Re:Missing the point here on Steve Albini: The Music Industry Is a Parasite -- and Copyright Is Dead · · Score: 1

    The endless discussion on the advantages of analog over digital recording always gloss over the fact that a customer has to pay $10-20 for EACH album purchased in the vinyl analog format, while a $10-$20 64Gb SD card stores 1200 albums (@12 songs; @ 5Mb per song in 256BPS MP3 format) for the same price.

    Not just that, there's 24 bit / 96 kHz or even 192 kHz PCM FLAC, or 1-bit DSD (2.8224 Mhz) bitstream, which is equivalent to 20bit/96 kHz PCM if you want to use the SA-CD format. Plus quite a number of albums ("DDD" in CDDA parlance) have been recorded digitally so the mixed/mastered in the actual source digital format version is best. There's a bit more trouble compressing the sound to death in vinyl.

    You never know, we now have the bionic eye that gives better than 20/20 vision, next might be the bionic ear that gives you 10Hz-40kHz range

  9. Copyright shouldn't be free-as-in-beer on Steve Albini: The Music Industry Is a Parasite -- and Copyright Is Dead · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One of the problem is that copyrighted works can sit on a shelf for 100+ years and it doesn't cost the rightsholder a cent. So yeah, sure, increase copyright terms. Please. At zero cost, even a trillion-in-one chance of a work-on-the-shelf ever making any kind of money is still better than zero.

    Even a use-it-or-lose-it system won't work, as you'll see extremely-limited runs just for copyrights' sake. NOT any other.

    A proposal is to limit copyright to (compared to the current situation) a very limited time, say 10 years, with an optional extension -at a fee and with registration- for another 10 years. This would total 20 years, the same as inventors get to exploit their ingenuity and creativity at the cost of filing for a patent. This would level the playing field between the two, open up a gigantic public domain, and still give creators a full 2 decades to exploit works.

    The most vocal opponents of this proposal will be: (1) the copyright industry, (2) "made men" (dead or alive) that somehow still cash in today for what they did many decades ago and (3) the Hordes Of Entertainment Lawyers that make a good penny with all the legalities, paperwork, clearances, etc. that comes with the actual use of copyrighted works.

  10. Re: Yes, but because on Steve Albini: The Music Industry Is a Parasite -- and Copyright Is Dead · · Score: 1

    This is easily proven. Artists On Spotify Have Dollar Signs In Eyes (you know the type, the pay-me-a-million-bucks-to-tweet-about-my-own-damn-movie type), Start Their Own Service At A Premium Charge And Withdraw Their Catalogue From Spotify. Poof. Too bad for you if you're on Spotify (and assuming the still-innocent kids are the ones who like them). This happened on Netflix too (Starz anyone? Bla bla our premium shows bla bla?

  11. Re:faster than light never violates Relativity on Ways To Travel Faster Than Light Without Violating Relativity · · Score: 1

    But more abstractly, consider two events that are separated in both space and time, A and B. Let's say A happens first and "causes" B. Maybe A is "someone throws a ball" and B is "someone catches it." In any case if B is outside of the light cone of A, meaning that light or anything slower could not travel from event A to event B, then there is a reference frame in which events A and B happen at the same place. But when you "boost" into this frame of reference, you'll find that B happens before A. Faster-than-light communication implies that effect can precede cause.

    Suppose there's a game of FTL baseball. I'm sitting in the audience, and in my peripheral vision the guy next to me get hits by a ball literally coming out of nowhere, while I'm looking at the bat swinging towards that same ball on the other side of the field... it hits and the ball vanishes (say enters Hyperspace). That doesn't mean the impact of the ball happened before the hit, I just saw it happen before the hit because photons coming from the ball next to me reach my eye faster than the ones from the ball being in play across the field. So I know the result of the hit before I see it happen. There's nothing wrong with that.

