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User: Post-O-Matron

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Comments · 73

  1. Re:A Defense of Abortion on The Mathematics of 'Legitimate Rape' and Pregnancy · · Score: 1

    The only problem with this argument is that by every legal or moral standard parents have responsibilities towards their offsprings that they don't have towards other human beings.

    It's not that I disagree with the bottom line, I think the previous comment sums this up quote well. I'm just pointing out that this particular argument is flawed.

    A better approach vector is if that person suddenly dependent on the victim is a half-clone sharing part of their DNA which was all of a sudden and without consent implanted in the host's body.

    (I think there is a movie based on a similar concept...)

  2. Re:Dumb laws are dumb. on Watchdog "Not Ready" To Probe Cookie Complaints · · Score: 2

    It's not as simple as that. You are missing the usual "but we are geeks" syndrome. For a /.er disabling all cookies and then inspecting incoming ones individually to decide which to enable might be something they can do and willing to invest the time in. For normal people doing that for every website they use isn't really a viable option.

    Hence a law that forces website owners to breakdown cookies to roles and present Mr. Normal Person a simple explanation of what they do and allow them to enable them or not.

    Think about it like Firebug's cookies tab for non-techies.

  3. Re:When Domination Isn't on Why Apple Is Suing Every Android Manufacturer In Sight · · Score: 1

    ...because Steve won't come back to save their asses this time around.

    And if he does that's a whole different horror movie!

  4. Re:I think everyone has already made up their mind on Mitt Romney To Announce VP Decision Via Smartphone App · · Score: 2

    No. "Crowd Input" is one aspect of social media. The other aspect is the viral aspect. You want to spread your message across the social web through each node's personal connection by seeding a select few initial nodes. The advantage of that over traditional media is that you can try and generate a buzz. Everybody talking about it, liking, commenting, sharing. Not everything is suiteable for broadcasting via social networks, but this is definitely one major aspect of social networking.

  5. Re:No kidding on The Fall of 38 Studios · · Score: 1

    I guess he means "Single player big-world adventure games".

    "Single player Massive Multiplayer Online" is an oxymoron. But nobody would understand what you say if you said "Single player BWAG"...

  6. I sincerely hope this one doesn't leave the lab...

  7. Re:This case is a joke. on Kim Dotcom Offers the DoJ a Deal · · Score: 1

    Well his assets were US-based so it makes sense if the US decided to seize them in response to him breaking US-laws. Next time when you break US-laws and taunt the US-companies that complain about you, move your money to Switzerland first.

    In other news: NZ isn't in Europe (your post is slightly ambiguous on that point...)

  8. Re:Post PC on Preparing For Life After the PC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Kindle's battery lasts for a month. I think if the power is out for a whole month there would be much bigger things that we'll be worried about than charging our Kindles...

  9. Awsome on Apple Wins Patent For Head-Mounted Display Tech · · Score: 1

    Maybe if Apple's ludicrous patent streak will be ludicrous enough and go on for long enough it will cause lawmakers to question the current state of the patent system?

  10. Re:No doubt... on First iOS Malware Discovered In Apple's App Store · · Score: 1

    OMG did I write this? I swear my English is usually better and I'm not drunk. Just didn't proof read... ><

  11. Re:No doubt... on First iOS Malware Discovered In Apple's App Store · · Score: 1

    The mindset of Y turns out to not be perfect, so it's on the same level of X, must originate from politics because the whole feel of the debate seems political. It's a retarded mentality to have, akin to cheering for wrestlers and their bogus storylines

    While I agree with your analogy, the reason for the "Y ISN'T PERFECT! Y ISN'T PERFECT" mentality, is the "Y IS BETTER THAN X! Y IS BETTER THAN X!" mentality on the other side. This is the same cause for it in politics. As the (left|right) claims that their way of doing things is better and then mocks / forces it on the (right|left) responds by showing that the (left|right)'s way actually isn't perfect and then mock it / forces it way.

  12. Re:Next: "Fucked" button. on Facebook Testing the Want Button · · Score: 1

    I think you missed the point,

    The "Like" button is a powerful commercial instrument. If you've worked with the FB API you'd know what data-mining you can do with it to find out things about your users. Namely - what they like. So you can try and sell that to them. Compare it to Google ads - super-sophisticated backend algorithms trying to figure out what you are looking for by analysing your recent browsing and the massive history and profiling they keep about you (because every website has google ads so they can follow you through the internet) - all so that they can serve you just the right ad.

    And here FB comes along and just *prompt* you to tell them what you like! How simple - and we do it. Not only that but that comes free with who you are, where you live, who your friends are, what things interest you and a whole wealth of information about you. Without not a fraction of the computing power and algorithmic sophistication that Google needed to invest to reach the same result. There is a reason why Google were upset with FB when they came out with the embeddable Like button, why they tried to compete with the +1, and why next to SEO companies talk about FBO as well now.

    The "Want" button is just the next logical step up from that. The reason I hate it and mock is because it's so obvious. With the like button there was an element of "social" "niceness" to it and you could argue that its roots where in social interaction rather than commercial opportunities. With the "Want" button they will basically drop the act - tell us what you *want* so that we can try and sell that to you. Seriously, what are the masses going to click *Want* about? World peace? Or that latest gadget from company X? They might "Like" all sort of things every now and then that don't directly give you meaningful information for your company's commercial efforts. The "Want" button weeds away the funny comments and silly videos and gets right down to what people *want*.

