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User: TigerPlish

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  1. Re:The only thing that will emerge... on New Type of Star Can Emerge From Inside Black Holes, Say Cosmologists · · Score: 1

    Y te digo algo mas...

    Beta is as useless as Slashot Mobile. I quit using that to read, even tho I enjoyed reading slash on the go. But not anymore.

    And soon, I guess I won't be here at all. because fuck beta.

    Nothing of value will be lost. Users will probably create a fork / clone / workalike, and Dice will have a nice shiny site with diddly squat for content. At best, it'll be like CNN's coments.

    Slashdot, it was swank knowin' ya. Don't look now, but I think that stink behind you is the Grim Reaper come to collect you.

  2. The only thing that will emerge... on New Type of Star Can Emerge From Inside Black Holes, Say Cosmologists · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    ...from the black hole known as Beta is a festering pustule of mediocrity -- the ashes of what probably once was the most interesting site on the 'net.

    Put another way, Beta sucks so hard it bends light.

    Al Carajo con Beta!

  3. Where does Splashdata get the passwords from? on Yep, People Are Still Using '123456' and 'Password' As Passwords In 2014 · · Score: 1

    I certainly hope Splashdata isn't reading passwords from SplashID users who store their SplashID data in Splash's servers. For your convenience in backing up and restoring, etc, of course.

  4. Re:Duh on Actually, It's Google That's Eating the World · · Score: 2

    I'd say they are becoming more like "Buy N Large" from Wall-E - all pervasive, all providing.

    BNL was also the government.

  5. Re:They can't stop unlockers on Apple Denies Helping NSA Subvert iPhone · · Score: 1

    Apple is a very small aspect of this story. The NSA has militarized the internet.

    The apple doesn't fall from the tree -- the internet's daddy was DARPAnet, brought to you by DARPA, who is part of Dept. of Defense -- good 'ole DoD.

    In other words, the internet is a military brat. It wasn't militarized, it was born into a military family.

  6. Remember kiddies, on US Federal Judge Rules NSA Data Collection Legal · · Score: 1

    The Government knows what's best for you.

    Ugh just thinking of that sentiment gives me the creeps real bad. That's all I heard when I was a kid / teen ('80's for the curious). That's the party line no matter what party was up at bat.

    If this stays, I thinks our world is over. Aw hell it was over in 1973, it's just taken it 40 years for the corpse to realize it.

    Still, in a word, Bullshit! Even if they had this deep, massive, dynamic oh-so-easy-to-misuse body of information back in 2001, they wouldn't find the perps before the planes took off because they (NSA, FBI, USA) can't find their own asshole with two hands *and* a flashlight! (torch for our uk-ish readers).

    And even that's irrelevant, really. If this stays, we've become a de-facto dictatorship with a rotating figurehead and lower cabinet, to present the illusion of movement at the top every n years. LIke said up there in the main thread, the 4th Amendment is dead, if this thing stays. And that's the paper-thin line that keeps us from being a police state, at least on paper it does.

    Y'know, now I think of the third paragraph up there.. we became one a long time ago, didn't we -- a dictatorship with a rotating head.

  7. Enjoy the streams, suckas on Disney Pulls a Reverse Santa, Takes Back Christmas Shows From Amazon Customers · · Score: 2

    Streaming and The Cloud: Where the Content Owner or designated representative can come in and remove content you had paid for.

    What, exactly, is so appealing about this model? If it's the lack of physical media to store / move, I can *sorta* see that.. but other than that.. where's the appeal in paying for something that the seller / owner can just *zap* out of your world? Does not compute.

    And don't give me the "I can view from any device at any time" schtick. Let's take "Wreck-It Ralph." I bought the BD / DVD combo. Ripped the DVD into an apple-friendly format and have it in my phone as part of my "desert island" playbill. The actual disc set is just chillin' in my shelf, and gets played -- a lot. So.. I just do'nt follow. Sorry. I have it in two devices at once. I can make that 3 or 4 without much trouble -- without having to "stream" it from somewhere.

    I simply don't see the value of paying for something you can't hold in your hand and can be taken away at a whim. Sounds to me like a model made by criminals bent on theft.

    If you want to keep it, get it in physical format.

  8. That's no hexagon... on Cassini Gets Amazing Views of Saturn's Hexagon · · Score: 1

    ...that's an A-T field!

  9. Re:It's a doomed race against time on Get Ready For a Streaming Music Die-Off · · Score: 2

    Quality music is no longer expensive to produce; the labels are pocketing the savings rather than passing it to the customer. In lots of 2000 a CD cost about a buck, including professional stamping and packaging. That makes it a couple grand to professionally produce a CD. That's far less than musical instruments cost

    You're just accounting for pressing and packaging the disk.

    Really good mikes cost a lot of money. Five digits USD is not uncommon. Renting a studio is expensive, and so's building one. THen there's mixing, editing and all that. Talented, skilled engineers cost money, and lots of it.

