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User: The+Snowman

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  1. Re:True on Ask Slashdot: Best Cell Phone Carrier In the US? · · Score: 1

    She streams talk radio and other live broadcasts where downloading MP3s isn't an option. Since she MUST listen to it live or she will shrivel up and die. Also, she is a federal government employee so her computer is locked down worse than a teenage girl when Pedobear is in the neighborhood.

  2. Re:True on Ask Slashdot: Best Cell Phone Carrier In the US? · · Score: 1

    I don't use much data and that is definitely something I am thinking about when I get a new plan. Part of the reason is if I do anything data-heavy with my phone, I do it at home over wifi. My wife is worse since she is always streaming stuff at work. I'm about to make her get her own account and deal with it, too much drama about "needing" to stream stuff 8 hours a day at work.

  3. Re:True on Ask Slashdot: Best Cell Phone Carrier In the US? · · Score: 1

    Seriously, you spend $150+ a month for a cell phone or is that for your entire family?

    $168/month with Verizon. Two smartphones, grandfathered into the $30/month unlimited data (for a little bit longer at least). Dumb phone for my elderly mother. So between data and family share, that's $80/month. Add in the unlimited text and other crap, that's $100/moneth. So $68/month for the base plan plus taxes and bullshit fees and junk. Yeah it sucks, but who's better? Is it worth $5/month or so for the hassle?

  4. Re:Google is Evil on Google Could Face Heavy Antitrust Fines In the EU · · Score: 1

    I notice Apple and MS don't sue Google they go after the small men who haven't the finances to fight back.

    I guess Samsung is a small man with no finances. Assuming you don't count billions in revenue and the largest slice of the tablet market. Or how about the lawsuits between Microsoft and Motorola.

  5. Re:I see on Ubuntu Will Now Have Amazon Ads Pre-Installed · · Score: 2

    This is why Red Hat actually succeeds. They make their money from the enterprise users: servers and business desktops with RHEL. The "desktop for the masses" is Fedora. Everyone wins: Red Hat makes money from the server/enterprise market, and home users can reap the benefits of a solid distribution.

    With Ubuntu you have a (until recently) good desktop distribution, but no clear way to make money and keep the train rolling. If Shuttleworth had created a server distro and aggressively marketed it, things probably would have turned out better than they will in another year or so. Just like Microsoft, Canonical is going to be late to the tablet party and pretty much locked out of the market. For a variety of reasons, Apple and Google control that market and it is unlikely that either Microsoft or Canonical will be able to control more than a few percent of the market. Definitely not enough to matter.

  6. Re:Odd... on Judge Rules Sniffing Open Wi-Fi Networks Is Not Wiretapping · · Score: 1

    I think that the difference between your conversations and pizza ordering on an analog transmission and on a digital one WRT 4th amendment protection should be zero.

    This isn't about analog v. digital. With an unencrypted cell phone transmission you are still paying for service and not just anyone is allowed on the network. Your phone has an ID that tells the carrier who you are so they can allow you to use the network and to bill you for service.

    With an unencrypted wifi hotspot, it is open for anyone to use. Perhaps you may need to purchase something and enter a code in your web browser (although this is more and more rare), but by and large, the wifi owner doesn't care who you are. They are providing a service to anybody, not specific individuals.

    Put it this way, with a car analogy. If I lend my car to a friend and charge money, there's no big deal. But if I advertise and let anyone rent my car, I am suddenly operating a business and a whole different set of rules and laws apply.

  7. Other people are perfectly free to dream up their own innovative characters. Nintendo does not have a monopoly on this process.

    What incentive do Nintendo have to come up with new material when they can simply rehash the same old crap over and over? How many Lion King movies do we need? Letting this stuff go into the public domain means they can keep rehashing it, but will be encouraged to develop new stuff. Since the entertainment market has a high barrier to entry to have the kind of exposure that these big companies have, it would benefit everyone.

  8. Re:Meh on Review: New Super Mario Bros. 2 Illustrates Nintendo's Greatest Problem · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes and no, because as Jim Sterling wrote about this last week on the escapist they USED to add new gameplay twists with each release like Zelda does. Now you have games like Meatboy and Rayman doing new things and giving us new twists while Mario...just treads water.

