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User: citylivin

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  1. Dear Slashdot, I have a major problem on French ISP Blocking Web Ads By Default · · Score: 4, Funny

    My town recently passed a law blocking people from defecating in peoples yards and spitting in their faces at random. One can opt out of the new law (and continue being spat at) completely, however there is no whitelist for white listing positive spitters and defecators that I do want to receive spit from. This means that its either an all or nothing choice, activated by default to block everything.

    While this seems like a potentially beneficial service, there's no doubt that it's biting at the heels of several sectors who rely on cleaning up shit and spit to make money, let alone the spitters and defecators themselves who try hard to eat and drink as much as possible to reach an audience, and are now blocked at the door.

  2. Re:Let's think about this... on 'Connected' TVs Mostly Used Just Like the Unconnected Kind · · Score: 1

    look at the bright side though, when people start ditching their smart tv's as their apps start getting older and buggier and buggier, there will be plenty of nice free hardware available on the curbside. Then some future open source project - ddwr-tv - will allow us to flash new firmwares to them!

    Its amazing what some people throw away as "broken"

  3. Re:where is the random? on High-Frequency Traders Use 50-Year-Old Wireless Tech · · Score: 2

    So the way I have heard HFT explained is:

    Trader 1 asks to sell Xsomething at $1.
    Trader 2 asks to buy Xsomething at $1

    Before their trade can go through, the HFT system immediately buys trader 1's Xsomething for $1.01. It then immediately sells that stock to trader 2 for $1.02.

    Thus the HFT system has increased costs for everyone, while increasing this "middlemans" worth because he is physically closer to the exchange and can intercept legitimate orders as fast as light. Should proximity to the exchange give you a license to rip people off?

    So explain please if this is not how it actually works, or why this should not be illegal.

    "They have to be very low-latency to make it profitable."

    Con men and scammers always try and work as fast as possible on their mark, lest they be discovered. If its as above board as you say, they should have no problem waiting 5 seconds before doing their business. If they can't wait, its a scam.

  4. Don't forget low-e glass on High-Frequency Traders Use 50-Year-Old Wireless Tech · · Score: 1

    Seems to block wifi from my tests around the office. New buildings and new windows are often low-e these days it seems. I haven't seen any articles about it, but as for anecdotal experience, I am 100% sure it does muffle wifi to varying degrees..

  5. Re:The don't make 'em like they used to on Voyager 1, So Close To Interstellar Space That We Can Taste It! · · Score: 1

    "cars are a hell of a lot better designed than they were 25 years ago. 25 years ago, a car typically lasted 100,000 miles and generally cost more to maintain that it cost to replace. Today, cars that go through basic maintenance can easily go 200,000 miles. Your 25 year old Toyota is an outlier."

    (citation needed). Did they find away to prevent rust completely now? Any well maintained vehicle will last many years. I myself drive a 20+ year old car which runs like a champ. The only problems I really have with it are all rust related. Unless you mean that more cars are made out of more plastic now adays, but I question whether that will make them last longer or less than steel.

    The problem I see with modern cars is that there is so much computer control. My car does have a computer in it (OBD1), however it does look like it was designed for a space probe.The entire thing is entombed in some kind of resin which is somewhat indestructible. I think the GP is questioning the standards of today and comparing them with 20 years ago. It does seem like all electronics now adays are designed to fail, running mostly at their spec, as opposed to being over engineered as they were back then. Of course as someone pointed out further above, you dont see the crappy stuff that failed right away and only see the long lasting durable machines and tools that were able to survive.

    Still, the statement "Cars are better engineered today (in terms of pure durability)" is a questionable one. Sounds too much like someone trying to sell me a new car for me to just trust it on faith.

  6. Re:Damn... on No More "Asperger's Syndrome" · · Score: 1

    " The social BIOS cannot be flashed. It is the bootstrap for all social interactions."

    Just apply the kernel patch: "alcohol_v01.gz" or the related update "a_few_drinks_v02.gz" and you will be fine. (disclaimer, most kernels need this sort of patch and there is nothing wrong with that. It is certainly not a "disease")

     

  7. Re:this is great news on Scientists Develop Sixty Day Bread · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "That's only how straw man capitalism works, not real world capitalism"

    and then

    "Of course, in "capitalism" as practiced by the US right now the entrenched bread company would get the government to pass some regulation"

    So if the US government practices an example of "straw man capitalism" in the real world, does that not make it "real world capitalism?".

