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User: Razgorov+Prikazka

Razgorov+Prikazka's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 334

  1. Anexorexia Nervosa is a disease!!
    Dont mock or bully people who suffer from it!

  2. Re:"Ancient." "Cruft." on OpenBSD Team Cleaning Up OpenSSL · · Score: 4, Funny

    You forgot Windows 1.x, 2.x, 3.x, 95, PocketPC 200x, mobile 5, 6, 7, 8, RT, NT3.1, 3.5, 4.0, XP, Server 20xx, XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 and finally CE1.x to CE7.x.

    Those should be avoided at all times as well if security is the main concern. Have you ever heard of a security breach on a OpenBSD system? You probably did, it's because that is actually newsworthy! News of a new MS security breach is chucked into the same lame bin as 'Cat is stuck in tree', 'Small baby is born', 'MH370 is finally found', 'Cat still stuck', 'MH370 still not found', 'Is this the year for BitCoins'?, "Cat climbed down himself', and other nonsense that will surprise no one at all.

    (P.S. This is not meant snarly, cynical or negative, just slightly blasé)

  3. Re:This is Fantastic! on Rover Curiosity Discovers Australia-Shaped Rock On Mars · · Score: 2

    Australians?
    You probably mean Austrians. The people in Austria are either called Mr./Mrs Aboriginal or Mr./Mrs Convict. The guy's next door from Switzerland are called Australians.
    Dont blame me for getting my topography wrong, it is about as accurate as that stone looks like Australia!

  4. Re:Equivalent on 5.1 Earthquake Hits California · · Score: 1

    Actually I fail to see why this is news that matters or how this is news for nerds however.
    IF it was triggered by a google experiment I could see why it has value on /.
    IF it was triggered by a Morlords I could see why it has value on /.
    IF it was triggered by a aliens I could see why it has value on /.
    IF it was triggered by a cosmic event I could see why it has value on /.
    IF it was part of a beowulf cluster of minor earthquakes running on GNU-Linux on raspberry-pi's I could see why it has value on /.
    Just some rocks sliding and stuff is no news. Let allone for nerds.

  5. Re:A lense cover on Google Tries To Defuse Glass "Myths" · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well said!
    There is a big difference between holding a phone vertically at eye hight (=most probably taking a picture) and the diagonal position used to crush candy or communicate via text or do other stuff.
    I think it is a sign on the wall that 99% of the criticism is about taking pictures and only 1% about things like distraction and so forth. It is all about consent and not knowing if someone is (not) taking a picture. And even if the wearer is not actively engaged in taking pictures, remote access tools might be able to take over. There is a reason I got the webcam taped off on my laptop...
    I just simply fail to see why a webcam strapped to a face is a nice idea.

  6. Re:Cliche on First Look At the Animals of the New Hebrides Trench · · Score: 2, Funny

    No Spongebob either :-(

  7. Re:No on Ask Slashdot: Should I Get Google Glass? · · Score: 0

    Thing is... that even when you are not filming me, I can not be assured that I am not being filmed.
    Ever heard of RAT? Remote Access Tools? So even when you are not aware of actually filming me, someone else actually might. They can even switch off that little LED that signals: Hey I am filming!
    Sorry... what did I say again?
    There should be a little red recording light?
    Never mind! FU if youre wearing it. Hopefully for you it is, the evidence of the attack is on a disk and the judge will tell me: YOU SHOULD LET OTHER PEOPLE FILM YOU WHATEVER THE SITUATION ! ! !

  8. Re: Slashdot: news for nerds who... on Ask Slashdot: Should I Get Google Glass? · · Score: 1

    Nice one! Let me elaborate on that theme a bit further:

    Slashdot: News for nerds who value their privacy and that of others
    Or
    Slashdot: News for nerds who value their teeth because they might bump into someone who actually DOES dislike new technology.
    Or
    Slashdot: News for nerds who value their teeth because they might bump into someone who actually likes new technology AND knows what it might do AND values his/her privacy and has no way of telling you are filming them without their consent.
    Or
    Slashdot: News for nerds who got rid of gmail because of privacy concerns, who actively block cookies, trackers, google-ads because of privacy concerns, who use xquick instead of google because of privacy concerns, who (after all that effort) do not want to impose Googles tech on others (with or without consent).

  9. Re:No on Ask Slashdot: Should I Get Google Glass? · · Score: 2, Informative

    No is the short and straightforward answer.
    The longer more thought through answer should be: No-no-no-no-no-no-no-Hell-no!

    There are way to many camera's as it is today, no need for privately owned ones as well.
    There should be a little red 'recording' light on there. So you can go about as you are when not filming me, or get a sub-retinal version for free if you start filming me without consent.
    I feel no need for others to film me with a wireless webcam straped to their faces!
    So the answer should be NO. Period.

