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User: felixrising

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  1. Re:Same as any other potential fraud. on Germany: Bitcoin Is "Private Money" · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most taxation systems are self reporting. You can lie but if you get caught any profits from your deception rapidly evaporate.

  2. Re:Their loss on Several Western Govts. Ban Lenovo Equipment From Sensitive Networks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sounds like capitalism at work.. working through our governments and spy agencies to lock out a major supplier/s from contract deals.

  3. Re:those horrible prequels on Star Wars City Doomed By Sand Dunes · · Score: 1

    here! here! Some things deserve to be buried and forgotten.

  4. Re:Could be a decoy on Australian Intelligence HQ Blueprints Hacked · · Score: 1

    It follows then that these blueprints where in fact the plans for a prison and the high value target (fully isolated server room containing all high value information) listed on the blueprint is in fact a nice padded sleep deprivation cell, with a one way door... muahahaha muahahaha

  5. As long as the economy grows... on "Dramatic Decline" Warning For Plants and Animals · · Score: 1

    Well, lets face it, the most important thing is the economy grows, and if indefinite human population growth is required to achieve this, then so be it.. who cares about anything else?!

  6. Lathes anyone?! What a Knee Jerk! on California Lawmaker Wants 3-D Printers To Be Regulated · · Score: 1

    Sure, when they start regulating machining shops with Lathes. Because you can making much more dangerous weapons with the proper tools... Lately is seems like there has been an increasing level of unintelligent knee jerk reactions to things like this. Put it into perspective and you suddenly start sounding paranoid!

  7. Re:Glitches on Feds Drop CFAA Charges Against 'Hacker' Who Exploited Poker Machines · · Score: 1

    Where is my mod points when I need them! Mod up!

  8. Re:Ah, Let's Read the Whole Article, Shall We? on Study Suggests Generating Capacity of Wind Farms At Large Scales Overestimated · · Score: 1

    Certainly no one complains about cars, yet they consume enormous resources - fossil fuels, metal, and land, kill people (through accidents AND through pollution - the worlds fastest growing cause of death is cars apparently). Yet people here in Australia are up in arms about the birds occassionally dying, or the "Wind-farm Syndrome" (which is not surprisingly absent in other areas where wind-farms have been around for 20+ years)... That's right, build some more of the dirtiest coal plants in the OECD nations, but whatever we do, don't build wind-farms.

  9. Land of the free, or anything corporations want. on White House Petition To Make Cell Phone Unlocking Legal Needs 11,000 Signatures · · Score: 1

    Really, for the "Land of the Free", it's just corporations taking priority and precedence over the rights and freedoms of the people. The level of government lobbying (you know, no no not bribes, its funding!) by corporations and the rights of the free people of the USA taking a back seat... this is just another example of the free not really being free. Please sir, may I have the right to do anything I want with the phone I bought and paid for?!.. Come on people, sign that petition!

  10. Re:Structural? on Is "Left" Vs. "Right" Hard-coded Into Your Brain? · · Score: 1

    Well, you may be wrong. It may not be visible at birth in brain structure, but a study into olfaction, in particular, pheromone attraction to the opposite sex showed a clear attraction of females to men's odor when they had the same political persuasion. http://www.theglobalmail.org/feature/your-politics-stink/269/ But you're right as well, its not all black and white, there have been other studies (using twins as controls) that also shows a genetic predisposition towards politics, but over time there can be divergence from the politics of the family home (as is so often the case in nature).http://www.economist.com/node/21564191 So there is clearly some genetic markers which predispose us, but like our genes, our opinions and politics can change over time.

  11. Re:Cool on Handheld Black Hornet Nano Drones Issued To UK Soldiers · · Score: 1

    Lets not forget, its pretty easy to crash a heli in ideal conditions, so I can imagine them losing more than a few even in non-combat conditions. It also contains a GPS and probably high accuracy barometer which enables "loiter" style flight based on a set of GPS coordinates, probably also pre-planned way-point drone style missions too (it's debatable whether it can do this autonomously though, probably needs the smarts in the control deck) which is quite an advanced feature set for such a small heli and greatly improves its usefulness for FPV applications. Video review of it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSQwb4p09wE

  12. Re:Hope you have friends inside on Ask Slashdot: How To Collect Payments From a Multinational Company? · · Score: 1

    I'd have to agree. Working a a reasonably sized company, finding someone who will make it their responsibility to chase it up the chain of command, or who even actually knows who to take it too internally. I doubt it's out of malice or intent that they aren't paying you, its just some douche who doesn't care until someone else comes asking what is going on and has the decency to chase it up within the company. Try escalating to the CTO or CIO and definitely hit them up with big red "FINAL NOTICE" and late payment fees for your hassle... the law is only when it gets horrible and you're willing to cut them loose as a client.

