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User: zakkie

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Comments · 176

  1. Re:Seriously? on Does Anyone Make a Photo De-Duplicator For Linux? Something That Reads EXIF? · · Score: 5, Informative

    See my earlier contrivution: geeqie. It will even scan for image similarity not just rudimentary hashing. Someone else mentioned gqview & that it was out of date - geeqie is what gqview became.

  2. Geeqie on Does Anyone Make a Photo De-Duplicator For Linux? Something That Reads EXIF? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Works excellently for this.

  3. Re:Eventually people will look up... on US Customs Destroys Virtuoso's Flutes Because They Were "Agricultural Items" · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe not on its own people (although there are examples of US citizens being killed by drones without any semblance of due process), but Iraqis, Afghans, Pakistanis and Yemenis are killed by US drones daily without any judicial process. That it doesn't happen on US soil is, as far as I'm concerned, immaterial.

  4. Re:Why so much butthurt? on Justine Sacco, Internet Justice, and the Dangers of a Righteous Mob · · Score: 1

    Kak, boet.

  5. Not. A. Fuck. on Google: Our Robot Cars Are Better Drivers Than You · · Score: 1

    Google + NSA + autonomous cars: you will get fucked, certainly.

  6. Re:Different reason cited in TFA on Google To Encrypt All Keyword Searches · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up please. This is the play, not anything else.

  7. Re:It was a myth on Joining Lavabit Et Al, Groklaw Shuts Down Because of NSA Dragnet · · Score: 1

    Few outside the US have considered it a good country for a long, long time now. Fewer still outside the common definition of "the West" would consider the US anything other than a malignant bully enforcing its will on others through violence, whether that be political or physical. It is impossible to keep up the charade though, even to your own citizens. Finally, slowly, the scales will fall from your eyes.

    I know many of you will say "so what, your country could do it if it could" and that the US was "obliged to act in its national interests". However, it should be plain to see that the necessary enforcement required to perform to that standard have long been surpassed, and today the interests of your corporations are served by your government, and the corporations in turn serve but a handful of masters. Ultimately we've got a situation where the interests of a mere handful of supremely wealth and untouchable individuals are more important than the rights and privacy of the millions who have toiled to enrich and empower them. Inevitably, the requirements to keep this status quo have been brought to bear on those responsible for allowing this state of affairs. Don't hang about, it's going to get worse. Having your privacy invaded is nothing; wait until drone strikes hit your neighbourhood. Wait until Guantanimo Bay is no longer merely for the brown or the Islamic. Wait until those urban armies dressed as cops bust more than drug dealers.

  8. Re:Only relevant line on Google Blocks YouTube App On Windows Phone (Again) · · Score: 0

    Just had to say: brilliant .sig. Thank you.

  9. Re:Dear Advertisers on IAB Urges People To Stop "Mozilla From Hijacking the Internet" · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well I run a site (see "homepage" link) that wasn't made for advertising, but it has allowed me, for a brief time at least, to devote my time to researching the information and purchasing materials for researching the information. Much of what you see on the site is online through my effort first. A whole lot is parsed by me from low-quality images that can't be searched, OCRd or otherwise rendered (see what I did there?) useful for people requiring answers. I tried to behave as respectfully towards my users as I could - no extraneous pages to click through, no annoying ads, and I made the decision to serve only text ads. I guess I'm SOL for now, but it would be nice not to be hated for just trying to make ends meet and doing what I love.

    From my point of view, the advertisers are the problem for another reason - they have ridiculously high demands for honouring payments, like not only must a user click, they must complete so and so action or the click doesn't count (which leads to ever more prominent, gaudy ads to try and bait users to click), extremely low revenue if the metric is views rather than clicks, etc. There is also zero transparency from their side - a click is valid or not on their say-so alone.

    Hopefully this will push ads towards a more peaceful and unobtrusive pay-to-display model - as per any other medium that has ads at all.

  10. Re:Azure on Should OpenStack Embrace Amazon AWS? · · Score: 1

    Rebooting after installing bug fixes. For the bug fixes.