    I guess its time for the big N to either bring some new talent in or let Mario rest for a few years because they are just rehashing now. Nobody wants to see Mario become another generic where they just slap a new coat of paint and trot it out, Mario is to Nintendo as Sonic was to Sega, you're supposed to bring your A game when you use the mascot.

    This is one more example of how copyright is hurting innovation. If properties such as Mario or Mickey Mouse were in the public domain, the companies that created them would be encouraged to create new mascot characters and innovate with their entertainment. Instead, we get tired old rehashes again and again. This is why I haven't purchased a Nintendo system in 20 years. I'll play games on the Wii or whatever at a friend's house and feel thoroughly underwhelmed, like I've played the game or one almost like it before.

  9. Re:Ah yes, the American dream... on Intellectual Ventures Tied To 1,300 Shell Companies · · Score: 1

    You mean how like how in the US the government can take away your business and give the property to some mega-corp with deep government ties via eminent domain?

    How often does this really happen, though?

  10. Re:History on Why Apple Is Suing Every Android Manufacturer In Sight · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are you under the impression that SEA lost? They won, and forced Phil Katz to abandon PKARC. Not PKZip, which was what Katz came up with him after he was forbidden to use the SEA file format.

    SEA won the battle, but Phil Katz won the war when the ARC format fizzled and died leaving ZIP as the predominant compressed file format.

    I think the OP was saying let Apple win their lawsuits, they're still drowning in a sea of droids in terms of market share.

  11. Re:The Mind is amazing on Beware the Nocebo Effect · · Score: 0, Troll

    No surprise here, the mind controls the body. Why wouldn't the placebo effect work both ways?

    Not just the "placebo effect" but what if the so-called "inert ingredients" weren't inert? Some placebos are sugar pills -- my body, while not diabetic, doesn't metabolize sugar well. Drinks with HFCS give me migraines, for example. A sugar placebo would certainly have side effects not even considering the mind over matter aspect of the situation. That could cause an anti-migraine pill to make the situation worse, or cause reduced kidney/liver function as my body works overtime to purge the sugar from my blood (my body isn't used to refined carbs like sugar).

  12. Re:No.. on Is It Time For an OpenGL Gaming Revolution? · · Score: 1

    I should also have been more clear that I meant that Direct3D is the only part of DirectX that competes with OpenGL directly.

    True, but anymore, the distinction matters only on a technical level. Who plays games without sound or high-precision input? Without its other sub-components, DirectX is meaningless to an end user. Without the likes of OpenAL, OpenGL is meaningless to an end user.

    I remember when MS announced the whole DirectX concept, and I never thought it would work - I had thought the overhead of the Windows OS was too much of a resource hog compared to DOS to get reliable performance in games. But the ease of writing to one API, versus having to code your game to support all the different hardware on the market, won out among developers.

    Early Windows was a resource hog, even Windows 95. Back when you had tiny amounts of memory and the responsibilities of the OS was growing beyond "display a flashing underscore and let programs do whatever they want (DOS)" every megabyte counted. But I also knew it was a hassle switching between DOS and Windows 3.x just to run different programs. When I heard that DirectX was coming, I was very hopeful. Being able to stay in Windows (95) all the time and not need to switch out to DOS for games was huge. I think the first big title I played that was written for DirectX was Diablo. Despite being hopeful about DirectX I was still skeptical. That removed all doubt that it was a good thing, and I've never looked back.

    Now I'm running Windows 7 and Kubuntu 12.04 on two desktops and thinking back to the "good" old days I wonder how I ever got by.

  13. Re:No.. on Is It Time For an OpenGL Gaming Revolution? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft wanted to encourage game developers to embrace Windows 95 at a time when Win 3.11 had been seen as a business-application-only platform, with DOS preferred for games. DirectX was developed as a collection of APIs for games running in Windows 95 that handled input, graphics, music, sound, networking, etc.

    DOS was preferred for games because it allowed low-level hardware access. Windows 3.x required everyone to use dog-slow GDI for graphics, which was only good for stuff like solitaire and minesweeper.

    With DOS mostly invisible in Windows 95, Microsoft knew they would be completing against their own legacy OS so they had to change it. They had to create a way to play games in Windows but still allow low-level hardware access. DirectX was born.

