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User: arisvega

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Comments · 702

  1. If you can't beat them .. on Microsoft and Facebook Launch Internet Bug Bounty Program · · Score: 2

    .. bribe them.

  2. Re:So, in court .. on Atlanta Man Shatters Coast-to-Coast Driving Record, Averaging 98MPH · · Score: 1

    Nope. 5th Amendment.

    ..but everything he's publicly said and displayed is freely admissible.

    I am at a loss- which one is it?

  3. So, in court .. on Atlanta Man Shatters Coast-to-Coast Driving Record, Averaging 98MPH · · Score: 1

    .. will he plead guilty?

  4. Re:Wtf? on 20-Somethings Think It's OK To Text and Answer Calls In Business Meetings · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Who does this? 27 year old here. If one of my employees did this during a meeting with me I would say something like, "Excuse me, was my meeting interrupting your important phone conversation? Perhaps we can reschedule the meeting around your social life. Would 8PM suit you?" (sarcastically)

    Did you consider that the call can actually be more important than "your meeting"? Personally, I assume that if during "my" meeting someone texts or answers a call, then there is a reason for that. And I believe that because I respect the people I am having the meeting with, as they -I assume in good faith- respect me, and they would not divert their attention elsewhere, if it was not for a reason.

    If you are not confident in your leadership skills, it is natural to put a grumpy sour face when someone is audacious enough to fiddle with their phone during "your" meeting.

    Bottomline, don't be a fucking Nazi.

  5. Re:I donâ(TM)t suppose... on Feds Confiscate Investigative Reporter's Confidential Files During Raid · · Score: 1

    most people, journalists included, barely even know what encryption is, let alone how to use it properly.

    What?? You mean to say that journalists do NOT know everything??

  6. LED light is weird on NYC's 250,000 Street Lights To Be Replaced With LEDs By 2017 · · Score: 1

    Sodium light is a kind of light that the eye is very responsive to, and it is perfect for illuminating roads and freeways: any one of you that has done some nocturnal driving will agree that the difference between driving with your vehicle's headlights only on an otherwise pitch black road, with driving under sodium lights is huge.

    Other technologies that produce bright light (Xenon, Halogen, all those 'energy saving' graded ones etc) are IMO are to bright to be of such use. Notice this: they are very bright, shine on things with wavelengths that make them look confusing and are in all good lights if you want to be seen, but not if you want to see. In the above example, imagine that you are driving headlights only, and then you enter a patch of that country road where the community thought would save money by replacing the sodiums with the bright white new energy saving ones, that watt-for-lumen are great. Then, all that happens is that the light blinds you, and since it is not really reflected back from the road that well not only you still cannot really see (like when you were driving in pitch black) but now you have a bright light on your face dazzling you

    So, bright new tech lights: are bright? Yes. Make your vehicle look like some sort of inter-dimensional fearsome invader? Yes. Are effective? No. So please leave the sodium lights where they are and, if you do not hate other drivers, ban xenon lights from cars.

    LEDs are good for trafic lights, as they are (kind of) directional and quite bright: however, if anyone has driven in underdeveloped countries where LEDs are now out of control and used a lot in advertising billboards (gasstations etc), will agree that it is very easy to confuse a, say, green or red light from said billboards with the real traffic light- so IMHO at least the red, green and orange leds should be regulated, especially on areas with traffic and traffic lights. Do not get me wrong, I am all into how they cyberpunk up the place, but bear in mind that you do not want some senior driver misinterpreting the local fish market's daily discounts shined on green LED letters for a green traffic light, and driving just ahead simply not registering the true traffic light and running you over (or worse). Not to mention problems in computer driving.

    Finally, since there has been some progress in 'naturalizing' the 'white' LED color, it will be interesting to see if this progress is to the point where light reflect back from the street is in a manner that makes the surroundings look crisp, and aids the driver in being aware of them, which is the whole point.

  7. Re:FFS on Join the Efforts of a Manned Mission To Jovian Moon Europa · · Score: 1

    Because submarines' flying abilities, even when nuclear, compete in the same league as pigs.

    Not quite.

