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User: syntotic

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  1. Re:Officially Freaked Out on How the NSA Identified Satoshi Nakamoto (medium.com) · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I am still asking around if it is there where my linked lists with attachTo() and Successor(n) methods winded up.. Now, can those guys keep playing and stop confusing me with whoever? Because we are on the thirteenth year of I Am Being Hacked, and They Are Stealing My Computers and now I Have To Recover My Email Accounts Too, but BASICALLY I am now doubting I have free access in G+ but can only be seen in India or in NYC. With nearly seventeen years (or more) or nearly daily text, they cannot lose me with those techs, right? I can serve as counterprrof validation! I DO remember what i wrote and would not confuse myself with somebody else. Another Pamphletdom Day.

  2. Re:Fuck China. on China Orders Internet Comments Linked To Real Identities (engadget.com) · · Score: 0

    Its babbling, Chinese do not have real identities, any three syllables identify a million, but they can press to have us identified for them. Illegal comments they do have a lot... just speak of ZONE. But they want to see who is speaking and who is just a repeater so that repeaters do not find speakers and believe whatever they can make out of what they heard. Euphemistically.

  3. Africans boasting they can fish your PIN in the convenience store line, then going flat faced when you input it with your eyes closed, one hand over the other hand and barely moving the input hand within gloves. Try this with a super uber complex unbreakable password under scrutiny by some surveillance security camera in the nothing-will-happen cafeteria cyber coffee free wifi hotspot. How many times did you obviously move your both arms simultaneously to input yet one more shift key while aiming at the upper left corner, then at the... you get the idea? Simple passwords are a must. I ve forgotten sites because my ruled in password was impossible to remember without thinking it or to input with discrete keystrokes without watching the keyword. The simpler, the longer I do not have to change it and the better security I get. My FB and amazon and bank passwords have been a success, not so the google ones, to the point several sites I rather ASK to reset password every time I want to log in than actually have MY OWN password in use.

  4. It is because of the presence of Africans in Earth s System, but I am not believed! Not even after going formal and undeniably principled. Just to think in getting vaccinated with whatever is announced in pharmacy back receipt ads gives me the creeps when I have not heard about it my whole life and... something s missing, gut feeling.

  5. How many companies between you and her (... ?) phone?

  6. (got an about:blank page opening this). Easy solution: what do all these drones need to exist? An accelerometer, which you definitely CANNOT make in your own kitchen. Manufacture accelerometer chips with a radio tag, and if it does not contain it, call it military gear and act accordingly! So you can have a cheap sonar or radar scanning for commercial, DIY drones, and if one passes through, call it an attack. Only a few years of plain accelerometers out of the scheme so it is to be acted fast. It can be very bad, in a low level conflict ONE casualty out of an unexpected innocent drone is a big victory in fact.

  7. Re:Simpler solution on Deserialization Issues Also Affect .NET, Not Just Java (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 0

    Looks just like the ineptitude of self called programmers and guys paying anonymous third parties to say the guy is a programmer. We would be deprived of a few good applications for a while if we admit programming is ALSO a matter of being born a programmer, not just extruded through a system (pun). The problem is perennial and unsolvable, it was called deep vs shallow copying in its time. Either your object is all born like that ready (struct), or it has to be initialized somehow (object) or you have to ensure the object is internally homeostatic and correct, due initialization or not. Late to the polemic, the way it was put (...) we just fell into Y2K again and out.

  8. Re:Or just get one that has 4 wheels on Scientists Discover How To Stop Luggage From Toppling On the Race Through the Airport (theguardian.com) · · Score: 0

    Now their task is to correct luggage designs and get a worldwide patent from it.

  9. They close at night when are most needed, did you know? And they do not dispense soda cups nor fix the soda machines.

  10. Re:The hotel chain I worked for... on IT Services Company Wipro Forces 600 Employees To Work In Bed Bug Infested Office (11alive.com) · · Score: 0

    They seem to come from Indonesia or Indochina, just found the picture in G+ in a tagalog (?) ad post on mattresses, the same insects I have found in NYC several times every so many years.

  11. Re:Perhaps something more complex is involved on Moderate Drinking Can Damage the Brain, Claim Researchers (theguardian.com) · · Score: 0

    Ah, OK, now lets repeat the same experiment some other five hundred times to have more data samples before forbidding alcohol like Islam. What about finding out if it happens cross generation in same family lines, etc? This study does oppose lots of other similar studies saying some alcohol is very good for general health. Of course we expect the polemic to last some hundred years, maybe a few millennia? Toast!

  12. Re:Theft and Damage on What To Do If the Laptop Ban Goes Global (backchannel.com) · · Score: 0

    WHO EXACTLY is the US Government in this issue? Another Arab? Indian? AFRICAN? Or one of their TOTEMS, carefully selected to be undiscernible to anything but those groups interests? It is a typical strategy, as long as they have ONE classic American, it is the Age of Stone (real stone, not computers) and Middle East and we have to say it is the USA and it is Americans because the Totem is justifying it all... on Middle East, Afroasian Age of Stone reasons he himself thinks are Occident... SURELY there is another solution to this problem. The thieves of my laptops will have some trouble MAYBE, but it also GROUNDS ME TOTALLY.

