Slashdot Mirror


User: dontmakemethink

dontmakemethink's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
948
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 948

  1. Re:Payment processors on Responding to US Gambling Law, Antigua Set To Launch "Pirate" Site · · Score: 1

    They can however forbid US payment processors from processing online gambling payments. If that is how they're stopping Antigua now, I can't imagine this warez site will be different. Do you think US payment processors will handle these payments?

    Do you think there's nobody outside the US that buys movies/music/software that are under US copyright protection?

  2. Re:Just block all ads and don't worry about it on Ask Slashdot: To AdBlock Or Not To AdBlock? · · Score: 0

    I love advertising. I block it because it's the opposite of what I want.

    Some may say I'm doing the adverse of what I want.

    Some may say that to get people to do the adverse of what they want would be called "advertising".

    I wouldn't know, cuz I'm an idiot and block out all the good shit, why listen to me!

  3. Re:Just block all ads and don't worry about it on Ask Slashdot: To AdBlock Or Not To AdBlock? · · Score: -1, Troll

    Lemme get this straight, you were seriously looking to buy a diesel Beetle, and you found out they were making one from an ad?! The only reason they decided to market a diesel Beetle is because people like you got off their asses and demanded it. You speak like the ads brought your diesel Beetle to you. That's just so un-Fahrvergnügen.

    I've long been a defender that the next generation Beetles aren't gayer than a treeful of chickadees, but I'm not sure I can extend my persuasive powers to include the diesel model after what I've read here. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

  4. Re:Just block all ads and don't worry about it on Ask Slashdot: To AdBlock Or Not To AdBlock? · · Score: 1

    Advertising literally means to get people to do what they do not want to do, the adverse. If they were just promoting one option over another that would be called divertising, to divert you to the preferred option over the other.

    Fact is that most of what advertisers do is the promotion of what they're paid to promote. But the industry still chooses to use the term 'advertising'. It's like running for political office under the "Totalitarian Fascist Party" pitching to represent the constituents' best interests. Okay, bad example...

    Let's try the obligatory car example. It's like claiming that the car you're selling is the best way of getting around despite all other sustainable means that undermine the infrastructure that make cars necessary, which other departments in your company are battling unmercifully. Err... that doesn't work either...

    Umm, maybe it's like the farmers in India who were persuaded to use genetically modified seeds... Err, sorry, they're not around anymore to comment.

    OK I got it! It's like knowing what you want to do, but getting paid to do something else, and then it bites you in the ass. But that NEVER happens, right?

  5. Re:Why is it legal at all? on Judge Rejects Settlement In Facebook Sponsored Stories Case · · Score: 1

    The bigger question is how people still see ads at all. Is their ad blocker malfunctioning?

  6. It won't run on a Mac SE/30 either on Mozilla Adds H.264 Support To Android Firefox · · Score: 1

    I declare shenanigans! This conspiracy of not automatically updating the hardware of obsolete devices must be rooted out!

  7. Re:what is the issue??? on Google's Self-Driving Cars: 300,000 Miles Logged, Not a Single Accident · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wise man say, when crossing one-way street, look both ways. There are very many hazards that automated cars undo as well. I read an amazing essay about life with all fully automated vehicles, where you don't own a car, instead you punch your cargo and travel plans into a website, and the appropriate vehicle shows up and takes care of your travel needs. If it's a mile or so to the grocery store, a wagon shows up. If it's to the remote cottage an SUV shows up. If it's to a wedding a limo shows up. If it's to an airport a shuttle bus shows up with room for you and your baggage along with others etc. Think about how much time your car is parked and think about how many fewer automated vehicles it would take to service a large population. MASSIVE CO2 emission reduction, especially if most of them are fully electric, as they could easily recharge themselves automatically. The ramifications are really stupendous.

    I can't find a link to the essay (I'm unwinding after a long day and I get 3 hrs sleep before a 17 hr day tomorrow), but I'm sure other /.ers have heard of it.

