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User: LarrySDonald

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  1. Re:Assuming We're still around on New Most Precise Clock Based On Aluminum Ion · · Score: 1

    'Sok. My timex syncs to Colorado. Now I just need to either get people to care or cure my OCD to the point where 1s/week isn't unacceptable.

  2. Re:Alt Title: Judge Makes Damages Only Mostly Insa on Judge Lowers Jammie Thomas' Damages to $54,000 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Hear hear. Talk about magnet effect - $2M is harsh but so is $54k. $54 might be fair. Twice the market value of the stolen property and $6 extra punitive.

  3. Isn't that kind of the end goal? on 75% of Linux Code Now Written By Paid Developers · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I use linux professionally. So does most of the web. We're "forced" to GPL any improvements we have to make in the process of getting the job done. "Forced" is in quotes because fair is fair - so did everyone else including those bat**** crazy people following Linus and Sallman who wrote the seeds that grew into this and frankly I feel I'm getting more then I could ever give (at best correcting the occasional bug). GPL is there so it's clear to the managers that if you have a problem with that, feel free to pay quite handsomely. It's cheaper to improve linux (and/or the rest of GNU) then it is to not use it. Epic score - that was the whole point all along, right?

  4. Split it on Brain Drain, Admin Failures Threaten the FCC's Role · · Score: 1

    Split "censoring airwaves" and "managing frequency blocks". I know they sound similar, but when it was mostly about managing what went where in the spectrum, there was cred (sometimes grudging) from those transmitting. There was some hate, but kind of like hot rodders v highway cops. Censorship of what has already been let onto a frequency or spectrum gets no real respect - you have to pay for talent in full dollars with a little extra for the anti-cred you get for being involved in it. Split them into two parts (and then feel free to take the second out back and shoot it, but that's a pipe dream) and the people doing actual sorting of spectrum can perhaps get some talent that wouldn't touch F*CC with a ten foot pole.

  5. Re:Single person != single identity on Dragging Telephone Numbers Into the Internet Age · · Score: 1

    Hell of a lot of it. If you want to be found, you can easily get your name (with perhaps a general location, like "John Random Loser, Iowa") to be the top google hit. Put everything you please on the page, including any phone numbers, addresses, GPS coordinates, etc. There you go - anyone who knows your name and perhaps some minor detail to tell you apart from namespace crashes can find out all of your contact info. But we don't do that, because of the people we'd prefer didn't find us. We'd like a degree of control over who gets what and a modicum of firewalls to limit damage when one of the IDs get found out by the wrong people and has to be abandoned.

  6. Hmm.. on Robotics Prof Fears Rise of Military Robots · · Score: 1

    Well, supposing both sides use them we'll be approaching essentially playing battlebots for it. Of course it'd be even better if we could like flip for it or play chess for it, but it's kind of a step (or stumble) forward.

  7. Re:But... on Google Attackers Identified as Chinese Government · · Score: 1

    The same standard as everyone else sucks, including for everyone else. Figure out a standard that works. Fair price for innovation, fair price for production. Right now, neither is - the US isn't using Vaseline (TM) on how things are produced, but happy to complain about what IP get made. Equally, China, as much of the area, isn't that interested in paying obscene patent fees. And while anything is underground you might as well shove it underground all the way - products made at gunpoint and zero worry about what is legal. Go to your room. Both of you. No, really, STFU. I won't hear a word more until you both can behave like adults.

  8. No way to tell on Kodak Sues Apple & RIM Over Preview In Cameras · · Score: 1

    The story omits the rather important detail of the patent number. Without it (and a link wouldn't hurt) it's rather hard to tell how much merit there is. On a broader scale, it goes to show how messed up the patent system is. The scales lean so far toward "pointless patent trolls" that it's virtually assumed anyone suing over a patent is wrong. Kodak do hold several well-earned patents (though not photostatic copies - nya nya nya) and it's not a bad idea to get people paid for coming up with good ideas. Then again, you can't expect to get paid forever or for something that is blatantly obvious given the tech at hand at time of "discovery". The balance is horrible right now.

