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User: sasparillascott

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  1. Re:It's incredibly frustrating... on US Democrats Introduce Bill To Restore Net Neutrality · · Score: 1

    It is incredibly frustrating, however its not just the GOP. Take a step back notice that the head of the FCC, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler - was a lobbyist for the Cable and Wireless industries before he was appointed to be the head of the FCC, the governing body that regulates these industries by the Democrats leader, President Obama.

    The Democrats take their lobbying money as well and while lower ranks may not like it - the outcome is the same. The FCC could protect net neutrality today if it wanted to (the most recent lawsuit the judge actually layer out what the FCC needed to do under its own authority), but under the former cable and wireless industry lobbyist just can't seem to figure it out...probably ringing his hands and loosing sleep...not...this is with the blessing of the President (which will only stop if it appears to start to blow up in his face from PR angle).

    It's all totally corrupt. The Democrats downfall started in the mid 70's when they starting taking big business campaign donations.

  2. Re:Just to get this straight... on Cadillac Unveils Pricier Alternative To Tesla Model S · · Score: 1

    In one sense you're totally right, however the Tesla S besides having much better performance also has much longer range (not Nissan Leaf range) so you can do most driving folks would need to do. Unless you're looking at driving really long distances (150 miles in a day or longer, where you'd be better off with a Prius) the Tesla just smokes this car.

    I think the big failing is the price...its way too expensive for what you get compared to a Tesla Model S or a Volt. Destined to be a sales dud unless they bring it down in price by $20-$25k. JMHO, saying it as someone who likes the Volt and wants GM to succeed.

  3. So nice Hubble grabbed this honor... on Hubble Finds Sign That Habitable Planets Could Exist Beyond Solar System · · Score: 1

    So satisfying that Hubble was the telescope to grab this honor as it enters its twilight years.

  4. Re:Was Bletchley Park wrong? on US Intelligence Chief Defends Attempts To Break Tor · · Score: 1

    It's a bit of a strawman question - this was Great Britain, they were at war (for real) with a real country and the very existence of their country was at stake (their perception in the first years of the war as they expected Germany to try an invade after rolling over western europe).

    The difference here is that the U.S. is not formally at war with any country, its existance isn't close to being challenged much less at stake - the U.S. has much better constitutional protections for rights to privacy and freedom of speech than the U.K. did.

    As others have pointed out, the head of the NSA here is actually talking about privacy. It's important to look at where this started and it was the ends justify the means free for all that the Bush administration let loose immediately after Sept 11th - whether it was allowing & pushing torture for the first time in our country's history, or making the country a complete surveillance state this all started back then and was mostly in place within a few years. Unfortunately the weak minded president that followed the Bush administration took the safe political path and didn't roll all this back making it "the new normal". We need to tear it all down and accept the marginal risk in exchange for freedom, privacy and democracy. JMHO...

  5. True Bummer for our friends in Russia on Russian Government Takes Over Country's 289-year Old Scientific Academy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Our thoughts are with those folks, this just really sucks...cause it begs the question, how do you turn this around and there's no nice answer to that. Deeper into the dark Putin takes the country.

  6. Re:Pretty good in general on New IE Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Discovered · · Score: 1

    Great points. I've thought about the XP EOL issue as well. Unless MS changes plans somehow, is nearly all downside and not much upside. They've still got close to 40% of their user base on it - they drop the security updates and every new security update for the newer versions is just a road map on what to exploit in XP. If the users dump XP in large numbers and don't upgrade (go Linux, go Mac, go Chrome) MS looses big chunks of marketshare (further making things look worse for them).

    About the only upside is that they won't have to pay for the updates for XP, but since they have to do it for the newer versions anyways (and the updates often overlap) - it won't be saving alot of money.

    Seems like it'll be better to wait till the last month or two before turning things off (that way you've got all the upgraders upgraded) and then tell the world that they're going to keep XP updates going (or make them pay per use & make it cheap).

  7. Re:EOL a product to force new sales? on China Has a Massive Windows XP Problem · · Score: 2

    They should just offer extended security support for $4.99 per year per machine and watch the profits roll in. Otherwise its just a big opportunity for folks to switch platforms since those old machines will run Linux and Wine but can't run newer versions of Windows because Microsoft changed the device driver architecture - if they hadn't done that they could just tell everyone to upgrade.

  8. Re:The perfect is the enemy of the good. on Why PBS Won't Do Android · · Score: 1

    Very true. I saw this the other day. Over at the BBC, their Android development team is 3 times the size of their iOS team. http://blogs.computerworld.com/android/22269/android-fragmented-and-costly-says-bbc-it-denies-apple-bias As for PBS, I can see why they might be reluctant to step into that briar patch until they're sure they have the funds to do the job right. Until then making sure things work through the browser might be the best fallback position.

  9. Re:nature and consumers on GMO Oranges? Altering a Fruit's DNA To Save It · · Score: 1

    Probably this can be traced to the fact that the scientists/companies doing GMO work are often doing it for enormous profit - and that profit wants to be served (solution pushed as "what we need") whether its actually a good idea for the population paying for it or not. This is a huge change from science of 30 years (and before) when scientists tried to stay disconnected from the commercial side of things. There are no impartial players in this area these days.