  13. Where are all these guys acquiring the same speech and phrase from? And denying reality in the process. Brains are discriminating machines, imagine a neural network solving XOR refusing the discriminate one side from another side with hyperplane... Problem unsolved.

  14. Re:So Hitler taught them nothing? on Germany Plans To Fingerprint Children and Spy On Personal Messages (fortune.com) · · Score: 0

    Because they are not children but MIDGETS created by Afroasian schizophrenia ideologies and their primitive recipes, grown ups in children bodies who may not know but have a goal of justifying their condition and the source of it in the face of Occidental thinking and the influence of Afroasia in Occidental ways of life. If they can prune out some intelligent families genetics and leave behind more easily handled morons for the Afroasians, they win. So it is understandable also that some control over them... since parents who may not be their parents may be actually living under extortion of the midget condition, or are using them further to justify their own deviations. Or do you think Cannibal invaded Rome with elephants only once and that was it, game over? In NYC it is very evident. Lots more to say about this, though basically they seem to be supporting a set of laws that are actually India and Occident adopted them as reflex unthinkingly (mob congresses do not think, and we already know what Arrow s theorem says).

  15. Re:They are? on For Video Soundtracks, Computers Are the New Composers (npr.org) · · Score: 0

    You just described exactly what computes can do very well: spontaneous, random, chaotic... eventually comes together, because we impose some sense on it. The hard task is to make things logical in a computer, not the other way around. Whenever I see these discussions I think I come up with yet-another-method-to-automatically-compose-music. The implication is that these people must have managed a particularly functional method. I wonder about it...

  16. Re:How much longer... on For Video Soundtracks, Computers Are the New Composers (npr.org) · · Score: 0

    Wasnt five, was eleven, and Casio organs were great. That was electronic music in its best.

  17. Re:Seems reasonable. on Harvard Pulls Student Offers Over Online Comments (go.com) · · Score: 0

    Just for an instant I thought it was related to supporting my matter with their ex student... I found another case, it is called Polymer. But Harvard is very exclusive and not only fame, right?

  18. Re:Maybe this opens up a market for modular laptop on US Might Ban Laptops On All Flights Into And Out of the Country (reuters.com) · · Score: 0

    Oscurantism is winning, but none of you would go help understand those decision makers the error of their ways, would you? Tablets are not enough, but a tablet can also hide a potent enough explosive to make a hole in an airplane and that is it. Wouldnt it be easier to forbid Arabs from taking airplanes not their own? This ban is a personal affront in fact.

  19. Re:Not enought balls for a rematch? on Google Go-Playing A.I. Retires To Focus On Energy Conservation And Medicine (engadget.com) · · Score: 0

    NOT enough balls to admit Chinese could not understand whoever was the original thinker thinking of binary and computer things. INstead of inventing something useful, they turned it into an Oracle and a game. The binary filiation is obvious, it is them who claim the antiquity. I think it is very telling nowadays when so many thing advanced are said to have been invented by Chinese, but only after Occidental Civilization and mass transportation exploded. So the Greeks were developing geometry while the Chinese were gathering an obtuse set of binary rules? And eve trying to make sense of the I Ching in TWO SEQUENCES, but not the meaningful sequence...

  20. Any idea if there is a restrictive monetary policy? Could be by design.

  21. Re:Isn't this just welfare for the rich? on Mark Zuckerberg Calls for Universal Basic Income in His Harvard Commencement Speech (fortune.com) · · Score: 0

    Shame. For the massacre it caused. It is not personal but it has been constant criminality since 1997. This was just the tip of the iceberg becoming visible. Universal Income? That far my ideas went? I have omitted a formal analysis, what for? We know why such discourse, right?

  22. Do you imply we have astounding third rate stars?

  23. Under Trump means Because of Trump? No. Is it tourists or they have other goals like becoming illegal, impersonating identities, feud wars and the like? They would not be quite liking Trump. This tourism thing started since the previous administration for this city at least, in fact, going down from mid 2000s decade on. In my mind tourism is a very structured thing you plan in advance and has nothing to do with a political administration but with commercial policies. Though of course I _should_ be on the right side of going all places... were you can actually go as a 8-O tourist and nothing else.

  24. Re:While you're at it.... on The Supreme Court Is Cracking Down on Patent Trolls (fortune.com) · · Score: 0

    Remember a foothold is a foothold... and it all is a matter of negotiation. Other than that... can we patent 3D holographic videos and display gadgets? Because a few years ago...

  25. Re: Interesting... on Humans Accidentally Made a Space Cocoon For Ourselves Out of Radio Waves (vice.com) · · Score: 0

    I cannot go anonymous here? Well, anyway, it does sound like the start of preparations to shun frequency transmissions, whatever that might mean. Too much of it, babies? Insect cocoons? Sounds like a Chinese meal.