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User: citylivin

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Comments · 734

  1. Re:Meteor Impact! on Scientists Warn of Rising Oceans As Antarctic Ice Melts · · Score: 1

    "What if we do all the hard work of fixing the climate, only to get hit by an asteroid and have it all go to shit anyway?"

    Wouldn't that mean we solved the hard problems and now have the infrastructure and know-how in place to solve the problem again but quicker and easier?

    I think its far easier to troubleshoot and solve the same problem the second time. Considering in your theoretical example that we have already solved the problem once.

  2. Re:sigh on US Climate Report Says Global Warming Impact Already Severe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Most are just variations on "lets tack on a bunch of fines and taxes to make doing certain things unpopular". Which doesn't ACTUALLY address the problem."

    If the problem is rampent overconsumption, british columbia proves that increasing taxes does make people use less fuel.

    "A report by Sustainable Prosperity entitled BCâ(TM)s Carbon Tax Shift After Five Years:An Environmental (and Economic) Success Story suggested that the policy had been a major success. During the time the tax had been in place, fossil fuel consumption had dropped 17.4% per capita (and fallen by 18.8% relative to the rest of Canada). These reductions occurred across all the fuel types covered by the tax (not just vehicle fuel)."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...

    Yes, I realize that everyone hates all taxes. I am not saying whether it is right or wrong, but the province of BC proves that it is effective at addressing the problem of too much carbon emissions being produced.

    http://www.fin.gov.bc.ca/tbs/t...

  3. Re:Microsoft has no spine. on XP Systems Getting Emergency IE Zero Day Patch · · Score: 2

    "it's amazing to me that we've actually reached the point where MS is getting flack for not adhering strongly enough to planned obsolescence"

    After painstakingly upgrading the entire office to windows 7 over the last few years, recommending to all friends family and clients that they NEED to upgrade, I am somewhat conflicted.

    Firstly, microsoft is making me look like a lying dick. When I heard about this IE vulnerability, I thought "awesome! now everyone that hummed hawed and complained at me for forcing upgrades will be apologizing!". So i am pretty pissed off that they now go back on their word and still support XP making me look like I didn't know what I was talking about.

    On the other hand, I do like companies stepping up and patching bugs in legacy products. So I'm not terribly sure what to feel right now.

    When in doubt, be pissed off at M$ I guess! Damned if you do and damned if you don't. I guess they did the "right" thing. But for how long? will they still be patching xp in 2025? I know a guy who still runs windows 98 with kernel extensions or something like that. He loves it!

  4. You double peddalled 2 or three times?? on Is the Tesla Model S Pedal Placement A Safety Hazard? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "So I'd have to conclude that the problem lies between the pedals and the seat in this case.

    And I know cause I drive [a tesla] daily and I have managed to double pedal a total of two-three times when being lazy..."

    So there was a problem with the driver in your case as well then?
    In my 20 years of driving many different cars, this has never happened to me. Not once. And I have size 15 feet, and regularly wear combat boots. The fact that you are saying you had the exact same experience on the exact same car - how can that NOT be a design flaw?

    Your anecdote exactly proves his point! Unless you are calling yourself the problem. Do you really love tesla so much you would rather blame yourself?

  5. Re:Ooooohhhh theeeeere's your money! on MtGox Finds 200,000 Bitcoins In Old Wallet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    She was just being nice. As the parent of an 11 year old, they make very bad liars. I just take everything my children say with a grain of salt. The thing with lies is if you understand peoples motivations in life, what they are interested in, what they desire. Then you can easily see when they are lying, withholding information or distorting their own memories to match with a current assumed reality.

    I find that it's good practice to firstly identify peoples motivations and character and then look at everything they say through that prism.

  6. Like your own personal expert! on A Primer on Data Backup for Small- to Medium-Sized Companies (Video) · · Score: 1

    "So [outsourcing to the cloud is] like having the worldâ(TM)s best expert hired on to your team just managing your particular system. "

    No, its more like having the cheapest possible person from the cheapest possible country, reading scripts and excerpts from manuals back to you while being oh so polite about it. And then after your 2 hour phone call, blaming any other vendor or technology you are using which *must* be the cause of all the problems.
    Surely its not their flawless product, which even though they are in tech support and must listen to peoples issues all day, has absolutely zero flaws they are willing to admit.

