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User: Nemyst

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  1. Re:Doubtful on Are We Reaching the Electric Car Tipping Point? · · Score: 1

    There was a time where cars had similar disadvantages versus carriages with horses, and yet here we are. Hint: the present situation is not the end point of the EV.

  2. Um... on Gmail Messages Can Now Self-Destruct · · Score: 1

    I know this is ancient technology by today's newfangled social media buzzword bingo, but have those devs ever heard of copy/paste?

  3. Re:It's discomfort at working alongside older peop on Woman Recruited By Google Four Times and Rejected Now Joins Age Discrimination Suit · · Score: 2

    It's rather amusing that you, as an outsider, attempt to define what we, 20 somethings, feel and how we think. It's even funnier when you realize how wrong you are.

    Having a person older than you by a fair margin be your subordinate might be somewhat strange, but not for very long and certainly not enough to cross the person off the hiring list. Working with older people in general, though? I've been doing that all my life... And so has basically anyone who's had to work, and not merely get a fat check from daddy to start their "startup". You seem to be conflating "20 somethings" with a select minority of people who can afford to turn their workplace into a reflection of their own egotistical selves.

  4. Re:Something wrong there on Google Self-Driving Car Rear-Ended In First Injury Accident · · Score: 1

    That's actually a really good point. After 20 years of driving, it seems like I have about 90+% accuracy in predicting what people will do over the next 5 seconds or so.

    You mean like... turn signals, brake lights and so on? I found it took me way less than 20 years of driving to understand that kind of stuff.

    If you're trying to gauge the person's intent from the way they shift their weight on the seat or handle their cigarette hanging off the window, you're thinking too hard.

  5. Re:Suck it, Neil on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    And I prefer CD quality to any form of lossy compression: and have told them apart in ABX testing, up to and including a 320K mp3 example. It was a castanet sound, and if it had been some other instrument (such as a flute, or an 808 kick sample) I would never have been able to tell. The attack of the castanet sound had less personality as 320K mp3, and I ABXed it successfully that time (it's a challenging test!)

    How many times did you successfully distinguish it? Were the mp3s generated with modern encoders with correct settings? Did anything change in the listening room between tests? Was there any fault that consciously or unconsciously allowed you to distinguish them?

    I'm sorry but your one anecdote is faced against mountains of well documented evidence, not to mention many audio experts agreeing on the fact that 320kbps mp3 is virtually indistinguishable from CD, and also that 24 bit or over 44.1kHz are absolutely useless to anyone but audio professionals that need the range to do mixes without losing fidelity.

  6. Politely? on Click-Fraud Trojan Politely Updates Flash On Compromised Computers · · Score: 4, Funny

    The trojan "politely" updates Flash? How would you do that "impolitely", exactly, by flashing a bunch of obscenities while updating Flash in the background?

  7. Re:slashdot on In Response to Open Letter, France Rejects Asylum For Julian Assange · · Score: 1

    Steve Jobs was a cruel narcissist, but he "had to be" to turn Apple into what it is.

    I am generally anti-Apple and think Steve Jobs was a massive cock, but I still think that's true. Look at how ineffectual Apple is without him.

    Jobs had a vision which the current execs at Apple seem to lack. You don't need to be a cruel narcissist to have a vision and act upon it though.

  8. Encryption and anti-malware on Ask Slashdot: Are Post-Install Windows Slowdowns Inevitable? · · Score: 1

    I can't say about the first submitter, but the second puzzles me. Why would you schedule more malware scans when the machines get slower? Heck, that might actually be a case of reversing cause and effect, since scans are notoriously slow.

    As for encryption... Yeah, no, that's pretty much terrible to do on an HDD, even an SSD. What you want there is OPAL-compliant SSDs, since those will be able to perform on-disk encryption using the SSD's hardware, dramatically improving performance.

  9. Re:I am afraid the answer is, "Yes!" on Ask Slashdot: Are Post-Install Windows Slowdowns Inevitable? · · Score: 1

    Not really. Much of the bloat comes from WinSxS and other such duplicates, but that doesn't mean the OS will run any slower, just that it has more versions of various DLLs available so that every application, regardless of what it was built against, can run without complaining about missing dependencies.

  10. Re:Security team on Ask Slashdot: Are Post-Install Windows Slowdowns Inevitable? · · Score: 1

    There is probably some kind of creative, adaptive scheduling solution that could fix this, but their management software might not have that kind of support.

    Or you could probably setup a security policy such that users don't have the power to shut down their computer. If it's a laptop, it's a different story, but it'd be relatively simple to just remove any shutdown/sleep option or menu for desktop machines. Make an announcement at the same time so people don't panic too much. Then you can do whatever you want with them at night.

  11. Re:"Are" or "could be"? on 79% of Airbnb Listings In Barcelona Are Illegal · · Score: 2

    While I don't know the reason for a "tourist tax" or for the Catalonian law mentioned (there could be good reasons, or not), not having insurance sounds to me like a serious problem. You're hosting people, you should have all the required protection that lets you cover the cost if something bad happens.

  12. Re:Instead of building thin bendable phones... on AppleCare+ Now Covers Batteries That Drop To 80% · · Score: 1

    I don't mind thin devices, but I do mind thin devices that can't withstand typical day-to-day usage and need a case to last. What in the hell is the point of a thin sleek device if I need to put a thick unsightly case around it?

  13. Re:Why fight forest fires with airplanes? on Drone Diverts Firefighting Planes, Incurring $10,000 Cost · · Score: 1

    If there's one entitled person here, it's you, for you seem quite entitled to have authority in deciding where federal money is spent.

