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User: O('_')O_Bush

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Comments · 1,391

  1. Short answer on Splashtop Drops Windows 8 Metro Testbed Onto Android · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Want to try out the Windows 8 Metro interface on your Android tablet?"

    Nope. Bye...

  2. Re: Ex-Military on Ask Slashdot: Ambitious Yet Ethical Software Jobs? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Everyone that pays taxes does that.

  3. Re:Another weakness on MorphOS 3.0 Released: Refusing To Let the PPC Desktop OS Die Gracefully · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just for reader enjoyment, prices range from 49€ (Efika) to 111.11€ for PowerPC. That seems like a lot for an OS that can't even do wireless.

  4. Not Bill on History Will Revere Bill Gates and Forget Steve Jobs, Says Author · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't know why we keep talking about Bill Gates being a philanthropist. Bill is a sociopath that gets a kick out of stealing from all of us and making money in the most cutthroat ways possible.

    Melinda Gates is the soul that Bill doesn't have, and she is the one that does the philanthropic work, with Bill's money.

  5. Re:What would be nice would be on Why Visual Basic 6 Still Thrives · · Score: 1

    There *wasn't* a good reason to switch from XP, until M$ stopped or threatened to stop releasing security patches for it, which is a big no-no for many companies.

  6. Re:Might as well... on Why Visual Basic 6 Still Thrives · · Score: 2, Funny

    So much troll, so few words.

  7. Re:A tad longer than that on Where Are All the High-Resolution Desktop Displays? · · Score: 1, Funny

    500$ isn't worth it to your OEM, since nobody else has the life crippling handicap of the inability to move a USB connector a few inches to plug in a full keyboard into the side of their laptop or dock.

  8. Re:a little understated on In Australia, Apple Fined $2.5 Million For '4G' Advertising Claims · · Score: 3, Informative

    There are zero 4G towers in any countries, including the U.S. The best we have are technically 3.5 G, as no service yet meets the 4G standard.

  9. Re:What if? on Linux For Navy Drone Ground Stations · · Score: 1

    Don't get your hopes up. Most defenze development networks are only accessible by cleared sneakers, and the data goes only one way (in, not out). A Chinese spy might get access, but not likely a hacker.

  10. Re:What if? on Linux For Navy Drone Ground Stations · · Score: 1

    You need to learn the morally significant difference between killing and murder.

  11. Re:What does Stallman think, I wonder? on Linux For Navy Drone Ground Stations · · Score: 1

    Linux has been in the defense industry almost since it has been around. In fact, this is only the second time I've heard of a major system #not# using linux.

    In your anti-defense industry world, linux would be the OS of death.

  12. Re:Choice B has worked before on Earth Approaching Tipping Point Say Scientists · · Score: 3, Informative

    If we get out our pitchforks everytime someone cries wolf, then when will we have time to raise the sheep?

  13. Re:Girl Analogy on Why Do Programming Languages Succeed Or Fail? · · Score: 1

    I'm going to go with professors trying something and liking it, passing it on to their students, and the rest following from there. I realise this isn't a complete explanation, but I does help explain the momentum some languages have gained (looking at you, Python, Matlab, QT4/C++, VB).

  14. results location on Why Do Programming Languages Succeed Or Fail? · · Score: 1

    The results were a bit of a pain to find on my phone, and took a while to load, but if you are looking for them, you can mostly skip the methodology and go to the bottom of the page
      where there are a handful of not well separated links.

    The results didnt seem too surprising, other than that under their questions, Visual Basic and Assembly ended up clustered together.

  15. Re:Not surprised on Canada No Pirate Nation: Global Leader In Music Download Sales · · Score: 1

    Delusions of being special, different, and self righteous, anger towards a nameless, faceless opposer that is trying to suppress a "truth" that only you see... I can show you a dozen other paranoid schizophrenics on any given Sunday.

  16. Re:The biggest problem with design patterns... on Book Review: Elemental Design Patterns · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, it is really hard to be cutting edge and innovative when you spend almost all of your time and resources reinventing and maintaining your own versions of the wheel. Design patterns have important uses no matter the area of software, but it takes wisdom to tell the difference when a DP makes sense and when it doesn't.