    The problem is that your academic version of capitalism has no baring on the real world. In the real world, the CEO would collude and conspire to increase profits at the expense of everything else, including and not limited to his shareholders and the future of the company. Because in capitalist america, short term profits drive YOU!

  8. Re:Ford Sync on The Coming Wave of In-Dash Auto System Obsolescence · · Score: 1

    "Here's a tip: the fuse that needs to be pulled in order to do a hard reset of the system every month or so requires you to have about 7 joints in your hand to get to."

    Well there's your problem! put down your 7 joints till your done with the maintenance.

  9. Re:AMD on Is Intel Planning To Kill Enthusiast PCs? · · Score: 1

    "There are different motherboards?"

    Spoken like a true non-enthusiast!

    I will assume you are not just trolling.
    - number and variety of ports
    - number and variety of expansion slots
    - number and variety of onboard options
    - technologies used
    - various manufacturer specific features
    - overclocking/over voltaging abilities
    - form factor
    - board layout
    - manufacturer
    - price

    Each one of those broad categories has lots of different options. The last time I went to purchase a motherboard for myself was 2010 and I spent a good few hours comparing models and looking for the exact features I wanted. For me, it was about board layout, lots of sata ports (8), ability to plug in multiple graphics cards, solid state caps, etc.

    If I am going to spend 100-$200 dollars on something, then I damn well better do a few hours of research and not just slap in the first motherboard the salesmen offers me.

    Its always cheaper to do the proper research before you buy something!

  10. well what if the motherboard fails.. on Is Intel Planning To Kill Enthusiast PCs? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In 20+ years you never had a motherboard fail 1 or two years after your bought it? hell i had one fail at 5 or 6 months! so then I have to desolder the chip? uh no thanks..

  11. Re:I call bullshit on DuckDuckGo - Is Google Playing Fair? · · Score: 1

    Dont spread misinformation. I have been using duck duck go since mid summer and I find it just as reliable as google was back in the day, before they started adding all the useless crap. I had been looking for a google alternative for years, tried bing and all that, but they all sucked ass. Duck duck go is more like what google once was. Their mapquest integration might not be the best (or mapquest just sucks), so i still do use maps.google.com on occasion, but I was actually surprised how well DDG works.

    For me the last straw with google was when they got rid of "cached" copies of webpages, or made it so you had to login to get them. I also see how much is tracked on my girlfriends google + account and how many searches are influenced by things in her gmail. And the last main reason, is that I talk alot of shit about google these days and using them as a search engine was being quite hypocritical. So suck it google/NSA/US govt! no soup for you!

  12. Re:Boot directly to desktop? on Windows 8 Sales Below Projections · · Score: 3, Insightful

    " People need to move forward, otherwise keep using Windows 7."

    Why?

    Why do I need to move "forward"? Is this OS "forward" because its new? What if "new" is really several steps backward in usability, or compatibility? (for instance, advertising built in)

    Basically, what makes newer = forward. Intrinsically, nothing. Yet people keep saying it. Forward in time, well then you are saying nothing. Yes, Windows 8 is newer than windows 7. Kind of a redundant statement to make.

  13. Re:Mass Mail on USPS Reports $15.9 Billion Loss, Asks Congress For Help · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Reading fail. The (obvious) point the OP was making is that the vast majority of snailmail is catalogs and other junk mail,"

    Thinking fail. You haven't ever received a mail in rebate, an ebay package, a small business online order, a care package from grandma, letters from the bank, local catalogues from small businesses, cheques from contract work, reminders about doctor visits, city forms, etc.. recently?

    And besides all that, do you really think that the destruction of a carrier will stop or decrease the levels of spam? HA! all that money there, UPS and fedex would be more than happy to enter that market. I doubt you would see even a one day drop in spam volumes. Someone like UPS would buy up the usps business and then charge the average person $7 to send a letter. The volume discounts would likely not change and you would be at the same place you started, except on the rare occasion when you do need to use the service and then you would personally pay a lot more.

