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User: manicb

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  1. Re:Differentiate on How Amateurs Destroyed the Professional Music Business · · Score: 1

    No there isn't. You just don't know what you want or how to find it.

  2. Re:In fairness on 55,000 Sign Twitter Abuse Petition After Jane Austen Campaigner Threats · · Score: 1

    I'm fairly sure that dashes can also be used in the manner of matched commas or ellipses – as is common in gothic literature – but they do carry a little ambiguity. I find the main benefit is that they reduce the formality of the text – as in speech, sometimes the pacing of a flow of ideas is of more interest than the exact relationships.

    Perhaps the rule should be that a person has to demonstrate proper use of a semicolon before they are permitted to use a long dash?

  3. Re:Yay, another hipster programming messiah!!! on Ingy döt Net Tells How Acmeism Bridges Gaps in the Software World (Video) · · Score: 1

    YAML markup language

    We're familiar with RAS syndrome (redundant acronym syndrome syndrome). YAML expands to "YAML Ain't Markup Language", making this his YAML ain't markup language ain't markup language markup language *headsplosion*

  4. Re:Diet and laziness on The Man Who Convinced Us We Needed Vitamin Supplements · · Score: 1

    [citation needed]

  5. Re:Executive Power on DNI Office Asks Why People Trust Facebook More Than the Government · · Score: 1

    You want to live in a country with no legal system? The judiciary is part of the government: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Separation_of_power

  6. Re:Does that still work, though? on DNI Office Asks Why People Trust Facebook More Than the Government · · Score: 1

    You do realise that "normal laws" are written, enforced and may be changed by the various branches of government, right? The judicial system is generally defined as one branch of government, and policing is ultimately funded and directed by politicians.

  7. Re:Executive Power on DNI Office Asks Why People Trust Facebook More Than the Government · · Score: 1

    Maybe we rely on the *government* to protect us from that?

  8. Re:Not a QC! on A Look At Quantum Computer Manufacturer D-Wave and Its Founder · · Score: 1

    Ah, the moment I run out of mod points...

  9. Re:quantum computing on A Look At Quantum Computer Manufacturer D-Wave and Its Founder · · Score: 2

    I've used a BlueGene/Q. It sucks for web browsing and gaming, the processors are only 1.6 GHz and it doesn't even run Windows ;-)

    Implementing MPI scalable parallelism into Firefox would actually be a pretty interesting exercise for somebody with the time on their hands...

  10. Re:Supercomputers are pretty useless on China Bumps US Out of First Place For Fastest Supercomptuer · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately the commercial fluid dynamics codes often have quite restrictive licenses where you pay for a certain number of cores. I've seen academic HPC queues full of 8-core jobs with hundreds of cores available, because that was all they could justify a license for. It's an absurdly artificial restriction (a bit like limiting numbers of tracks in cut-down music software), but >Ansys are fairly unrepentant at the moment.

  11. Re:Supercomputers are pretty useless on China Bumps US Out of First Place For Fastest Supercomptuer · · Score: 1

    This mostly agrees with my experience. Here's some data: This is a breakdown of the codes used on HECToR, the main UK academic cluster. It is dominated by chemistry; generally in chemistry the main computational challenge is in performing very large matrix diagonalisations to solve approximations of quantum mechanical systems. Clearly generous allocation and effective sharing of memory is critical for this kind of task.

  12. Re:doesn't help people take games seriously either on Sexism Still a Problem At E3 · · Score: 1

    I approve of this world view! Now we just need to convince professionals not to attend unprofessional conferences... This could be difficult if it is the professionals who are making the environment unprofessional, but we must try. I personally find it difficult to challenge "low-level" sexism without seeming overly judgemental or sensitive; to some extent it is this low-level criticism we need to make more common, instead of strong reactions to isolated incidents which provoke strong and unproductive debate.

  13. Re:doesn't help people take games seriously either on Sexism Still a Problem At E3 · · Score: 1

    Feminism does support all of those things, but with one caveat. Women are different to men.

    Judith Butler showed that to be a very problematic statement. If both sex and gender are socially constructed, it's difficult to employ any kind of biological argument. You may need to broaden and update your idea of "feminism".

  14. Re:Genetically speaking... on Transgendered Folks Encountering Document/Database ID Hassles · · Score: 1

    In database design, I thought the answer to this was "yes"?

    (IANADatabasePerson. My scientific codes have all kinds of vulnerabilities to unexpected input.)

  15. Finder Tabs: about time on Apple Updates MacBooks and Mac Pro Desktop With Haswell, "Unified Thermal Core" · · Score: 1

    Looking forwards to Finder Tabs. I use a Mac at work and Linux at home and find the tabs in Dolphin and Konquerer a pretty much essential aspect of any gui filesystem work. (Mostly I like CLI but sometimes you have to accept that clicking and dragging really is quicker). Just like multiple desktops, Apple are a few years behind but doing well to pick up the useful bits. Speaking of which, I hope they've dropped the absurd restrictions in moving windows between multiple monitors and workspaces.