    I'm not rooting for the labels, but props where props are due: "The Labels" know / knew what they were doing. Archiv / Deutsche Gramophone, Atlantic, Telarc, RCA, Columbia, Decca all went out of their way to get better sound. They invented, innovated, adapted new technologies / methods. And that aspect of their business has my support.

    Example: Deutsche Gramophone worked with Yamaha to make a recording system capable of getting a 144db dynamic range. That's beyond ridiculous. I have a set of Beethoven Symphonies recorded with this. I had to get a much better amp. The old one couldn't handle it cleanly. When was the last time some indie producer pushed the limits like that?

    But of course, if one listens only on crap earbuds or a crap car stereo, then who cares, right? I bet you 9 out of 10 people just flat out don't care about how it sounds, and by extension how your body perceives it. It's more than just your ear holes, you know.

    I still think streaming is for suckers. You pay for something that can be arbitrarily taken away by the "content owner" at their whim.

  10. Re:Shell gas stations, usa, ca. 2008 on Tesco To Use Face Detection Technology For In-Store Advertising · · Score: 1

    Erm, if you haven't been there in 7 years, how do you know they installed new pumps in 2008.

    eh, so 5 years instead of 7.. I fail at maths, I don't hate it -- it hates me. The problem is magnified by caffeine deficiency.

  11. Shell gas stations, usa, ca. 2008 on Tesco To Use Face Detection Technology For In-Store Advertising · · Score: 4, Informative

    A Shell station I used to go to at another job had brand new pumps installed in 2008. These "new" and "improved" pumps would start playing ads the second you took the nozzle off the cradle and started pumping.

    Result? I haven't been to that station in 7 years. To hell with intrusive adverts to a captive audience.

    Boycott the store, people. Don't buy there. There is no greater "fuck you" to a merchant than an empty till and a competitor's store full of what used to be your own customers.

  12. Re:Really? Did we ever really want smart watches? on Leak: Almost a Third of Samsung Galaxy Gear Smartwatches Are Being Returned · · Score: 1

    The Swiss don't exclusively own the high end. The Japanese have wicked watches, there's Seiko and their partner Orient. Seiko has a higher-end name called Credor, and they've made some outrageous stuff.. how about grand complication with sonnerie, based around the SpringDrive movement?

    Feel too lazy to type links so just look up Credor, Grand Seiko, Spring Drive. Also Credor Torque and Credor Sonnerie. I'm not gonna type the links for you. Use the google!

    What makes Seiko so special? They make everything. They don't buy movements from someone else -- like the swiss do -- and then finish them themselves. Seiko makes everything -- the steel the case is made of, the crystal, the dial, the markers, the glue that glues the markers to the dial, the jewels, the spring that holds the jewel, the lube that goes between the jewels, they make the mainspring, the crown, the stem, every single piece of the movement, the hairspring, etc.

    The only other watchmakers than can boast complete construction of every piece of their watches is Patek Phllipe, Jaeger and maybe even Panerai. Everyone else buys from ETA or Jaeger. Cartier? Jaeger. That obnoxious 52mm penile extender? ETA. Bell & ROss? ETA. Omega? ETA. ETA ETA ETA. Jaeger and ETA makes most watches' movements for Europe.

    And lastly, if you think Rolex and IWC are the high end, well... I'm sure Patek Phillipe, Seiko and Jaeger would dispute that claim.

    Go ahead, do your googlin' and youtubin'. Spring Drive will make your head explode. ETA tried and failed miserably to copy that. It took Seiko almost 30 years to perfect it.

    What's on my wrist? A 1968 King Seiko, handwind, no auto. Keeps to plus or minus 2 seconds every 24 hours. Hand-made. Fanatical attention to detail. Don't bother, you won't find a 44KS unless it's from ebay, never sold outside japan.

  13. Pushback? It's always been there. on 'Pushback': Resisting the Life of Constant Connectivity · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'll open by repeating what others have said: this isn't being a Luddite, not by any means. If there's a tech toy / tool that makes my life easier, I'm all for it, whether it be physical goods or software.

    But, similar to the "i love me" websites of the early days of the web, Twitter and Facebook, to me, are just another kind of dancing cat / hamster / chilli pepper: Utterly superfluous. I actively reject them, I have no FB or TW account. I don't want to know what my friends are doing 24x7. I don't want the world to know that I just had six blonde Oreos and two cups of non-name-brand non-trendy coffee that is still awesome due to careful preparation.

    I'm sure this view is incomprehensible to some. To them I say: It's ok to sell yourself, if you don't mind being treated like a whore -- kept around only as long as you have value to the people "giving" you the serivce for "free." Myself, I'll make "them" work for their money: If you want my $, then you should make things that interest me. I'll hear about them, ads or no ads.

    But to those making targeting decisions / algorithms with data obtained from my mere mousing around, I say "fuck off." I took off your logo'd t-shirts and polo shirts a decade ago. I stopped listening to your drivel on TV a decade ago. I block ads and do a few other interesting things, just so I don't have to see / hear your unrelenting patter.