    Fact, no one cares more about your data than you do. That ain't never going to change.

    This interview transcript (cant watch, get player error) is laughably sparse on any real strategy except "outsource to us!". I feel dumber for having read it.

  7. Re:One question on Death Hovers Politely For Americans' Swipe-and-Sign Credit Cards · · Score: 1

    So how do you explain canada then? I converted our business to chip and pin 3 or so years ago. It was either that or be on the hook for more fees from the credit card company.

    Our payment processor issued us new pinpads, as all equipment is leased. Some older POS software had to be retrofitted. Took about 2 months of work for a medium business with about 15 tills and that includes all emails and vendors writing updates. The whole country did it pretty much at the same time a few years ago, so the vendors knew they would have to update or they would lose business.

    Now here in canada, there is exactly 1 store that i frequent that does not have chip and pin. Sure it offloads the burden onto the customer, but generally if peoples cards are compromised, its because of some kind of skimming and camera going on, same as at ATMs. Based on the volume of fraud transactions, the bank generally knows about the fraud before you do and issues you another card.

    Contrast that to my friend who got back from the states. He was on a 3 day trip, no one uses chip and pin down there and his card was almost immediately compromised (he thinks the cab company that he used). They called him on the second day asking him if he had made any large volume purchases in new york (he was in the south).

    Looking backwards, it seems kind of ridiculous that a few scribbles were allowed to authenticate large financial transactions for so long. No one ever contests a signature. I have never seen it happen. A pin on the other hand is a pin. You either have it or you dont.

  8. Re:company charges for paid support on HP To Charge For Service Packs and Firmware For Out-of-Warranty Customers · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Who pays the cost to fix old, out-of-date drivers and firmware? Is HP supposed to do it out of the goodness of their heart?"

    Bullshit. A firmware update generally addresses some sort of bug or deficiency. By not patching it freely, HP is admitting that they sold you a flawed product. So I should be able to then demand my money back. It is their RESPONSIBILITY to fix it!!

    As others have said, the worst company with this is cisco. The second worst is sonicwall. Fuck sonicwall and their paid updates!! I had to throw out a perfectly good VPN appliance whoes compact flash card had died because they would not let me download a firmware for the unit. Not because I didnt have a service contract with them, but because I didnt have a service contract for that one particular VPN appliance. I had another contract with another appliance which we purchased later.

    If the fix is already made, then keeping it from former customers unless they pay up is spiteful ransom. A firmware update is addressing flaws in the vendors product. The vendor would do well to get them fixed, or you get a very bad reputation such as sonicwall has with me now.

    If I had to maintain support contracts with every vendor i've ever done business with on the off chance that one day I will need an update, I would not be able to ever purchase anything new. Your old assets would become drags. This is similar to why I always try and find open source software alternatives for everything I possibly can. Specifically because in software world, it is very common to charge for every update. Result, I don't buy much paid for software when I have open source alternatives. With hardware, its a lot harder to change products when some bug is encountered.

    All this is is a giant ad for dell servers, who I have never had a problem with getting drivers or updates for. If dell can do it, then sure as shit HP can. I was actually looking at HP servers for a friend, but I guess I will be recommending dell now. HP fails it. Short term profits trump everything and I am so sick of it.

  9. Re:Non-Drm'd? on Adobe's New Ebook DRM Will Leave Existing Users Out In the Cold Come July · · Score: 1

    "Never, ever pirate anything. It spurs their belief that people really want their product, but just aren't willing to pay for it."

    I guess you are no fan of libraries then.

  10. Re:It's not a debate on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 1

    "So you've studied Han's perspective then? No? Waste of your time? You do get your logical fallacy here right?"

    Isn't his "perspective" creationism? Wouldn't that require believing in a god or gods?

    I don't think hes talking about panspermia. Wouldn't creationism dictate that there is 1) a creator 2) that he has input in human events? and 3) that this creator is "super natural". In that case, what is there to study? It's impossible to prove there is a god short of god herself coming down. And even then, I would most likely believe it to be an intelligent alien race rather than some supernatural being.

