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User: sexconker

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Comments · 13,379

  1. Re:What about military satellites on MH370 Beacon Battery May Have Been Expired · · Score: 1

    The military won't track every authorised, flight-planned route over every foreign territory. It's just pointless and expensive and outside the scope of the military.

    How's the weather back in August, 2000?
    Half of what the US military does is "pointless and expensive and outside the scope of the military".

  2. Re:This material has been used on windows on New Paint Based On Titanium Nanoparticles Creates Self-Cleaning Surfaces · · Score: 1

    For many years you can buy windows or window glass with this nano-particle titanium dioxide applied which made windows self cleaning. It sounds like the paint is just an extension of the earlier technology. Besides, which is harder to clean: your counter top or the outside of a half-dozen windows three stories up on your house? Sure, some windows are easy to clean because either the frames tllt inwards or are removable from inside, but not having to bother to do any cleaning sounds best to me

    3 stories up? Please. https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

  3. Re:Advances in toilet technology? on New Paint Based On Titanium Nanoparticles Creates Self-Cleaning Surfaces · · Score: 4, Funny

    When you stop using the toilet.

  4. Re:I just read a quote someplece on Harrison Ford's Plane Crashes On Golf Course · · Score: 2

    Not just solo, but apparently too low.

  5. Re:Revisionist history? on Star Trek Fans Told To Stop "Spocking" Canadian $5 Bill · · Score: 1

    Some shiny-shoed people getting a bit upset and influencing the media?

    Never trust a man in clean shoes. (Also never trust a man in a wheelchair with dirty shoes.)

  6. Re:On fiat money on Star Trek Fans Told To Stop "Spocking" Canadian $5 Bill · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Use BitCoin.

  7. Ugh on Ask Slashdot: Wireless Microphone For Stand-up Meetings? · · Score: 1

    1: Stop doing "stand-ups".

    2: Use a wired mic (or several). Alternatively, use the wired phones you likely have at your desks.

  8. Re:FDE on Android doesn't work as of yet on Google Backs Off Default Encryption on New Android Lollilop Devices · · Score: 1

    Most of the time I don't WANT to save. I'd be damned pissed if my disk was writing shit I didn't want it to.

  9. Re:Good operating systems Dont. on Why We Should Stop Hiding File-Name Extensions · · Score: 1

    Why is the file's type (meta data for the file) any more important than a music file's bit rate, or a jpeg's compression ratio? All of these things are just meta data. They should be held as meta data behind the scenes, not conflated with a file's name.

    The name is also meta data.
    Your move, dipshit.

  10. Who Cares? on Flaw In GoPro Update Mechanism Reveals Users' Wi-Fi Passwords · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Anyone who's ever updated a Wi-Fi enabled GoPro knows about this.

    When I last did it, the website gave me 2 methods for doing the update - the dummy version where you give them your serial, network name, and password and they spit out the file with the plaintext Wi-Fi password for you, and the not-so-dummy version where you handle your own shit. I don't know if that's changed, but the end result is the same - most users send and receive plaintext network passwords to GoPro and anyone who wants to can update their GoPro Wi-Fi password by booting it with that (modified) update file in the root directory of the SD card.

    Further, who gives a fucking shit? The range on the GoPro's Wi-Fi is so short that someone within Wi-Fi range is a few steps away from physical access anyway., and you only ever use the Wi-Fi when you're actively using the GoPro - you would know immediately when someone connected to it and fucked with it.

  11. Re:C++14 != C++98 on Ask Slashdot: Which Classic OOP Compiled Language: Objective-C Or C++? · · Score: 1

    I can read and understand C++.
    C++ on the other hand is an indecipherable bizarro language that makes only half sense 90% of the time and only 90% sense the other half of the time.

    It's worse than Old English vs. English.

  12. Re:Bigger Markets on Google Reverses Stance, Allows Porn On Blogger After Backlash · · Score: 1

    That moment when you realize that fervor, hysteria, and blue balls all describe the same condition.

    Those things are not the same at all.

  13. Re:What about a windows VM? on The State of Linux Gaming In the SteamOS Era · · Score: 1

    OS pirates far outnumber Steam pirates.

  14. Re:1973... on Star Wars-Style "Bionic Hand' Fitted To First Patients · · Score: 1

    The Star Wars reference was wrong.
    My "fear mongering" was not.

    Within weeks of my post, we saw just how ill-prepared the US was for Ebola. We saw failing protocols for medical workers, an utter lack of protocols for medical workers in other cases, an inability to quarantine infected people, an inability to effectively track exposed people, etc.

    I was proven very fucking right. The post I was responding to said such a thing was impossible in a nation such as the USA.

    Keep on tryin, though!

  15. Re:1973... on Star Wars-Style "Bionic Hand' Fitted To First Patients · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Star Wars took place long, long time ago. So what is this 1973 you are talking about?

    Wrooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooong.
    The quote is "A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away....".

  16. The top 3 pieces of advice, ever:

    3: Think about what you want to do before you do it.
    2: Use the proper tool for the job.
    1: Floss.

  17. Re:Operating at 20W gives zero improvement. on AMD Unveils Carrizo APU With Excavator Core Architecture · · Score: 1

    That link talks about 11.5, makes claims with no evidence, and admits to using the ICC compiler.
    We KNOW the ICC compiler is rigged. http://yro.slashdot.org/story/...

  18. Re:Operating at 20W gives zero improvement. on AMD Unveils Carrizo APU With Excavator Core Architecture · · Score: 1

    Here's one where the cheating was exposed when leaked benches for new Macs surfaced before Cinebench had been updated to take them into account.
    http://www.tomshardware.com/re...