  14. Re:Easier headline... on Being Honest In Exit Interviews Is Pointless · · Score: 1

    So, as was eventually backed up by the state employment agency, they fired me (and still insisted that they were just taking my resignation early).

    Did they pay you for the time you would have worked? If so, they accepted your resignation early and paid severance since you agreed to work the full term. It may also matter if it was an at-will employment state: it is more difficult to fight these things, but unless you really did burn bridges, they often don't have a valid reason for firing you and may have to pay unemployment if nothing else.

  15. Re:Religion on Finding Fault With Anti-Fracking Science Claims · · Score: 0, Troll

    Genesis being one of the best examples of 'motivated reasoning' that there is.

    As a Christian myself, I have to agree. Genesis is full of allegories, the Judo-Christian version of mythology. Much of the Bible is. That is why in some cases, for example the Gospels, there are multiple accounts of the same events: the humans that wrote the books, sometimes decades after the events took place, are fallible and forgetful. I just wish most religious types would understand this, and get off their soapboxes sometimes.

    It is the same thought process as what the article is talking about: people believe what they want to believe and will argue until their death about it.

  16. Re:That is no prediction on Asimov's Psychohistory Becoming a Reality? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    while the North made their money on the backs of poor lower-class workers who were exploited just as bad

    Yeah, all those whippin's and amputations and such that the poor lower-class workers got... er, wait.

    Working in crappy factories where injuries were common, to include losing digits, limbs, etc., yeah. Where if you quit, the only other jobs were just as bad. Sure, slaves had to deal with stuff like being whipped, raped, etc. but the living conditions of a slave were comparable to the Northern working class, and the hope of changing one's situation was equally as abysmal. Meanwhile, the crime and other crap the working class in the North dealt with (including beatings, rape, etc) were almost as bad.

    Slavery is evil and was never good. My point is the plight of a non-slave working class in that time was almost as bad. Look at the whole picture: not just the employer/slavedriver, but where did those people live? What did they deal with on a daily basis?

    Makes me grateful that the worst I deal with is my tendonitis and the risk of CTS.

  17. Re:That is no prediction on Asimov's Psychohistory Becoming a Reality? · · Score: 0

    So what's our policy for deciding which people's rights get protected?

    Oil.

    Roll the dice, and if their country is important to our strategic economic interests we intervene, otherwise we don't?

    Forget the dice, read the words between your commas.

    And whose right were we protecting on those occasions that we knocked off or destabilized democratically elected governments to put some thuggish warlord into power?

    Large U.S. corporations who will profit from it, and will consequently pour money into reelection campaigns.

  18. Re:That is no prediction on Asimov's Psychohistory Becoming a Reality? · · Score: 2

    FWIW, I don't think any historians would agree that we fought WWII to protect the rights of any people (other than US self interest). The US entered WWII to stop Japan from gaining too much influence in the Pacific (of course we were at the same time giving lots of money to England in their fight against Germany, but that wasn't really to protect their rights either). History records that it all came to head when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. The fact that Germany wanted to pick a direct fight with the US pretty much gave us no choice but to go over to Europe for real too...

    This is a much more complex and nuanced topic, but it comes down to this: FDR/HST wanted to get involved in the war, but Congress refused to issue a formal declaration (remember the Constitution and its rules about war? Our current politicians don't). Japan attacked us on our soil, giving Congress no option but to declare war against them. Two days (if I remember correctly) they were convinced to declare war on Germany/Italy as well since they basically declared war on us.

    Once war is declared, the thing to remember is this. The 48 states are slightly larger than Europe. We have one government. They have many. At that time, each nation stood alone, not really working together. Since they refused to unite, they were conquered, one by one. The U.S. immediately resolved itself as a single unit to attacking in force. Imagine if Hitler attacked France, but every other European nation banded forces and attacked as a single unit. That would have been like the U.S. slowly steamrolling across Europe from the Atlantic to Berlin, which we did. WW2: The Sequel was won by the fact that the U.S. had far more resources than any single European nation and was motivated to spill its own blood to save our allies (if you fail, the next battles will be on our East coast).

  19. Re:That is no prediction on Asimov's Psychohistory Becoming a Reality? · · Score: 5, Informative

    The American Civil Was was about *more* than slavery, but it's ridiculous to say that it wasn't about slavery.

