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User: ET3D

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  1. Re:They're not gamers. on Among Gamers, Adult Women Vastly Outnumber Teenage Boys · · Score: 2

    "Gamer" is associated with people who spend most of their time playing games inside their mancave.

    Don't you mean "in their parents' basement?" :)

    Sure, if you limit the definition to men then by that definition only men can be gamers. If you define by game time, I'm sure women will still have a good representation.

  2. Re:Another child making unsupported claims on 15-Year-Old Developing a 3D Printer 10x Faster Than Anything On the Market · · Score: 1

    I assume that by "we" you mean "cynics".

  3. Re:Sad, but... on HUGO Winning Author Daniel Keyes Has Died · · Score: 1

    I do think it's news for nerds, but I'm more saddened by the death of Jay Lake this month, just before his 50th birthday.

  4. Now I understand why Popular Science ... on The Singularity Is Sci-Fi's Faith-Based Initiative · · Score: 1

    ... shut down its comments section.

  5. Re:In other news, criminal aggression... on Study: Video Gamer Aggression Result of Game Experience, Not Violent Content · · Score: 1

    Not sure what you're talking about, I always found Mario Kart Wii to be easy. How hard can the controls be, you mostly just use the wheel and occasionally activate a boost. Then again, I don't remember blue turtle shells so maybe I'm missing something.

    Back to the point, as I said frustration leading to anger is not something which needs research, it's very easy to see on my 4 year old. To quote the BBC article about the research we're talking about "one recent study suggested that playing violent video games for long periods of time can hold back the "moral maturity" of teenagers." (To clarify, the BBC is talking about another research, not the one we're talking about, but it was in an article about that) Which goes back to what I said: one things which could be studied is how players of violent gamer deal with frustration compared to other players and non-players.

  6. In other news, criminal aggression... on Study: Video Gamer Aggression Result of Game Experience, Not Violent Content · · Score: 1

    ... is linked to insults, not abuse when growing up.

    I won't repeat everything I posted elsewhere, but really, that's the stupidest research I've heard of in a long time. First of all, starting with calling a version of Half Life 2 where enemies evaporate "non-violent". So, if there's no blood it's not violence? If you just disintegrate people that's a non-violent game? That's such a basic problem with definitions that I feel that the researchers should be taken out and evaporated non-violently.

    Then there's the conclusion. Sure, people can get angry when they are frustrated. You don't have to be a genius to know that. A more interesting question would be how well people deal with that frustration. Do players of violent game tend to have worse control of their temper in this respect than others? That would be more interesting than the stupid conclusions here.

    (And I'd like to apologise to the researchers, I haven't read the research paper, just the articles on various sites, and it's possible that it's only the writers of these editorials who are jumping to conclusions. However I'm sure that the "non-violent Half life 2" is part of the original article, and as such I can believe that the rest of the stupidity also exists there.)

  7. The price will go up, but I think it's a bubble on Ask Slashdot: Do You Still Trust Bitcoin? · · Score: 1

    I don't know about trust. Bitcoin is a speculative market, and it will probably always be like that, because the characteristics of bitcoin make it a commodity and not money. I can't see it ever being used directly as money (i.e., without going through a "real" currency such as dollars).

  8. Speaking on different aspects on A Rebuttal To Charles Stross About Bitcoin · · Score: 1

    If one side argues concept and the other argues implementation issues, they can easily both be right. Stross was wrong on several levels, but saying that he misses the point of the concept is the stupidest rebuttal one can make.

  9. Re:Survey on IBM Uses Internal Kickstarters To Pick Projects · · Score: 1

    Right (and wrong, see below). This is a bad article by Network World, trying to frame this as crowdfunding, and bundling it with other crowdfunding news. It's possible that this is how IBM presented the subject to them, but I'd have liked a bit more critical thinking from the reporter.

    The result is that most comments here make it clear that people didn't get what IBM did. To quote the relevant part of the article: "they were able to propose and fund projects designed to improve corporate culture and staff morale".

    Where you're wrong is that it's not a survey or poll, because the suggestions come from the employees. That's where this scheme is better, because the company is saying "we're giving you a maximum of $50,000, what would you do with it?" rather than the higher ups providing the suggestions.

  10. Any official announcement? on AMD/ATI Drops Windows XP Support · · Score: 1

    Googling for AMD dropping XP I found posts from October 2012 claiming the same thing: a driver came out with no XP support, end of the world is coming. I haven't been able to find anything official about AMD discontinuing XP support. Doesn't mean it doesn't exist, but I feel that a post will at least have a link to relevant proof. Linking to a beta driver as a form of proof just doesn't cut it IMO.

  11. It works and I'm used to it on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    I haven't had problems with Windows for a long while (I'm on 7 now, but it was true for Vista too). It has the software I want and I'm used to using it.

    I haven't tried Linux lately. When I did, it was a little bit of hell, closest in my experience to a beta of Vista. It didn't like my hardware, I had to edit text files to get it to work correctly on a second drive, installing a display driver was a bit of hell and killed the display, GUI programs silently failed, printing their errors only to a console, ...

    That was maybe 3 years ago. I tried again later, and at least hardware-wise it was better, but the OS was still a little too rough. Perhaps these days the experience will be better, but I just don't have the time to waste on trying to get a non-Windows system to work just for the hell of it. Sure, I like alternative OS's, but I see no practical benefit for the switch and enough drawbacks.