  9. Ok, are we done yet? on Control Your Apps Without Your Finger · · Score: 1

    They said one day we'd be so high level we'd communicate our requests in interpretive dance. I figured saying "No way you'll get people to do that" was as safe as "640k will be enough for anyone". Ok, so you got me. Point an laugh. It's for sure what I'll do. I was thinking by now the backlash would have started. Sure, grind away the last few nanometers of the learning curve by shoving usefulness into the dirt and stepping on it. At some point, people will realize learning touch type wasn't such a bad idea because while it didn't work crazy good out of the box, it's way fast. Morse code with two switches beats T9. It's going to be a while until we beat the human brain for processing, so how about we use what we have?

  10. Re:The real story should be. . . on Novelist Blames Piracy On Open Source Culture · · Score: 1

    The craziest thing is we have libraries. Generally, if you want to read a paper book for free you can do so. A while back I got stuck in a weird dilemma. I wanted to reread "Of mice and men". Sort of. Not enough to pay for it. I wanted an ebook copy. There were none legally at the time. I grabbed a non-legal one. I considered buying a copy, just to keep thing even. Then I realized the local library had a copy. Except of course it's a bit dumb to use *their* copy, just so that I have legal access to the text so that I don't feel bad about grabbing an illegal e-version. When it comes to a head like that, the absurdity becomes pretty clear. They're in no more jeopardy then when the Gutenberg press started. Chill and roll with the times.

  11. Re:Hello, World! on English Shell Code Could Make Security Harder · · Score: 1

    Kind of thinking the same thing. Useful in the wild? Perhaps. Sometimes. Major blow for security? Hardly. Mindblowingly cool, especially given how frustrating much lesser limitations get? Totally. I've seen quite a few awesome "x86-with-harsh-limitations" (many just because, same reason as coding in brainfuck) but that's just out there. Hope they at least make an RSA poem..

  12. Re:Netbooks get handled a lot rougher . . . on Netbooks Have Higher Failure Rate Than Laptops · · Score: 1

    This was my first thought as well. They're also big with teens, a market group where I could easily see the non-techies accidentally breaking a cockpit voice recorder (I don't know how dad! I was just putting it on my bedstand and it broke! GAWD!). Sure, tech has gotten flimsier since the bulletproofs of yesteryear but people take their tech much more for granted as well, not giving the TLC we used to show it.

  13. About time on Former Microsoft CTO Builds Kitchen Laboratory · · Score: 1

    Growing up with a mom working as a chef or cook in various kitchens the whole way, I'd often be baffled by how awkward and backwards the tech involved was. Tons of stuff was clearly considered way obsolete by standards in non-food engineering. Like many fields (like cells having features you'd never see on a cordless or a car having features a house rarely has) cooking sticks to tradition for no particular reason. It's of course ok to treat it as an art, but while painting in oil has it's place it's also useful to have photoshop and an inkjet printer for when you need speed, flexibility and consistent results.

  14. Wouldn't a 6510 emu essentially be an interpreter? on Commodore 64 Runs Again On the iPhone · · Score: 1

    I mean, it is executing non-native code (6510 asm) without (I'm guessing) recompiling it for iPhone, providing a way to run programs with an in-between layer to not use the native stuff or keep Apples glorious blessing on the code. This is essentially what java or flash does, construct a secondary layer where code can run. On the other hand, Apple is Apple and pretty much reserves the right to be inconsistent, bizarre and allow or disallow things at will depending on what suits them so I guess it's par for the course.

  15. Re:Why you're not responding? on Recovering the Slums of the Internet? · · Score: 1

    Many do to prevent verifying the existence of an address. This is pretty reasonable, especially if the email leads itself to a username (not that they do much anymore) and to prevent general recon for compiling "good" lists. A few years back I wrote a script to verify a few hundred email addresses (for good, in fact you'd have to pay $100/month or so to be on it - some journal about labor law cases). About half would treat existing and non-existing addresses equally, of the rest about half sent bounces, half denied you in SMTP. I'm sure number have changed. In the far past, it was common to bounce "doesn't exist" to spam, hoping to be taken off the list. Kinda like beeping a fax tone at automated telemarketing dialers. Neither worked all that long.

  16. Re:one-letter domain? on PayPal Introduces Open API · · Score: 1

    I remember the launch, at the later time when they actually became useful I thought they'd simply changed their name to paypal or were named paypal but also linked x.com. The domain was touted for easy use on mobiles (a little doubtful since it's not significantly easier then any other domain and by the time mobiles with web made sense they were good enough to handle bookmarks). At the time only a little over half of the two-letter domains were taken and while 100% of singles were taken not all were registered that long ago.

