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User: S.O.B.

S.O.B.'s activity in the archive.

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Comments · 895

  1. Re:USA, the land of freedom on Why Lavabit Shut Down · · Score: 1

    Perhaps he/she, like me, had an account years ago and lost the password?

    And somehow lost the ability to create a new account? Nice try.

  2. Re: Not denying something is different from forcin on Did Mozilla Have No Choice But To Add DRM To Firefox? · · Score: 0

    Amen. I'm not a Jew but I completely agree.

    Anyone who equates someone who accepts DRM with someone who accepts the systematic slaughter of an entire people by the state needs to have their sense of proportion adjusted.

  3. Re:Hubble Rules! on The Shrinking Giant Red Spot of Jupiter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree that we can learn a lot using telescopes and autonomous/semi-autonomous robots but nothing captures the imagination quite like one of us actually going there.

  4. Re:Wallet on Unlock Your Android Phone With Open Source Wearable NFC · · Score: 1

    Wallet may not be the best place for that tag, although it probably beats placing it in your belt buckle.

    How about a tattoo on your johnson?

  5. Re:Happy to see it - Gonna sue for $ 14 Trillion.. on Pirate Bay Sports-Content Uploader Faces $32m Lawsuit · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the Lemons analogy.

    Hey, hey hey! This is Slashdot. No lemon analogies allowed.

    Only car analogies and the more twisted the car analogy the better.

  6. Re:Velocity on Star Cluster Ejected From Galaxy At 2,000,000 MPH · · Score: 1

    Here's a few more:

    160,000 times the top speed of a Segway
    500,000 times faster than a senior on a scooter
    6.67 E07 times faster than a garden snail
    1.11 E15 times faster than Europe and North America are drifting apart
    infinity times faster than the U.S. Congress

  7. Re:Not a surprise on SEC Chair On HFT: 'The Markets Are Not Rigged' · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's why the HFTs installed their own dedicated fiber-optic lines between key exchanges that were "straighter" than the public network to shave a few milliseconds off the roundtrip time at the cost of $100's of millions. Why do you think they did that? So they could improve their WoW latency?

    That was only one of the techniques they used to manipulate the market. NY Times has a nice article about the book that brought this to peoples' attention.

  8. Re:Buggy whips? on The Koch Brothers Attack On Solar Energy · · Score: 1

    ..the Koch brothers are aliens...

    No, they're just dicks.

    Or are they?

    I for one welcome our alien dick overlords.

  9. Re:Makes no sense on DOJ Complains About Getting a Warrant To Search Mobile Phones · · Score: 1

    Then pull the SIM card before you put it in the evidence bag. No SIM card means no remote wipe. And install a WiFi blocker in the police evidence room to prevent it callling home via WiFi.

  10. Re:axis of lameness on SpaceX Files Suit Against US Air Force · · Score: 1

    I'll have to rethink the realism of Moonraker. I used to think it was the most ridiculous of all the Bond films but Musk is well on his way to being a real life Hugo Drax.

  11. Re:obamacare says "no way" on $42,000 Prosthetic Hand Outperformed By $50 3D Printed Hand · · Score: 1

    obamacare requires people to buy health insurance by law. there is no escape, muwahahahaha!

    The government requires you to have car insurance and there's no outrage over that. It protects you and anyone you might get in an accident with.

    How is requiring health insurance any different? It protects you and your family from unexpected medical expenses that would bankrupt anyone but the 1%ers.

  12. Re:OpenWRT all the way on Ask Slashdot: Which Router Firmware For Bandwidth Management? · · Score: 1

    I'm still waiting for my 5 year old Linksys WRT320N to be supported by OpenWRT. Still in progress.

    However, it's been supported by DD-WRT for a number of years.

    From where I sit the only movement from OpenWRT is of the bowel variety and apparently pretty constipated from what I can see.

  13. Re:Why do people listen to her? on Jenny McCarthy: "I Am Not Anti-Vaccine'" · · Score: 1

    ...choose your hobgoblin: The Illuminati, the Jews, the Government, the Man, the Aliens, the Republicans, Ronald MacDonald, the Gecko on the insurance commercials, Gordon Gekko, former President Bush, Condoleeza Rice, Sasquatch, etc.

    Damn you Geiko Gecko! Your constantly changing accent isn't fooling anyone. I've been to tropical countries and I've seen your operatives in my hotel room watching me while I sleep.

