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  1. Re:Paris accord is a scam on Trump Announces US Withdrawal From Paris Climate Accord (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    China will say to any number of nations: "Here, have some climate impact mitigation aid money, but you must buy Chinese equipment/services with it.". The money soon flows back to Chinese companies (after being skimmed for kickbacks and some local handling). These Chinese companies use the money to ramp up production, gaining economies of scale through what in effect is government based support that neatly does an end run around WTO state aid rules. Now, not only has the USA been locked out of these initial deals, it's locked out of the long term contracts (services, maintenance, upgrades)...

    So only countries who have signed up for the Paris Climate accord are allowed to give money to other countries with strings attached? Not that this administration would do it but I'm pretty sure that we are just as capable of giving clean energy money to other countries with strings attached today as we were before the announcement.

  2. Yes I can T R O L L. And you shouldn't be feeding them...

  3. The poster could be stupid or they could be trolling...

  4. Re:Build quality, for one. on Ask Slashdot: What Is the 'Special Appeal' of Apple Products? · · Score: 1

    I've got a Lenovo W510 running Kubuntu 16.06 that works better today then when I got it in 2010 or 2011. I doubled the RAM (up to 8BG) and added a 512GB SSD. Without those updates it would work as well today as the day I bought it.

    The secrete to longevity isn't Apple its buying something high quality.

  5. Re:"uncertainty about Ubuntu" on Linux Mint 18.2 Ubuntu-based OS is Named 'Sonya' (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    To be fair that is kind of the opposite of uncertainty. The old situation was that it was unclear whether wayland support would be added or how long X11 would continue to be supported on Ubuntu. With Cinnamon unlikely to support Mir this left an open question about whether the Mint team would be able to package Cinnamon on top of the Ubuntu base. The new situation is that Ubuntu will go the Wayland route like most other distros. Cinnamon will likely gain Wayland support somtime after the Gnome Devs complete their support. Personally I run Kubuntu or KDE neon. The KDE devs have said that they had no intention of supporting Mir so the future of those releases was very uncertain. Now that Mir is out and Wayland is in I think that there is far more certainty.

  6. Re:Mile high club on Why Do Airlines Overbook? (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    It sounds like that passenger was down-graded to an economy seat not bumped off the flight all together.

  7. Re:Numbers on Why Do Airlines Overbook? (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    However, there are people who may be flying somewhere for a funeral. They may absolutely have to be back at work the next day or face termination.

    It sucks but in the situations you describe maybe the person shouldn't be flying. Its easy to get mad at the airline when someone is involuntarily bumped but it could have been a storm, or an accident at the airport, or one of many other unlikely but possible issues. If the cost of a delayed flight will cause you to risk loosing your job, or miss a wedding, funeral, or some other event maybe you should plan a day of contingency into your travel plans.

  8. Re:Mile high club on Why Do Airlines Overbook? (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Except for buying the most expensive tickets, there's no option to buy a ticket where you won't be "voluntold" to leave the seat you're already in.

    What other option would you like? If you want a cheap ticket be aware of the fact you might get bumped. If getting bumped isn't OK then buy a more expensive ticket. Ya a first class ticket costs a lot more but in addition to complimentary alcohol you are less likely to get bumped. If getting bumped is a big deal then the cost of the ticket probably isn't.

    The other really important thing to remember is that as good as the industry generally is at getting people to their destination at about the time they say they will there is always the possibility that there will be some issue that prevents you from getting where you want to be when you want to be there. It could be weather, or mechanical, or airport shooting or... If you absolutely have to be somewhere on Monday morning you shouldn't be flying on the last flight out Sunday...

  9. Re:Linux "operating system"? on 'Most Serious' Linux Privilege-Escalation Bug Ever Is Under Active Exploit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    This is a bug in the Linux kernel, affecting most operating systems that use this kernel.

    Sorry Richard...

  10. Re:Works for Me on Skype For Linux: Dead? Or Just Resting? · · Score: 1

    Also, if security loopholes are discovered and exploits made, and your software didn't change - then it did "degrade" because now it's not as secure as it once was.

    I wouldn't say that its not as secure. Its just as secure, its just less safe because the exploits are known.

  11. Apple should pay like anyone else on Slashdot Asks: Should FBI Reveal to Apple How to Unlock Terrorist's iPhone? (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    Many companies offer cash bounties in exchange for security bugs. This means hackers can 'sell' their bugs to the manufacture who can then pass it. The hacker gets cash and they get to feel good about what they did; but mostly they get cash. I don't believe apple pays for bugs. If they did this the company might have 'sold' their bug to apple instead of the FBI and any agency/country wanting to access an IPhone.

  12. Precheck lanes always need to be open on TSA's Precheck Registration Program Causing Longer Security Lines (usatoday.com) · · Score: 1

    It doesn't help that the TSA check points aren't always sufficiently staffed to run the Precheck lane(s). My home town airport often has the precheck lane closed. As a booby prize I get a car which lets me keep my shoes on, but I still have to take out my laptop and liquids. If they are serious about getting people to enroll in the program (which I did) than they damn well need to make sure that we can make use of it. How can they hope to convince people to pay the fees to enroll in precheck if they might not even get to make use of the program.