  8. Re:question: on Physicists Discover Geometry Underlying Particle Physics · · Score: 2

    does the simplification that it mentions, mean that simulations will be way faster? does it in any way affect the n-body problem simulations ?

    An awesome question. And, basically, an awesome idea. I would think that if you can set up a numeric experiment that virtually represents fundamental particles and their interactions, and you already know more or less the trajectories in some n-dimensional space (through this new discovery), then you can probably greatly optimize your algorithms since you will a priori know whereabouts to look for solutions: you would not need to sweep everything.

    Or, you can accept this manifold as truth, and further constrain your experiment: interactions will only be "allowed" on this manifold, and many of the previously free parameters will not be free anymore. And of course, once done, one can compare to observations.

    Forgive me if I made a serious error here, my QCD is a bit rusty.

  9. They initially denied it. on US and Israel Test Missile As Syria War Tensions Rise · · Score: 1
    News agencies in South EU mentioned that when the Russians spotted the missile in the morning, the US denied the incident (i.e. "what missile"). Later in that afternoon (local time) Israel and the US confirmed that it was part of a joined drill.

    'This test had nothing to do with United States consideration of military action to respond to Syria's chemical weapons attack.'

    HAHAHHAHHAHA

  10. Re:Would not have expected? on Members of Parliament Demand Explanation For Detention of David Miranda · · Score: 1

    [..] and one of the MPs involved in passing the anti-terrorism legislation used for the detention has said: 'those of us who were part of passing this legislation certainly would not have expected it to be used in a case of this kind.'

    This, even in the slim chance that is the truth, is absolutely no excuse. They should at least try to act responsible by cleaning after their own mess.

  11. "Expert" ? on Canadian Military Developing Stealth Snowmobile · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Michael Byers, an Arctic policy expert, questions the need for a stealth snowmobile. 'I don't see a whole lot of evidence that criminals and terrorists are scooting around Canada's North on snowmobiles and that we have to sneak up on them,'

    Then Michael Byers is not quite the expert: when the ice cap in the North Pole shrinks or disappears completely, a whole new theater will come into play. Claims have already been filed for integration of the North Arctic Ocean into their exclusive economic zones from several countries, including Canada.

  12. Re: Tiny Utah-based ISP makes a name for itself. on When the NSA Shows Up At Your Internet Company · · Score: 1

    The company, a comparative midget with just 30,000 subscribers, [..]

    The website where this article is hosted at, 'buzzfeed', has probably more than 30,000 track/ad crapsite partners, driving my firewall crazy. Why on earth do I need to allow a dozen such sites and their javascript and flash, sites with names similar to ad1.trackadexperts-r-us.com to be shoved down my browser's throat, in order to read this article?

    The NSA at their worst day are way more moral that those shitty advertrackers and their sneaky ways.

  13. Re:Executive Power on DNI Office Asks Why People Trust Facebook More Than the Government · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Seriously? Gee, I don't know... maybe it's because those private parties can't ruin your fucking life like a government can?

    I do not think that it is just that. Some years back when Facebook started, one could have an account by providing a VALID ACADEMIC email address ONLY- that, implied that one had to do with a serious social academic tool that allowed to connect with other academics, and not yet another place to post pictures of cats and sandwiches. So many people bited and just gave away their personal information. Of course, Facebook turned a couple of years later, showing its real face and bringing chat to the masses, and it was only then that people started not giving away their real names.

    When was the last time Facebook's swat team raided someone's house, taking all posessions and ruining their job/social image?

    Indirectly, all the time: do you seriously think that there is no backdoor for the authorities in Facebook?

  14. Re:No Chrome for me thanks on Google Is Bringing Chrome Remote Desktop App To Android · · Score: 1

    It's made by Google and I just assume they are snooping on me.

    Fair assumption, I believe. They do snoop on all their other stuff, why not on this one as well.

  15. Re:Where is the mention of Gold in the real link ? on Colliding, Exploding Stars May Have Created All the Gold On Earth · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure why Network World thought that singling out gold was necessary to get geeks interested in science..

    The goal is not to get geeks interested: it is to hit the news' headlines and make the research more 'hot', so the chances of it being funded increase.

