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User: elronxenu

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  1. Re:That kind of thing has been done actually on 12-Year-Old Rewrites Einstein's Theory of Relativity · · Score: 1

    I can confirm that; the radios and TVs I repaired as a kid had pretty simple faults. Rarely a non-simple fault came around which I couldn't fix.

  2. Re:No. on Canadian Songwriters Propose $10/mo Internet Fee · · Score: 1
    Videos: $10/mo.
    Games: $10/mo.
    ebooks: $10/mo.
    Software: $10/mo.
    Music scores: $10/mo.
    Scientific papers: $10/mo.
    Recipes: $10/mo.
    Knitting instructions: $10/mo.

    There's an endless variety of types of copyrighted work. Paying a blanket fee for "music" only sets up the situation for the next type of content owner to demand their tithe from all.

    Disney: $10/mo.
    WB: $10/mo.
    Sony: $10/mo.
    CNN: $10/mo.
    FOX: $10/mo.

    Don't think these megacorporations won't want their own guaranteed slice of your assumed piracy.

  3. Christopher A Voigt on Scientists Create Programmable Bacteria · · Score: 1

    Is that the biologist Christopher A Voigt?

  4. Should have been called the Windows Geek IQ test on 2010 Geek IQ Test · · Score: 1

    Fucking Windows, how does it work?

    Let me tell you ... I don't care.

  5. I wish we had that for SCO on FBI Watching Oracle-SAP Trial · · Score: 2, Funny

    An FBI agent watching the courtroom activity might have curbed some of SCO's outrageous behaviour.

  6. Re:Quanta? on KDE Developers Discuss Merging Libraries With Qt · · Score: 2, Informative

    I changed to xfce recently after trying KDE 4.x for the 2nd time after 12 months (debian lenny to squeeze). The first time, I backed out of my upgrade. The second time, I took a friend's advice and switched to xfce. It's more stable than KDE (kdm locked up my screen twice in a day), much faster, and things mostly work the way I expect.

  7. Re:Why would soft-hyphen be legal in a URL? on Spammers Using Soft Hyphen To Hide Malicious URLs · · Score: 1

    Indeed; it seems to be a good example why extending the DNS character set was not such a good idea. DNS should have readable domain names, and avoid using different characters with identical glyphs and non-printing characters.

  8. "Server Error in '/' Application." on The Advent of Religious Search Engines · · Score: 3, Funny

    Description: An application error occurred on the server. The current custom error settings for this application prevent the details of the application error from being viewed remotely (for security reasons). It could, however, be viewed by browsers running on the local server machine.

    Your God is not so powerful now, is he??

  9. Re:Actually great for these companies! on Security Guards, Alarm Companies Object to Australia's National Fiber Network · · Score: 1

    I've had "Securitel" monitored alarms, both the type where cable integrity is monitored at the exchange and the type where the alarm system dials out over PSTN with a low baud-rate modem.

    My current alarm system, the LS-30 is much superior to both. Because it's ethernet-enabled, it can be monitored by a security company over the Internet. It also can alert via GSM or PSTN. Of course, one of the features of this alarm system is that the owner doesn't have to get a professional monitoring service, but the choice is there.

    I haven't seen security company infrastructure but my impression is that they can achieve much better economies of scale by using the ContactID protocol and net-connected alarms. They can also provide better service to home owners.

  10. Re:Your capitulation is insufficient on UK Music Industry Calls For Truce With Technology · · Score: 2, Interesting

    'Our future is now totally dependent, totally entwined, totally symbiotic'

    I would have said more parasitic than symbiotic, actually ...

  11. Re:is it really copyright trolling? on Senate Candidate Sued By Copyright Troll · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, it seems pretty sensible. Righthaven was not harmed at the time of publication. They clearly looked for an infringement and then brought the harm upon themselves.

    On the other hand, it could be said that the Las Vegas Review-Journal had suffered harm, and Righthaven bought the rights, thus relieving LVRJ of the harm and taking it upon themselves.

  12. Go wireless networked burglar alarm on Where To Start With DIY Home Security? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I use the Scientech LS-30 which is a device supporting several types of wireless sensors including PIR (infra-red), reed switch, glass breakage detector, smoke detector, medical alert button and wireless outdoor alarm.

    The alarm system can report a break-in, fire or medical emergency via PSTN or SMS. It's very programmable, with support for lots of different zones, X10 home automation switches, day-of-week and time-of-day mode setting, doorbell and so on.

    The LS-30 has accessories including a GSM module (for sending alerts via SMS) USB interface and also ethernet interface.

    I wrote the LS30 project to allow me to control and monitor the device from linux. There's a daemon which connects to the alarm's ethernet port; it proxies commands (from clients on my machine) and events (alerts / status updates) from the device.

