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User: jafac

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  1. Re:2006: "There's no real estate bubble..." on No Tech Bubble Here, Says CNN: "This Time It's Different." · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Oh I remember this, too; in 2007; and I kept imagining that housing demand will always go up, because we're always adding more people, right?

    I was naive enough that I could never conceive that we'd get to a point in this nation where vacant, foreclosed houses outnumbered homeless people 4:1. I never dreamed that our trusted financial institutions and ratings agencies would sell their credibility and AAA ratings like a crackwhore sells her virtue. Yet, post 2008 - the banks were willing to sit on empty, depreciating inventory, rather than let their fellow americans sleep indoors under a roof. Disgusting. I learned a lot since 2007.

    But I'm pretty sure that when the next crash comes, everybody's going to act all surprised like they didn't see it coming, and though it could never happen like that again.

  2. Re:Round and round. on No Tech Bubble Here, Says CNN: "This Time It's Different." · · Score: 1

    yes; it was called the "New Economy". A term that should be remembered for generations, in infamy. Like Hitler.

    Yet - people still refer to the "New Economy" as a thing; instead of as a grim reminder of how we create buzzwords to fool ourselves into believing that "it really is different this time, and we are really a special flower."

  3. Re:Fool me once, shame on you... on No Tech Bubble Here, Says CNN: "This Time It's Different." · · Score: 1

    no. More like
    "There's a sucker born every minute" - David Hannum

  4. Re:Vizio P Series on Ask Slashdot: Affordable Large HD/UHD/4K "Stupid" Screens? · · Score: 4, Informative

    It could be argued (and has) that "Smart TV" features, are a value-add for the manufacturer, not the consumer. (because those very features are used to generate revenue, and are not particularly useful to the end-user).

    The only real benefit to the end-user is if they're too dumb or lazy to hook up a Roku or other cheap streaming device (or whatever). In fact; I found my Samsung's menus and apps to be so ridiculously slow and poorly designed, that those features are basically unusable. (example: get up in the morning, turn on TV to watch something while I eat breakfast: TV takes at least 60 seconds before Netflix app can even be selected (please wait, the TV is starting up), then another 30 seconds to START the program, then another 30 seconds to display, pick, and enter the profile - OMG-Teh LAG!; we're all used to Netflix taking about 5-10 seconds to fire up the stream of your selected program, plus the remote is shitty, is very sensitive about direction pointing, weird button placement, poor battery life. . . if I instead use the Roku, it's literally 5 seconds to get into where I'm picking the program, the remote has a simple, intelligent layout, and doesn't particularly care if it's pointed perfectly at the device).

    As far as "Smart TV" features go, I think it's just this year's "3d" (which, also, nobody wanted.)

  5. Re:Some clarification for the recently arrived. on Is Modern Linux Becoming Too Complex? · · Score: 1

    IMO: it is the "major distros" (ie. We'll just call it "RedHat" and "Ubuntu" for now. . . ); who have been poor stewards of what are actually very influential segments of the Linux market. Spreadsheet jockeys who were clearly not "technical" - at these companies, made these decisions. To the detriment of the entire community. These guys are invested in their quarterly bonus check. Not the overall success or failure of Linux. They have their corporate accounts, with money rolling in. Like Microsoft, and sorta like Apple. They give no fucks about the people who actually use the system.

    I don't see Pottering as the problem. Unless he has a mind-control ray that works on the fat fucks at RedHat and Canonical. Or; unless he's an NSA plant, and RedHat is paid-off by the US Government, and Canonical paid off by GHCQ. And while that's wildly speculative and crazy sounding, I think that at it's root, the problem with Systemd, is that admins and developers do not TRUST that Systemd is their tool. It's a Tool that's foisted on them by the vendor - and bundled with all the other "free" stuff they were used to getting. In that regard, this is really the quintissential RMS argument. But then again, I think RMS's advice was that everyone should be running BSD anyway. Fuk da man.

  6. Re:But surely... on Samsung SmartTV Customers Warned Personal Conversations May Be Recorded · · Score: 2

    I will confirm this:

    My Samsung's CPU seems to be something well-below that of a low-end smartphone. It literally takes 5 minutes to fire up the Neftlix App. It's so bad, that I stream it from my Roku instead.