  12. Re:Distraction. on Siri's Creator Challenges Texting-While-Driving Study · · Score: 1

    Few people completely focus on driving. It's nearly impossible to drive for long periods and not think of anything else.

  13. Re:one more distraction while driving on Siri's Creator Challenges Texting-While-Driving Study · · Score: 1

    The phone conversation distraction is precisely why something like Siri would be a good alternative. Texting isn't immediate, so there's less pressure to respond immediately or someone who continuously hammers at your ears.

  14. Re:I agree with this change on Amazon: Authors Can't Review Books · · Score: 1

    "Most of us writers aren't petty jerks who enjoy tearing other people down undeservedly."

    Speak for yourself. :)

    More seriously, consider your use of "undeservedly".

    Writers are a lot more critical of writing than the average reading public. Any good writer has some experience with critiquing other work and getting her own work critiqued. Any good writer will have an eye for what she considers errors in the way sentences are strung, scenes are described, point of view, etc., etc. I've been in critique groups. A lot of writers slam things just because they would write them differently.

    I said "any good writer" because these days it's easy to publish books without going through and editor, and this means people who think their writing is perfect and can't benefit from comments are out there, and they will likely slam other books with less of a rational basis.

    Either way, writers aren't to be trusted when it comes to how enjoyable the book is to the less discerning non-writers.

  15. AAA games are fun on Gameplay: the Missing Ingredient In Most Games · · Score: 1

    The blockbuster games are fun. That's why people play them, and they make a gazillion dollars on the first day of sales. To claim that somehow indies know better flies in the face of reality. Sure occasionally some indies make a decent amount of money, but it still pales in comparison to what the AAA games make.

    It's okay to claim that these big budget games are holding the art of games back, or that they don't always succeed in getting the formula perfect, but claiming they're not fun? Maybe they're not fun to a subset of people. But most indie games are not fun for a larger subset of people.

  16. Many free projects ask for donations on Ask Slashdot: Funding Models For a Free E-book? · · Score: 1

    Donations can help to continue the development of a free project, which is why a lot of free projects ask for them. There's nothing bad in that, and occasionally if I use a free piece of software a lot I will pay its developer some money, because this kind of thing does encourage a developer to continue.

    That's how I understand "economically sustainable". Dan Spalding wants to create more free books, but working on them at his own expense is not practical. Enough donations could help sustain this idea indefinitely.

  17. Mention it in the book on Ask Slashdot: Funding Models For a Free E-book? · · Score: 1

    I think you shouldn't put a price on the book, but do mention the possibility of donation in the book (in the preface and possibly elsewhere). Write something like "if you enjoy this book or find it useful, please consider donating a small sum at my web page http://.../ to help me create more free books."

  18. Re:Interesting questions on Virgin Galactic's Quiet News: Virgin Now Owns The SpaceShip Company · · Score: 1

    If it's space ships for tourists vs. no space ships at all, I'm definitely all for the tourists.

  19. Likely to increase ad-hominem arguments on Will Real Name Policies Improve Comments? · · Score: 1

    Using your full name will enable people to easily guess (though they may be wrong) your gender and ethnicity. That's great trolling material.

  20. ZX80 looked nicer on Sinclair ZX81 Made Out of Lego · · Score: 1

    White and blue, with some orange. A lot more interesting than the drab ZX81.

  21. Re:There is no "issue." *I* own my files and data on Rethinking the Nature of Files · · Score: 1

    That's exactly the ownership that Microsoft is writing about. Do you want Facebook to be able to publish your photos even after you've deleted them (and possibly deleted your account)? The article also mentions Amazon's Kindle lending. Buyers of e-books want to be able to lend and resell their books, they want ownership.

    Sure, all these things require DRM, but just because it can be used in annoying manners doesn't mean it's not useful for people in general.

  22. Use Bar Tab and Memory Fox on Ask Slashdot: Best Small-Footprint Modern Browser? · · Score: 1

    These two plugins are must haves, IMO. Bar Tab needs a little massage to get to work in FF4 (there are details in the reviews) but that's detailed in the reviews on the plugin page (or use FF3). With them FF3 used under 300MB with tons of tabs, while Opera uses over 1GB for the same number of tabs. (I'm currently using Opera, switched because FF4 wasn't compatible with the plugins I wanted, but that's on a 8GB system. And I hate the memory footprint.)

  23. True in theory, but even scientists are people on Is Science Just a Matter of Faith? · · Score: 1

    Science is a matter of faith even to many scientists. Science may be able to back up a theory to an extent, but scientists use belief to take it beyond what science can prove, and look on others who don't believe in the theory as lesser people. An always topical example is how "global warming skeptics" are treated as heretics, but there are other (perhaps better) examples of scientists sticking to theories even when they start to lose favour.

    People are programmed to believe. Science may be vastly different from religion, but trust or faith in both probably use the same psychological mechanism in most people.

  24. Re:No on Ask Slashdot: Would You Take a Pay Cut To Telecommute? · · Score: 1

    Getting a separate phone line for work is one way to overcome this. I've known people with a work cell and home cell. Don't need it myself, but it depends on the job.

  25. Re:No on Ask Slashdot: Would You Take a Pay Cut To Telecommute? · · Score: 1

    I've known people who work very long hours just so that they get away from their families. It's sad.