  14. Re:Let it die on How Cochlear Implants Are Being Blamed For Killing Deaf Culture · · Score: 1

    tl;dr

  15. Re:Tracking` on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 1

    If you're talking about the idiots that sue McDonalds for being burned by hot coffee they spilled on themselves then I agree with you.

    If you're talking about giving grieving families some peace and possibly identifying how to prevent it in the future all for the cost of a few cents per mile travelled then I would disagree with you.

    FYI, a black box is not a safety measure, its a forensic tool.

  16. Re:Tracking` on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 1

    I didn't say that it would have solved this particular problem. I was responding to someone's comment about the cost/benefit of this technology with MH370 and the Air France crash in 2009 as hypothetical examples of it's potential use and that the same arguments were likely made when the original black box technology was introduced.

    I agree that until we know for sure what happened we don't know how or even if we could have prevented it.

  17. Re:Tracking` on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 1

    I wasn't suggesting putting one of these in a Cessna. This would only be of use in commercial airliners capable of making transoceanic flights. And I never said anything about retrofitting all current aircraft just like the original black boxes were not initially retrofitted into all existing aircraft.

    A device like this should only be added to new aircraft and the aircraft I'm talking about are in the tens of millions to buy so a $100k device is not a huge additional cost.

    So you can unbunch your panties.

  18. Re:Tracking` on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 1

    I agree but somehow I suspect that it's not as simple as that. All the electrical systems on an aircraft have to be accessible to the crew to troubleshoot and potentially shutdown circuits in the event of a problem. Up until this point no I'm sure no one considered that a flight crew would intentionally disable the transponder (if that is what really happened) so no failsafe was put in place to prevent it. But at the same time you don't want to introduce a failsafe that could prevent them from addressing a potential problem.

  19. Re:Tracking` on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 1

    My estimate of the data costs was from an interview with the man who created this proposed enhanced black box. I think he knows more than either of us what the data requirements of his device are.

  20. Re:Tracking` on Most Expensive Aviation Search: $53 Million To Find Flight MH370 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm sure similar arguments were made when the original black boxes were made mandatory on aircraft.

    A new Boeing 777-200ER is about $260M. A Canadian has developed an enhanced black box that constantly sends data back to the airline. The cost would be $100,000 which is only 0.04% of the cost of the aircraft and $85,000 more that the boxes they would replace. There would also be satellite data transfer charges which would be only a few thousand dollars for a flight like MH370 or about $20 per passenger on the flight. You could even limit the data transfer to trans oceanic flights to minimize the impact on low cost and domestic carriers.

    Of course, all those costs would come down if every new aircraft was equipped like this. I'm sure the families of the MH370 would consider this minimal cost money well spent.

  21. Re:Word processing?! on Why Are There More Old Songs On iTunes Than Old eBooks? · · Score: 1

    I don't login to Google and I block cookies by default so my results aren't personalized but you're right, most people probably do get personalized results.

  22. Re:Salvage Opportunity... on The Mystery of the 'Only Camera To Come Back From the Moon' · · Score: 1

    F*CK YEAH!

  23. Re:Jenny McCarthy on Survey Finds Nearly 50% In US Believe In Medical Conspiracy Theories · · Score: 1

    Of course chiropractors think regular adjustments are the one solution to everything because one solution is all they know how to do.

    When all you have is a chiropractic hammer, everyone's spine looks like a nail.

  24. Re:Ah, the Planet Pluto on Pluto Regains Its Title As Largest Object In Its Neighborhood · · Score: 2

    Don't forget, they also redefined the term Astronomer when they started letting Tyson call himself an Astronomer. The man is a shameless self-promoter and a director of a planetarium, not an observatory. A planetarium where they do laser light shows for stoners to Grateful Dead or Pink Floyd music. Unlike some true astronomers who actually discovered a planet, Tyson's planet discovery count is negative one. That's why I prefer to call him a "dwarf astronomer".

    Tyson's profiles at the Hayden Planetarium and the Planetary Society (where he is a board member) refer to him as an astrophysicist and astrophysics is a branch of astronomy. If other people refer to him as an astronomer, dwarf or otherwise, that's their mistake but he clearly identifies himself as an astrophysicist.

    And yes he does do a lot of media appearances but so did Carl Sagan in his day.

  25. Re:And the US could turn Russia into vapor on Russian State TV Anchor: Russia Could Turn US To "Radioactive Ash" · · Score: 2

    ...in global nuclear conflict there are no winners. With the possible exception for rats, cockroaches and tardigrades.

    Don't forget lawyers.