    Maybe y'all should look at it from that point of view: To them, your body is a billboard to display their ads, you are data, not a person. Deny them the use of your body, deny them the use of your data. Most everytime you click somewhere you just either made someone a fraction of a penny, or gave data to someone who will eventually make a mint aggregating your data to a massive data mine from which they "target" ads (or lately, as it turns out, "target" people directly)

    Resistance to always-on isn't being a luddite, it's about being yourself, and keeping that self as private as possible. It's about not being a slave to the phone, but having the phone as a toy / tool: there for your use or amusement, not the other way 'round.

  14. Douglas, Boeing, DeHavilland... on Black Death Predated 'Small World' Effect, Say Network Theorists · · Score: -1

    Goodbye to all my friends at home
    Goodbye to people I've trusted
    I've got to go out and make my way
    I might get rich you know I might get busted
    But my heart keeps calling me backwards
    As I get on the 707
    Ridin' high I got tears in my eyes
    You know you got to go through hell
    Before you get to heaven

    -- Dave Matthews Band

  15. This just smacks of something out of a comic on "Slingatron" To Hurl Payloads Into Orbit · · Score: 1

    Specifically, out of either Calvin and Hobbes, or Ozy and Millie.

    I'm all for it, of course!

  16. Re:Not Big Brother, and long overdue EAS extension on AT&T Rolls Out iPhone Wireless Emergency Alerts · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You're an idiot if you're complaining about this.

    Well, good day to you too, sir.

    My complaint isn't about the message, it's the method of delivery. Or rather, the inability to turn off The President's Mouthpiece.

    I can turn off the AMBER and weather alerts, but not The President's Mouthpiece. That's the part that truly gets my goat. Now listen to your phone like the good little citizen you are!

  17. Re:Really object to emergency information ? on AT&T Rolls Out iPhone Wireless Emergency Alerts · · Score: 1

    I don't object to the message, I object to the chosen method of delivery and the inability to opt-out of the most ominous. In other words, if the Government speaks and one has a WEA-enabled device, one must listen like a good little citizen!

    You know, like those radios some governments had mandated you have. Good luck if they found you with a non-compliant radio.

  18. *sigh* Never thought I'd ask, but.. on NSA Building $860 Million Data Center In Maryland · · Score: 1

    ...where do I get a nice tinfoil hat?

    It's not paranoia if it's out in the news.....

  19. Business, like life, is war. on Sorry, Larry Page: Tech-Industry Viciousness Is Here To Stay · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it's my upbringing, but I see life as war. Not a race, but a war.

    Do onto others before they do unto you. That's the credo I feel this world operates on.

    This goes doubly more for business. There are, and I've met, some good honest people out there doing great work with little reward, or even little desire of more reward. But for one of those, you have 10 who want nothing more than to kill every single competitor, steal their ideas, products, clients / customers, and then lie, cheat and steal their way through those customer's wallets.

    Not nice, right? It is Darwinian. Kill the other business before they do it to you. Not the way it should be, but is the way it is.

    I hate it. I detest it. And this is all learned by 3rd grade, I think. Even then I noticed "huh, the nasty kids and the cheats win and get ahead faster than the quiet, studious, nice ones."

  20. Flintstones said it best on How To Talk Like a CIO · · Score: 1

    "Strategize, Visualize, Conceptualize."

    C-Speak takes what could fit on a 2 x 1.5" sticky note and expands it to fill entire books.

  21. Re: Got more air time than Moller SkyCar on Flying Car Crashes In British Columbia · · Score: 1

    I imagine it'd look like frog-in-a-blender streaking by at something near mach 1 with fire at the tail end.

    Ewww.

  22. Re:Wow... on Windows Blue Is Officially Windows 8.1, Free For Existing Users · · Score: 2

    Apple is "known" for their great UIs and yet it's far more difficult to find things on a damn mac, iphone or ipad than it's ever been on a windows device.

    Dunno 'bout you, but on my ios6 iphone 4, I go to home screen, press home again, and there's this magical Search page that will rifle through my phone. if I search for "doctor" it'll return all the calendar, email, address book entries for that "doctor." If I have media in the phone with the word "doctor" in it, it'll also come up.

    How is it worse than a Windows device?

  23. Re: Got more air time than Moller SkyCar on Flying Car Crashes In British Columbia · · Score: 1

    And a JATO pack.

    On me, or the car? Either way, that's a win.

  24. Got more air time than Moller SkyCar on Flying Car Crashes In British Columbia · · Score: 2

    Still waiting for my flying car..

  25. Re:Been going on for at least a decade on Chinese Hackers Infiltrate US Army Database, Compromise Safety of Dams · · Score: 1

    Oh, and another thing -- The next World War will really be fought inside the computer and the various networks. Yeah, drone bombs and bullets and real deaths -- but the real damage, I suspect, will be done by manipulating utilities and financial systems.

    Wow, Sum of all Fears is starting to sound plausible. Didn't that one start with an attack on the stock exchanges? Bogus transactions, etc?