  13. Not PC, but relevant on People Are Living Longer, With More Disabilities Than Ever · · Score: 1

    Remove natural selection from a species and watch it's gene pool deteriorate. Which leads to the moral dilema: given in vitro genetic testing, do we have a moral responsibility to test and either abort or rectify genetically borne diseases and problems. And who decides what genetic traits are desirable and what isn't in our offspring?

  14. "So-called", it IS the Habitable Zone! on Super-Earth Discovered In Star's Habitable Zone · · Score: 2

    What's with the poor "Habitable Zone" being "So-Called"? That makes it sound like it's not the correct name for it, but being the correct scientific term, how can it be incorrect? Okay, maybe it's the "Circumstellar Habitable Zone", but come on!!! It IS the theoretically "habitable zone" of a parent star, you could call it the so-called "Goldilocks Zone", because the phase "Goldilocks Zone" is just colloquial. /me ends rant.

  15. Disgracefully managed! on Voting Machine Problem Reports Already Rolling In · · Score: 1

    The USA should outsource their voting systems and electoral management to the Australian Electoral Commission. A federal body responsible for a unified, fair and well managed voting apparatus on election day... Serious USA, the poster child for democracy! WTF?!

  16. Re:Gods with pitchforks. on Physicist Explains Cthulhu's "Non-Euclidean Geometry" · · Score: 0

    Arthur C. Clarke's third law: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."

  17. Plagiarised? on How To Hug a Chicken Via the Internet · · Score: 2

    A friend, Dr Florian "Floyd" Mueller of RMIT University here in Melbourne, Australia also published a paper on a project called "Hug over a distance" back in early 2005... The projects look surprisingly similar... Floyd heads up the Exertion Games Lab which does a lot of similar "over a distance" Internet enabled interactions.

  18. Finally, lets see whether CD and DVD sales soar on UK ISPs Asked To Block More File-sharing Websites · · Score: 1

    Really, all along the **IA and their ilk have been claiming that pirating is responsible for lost sales, that is 1 pirated move == 1 lost DVD sale or bum on cinema seat... so based on that argument, now that pirating is getting really hard to do a corresponding sales increase will ensue! right? Right?!

  19. Re:That sounds really cool on Alpha Centauri Has an Earth-Sized Planet · · Score: 2

    Let's use that as a setting for a sci fi movie and waste it on contortionist zombies and scientists who act like complete douchebag morons. Awesome.

    Did you have a hand in Prometheus?!

  20. Suddenly and without warning on Ask Slashdot: How Do SSDs Die? · · Score: 1

    In my limited experience (we have a VNX SAN running a few cages of EFDs, 16 servers with RAID 1 SSDs and a mix of laptops running SSDs), most die with no warning whatsoever.. they just cease to exist with nary a whimper.

  21. "Childish" not in text, Incorrect translation... on Einstein Letter Critical of Religion To Be Auctioned On EBay · · Score: 3, Informative

    As several commenters on the source article mentioned already, the word "Childish" does not appear in the original text. My German may be rusty but I concur, "Kindish" is not present in the original letter... but lets not let the facts get in the way of a sensational headline...

  22. Leave the gate open, blame the horse for bolting.. on US Suspects Iran Was Behind a Wave of Cyberattacks · · Score: 1

    Sure, we can run around getting mad because someone exploited a hole.. or we can stop building systems with holes that can be exploited... As a systems engineer I believe the contractual obligation to provide systems and software which is fit for purpose and fit for use should not lie with the users of said software, but with the producers. There is an aspect of mismanagement/misconfiguration but really, we are applying patches ALL THE TIME! If our level of trust in border protection (i.e. the border between internal network and Internet) is so low, then maybe a redesign is required that separates these two areas so we stop getting exploited in the first place. Our weighting of security vs convenience is way too far towards the convenience side, and we're depending on sloppy coding and configuration and getting caught out far too often and then blaming the attackers.

  23. Re:Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Bra on Ask Slashdot: What Books Have Had a Significant Impact On Your Life? · · Score: 1

    +1

  24. Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke on Ask Slashdot: What Books Have Had a Significant Impact On Your Life? · · Score: 1

    At the age of 15, my mother brought me an old copy of Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke. It was the first novel I'd ever read cover to cover in one sitting.

    It was complete paradigm shift for me, it changed how I thought of myself as a member of the human race. I immediately changed my elective subjects for the final two years of high school, from shop style classes to physics, chemistry and math. It totally change the course of my life.

    Mum later told me that my grandmother had bought this novel for her and her siblings around the same age, and I definitely will do the same for my children.

  25. What is the Internet? on Kurzweil: The Cloud Will Expand Human Brain Capacity · · Score: 1

    What do you think the Internet is for exactly?! If not an extension overcoming our brains limitations, not solely for storage, but for communication too. Technology is simply the next phase of evolution, an extension of the biological to overcome biological limitations.