  17. Re:...but Beyonce... on In-Game Advertising Makes Games Better? · · Score: 1

    And what, one might ask, was accomplished then? It looks a tiny bit less like Formula 1 and doesn't have to go through the pesky business of getting a bunch of money from people who sell crap to idiots allowing you to pay it all yourself instead? Brilliant dude, where do I sign up for that? I mostly prefer non-ad stuff, but a lot of real world stuff does have ads on it. If they do and you're emulating it, hell yeah, cash the checks instead of mine. I'm not much of a gamer (the games I prefer won't count as games and they won't get sponsors much) or a TV watcher. I think it's better to charge a fair price for a fair product then to go through the complicated business of charging a sponsor to put a sign on content you might enjoy which then would positively bias you toward said product causing you to buy it thus repaying the maker who paid the content producer. It seems overkill and less simple then paying for what you get. However, the world clearly doesn't see it that way and I'm a-ok with that, each to their own. I think pre- or post- game ads are really way more invasive then "product placement" type stuff. Either one gets in the way, but really, if you are to replicate reality it'll be there. You could replace it with "Koka Khola", sure, not much artistic loss but what's the point rather then just sticking it to Coke to fork up at least a little to have the real logo. And I don't think companies worry too much about carnage and mayhem. Ads work by "You're happier then you were a minute ago now due to enjoying something"->"You see our logo/pitch in front of you". One thing you can say for ad supported media is that it's very democratic in a ruthless sort of way, you won't get sponsors unless you can demonstrate X amount of impact on Y amount of people.

  18. Re:When does a netbook stop being a netbook? on ARM and Dual-Atom Processors in New Portables · · Score: 1

    I'd agree with "when people stop trying to draw artificial lines and realize hardware is hardware, only various degrees of suitable". My daughter (at six) uses an ancient laptop revived with linux and a PCMCIA WiFi off ebay. Is that a netbook? It sure works much like one - not a whole lot of power locally but enough so she can play online kids games. My sons Acer One is a lot faster and a lot smaller, though he uses it more like a laptop - MS Office and/or OpenOffice (I don't interrogate him on which he settled on) and all that - but it's mostly for online work. I use my laptop mostly online, but it's not especially powerful by todays standards which is OK because it's enough for what I need it for. There is no line - they fade seamlessly from 128x128 opera mini supporting boost phone all the way to laptops that would work fine as a small server via any device in between.

  19. Re:sooo.... on Software To Flatten a Photographed Book? · · Score: 1

    For one book, this kind of thinking makes sense. If this is a regularly occurring issue, it'd make sense to find a faster way then a flatbed scanner to get through it. I have no idea how feasible this is in real life. Working data entry we'd usually chop the back and put them in a sheet feed, but then you have a destroyed book and also sheet feed scanners aren't exactly commonplace. It's pretty interesting that there are at least some solutions around, I may just be too out of the loop to realize how much things have advanced.

  20. Re:Van Gogh. . . on Sony Ericsson Develops Contact Headphones · · Score: 1

    You can set it to mix them to one phone. Being a married man with three kids, I barely remember the concept of stereo - having one ear to play music into is a rarity, but not needing even one on the world at large is unheard of. Perhaps it's good to someone but I'm not sure how terribly difficult it is to tap a key or two to get your phones to do what you need.

  21. Re:Worst move ever, on TI vs. Calculator Hackers · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The point isn't that they're the target market, but that they are somewhat useful and completely harmless. I hacked on every calculator I used (you have to do something while watching the dry as paint lectures and they're an allowed tool in school. Hey, perhaps I do think this English lecture needs some mathematical analysis, who are you to judge?) and I have no earthly idea how exploring their deeper workings did any harm at all to the maker. Also, this is the group that will (I've noticed) be asked what calculator you should buy. I bought all that were allowed in school pretty much, so that won't help you, but I was also the go to guy for 20 and by extension hundreds for "Ok, so what's the deal here? What should I buy?". It's crazy. I'm not sure what they're trying to prevent. They sell hardware and pretty much that only. They're not razorblade - they charge full price for the hardware they sell. What's the point in even trying to prevent people from doing what they feel like with it? Of course they have certain amounts of right to do so, just as we have every right to not buy their crappy locked down platforms, but it's hard to see where alienating the enthusiasts, which by secondary steps will alienate a ton more who asked them "So what about TI?" and got the answer "Assholes sued me for trying to write a better point graph fitter. Don't buy it" while gaining nothing useful.

