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User: NoobixCube

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  1. Re:"Linux Command Line Tirckery" HA! on Windows 8 Features With Linux Antecedents · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Learning to use your computer certainly SHOULD require familiarising yourself with your chosen platforms command line. The very idea that it shouldn't is why it'sso bloody rare to find an "average" user who knows how to do more than hit Play in iTunes. Not that it even involves the command line, do you know how many customers I have who don't know how to install software in Windows? This is simple, Computer Literacy 101 stuff. I learned how to use computers back when they were actually hard to use (though people who learned before I did, would probobaly look at my cosy DOS prompt and wish they'd learned there), these days there's no excuse for not having some basic and essential skills, yet every time I dare say we coddle the users, and that the problem is user education, NOT the programming and design, I'm told I'm being elitist. If a grown man with no intellectual disabilities couldn't work out how to use a spoon, and got cereal everywhere, would you blame the bowl, the spoon, the cereal, or him? I'd blame him just a bit, for not seeking out some user education. I'm sure a copy of Spoons for Dummies can't cost that much.

  2. Re:What if... on Defendant Ordered To Decrypt Laptop Claims She Had Forgotten Password · · Score: 2

    Depending on the type and method of encryption, she could say "Do you know when the last time I needed to know that password was? The last time some asshole law enforcement agency decided to rip the drive out of my laptop and gain unlawful and unjustified access to the data therein!"

  3. Re:Magnetic field + conductor = Electricity? on 'Electric Earth' Could Explain Planet's Rotation · · Score: 1

    Voltage isn't the same thing as charge, it's an expression of potential energy; that is to say, the difference in charge between two places. High voltage means electrons are colleted at one place and somehow absent from another. You're not going to take MORE electrons from the low point, obviously.

  4. Re:Magnetic field + conductor = Electricity? on 'Electric Earth' Could Explain Planet's Rotation · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Electricity is remarkably lazy, and doesn't do anything it isn't forced to do. It will always follow the path of least resistance, and will never flow from a point of lower voltage to higher (that would be like water flowing up hill). If there's electricity flowing, you have to ask what's causing it to flow. What's increasing the voltage between the two points? If you harvest the electricity without unerstanding why it's flowing in the first place, you won't know what the consequences may be.

  5. Re:You can get mesh blinds for the windows... on Ask Slashdot: Ideal High School Computer Lab? · · Score: 1

    And no more frivolous, decadent candy, either. You shall eat only turnip! The efficient food for the worker!

    While some might feel more comfortable in a basement-like environment, if it's a high school computer lab, it will be used by students of all subjects. There's no worse way to make something appealing to a 14 year old with the attention span of a gnat than to lock them in a dungeon to do their schoolwork. Have you never studied education theory?

  6. People are too stupid on Inductive Charging For EVs To Be Tested In Berlin · · Score: 4, Funny

    People are too stupid to plug their cars in, I mean, connecting something to the car to make it go? It just baffles the mind! That's why we all fuel up by driving into a pool of petrol and letting osmosis take its course!

  7. Thank you, OFLC on Australian Government Bans New Syndicate Game · · Score: 5, Funny

    Peter Sunde would like to personally thank the OFLC for their contribution to The Pirate Bay's ad revenue.

  8. Re:EULAs on Sony Sued Over PSN 'No Suing' Provision · · Score: 1

    I'm just saying, I don't think an entirely unrelated retailer is actually legally obliged, or inclined, to accept my four year old game console back, no matter who signs a note for me. One might be able to return directly to Sony, but I just doubt a shop that could have changed management or even franchisee in all this time is going to care.

  9. Re:EULAs on Sony Sued Over PSN 'No Suing' Provision · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd like to see my local EB Games accept my PS3 return now, after the EULA updates, even though I bought it years ago...

