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User: baerd

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  1. As stated in the story "Apple Card will be accepted by vendors who participate in MasterCard’s global payment network" So no it's not like those things, it's like a MasterCard with the Apple logo pasted on it.

  2. Re:At long last on Tesla Will Close Most of Its Stores, Only Sell Cars Online · · Score: 1

    I don't know why everyone is saying you won't be able to try before you buy or test drive, you can still do that you just won't be doing it ad-hoc at a dealer location you have to book it ahead of time. Assuming that's true then they aren't losing out on too much.

  3. He was diagnosed at 24 and died at 30. I doubt any kind of misdiagnosis had anything to do with it. His stupidity might have killed him, and he was in India apparently. No explanation for why he was there, which is what I find to be unusual.

  4. Re:It may be well known among rational Americans.. on Foxconn Is Reconsidering Plan For Wisconsin Factory (cnn.com) · · Score: 1

    The mindset of Americans towards politics has been poisoned by the two party system. Your system ensures that there are always only two sides to any discussion, and it always results in an us or them mentality because quite literally there is only the choice of someone voting for the party you yourself vote for, or the opposing party, to the vast majority of people. The divisiveness is shocking to anyone from outside the US with an actual democracy. Having more than two viable parties means that ideas can be more important than parties. There are always more than two sides to an issue and multiple parties allows for these ideas to be represented and debated openly. It also helps to foster an educated population who are capable of deciding for themselves where they stand on specific issues rather than their party line more than a simple dichotomy. Your "partisan dumbshits" are a consequence of your two party system and I cannot see anything improving until you update your electoral institutions and methods to stop recognizing only the two major parties. I also can't see either of the major parties spearheading it because they see it as an erosion of their power, but your country needs this!

  5. We still have this actually: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... And although I think a lot of mediocre content gets promoted because of it, I'm actually ok with it because I can choose not to watch/listen to it. America is a real threat to our culture, and our 'u's, eh.

  6. The STOCK act was not repealed, it might have been gutted but it is still in affect and insider trading even for members of congress is still illegal.

  7. As a Canadian who traveled to Australia I was amazed and the amount of data and how cheap it was month to month down there. In Canada you get basically the same ripoff from all the major providers. There are cheaper choices (your Fidos etc) but for some reason a lot of people choose not to use them. It's even worse with internet providers, there is no choice for most people in the west.

  8. Re:Stop recyling paper on Plastic Recycling Is a Problem Consumers Can't Solve (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 2

    In google maps you can see the horrible scars left on the land by logging in western Canada and US, it is truly staggering how much tree cover has been removed. Re-using paper means cutting down less trees and that is a noble goal. You can plant replacement trees but the degradation of the environment (in terms of habitat of natural species) from the initial and subsequent logging takes centuries to be undone. Throwing paper in a landfill is not a sensible solution to anything.

  9. Re:It is solvable on Plastic Recycling Is a Problem Consumers Can't Solve (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    It is different depending on whether you live in a house or a condo/apartment in Victoria, in condos at least you do NOT participate in the blue box program; separate out kitchen waste/paper/everything else (plastic/metal/glass all in one) and then garbage. So you do not yourself have to separate out the plastic from the glass etc that all goes into a single bin and someone downstream separates it out - maybe the companies that do the collecting do the sorting as well. I don't know what percentage of people here are in houses vs condos/apartments but it is good to know that the rules are not the same for everyone, us poor downtrodden condo dwellers actually get more convenient recycling. But everyone recycles.

  10. Re:Dear Slashdot management on Robin "Roblimo" Miller, a Long-Time Voice of the Linux Community, Has Passed Away (wikipedia.org) · · Score: 2

    It used to be I actually LEARNED things from comments. Now it just sounds like the same old set of 30 grumpy old men complaining about things.

    I still learn things by reading Slashdot, most times I come here. The internet has changed so much, I think Slashdot has done more than any site I know to stay true to it's roots. In other words: if you think Slashdot is bad just look at what's happened to the REST of the internet... Compared to that Slashdot is a beacon of sanity.

  11. I'd be happy to be in the self-driving car on People Are Losing Faith In Self-Driving Cars Following Recent Fatal Crashes (mashable.com) · · Score: 1

    ... but I definitely feel less safe crossing the road in front of one. The passengers will be fine but not the poor saps getting run over!

  12. Re:Oh for FUCK'S SAKE! on Europe Divided Over Robot 'Personhood' (politico.eu) · · Score: 1

    And you'll be the first against the wall when the AI revolution comes!

  13. Re: Sounds like a CYA distraction statement on Tesla Issues Strongest Statement Yet Blaming Driver For Deadly Autopilot Crash (abc7news.com) · · Score: 1

    Cruise control maintains your speed extremely well and doesn't ever fail catastrophically. In hilly terrain it might go slightly too slow or too fast, but it doesn't put you in a dangerous situation.