  13. Re:which brings to mind the old question ... on Apple Is Said To Be Working On an iPhone Even It Can't Hack (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure how it'd work but that could be way better as a Chuck Norris joke:

  14. Re:How I stopped hating tax and learned to love it on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 1

    While overall this seems reasonable there is still the question of how the government proportions the money that it gives back? Does everyone get x/population dollars back? Is it based on how much people paid in taxes for dirty energy (which I think negates all benefits)? Does it get redistributed proportionate to income? Or inversely proportionate to income? In all cases you are going to have people complaining about it being unfair (for some definition of unfair).

    The other issue is that unless all countries do the same it will just drive energy consumption from places which charge these tax-like-things to places that don't charge these tax like things. From a global CO2 level perspective it doesn't matter where it comes from, its all equally bad. (Generic pollution isn't as global, but it does have a non-trivial global component.)

    Taxes should be about raising revenue. They should NOT be a mechanism for societal engineering because the people writing tax laws are simply not smart enough.

    The only solution that I see is to 1) identify the carbon/pollution cost of a product, 2) charge a tax/fee for that amount when the product is sold, 3) uses the revenue to clean up pollution or capture carbon. Were we to start small (i.e. the fee charged represented the cost to clean up a fraction of a percent of the environmental cost) and slowly ramp up from there, we might be able to slowly disincentive pollution instead of just off shoring it.

  15. Re:C++ on an MCU? on Empirical Study On How C Devs Use Goto In Practice Says "Not Harmful" · · Score: 1

    Many of the issues that people have with using C++ on embedded systems are bunk. Here [1] is a recent discussion about C++ on embedded systems. Specifically to your point about C++ being too bloated [2] argues that the language itself isn't really.
    [1] http://app.content.ubmtechelec...
    [2] http://www.embedded.com/design...

  16. Re:Where to live and how to get to work on Miss a Payment? Your Car Stops Running · · Score: 1

    You continue living with your parents until you've got the resources to find something better. It was a perfectly good home for the first 18 years of your life, why the hurry to move ot now?

  17. Re:Where to live and how to get to work on Miss a Payment? Your Car Stops Running · · Score: 1

    Just opt out from the credit system

    Without credit, how do you buy a roof to keep over your head? Cities tend to arrest people living in tents, and renting a house or apartment is borrowing.

    You could buy a house with cold hard cash.

  18. Re:Earth is 6000 years old on Why the Moon's New Birthday Means the Earth Is Older Than We Thought · · Score: 1

    Accodring to Ubran Dictionally the term originated in Hawaii. I'm not sure that I believe it, but it is certainly alive and strong there.

  19. Under *buntu
    sudo apt-get install fdupes
    man fdupes:
    fdupes - finds duplicate files in a given set of directories

  20. Depends on what field you go into on Ask Slashdot: How Important Is Advanced Math In a CS Degree? · · Score: 1

    Honestly diffirential equations probably isn't the most important skill for a Comp Sci graduate to have. Outside of specific applications you'll probably never use it again. I never have. I wouldn't discount all higher math though. Most algebra related classes (discrete algebra, linear algebra) definately have applications and if you don't understant those you'll probably suffer for it. Just suck it up and deal with it. The system isn't about teaching you useful skills. The system is about proving that you can jump though hoops.

  21. Re:Uhhh... on New Largest Known Prime Number: 2^57,885,161-1 · · Score: 1

    Not for n = 4 2^4 -1 = 16 - 1 = 15 = 3 * 5 ==> not prime!

  22. Borderlands 2 on Ask Slashdot: What Video Games Keep You From Using Linux? · · Score: 2

    At the moment that is what I'm playing the most. I also play Battlefield 3, Civilization 5, and its been a while but Team Fortress 2.

  23. Re:AZ - Voted two weeks ago by mail. on U.S. Election Day In Progress: What's Been Your Experience? · · Score: 1
  24. Re:I'd like to see more of this on EFF To Ask Judge To Rule That Universal Abused the DMCA · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oooh, Oooh how about 3 strikes. The media companies love it so much; what if they got 3 strikes? If they issue 3 DMCA take down requests that get overturned as failing to consider fair use, they loose the right to issue take down requests.

    I predict that a fraction of a second after such a law took affect most companies' bots would issue bad requests. A few months later the courts would rule that 3 of them were in valid, and all of big name rights owners would loose the right to issue take down notices. Then the word becomes a better place and I can watch the Curiosity landing!

  25. Age Already Matters on Court on Video Games: Less Cleavage, More Carnage · · Score: 1

    We (the USA) already restrict certain things based on age. You can't vote until you are 18. You can't drive until you are 16. You can't drink until you are 21. You can't serve in the military until you are 17?. You can't work full time until you are 18. I don't think that anyone is going to propose letting a 5 year old, vote, drink alcohol, drive or work full 40 house a week killing people in the military. If we can restrict all of these things based on age why not restrict sales of games. Unless I am mistaken the law didn't restrict minors from owning or playing the games. If parents want to allow their children to play the games they should be allowed to. Just like parents can (or should be able to) let their children operate a vehicle on private property. Children are not first class citizens. They shouldn't be first class citizens. Restricting sales of violent games, alcohol, pornography, or tobacco should be alright.