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User: Zerimar

Zerimar's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 89

  1. Re:5 millions for the seti on Google Pumps $6 Million Into Summer of Code 2011 · · Score: 1

    No, it wouldn't be nice. It would be $5 million wasted on SETI@Home.

  2. Re:It's Official. Firefox has jumped the shark! on Firefox 5 Scheduled For June 21 Release · · Score: 1

    This is totally subjective. Extensibility it clearly loses out to everyone - Microsoft and it's corporate customers do not want it to be extensible, so I doubt it will be. In terms of speed, I think Chrome/Firefox/IE/Opera are all fast enough. They all load quickly, render pages quickly, execute Javascript quickly - a lot of this is thanks to Chrome pushing that envelope, but everyone else seems to have caught up by now. For the first time in a long time, I am of the opinion that all of the major browsers for Windows are good enough. It basically comes down to personal preference at this point. I typically use Chrome as my primary browser and IE9 for the handful of random sites that don't quite work properly with Chrome.

  3. Re:Time on Turning Your E-Reader Into a Cheap Tablet · · Score: 2

    BS, it takes a half hour, tops. Following this wiki http://nookdevs.com/NookColor_Rooting will walk you through it. The only decision you have to make it deciding which software version of nookCOLOR you have. The only reason it would take longer is if you are messing with replacing the whole system, but a basic root with marketplace support takes very little time at all.

  4. Re:Apples to Oranges? on Firefox 4, A Day Later · · Score: 1

    IE9 was officially released last week.

  5. Re:In my day... on Ask Slashdot: Facebook Archiving? · · Score: 3

    And you'll say, "Get off my lawn!!!!!"

  6. Re:Dumbest article to date. on Ask Slashdot: Facebook Archiving? · · Score: 1

    Tell that to all Geocities users. Sometimes, things die forever and all is lost.

  7. Re:Champion on Microsoft and Nvidia Abandon PC Gaming Alliance · · Score: 1

    Fallout: New Vegas is a horrible example - it's a buggy piece of crap even on Xbox360, and the only game I've ever played that has managed to lock up my console. The game itself is good, but the bugs, especially the crash bugs, make it incredibly frustrating.

  8. Re:Wow, that would be redonkulously profitable. on AMD Sale to Dell Rumored · · Score: 1

    A huge portion (if not most) of the profits come from the enterprise space, where often you buy the biggest, best servers. Sure, for an average desktop a cheap AMD chip might be a better choice, but for an enterprise server (or a high end VM server), performance is king and AMD isn't even competitive.

  9. Re:I think Madden is schitzo...... on EA Simulation Correctly Picked Super Bowl Champs in September · · Score: 1

    That's only partially true. The betting odds and lines are not there to predict a winner - they are there to try and get equal money on each side of the table. More often than not, the end result is that it is pretty accurate, but that's largely due to wisdom of crowds. Predicting winners is not goal of the people who set the lines. As for the other comment, no team in any sport will be overwhelming favorites to win at the beginning of the season, due to the vagaries of small sample sizes. Picking the Phillies to make the playoffs in Major League Baseball is a safe bet - after 162 games, generally talent wins out (they are -300 to win their division). But give them three additional playoffs series after that, each of which is a race to four games, and luck plays a much larger role (+200 to win the World Series). The NFL is even more difficult (New England +500) because the season itself is so short that luck plays a much bigger role all year long.

  10. Re:What they mean on Firewalls Make DDoS Attacks Worse · · Score: 1

    Amen. Take for instance Cisco's biggest, baddest firewall - it can handle 2 million concurrent connections. Do people realize how trivially easy it is to to create 2 million connections? After you fill the connection table, it's game over. Other firewall vendors have similar breaking points - it's just a matter of how big your connection table can become. Also, with the rise of SSL on public facing web servers, firewalls are little more than stateful bottlenecks waiting to explode - there's not higher level protections there. People stick with them for regulatory reasons, but they provide very little protection in many, many scenarios.

  11. Re:Fingers crossed... on Intel's Atom To Ship In Over 35 Tablets Next Year · · Score: 2

    I've seen a lot of apps in the market saying they don't work with the Samsung Galaxy S line of phones - your post helps me understand why. Is there any company doing more harm to the Android ecosystem than Samsung? HTC and Motorola stay pretty close to Google's Android, and seem to benefit from it. Samsung needs to wake up.

  12. No Linux for the same reason as no Android on Netflix Touts Open Source, Ignores Linux · · Score: 1

    It's all about DRM baby. With not consistent and enforceable DRM mechanism, the studios will not allow them to make the streams available on Linux. It's the same reason why there are Netflix viewers for iOS and Windows Mobile 7, but not Android.