    My U.S. History professor, who wrote a dissertation about the civil war, agrees but in a slightly different way. He said it was an economic war. It just so happened that the economics of the South were based on slave labor. So while Congressmen in both chambers of Congress from both sides of the Mason-Dixon line were debating economic strife, the underlying issue was that the South made their money on the backs of slaves, while the North made their money on the backs of poor lower-class workers who were exploited just as bad but were free to walk away from their jobs.

    Nothing was good about either side in those times, but the North was slightly less bad.

  20. Re:Also, another interesting point. on Entangled Histories: Climate Science and Nuclear Weapons Research · · Score: 1

    Equally they also killed off a number of trees too, but not enough that greenery can't handle it to a the extent it has.

    Much of the CO2 processing occurs in the oceans by plankton. Trees definitely help, but plankton does more. Of course plankton is dying too and it's much more difficult to remedy than planting more trees.

  21. Re:Can somebody please explain..... on Asteroid Crashes Likely Gave Earth Its Water · · Score: 2

    I mean, if it could form on comets or asteroids, why could it not have formed right here on Earth the same way it forms elsewhere? Why is there such a predisposition to the notion that water must have come from somewhere else?

    Earth, in its early years, was a molten ball of rock and metal. Pretty much all the junk that's swirling around in the mantle today, plus the stuff in the crust that floated to the top. Think Jupiter's moon Io, but bigger, and it eventually cooled off. Anyway, when a planet is that hot, the water boils and becomes vapor.

    Being that I am not an astronomer or astrophysicist, I'm not going to conjecture what really happened: but the theory goes that since Earth was too hot, water must have been delivered to it later on. Since asteroids are small and were freezing cold while Earth was super-hot, the theory goes that asteroids bombarded Earth and delivered water.

    What I don't get is why would it not be possible for the water to have boiled off the surface, but floated to the top of whatever primordial atmosphere the Earth had? Or if no atmosphere, just hang out near the surface until things cooled off?

  22. Re:Recommended Reading on FBI To Review Use of Forensic Evidence In Thousands of Cases · · Score: 1

    Do you really think there is anyone behind bars that's in agreement with their sentence?

    Yes. There are people who plead guilty because they know they are guilty and deserve to go to jail. They enter their plea knowing what the possible sentences are, and implicitly agree to said sentence.

    Granted most people would plead not guilty and take a spin of the Wheel of Justice, but there are a few exceptions.

  23. Re:I don't see much to miss on DirecTV Drops Viacom Channels · · Score: 1

    Next, if you don't have to have HD, drop to the lowest TV package, or if you can get what you need online, drop TV altogether.

    My wife and I have the lowest TV package, basically the local channels only and it has HD. Comes in better than OTA broadcasts (and I have a good HD antenna), and it's only a few dollars. I don't watch much TV but my wife does, and she's slowly discovering that the Internet has ways to watch shows without the FBI knocking on the door. So there goes any desire to "upgrade" to 100 channels we won't watch for the "low" price of another $80.

  24. Re:Moles at Microsoft and apple on In Face of Flame Malware, Microsoft Will Revamp Windows Encryption Keys · · Score: 5, Informative

    The only way out of this is to use an open source operating system where you can do your own code review, and where one guy doesn't have a bottle neck of control.

    Yes and no. Open source doesn't guarantee security. For example, BIND had a long history of bugs (many of which involved security) due to poor design prior to version 9. You didn't need a mole or any malicious intent when the software was so full of big holes you could drive your car through them. OpenBSD had an alleged FBI back door in the news a couple years ago that had lain unnoticed for years.

    Then again, there are examples of open source uncovering security issues. A quick google search uncovered this old one and this more recent one. By the way, if it sounds like I'm picking on BSD, I was searching for that FBI link. The other stuff just popped up. I know the various BSDs have a reputation for stability and security.

  25. Re:Beginning of the End on Best Buy Cuts 650 Geek Squad Techies · · Score: 1

    ...anything above 5 dollars is retarded for a HDMI cable.

    Bullshit. I spent $9 on a 15 footer and it was clearly NOT retarded. I can sit on the couch and have my laptop display on my HDTV without tripping over the cable. Also, my wife and I can watch... movies... in bed on the HDTV in the bedroom.