    So yeah, they might create a "Support" button along the way if it's not any additional hassle and doesn't clutter the UI or takes your attention away from the "Want" button. But they couldn't give a toss about it. Unless of course it turns out that they can sell the information to politicians, in which case they'll add it with friggin bells on.

  13. Next: "Fucked" button. on Facebook Testing the Want Button · · Score: 5, Funny

    So we know who fucked whom.

    What else is left?

  14. Re:My Take on Immigrants Crucial To Innovation · · Score: 1

    As someone who went through the legal process in the UK I can tell you that I have a good "profile" (senior developer, high earning power, middle class background etc) and I barely made it in because I didn't have an academic degree. In fact the points system keeps changing and today I wouldn't be accepted.

    I don't have a problem with it, countries aren't obligated to let anyone in. But when you talk about legal immigration you should understand that the systems are built to only allow the cream of the crop in. Scientists, Engineers, Doctors, Entrepreneurs - high earning power, money, education. In many countries that means higher social economic background to begin with.

    95% of the people wouldn't be able to get in through the legal process. At the same time the US, Western Europe and friends and basically sucking in the best minds of the third world and developing countries.

    I'm not justifying or criticising either side, just trying to shed some light on why many people might choose the illegal route.

  15. The causal mistake on Biotech Report Says IP Spurs Innovation · · Score: 1

    Over the past decade, increases in patents have been matched by growth in the biotech and pharmaceutical sectors in India, Brazil, Singapore and other countries with emerging economies.

    In other words:
    1. Over the past decade growth in the biotech and pharmaceutical sectors has been observed in India, Brazil, Singapore and other countries with emerging economies.
    2. Over the past decade increases in patents in the biotech and pharmaceutical sectors in India, Brazil, Singapore and other countries with emerging economies.

    I would guess these new companies that grew over the past decade in the biotech and pharmaceutical sectors in India, Brazil, Singapore and other countries with emerging economies *for various reasons*, have also secured their achievements with patents as in this days not doing so is suicidal.

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

  16. Re:It's possible on RIM Drops Playbook Price By 66% · · Score: 1

    Yeah but that company has the i-factor, this mysterious elixir that makes people get addicted to your meaningless electronic toy products as if they were crack.

    Without that companies have to compete in an actual free market, where trying to be economically efficient and lowering your price is the key to survival.

  17. Re:Let the guy fucking rest already... on How Steve Jobs Changed Google Plus · · Score: 1

    Shroedinger's cat could be dead or alive. Each time I log in to Google+ on the other hand - it's dead.

  18. Re:Sorry, but... on "Muthuball": How To Build an NBA Championship Team · · Score: 1

    "even watching can be mentally taxing if you wish."

    only if your so fucking stupid that watching a bright orange 30 inch chunk of rubber being tossed around is mentally taxing

    Troll? Gentlemen this should be modded 5: "Genius Irony" !

  19. Microscopic engraving? on Blocking Gun Laws With Patents · · Score: 1

    I don't understand, it's enough to just graze a microscopic layer off the tip of the firing pin to render the gun "unidentifiable" ?

  20. YAGL on Google Blockly — a Language With a Difference · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yet Another Google Language.

  21. Re:Discredited as predictive, NOT for accuracy on Hungarian Sequencing Company Vets DNA For 'Gypsy Or Jew' Genes · · Score: 1

    There might not have been a lot of travel back then, but there was enough.

    2000 years ago at the height of the Roman Empire there was *a lot* of travelling. Not all of it by will...

  22. Re:Discredited as predictive, NOT for accuracy on Hungarian Sequencing Company Vets DNA For 'Gypsy Or Jew' Genes · · Score: 1

    Considering that we have no proof that Jacob is a real person who actually existed, let alone having any surviving genetic sample from him, I think any attempt to assert that a person living today descended from Jacob or not is nonsense.

  23. Re:As a hungarian on Hungarian Sequencing Company Vets DNA For 'Gypsy Or Jew' Genes · · Score: 1

    As an Earthling I feel like throwing in the towel and getting the hell out of this dump of a rock a while now.

  24. Re:Would anyone else recommend GWT? on Ask Slashdot: Tips For Designing a Modern Web Application? · · Score: 1

    You are comparing two different things in this context. jQuery isn't meant to insulate you from what you describe as "browser craziness". jQuery is meant to give you browser abstraction, while still speaking browser.

    GWT on the other hand gives you the ability to develop with a desktop-like API and behaviour inside the browser, which comes at a price. GWT is much slower to develop in then simple HTML/CSS/JS and this insulation also means you are too detached from the underlying HTML/CSS which isn't necessarily good when you do want to think in terms of HTML/CSS for validation / accessibility / SEO purposes.

    For people familiar with HTML/CSS/JS doing simple stuff with a couple of jQuery lines is preferable to GWT. In really depends on the context.

  25. Spring MVC on Ask Slashdot: Tips For Designing a Modern Web Application? · · Score: 1

    I work as a Java developer and we're building websites on an SOA architecture with restful backends. In this regard we see the web app as "just another client".

    We use spring MVC for the browser-facing server app, and Jersey for the backend (I use the terms loosely here because this backend is still public-facing since it serves the mobile apps as well, so it is in itself a standalone secure web app).

    We use velocity or freemarker for the web app pages.

    I would warm-heartedly recommend this setup, it's hard to go wrong with it. That said, it's only one valid approach.