  17. Re:What did the military expect? on Backdoor Found In China-Made US Military Chip? · · Score: 1

    You can thank budget cuts for that. You want a smaller defense budget? You get COTS(off the shelf parts) being built into critical areas. Where does COTS hardware come from? China, Taiwan, other places with little oversite or design quality control.

    You end up with this, a COTS FPGA with a backdoor. We see this kind of thing all the time on SSD controllers.

  18. Re:Kaspersky Again on Flame: The Massive Stuxnet-Level Malware Sweeping the Middle East · · Score: 1

    Maybe Russia has more access to middle eastern states that play nice with Russia than the U.S./Europe and their ties with Israel do?

  19. First, pick your brand. on Ask Slashdot: How To Shop For a Laptop? · · Score: 1

    Really, the biggest difference between laptops is the brand. Typically, more expensive laptops are better built laptops.

    Dells tend to break after a year. HP's, 6 months if you do anything other than leave them in one spot on your desk, a year otherwise.

    Lenovo's are basically rebranded IBMs, and are typically decently constructed. I've had good luck with Fujitsu as well, but only for their tablet notebooks (higher end).

    Mac's are higher priced, and higher end, but are also built well.

    Once you've figured out what brand you are buying, then the rest should be easier.

    You can go with a desktop type processor (AMD Phenom/Intel I5) or a more mobile oriented processor (AMD Turion/Intel Atom), with the tradeoff being that typically higher power CPUs make your battery life short. On the higher power processor side, you can usually shop around for a discrete graphics card model, which would allow you some limited videogame playing.

    From there, the options are usually HDD speeds and sizes (7200 RPM being fast, but power hungry, 5400 RPM being slow, but good battery life, and SSD being fast, good battery life, but small in space), screen size ( > size == > bulk/weight), and RAM/memory (less practicality for more RAM, and laptop RAM is usually much higher priced per GB).

    So it depends on what you want to do.

    If you intend to use it mostly on travel, pick one with a mobile style processor, a moderately sized SSD (maybe 32GB-64GB, with Linux, 128GB+ with Windows 7), and a smaller screen size/lighter weight.

    If you intend to use it mostly as a desktop replacement, pick one with a good processor (Phenom/I5/I7), a nice sized 7200 RPM HDD (300+GB), a discrete graphics card, and a large screen.

    And of course, one that fits your budget (which you should probably increase).

    I hope that helps a little bit in explaining the options.

  20. Re:We alter our brains all the time on Bioethicist Jonathan Moreno Talks Jacked-In Soldiers And Military Neuroscience · · Score: 2

    We ban what some faction of the gov't or interest group can convince the public should be banned. There was a push in the 50s to ban rock and roll, but the lack of public support killed that idea.

  21. Re:Oh dear on EU Blocks France's Ban of Monsanto's GM Maize · · Score: 2

    Bee population die-offs have been causually linked to the systemic pesticides that some GMO crops have been bred to produce. Effectively, the pesticides are a neurotoxin, and traces of the toxin in the nectar bees feed on cause them to slowly "go crazy", breaking down the social structure before abandoning their hives.

    So you are correct that it isn't cause by roundup ready crops, but rather some of Monsanto's other products. The roundup ready controversy stems from the treatment of farmers that dont ise roundup ready crops by serving them patent lawsuits when cross pollination occurs naturally.

  22. Re:No wrongful death? on Rutger's Student Dharun Ravi Sentenced To 30-Day Jail Time · · Score: 1

    Right, and the people who jumped off the burning and collapsing Twin Towers did so because they were cowards and chose not to seek help? The world isn't black and white, and you don't know shit about it.

  23. Re:Hollywood still pissed of Edison? on Disentangling Facts From Fantasy In the World of Edison and Tesla · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I see it as a sign of the times. 30 years ago, in the depths of the Cold War, of course the US would acknowledge one of their own, a born and bred American, over a competitor from a Soviet bloc country.

  24. Re:Fascinating .. but .. on An 8,000 Ton Giant Made the Jet Age Possible · · Score: 2

    I dont know why you are using the UK as the standard... being that it is the only country I'm aware of that still uses the "stone" as a unit of weight measurement.

  25. Re:Verizon on American Cellular Companies Clamor For Fresh Spectrum · · Score: 1

    It is only good business... why would you wait until you are screwed to do anything about it? It is far better to grab spectrum and use up what you have until you can get more, than force yourself to stop providing until you can expand. Telcoms might be evil, but they aren't idiots.