    People have wisely grown quite skeptical of such proposed solutions. JMHO...

  10. Amazing how much Bin Laden changed the U.S.A. on US Promises Not To Kill Or Torture Snowden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's amazing how much Bin Laden changed our country, for the worse. In just a few years we openly torture (something George Washington wouldn't allow and hadn't since the founding of the country), publicly kill Americans and others and of course spy on the entire population.

    He may be dead, but we lost so much to the weak minded choices of our political weenies in Washington (the prior administration coming up with these awful choices and then the current one not stopping them so the become "the new normal" in perpetuity - its amazing what he changed our country into via our politicians.

  11. Gotta love this part on CNET: Feds Put Heat On Web Firms For Master Encryption Keys · · Score: 1

    ""Strongly encrypted data are virtually unreadable," NSA director Keith Alexander told (PDF) the Senate earlier this year." Hmmnnn, should I trust what the Emperor of the NSA, who has directly lied under oath numerous times, is saying? I have no doubt that if the companies don't provide those master keys (seems many if not all of the big ones won't do this), this intelligence empire would just obtain them illegally via direct attacks and/or people on the inside of these organizations.

  12. Re:Microsoft Security Essentials on Ask Slashdot: Light-Footprint Antivirus For Windows XP? · · Score: 1

    I agree on this, it seems lightweight on the resources, unobtrusive and free. As others have pointed out, Microsoft stops Windows XP security updates in less than a year. You want to have them transitioned to something else before that happens (Vista will take security updates into 2017 and Windows 7 will take security updates through 2020). Same story with Office as well (if they have that on their machines), Office 2003 stops security updates next year when XP does. Linux would be the lowest cost choice, but you probably don't want to be the training resource - they'll want something that works like the old computer.

  13. Re:Apple assholes on Judge Rules Apple Colluded With Publishers to Fix Ebook Prices · · Score: 2

    Well, its always best to know the actual details of what was going on. The problem was that Amazon was selling its "e-books" (i.e. Kindle) versions of books for well below their cost they paid to the publishers to buy them. Several years into this Amazon also started its own publishing arm. In the end, assuming Amazon would demand low pricing like they were selling e-books for or not sell them (after all other large scale sellers had been eliminated) this would likely bankrupt and destroy much of the publishing industry (the industry and Apple could see this) - leaving Amazon with sales and much of the publishing to itself (a monopoly).

    Apple talked with the publishers and said we want to sell e-books, but since they are electronic they need to be cheaper than the paper based versions, but the publishers have to make enough to be around (as nobody wants to just have Amazon destroy the publishing industry and be the only large scale publisher/seller of books in the U.S. - monopolies tend to not work out well for the consumer in the end).

    So Apple was proposing lower prices for e-book versions, but the publishers would force Amazon to not sell their Kindle versions at a loss. This was illegal to coordinate & price fix like this, but it didn't raise the prices of e-books the publishers were selling, it lowered them (as they were selling them for the same price as paper versions to distributors, including Amazon, before hand - Amazon was just selling their e-books at large losses, presumably to destroy their competitors in the large scale book sales market & possibly with an eye to eventually corner the market in the publishing industry).

  14. Can see in infra-red? on Microsoft Integrating Xbox One Advertising With Kinect To Profile Users For Ads · · Score: 1

    Based on comments from Microsoft, supposedly the Kinect can see where the blood is going in your body, if your hands were hot etc. (i.e. see in infrared wavelengths in addition to visual) via "active infrared". This would also mean it would be able to look through (to an extent) light clothing. How the bozo's at the top of Microsoft thought this was a good idea is hard to fathom - as this will blow up in their faces (another thing, yet again).

  15. Re:Video from different angle... on Russian Rocket Proton-M Crashes At Launch · · Score: 1

    Yes on the payload section you can see it tear off the vehicle since its not designed to handle flight loads sideways. I was stunned they didn't blow it up when it toppled over, you want as much burned up before hitting the ground (in case it goes where people are). It makes me wonder if they don't have a low altitude self destruct process and system for the vehicle (they sure should) - hydrazine is extremely nasty stuff.

  16. Re:This looks like gross error on Russian Rocket Proton-M Crashes At Launch · · Score: 1

    I saw that too. I was rather surprised they didn't blow it up - it was obvious it was game over when came over the end there - instead just letting it impact with full force (good thing it didn't decide to topple over towards the ground crews or it would have been game over for them). Makes me wonder if they have self destruct on the Proton or not?

  17. It handles the flying periodic table better on Firefox 22 Released, Boosts 3-D Gaming and Video Calls · · Score: 5, Interesting
  18. Re:While we dither with meaningless goals on Obama's Climate Plans Face Long Fight · · Score: 1

    Well, think about the statement regarding "wealth transfer scam". What power sources are projected to go nowhere but up in costs siphoning larger and larger amounts of money away to the largest most profitable (and politically corrupting) companies in the world as time goes on? That would be fossil fuels (oil, natural gas which has gone up more than 100% in the U.S. since Dec of 2011 as it comes out of its bubble and which on the world market is more expensive than oil, and of course coal).