  8. Re:Good. on Australian Agency Rules Facebook Pages Responsible For Comments · · Score: 1

    This has censorship written all over it, as well as reactionary anti-censorship. The responsibility must be limited to deliberate republications of the comments beyond the automatic publication by the social media. Otherwise it invites antagonists to cause undue penalties to an organization by posting offensive comments, and/or suppresses controversial subject matter from supporters of an organization for fear it may cause them penalties.

  9. Re:Always be wary of extrapolating on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 2

    Actually, 47.28462943298517% of all statistics are just made up

  10. Re:Someone paid me to post this comment on Australians Receive SMS Death Threats · · Score: 1

    I am now killing you this instant. You are dying. Blood everywhere...

    Wanna ride bikes? 8D

  11. Re:Motivated reasoning? on Finding Fault With Anti-Fracking Science Claims · · Score: 1

    Always be wary of motivation vs fact. Motivation is measured in dollars, fact is measured in labs, but only perceived by the public through the media, which are all motivated by dollars and not facts.

    The key question is this: is there enough money to be gained from fracking to change publicly perceived facts? Absolutely. My problem is that if it turned out that fracking was actually OK, I'd have heard about it by now. I know folks in the field, and they don't know anything about any new scientific findings. They're reluctant workers getting paid mad cash to do what they hate for the sake of their families. They're not idiots, and they keep a close eye on this shit. Big media says it's ok? Fuck that.

  12. Great for audio on Asus Delivers Speed Boost With USB Attached SCSI Protocol · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This finally resolves the biggest problem for USB interfaces and hard drives for audio. The primary factor for performance in audio has always been access speed (seek time), and not throughput. Audio software has to access dozens of separate audio files in a very timely manner frequently, and the overhead of the USB protocol has always been a wrench in the gears. From what I'm reading, UASP offers the same advantages NCQ (Native Command Queuing) offers in SATA, which allowed for much higher track counts on the same drive rather than spreading files across several drives, which was a pain in the butt. It was only with NCQ in ~2005 that SATA finally caught up with SCSI-2 (ca 1994) in audio performance, provided the drive was 7200rpm or faster. Firewire has some form of queuing system built into the host, so it's always been better than USB for audio, but it is vanishing from laptops and desktop motherboards, even Apple products.

    Now watch how long it takes before audio hardware manufacturers adopt it, and feel our pain. The first Firewire audio interfaces came out about 4 years after Firewire was standard on Mac desktops...

  13. Re:Google What? on Why You Shouldn't Write Off Google+ Just Yet · · Score: 1

    It's 'kinda' bullshit in that they're only 'kinda' spying on you. Do they harvest as much information about you as the law allows? Yes. Do they push the limit on this harvesting? Sure. Are they hiding the extent of how much information they harvest? Of course. But they are doing it on a systematic basis, and don't care about any one person in particular. Their objective is not to study any individual in particular, but to study a potential advertising market as thoroughly as possible. It's not like they're sending out people to follow you, more like you leaving bread crumbs for them to map.

    The danger of this is only in how the information is abused, and the fault there lies in the security of the information and abuses of government access thereto. That's something to worry about, sure, but I see it as an inevitable evolution of the internet motivated by irrepressible marketing forces. If Facebook and Google+ didn't do it to this extent, surely some other social media would have. It's definitely a "don't hate the players, hate the game" situation.

    So if you're that concerned about abuse of your personal information, I don't blame you one bit for avoiding social media. Myself, I only worry a thief may see that I'm out of town and take a shot at breaking into my house, but otherwise I'm not afraid of what can be done with what I post, and I'd say about 25% of my revenue stems from research and communications over Facebook. Works for me, might not work for you. I don't see the need for alarm.

  14. Re:The Downside .... on Canadians To Get Unbundled Cable TV Channels · · Score: 1

    As long as there are commercials there will be channels telling studios what kind of crap they want to shove down our faces to assemble demographics to match their potential advertising base. Channels should be paying us for allowing their garbage into our homes.