  10. Re:ICF on 1870s Horse Flu Epidemic Brought US Economy To Its Knees · · Score: 1

    Its a bellshaped curve, not a circle. And it is going to strike hard once it hits!
    http://vimeo.com/34571708
    (talk on the report requested by the US Department of Energy)

  11. Re:My Toyota has had this since 2004... on Dead Reckoning For Your Car Eliminates GPS Dead Zones · · Score: 1

    That is absolutely true. The whole idea of navigation, wether it is on land or at sea is that you take measurements. From a practical standpoint it doesnt really matter wether that is from celestial bodies (natural or man-made) or from known landmarks.
    One of the problems a sumarine (whilst being submerged) has is that it can`t do any measurements of that kind. Like LORAN-C, GPS, INS, landmarks, celestial navigation et cetera. So angle, distance and time are the main navigational tools. The main skewing factor there is drift. When in a body of moving water (mainly tide induced) you will move, say north to south, with that water without a way to find out you you are drifting. So sonar is another thing they use to avoid hitting the sea floor. Also using sonar wit a good map gives you some idea of where you are if there are some known "submerged landmarks". Again this is, as you said, a measurement. Also it is a tell-tale-sign for the enemy :-)
    Actually, these two techniques (DR, mapping the surface while comparing it to a known map) are two of the seven measurements a typical cruise-missile uses to be... dead on... so to speak.

    By the way, when talking about navigation, "a measurement" like shooting a sun or star is called "taking a fix". NavLeetSpeak :-D

  12. Re:My Toyota has had this since 2004... on Dead Reckoning For Your Car Eliminates GPS Dead Zones · · Score: 1

    In maritime navigation DR is one of THE most fundamental way's of navigating. As it has been for litterally ages.

    http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_American_Practical_Navigator/Chapter_7

  13. Re:Finally! on Chinese Firm Can Now Produce 500 Cloned Pigs Per Year · · Score: 3, Funny

    and now they are at it... why not implement some chicken DNA as well. Have bacon and egg`s in one go.
    Oh, and bread DNA, baked beans DNA, orange juice DNA, coffee DNA, newspaper DNA, naging wife DNA, sunrise DNA and some razorburn DNA and we are all set for the day!
    What a glorious future it will be!

  14. Re:War on Drugs on Cartels Are Using Firetruck-Sized Drillers To Make Drug Pipelines · · Score: 1

    Sorry, should have spelled it with capitals perhaps. RISC:

    Reduced Interception Subterranean Cargo-system.

  15. War on Drugs on Cartels Are Using Firetruck-Sized Drillers To Make Drug Pipelines · · Score: 1

    I guess that people like a 'buzz' and as long as there is demand there is a suplier willing to take riscs to deliver.
    Its basically the whole 'prohibition era' all over again with some new tech.
    So keep fighting it guys! We all know what the end result will be!

  16. It is finished! Now it will begin! on Finnish HIV Vaccine Testing To Begin · · Score: 1

    HIV vaccines that go back in time are the best in the world!

  17. Having a GUI is great... on GNU Octave Gets a GUI · · Score: 1

    ...but does it run linux?

  18. Re:So, this is what Slashdot has become? on Dial 00000000 To Blow Up the World · · Score: 2

    Oh, and Jimmy Carter once sent his jacket to the dry-cleaner with a paper with the detonation codes still in one of the pockets. Just so you dont have to write a 'news article' on that in the near future...
    I got both pieces of info via QI (Quite interesting), wich is normally considered a quiz, but for the author it is probably a news show...

  19. Re:Language? on Snowden Document Says Dutch Secret Service Hacks Internet Forums · · Score: 2

    Whether it`s Dutch, German or English, it should be fora... not forums.

  20. Re:you must be kidding on Bitcoin (Probably) Isn't Broken · · Score: 1

    Math is not a system, it is a abstract study of several topics.

  21. you must be kidding on Bitcoin (Probably) Isn't Broken · · Score: 0

    A system that has a flaw? You! Must! Be! Kidding me!
    There is no such thing as a flawless system, never has been, never will be. One could say that a flaw is an intrinsic part of any system.
    When AES256 is in place and people use 12345 as a password for example.
    Usually the flaw = human failure.

  22. Re:2013 Year of the Linux Network on Your Next Network Operating System Is Linux · · Score: 1

    amen

  23. Re:Asteroid class on How Many Tiny Chelyabinsk-Class Asteroids Buzz Earth? · · Score: 3, Funny

    About 0.9999999999999 Chuck Norris that is...
    That said, nothing is >1 CN except for CN himself of course

  24. Re:Skynet. on The Human Brain Project Kicks Off · · Score: 1

    First of all I think we should figure some stuff out before we give it access to weapons with the obligatory Turing test.
    Then I think these are valid questions:

    Does it have the urge to pull out its eyebrows, then doodle on some fake ones? (yes / no)
    Does it think that an emotion is the same as a valid argument? (yes / no)
    Does it answer yes, no, yes, no, maybe to questions that are in fact rhetorical? (yes / no)
    Does it leak hydraulic fluid for a week a month and doesn't shutdown? (yes / no)
    Does it think that eating makes it feel better? (yes / no)

    If any is answered with yes... don't give it nukes... PMS is one thing, but having the bitch strapped to nukes will certainly kill us all!

  25. If you are a journalist in a 'not so democratic' country you are probably working for the state press telling people exactly what the nice mister Dick-tator wants the people to believe. Journalists who use TOR to get the real message out are CRIMINALS! And once found, put in a cage and shot. Only criminals use TOR!
    If you are a student in economics you would probably only read books because something interesting and practical like bitcoins are only for CRIMINALS! And they should be shot. Actually, money in any form is used by criminals and should be avoided! Right?
    If you are a human you would only drink mercury because water, or hydrogendioxide as you will probably call it, is used for making drugs! Kill the waterdrinkers!

    You must have a rather complicated life I guess...