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User: David+P

David+P's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 74

  1. Re:My reasons on Why Do You Block Ads? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone else here blocked Google's ads as well? It's just one more block of irrelevant content that my eye has to scan over to get to the stuff I wanted.

  2. Re:Hi mom! on Windows 2000 & Windows NT 4 Source Code Leaks · · Score: 0

    I agree to bumping the post count. Also, Victory Prima Pils is quite good. Anyone concur?

  3. Re:No, the kid was not me... on Lecture Hall Back-Channeling · · Score: 0

    My history teacher in grade school loved to kick the underside of a sleeping student's desk, making his head pop up half a foot.

  4. Re:WHY DON'T THEY JUST CALL IT C++++ on Latest Proposals for C++0x · · Score: 0

    dude, the ^ operator is for XOR, not X^Y

  5. Re:because you're the only person using ogg vorbis on Archos Releases Portable Video/Image/MP3 Player · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is absolutely no similarity between Betamax and OGG Vorbis.

    The average user doesn't give a crap about decoder liceses; when was the last time you had to pay for MP3 software? The comparison is a valid one because users are presented with two choices, and are choosing what allows them to most easily enjoy their (and other's) music, not which choice makes a better political or ethical statement.

  6. Duh... on Abandoned & Little Used Airfields · · Score: -1

    Great idea, posting a link to a Tripod site on Slashdot... Its dailly bandwidth quota will be consumed in 20 mins, making the post useless for the rest of the day.

  7. Oh Snap! on Programmable Vacuum Fluorescent Display (VFD) · · Score: -1

    Primer Postado, boyees!

  8. Re:Alan Thicke Interview on Decentralized Internet on Universities Tapped To Build Secure Net · · Score: -1

    Bravo!

  9. Re:Uhhh... on An Overview of Quad Band Memory · · Score: -1

    Intel traditionally has sold their own chipsets; this would allow Via to eat away another chunk of this market for them.

  10. Dance Dance Karnov on A Beginner's Guide to the Dance Dance Phenomena · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Be sure to try Rich "Lowtax" Kayanka's take on DDR:

    http://www.somethingawful.com/article.php?id=142

    It's quite fun, with two action-packed levels of flash goodness.

  11. Agression? on The Age of Aggressive Linux Advocacy Is Upon Us? · · Score: -1

    Aggressive promotion will defeat the evil M$! Go crazy you long-haired fucks!

  12. Swingline's not the Same as the Movie's on I Believe You Have My Stapler · · Score: -1

    I got this model about 2 months ago, and it's not the same as the one they used in the movie. The color is more of an orange-red than the cherry red used in the movie, and even its construction is different.

    The movie's stapler's hinges are underneath the top piece, while the one being sold now has the hinges on either side of the top piece. In addition, the "Swingline" label is on the sides of the movie's stapler, while the current one has a single logo on the top. If they had just gotten the color right, I'd be a lot happier with it.

  13. Seems to work... on P2P Streaming Radio · · Score: -1

    I've got a stream going now from the author (@ 16kbs, though). I had to try a few times to get it to stop crashing when viewing servers.

    I've yet to get it going as a server, though. It crashes when Shoutcast tries connecting.

    BTW, I'm running WinXP.

  14. Re:Chances... on Do Strangelets Pass Through Earth? · · Score: -1
    I read the explosion was due to Tesla mucking about with his "death-ray".

    From http://www.parascope.com/en/0996/tesla4.htm:


    It is not certain if Tesla ever used the death ray, or indeed if he even succeeded in building one. But the following is the often-related story of what happened one night in 1908 when Tesla tested the foreboding weapon.

    At the time, Robert Peary was making his second attempt to reach the North Pole. Cryptically, Tesla had notified the expedition that he would be trying to contact them somehow. They were to report to him the details of anything unusual they might witness on the open tundra. On the evening of June 30, accompanied by his associate George Scherff atop Wardenclyffe tower, Tesla aimed his death ray across the Atlantic towards the arctic, to a spot which he calculated was west of the Peary expedition.

    Tesla switched on the device. At first, it was hard to tell if it was even working. Its extremity emitted a dim light that was barely visible. Then an owl flew from its perch on the tower's pinnacle, soaring into the path of the beam. The bird disintegrated instantly.

    That concluded the test. Tesla watched the newspapers and sent telegrams to Peary in hopes of confirming the death ray's effectiveness. Nothing turned up. Tesla was ready to admit failure when news came of a strange event in Siberia.

    On June 30, a massive explosion had devastated Tunguska, a remote area in the Siberian wilderness. Five hundred thousand square acres of land had been instantly destroyed. Equivalent to ten to fifteen megatons of TNT, the Tunguska incident is the most powerful explosion to have occurred in human history -- not even subsequent thermonuclear detonations have surpassed it. The explosion was audible from 620 miles away. Scientists believe it was caused by either a meteorite or a fragment of a comet, although no obvious impact site or mineral remnants of such an object were ever found.

    Nikola Tesla had a different explanation. It was plain that his death ray had overshot its intended target and destroyed Tunguska. He was thankful beyond measure that the explosion had -- miraculously -- killed no one. Tesla dismantled the death ray at once, deeming it too dangerous to remain in existence.

  15. Hmmph on TV People Meter: Monitoring What You Watch · · Score: -1

    Saw this on CNN a while back.... Get some creativity!!!

    -Dave

  16. I Agree! on When IT and Bad Government Meet, Everyone Loses · · Score: -1

    When they meet, bad stuff goes down!!

    20 secs yet??

  17. Re:Can you imagine? on Web-Surfing Indian Slum Kids Ask: "What's a Computer" · · Score: -1

    Nice one!

  18. Re:Mirror on Heat-Conducting Carbon Foam · · Score: -1

    The man deserves to get modded up at least once! That brought a much-needed chuckle to an otherwise crappy day.

    Keep on Trollin'!

  19. Re:It seems like on Stealth Asteroid Misses Earth · · Score: -1

    At least try to be original with your tired MS-bashing.

  20. C#? on C · · Score: -1

    NOT a first post!

  21. Re:You aren't paying for the media. on RIAA Almost Down To Pre-Napster Revenues · · Score: -1

    But popularity equates with demand, so the law of supply and demand certainly applies to his argument.

  22. Re:Get a Hotmail account on DSLReports Study: 8 Hours 'til the Spam Hits · · Score: -1

    Another problem with those free accounts is that they get shut down after a period of inactivity. For exapmle, my @yahoo.com account got close after not checking it for 3 months.

  23. Re:I don't see this as all the terrible. on USAF Readies Laser of Death · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Perhaps the concern is over blinding soldiers, not killing them, kind of like with mustard gas of WWI, which would ruin a soldier's lungs, rendering him unable to fight.

    But yes, it's funny how you can't shine a laser at someone's eyes, but you'd get a medal for gouging them out with a knife.

  24. Re:I wish this wouldn't keep happening on Corel Shuts Down Open Source Development Site · · Score: -1
    That is the crowning achievement of free software

    That sort of lame attempt to find good points to cling to in an otherwise bad situation can't speak well for the health of the free software community.

    Granted, companies go out of business in other industries (and take their knowledge with them), but we all know the dropout rate is a bit higher in this industry compared to others. Now why would a business want to start producing free software, knowing the venture may fail, and their investment will be lost to "the community?"
  25. Re:Left-handed mice on Non-Apple Buttonless Mouse · · Score: -1

    The MS Optical (the one w/ the white body) is symmetrically shaped, and the drivers (Windows drivers anyway) allow for button remapping.