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User: commodore64_love

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Comments · 14,161

  1. Re:Earth is BIG on Sludge In Flask Gives Clues To Origin of Life · · Score: -1

    >>>There must have been quite a bit of trial and error in nature for something to have perpetuated to this day.

    That's kinda the point. Life wasn't "born" until 1 billion years ago. It took nature 4 billion years of trial-and-error to make it happen, and even then there were some failed experiments (like anaerobic bacteria that died-out when earth became oxygen-rich).

  2. Imported workers == negative wage pressure on CS Prof Decries America's 'Internal Brain Drain' · · Score: 0, Insightful

    It's not about quality. Foreign workers are no better than Americans.

    Corporations push for imported people, because it keeps overall US wages low. Else US engineers/scientists could demand $200,000 and get it. Having cheap imported workers keeps the salaries lower, and saves Microsoft, Lockheed, etc money.

  3. Re:Has Timmeh lost his mind? on 2011 MacBook Pros Confirmed To Crash Under Load · · Score: -1, Funny

    Well here's my opinion on this Apple overheating situation:

    On second thought, never mind. (runs away from AppleFans wielding the -1 mod stick)

  4. Who Says authors are supposed to be rich? on The 'Adventure' In Self-Publishing an IT Book · · Score: -1

    $9000 may not sound like much, but if the guy writes multiple books each year, he's making more than a guy at McDonalds or Walmart. Also there's the opposite example of the man who earned ~$10 million by selling his books for just one dollar each.

  5. Re:I, for one, salute our new sock-puppet overlord on US Military Commissions Sock Puppet Program · · Score: -1, Interesting

    I shared this story a few weeks ago on my Facebook page. Here were some of the responses from "typical" americans:

    - "I'm sure there's more to this story than you are hearing. My friend is a soldier and he's a good person, as are his commanders."

    - "You are too nuts for me. The government can be trusted."

    - "I'm okay with this. Government needs to be able to root-out the terrorists inside our country."

    And so on.
    I am saddened.

  6. Re:Lets face it on Potentially Great Sci-fi Films Still Due In 2011 · · Score: 1, Informative

    >>>most of these will be unbelievably terrible
    >>>Sci-fi is very, very difficult to translate to the screen.

    Precisely. A magazine (Analog?) recently published their top 20 movies based on solid science.

    They only came-up with 11:
    Destination Moon (1950). This movie was made with the involvement of the space community of the day and Robert Heinlein who wrote the story it was based on.
    Predator (1987)
    The Abyss (1989)
    2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). Credit Arthur C. Clarke and Kubrik
    2010 (1984)
    Contact (1997). Credit Carl Sagan
    Deep Impact (1998)
    Gattaca (1998)
    Red Planet (2000)
    Minority Report (2002)
    Primer (2004)

    As for the movies of Summer 2011, only "now" and "rise of the apes" looks like "true" science fiction. Although it's hard to say until I actually see it.

  7. Re:First Invent AI on Scott Adams Says Plenty Would Choose Life In Noprivacyville · · Score: -1

    >>>Why would an AI care?

    It's the Zeroth Law - "...not harm humanity, not by inaction allow humanity to be harmed." Haven't you seen the Will Smith Robot movie, or read Asimov's Foundation & Earth?

    Of course one of the problems with the Zeroth Law, according to Asimov, was that the robot can never be sure if he is making the correct choice, due to the inability to predict the future. Psychohistory provides a solution, albeit an imperfect one (it can be derailed by the unexpected).

  8. For those who don't know what the Law's about on Utah Governor 'Honored' With Blackhole Award · · Score: -1

    QUOTE: "The law restricts access to most electronic communications by government officials, allows state agencies to charge higher costs to answer records requests, and places the burden of proof about whether a record is public on the person asking to see the record.

    "The cards are stacked against citizens so badly that almost everything can be kept private," Cuillier said. "They can say no to every request and there's nothing that can be done."

    I would argue that the government is taxpayer-supported, therefore all the information belongs to the Utah citizens, free of charge. Charging people outside the state might be reasonable, but charging your own citizens makes no sense. Perhaps it's time Utah dissolve its government and create a new one.

  9. Re:Public Forum. Get used to it. on Should We Have a Right To Be Forgotten Online? · · Score: -1

    >>>A right, by definition, does not require action on the part of another.

    Well said.
    People just have to learn that what they publish, just like a newspaper, becomes a permanent part of the record. (Or at least until the paper or server dies.) Some servers like Google groups let you erase old messages but most, like slashdot, do not. (Which is why I post under aliases.)

  10. Re:It's certainly time for this already! on Google Draws Fire From Congress · · Score: -1

    - Google (and other corporations) need to be investigated at every opportunity, and their licenses revoked (or broken-apart like ATT) if found guilty. The semi-equivalent of a prison sentence.

    And no I don't consider google a "good" corporation. I don't understand people who do?

  11. Won't Work for me on Solar Powered Table That Wirelessly Charges Your Gadgets · · Score: -1, Informative

    My house is dark (to save energy).

  12. Re:Maybe I'm mistaken, but.. on TSA To Retest Full Body Scanners For Radiation · · Score: -1

    The real issue is not the amount of radiation but where it is FOCUSED on the body - i.e. on the skin.

    If we continue using these things, there will be a rash of skin cancer outbreaks among weekly travelers. Also sterilization of men's sperm too.

  13. Re:What's Wrong With That? on US House Subcommittee Votes To Kill Net Neutrality · · Score: -1

    >>>>>- Government owns cables that are 50-optics bundled together..... companies like MSN or AOL or Apple or Comcast or Verizon then lease those lines. That way customers would have upto 50 different companies to choose from --- a true free market.
    >>
    >>Monticello got their asses sued off by TDS when they tried it.