    Its hard for me to believe that the federal government doesnt own the post office as a government service. Its one of those businesses that should not be run as "for profit". They are providing a service at a low cost to everyone in your country and should be protected.

    " Hence your "old ..and poor people" are subsidizing the corporations."

    Nice try there sparky, but here's a fun arithmetic fact. 10000 items at 5 cents per item is vastly MORE MONEY than 1 grandmas letter at 2 dollars or whatever. Obviously the advertising industry drives the post office's revenue. You can argue that this is wasteful, environmentally unfriendly and therefor the federal government should really probably pay for the post office to prevent these sorts of spamvalanches, but you are not doing that. You seem to be saying that snail mail is obsolete, which i think is demonstrably false. There is quite a high premium to send things by fedex or ups, thus creating a good niche for USPS, albiet evidently not a profitable one. Should near universal access to a communication tool be profitable? thats the question.

  14. Be honest on Website Calls Out Authors of Racist Anti-Obama Posts · · Score: 1

    If you ever thought that advocating for or even casually mentioning the assassination of geroge w bush as a positive thing, you cannot really object to people doing the same thing with obama. Back in 2003, i certainly did want bush out by any means necessary. So it would be hypocritical of me to not side with free speech here.

    Hate speech is another issue, but as i understand it, hate speech is not illegal in the USA, whereas assassination threats are taken more seriously because of the seriousness of the position. Probably because in the usa the position of president is sacrosanct, whereas hate speech, which often builds to hate crimes (and arguably is more likely to insight actual violence), affects only the ordinary citizen who is less protected then the president, obviously.

  15. Re:blocked already on AdTrap Aims To Block All Internet Advertising In Hardware · · Score: 1

    Advertising causes mental problems. Advertising is evil and must be stopped. Would you like it if while walking down the street, every 10 feet or so someone spit in your face?

    I dont give a cows lick if people that rely on spitting in my face for their revenue have to find another business model. All free content will never dissapear. Perhaps you remember the mid 90s? I can assure you that the internet before advertising did exist.

    Advertising causes need, therapy, therapy, advertising causes need. Every minute, every second, buy, buy, buy, buy, buy.

  16. Also warranties suck now on A Year After Thailand Flooding, Hard Drive Prices Remain High · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have also noticed that you are paying a huge premium now for even a 3 year warranty. Most seagate drives now come with a ridiculous 1 year warranty on them, so I wont even look at them any more. WD is not much better, with their green drives being 1-2 years. If you want 3-5 year you are paying 50% more for the drive. For example a 2tb WD black (5 year warranty) has a non sale price of $199 ( http://www.ncix.com/products/?sku=58376&vpn=WD2002FAEX&manufacture=Western%20Digital%20WD&promoid=1230 ) whereas the same drive albeit "green" with a 2 year warranty is $119 non sale price ( http://www.ncix.com/products/?sku=62047&vpn=WD20EARX&manufacture=Western%20Digital%20WD&promoid=1230 ).

    Its a shame because I was looking at old invoices and in 2010 I was buying 2tb drives with 3 year warranties standard for 80 bucks.

    Sure they claim to have more "features" with their different colour codes, but it does seem like they just decided 3 years should no longer be industry standard for a warranty. Probably some sort of collusion as they all pretty much changed their warranties at the same time. With seagate, they used to pride themselves in having 5 year warranties. And having recently RMA'd a 1TB drive from 2008, I am glad for that.

    Most HDD's die within 3-5 years. So a 1 year warranty is useless except for straight off the truck failures. Arguably, this is more sensible for the company, however it sucks ass for consumers who are used to having a standard 5 year warranty, an artifact of the storage wars of the mid aughts.

    So I am not surprised, but not many people are talking about this, which is surprising. Glad to see a slashdot article about it!

  17. Re:Revolt before it spreads to TV. on Microsoft's Hidden Windows 8 Feature: Ads · · Score: 1

    That would truly be crazy! My downloaded TV has no ads, and my shoutcast radio does not either! Not needing to be mentioned before, but neither does my modern windows 7 OS.