  10. Re:next we'll hear that Dell is in trouble... on Dell Ditches Netbooks · · Score: 2

    I have an EEE Pad Transformer, so I get the best of both the netbook and tablet worlds ;) That said, I paid twice as much for the privilege... But Dell must surely be in trouble, I mean, they would obviously benefit from as much market coverage as possible, even in smaller market spaces. Tablets are a growing market, and Dell are doing themselves and their shareholders a grave disservice by calling it quits. I loved the Streak 5, their phone/tablet abomination, and I'm disappointed (though unsurprised) they discontinued those. If Dell are pulling out of more and more markets, it says to me they're losing money.

    My advice: Either make Alienware products worth the price tag, or bring the price tag down to match, because currently they're no match for Asus' Republic of Gamers label. Second, put out a Tegra 3 tablet, Asus are the only opposition there, and if Dell hits the right spot in the market, they can have a success on their hands. Third, shit or get off the pot when it comes to Linux. Either they should maintain their own Ubuntu distribution, so they can have a full vertical slice and compete with Apple, or they should just give up on Linux. Currently, they basically install it without even checking to see they've got all the necessary drivers (or IF there are appropriate drivers at all) before they ship, there's no QA.

  11. Configurability on Examining the Usability of Gnome, Unity and KDE · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know what's best for everyone? Configurability. When the developers can't decide how something should work, when they have two what seem like equally good or equally bad ideas, why should they force one particular decision on the user? Why not just put an option on a big scary controll panel somewhere made just for that? Of course, for usabilitiy's sake, there'd be the normal slick and easy to read control panel, but Gnome used to have GConf (does Gnome 3 have it? I don't know). You could use GConf to configure ANY aspect of the interface, anything at all. It was a very powerful tool if you knew what you were doing with it. So set the defaults to the lowest common denominator, to the grandma standard, but at least leave the powertools where we can reach them! Put up a warning that it may break the interface, sour the milk or bring the rapture to scare off the grandma users, and only those who really know what they're doing need concern themselves with it.

  12. Re:Yahoo is still relevent on Microsoft Just Can't Quit Yahoo · · Score: 2

    From what I've noticed, though I don't have any data to back this up, Yahoo is significantly more popular in non-english speaking countries than Google is. Most of my Japanese friends, for example, have Yahoo mail accounts, and Yahoo Japan as their home page.

  13. Or not... on System Recognizes Emotions In People's Voices · · Score: 5, Funny

    Caller: Oh it's another damn machine.
    IVR: Do not take that tone, please, sir or madam.
    Caller: WHAT tone?
    IVR: Please remain calm, and speak clearly.
    Caller: I AM CALM, DAMN IT!!!

  14. My case on How Much Tech Can Kids Take? · · Score: 1

    I'm a living example of both the rewards of getting kids into tech early, and the dangers of using the computer a a baby sitter. I learned to read and do basic maths at the age of 3, from Reader Rabbit, Math Rabbit, Treasure Math Storm, and others; this had me years ahead of my peers when I started school. I developed a strong taste for it, though, to the exclusion of sports. Computer games were just more fun and interesting to me than ball games. Whether or not technology stopped me from being the greatest runner in the world, I don't know, but I do know that even as a toddler, I'm told, I didn't run around a lot. I preferred to sit alone and build with blocks, or do puzzles and stuff. I've always, as long as I can remember, been a scrawny, pasty nerd.

  15. Re:Why so much disbelief in aliens among scientist on Exoplanet Count Tops 700 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How would we see a Dyson Sphere if it's capturing all the output from their star? It would be just another patch of blackness against the inky black of space. Our small slice of space we can view at any given time is very tiny, frequently changing, and we can't actually see most of these exoplanets, just their effect causing their stars to wobble. We'd have no hope of seeing satellites around a planet, or space shuttles, or even a space ship the size of one of the Alliance citadel style things in Firefly, with current technology, unless they were within the inner solar system, or buzzed a probe in the outer system. We might see something very large if it deliberately silhouetted itself against Jupiter, for us.