    Who? What?
    More info please.

  14. Breakage on Miguel de Icaza On Usability and Openness · · Score: -1

    'I spent so many years battling with Linux and something new is broken every time

    Precisely.
    Linux is GREAT when it works, but can be a real PITA when it doesn't. For example my brother's Ubuntu 9.1 laptop still doesn't play flash videos (except youtube), and I can't figure out why. It also doesn't handle Atari Stella emulator very well (half the ROMs don't work) or connection to Netscape Dialup.

    So I decided that I'll use Windows as my base (since it's free with the computer), and open source for everything else (OpenOffice, Firefox, WinAmp, etc).

  15. Re:Technically... on Utah To Teach USA is a Republic, Not a Democracy · · Score: -1, Troll

    >>>We are a representative democracy

    No.
    A Democracy is run by a simple 51% majority.. i.e. no laws but simple 51-49 votes by the legislature..... which means there are no laws to protect your individual rights. (If you're still not understanding, see Ancient Athens and how the Demos killed Socrates, because he exercised free speech, and they didn't like his opinion, so the majority voted to kill him.)

    >>>or a democratic republic

    Correct.
    .

  16. Re:$500k? on Crime Writer Makes a Killing With 99 Cent E-Books · · Score: -1, Interesting

    I've read about this guy in the Economist.

    Basically he started selling his book at $2.99, dropped it to 99 cents when it started sliding to the bottom of the Best selling chart, raised it to $2.99 when it peaked, dropped it to 99 when it moved to the bottom, and repeat.

    So his total earnings are a combination of 0.99 and 2.99 mixed together, as he played with the price to maximize his profits. He's a very good businessman.

  17. I love my brother's method of guilt on A Letter On Behalf of the World's PC Fixers · · Score: -1, Interesting

    "If I knew how to do computer, I would help You so you should help me." Well my brother did help me move from my parents' house to my apartment --- ten years ago.

    Meanwhile the computer service continues onward year-after-year-after-year.

    And I wouldn't mind if he actually LEARNED something, but he's still stuck at the "how do I make firefox fill the whole screen" or "I have firefox open - how do I get back to desktop?" stage (try minimize and maximize like I taught you back in 1999). He never learns.

  18. The German car I want on A Car You Can Drive With Your Thoughts · · Score: -1
  19. Re:I would have thought this closer to 100% on 80% of Browsers Found To Be At Risk of Attack · · Score: -1

    I'm one of those who doesn't do updates. Mainly because I've read too many horror stories of updates making computers unbootable, or breaking the software, or whatever.

    Instead I wait a month-or-so until I'm sure there's no negative outcomes being reported by the press.

  20. Re:"We own it" on Microsoft Bans Open Source From the Windows Market · · Score: 0, Troll

    More likely it's just because Bill Gates' protege Ballmer doesn't think software should be free. See his infamous Computer Users Group letter from circa 1977. He cited the unfairness of gaining the benefits of software authors' time, effort, and capital without paying them.

    It's also reminiscent of how Microsoft sent letters to schools warning them that using open source and/or pirated software could be dangerous with possible legal consequences. As a result we have stories like Karen the Teacher sending a student to detention, because he was handing-out Linux OS discs. (She thought she was doing the right thing based upon Microsoft's warnings.*)

    MS actively fights against open source.

    *
    * "No software is free and spreading that misconception is harmful. These children look up to adults for guidance and discipline. I will research this as time allows and I want to assure you, if you are doing anything illegal, I will pursue charges as the law allows."

  21. Re:For those who like this sort of thing, this is on TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1 · · Score: -1

    >>>loss at ã120 then the "hurt feelings" at ã1,000,000.

    That's not quite how it works. The courts sue the company the value of the product PLUS a multi-million dollar punishment to discourage the corporations from acting like assholes in the future.

    AKA punitive damage. I'm surprised the UK doesn't have a similar way of punishing corporations, else they'd just keep screwing the citizens again and again.

  22. Re:For those who like this sort of thing, this is on TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1 · · Score: 0

    >>>I know of two lifetime replay TV units that are still getting data

    They have cable and still receive cable updates. But when freeTV Analog was turned-off, replayTV stopped supplying the data to those users.

    Of course RTV could still supply FreeTV digital, but they simply choose not to. Instead the screen comes-up blank as if no over-the-air stations exist.

  23. Re:For those who like this sort of thing, this is on TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1 · · Score: 0

    They have cable and still receive cable updates. But when freeTV Analog was turned-off, replayTV stopped supplying the data to those users.

    Of course RTV could still supply freeTV digital, but they simply choose not to. Instead the screen comes-up with just one lowpower analog station, and none of the digital channels. (I get about 50 of them.)

  24. Re:For those who like this sort of thing, this is on TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1 · · Score: 0

    >>>loss at £120 then the "hurt feelings" at £1,000,000.

    That's not quite how it works. The courts sue the company the value of the product PLUS a multi-million dollar punishment to discourage the corporations from acting like assholes in the future.

    AKA punitive damage. I'm surprised the UK doesn't have a similar way of punishing corporations, else they'd just keep screwing the citizens again and again.

  25. Re:£149? on TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1 · · Score: 0

    >>>>>10MB broadband.
    >>
    >>Ah it means speed, not volume. I am in Australia so 10MB seemed strangely low [data cap]
    .

    This is funny. Up above we had a discussion about how diluting terms like "brick" can cause confusion when speaking to other people, and now here we see an example of that.

    It's not 10 MB broadband. It's 10 MB per second or 10 MB/s broadband. The former is not correct, but the latter is - volume versus speed. (If this was college, the professors would take half a point off for having an incorrect answer.)