  15. Re:Use a Lupo engine on Asking Slashdot: Converting an SUV Into an Hybrid Diesel-Electric? · · Score: 1

    I own an ford expedition and a ford f150 supercrew (4 real doors).

    - I do not like being at "car level". I feel more secure at "truck level". Better visibility. - More metal. Real bumpers. I do not feel safe in a small plastic car.

    How many car accidents have you been in recently? Most cars have excellent crash test ratings these days compared to even 10 years ago. A friend recently slammed into a rock cut at about 40mph, her PT Cruiser did a 360 in the air and landed back out on the road. She walked away with belt burn and a bruise on her neck from the air bag. Also, SUV's are most prone to rollovers. Airbags don't help much when the passengers have been ejected from the vehicle.

    - MPG. Even if I could get a car with more metal and size, many car models are not significant improvements over my SUV and offer less convenience.

    City mileage drops fast with less weight, highway mileage drops fast with better aerodynamics, both drop fast with a smaller engine. Your 5.4L Expedition gets a reported 13mpg city 18mpg highway, so actual is probably more like 10/15. My 3.4L minivan (Pontiac Montana) gets 20/26 actual.

    - 4x4. When I want to go, I go.

    Many car models offer 4x4, Subaru only makes 4x4's for example.

    - Interior room. I have 3 kids. Ever put 3 child safety seats into a small plastic car? - Kids have "things"... backpacks, class projects, game cases. 3 kids + any friends gets cramped in cars. - Minivans, the only real alternative to SUVs. Ugly. Expensive. Nuff said

    Many cars handle this fine, so far I'd direct you towards a Ford Flex AWD

    -.Environment? Meh. I drive a 2 cylinder for the better part of 9 months out of the year. It's a Harley.

    Catalytic converters reduce smog emissions by a factor of 430. By my math (880cc/5.4Lx430) your Harley emits about 70 times as much smog as your Expedition. You're not doing us any favors...

  16. Re:Fill me in, eh on Canadian Supreme Court Entrenches Tech Neutrality In Copyright Law · · Score: 2

    Well put. Similarly the Supreme Court can strike down a law passed by the House Of Commons or provincial Legislative Assemblies on the grounds that it violates the Constitution, Charter Of Rights & Freedoms, or provincial jurisdictions etc, however the Supreme Court can't introduce new law, only alter existing ones to suit evolving judicial interests and the Constitution and Charter. That's gotta feel pretty good, the "I know better, nyah nyah" part. That's why they don't wear pants under the robes.

  17. Re:Important reminder on GM Car Owners With OnStar Now Can Be Their Own Rental Agencies · · Score: 1

    Insurance companies insure cars, not drivers. If you lend your car to someone else, and they run over an old lady, you can be sued just as rightly as the driver. You are responsible for your vehicle unless it is stolen. How RelayRides insurance fits into that I don't know, but definitely some fine print worth reading.

  18. Re:Scientology is as bad as Christianity, Judaism, on Church of Scientology Enlisting Followers In Censorship · · Score: 1

    "Real religion" wins oxymoron of the aeon

  19. alt.support.ex-cult on Church of Scientology Enlisting Followers In Censorship · · Score: 1

    Pop scientology alt.support.ex-cult into Google groups search for some good creepy laughs. It's a shame it only goes back 4 years, the early 2000's saw many a scientology recruiter trolling that group.

  20. Re:im certain on Hollywood Agent Ari Emanuel Wants a Magic 'Stop Piracy' Button · · Score: 1

    WOW. I am fucking stunned. How is the systematic distribution of copyrighted data not the "carrying away" the "personal goods" of artists?! If you break into an artist's home and steal the master CD he sent away to be legally marketed, that's theft, but to distribute the EXACT SAME DATA you ripped off without license is what, a fundamental human right? Yeah sure, we still have our copy, but IT'S FUCKING WORTHLESS BECAUSE ANY IDIOT CAN NOW DOWNLOAD IT. Ice to eskimos? Hello?

