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User: fisticuffs

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Comments · 16

  1. Re:Track an IP? on Chinese Hackers Targeting NYPD Computers · · Score: 2, Funny

    Someone should create a GUI interface using Visual-Basic

    Get with the times, man. Haven't you seen CSI? They make 'em with Flash now.

  2. Re:it's over... on AMD Overclocks New Phenom II X4 To 7 GHz · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Hi, pedophile!

  3. Re:it's over... on AMD Overclocks New Phenom II X4 To 7 GHz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Slashdot is where stupid people go to appear smart.
    /b/ is where smart people go to appear stupid.

  4. Re:Duh! on Digital Schwarzenegger Set For New 'Terminator' · · Score: 1
    I was referring to this

    So we may see new movies with Bogart, Wayne, Hepburn, Garbo and many others.

    portion of my parent's comment. Arnold is a bad example.

  5. Re:Duh! on Digital Schwarzenegger Set For New 'Terminator' · · Score: 1

    May not work until they get the voice synthesis and the mannerisms right. They might as well start from scratch if they're going to develop digital "actors".

    Additionally, digital actors have less of an impact (episodes IV, V, and VI vs. episodes I, II, and II for example).

    Meatspace actors and stuntmen do take real risks on the set. They break real sweats in those chase scenes and they sustain bruises or worse when something goes wrong, even though it's all scripted. Don't forget about improvisation. It's a lot less exciting to know that what little existing element of real danger and urgency has been replaced by billions of triangles made with a keyboard and perhaps motion-capture sensors.

  6. Re:pirate repellents on Mariners Develop High Tech Pirate Repellents · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    All the testosterone and gung-ho aside, how about not giving them a reason to pirate? It seems that nobody here realizes that the Somali pirates are doing what they do because other nations illegal fishing (worth an estimated 300 million) in the region have depleted their fish stocks while the UN turned a blind eye. To add insult to injury, there's been some toxic waste dumping off the coast.

    So while the media distraction du jour clearly has many of you foaming at the mouth, try to realize that Somali pirates, much like our own domestic media pirates, are doing what they do because they system has failed them and they see piracy as the most feasible method to force change. The only difference between us and them is that they do it to put food on their table.

  7. Re:Terrorists? Probably not. on A Cyber-Attack On an American City · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Bruce, pardon my tinfoil hat, but could it have been a 3-letter agency running a live simulation? The data would be skewed if the participants knew it were an exercise.

  8. Re:Get what you pay for on "Good Enough" Computers Are the Future · · Score: 1

    then I'm stuck with three choices: try to break an agreement and crack it or be forced to upgrade.

    Or, migrate to another OS if applicable. What I meant to say ;)

  9. Re:Get what you pay for on "Good Enough" Computers Are the Future · · Score: 1

    And would would a hypothetical

    I based my argument on the behavior or existing free and non-free operating systems, especially with regards to customizability.

    Monopolies are monopolies because they control what the user does, not vice-versa. With a free operating system I can examine the source and do whatever I want to it or even port it provided I have the time and the skill available. With closed operating systems, I'm pretty much stuck. If there's a (hypothetical) kill-switch on a proprietary OS which forces a software upgrade(possibly a hardware upgrade too) then I'm stuck with three choices: try to break an agreement and crack it or be forced to upgrade. And we can get over-pedantic about licensing and all that, but if everybody used different distros and hybrid mutants having only the Linux kernel in common then I wouldn't say that Linux the operating system would not be a monopoly in practice.

  10. Re:Get what you pay for on "Good Enough" Computers Are the Future · · Score: 1

    short term cheap computers, or long term expensive computers.

    False dichotomy. As long as there isn't a non-free OS monopoly which essentially forces upgrades which require better hardware each iteration, then almost all hardware stays relevant in the long term. There will always be exceptions for hardcore gaming, visualization, media development, etc.

    As Captain Splendid said above, it's actually been that way for awhile - though Microsoft and other monopolists wouldn't want Joe User to realize that.

  11. Re:Brings me back on The History of Microsoft's Anti-Competitive Behavior · · Score: 1

    It might not be his fault. For example, the quote "640K ought to be enough for anybody" is still widely misattributed to Bill Gates.

    Check out his wikiquote for more.

  12. Re:Sure it will. on BYU Prof. Says University Classrooms Will Be "Irrelevant" By 2020 · · Score: 1

    So student A signs up, and Student B does the work, but Student A gets the credit.

    Not always. Many online classes (especially the maths and sciences) require students to take the midterms at school, showing photo ID before the tests are administered.

    My community college even offers calc I online and I believe they did offer calc II. Perfect for those of us who work full-time but have to jump through the hoops only to never use the math again. I don't know many webapp or database programmers whose job depends on solving improper integrals.

  13. Um on First Android-Based Netbook, Set-Top Box · · Score: 1

    Did anybody else notice that the web browser shown in the picture of the device in the summary's linkappears to be a simulated screenshot of Firefox on Windows XP? ;) Specs indicate only Android.

  14. Re:Plagiarism takes yet another hit on Fair Use Affirmed In Turnitin Case · · Score: 1
    Exerpt from Turnitin's website:

    "...being able to see a highlighted line that is similar or exact to another document gives us that "teaching moment"..."

    Without knowing the mechanism of the plagiarism detection I'm wondering about writers, especially budding ones, who like to use the same style and mannerisms as their favorite writer(s). Being influenced by an artist does not necessarily constitute ripping them off.

  15. Re:Classroom interaction is valuable on BYU Prof. Says University Classrooms Will Be "Irrelevant" By 2020 · · Score: 1

    Right. In the future we'd probably instead see more "virtual classroom" lectures, where students log on to a real-time lecture via webcam from the comforts of their home or dorm room, replacing actually going to class. Another good compromise would be to have the lecture videotaped and the office hours walk-in or live cam session as described above.

  16. Pirates on Brazilian Pirates Hijack US Military Satellites · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What exactly are the "pirates" pirating? Does mere communications count as "piracy" now?