  13. Re:Okay... on UK Games Retailers Threaten Boycott of Steam Games · · Score: 3, Funny

    But Valve (and to a lesser degree, Blizzard) is almost single handedly keeping PC Gaming alive and well. Steam has been amazing for the PC gaming ecosystem - especially for the little guys. Does World of Goo get noticed without Steam? Probably not. Defense Grid? I doubt it. Puzzle Quest and it's derivatives? Nope. Crayon Physics? No. Plants vs Zombies took off with help from Steam as well, although Popcap is a fairly large developer at this point. I'm against DRM as much as the next guy, but I stick up for Valve and Steam. So far they have a proven track record of being very customer friendly as well as being fairly developer friendly. They are unique in that they seem to be the only company doing AAA cross platform games that puts the PC first. When developers like Bioware are making their PC games feel like ports (and stripping features as in Dragon Age: Origins 2), Valve is still out there supporting Team Fortress 2, and the Left4Dead series first and foremost on the PC.

  14. Re:Okay... on UK Games Retailers Threaten Boycott of Steam Games · · Score: 1

    eBay is the best way to get top dollar for your old games.

  15. Re:Hurray! on Opera Embraces Extensions For v.11 · · Score: 1

    I was in the same boat as you, although I couldn't switch to Firefox - it was way too slow. I ended up switching to Chrome - with three plugins (Speed Dial, Smooth Gestures, RSS Subscription Extension), I was close enough in feature parity to be happy. The only thing I'm really missing is that Opera would not close when you closed your last tab, but Chrome does. Everything else works about the same (other than no built in e-mail, bit torrent, news, unite, etc.), but that one still bothers me. The nice benefit - more sites work in Chrome, and Chrome feels a tad bit faster.

  16. Re:How about... on School District Drops 'D' Grades · · Score: 1

    At my University, the CS100 class had a median score of 91 or 92, but the mean was much worse. Basically, 70-80% of students were "A/B" level, and just about everyone else was a total failure. Of course, those everyone else's probably never took another computer science class, so I guess the system worked for everyone.

  17. Re:So..'many eyes make bugs shallow'? on Safari Privacy Bug May Be Leaking Your Data · · Score: 1

    Wait a minute now. We're talking about four browsers. The ones from Apple and Microsoft have security vulnerabilities and the ones from Google and Mozilla do not. Is it just coincidence?

    Wait a minute, Chrome and Firefox have no vulnerabilities?

  18. Re:Silverlight? on Adobe Flash Now Officially a Part of Google Chrome · · Score: 1

    +1 to this - Silverlight is much better than Flash for video. In my experience, it runs with better quality and less CPU usage than flash on all of my systems (Core i7 all way down to Core Duo). Of course, my only experience with Silverlight is with Netflix and March Madness, so YMMV.

  19. Re:And yet they're still the only cards... on Nvidia Drops Support For Its Open Source Driver · · Score: 2, Informative

    The 2.6.32 kernel fixes the HDMI TV detection for 720p resolution on intel chips. Everything else works great for me in intel world (using Gentoo x64 stable).

  20. Re:complete whats new and opinions on Opera 10.5 Pre-Alpha Is Out, and It's Fast · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's faster, according to Lifehacker.

  21. SYNC is awesome on Ford's New Cars To Be Wi-Fi Hotspots · · Score: 1

    SYNC works really well and is a huge reason I would consider a Ford vehicle (Fusion or Mustang) over competitors. Of course kdawson will find negatives about it since it's a Microsoft product.

  22. Re:IE6 comes with XP, IE8 with Win7 on Firefox 3.5 Now the Most Popular Browser Worldwide · · Score: 1

    IE8 isn't garbage - it's Javascript performance is pretty awful, but it does bring a few decent features to the table. Accelerators are simple, but effective; web slices might be glorified RSS feeds, but they work and Yahoo mail supports them; and the best part is that each tab gets its own thread. IE8 and Chrome are the only browsers that do this (to my knowledge) and it's really handy - broken websites don't hork up your entire browsing session like they do in Firefox and Opera. FWIW, I use Opera as my primary, and IE8 as my backup in Vista/7 and FF3.5 as my backup in XP. For whatever reason, IE8 feels faster than FF in Vista/7, whereas FF3.5 feels faster in XP.

  23. Re:So... in short. on Is Console Gaming Dying? · · Score: 1

    No, the article is pretty crappy and is definitely troll bait, but the website is good in general.

  24. Re:So... in short. on Is Console Gaming Dying? · · Score: 1

    Bit-Tech is actually a really good website - kind of like the British version of AnandTech. It's also Custom PC magazine's website, I believe.

  25. Re:PayPal is a scam on PayPal Offers $150,000 In Developer Challenge · · Score: 1

    Google's Checkout is a failure, much like most every other Google product other than search. Now that Google Checkout is the same price (or in some cases, more expensive) than PayPal, yet less feature rich, I assume it will just disappear in time like every other PayPal challenger.