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User: Adambomb

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Comments · 1,098

  1. Re:Remembering Nimoy this way is illogical. on Star Trek Fans Told To Stop "Spocking" Canadian $5 Bill · · Score: 2

    Spocking 5$ bills has been a thing for a long time now up here in Canada. It's just seeing a spike due to the recent sad news.

    It's not like this is some specific tribute thing.

  2. Re:I would think on The "Cool Brick" Can Cool Off an Entire Room Using Nothing But Water · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From my days working in the dry portions of Colorado in the summers, exactly this.Swamp Coolers have been used forever and are a godsend in the 100+ parts of summer.

    It's a dry heat sure, but thats why swamp coolers work there.

    All this seems to be doing is optimizing the concept instead of just having giant slats paddlewheeling in a tank.

  3. Re:Interesting what he chose not to answer on Interviews: David Saltzberg Answers Your Questions About The Big Bang Theory · · Score: 1

    This is one reason I cannot stand this show. People claim it is a show for nerds, where the premise is being a nerd.

    This isn't the case; Being a nerd isn't the premise of The Big Bang Theory, it is the punchline.

  4. Re:So what exactly is the market here. on Apple Announces Smartwatch, Bigger iPhones, Mobile Payments · · Score: 1

    See, now what you describe I could see having a market. Especially with advances in flexible displays some sort of comfortable short bracer like wrist device with decent screen real estate and the ability to incorporate phone functionality, whether in itself or by bluetooth sync to the phone in your pocket, would be much more of a development.

  5. So what exactly is the market here. on Apple Announces Smartwatch, Bigger iPhones, Mobile Payments · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A gigantic set of the population is no longer even used to the concept of wearing a watch, because they have their phone. This device doesn't replace their phone. What exactly is the reason to have this as well, as opposed to pulling your phone out of your pocket?

    Unless some company comes up with a functionally independent wearable device that replaces the need for keeping your phone with you I do not see the appeal. I don't understand what the pitch is supposed to even be. Literally every functionality can be responded to with "but i have my phone right here, it also does that and better"

  6. Re:Turn it around: on Illinois University Restricts Access To Social Media, Online Political Content · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For all I detest the fact, i still hold that anyone should be free to be a complete fucking idiot. If you hold ultra fundamentalist nutjobs as being limitable speech you are simply paving the way for rationalism to be limited in the advent of a fucking moronic demographic spike. Overestimating future generations is kind of what has fucked america over already.

  7. Re:Puts on glasses... on The Military Is About To Get New Augmented Reality Spy Glasses · · Score: 1

    Always down with a They Live reference.

  8. Re:Auctioning money? on US Marshals Accidentally Reveal Potential Bidders For Gov't-Seized Bitcoin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Fine, but that doesn't change my basic point. Why bother with an auction that will necessarily get less than an open market?

    The same reason you wholesale anything; You get a transaction that moves a large volume quickly. Basically all consumer goods you buy in any kind of branded store works this way, Wholesalers, whether manufacturers or a middleman, sell large volume to companies who then take the burden of distribution but reap the benefits of charging retail price and profiting on the difference between that and the wholesale cost plus infrastructure/logistics costs. The wholesaler gets the benefit of moving a large volume at an agreed upon price and not having to worry about inventory control, distribution, or logistics of getting it to the consumer.

    This is not strange, or even strange at all. Side benefit in this case, they get the auction entry fee from everyone bidding regardless of whether they win and also a look into who is interested in amassing a large quantity of bitcoins.

    Honestly this shouldn't require explanation,

  9. Re: For the sake of saving time, on Snowden: NSA Spying On EU Diplomats and Administrators · · Score: 2

    Ahh, I see you show interest in the Naughty Childrens Energy Consortium. Please subscribe to our material at www.caltropsinthefireplace.com

  10. Re:This is just a decoy... on Microsoft, FBI Takedown Citadel Botnet · · Score: 3, Funny

    hell that's nothing, Dihydrogen Monoxide is only one ATOM away from being a substance known to cause a condition called Black Hairy Tongue as well as abdominal pains, vomiting, and diarhea!

  11. Re:moral luxury on USPS Discriminates Against 'Atheist' Merchandise · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cast off the shoe, Follow the gourd!

  12. Re:How is this tech and wtf is this doing on Slash on Possible Chemical Weapons Use In Syria · · Score: 1

    Note: it is Russia and China that have everyone afraid to intervene for the most part. What we have here is a clusterfuck of the current iteration of the Great Game causing political tensions that make most nations leery to the point that everyone refuses to take any action.

    This is doubly so for America as you add in the Democrats knowing damned well that no matter how justified an intervention is they will be tarred even more by Republicans claiming it was simply warmongering (see Libya).

    So those in power amongst the major powers are too busy glaring at each other while thousands and thousands of Syrians die and even more are displaced. You are right about apathy being a major problem as even if it seemed ineffectual, massive protests concerning inaction in Syria would force the news outlets to at least have to mention the issue rather than continuing to sweep the problem under the rug beyond the odd "shits still crazy in Syria" headline.