  22. Two I liked on Science, Technology, Natural History Museums? · · Score: 1

    Nothing terribly much locally. Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchinson was pretty cool last I saw it. Indianapolis Museum of Natural History was also pretty cool. They have a few here in Wichita, but unless it's just on the way anyhow I'm not so sure I'd bother.

  23. Re:Yes on The Ethics of Selling GPLed Software For the iPhone · · Score: 1

    This, to me, would be the core point of this whole debate. It is a hardware problem. iPhones (as most of Apples portable offerings) are not free (as in freedom) unless cracked open - those of us with the hard rule of "it runs my code or it doesn't get bought" only have them if morally ok with jailbreaking and unlocking them. That isn't the fault of some dudes trying to offer a version of xpilot (which is so cool BTW), that's Apple.

    I've seen "against the spirit" GPL stuff now and again doing document and image handling. A lot of software provides the source so that they can use a GPL toolchain, but provide it so obscurely and in such a form that it's virtually impossible to recompile, read or use and do so for the express purpose of extracting a bit of cash for paying for the particular implementation. That's wrong. I don't think that's what these guys are doing. Given a reasonable way to distribute, they probably would. Apple doesn't do that sort of thing, it's a rather "pay to play" business. Since (if that's indeed the case) the source, binary and distribution in general is as open as they can be under such a severely locked platform, then I'd figure they've done what they can then - the only other option is to not develop for the iPhone or to only have non-GPL stuff on the iPhone.

  24. Could be useful on NIH Spends $400K To Figure Out Why Men Don't Like Condoms · · Score: 1

    It's far from clear why men don't like to wear condoms and women don't like for men to wear condoms. The former is probably more likely, but the latter isn't unheard of. Sensitivity issues enter in, but there is certainly a psychological issue involved as well. You aren't skin on skin, not really. With the adult products now, some situations I'm not even sure a lot of people could pass a double-blind. However, there is also correct use, being able to get people to use it correctly (both for effectiveness and for not messing it up). You won't be in your right mind at the time. Or, at least that's what we're all hoping you won't be. So it kind of matters how much is what here and you won't get answers out of humans (yes, I'm one) because it doesn't work like that. Take out ten edge cases of people who would have otherwise not used rubber and you've easily paid for yourself (in actual cash, they have to be raised/treated). Not sure if that's the states job, but at least it's pretty likely to not be a waste. If, oddly, it produces nothing then at least we know a little more about the matter which would be handy.

  25. Don't be afraid to fake it a bit on Where Does a Geek Find a Social Life? · · Score: 1

    Not online - online be completely honest. People appreciate that. But while people say "OMG it's so easy to lie online", meatspace is usually no less (or, for that matter, more) deceptive and it's not even home turf. However, all those confident people are actually just pretending to be confident. I'm not saying go into full social engineering mode and lie like there's no tomorrow, but act as you would expect someone confident to act. Try to imagine how you'd act if this social thing wasn't a problem. Not snotty or "my calendar is full" but not as though you're desperate to get past saying "Hello" without embarrassing yourself (there's no shame in that, everyone secretly is). Surprisingly, it's way easier then it seems and everyone else is mostly pretending too anyhow so people will indeed believe you if you pretend to be confident. Most of the time. If they don't, reboot, accept that you just made a fool out of yourself and move on - the "cool" people did that too only you weren't there to see it.

    I'd think going for slightly non-geek girls would also be a good idea if it's going into a more long term thing (I know, I know - why think about that before the short term has even became remotely a reality, but it'll come up later since you'll make it). My wife (met online (yawn)) isn't nearly as geeky but abnormal enough to make her accept me as well as see that we compliment each other very well, doing many of each others formerly hard tasks (social issues - talk to my wife. tech issues - talk to my husband). It's a frustrating relationship at times, but man, you do not want to go up against us in meatspace - every base is covered.

    Also, make sure you research the.. more physical side of things carefully. Non-geeks dating or starting to date geeks expect us to be, while inexperienced, quite well versed (which is generally a very good guess) so be sure if it comes to that you keep our banner high.