    Which power sources have falling cost curves which are expected to continue declining into the future? That would be renewable power sources (wind, solar, geo-thermal).

    What would be the wealth transfer scam, stay on fossil fuels with ever greater prices (and profits for the massive corporations - boy they want that) as their prices increase in the future or transition off them to renewables which are projected to continue declining in costs as time goes on? Seems staying on fossil fuels longer is the wealth transfer scam. JMHO...

  19. Re:Unfortunately on Obama's Climate Plans Face Long Fight · · Score: 1

    That's when you need to look at some basic questions that get to the core of the issue (other things aside).

    If a greenhouse gas is released into the atmosphere, will it behave like a greenhouse gas? Of course it will. Have we been releasing massive quantities of greenhouse gasses (mostly CO2) for more than a century and are we accelerating that release? Yes

    Another great question is if we just halted all manmade CO2 emissions tomorrow (burning fossil fuels) when would the warming stop? The answer is 30-40 years, because most of the warming has gone into the oceans (just a little goes into the atmosphere where we normally measure it) and they act as a huge drag as the climate moves to an equilibrium state.

    Here's a great graph of the arctic ice volume at its minimum (how far back it shrinks every year) since the 70's...its down ~80% in that time and following its trend puts a melt out during this decade (20 years ago the scientists thought it wouldn't happen till after 2100):

    http://economicdemocracy.org/eco/images/2012.volume.final.jpg

    Now the ice cap anchors the jet stream in the northern hemisphere (gives us our weather and its already becoming unstable over the last 10 years or so & is why we're getting alot of the weird weather we've been getting in the U.S. over the last couple of years), it keeps Greenland from melting (believe its over 20+ ft of sea level rise just there) and keeps the permafrost ringing the top of the world from melting (which, once it melts out, would release more methane and CO2 than we have in the atmosphere - i.e. nature taking over control of the warming).

    So does it make sense to put our future coastlines, weather (that we grow our food with, get our water from) and societal budgets at risk just to avoid getting off fossil fuels (i.e. to keep the status quo) or would it be better to get off fossil fuels?

  20. While we dither with meaningless goals on Obama's Climate Plans Face Long Fight · · Score: 2

    Great article in Rolling Stone the other day - laying out how our decades of not doing anything (fossil fuel companies love it) has already cost us Miami and southern Florida, its just a matter of time at this point:

    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/why-the-city-of-miami-is-doomed-to-drown-20130620#ixzz2X0NGzxLY

    The President will be talking about 17% CO2 emissions reductions from 2003 levels (if memory serves, but it should be 1990 levels) by 2020 which is a joke - and totally inconsequential in the grand scheme of things. He'll probably be doing this talk while approving the XL expansion (he approved the 1st two tar sands pipelines, Keystone 1 and Alberta Clipper in 2009).

  21. Gotta love Symentec's comment on Chinese Hack New York Times · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Symentec, who's software didn't identify but one of the 45 pieces of malware installed, tried to imply it was the NY Times fault, saying the anti-virus isn't enough (although once such stuff is installed the antivirus should be able to find and eliminate it...that's what they sell it for, right?) - I wonder if Symentec's software can identify all or even most of the malware now, yet? The average user is just so far out in the woods, its obvious most of the anti-malware software (even the biggies like Symentec) are not remotely successful at catching or preventing such attacks (since they obviously won't just be used by the Chinese govt hackers forever).

  22. Couple of easy solutions on Trip To Mars Could Damage Astronauts' Brains · · Score: 1

    1st instead of using a chemical rocket engine to get there after almost a year - use a much faster engine technology to get there in a couple of months or less. Then make sure you surround the living quarters (not command quarters) with the crew's water and other stores as well as long term propellent tanks and you'll get your shielding.

  23. Re:So what? on Are Windows XP/7 Users Smarter Than a 3-Year-Old? · · Score: 1

    Yes, just because Microsoft wants to sell more Tablets and Phones - many folks won't want to spend the time or effort to learn that touch based UI on their mouse keyboard PC, nor should they.

  24. Corporations going to Windows 8 on PC's? Dream on on Microsoft Urges Businesses To Get Off XP · · Score: 1

    Companies are very conservative when it comes to embracing Windows versions, for the most part, most big companies just didn't do Vista at all. Think large corporations will go to a small touch screen (phone and tablet) focused UI based version of Windows (where Metro applications are full screen only) just because Microsoft wants to sell phones and tablets? With all the associated costs there. Dream on Microsoft.

    Microsoft should actually give their customers what they want, instead of trying to shove stuff down their throats cause they think their buyers have no choice. Microsoft why not just charge users $5 a year for further XP security updates...they'd make a ton of money as XP is still close to 45% of all the systems out there.

  25. Re:Time to pick one up! on Microsoft Surface Pricing Goes Toe-to-Toe With Apple iPad · · Score: 1

    That video was hilarious.