    Now also suppose we can "rewind" the entire universe, and replay the entire event, while you can be a ghost present at any location in Realspace and experience events like you've always been there. Say there's a "ghost" of me sitting right at the other side of the field. Looking through the ghosts eyes, the bat hits the ball, the ball vanishes, then rematerializes hitting the guy -- a lot sooner than expected but not before it vanishes. The ghost can see it no sooner than a photon hits the ball and travels back to the ghost eye. Rewind and put the ghost smack dab in the middle, the ball vanishes and appears hitting the guy at almost the same time.

    Finally, you can be the ball... you're actually a 360 degree camera that can take Realspace snapshots. That bat swings towards you, then bang! Looking back, you can see yourself, in the past. The bat is just about to hit you. And the next snapshot is a little bit further in the past as you're farther away from the bat about to hit you. It looks like time is going in reverse. Then you pop out of Hyperspace, hit the guy, but looking back time reverses again and is back in forward. You see the bat swing, hit you and see yourself vanish. Then you can see yourself, just a few times and for minute fractions of seconds, as you get closer and closer when you took those Realspace snapshots.

  12. Re:Clean room implementation? on US Justice Department Urges Supreme Court Not To Take Up Google v. Oracle · · Score: 1

    I am bothered by copyrights lasting longer than patents or anything for both.

    This is always what I bring up in copyright term discussions: why should an inventor, working for years on an idea and perfecting it, then finally applying for a patent, only get 20 years to exploit their hard work, ingenuity and creativity, after which the invention becomes public domain and benefits society be considered a Great Thing, but it's perfectly fine to have to pay Warner Music Group royalties to "Happy Birthday To You" (super-intelligent lyrics only) as otherwise artists would starve/no longer be bothered to create new works?

    Don't forget, the Copyright Industry is not just the RIAA/MPAA, it's also the Hordes Of Lawyers involved in all the "clearances" and other related stuff. And the same way the revolving door PoliticiansRIAA/MPAA/Lobbyists works, the IP Lawyers Judges revolving door works the same way.

  13. Re:Waste of Time & Money on Neil DeGrasse Tyson Urges America To Challenge China To a Space Race · · Score: 1

    ...but manned missions are what excite Ye Regular Folks, a/k/a/ Joe and Jane Taxpayer. So there's this thingy driving around on Mars, the other thingamajic orbiting "an asteroid", then the rocket with the camera taking pictures of Pluto. You know about that when you read the science column in Saturday's newspaper (page 8 of section F).

    So what if we have this group of Real American Heroes training to go to Mars, the first ones orbiting, the second crew landing? Assuming they're the first ones there, of course. When's the last time you've seen a non-certified-nerd wear a NASA T-shirt?

  14. Corporatism on Russian Space Agency Misused $1.8 Billion, May Be Replaced · · Score: 1

    and replaced by a state corporation of the same name by the end of the year. "In its new, corporate identity, Roscosmos will be responsible not only for setting mission goals but managing wages for space industry workers and modernizing production facilities."

    THAT'S how you fight corrupt (semi) public officials! You turn the whole thing in a corporation. When the executives then give themselves exorbitant salaries and benefits (incl. pensions), and hand themselves 15-25% wage increases year over year, while at the same time "managing wages for space industry workers" and doing a "realignment" every couple of years, it's just good business!

  15. SpaceX guidance system on The Brainteaser Elon Musk Asks New SpaceX Engineers · · Score: 1

    The source for the SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage lander will win the 2015 Obfuscated C contest.

  16. Re:Priorities on In-Database R Coming To SQL Server 2016 · · Score: 1

    How about making SQL server respect ASCII nulls on unique constraints?

    I would be more impressed with EBCDIC nulls.

    In the KELVIN character set, NULL equals ABS(NULL)

  17. @ChanBot on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    /join #Internet
    Chanbot sets mode: +b *!*@*.aol.com
    * You were kicked by Chanbot (AOL lamer!)

  18. Re:No sympathy is deserved for these idiots. on Photobucket Hackers Nabbed, Face Serious Charges From US Authorities · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Welcome to the Star Trek: We're Back fan movie website!