    I have daemons to watch for particular events (e.g. door open/close), logging the activity rates of PIR sensors (movement detection is reported by the unit even when disarmed) and burglaries (so the computer knows and can react accordingly e.g. by sending SMS messages or twitter).

  13. Re: a sad day on Google Chrome Now Has Resource-Blocking Adblock · · Score: 1

    When does the system become sentient? Looking forward to the day.

  14. Re:Somebody tell me again ... on Apple Wants To Share Your Location With Others · · Score: 1

    So, yeah, information like this can be useful.

    Not to me.

  15. Re:you missed the car analogy on Apple Wants To Share Your Location With Others · · Score: 1

    It's like parking my car and coming back to find friends of the ice-cream vendor making out in the back seat and they want me to drive them somewhere.

  16. Somebody tell me again ... on Apple Wants To Share Your Location With Others · · Score: 1

    ... why, in order to buy music, I have to agree to let Apple sell my location to unknown businesses? What exactly is it about the music transaction that has anything at all to do with my location and some other company that have no relationship with?

    It's like going to the shop to buy an ice-cream and coming back to find some squatter living in your house.

  17. Re:Bad summary on Australian Buyers Say They Were Told "No iPad Without Accessories" · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the information. I can't confirm that from my own experience, but I'll be wary.

    I have had some bad experiences with Strathfield however ... they are definitely a shop-of-last-resort.

  18. Re:Bad summary on Australian Buyers Say They Were Told "No iPad Without Accessories" · · Score: 2, Informative

    JB's not bad, but I have learned to never pay their ticket price on electronics. I always ask for, and get, a discount.

  19. Expect a call from my lawyer on Sudden Demand For Logicians On Wall Street · · Score: 1

    Sorry but I patented that idea^H^H^H^Hbusiness method.

    ... runs to submit patent application for switching legal strategies with a period of between 0.5 to 4 seconds ...

  20. Re:agreed on Recrafting Government As an Open Platform · · Score: 1

    Probably not a wiki; we should be using git repositories for working on laws.

    Anybody can commit their suggested changes, but getting them merged will be really difficult.

  21. Re:"Looks to me, I am open!" on Adobe Founders On Flash and Internet Standards · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I thought the same thing. Clearly software incompatibility is a nuisance only when it's somebody else's software. If it's my flash crap, being asked to upgrade or install is a feature.

  22. geekmyride.org on Any Open Source Solutions For DIY Auto Diagnostics? · · Score: 1

    This looks like a job for geekmyride.org.

  23. Re:wagging the dog on Pope Rails Against the Internet and Transparency · · Score: 1

    I think they should do it annually. Or maybe monthly. It's important to keep showing how silly these Islamic preachers are, with their medieval worldview. We have one in Australia too; Sheikh Hilali, former (?) Mufti of Australia and speaker of the quote comparing immodestly dressed women to raw meat left out in the sun. He wasn't talking about their suntan.

    Can we devote like every Sunday to BoobQuake day?

    I know, I know ... with the acres of flesh on display during the summer months in most enlightened countries, it's surprising that the cities haven't all come tumbling down with the resulting quakes.

  24. Re:It's not the abuses... it's the coverups. on Pope Rails Against the Internet and Transparency · · Score: 1

    Of course people are complaining about the abuses too. This is an organisation which holds itself up as a source of morality and virtue, not to mention divine revelation, infallibility (the Pope!), control, retribution and forgiveness.

    The purpose of the Confession is to forgive a person for their sins, yes? The priest has some power delegated by jesus, so they claim, to forgive sins before death.

    The commission of such appalling acts by members in good standing of the Catholic Church really brings into disrepute the whole concept of Catholicism :- it doesn't give you an improved morality; the Pope is clearly as fallible as the next guy; how can they dictate how people should live their lives if the priests themselves are sometimes such disgraces to humanity?

    I'd think that priests, being professional god-botherers, would be expected to have a deeper connection to the deity than you or I. If god doesn't punish paedophile priests and instead allows the Catholic Church to hide their abuse and move them around to rape some more, finally allowing them to die of old age in comfort and avoid earthly punishment, that really (a) calls into question the existence of a loving, caring god, and (b) indicates that said priests do not believe that god exists any more than I do.

  25. Re:wagging the dog on Pope Rails Against the Internet and Transparency · · Score: 1

    The Pope deserves to be worried. As far as I can tell, backlash against the Catholic Church is very much mainstream now. Big changes are coming, and nobody knows what they will be.

    Does the Pope dare to enter Britain later this year? He may be arrested or at least subpoenaed. Will he hide in the Vatican, effectively becoming an exiled spiritual leader of millions? Or will he fall on his sword for the good of the "Holy Mother Church" (his words)?