  18. Re:Getting stupid... on 'World of Warcraft' Candidate For Maine State Senate Wins Election · · Score: 2

    The thing I don't get about this line of reasoning is that republicans in the USA are MORE big government than anyone! They start wars, encourage wasteful spending by getting the private sector to do their job (for a profit, which can only increase costs, DUH), cut taxes/services forcing more burdens onto the individual, etc.

    That is why I think its all a sort of cultural brainwashing, mixed with racism and lack of diversity. I am not from the USA, however i see the same things in rural areas in my country. If you live in a city, you actually have to coexist with more people around you, so it forces people to be more civil to one another and respect each others space and values. (for instance my asian neighbours who cook the stinkiest fish imaginable every single god damn day), however I have no choice but to put up with it really, so you gain a kind of acceptance. If I was in the country, I would simply burn a cross on their lawn or something to try and get them to leave. You cant burn crosses on everyones lawn in the city. First off, most people do not have lawns.

    So you are stuck with accepting them and realizing that you probably piss off people around you too. In short, density makes people more civil I find. You cant start fights with everyone in your apartment building that annoys you. There would simply be no time for anything but fighting.

    I would think in rural areas you need to rely on the government MORE, per capita. The government pays a premium to support your infrastructure out in the middle of nowhere. The government pays to have doctors stationed out there (ok maybe not in the USA but, in other countries this is true). They pay to upkeep roads which are used less than the cities. Government run power companies pay more to provide services out there, again less users per sq km costs more. Laws mandate that greyhound and other bus companies must go to these far flung places, instead of just dropping them and disconnecting the communities.

    I don't think the idea of a sensible level of government has anything in conflict with a self sufficient attitude. There are some things that it is impossible to DIY, DIY healthcare, DIY highway systems, DIY firefighting and police (enforcement of sensible laws), DIY mail service, DIY internet. Americans seem to have defunded their government services over the years, and then complain about shoddy service. Its a really annoying cognitive dissonance not found in many other countries. Most people expect that you get what you pay for, and government services are no exception.

    So in short, its great to be as self sufficient as possible however no man is an island, and I would rather have well run and well funded governement programs when I do need them, then underfunded and non existent programs. Even if 99% of the time I dont need hospital care, I still will pay to have that hospital properly funded because of that 1% of times when you really do need it.

  19. Re:Massively overbuilt, most reliable buildings. on 26 Nuclear Power Plants In Hurricane Sandy's Path · · Score: 1

    "I'm sorry, where are these magic plants that don't need backup power?"

    You didnt try very hard:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CANDU_reactor#Safety_features

    CANDU reactors, yes I would trust them no matter what as they are designed to fail peacefully without power. Now for american reactors which were built by the lowest bidder in the 60s /70s - I would want to be far far away from in ANY natural disaster.

    With the USA's famous lack of regulation and much corner cutting, who knows what will happen in the real world?

    And if there is an incident, you are making possibly a large swath of land uninhabitable for 10000 years. I am not sure why everyone is so PRO nuke on slashdot. Most of the plant designs that are currently operating were built 50 years ago with a lifetime of 30 years.

    So to sum up, yes nuclear power CAN be safe, however as fukishima shows, just because its nuclear power is hopefully heavily regulated, does not automatically mean it cannot fail! At the end of the day, these systems are built by man who is fallible. You can argue whether or not it is worth the risk, but you cannot argue that there is no risk whatsoever. (I think I was actually agreeing with you and disagreeing with parent, but I see the same infallibility argument often in these discussions)

  20. Re:3 year olds don't do that much. on Are Windows XP/7 Users Smarter Than a 3-Year-Old? · · Score: 1

    "The error I am seeing on this thread time and time again is the assumption that 3-year-olds are stupid.
    They aren't. They have a hyper-active ability to learn that leaves all adults in the dust. This is exactly when they are learning languages and most of the building blocks of knowledge that are incredibly important and we take for granted."

    So then we could paraphrase this to say "Windows 8: if you have no problem picking up foreign languages, then you will have no problem learning our interface!". Which isn't exactly a selling point as most people cannot pick up a foreign language with the ease that a 3 year old could. I think you are misinterpreting the "error" you claim people are making. I think most people realize that children before puberty are much better at learning than adults. I'd even go so far as to call that "common knowledge".