    Now: it doesn't take a LOT of processing power to do onboard speech recognition. Just quite a bit more than is available on your typical "low power" processors that you find on phones and appliances. A low-end desktop will do just fine. (in fact, I can remember when Apple added speech recognition to it's desktop line back in the early 1990's. They were capable of limited dictionaries that worked well for opening and closing apps, clipboard operations, etc - - - just not dictation. Dictation involves a broader dictionary, and special software with the statistical models, and the hardware to process them quickly. Still not terribly difficult on midrange desktops of the 1990's.

  7. Re:Article did not discuss downsides on Testosterone Increasingly Being Used To Fight Aging In Men · · Score: 1

    A lot of older guys are not particularly worried about the fertility bit.

    Prostate enlargement, on the other hand. . .

  8. Re:well on Massive Layoff Underway At IBM · · Score: 2

    That said; IBM has made itself largely irrelevant now for at least the past 5 years, if not longer - especially after they sold their desktop and laptop business to Lenovo. They gambled on a core part of their business that was already dead, and sold off their best assets.

    Part of this was that. They didn't catch the wave of mobile computing.

    The other part of this is that; believe it or not, this economy is headed for a steep nose-dive. Again. I know most of us have felt that it never came out of the last recession. But the past two years, we've seen parts of the economy doing like gangbusters, and other parts just falling on it's face. And just in the last 4 months, we saw the bottom drop out of the oil market due to weak demand. That's a signal. Not that there's a massive oil-production conspiracy (I'm not saying there isn't) - but that demand is falling because the economy is failing. We're seeing it in the 9% drop in CS grad starting salaries. We're seeing it in the mass layoff at IBM. I'm seeing it in my company. (last year's results were shitty: we basically made no money at all for the year.) Virtually nobody I know is doing well, money-wise, or job wise. It actually feels worse than 2008.

  9. Re:I wish they'd fix the missing functionality on LibreOffice Gets a Streamlined Makeover With 4.4 Release · · Score: 1

    Excel has a very stubborn and evil UI bug. It's been there forever, and it appears that MS has no intention of ever fixing it, or ever giving users an option to suppress the behavior. Ever try to scroll a large document, and you'll see what I mean. It is impossible to scroll by half-cells (or >1 cell). It's very annoying, especially when you have cells which contain a paragraph or two of text, and makes it almost impossible to navigate without losing your place as you're reading a spreadsheet. The other really horrible issue is that tab-names can only be llike 15 characters. If you need a more descriptive name for tabs, well, then, fuck you.

  10. Re:Nope on Could Tizen Be the Next Android? · · Score: 1

    Tizen on smartwatches does have some pretty good battery life.

    Apps?

    Not so much.

    Also - samsung writes SHITTY UI's.

  11. Re:"Half Baked"? on Could Tizen Be the Next Android? · · Score: 1

    I use an S5. I don't hate it.

    I used to use a Samsung DVD player - I actually loved that thing.

    I was slightly less impressed with the GG2. (running Tizen).

    I am appalled and horrified by their absolutely craptastic "SmartHub" system on their TV. Not sure if it's Tizen-based, but it's really, really bad.

  12. Re:"Half Baked"? on Could Tizen Be the Next Android? · · Score: 1

    yet, still, nobody needs or wants it.

  13. Re:You gotta be kidding me... on FDA Approves Implantable Vagus Nerve Disruptor For Weight Loss · · Score: 1

    give up.

    There are people out there who will NEVER be convinced; because they'd rather sit on their high-horse and morally judge people for being fat. The simplistic worldview that fat people simply overeat, and that there's nothing else going on, is too compelling, even if it is wrong.

  14. Re:Try Here on Ask Slashdot: Can I Trust Android Rooting Tools? · · Score: 1

    I've had my Samsung S5 (Verizon) complain that TowelRoot was malware.

    Also, after rooting, the update process seemed to fail from that point onwards; I can't install any vendor-provided update successfully.

  15. more to fear on An Open Letter To Everyone Tricked Into Fearing AI · · Score: 1

    Honestly, I'm far more afraid of DUMB programs, set loose by psychopathic human operators. Humans will do almost anything to fuck over other people, and make a buck. An antelope thighbone is a simple tool. One that can be misused. A program is just a much more sophisticated tool.