    As an example, astrophysics, astronomy and planetary science these days is all "exoplanets this, exoplanets that": exoplanet research is something the public likes and can relate to (as is gold) and, until it gets bored of it, it is guaranteed to enjoy more funding than other disciplines.

    This often leads 'science journalists' to come up with a catchy title, sometimes stretching it really far: a while back ago some did so regarding the methane emissions from Mars, spamming the headlines with 'life on Mars'-- whereas all there was about that on the publication was _one_ sentence toward the end saying something like "at this point, a biological origin for the detected methane emission cannot be ruled out."

    Furthermore, the ones administering the funds, mostly politicians and not scientists themselves, are more prone to allow money to flow towards the direction of a 'hot topic' project, and this is because they cover their bases for their own careers: money thrown towards research that had citizens excited means that those politicians "did a good job" allocating that money, which looks good in their CVs.

    Scientists are well aware of this and, unfortunately, lots of them play along and often "peacock up" their publications and come up with some very annoying and embarrassing publication titles, acronyms and catch phrases.

  16. Re:Wrong usage of resources on UK Steps Up the Search For Alien Life · · Score: 1

    .. they might actually put the equipment to a more promising use than illegally spying on the rest of Europe.

    But they do. They are looking for illegal aliens, mind you.

  17. Re:What are they trying to achieve? on UK Police Launch Campaign To Shut Down Torrent Sites · · Score: 1

    What could they possibly try to be achieving by doing this?

    Terrorizing them; because that is what threatening someone with a decade in prison for using torrent files is.

    Apparently when those bodies are doing the terrorizing, it is not considered as such-

  18. Application-based firewall on 3G and 4G USB Modems Are Security Threat, Black Hat Presenter Says · · Score: 1

    .. so the 3/4G modem software cannot connect to that Chinese IP during startup.

  19. Re:Windows 7 on Ask Slashdot: Mac To Linux Return Flow? · · Score: 1

    so this leaves me with only sensible window managers like XFCE and LXDE.

    Any other ones I should try?

    Fluxbox- do-it-yourself!

  20. Perhaps, but on Vint Cerf: Google Shouldn't Require Real Names · · Score: 3, Interesting

    .. but what Google gives out with one hand, it takes back with the other: nowadays increasingly one cannot open a google account without a valid cellphone numbr for verification- and do not forget all the profiling that happens regardless if one is logged in or not.

  21. Failed analogy on AirBurr UAV Navigates By Crashing Into Things · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you have TRULY observed a fly trying to find its way around a house, you might have noticed that it in fact takes a very GRACEFUL approach: it never bumps to anything but almost completely transparent objects (as do many birds), and its true grace can be readily observed through 1500 fps videos.

    It is one of the animals with the highest flight maneuverability, as two of its wings have evolved to counterweights: not only it can hover and take-off backwards, but it can land upside-down, and does so very skillfully. See youtube and BBC documentaries for further edification.

  22. Re:Not the Borg? on Intercontinental Mind-Meld Unites Two Rats · · Score: 1

    'It's not telepathy.'

    It is, almost by definition.

    'It's not the Borg,'

    It is, almost exactly by definition.

  23. Re:mostly already done on Carmack On VR Latency · · Score: 1

    One: laser ring gyros instead of mechanical accelerometer or visual head tracking systems two: Render a frame larger than FOV and digitally move that before the next frame is rendered.

    Not hard.

    The first costs on materials, power and research, and the second requires loads of processing power. Cheap compared to the cost of, say, an F35, but expensive for consumer electronics (which I gather is the point for this article).

    For your edification as an armchair specialist on laser ring gyroscopes, framebuffers and all things VR, may I suggest that you at least bother to multiply the number of bits per pixel times the number of pixels times the FPS, to at least get a handle on how much data needs to be processed and understand the problem before you post.

  24. Re:I'm doubtful of that so called expert... on Iceland Considers Internet Porn Ban · · Score: 1

    "Professor?!?!?"

    "I am doing s c i e n c e , OKAY?"

  25. Re:how about something really bad ass on Vote To Name Two Newly Discovered Moons of Pluto · · Score: 1

    like the names of the greek gods for "fear" and "terror"

    'fear' is taken: one of the Martian moons is named after it.