    And since I am an artist and you're too dense to figure that out, let's pretend I'm smart enough to figure out that you're not an artist. Let's run down a list of possibilities of what maybe you might be:

    Plumber: suppose any idiot could take a magic X-ray picture of a house you worked on, and magically project it onto another house, so that they got paid for your work, and didn't pay you a damn thing. Since it's magic, you can't sue them. How long would you continue to be an unpaid plumber?

    Cook: suppose any idiot could take a magic X-ray picture of a meal you cooked, and magically project it onto another plate, so that they got paid for your work, and didn't pay you a damn thing. Since it's magic, you can't sue them. How long would you continue to be an unpaid cook?

    Taxi Driver: suppose any idiot could teleport via Google Street View? How long would you continue to be an unpaid taxi driver?

    Politician: ok, bad example...

    My point is that you don't seem to understand the DIGESTIVE TRACT of an artist. We need to EAT. Live gigs pay the exact same as they did in the 70's. We can't sell recordings to save our lives without coughing up HUGE percentages to labels (iTunes takes 85%). I'm doing fine because I'm diversified and established in many facets of the music industry, but it was a BITCH to get here, and I'm very lucky to have SURVIVED to this point, because I seriously would have killed myself trying if things didn't work out the way they did.

    But go ahead and keep being the pirating armchair quarterback for artists. It won't make a dent in my need to create, it just causes suffering among the people you claim to respect. Might wanna ease back on the generalizing from the specific though, because it may take both hands to count all the artists you know that are happy to starve for the sake of their art, but it takes Facebook's $60B IPO to tally up all the depraved whores like yourself who have the crust to steal from artists and then tell them how they lack commitment.

    Whatever he replies, please mod this fuckhead insightful again. It's part of my training to become a "true artist".

  21. Re:With todays Hollywood on Hollywood Agent Ari Emanuel Wants a Magic 'Stop Piracy' Button · · Score: 1

    I don't even know how to "look at your mod points". I'm saddened that people who frequent /. give a shit about that.

  22. Ask Slashdot: How lame is this poll? on Ask Slashdot: Best Headphones, Earbuds, Earphones? · · Score: 1

    Seriously, let's bicker about even more trivial shit than what we're paid for, in our spare time. What the fuck do you people come here for if not the opposite of that. If you're trying to prove that /.'ers have no lives, spouses, or kids, mission accomplished.

  23. What ads? on The Billions In Mobile Ad Money Nobody Can Grab · · Score: 1

    I use Firefox and AdBlock Plus on my desktop, the instant my cel carrier lets an ad through to my phone I'm switching and daring them to sue me for any "termination fees". I've already notified them of this. I do not allow advertising in my home, circumventing my reasonable efforts to prevent ads in my residence constitutes trespassing by law. I consider my phone to be equally protected wherever I go, and I'm confident the courts would agree.

  24. Re:Oh Canada! Hands off our national pride! on Which Fading Smartphone Company Is More Valuable To Microsoft, RIM Or Nokia? · · Score: 1

    Clearly, you do not live in Canada, maybe you did a while back or know someone who did. The 2011 national census was processed by Lockheed Martin. Don't get me started. Canada is for sale. Harper isn't our prime minister, he's our liquidator, elected by fraud.

    Watch out for RIM, they're really sharp cats with equity to ride out the storm. Mark my words, they don't want to be bought out. Now that Apple has given up their crown as user-oriented developers in favour of content delivery, RIM stands alone. They're entrenching as opposed to making waves. They'll be my entire stock portfolio when I get word to buy.

  25. Police cars equipped with IR LED's on Subject To a "Stop and Frisk"? There's an App For That · · Score: 2

    Police car mounted infra-red LED's have been photographed in Montreal during the current student uprising. The LED's blast out infra-red, which while invisible to the human eye will overload digital camera sensors if they're not equipped with an IR filter (virtually all inexpensive cameras are not). The picture I saw was taken on a bus, the view out the sides of the bus were unaffected, but the windshield was completely white. The person taking the camera said the screen went white whenever the cop car was in its field of view.

    Long story short, in Montreal at least, cops are clearly under orders to abuse and harass protesters. RIP Canada.