  16. Re:Realistic vs Imagination on Spotted Horses May Have Roamed Europe 25,000 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    Anyone here, really, could (unethically) make a Slashdot page on G+ and doggedly keep track of the stories for the benefit of the whole world. Pity we're all lazy bastards...

  17. Re:smoking causes yellow fingers on Oxford Professor Taken To Task For Linking Internet Use To Autism · · Score: 2

    Of course a link exists. Autistic children get a lot of very direct feedback, and lots of reinforcement while they're playing a game, and games generally have much clearer goals than anything else they'll do. Generally speaking, a game never leaves you wondering if you've done well or not, you get points, you finish levels, you finish games.

    I think the correlation between internet use and autism diagnoses though is more an effect of everyone's new favourite physician, Doctor Google. Not to mention, blaming autism is the new fad diagnosis. When I was a kid, it was asthma, then not so long ago, it was ADD, or ADHD, now the fad diagnosis is autism; this, too, shall pass, in time.

  18. Re:What are the range of failures? on Hardware Running Android Fails More Than iPhone, BlackBerry Hardware · · Score: 1

    I think it's more likely because Android users are of more discerning taste, while Apple users are happy enough with literally a hand full of glass shards.

  19. Re:What are the range of failures? on Hardware Running Android Fails More Than iPhone, BlackBerry Hardware · · Score: 1, Interesting

    In my experience working in a phone shop, peopoe just tolerated more from their beloved Apple-emblazoned brick than they would of Android devices. I had people returning perfectly good (and to my eye perfectly healthy and fast) Android phones for being a bit slow. They'd also claim the reception was bad on the Galaxy S and that "a friend with an iPhone gets better reception". Right, Galaxy S tested best on the network for network speed and reception, waste of another courier bag sending that one away. People sent their Galaxies away for a minor chip in the screen, but I regularly see people running their fingers over shattered glass panes on their iPhones, little chunks falling to the floor with every touch.

  20. Re:I stopped reading the responses after... on The White House Responds To We the People Petition · · Score: 1

    An addiction is only a problem when you can't satisfy it :P

    The problem was, if I didn't get my morning cup(s), I'd have headaches all day, even after I finally have a coffee. Was trying to give it up for that.

  21. Re:I stopped reading the responses after... on The White House Responds To We the People Petition · · Score: 2

    I really can't function on a normal level without at least one morning coffee, and another by about 1 PM, and again at about 4 or 5 (speaking of...). I've cut back a lot, I used to have about eight to twelve cups a day last time I was out of work (nothing better to do but play Civ for 19 hours at a time, and drink coffee). I'm down to usually no more than four cups a day, now. I successfully gave it up for a time, and then found out that due to an unrelated blood disorder, going without the coffee was actually doing me more harm than drinking too much of it, so I got myself back to four cups a day.

    I don't smoke pot, but I know quite a few who do. Only one of them is your traditional dazed stoner, and I strongly suspect he's just an idiot. The others are quire functional members of society. I have known three people to be diagnosed with lung cancer from smoking tobacco, though (strangely enough, not the pack a day smokers I live with...)

  22. Re:Not likely on Schools In Portugal Moving To OSS · · Score: 1

    You can't trust Office 2010 to play nicely with Office 2007, or 2003, either. When I need to send a document to someone, I make it in LibreOffice, and then hit that nice convenient Export to PDF button. PDF may not be the nicest of formats, and it's not editable without some source file voodoo, but it's still the best guarantee the end reader will be able to read it, and read it exactly as I made it.

  23. Re:innovation is dead? on Nokia Unveils OLED Phone You Control By Bending · · Score: 3, Funny

    I know, right? Only Apple could ever have thought of touching things on a screen!

  24. Re:And it doesn't work. on Inside Facebook's Cyber-Security System · · Score: 1

    To make matters worse, some banks even have pages you can like, making it more plausible they'd contact you on Facebook.

  25. Re:And it doesn't work. on Inside Facebook's Cyber-Security System · · Score: 1

    If I'd meant emails, I'd have said emails. I'm honestly surprised so many people in this thread had trouble with that.