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User: DeathMagnetic

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Comments · 26

  1. Re:Unregulated currency on Bitcoin Exchange Flexcoin Wiped Out By Theft · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What you're saying may all be true, but the value of any currency is based on people's faith in it. It doesn't matter if it's just corrupt or incompetent companies failing and not the "Bitcoin protocol" itself. When the average person turns on CNN and sees story after story about Bitcoins disappearing, falling in value, or just general chaos in the Bitcoin market, they're going to avoid it like the plague. Fewer reputable businesses will devote the effort and take the risk of accepting Bitcoins as payment. Any chance of it ever becoming a ubiquitous global currency, not just a plaything for computer geeks, is quickly dying and no reasoned defense of the concept is going to change that. Hand waving away the problems by blaming individuals just misses the point that this system will not ever work on a wide scale until it is regulated, likely to the point where any value it has over other real currencies is lost.

  2. Re:America needs to own up to its mistakes... on Snowden Gave 15,000 Documents to Glenn Greenwald; Obama Cancels Russia Summit · · Score: 1

    The problem with blaming "America" is that no one is held accountable for their own share of the problem. It's very easy for any individual, even the president, to throw up their hands and blame the system without taking any responsibility for anything. It's about time we start naming names and holding real people accountable for the actions of our government. Speaking from a totally non-partisan point of view, the president seems like as good a starting point as any to expect real accountability and direct action. We elected him to be a leader, not to deflect attention elsewhere just because the problems aren't all his fault. Nothing will ever substantively change as long as we keep appealing to "America" or "the NSA" or even "the general population" to magically self-correct. Apologists for our leaders on both sides of the aisle are who have allowed us to get to where we are today.

  3. Re:Too much storage = too much garbage on Seagate Hits 1 Terabit Per Square Inch · · Score: 1

    I've definitely noticed this with my personal data storage, but I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing. Given the growth rate of hard drive sizes, it's just no longer worth my time to spend hours, or even days, picking through my old data to save a few percentage points of capacity. Entire multi-gigabyte backups of old systems that once seemed massive, are now only small, insignificant directories within a multi-terabyte array. And with every passing year, the ever-falling cost/byte makes it even less worthwhile to go back and trim the fat. Yes, it can make finding things a pain if you're not well organized, but that's more a symptom of an underlying problem than a problem in itself. I sure don't miss the days of being forced to hastily delete things to make room for something else, only to later regret it when I unexpectedly have a need for that thing I've deleted.

  4. Re:that's on purpose on Users Spend More Time On Myspace Than Google+ · · Score: 1

    It may be the wrong metric to measure intrinsic value, but let me know when you come up with whatever that actually would be. In the meantime, this is as close to an objective measure as we have to compare the value actual users are getting out of the respective services. 3 minutes vs. 405 minutes a month is not the result of a 10000%+ increase in efficiency or some nebulous paradigm shift in how it's used; it's the result of people clearly not liking it as much as the competition. It's all well and good to say "that's ok", but I'm sure there were people saying the same thing about Google Wave or Google Buzz or any number of other Google products that have since been discontinued. Google didn't develop this to fill some obscure niche and it won't last if the average user is using it 1% as much as they use Facebook.

  5. Re:Why is slashdot not participating? on Ask Slashdot: What Can You Do About SOPA and PIPA? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is it that in every story about this, someone feels the need to question why /. isn't shutting down? These blackouts, in and of themselves, will not stop SOPA/PIPA. The purpose is to raise awareness and mobilize people who would otherwise be unaware or apathetic to the cause. /. readers are already well aware and united in their opposition, and frankly, stories such as this on the front page will so more good than a simple blackout to that audience. The blackout of Wikipedia, on the other hand, reaches a vastly wider audience, including millions who have never even heard of this legislation. The inconvenience of not having access to one of their most useful sites will hopefully serve as a wake-up call to these people and spark action from a much larger base. Think for a moment about why one size doesn't fit all when it comes to how sites can best raise awareness of the issue.

  6. Re:So much for a fair trial. on Osama Bin Laden Reported Dead, Body In US Hands · · Score: 1

    What a load of crap. You say this like we just walked up to the guy and executed him for spite. By all accounts, he was killed in a firefight in which he was almost certainly committed to going down fighting and taking as many innocent people with him as he could. I'm sure we would've loved to take him alive if he wanted to end this in a civilized way, but that was never the way he would've allowed it to end. It took nearly 10 years just to find and kill the guy; how many more years were we supposed to wait for a better opportunity in which we could capture him alive? Just like with any police force taking down any other criminal, your right to a fair trial ends when you start actively endangering the lives of others in a way that requires lethal force to stop.