  16. Re:A host of things on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    You missed my point.

    There are plenty of great reasons to not use Linux for professional audio.

    I'm not trying to make you switch. I'm not saying you've been irrational or unethical. I'm just trying to point out that getting messed around by DRM on freaking AUDIO SAMPLES is an insane situation to be in. Audio samples are one of the most basic resources in music production. Not being able to hack around your samples is like having a pen that only writes on branded paper. What if you want to write on the side of a tin can? This is supposed to be art! Sure a computer is a tool, and a tool should not make too many assumptions about what you are doing. I only mentioned WINE options as an example of a transition for someone that has already been screwed; it's still a rubbish situation to be in. The best course of action is to make some great music with your DRM while you still can! And then sell it to a DRM-free indie game ;-)

  17. Re:A host of things on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    For general-purpose sampling, there are quite a few companies out there offering samples in SFZ or gigastudio format. Personally I'd be reluctant to call a sample pack "samples" if you don't have access to the audio files. It looks like Vienna Symphonic Library used to be available in a friendly format, but is now closed off, so there is a genuine lack of professional-level orchestral samples. Of course, if you can afford VSL then you can probably justify extra hardware like an offline winXP box or a Muse Receptor, controlled over MIDI.

      Failing that, I hear Kontakt works well in WINE if you have a proper audio setup. (The Muse Receptor compatibility would support this.)

    There are plenty of great reasons to not use Linux for professional audio. I remain unconvinced that getting taken for a ride by sample producers is one of them.

  18. Re:because desktop linux is a toy and novelty on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    At the sort of very advanced level we're talking about above, Excel can be evil. Finding a modeling error in a spreadsheet can be very hard; even knowing that it's there can be very hard. Build a complex spreadsheet that uses the most advanced functions and keep it error free? You'd better be really good, and more than a little lucky. (LibreOffice etc. are subject to the same thing, of course.)

    Spreadsheets are abused. At the most complex levels they can be abused seriously. They are not a substitute for something like Octave, SciCalc, or SageMath, where at least all the formulae are out in the open and not inside cells.

    This. I also find spreadsheets conceptually limiting; I'm a scientist and do most of my data processing in the form of multi-dimensional arrays and structures in MATLAB or Python. (Octave is also respectable but isn't as good at importing data files.) Excel really limits you to two dimensions, and referencing between multiple tables and sheets can get very awkward very fast. I worry that when people grow up with Excel it limits the way they think about data.

  19. Re:At one point, lack of good DAW and NLE on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    Interesting stuff, thanks for sharing. I'm currently using REAPER: while it's not native they are very supportive of WINE users.

  20. Re:A host of things on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    all the samples I own are Windows and Mac only, and I do not wish to rebuy them, nor have I found any for Linux remotely close in quality.

    How the heck did you manage that? You do know samples are audio files right? What are you going to do when support ends for Kontakt (or whatever it is)?

  21. Re:What kind of encryption did the FBI break? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    What happens when a judge demands, under threat of prison time, that you "decrypt" one of your pads?

  22. Re:When did CEOs get to dictate tax policy? on Eric Schmidt: Google Will Continue Investing In UK Even If Taxes Raised · · Score: 1

    If you feel so strongly about people being responsible for the circumstances of their own birth, why do you grant people a right to survival?

  23. Re:When did CEOs get to dictate tax policy? on Eric Schmidt: Google Will Continue Investing In UK Even If Taxes Raised · · Score: 1

    Anything spent outside of what you need to live, should be subject to tax.

    Everyone should have some skin in the game when it comes to taxation and supporting the basic services the govt needs to provide.

    "what you need to live" is a surprisingly subjective term. After all, do people really *need* to live? What quality of life justifies such a need? Basic sustenance may not provide such a quality of life.

  24. Re:Context matters on Eric Schmidt: Google Will Continue Investing In UK Even If Taxes Raised · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Regardless, it's a stupid thing to say. A company like Google threatening to leave is a good way to shape tax policy in its favor. But coming right out and saying that they won't leave makes it a lot easier for the UK government to raise their taxes.

    That's a very simplistic take on things. The fact is that government is very used to people threatening to take their business away if they don't get their own way, and it's pretty obvious that it doesn't happen in practice. It's not a good way to shape tax policy, it's a transparent and dishonest way. Perhaps as a government you'd actually rather work with companies that don't just routinely lie and throw temper tantrums?

  25. Re:That's fine on Fedora 19 To Stop Masking Passwords · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a good case for, as suggested by many in the discussion, a "show password" button, as is widely used. I don't see an argument for making it the default.