    Episode downloads:

    1. www.strekwb.test/episode1.mp4
    2. www.strekwb.test/episode2.mp4
    3. www.strekwb.test/episode3.mp4

    Episode 4 is ready and we sent the download link to a few people who we think are better than you and get to see it first!

    You're a foul, devious, stinking criminal if you think of trying www.strekwb.test/episode4.mp4 just for the heck of it.

  19. Re:Seems a bit harsh on Photobucket Hackers Nabbed, Face Serious Charges From US Authorities · · Score: 1

    If you read the indictment, they did not just create the code, they actually used it themselves and showed others how to use it by demonstrating it. Now of course comes much greater consequences, their customer base is also in the firing line and they will all be turned over for a reduced sentence. This could lead to a whole bunch of crimes being exposed.

    If you remember the Aaron Barr/HBGary e-mails, which preceded the Snowden revelations by years, it was already obvious that there was a whole subculture of businesses who bought and *sold* 0-day exploits (HBGary's boss called them 'Juicy Fruits"), of course with the obvious intent of being used against non-censenting targets. So if these Photobucket guys are guilty, let's start filing suits against the dark "security businesses" of this world.

  20. Re:"Hacking" goes a little far here.. on Photobucket Hackers Nabbed, Face Serious Charges From US Authorities · · Score: 2

    Balancing the budget? :-p

    Close, but no cigar.

  21. Free Employees on Prison Messaging System JPay Withdraws Copyright Claims · · Score: 2

    To justify the discipline, prison officials said they were enforcing JPay's intellectual property rights and terms of service.

    If you told someone that 20 years ago, they'd have called you a crazed conspiracy theorist and asked where your tinfold hat was. Well, ladies and gentlemen, there you have it. Let's make our life's goal the enforcing of "intellectual property" rights and TOS.

  22. Re:But this is not a free market on Judge Tosses United Airlines Lawsuit Over 'Hidden City' Tickets · · Score: 1

    It's all about competition. The price is as high as they can get away with. So if their A->B->C flight competes with direct A->C flights, they will need to ask a similar price. For A->B they compete with other A->B and A->B(-->X) flights which might end up at a higher price point if they can get away with that. It has nothing to do with 'fair' pricing. Just how high they can set it. Booking the A->B->C flight and getting off at B, in their view "robs" them of the extra revenue the A->B flight would have netted them -- even if you wouldn't have bought that ticket in the first place (now where did we hear that again?).

  23. Re:Fair on Judge Tosses United Airlines Lawsuit Over 'Hidden City' Tickets · · Score: 2

    If you buy a dozen apples from a farmer, (...)?

    Here's the right analogy. You want 8 apples. The farmer will sell you 8 apples at dollar each, or you can have a bag of 10 apples for 5 dollars. You buy the bag. Then you throw 2 apples away (for the birds), ending up with 8 apples for 5 dollars. The farmer will then sue you since you didn't pay 8 dollars for your 8 apples, and they can't sell the 2 apples you discarded to another customer.

  24. Popular support on NASA Gets Its Marching Orders: Look Up! Look Out! · · Score: 2

    more focus on launch systems and manned exploration

    Perhaps a joke for the 'robotic exploration' crew out there. A man walks into a bar. Tells the bartender "Well, it's over for MESSENGER but we're getting a lot of New Horizons data soon!" Bartender: (blank stare).

    Look up some old footage of public interest in NASA during the Apollo program. NASA needs to have heroes, and they need to have something that is seen as a major accomplishment. And they need it soon. Luckily the Chinese are the new Russians.

  25. Re:More religious whackjobs on Native Hawaiian Panel Withdraws Support For World's Largest Telescope · · Score: 1

    In the grand scheme of things they were lucky to have had the USA and not some other power appropriate that land.

    Exactly, otherwise there would have been several trade agreements containing Investor-state dispute settlements and they'd have their native asses sued off (in front of a secretive tribunal, of course).