    No one said kids are stupid. People have been saying that kids are not a good baseline for "adaptability" when your target audience is not really 3 year olds.

  21. ocz is garbage on Ask Slashdot: How Do SSDs Die? · · Score: 1

    1) OCZ drives are GARBAGE along with most products put out by that company. Avoid at all costs.

    2) Crucial m4's as wonderful as they are, had a firmware bug in the last version, whereby if the power was lost in some circumstances the drive would then fail to post. The fix strangely was just to apply power and no data cable for 2x 20 minutes periods. So just hook the drive up to power and wait 20 minutes. shut down and then do it again.

    Its amazing, but i have personally fixed 3 drives doing that magic trick. I believe they have corrected this bug in their 000F firmware. Otherwise it seemed to occur mostly in laptops when they were shut down improperly. It was scary for sure! drive appeared to just disappear from the machine.

  22. Re:That is seriously an unhealthy amount on Lawsuit Challenges New York Sugary Drink Ban · · Score: 1

    "So what do you like to drink. We'll try and get that banned, too."

    I doubt they will make you a single drink if you asked for 1L of whiskey or vodka in a bar. They would say that its illegal and dangerous to make such a powerful drink. However, they will happily sell you ten 100ml drinks.

    Do you understand how its not about freedom now?

    And trust me, if there was a multibillion dollar industry telling people to smoke as much weed as possible per day, I would advise them that its a bad idea and not good for you. However weed should obviously still be legal. You are trying to say that because someone sets a limit on you, its akin to a ban when clearly this is a false dichotomy.

  23. Re:Sugar tax and the CID on A Day in Your Life, Fifteen Years From Now · · Score: 1

    All prepared foods are taxed (in canada anyways). I could easily see them judging a sugar drink as "prepared" food. After all, alcohol is taxed. I pay 3 separate taxes on alcohol from a retail store. Of course you can homebrew, and since that is considered a non prepared foodstuffs, there is no tax on that. So there are always ways around it for those so inclined. Its pretty easy to homebrew gingerale for instance.

  24. Re:Might be incentive to buy American? on Supreme Court To Decide Whether Or Not You Own What You Own · · Score: 2

    "Most people who've taught or given presentations would attest that people who think they can talk (or think of questions) and listen at the same time are deluding themselves."

    Really? Bringing a pad of paper (or smartphone) to note down comments for the question period in a meeting isnt standard where you work? People just rely on their awesome memories, or what?

    You can easily take 10 seconds to note down a comment for later without detracting from your listening ability at all. If I can do it, and my job is not specifically to listen and ask questions, I am sure someone whoes entire job revolves around listening to lawyers and other extremely boring and esoteric people all day, can make the effort to learn that skill - if they have somehow gone through life without it.

    its a cop out plain and simple. These people dictate the laws for your entire country (sometimes the world), yet cant be bothered to take basic notes for their own reference? bullshit.

  25. Re:Compared to what? on Why It's Bad That Smartphones Have Banished Boredom · · Score: 2

    Ah LOL!

    You are following scripts and pre programed algorithms with fake sandboxed physics. I think its hilarious when people try and justify playing angry birds as having any real world uses at all. What do you think you can now throw a shot put ball with a more proper trajectory? Give me a break!! It may be technically more interactive than tv, but that is made up for by having the smartphone turned on and receiving 24x7. Like having a tv strapped to your face, which auto detects where your drool lands on the controls to derive intent. Its interactive!

    I have met very few people who can actually use a smartphone "properly". Most people are checking their work and home emails and doing something on facebook. The article is right. People don't just stare at walls any more because all their time needs to be "productive". However no one really knows what productive even means anymore. Is it working all the time and burning yourself out? Is it firing off comments to your friends so they know how quick and snarky you can be? Why are these things "productive" while staring at a wall and letting your mind wander is considered not?

    I would argue that the more breaks you take from your routine, the more likely you are to think outside your environment and comfort zone. Smartphones have created, in a few short years, a culture of people who are so disconnected and alone that they need a small glowing screen to babysit them all the damn time. I mean its common now for people to think its perfectly acceptable to be on their phone on the toilette. This smartphone wave is so fucked up. And don't get me wrong, I love the internet. But does it really have to be everywhere, all the time?