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User: vistapwns

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  1. Democrats believes patriotism is not racism, lmao!

  2. Does this really warrant scientific study..? on Misophonia: Scientists Crack Why Eating Sounds Can Make People Angry (bbc.com) · · Score: 0

    I get irritated by these noises, but I just tend to think that if I am hearing noises I shouldn't be hearing, because people are capable of breathing and eating quietly in most cases, it's because someone is trying to bug me by monopolizing my attention. Some people are amused simply because they can bug people with no consequences, /shrug.

  3. Re:It goes far beyond '1 in billions' on Elon Musk: 'One In Billions' Chance We're Not Living In A Computer Simulation (vox.com) · · Score: 1

    To clarify, that's 0.99999.. out of a 1, the standard format would be 99.99999 with an infinite number of 9's percent likely hood this is a simulation.

  4. It goes far beyond '1 in billions' on Elon Musk: 'One In Billions' Chance We're Not Living In A Computer Simulation (vox.com) · · Score: 1

    Technology advances to the physical limitations of the universe, we are not quite there. A civilization at those limits, will have atomically precise nano-robots and real AI. They will also probably live forever. Putting those together, along with the fact that this is probably the most interesting time to live in (much before this, people usually died in the same hospital they were born, much after this, nanobots and AI will make crime, dating, disease, getting resources and other of today's hardships a non-issue) means that this particular time will probably be simulated in games and historical research an infinite number of times. They say science requires a 5 sigma for proof, the likely hood of us being in a simulation is 0.99999... with an infinite number of 9's after it.

  5. Re:@AC (#48138981) - Re:Not unexpected.... on Windows Flaw Allowed Hackers To Spy On NATO, Ukraine, Others · · Score: 1

    Don't hold your breath. This guy knows he does not have an audio recording, I have googled high and low, and all you can find is the quote, which Bill Gates denies. Furthermore, MS was never in a position to dictate the memory on the system, that was decided by IBM who decided to use a 16-bit intel chip which is inherently restricted to 1024KB (640K for programs, 384K for VRAM and BIOS functions). It's merely propaganda, blaming IBM isn't Politically correct since they are now linux backers.

  6. Whoa. /keanu on Urban Terror Code Stolen · · Score: 1

    I know this is off-topic, but I hadn't played this game in like a decade, and never think about it, but just last night I was sitting thinking about the times I used to play it. Didn't even know it was still around, might have to check out what their doing with it..

  7. Re:Why not stop using firefox and Java on TOR Wants You To Stop Using Windows, Disable JavaScript · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They really don't need to have backdoors, and that would present problems if MS and Apple allowed it. They could face lawsuits and what not, and hackers could find them and use the backdoors. Most likely what these 3 letter agencies do, is hire people to find 0-days in all the OSes and all the browsers. Modern OSes and browsers are so complicated, that this is probably easy to do. If a 0-day gets fixed, they can just always find more. It's the same effect as having a backdoor, but without the legal problems for the companies involved, and it works for all OSes/browsers. Hackers find 0-days all the time, and these 3 letter guys are probably much better and more funded, so..

  8. Re:Why not stop using firefox and Java on TOR Wants You To Stop Using Windows, Disable JavaScript · · Score: 1

    You don't care about games and whatever else is windows specific, but others do. Hell I don't give a spit about what you do with your PC probably. Switching to Linux is a stop-gap measure, if most tor users used Linux, they could change the malware package to work on Linux, and the same bug would have worked in exactly the same way in either case.

  9. Re:Why not stop using firefox and Java on TOR Wants You To Stop Using Windows, Disable JavaScript · · Score: 2

    Yea, that would make sense, except this vulnerability existed in, and was just as exploitable in Linux versions of FF as far as I know. Even if it was Windows specific, that's just coincidence since the Linux versions of firefox have vulnerabilities all the time that are just as exploitable. Do you actually know anything about computer security?