    Why would anyone give that "argument" any serious merit? I would think you would have to be religious in which case your reason and logic faculties are already damaged and probably could not participate in a debate in the first place. I doubt any non religious people believe in creationism.

  11. Re:Cellphones during the movie was debated.... on Man Shot To Death For Texting During Movie · · Score: 1

    Well its america, and even worse, florida. The courts already said you can kill whomever you want, you just have to say "he's coming right for us".

    If I was in america, and everyone around me was armed and with the above mentality, YOUR GOD DAMN RIGHT I WOULD BE ARMED!

    If everyone around you is a violent psychopath (this did occur in america), I would want to be protected personally.

  12. Re:Killer App on Is the World Ready For Facial Recognition On Google Glass? · · Score: 1

    "Point is, there will be backlash to people wearing internet-connected face-recognizing cameras, and it won't matter what the excuse."

    I agree with your sentiment, but no matter how much backlash there is, you can't stop the train. Just look at smartphones, tiwitter, facebook. People don't give a shit about privacy at all. 70% of people carry a smartphone now. Things I would have thought unbelievable 10 years ago regularly happen now. People are fucking around on their phones in meetings regularly, putting a real life person "on hold" to pick up a cel phone call, breaking up with people over text message or email, not paying attention walking down the street because you are twiddiling your phone, texting while driving... the list goes on. All of these things are bad judgement, if not outright rude, in my opinion, but smart phone adoption has become so widespread so fast, that the social mores haven't matured along with them.

    Google glass will be the exact same. It will have so big of an adoption rate, one day you will wake up and everyone will have one. Same as smart phones. Make them cheap enough and they will become ubiquitous.

    Disclaimer, i dont have a smart phone, but would really love a google glass type chinese knockoff headset. Why? because I would be in control of the information. So many situations occur where a customer or acquaintance mis remembers a situation. It would pay for itself ten times over to have video recall. Once again, that I and I alone, controlled. None of this big brother cloud BS.

  13. Re:Disqus is evil on Disqus Bug Deanonymizes Commenters · · Score: 1

    its also default blocked by ghostery.

    I have noticed more and more sites using it though. Maintaining comments is hard I guess, and people are all outsourcing it. I looked into them because ghostery was blocking them all the time. Seems like a horrible company.

  14. Re:When you have a bad driver ... on Is the Porsche Carrera GT Too Dangerous? · · Score: 1

    "You might be willing to take the risk of not having anti-lock braking, but why should the other people on the roads have to put up with the unnecessarily increased risk that you'll crash into them?"

    Excuse me, but those of us who drive older cars (manufactured before the 90s) do not have ABS and have no problem keeping from running into people. Maybe they don't teach threshold breaking anymore, but that is not my problem. I learned to drive on a non abs car.

    The problem is that these days, people follow too closely and rely on their ABS to save them. 8 car lengths on the highway at 100 km/h, or about 4 car lengths at 60 km/h. Give or take, I dont go out and measure.

  15. It's not enabled by default?!?! its 2013!! on Ubuntu Wants To Enable SSD TRIM By Default · · Score: 0, Troll

    What the hell reason would it not be enabled by default? I dropped an SSD in my webserver at home a year ago. I just assumed, since osx and windows both support it for YEARS, that forward thinking linux did. Wow.

    Now i have to go check tonight when I get home with this article as a reference
    http://askubuntu.com/questions/18903/how-to-enable-trim

    I am shocked and appalled. We all laughed 10 years ago when M$ said installing linux may damage your hard drive, but in this case its true! What a sad state of affairs.

  16. Re:20% failure rate in 3 years is LOW? on 25,000-Drive Study Gives Insight On How Long Hard Drives Actually Last · · Score: 1

    Enterprise drives are a scam. Don't believe me? ok, cite one study not done by hard drive manufacturers which says there is any difference whatsoever between so called enterprise drives and so called consumer drives.

    Google proved years ago that all hard drives fail after roughly the same amount of time, in the same conditions. The reason why enterprise drives may be perceived to be better is because they are almost always located in chilled data centres where the temp is probably never over 15*c.