  13. Slashvertisementitis on IronKey Releases Windows 8 Certified Bootable Flash Drive · · Score: 5, Informative

    I know it's pretty cliche to scream slashvertisement whenever there's an article involving a purchasable gadget, but jebus tapdancing christ guys when you advertise the price including a link to their store for something like this it really is getting sad.

    If it ISN'T intentional you sure are letting submissions take you for a ride.

  14. Re:lawsuit time? on Canadian Teenager Arrested For Photographing Mall Takedown · · Score: 4, Informative

    That only worked because the government thugs had arrived.

    Had it only been the mall cops they would have been sued out of existence, its illegal in BC for security workers to even carry handcuffs.

  15. Re:Unfair comparison on 19,000 Emails Against and 0 In Favor of UK Draft Communications Bill · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So given a situation where of those informed and interested in the bill there is a significant amount of opposition, and of the remainder of the population people either don't know or don't care enough to support the bill, does this imply to you that this legislation is representative of the will of the people?

    If this was a case of 19K for and even 1 against I might be able to buy the argument of sampling bias. When not one single person supports it in the consultation it is not only reasonable to infer that the legislation is not desired, but damn near certain.

  16. Re:Unfair comparison on 19,000 Emails Against and 0 In Favor of UK Draft Communications Bill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Basically all this states is that you have those that are willing to write in against it, and those who are ignorant of it.

    Sorry but at a rate of 19K to 0 the statistical significance is there to derive overwhelming disapproval from the result. Do you honestly believe if the populace was MORE aware of the details of the bill that suddenly there'd be an outpouring of support?

  17. Re:Awesome! on Battlestar Galactica Community Game Diaspora Has Arrived · · Score: 1

    ack, replying to undo cocked up moderation

  18. Re:Correction for OP on Charles Carreon Drops Case Against the Oatmeal · · Score: 1

    s/is considers/considers/ goddamnit.

  19. Re:Correction for OP on Charles Carreon Drops Case Against the Oatmeal · · Score: 1

    heh, the phrasing is saying that the EFF is considers the suit to be of that type, not that they coined the phrase.

  20. Re:This is fantastic. on FunnyJunk Sues the Oatmeal Over TM and "Incitement To Cyber-Vandalism" · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Before everyone finishes patting themselves on the back about how stupid Carreon is, how he has invoked the Streisand effect and a bunch of bad PR ask yourself this: How many of us had honestly even heard of Funnyjunk before today.

    Given that it contains so much user submitted content, imagine how many ads have been served on pages where people have gone to flame them, despite the bulk of slashdot readers using adblocks on unfamiliar sites.

    I wonder if his ego might still have them laughing all the way to the bank depending on how long it takes them to drop or settle the suits. Even before the internet its been known in marketing that the only bad publicity is no publicity.

  21. Re:punishment on Iran Shuts Down US Virtual Embassy · · Score: 1

    well, if nothing else, I chuckled a little.

  22. Re:Oh boy on Indian Mathematician Takes Shot At Proving Riemann Hypothesis · · Score: 3, Funny

    We won't be having naan of this around here!

  23. Re:Dumbing Down is hidden agenda? on Maine School District Gives iPad To Every Kindergartner · · Score: 1

    Hell, I'm not even American and even I know this was basically laid out by Woodrow Wilson as a GOAL back when he was kicking about.

    Let us go back and distinguish between the two things that we want to do; for we want to do two things in modern society. We want one class of persons to have a liberal education, and we want another class of persons, a very much larger class, of necessity, in every society, to forego the privileges of a liberal education and fit themselves to perform specific difficult manual tasks. You cannot train them for both in the time that you have at your disposal.

    source

    Hey the concept is only 102 years old, as far as american politicians are concerned..

  24. Re:lot's of medical stuff is very over priced on Is There a Hearing Aid Price Bubble? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Simply put, but this is the actual answer to the question posed in the summary. The cost of health service and supplies are greatly inflated in the states compared to most of the modern world. I don't mean in the sense of "oh, in other countries it's paid for by taxes" sense or the "yeah but it is inferior quality care" sense but the actual amount that the provider gets paid for exactly the same supplies or service, regardless of who is paying it in the end. As an outsider looking in at America i really do not understand how the health provider industry in the states managed to pull it off.

    Americans are getting ripped off on health care hard, to the tune of 2 to 10 times the prices paid out to suppliers or service providers in other countries. I think given the amount of discussion on HOW or WHO will be paying for health care in past years, some groups had to be lobbying very hard to keep the topic of "Why is it so damned expensive here to begin with" out of the limelight.

    And they succeeded.

  25. Re:Most insecure ebanking ever. on Citi Hackers Got Away With $2.7 Million · · Score: 1

    Many companies refuse to approve implementing costly security, and will fire techies who raise concerns about that too often and then hire incompetent techies who don't think to question the lack of security.

    Who is really at fault in this case, the fool or the fool who hired him.