  7. Re:I don't need on Steve Jobs Recommends Android For Fans of Porn · · Score: 1

    Your analogy makes no sense. It's ok for Wal-Mart not to sell porn because there are alternate sources out there, but it's not ok for Apple... why exactly? It's the exact same situation. To use your own analogy, if the iPhone was legislated to be the absolute only smart phone, then people would have a much more valid concern if they refused to sell porn. That's not true though; you're free to use a different phone if you don't like it. Steve Jobs is even suggesting an alternative for you!

  8. Re:11 on The Perfect Way To Slice a Pizza · · Score: 1

    Couldn't you just cut it into 10 and make each piece a little bigger?

  9. Re:Is there anything on iPhone App Wins Microsoft-Campus Programming Contest · · Score: 1

    Ever hear of jailbreaking? These things are not limitations of the phone at all, only of its default configuration. Anyone who cares enough about those functions and is technically savvy enough to be trusted to use them responsibly, is quite capable of getting them.

    For the record, I can't stand Apple and I'm certainly no fanboy, but my jailbroken iPhone simply offers more functionality than any of its competitors.

  10. Re:Slashdot editor's demonstrate..... on Network Adapter Keeps Talking While a PC Is Asleep · · Score: 1

    I don't know. Usually doesn't take that long...

  11. Re:A halfway decent source? How? on Wikipedia Approaches Its Limits · · Score: 1

    Sorry, just because you've written some random piece of software doesn't mean it's entitled to its own Wikipedia article. I write lots of little insignificant bits of code too, but I'm not so full of myself as to think it's worthy of mention in any encyclopedia. If you can't find one independent source referencing your software somewhere on the web without paying a journalist to review it, then I hate to break it to you, but it's just not that noteworthy. It's not the job of Wikipedia editors to do their own independent research to confirm or deny the accuracy of anything, no matter how trivial it may seem to you.

  12. Re:What the hell? on First Look At Palm's Mojo SDK · · Score: 1

    I don't know. Seems more like rampant fanboyism to me. Tell me why the Pre is better than the iPhone and I'll listen. A lot of hand-waving and vague references to being more free and creative doesn't really mean anything unless you can point to something more tangible. What has been produced on the Pre, which could not have been done on the iPhone? Keep in mind to all those who would rail against Apple's restrictive App Store, there is (and has been for years) a vibrant jailbreak community which I'd say shares a lot of these nebulous traits that are supposedly so unique to the Pre.

  13. What the hell? on First Look At Palm's Mojo SDK · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know people are doing similar things with the iPhone â" such as selling the source to people who must install it themselves â" but the entire scene emerging around Palm has a much more organic and creative vibe.

    What does this even mean? Are we measuring mobile phones against each based on "vibes" now? And how is doing the same thing on a different device somehow more creative?

  14. Huh? What? on Prehistoric Gene Reawakened To Battle HIV · · Score: 3, Funny

    In this work, we reveal that, upon correction of the premature termination codon in theta-defensin pseudogenes, human myeloid cells produce cyclic, antiviral peptides (which we have termed "retrocyclins"), indicating that the cells retain the intact machinery to make cyclic peptides. Furthermore, we exploited the ability of aminoglycoside antibiotics to read-through the premature termination codon within retrocyclin transcripts to produce functional peptides that are active against HIV-1. Given that the endogenous production of retrocyclins could also be restored in human cervicovaginal tissues, we propose that aminoglycoside-based topical microbicides might be useful in preventing sexual transmission of HIV-1.

    Woah, I think I'm going to need a car analogy...

  15. Re:Bye Bye Monopoly on Underground App Store Courts the Jailbroken · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Huh? What does moving to another cellular carrier have to do with jailbreaking? I think you're confusing two separate issues here. Yes, you need to jailbreak before doing a carrier unlock, but that's really irrelevant to the discussion at hand. Making the iPhone available on multiple networks, in and of itself, will have little effect on jailbreaking and no effect whatsoever on the use of the Cydia store.

  16. Re:So... on How Apple's App Review Is Sabotaging the iPhone · · Score: 1

    Wait for what now? Jailbreak and install Backgrounder.