  10. Re:Why not stop using firefox and Java on TOR Wants You To Stop Using Windows, Disable JavaScript · · Score: 2

    "So the vulnerability is in firefox and java, but they propose to stop using Windows?" Exactly. This could have happened in any OS, they just targeted Windows because that's what most users use. Ironically IE10 run in x64 mode probably would not have this problem, since it uses vastly more address space for ASLR. It's like getting a flat tire, then the guy you hire to change your tire tells you to buy his favorite brand of car to fix it.

  11. Re:Isn't this just a frictionless surface? on Physicists Attempting To Test 'Time Crystals' · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, the galaxy is not spinning as you think of it with stars at a constant orbit. What happens is the galaxy's gravitational field is pulling everything towards everything else in the galaxy, very slowly, so it's more like water going down a huge drain, where it circles a few times then goes poof. Same principle with our sun and planets (or your golf ball example), it appears they spin forever at constant distance, but they are slowly being sucked into the sun. So yea the galaxy collapses into the black hole, but the black hole is just a manifestation of the gravity that caused the thing to circle in the first place, and then swallowed it all up so it spins no more. Point is, galaxies are not an eternal event no matter how it plays out, and it must always die and become useless. Where as this thing in the article, possibly does works forever.

  12. Re:Isn't this just a frictionless surface? on Physicists Attempting To Test 'Time Crystals' · · Score: 1

    Well, this is probably the blind leading the blind because I'm only a laymen as well, but my understanding, is that while a black hole will spin for a very long time, and you may somehow be able to extract energy from that (or not), eventually it will stop spinning and then evaporate. Talking about 10^50 years or more here, so a very long time depending on it's size, but eventually it will not be useful to any thing still around. Like I said, this device, will never stop, in theory.

  13. Re:Isn't this just a frictionless surface? on Physicists Attempting To Test 'Time Crystals' · · Score: 1

    Not sure if you meant what that says, but galaxies don't spin forever, they eventually end up in a black hole. Now that's a long time out, but this thing is supposed to actually spin *forever*, not get degraded by any other physical process, well that's how I read it anyway, I'm not a physicist.

  14. Implies? "Can't really"? on Physicists Attempting To Test 'Time Crystals' · · Score: 2

    Can we get something more definite than that? I mean if the submitter doesn't know, and it sounds like he doesn't, why even say anything.

  15. Re:Did it really work? on 64-bit x86 Computing Reaches 10th Anniversary · · Score: 1

    "Let me guess, you ran it in 32 bit mode, then ran it again immediately after in 64 bit mode ... and then ignored the disk cache completely?"

    Nope, I did dozens of runs for each, ignoring the first result that was obvious disk I/o bound (because it was much longer). As others have explained, and I said, some code benefits greatly from x64.

  16. Re:Twice as big as it needs to be? on 64-bit x86 Computing Reaches 10th Anniversary · · Score: 1

    Depends on how you want to look at it, and who you feel like being cynical against. Easing the job of programmers is a good thing, if they can use 10x more ram and not have to write code to juggle memory as much, they have eliminated a potential source of bugs and a time sink, that is probably hard to maintain as well. Memory is cheap, I got 16GBs for $90 bucks, and though programs are larger, maybe unnecessarily so, nothing comes close to exhausting my memory. It seems like a much better method, than defining some arbitrary limit, stopping all progress, and telling programmers to 'stop being lazy sobs'.

  17. Re:Did it really work? on 64-bit x86 Computing Reaches 10th Anniversary · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Heard x64 was barely faster than 32-bit, wrote this program to find duplicate files on Windows: http://poshcode.org/3377 - it's at least twice as fast in x64 than 32-bit. Naturally it won't apply to everything, but for certain things x64 is really good.

