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User: synaptik

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  1. Re:That's fast. Hosts speed you up two ways... apk on Crytek Shows 4K 30 FPS Ray Tracing On Non-RTX AMD and NVIDIA GPUs (techspot.com) · · Score: 0

    ... How many years have you been on this Slashdot spamming campaign, now?
    When you pick a lost cause, you really commit. My hat's off to you.

  2. Re:What? on Earth's Atmosphere Extends Much Farther Than Previously Thought (newatlas.com) · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not arbitrary. Starting at approximately 100km, the speed at which an airfoil could generate enough lift for flight is greater than orbital velocity at that same altitude.

    "Approximately", because it will vary based on conditions.

  3. Re:Idiocracy on 'The Problem With Programming and How To Fix It' (alarmingdevelopment.org) · · Score: 1

    I got plenty. But seeing how I'm conversing with someone who objects[*] to small injections of humor[**] to a non-somber thread, there doesn't seem to be much point.

    [*] Or at the least, was triggered by a good-natured jab at their favorite musical genre

    [**] And yet, has a joke in their own sig

  4. Re:Idiocracy on 'The Problem With Programming and How To Fix It' (alarmingdevelopment.org) · · Score: 1

    Wow, you completely neutered his joke before he could get any laughs! Good job.

  5. Re:For once a religion worthwhile pursuing. on We May Be All Alone In the Known Universe, a New Oxford Study Suggests (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    Life exists in the service of entropy. We hasten it.

  6. Re:For once a religion worthwhile pursuing. on We May Be All Alone In the Known Universe, a New Oxford Study Suggests (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    Sending frozen blastocysts out towards likely planets, to be incubated & mothered by robots upon successful arrival? That might work.

  7. Re:For once a religion worthwhile pursuing. on We May Be All Alone In the Known Universe, a New Oxford Study Suggests (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    Sounds great, but I guaran-damn-tee that someone will twist it into something perverse and destructive. Like, "all consciousness is equal, but some are more equal than others."

    At the very least, add something about not being racist, and overrunning available resources before sending out diaspora.

  8. Re:If you cannot make it, fake it on New IBM Robot Holds Its Own In a Debate With a Human (nbcnews.com) · · Score: 1

    "I am not prepared to debate that subject."

    Which is exactly what I'd say if I was asked to debate "phylogeny recapitulates ontogeny"

  9. And the Glorious MEEPT!

  10. Oh yeah?

  11. Re:Everything that's wrong with U.S. politics on Senate Votes To Save Net Neutrality (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    My point was P(pickup), not P(found). But you knew that.

    If you really want to challenge my argument, instead of a strawman you should challenge me to provide citations of this (and similar) douchey behavior happening prior to the FCC's 2015 Open Internet Order. If you did that, I would list:

    * Major ISPs throttling Netflix, et al.
    * Verizon stating on-record that they would like to charge services for better access to their subscribers
    * Madison River (ISP) blocking vonage
    * Comcast (ISP) blocking P2P applications
    * Telus (ISP) blocking access to a website critical of them
    * Shaw (ISP) charging a 'QoS fee' to subscribers using competing VoIP solutions
    * AT&T blocking VoIP apps on the iPhone
    * AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon blocking Google Wallet
    * Verizon blocking tethering apps
    * AT&T charging extra if iPhone users want to use facetime, instead of AT&T's competing product

    No one would put up with a power company that charged more for electricity to power appliances that weren't also bought from them. And yet, when a company that is a combination of ISP and content provider decides to trollishly increase the cost of competitive content streaming, somehow that's OK? SMH.

    You ended with a point about opening up more spectrum & increasing service (which I take to mean that the former would cause the latter.) I can't personally speak to the matter of opening up more spectrum, because I don't know how much spectrum sits fallow. I would be surprised if much did.

  12. Re:Everything that's wrong with U.S. politics on Senate Votes To Save Net Neutrality (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    There are no hippogriffs, thus the probability of hippogriff attacks remains firmly at p=0.

    In contrast, the probability of what I described is approximately the same as the probability that you would pick up a stray $100 bill you spotted in a parking lot. Because, why wouldn't you?

    Profit motive is rather predicable, that way.

  13. Re:Everything that's wrong with U.S. politics on Senate Votes To Save Net Neutrality (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    That is a moot point. The racial demographics of the nation are rapidly shifting to majority minority. The Democrats will have an overwhelming majority by 2020 or 2024, at the latest, after which there will never be another Republican U.S. President.

    Sounds great, except that the Quiverfull movement is explicitly attempting to outbreed secularists / liberals. They might meet stiff competition among predominantly-Catholic Hispanics, but I can't imagine secularists deciding to engage in reproductive warfare, even if they do realize that's what the Fundies are up to. Overbreeding is kind of anathema to secularism.

  14. Re:Everything that's wrong with U.S. politics on Senate Votes To Save Net Neutrality (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 2

    The Net Neutrality regulations were a bad solution to a non-problem.

    Cable internet companies throttling people's Netflix streams because they want those people to get frustrated w/ Netflix and switch to their cable TV packages, is a non-problem?

  15. Re: Learn math on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Teach 'Best Practices' For Programmers? · · Score: 1
  16. Humans don't understand 2+2. They perform the operation by sending electro-chemical impulses from axons to dendrites, ending in a pattern that others interpret as 4.

  17. Re:Who cares on Facebook's 21-Year-Old Wunderkind Leaves For Google (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Huh? I peruse FB exclusively on laptops & desktops, and have never been kicked off.

  18. Re:A double-sided problem... on The Oculus Rift Still Isn't Selling, In a Worrying Sign For VR (technologyreview.com) · · Score: 1

    You sure do have a lot of AC replies throwing shade at you. It reads as though someone had nothing better to do with their time than to write a program looking for new creimer comments to troll.

  19. Re:Improve the back-end on Amazon Plans Cuts to Shed Whole Foods' Pricey Image (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Do you count Forbes as 'some rag'? https://www.forbes.com/sites/c...

  20. Re:no on Are There More Developers Than We Think? (redmonk.com) · · Score: 1

    Outliers are anecdotal at best. Write back when you find a governmental entity in the U.S. that is willing to let you erect a structure that millions of people every week will trust with their lives, having only read a book on the subject.
    I'm not belittling your autodidactic joie de vivre; to the contrary, I share it. But, know that book knowledge is just one leg of a 3-legged stool, where engineering is concerned.

  21. Re:no on Are There More Developers Than We Think? (redmonk.com) · · Score: 1

    Being an engineer isn't just about knowledge. It's also about competency (apprenticeship) and licensure (testing & certification by the state.) No one is going to let you build the Golden Gate bridge just because you read a book.

  22. "Computer, make a badass game for me to play."

  23. Re:RTS? on Slashdot Asks: Do You Still Use RSS? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because it's actually Rich Site Summary, or alternatively "Really Simple Syndication"

  24. Re:No New Monopolies on Neowin: Microsoft's Windows Phone Business 'Is Dead' (neowin.net) · · Score: 1

    Pepperidge Farm remembers.

  25. Re:Really? on Neowin: Microsoft's Windows Phone Business 'Is Dead' (neowin.net) · · Score: 1

    Even though I preferred the openness of Android, I always secretly admired Microsoft's mobile UI. The tiles concept seemed very well-done.