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User: hey_popey

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  1. From the article on Workers Raise First Section of New Chernobyl Shelter · · Score: 0

    "Originally, that was intended to be destroyed. But I think this (shelter) will be so impressive that even in 100 years people will come to look at it," Yeah, sure: "Honey, let's go take the kids near that radioactive site that was they covered by a shelter some guys build a 100 years ago" Seriously...?

  2. Obligatory... on EU Working On Most Powerful Laser Ever Built · · Score: 1, Interesting
  3. Re:When will this be available? on Scientists Move Closer To a Universal Flu Vaccine · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Is it really going to happen if the "boosters" do not have to be taken often enough to keep the money flowing into the pharma industry?

  4. Re:Accidentally? on CyanogenMod Android ROMs Accidentally Logged Screen Unlock Patterns · · Score: 2

    The Cyanogenmod team (however precisely it is defined) might not be responsible for that one: the guy who added that "feature" seems to be working independently: he used his username directly in the code...

  5. Re:Incremental updates? on Custom Android ROM Developers Get OTA Update Capabilities Like Carriers · · Score: 2

    How exactly do you manage to do that? I change update CM9 nightlies with CWM. No wipe is needed at all. Not a single app login is lost during the process! The only thing I need to setup again is the avast anti theft service.

  6. Re:hmm on Upgrading Software From 350 Million Miles Away · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course, not! They do it just for the lulz!
    More seriously, for space systems and embedded systems in general, due to resource constraints on-board, you usually cannot fit all the functionality you would like to in one software image. So you keep only what is necessary for the first mission, and then you replace the obsolete ones with the next thing you want to do.
    As a simplified example, when you launch a satellite, you will need it to deploy its solar arrays quickly (and do many initialization checks). When that is done, you could imagine changing this part of the software with something else...

    Also, they might have had time planning constraints on the project, and needed to launch with a simpler first version of the software, while finalizing the second one. That does happen.

  7. Re:isn't it ridiculous? on Microsoft Drops 'Metro' Name For Windows 8 UI · · Score: 2

    clearly, the word is common and abstract enough that anyone can claim it's usage

    Exactly. Usually, no trademark issues are raised when the two companies' activities are so different.
    My guess in that case is that the German Metro wanted to avoid a splash of bad notoriety in case Windows 8 is a flop.

  8. Not sure... on Speed of Sound Is Too Slow For the Olympics · · Score: 1

    Not sure if real pistol fired next to the athletes is too easy or not geek enough...

  9. Re:Can the Public Become Private? on Twitter To Appeal Turning Over Protester's Messages · · Score: 2

    So much so, I wonder if the police monitor tweets and store potentially interesting ones?

    Why wonder? Just assume that some agency, somewhere, does. Maybe not the police, but with all the agencies that could be interested in this, it's likely that this happens!

  10. Re:Except on Small, Big-Brained Animals Dodge Extinction · · Score: 0

    at least as measured by IQ

    This is the most important part... Don't forget that our definition of intelligence today might be very different from the original "natural" one, as in "surviving in a wild environment". Maybe the bigger brain is better suited for the wildlife thing; from TFA: "Animals with larger brains relative to their body size have been shown to be more likely to thrive when introduced to new places"
    On an another subject, I cannot find the curve they're referring to, to predict the brain size from the body's. From what I understand, it seems to be really curvy, not linear, so I am not sure it is that reliable for such predictions...Moreover, it is only applicable to mammals.

  11. Re:Windows 8 Metro on Georgie: Smartphone For the Blind and Visually Impaired · · Score: 1

    Unless you are a software patents fundamentalist, this screen filled with big buttons looks just like any interface designed for the sight-impaired!

  12. Recursive crowdfunding on Entrepreneur Offers Crowdfunding For Health Startups, Including His Own · · Score: 1

    Some men just want to watch the world burn...

  13. Not a surprise on Bye ACTA, Hello CETA · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not like if we weren't warned; some Euro-MPs had announced this: https://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Translation_Interview_Marielle_Gallo_ACTA_pcinpact

  14. Re:How Wikileaks will take itself out. . . on WikiLeaks Begins Release of 2.5m Syrian Emails · · Score: 1

    You mean, like any of the biggest military powers which were concerned by the diplomatic cables?

  15. Re:Going down kicking and screaming on France Ending Minitel Service · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The fact that it was working just fine and the population liked and used it will be ignored for the brief moment that your comment is read.

    In that case, the fact that it was a horribly ugly and slow even compared to 56k Internet (compare it to an old black-and-white teletext) should also be ignored. I forgot to mention the outrageous charges, even to connect to public administration services; I remember myself waiting for some nation-wide exam results to display, the connection timer was the real source of stress, not the results!

  16. Re:Lockstep, my ass on Microsoft's Surface Caught Windows OEMs By Surprise · · Score: 5, Informative

    On the rare occasion I bow down to necessity and buy a laptop, the first thing I do is buy a new license to Windows, wipe the thing, and start fresh.

    I am surprised by this part: last time I tried with a Win7 Pro laptop, I was able to use my own license number (the one on the sticker on the laptop case) with another Windows setup disc, without having to purchase a new license!

  17. Flash your UEFI on Ubuntu Lays Plans For Getting Past UEFI SecureBoot · · Score: 2

    Couldn't the buyer of an OEM PC with Windows just flash their UEFI with one allowing disabling the Secure Boot?
    This would add just one step to the alternative OS setup!

  18. Neat... on Interview With Mozilla's Ryan Merkley: Tracking the Trackers · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is nice as a tool to increase users' awareness, but Idon't see the point of using this add-on more than a couple of minutes
    Then you install ghostery if not already done, and you forget about trackers...

  19. Re:23 feet, kinda small asteroid on Astronomers Catch Asteroid In Near-Miss Video · · Score: 2

    I realize I might have misunderstood you, but there does not seem to be a lower limit. An asteroid is a kind of meteorite if it resists impact on Earth

  20. Re:23 feet, kinda small asteroid on Astronomers Catch Asteroid In Near-Miss Video · · Score: 1

    Well, it seems that Ceres (radius=950 km, 590 mi) is still called an asteroid, since it belongs to the Asteroid Belt.

  21. Cancer free? on Patch Makes Certain Skin Cancers Disappear · · Score: 1

    I thought you had to wait several years, not months before declaring the cancer cured!

  22. Re:Don't accept cookies. on CNET, IDC Find Rapid Increase In Behavioral Data Tracking · · Score: 1

    1- If you don't accept cookies, some websites simply don't work
    2- Incognito/private browsing is not enough to avoid other trackers like pixels, scripts...

  23. Seriously... on UN To Debate Taxing Internet Data · · Score: 1

    Does anyone have a non US-biased source about this UN proposal? I couldn't find anything on a European Google News.
    The sensationalistic headline of TFA, without any actual numbers regarding this potential tax leaves me puzzled.
    Don't get me wrong, I am all for net neutrality, but jumping from an article with two "work in progress" leaked documents to companies running out of business is a big leap!

  24. Speed... on Researcher Develops Chemical Circuit Using Ion Transistors · · Score: 1

    Sure it is nice and "cyborg" just got a new dimension, but will transmitting ions and molecules will ever be as fast as transmitting electrons? I doubt that...

  25. That's right... on Audio Surveillance, Intended to Detect Gunshots, Can Pick Up Much More · · Score: 1

    Because they don't need to "be on" to "hear a gunshot"?