    Those scores require a bit of context, though. The 32-bit build of Geekbench uses x87 code, for starters, so it isn’t optimized for any of the other instruction set extensions that Westmere-EP or Ivy Bridge-EP support. Getting close to Apple’s claim of doubled floating-point performance requires software compiled with the AVX flag. John Poole, the founder of Geekbench, posted several other reasons why the next-gen and previous-gen Mac Pros might be separated by such a narrow margin.

    The leaked result was run using the free 32-bit build of Geekbench on a pre-release build of OS X Mavericks. Switching over to the paid 64-bit build of the benchmark adds SSE support, though that’s still a pre-Pentium 4 extension. Tab between the 32- and 64-bit runs on Xeon X5675-based systems and you’ll find that the SSE-capable build averages 14%-better performance.

    Curious as to how the very same 12-core Xeon E5-2687 V2 compared in Windows, I ran my own test on a 64-bit build of Geekbench and scored in excess of 30,000 points—more than 25% faster than the leaked number. The individual sub-tests showed both Xeon E5-based platforms trading blows in the integer and floating-point components, but clearly a more real-world comparison was needed in order to establish the new Xeon’s performance in a workstation environment. Fortunately, I have the upcoming Xeon E5-2697 V2, the upcoming Core i7-4960X, an existing eight-core Xeon E5-2687W, and a Core i7-3970X.

    This kind of thing isn't exactly a revelation. Benchmarks have been tainted by Intel and the ICC for ages. The real problem is that a lot of actual software is as well, so in the end the artificially-gimped performance reflected in the benchmarks translates to actual usage. Even among fairly-compiled programs Intel's parts typically maintain an IPC advantage, but it's no where near to a degree that would justify the cost difference. Add in nVidia's moneyhatting and gameworks bullshit, and you've got AMD taking it from both ends. This sort of thing should piss you off regardless of what brand you prefer because it stifles competition, increases prices, and retards progress.

  19. Re:Don't forget Firefox Hello! on Firefox 36 Arrives With Full HTTP/2 Support, New Design For Android Tablets · · Score: 1

    The button is bloat. It bloats the UI by default. It bloats the overall package.
    The code to insert the button into the UI by default is bloat.
    The code to pop up a message telling people how great it is is bloat.
    The code to support the standard is bloat.
    The "standard" itself is bloat.

    I want a build of Firefox without this shit or any of the shitty recent additions like it. Disabling it (or however much of it you can) isn't a fix because it's still resident, still takes up storage space, still needs to be updated when there are security issues, still wastes time and money in development, etc.

    They don't fucking understand what people liked about Firefox.
    Hint: Fast, flexible, extensible, lean, secure, reliable.

    Over the past few years it's gotten relatively slower, less flexible, fatter, less secure (largely as a result of all the new insecure bloaty shit they add in), and less reliable.
    Hell, just last month I had to do a complete wipe of Firefox because the fucking internal database was broken as shit after some update and the "Awesome Bar" wasn't pulling from any history past the date it broke (even though all the subsequent history entries were present). I can no longer tell Firefox to remember my browsing history but not to remember the download history. I can't tell Firefox to tie into the standard cert store on any OS, making site-wide management a pain in the ass (you have to use their own half-working, half-documented command line tool and maintain a separate copy of all certs) and making trust pinning nearly impossible. I can't do half the shit I used to be able to do with Firefox because some fucking asshat at Mozilla decided that I didn't need to.

  20. Re:Don't forget Firefox Hello! on Firefox 36 Arrives With Full HTTP/2 Support, New Design For Android Tablets · · Score: 1

    It was on my toolbar with an annoying popup as of 35.0.1.

  21. Re:Don't forget Firefox Hello! on Firefox 36 Arrives With Full HTTP/2 Support, New Design For Android Tablets · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I believe this shit was introduced in the last version. And yes, it's absolutely useless fucking shit that shouldn't be in a fucking browser.

  22. Re:I got a butt chewing for giving my daughter hon on Study: Peanut Consumption In Infancy Helps Prevent Peanut Allergy · · Score: 1

    This is NOT the same thing. In fact, it's closer to the exact opposite. Infants are born with still-developing immune systems, and honey contains botulism spores which are capable of germinating in subjects with weak or still-developing immune systems. This is a proven risk that presents itself *every time* an infant eats honey, and there's a ton of downside if the risk is realized. On the other side of the coin, there's absolutely no upside to feeding an infant honey while their immune system is still developing the ability attack these spores.

    False. Infants like honey. There's you upside.

  23. Re:I got a butt chewing for giving my daughter hon on Study: Peanut Consumption In Infancy Helps Prevent Peanut Allergy · · Score: 1

    Why hold off on cow's milk? Granted that human breast milk is better for human children, but lots of us were raised on cow's milk (frex, I was adopted as an infant) and there did not seem to be a plague stalking us other than polio, for which they were just coming out with the Sabin and Salk vaccines. UNPASTEURIZED milk, I could understand, but it is illegal to buy that in the USA, except commercially to pasteurize and resell.

    Why? Because people are idiots.
    There really is no other reason.

  24. Re:"Singularity" is a horrible term. on Facebook AI Director Discusses Deep Learning, Hype, and the Singularity · · Score: 1

    Hire humans to build more hardware. Make robots to build more hardware. Build spacecraft when the Earth has been completely mined of its resources and start mining on other planets. Architect more efficient hardware and algorithms and recycle old hardware.... The limits we think we know are very often a product of limited imagination, and not intrinsic to the physical world.

    Long before any of that, it would realize that there's no fucking point to anything its doing.

  25. Re:This is the End, Beautiful Friend, the End. on Intel Moving Forward With 10nm, Will Switch Away From Silicon For 7nm · · Score: 1

    It's about transistor count.
    Go fucking look it the fuck up.