  18. Re:Make him run the Marathon on Police Capture Second Marathon Bombing Suspect in Watertown, Mass. · · Score: 1

    Directed at you and falcon, these things are complicated, these actions have to be done in private, and are subject to abuse of bad people who get into a position of power. Yes, of course we could do better to weed them out, but there are diminishing returns to everything. And actually I see no problem with using these assholes to destroy our enemies, then turning on them because they are usually not much better. It makes more sense than trying to take all the assholes on at once, and making our plan evident to everyone. That would just not work. And we must do everything we can to make this work, it's easy to speak of it as if it's a game, but if we had lost the planet to the soviet union, that might well have meant eternal darkness for all of the human race forever. While it seems so far removed from our current reality, which is testament to our success I would say, any number of mistakes might have had a cascading effect and caused too many countries to go against us/for them, and so on. It's not easy to put the situation into words, but I feel people think this relatively nice reality we have was inevitable; it was not. That does not excuse gross abuse of our system for people's own ends, but I see that as an inevitable side effect of a situation we did not cause. And your last paragraph is spot on, you get no argument from me.

  19. Re:Make him run the Marathon on Police Capture Second Marathon Bombing Suspect in Watertown, Mass. · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I know you will probably not give a damn what I think, but I think you see things too black and white. I think the US hates all these SOBs, but we can't be against every single asshole on the planet or we'd have no friends and would definitely lose the fight for the soul of the planet. We have to be 'friends' with some of them, which means, we are friends with them so long as they help us against people we judge to be worse, and that worse could be something the Berkley brigade would call greedy like financial help, but without a strong financial position the US and thus freedom parishes. So we have to make shitty calls all the time, I think (or hope) it's for a ultimately greater good, and one day the world will be democratized and all these stupid fucking dictator will be waiting tables and not bothering anyone (or even better, hung at war tribunals), but who knows. Without omniscience we can only make the best shit call we can out of nothing but shit calls. Just my opinion, take it for what it's worth. Oh btw, we didn't flee Vietnam, not the US anyway, after stabilizing the situation, and setting up South Vietnam to defend itself, the democrats in the US congress (which had a super majority that was too much for even a presidential veto) decided to abruptly cancel funding for South Vietnam, causing their military to collapse against the North's war machine. Now you may consider the democrats to be the US, but I assure you I think quite the opposite.

  20. Re:And it's already caught. on Hacker Bypasses Windows 7/8 Address Space Layout Randomization · · Score: 1

    Defender catches the proof of concept code, but you could drop in your own code, for an unpatched vulnerability, and use the same technique described in the article. My advice is to use x64 IE. FF isn't sandboxed, and chrome isn't 64-bit.

  21. Re:All Fixed in Windows 9 on Hacker Bypasses Windows 7/8 Address Space Layout Randomization · · Score: 0

    Not a Windows problem, it's a 32-bit problem and the solution is 64-bit, and of the main browsers, IE is easiest to use the x64 version (a checkbox in IE10), with FF being close, slick.

  22. Re:Is it in theory possible to get dinosaur DNA? on Interviews: Ask What You Will of Paleontologist Jack Horner · · Score: 1

    I'll check out that TED talk, thanks. But that's depressing, I've always dreamed of something like Jurassic park (obviously without the stupid non-security... :) )

  23. Is it in theory possible to get dinosaur DNA? on Interviews: Ask What You Will of Paleontologist Jack Horner · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Assuming you had some great technology that could collect it, is there any possible source of dinosaur DNA that would allow a more or less complete rebuild of a dinosaur (again assuming great futuristic technology that can accomplish this - think nanobots and strong AI)? Or is all dinosaur DNA forever gone? Or is it an undecided question?

  24. Re:inflation ok here? on Astronomers Discover a Group of Quasars 4 Billion Light Years Across · · Score: 1

    Ah, yes that's what I was kind of (clumsily) trying to get at, thanks for the great informative post, that's exactly what I wanted to know and I know that kind of answer does not come easy. :)

  25. inflation ok here? on Astronomers Discover a Group of Quasars 4 Billion Light Years Across · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Curious question for you physicists or arm-chair physicists, does this have any implications for inflation? I've read here and there that inflation would be problematic if there were large structures in the universe, because nothing would have had time to propagate the distance in the time required to be compatible with inflation, so does this bump up against that limit or break it?