    Incorrect, cruise control systems are constantly failing, the one in my old Mazda has a defect where it can cause your speed to surge so the speed keeps increasing making you drive at an unsafe speed unless you cancel it. If you aren't paying attention using cruise control you are a fool. If you aren't paying attention using autopilot you are also a fool.

  14. Re:Personally I don't care on EPA Confirms Tesla's Model 3 Has a Range of 310 Miles (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    and a full charge happens in 10 minutes In your everyday life (aka, the vast majority of your time), instead of 5 minutes to detour to a gas station, a full charge takes 10 seconds: 5 to plug in, 5 to unplug. In the comfort of your garage.

    This is one of my pet peeves about electric cars, and why they are not ready for the average person yet. Most people do not own a house, many own or rent an apartment or rent a house, in which case they cannot have a charger in their garage and MUST be able to recharge their car somewhere else. What about people who park out on the street are they not worthy of driving electric cars? Garage chargers were fine for Model S and X where they are expensive enough that the commoners who rent couldn't afford them anyways, but now that they want to appeal to a wider customer base this needs to be addressed. It amazes me that proponents of the electric car revolution have never considered the vast majority of the population for whom recharging at a station is the only way they will be able to do it and legitimately required it to be faster and more convenient than it is.

  15. Hey at least we have a multitude of political parties at all levels of government. You should try it sometime, people are more likely to vote on the issues when they have several choices. Where I live we even have a coalition provincial government where the 2nd and 3rd place parties joined together to form the government, ousting the incumbent. In a two party system your issues matter little, so you get what you get.

  16. Why ban instead of regulate? on New York State Bans E-Cigarettes Everywhere Traditional Cigarettes Are Prohibited (usatoday.com) · · Score: 2

    This is the thing that annoys me about political decisions like this. Why don't they just regulate this billion dollar industry so that vape manufacturers must prove their products are safe before getting the ability to sell them? This would actually make it safer for the users, reduce potential future health costs for the commons, and make it safer for people near them and no longer necessitating the ban. Seems reactive and stupid.

  17. And nothing of value ... on Windows 10 Update Removes Windows Media Player (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    And nothing of value was lost.

  18. Re:FIrst show me a full replacement car on California Considers Banning Internal Combustion Engines To Meet Emissions Goals (sacbee.com) · · Score: 1

    The missing component here is people who do not own their home, or park on the street, or live in apartment buildings without the ability to charge an electric car overnight. The thing that existing cars offer that electrics do not is that you don't need any infrastructure where you live at all to support it other than a place to park -which you would also need for an electric car. You can just go to any gas station to fill up, when can you go to the electric station to fill up in a few minutes? Wealthy homeowners can easily charge their electric cars overnight and go to work, what about the rest of the population?

  19. Re:The same as before with one exception on AskSlashdot: How Do You See Your Life After Firefox 52 ESR? (mozilla.org) · · Score: 1

    Sorry, a slashvertisment would have nice things to say about the new and shiny not "OMG! They are taking away all my favorite add-ons"

    Unless it is a clever way to advertise Pale Moon, which I had never heard of until this ...

  20. Re:Call them 1 888 258-7467 on Dealership Remotely Disables A Car Over A $200 Fee (www.cbc.ca) · · Score: 0

    Do you speak french? No? Don't bother calling Quebec. Also even if they have an english speaker there is no way they will bother entertaining your call if it isn't related to selling you something.

  21. Who listens to MP3s? on What Happened To Winamp? (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    I still have winamp installed but I haven't listened to an MP3 on a computer for years so I haven't used it. Basically my phone has replaced mp3s, or when I do want to listen to music I just look on youtube for it as it is much easier.

  22. Re:Don't on Ask Slashdot: How Can You Teach Programming To Schoolchildren? · · Score: 1

    Bingo, teach them critical thinking. So much of school is rote memorization or simple repetition, there's got to me some way to teach critical thinking even in children.

  23. They aren't hoping to collect data, they've been collecting it for years. They know more about people's moviegoing habits than the people do, and they've calculated that if they lowered the price they would get enough people paying who wouldn't use the service enough that they could make a profit on each one. The amount of profit will be less per person but there will be more of them with little additional cost. Also keep in mind very few people go to the movies alone, so in all likelihood each subscription will be more than one person. Also I think lowering the price means it would appeal to more casual moviegoers who are even less likely to use the full value of the subscription.

  24. Re:The desktop is dead, long live the workstation! on 'Windows 10 Is Failing Us' (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    It's not that PC/Desktop is a "dead" market, it's simply no longer a mass CONSUMER market. We don't need more underpowered $199 1.1GHz laptops with 2gb and 64mb flash drives... we need more $2,000-4,000 laptops

    Has nobody on Slashdot heard of PC Gaming? And those laptops exist, there are plenty of them, and people who want them buy them all the time. I'd guess there are more consumer laptops being sold than desktops, which makes me sad.

  25. Definitely not on Would You Buy the iPhone 8 If It Cost $1,200? (9to5mac.com) · · Score: 1

    That's $1550 Canadian, so no .. no I wouldn't.