    Anyone who has worked in the industry knows the 5 year rule. Most drives will last between 3-5 years in a normal operating environment. These numbers do not disprove that at all. I will wait for the 10 year study in a further 5 years. I bet they get 90% failure rate in 10 years, with a steep curve downward in reliability after year 5, which matches my experience. 3-5 years is the most you can expect from ANY hard drive. That said, I have some 500gbs that are beyond that and they are running fine, because I keep them cool.

  17. Re:Why bother with a radar / laser jammer? on Atlanta Man Shatters Coast-to-Coast Driving Record, Averaging 98MPH · · Score: 1

    " all police claim to be "trained in visual speed observation", and will back up the radar evidence with their professional judgement of how fast you were going."

    Its more than that. In canada, they cant just sit there speed gunning everyone (dragnet style). They have to say they made a sight check first, and judged you to be speeding, before they deployed their gun as a confirmation. The law is written in such a way as the police must visually estimate your speed before deploying the gun.

    I am not sure how exactly the AC would defeat a radar gun, as the way I understand that they work, they take several distance measurements milliseconds apart and then deduce what speed you are going based on the change.

  18. Re:This is why I'm keeping my truck for forever on Oregon Extends Push To Track, Tax Drivers Per Mile · · Score: 1

    You know you can set those to any value you like right, with a set of tweezers? And there are always new gauge clusters to be had at the auto wreckers.

    If the government did that with me, id simply have two gauge clusters and swap them out (takes maybe 20 minutes) every time before I had to go in for my evaluation.

  19. Re:perhaps not the best description on 'Pushback': Resisting the Life of Constant Connectivity · · Score: 1

    "Its alabaster wall is a prison in which the inmates scrawl their wishes and dreams, announce their likes and disklikes, and pass the time with games and witty reparte while a recumbent warden looks on intently."

    It's called a "timeline" now. Get it right.

    No no, I think he just described slashdot!

  20. Re:153 GOP voted to default on US Government Shutdown Ends · · Score: 2

    "Highly misleading. Rates on the "super wealthy" are far from historically low. The only people currently benefiting from historically low taxes are the poor. Taxes on everybody else are around "average" historical values: http://www.factcheck.org/2012/07/tax-facts-lowest-rates-in-30-years/ (and that article was before the December tax hike)"

    You have cherry picked your timeline there my friend. I know for a fact, that corporate taxes were much higher in the 50s and this site agrees with me http://personal.psu.edu/sjh11/TCTaxBits/OtherTaxBits/TaxRates.shtml (to the tune of 90% corporate taxes, in what some white people call the golden age of american life). Taxing the rich, but especially corporations, is the way forward. Fix the loopholes in corporate tax, and make companies pay their fair share. We need to get out from under the market society, where wealth can buy anything and there is rampant inequality. (see http://blog.ted.com/2013/06/14/the-real-price-of-market-values-michael-sandel-at-tedglobal-2013/ for a newish highly topical ted talk about it)

    Certain things like healthcare are a human right in most developed countries. As i understand it, the better solution of single payer healthcare was already shot down by american republicans, and obama and his right wing democrats. So this ACA is the best that the obstructionist republicans and not really leftist democrats could do to please their corporate masters.

    Another good reason to up corporate taxes, take control away from the lobbyist's and corporate interests in washington. Hopefully you can agree that money should absolutely not be a part of political campaigns.

  21. Re:Sure, to lower paying jobs on The Luddites Are Almost Always Wrong: Why Tech Doesn't Kill Jobs · · Score: 1

    I do agree with you about tariffs (i hate them), however your anecdotes are shakey. My phone bill in the 90s was 40 bucks or so. Now my wifes cel phone bill is 80+. That 80s TV and car phone you mention probably still work (car phone network permitting). Whereas it seems you cannot expect any piece of electronics to last even 4 or 5 years these days.

    We have a declining middle class, because the "middle class" now lives paycheque to paycheque and cannot afford anything that is not food, rent and a small amount of entertainment (cable, weed, alcohol, etc).

    "Personally I'd prefer making $10 an hour and having my lunch cost $4 rather than making $20 an hour and having my lunch cost $20"

    Well considering that the middle class is becoming too poor to dine out, I would much prefer to make $20 dollars an hour and bring my lunch from home. I disagree that food has gotten cheaper, as every year my grocery bill goes up, especially if you want "real" food, as opposed to glucose-fructose infused, mechanically seperated garbage that passes as food these days.