  11. I blame removing configurability on The Last GUADEC? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Gnome 3 was a fuckup, but it started way back, when Havoc Pennington declared that too many options confused users. That was the start of the slippery slope that led us to this scenario. Taking away options completely instead of just offering basic & advanced configuration options was a fucking stupid idea. A desktop or any interface needs to get out of the way and make your day-to-day experience as painless as possible, but Gnome was hijacked by look-at-me designer types with nothing better to do than find ways of breaking shit that worked pretty fucking well. End result? A clusterfuck that nobody wants to use.

  12. Re:no, no it won't on Edward Snowden Nominated For Nobel Peace Prize · · Score: 1

    As I'm out of mod points, have a good, old-fashioned +1.

  13. Re:The real idiots... on Why Protesters In Cairo Use Laser Pointers · · Score: 0

    You do know that in just a couple of days there are over 30 dead already? Hardly peaceful. Certainly not democratic in any sense.

  14. Re:No reason to light up snipers these days... on Why Protesters In Cairo Use Laser Pointers · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yeah, the US traditionally champions democracy with the caveat that the people elected had better be who the US wants to see in power, or your democratic process will be summarily and violently overthrown. Egypt is just one more chapter in this book of aggression.

  15. Ultimate example of a 1st world problem? on Chemists Build App That Could Identify Cheap Replacements For Luxury Wines · · Score: 1

    Fuck me. Truly a first world problem.

  16. Re:Timewarp on Ask Slashdot: New To Linux; Which Distro? · · Score: 1

    Actually, HDD or mobo.

  17. Re:Timewarp on Ask Slashdot: New To Linux; Which Distro? · · Score: 1

    If what you say is true, hello :), and I would suspect the hard drive almost certainly. It's 5 years old and is likely due to fail. Copying large blocks of data as you describe could well be the trigger to start hitting bad sectors and then boom!, dead drive. Without escalated privileges you could not possibly have done OS-level damage doing what you have described.

  18. The tests are rubbish anyway on EU Car Makers Manipulating Fuel Efficiency Figures · · Score: 1

    The current test cycle setup is rubbish, even with approximations made for load on the rolling road based on the coast-down phase of the test. Undue importance is put on CO2 emissions whilst disregarding the really nasty exhaust gases, but obviously that's because most EU countries base their tax solely on CO2 output now.

    That said, the car makers are not doing themselves any favours by playing around the edges of the stated legislation, even if you bear in mind that pushing the rules to the limits is one of the basic principles of motor racing in any format, and would be the default mindset of those engineering the cars.

    Constructing a truly even, fair and representative test will be terribly difficult, if not impossible. I wonder if any changes they make will be worth the effort at all.

  19. Re:Local alternatives? on Google Reader Being Retired · · Score: 1

    Liferea is inadequate.

  20. Re:Manning is a Hero and a Traitor on What If Manning Had Leaked To the New York Times? · · Score: 2

    He's not a hero. He violated his contract with the US government.

    Those two are not mutually exclusive; in fact, I'd consider them quite strongly linked. The global bully who goes around kicking sand in others' faces is the US and has been for at least 35 years, possibly longer.

  21. Re:Quite simply lies on What If Manning Had Leaked To the New York Times? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yesterday I had 14 mod points. Today I have none. I wish I could have given them all to you for that insightful comment, rather than have them vanish. You are spot on, and sum up perfectly what the correct response to this article is.

  22. Re:Its hard to tell on Bradley Manning Makes Statement · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you think they give us their natural resources at almost free prices because its in their best interest? Nah all that is because we put cool despots in office and create instability we can exploit.

    And yet you still think it a good thing? You've just taken the bully stealing lunch money concept and scaled it up to global scale. Yes, *this* is why we hate you, and this is why what you do is wrong.

  23. Re:Easy solution on al-Qaeda's 22 Tips and Tricks To Dodge Drones · · Score: 1

    Or a family member, relative, visiting friend or neighbour of an al-Qaeda member.

  24. Re:Pro Exploitation CEO on US CEO Says French Workers Have Three-Hour Work Day · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sample size of one - must be true for all!

  25. An answer to smartphone apps on Ask Slashdot: What Does the FOSS Community Currently Need? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And for that matter, the big social networks and their apps or app-like interfaces. These are two sides to a common threat: the partitioning of the internet into a device- or social network-delineated series of ecosystems.