  17. Re:why doing this? on iPhone 3GS Finally Hacked · · Score: 1

    Why does everything have to be a holy war to some people? Okay, Apple, AT&T, & the iPhone are not perfect. But a jailbroken iPhone does everything that I need it to do in a way that no other device can. So I'm supposed to sacrifice that functionality to teach Apple & AT&T a lesson? There's a time for standing up for principle, but this is just silly. If you think the iPhone (including it's jailbreakability) is the best device out there for your money, not buying it because you think Apple is evil is just stupid because you're hurting yourself more than you'll ever hurt Apple. If you'd actually prefer another device in the first place, then your proclamation about being unwilling to give such companies your money is just a meaningless rant.

  18. Re:somewhat misleading color coding on Visualizing the Ideological History of SCOTUS · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure where you're measuring color saturation from, but it seems irrelevant in any case. Color saturation is not a measure are how light or dark a color is, but rather how saturated with color vs how "gray" it is. For example, a color with a color saturation of 0 could range anywhere from pure white to pure black, including all shades of gray in between, but no one would suggest that every shade of grey is equally intense.

    Look at the 1.48 square for John Roberts 3rd from the right. It has an RGB value of (213,149,149). Conversely, the -1.48 square for David Souter on the far right has an RGB value of (228,233,244). Clearly the latter is far, far closer to white than the former, which should come as no surprise considering that it's quite obvious to the naked eye as well. Hell, look at the 2nd square for Earl Warren (top row). It's -0.45, which should place it slightly on the liberal side, yet it's colored a light pink. It almost appears as if the color scale is centered around something like -0.80 rather than 0. Either there are some fancy calculations going on that are not well explained and thus quite deceptive, or the colors are blantantly biased to make the reds darker and the blues lighter.

  19. Re:Uh-oh, they're catching up! Someone tell Apple! on Apple To Face Challenge At WWDC · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't think anyone's predicting the fall of Apple, but rather just stating the obvious. The competition is catching up. Unless Apple unveils some big surprises next week, there's no denying that the competition is positioned much better than they were a year ago. Apple's in no imminent danger here, but they are losing ground, and rumors about the next-gen iPhone suggest that there won't me any major innovations coming from them any time soon (and no, OS updates to include features the competition already has don't count).

    As for the Palm Pre, it hasn't achieved anything yet, much less established itself as an iPhone-killer, but it's a little premature to write it off due to lack of apps or lack of actual customers. It hasn't even been released yet! Most reviews have been very favorable and put it at least in the same class as the iPhone, which is a big step from where we've been for the last couple of years.

  20. Wrong bot for the job on How IBM Plans To Win Jeopardy! · · Score: 1

    It's a shame that 'Watson' works by breaking down questions into their structural components and then searching its database for relevant answers. After all, on Jeopardy all the answers are given freely.

  21. Re:No URLs or contact info allowed on artwork?! on Amazon & TuneCore To Cut Out the RIAA Middleman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The service being offered depends on them taking a 60% cut of any sales. By providing your contact information, it would enable artists to direct buyers to an alternative location (such as their own website), which could offer the CD at a lower price while still giving the artist a larger cut (100% minus production/shipping costs). They're understandably not interested in offering an unlimited advertising service for a flat rate of $31.

  22. Re:The psychology will be interesting... on Tiered Data Plans Coming To the iPhone? · · Score: 1

    If you consider yourself a "normal" user and you use 150MB a month, why on earth would you expect the reduced-price, limited-bandwidth plan to have a cap anywhere near 500MB or 1GB? AT&T is in the business of making money and they're not going to offer a new plan that will cut the typical user's bill in half, sorry.

  23. Re:The Letter Was Written by NCsoft on Richard Garriott To Sue Former Employer NCSoft · · Score: 5, Informative
  24. Re:What the fuck on Researcher's Death Hampers TCP Flaw Fix · · Score: 0

    My high regard for the Slashdot community...

    Well THERE'S your problem.

  25. Re:Now about that 32GB issue... on iPhone 3.0 Software Announced · · Score: 1

    God forbid you have to listen to the same song twice in 2 months.

    Why is this so hard to understand? The reason for wanting enough space for your entire music collection is so that you can play anything you want on demand. Who cares if 80% of it never gets listened to? That one day when I'm in the mood to listen to a particular album, I don't want to be cursing the fact that it's not on my iPod at the moment. Why need to re-sync once a week? Why try to predict which subset of your music you'll feel like listening to? God forbid someone would ask for a feature that would make their usage more convenient. And yeah, I'm sure the inevitable doubling of memory will set back gps and other feature development for years... Who mods this shit insightful?