    Concentration of wealth is the problem here. Most people have no wealth at all. Don't believe me? how much is your fancy iphone, computer and TV going to be worth in 5 years, if they still work. What about your fancy furniture? Material possessions mean nothing if you get kicked out of your house. They are then just a liability which needs to be stored and payed for - your "wealth" owns you. Most people live between paycheques, have a few thousand or few ten thousands saved up, but other than that, no assets at all and therefor no wealth. Unless you count intangible wealth like knowledge, which of course, since the internet, has exploded. I'm no luddite, automation is the only way forward.

    We just need more taxes on the rich and corporations, so that one can live on $15 an hour and raise a family. For instance, in USA, you would get free healthcare with more corporate taxes, maybe even free food.

    I would prefer never worrying about shelter, food and healthcare (for americans) to having more "wealth" any day.
     

  22. Re:Sure, to lower paying jobs on The Luddites Are Almost Always Wrong: Why Tech Doesn't Kill Jobs · · Score: 1

    Spoken by someone who has never owned a roomba. They need quite a lot of bi-daily maintenance, from emptying the hopper, to brush cleaning and de-hairing. Not to mention they would have to engineer something to combat roombas mightiest foe: the common sock.

  23. Re:Maps and Music on Georgia Cop Issues 800 Tickets To Drivers Texting At Red Lights · · Score: 2

    "By that logic, I'd have to pull over every time I wanted to change the radio station, temperature, or turn on/off the defroster. The world may not be as black and white as you think it is."

    Are you fucking kidding me? how can anyone defend purposefully distracted driving, driving with a cel phone in your hand.

    Do you take your eyes off the road to change the radio station? I sure as hell don't. Same with the environmental controls. If its your car, you should not have to look down to find the correct button or knob, it all becomes muscle memory.

    Its the fucking narcissistic facebook generation you are defending here. And it is by all means not only the youth who do this. No one needs to make a phone call, send a text, or check their facebook status while they are driving a car!!! Like seriously! how can people defend this bullshit! If you are driving in a car, keep your fucking eyes on the road!!! NO EXCEPTIONS! Check your status, or return that call WHEN YOU GET TO YOUR DESTINATION. Jesus christ. Finaly a cop doing their job, not pulling over someone for speeding or driving while black or some other bullshit and people on slashdot whine: whhaaa i want to play angry birds at stoplights because i cant have a minute of fucking downtime with my mind idle or i will get lonely and DIE.

    fuck everything about using a phone while driving. cars should have cel phone jammers activated by default when the car is running. I have a recurring fantasy about buying one of the larger area effect jammers form deal extreme and mounting it in my trunk, with antennas poking out. This madness of hand held devices needs to stop. you can't even walk down the street anymore without dodging a bunch of zoned out zombies.

    For fucks sake what has happened to society in the last 5 years? everyone only wants to be in their own little world where they are the center. I had a palm in 1997 and sure as hell wouldn't have been driving and using it. The barriers to entry have dropped and so have peoples common sense it seems. I would think slashdot would see the light, and yet here we are at 900+ comments, half of which are defending the god damn texters!!!

  24. Re:jerk on Georgia Cop Issues 800 Tickets To Drivers Texting At Red Lights · · Score: 1

    Are you on crack? NO ONE should be using a phone when driving PERIOD.

    they should impound these narcissistic self absorbed fuckers cars and make them take the bus for a few weeks. Then they can send a facebook update: you've got jail!

  25. Re:Impractical? on What Will Ubiquitous 3D Printing Do To IP Laws? · · Score: 1

    "It may be $1 worth of plastic, but if this specific part fails on, say 0.3% of the cars that use that it, you are looking at a nationwide market of a few hundred units per year. "

    You clearly haven't worked on many cars. More likely, the part fails all_the_time on every car, and the manufacturer does make $90 profit (some to the dealership for sure) on the part. This can easily be verified by going to an auto wrecker and looking for the same part on other cars. Are they all broken? But more likely for the GP, his windshield washer lines are probably just clogged and backflushing them with some compressed air and water should restore their operation.

    But to the main point, you don't think dealerships make money selling actual full cars do you? Its all about financing, replacement parts and service.