  14. Re:Why fight forest fires with airplanes? on Drone Diverts Firefighting Planes, Incurring $10,000 Cost · · Score: 1

    What the fuck? Have you tried just counting the number of cities in the general vicinity of a forest? Hint: it's a significant proportion of the world. We use airplanes because they're fast, they can carry immense loads of water or fire retardant, they're far safer for their operators than any other mechanism and they're quite cheap for the amount of work they can do. To not use airplanes is a suggestion only a complete idiot would make.

  15. Re:What I remembered of Supreme Commander... on Reverse-Engineering a Frame of "Supreme Commander" · · Score: 1

    That's something you failed to mention in your initial post, giving the impression that the game had very flawed balance or mechanics and that there was no depth to the gameplay and strategy beyond this one, simplistic method. That it works against AI should surprise precisely nobody, but you've only demonstrated that you're smarter than your computer (and even then, only a tiny bit, for you repeated the same strategy over and over instead of attempting other fun strategies).

  16. Re:No brute-forcing murky... or clear? on My United Airlines Website Hack Gets Snubbed · · Score: 1

    Note that it does say "other users", so technically you could quite easily run the test against yourself.

  17. Re:Seattle too on "Vision Zero" Aims To Eliminate Traffic Fatalities In San Diego · · Score: 2

    The problem is that any accident has a pretty good chance of harming/killing someone who did not do anything wrong. That senile person doing a left turn might run into a minivan with two kids on board. That kid riding their bike in traffic might cause someone to swerve into the opposite lane and collide with someone else. It's not that easy to say "eh, those are acceptable".

  18. Re:Obligatory reading on Philae's Lost Seven Months Were Completely Unnecessary · · Score: 2

    I'm not opposed to nuclear. I think it needs to be a viable option if we are to stop producing CO2, but I won't pretend that it's harmless, either. Even if we get to a 100% safety record, there's still the matter of storage, and transporting that waste to the storage areas. How many TEPCOs do we need to realize many of these companies entrusted with the task can be very incompetent and borderline criminal in ignoring safety lapses pointed out by inspectors.

    You're not opposed to nuclear, but you still fall prey to the severe lack of knowledge most people have regarding nuclear power generation. It's really simple: if the waste is so dangerous as to need storage that can last centuries, as is currently the case, it's because it's overwhelmingly still fuel. It's been "poisoned" in the reaction process, but can be reprocessed into usable fuel. However, the US has stopped all reprocessing activities, which means that the fuel is immediately disposed as soon as its efficiency dips too much. While studies say that reprocessing is more expensive than just getting new fuel, this wouldn't hold if we refocused on nuclear power, making recycling an obvious choice. Further, certain designs of reactors can straight up use the poisoned fuel anyway, lasting dramatically longer and producing far less dangerous waste, since more of its energy has been extracted. That's discounting thorium reactors, which don't even use uranium and produce up to 100 times less waste than uranium-based reactors.

    In essence, the waste issue has by and large already been solved (or at the very least dramatically diminished) by scientists. It's just politicians getting in the way.

  19. Re:Not shared by everyone on Why Our Brains Can't Process the Gravest Threats To Humanity · · Score: 2

    It's actually funny because you've noticed the issue but can't seem to understand it.

    Let's try and think: if a data set shows as noise, it means one of two things. One, it could be that the data is noise. Two, it could mean that the trend requires a much larger amount of data to determine. Bingo! If your uncertainty is significantly higher than any possible trend, it's pointless to use the data. Instead, you look for more data, and lo and behold, you find that when you include the full range of data all the way back to 1980, you get a nice upward slope. 15 years isn't enough, for a system as complicated as our planet, to plot a trend from. Even 35 years isn't enough, really, which is why you generally try to get other data sources going back farther (which is what climate scientists do, go figure).

  20. Re:I call Balogna on Why Our Brains Can't Process the Gravest Threats To Humanity · · Score: 1

    Yes. Make it 100 years though and I think you'd see a very different, self-serving response.

  21. Re:Are these the Germans... on German Parliament May Need To Replace All Hardware and Software To Stop Malware · · Score: 0

    In general, this is true, but this is targeted. If the Germans were running Linux instead, they would've been attacked anyway, just through a different vector. For casting wide nets in the hope of fooling common folk or stealing sensitive information, aiming for Windows is the logical choice due to the size of its user base alone. For targeted attacks, though, any platform is vulnerable.

  22. Re:It's summer-time, no need to heat your office! on NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 980 Ti Costs $350 Less Than TITAN X, Performs Similarly · · Score: 3

    I know Slashdot isn't really up to date on gaming, but I'll just drop a hint: if someone's looking at the 980Ti, they are NOT the target market for a 750Ti.

  23. What? on Russian Space Agency Misused $1.8 Billion, May Be Replaced · · Score: 1

    So the solution to rampant corruption is to rebrand it, spin it as a corporation, and hope for the best? That sounds like great logic, especially in Russia.

  24. Re:No more fancy navigation/in dash for me on Hyundai Now Offers an Android Car, Even For Current Owners · · Score: 1

    We bought a 2015 Dodge Journey Blackout Edition.

    I believe I have identified, after much research, what your problem may be, good sir.

  25. Re:Obsessed with keeping government out of busines on North Carolina Still Wants To Block Municipal Broadband · · Score: 1

    All that will cause is for a few puppet ISPs to come up, offer token plans to reach the magical number (be it 3 or something else), and then continue as per usual.