    Why are we afraid of the moment when a tool decides to use other tools, when any human can do horrible things.

  16. Re:Ironically, bottled mineral water is exploding. on Why We Have To Kiss Off Big Carbon Now · · Score: 2

    Again, it's really annoying that the bad actors screw things up for everybody.

    Tragedy of the Commons, eh?

  17. Re:Ironically, bottled mineral water is exploding. on Why We Have To Kiss Off Big Carbon Now · · Score: 1

    even in the nuclear industry, we regulate, and monitor - - obsessively. Yet, accidents happen.

    In the drilling industry - we're FAR less strict. I think it's almost guaranteed that accidents in fracking are more the rule than the exception.

  18. Re:Never had such issues on Ask Slashdot: High-Performance Laptop That Doesn't Overheat? · · Score: 1

    there's a utility for MBP's called "SMCFan Control" - however, it has been a bit "flaky" in my experience.

    If you boot to either Fedora or Ubuntu, there are some great temperature/fan/CPU controls that can be used to moderate heat.

    The MBP is absolutely fucking amazing hardware. You pay for it though. And there are trade-offs (no 3-6 disk slots, that's for sure).

  19. Re:How about unburdening Cable services on Unbundling Cable TV: Be Careful What You Wish For · · Score: 1

    yeah, cable news has gone down the shitter - but frankly, that's been a very strong trend since 1982 or so.

  20. Re:SF Economic Plausibility on Why We're Not Going To See Sub-orbital Airliners · · Score: 1

    Right. If only someone had the vision to write (Economic) Science Fiction. . . (or maybe that's Fantasy writing right there. . . )

  21. Re:No... on Tumblr Co-Founder: Apple's Software Is In a Nosedive · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes; I'm looking back at my "mac fanboi problems" from the 1990's, and the reason I bought Macs then, was to run Mac OS, or some mac-only software - the hardware was always pretty much playing "catch up". The fishtank-iMac was the first glimmer of hope on the hardware front. The dual G5 was amazing, even if OS X was kind of rough.

    But at a certain point, it became obvious that the OS team was being pillaged of talent for the i-device (iOS) team. The fact that Apple pulled all support for PPC kind of put a knife in it for me. And that's when I went over to PC hardware.

    Windows 8 was an amazing opportunity for Apple - and they totally blew it. Microsoft tripped, stumbled, and Apple could have curb-stomped them with a great development effort to tune-up OS X. They blew that opportunity off. And Microsoft STILL isn't really on their feet yet.

    Now: I have a macbook pro - because it's just an "insanely great" piece of hardware. But the ONLY reason I'm running OS X is to be able to use VMWare Fusion. If VMWare Fusion's features were available on Linux, that's what I would be running on my MBP.

  22. Re: not original on Uber Pushing For Patent On Surge Pricing · · Score: 1

    I suspect arson was somewhat frowned on then as it is now.

    lol. If it "creates jobs" - then it is pretty much accepted with open arms, if not worshiped and deified.

  23. Re:Just get f.lux! on Study: Light-Emitting Screens Before Bedtime Disrupt Sleep · · Score: 2

    just a word about this program - sometimes it gets flagged as spyware. I don't know if it's because f.lux has to know your location (in order to time the local sunset) - or if there's something else going on. There are some other programs. There is g.lux, and redshift, for starters.

  24. Re:a progressive new group on Putting Time Out In Time Out: The Science of Discipline · · Score: 0

    Oh look, here come the same "social engineers" that brought us soaring male suicide rates and burgeoning single motherhood with it's associated social outcomes,

    The only problem with this statement, is while these theories on raising children are a relatively new thing (last 100 years or so) - it can not be demonstrated that any kids are ACTUALLY being raised this way. Maybe a few, here and there, but by and large, most parents still raise their kids using traditional violence-based methods.

    So to blame these new science-backed techniques for the "decline of modern civilization" is just a bunch of bullshit; to justify frustrated parents whose first tool in their parenting toolbox is the paddle.

  25. Re:Land of the free on Reaction To the Sony Hack Is 'Beyond the Realm of Stupid' · · Score: 1

    Lol, in Gary, you're at much higher risk from industrial pollution than you are from random hooligan violence on the street. That shit gets into your body every day, all day long. You can't shoot it back. And it's completely legal.