Slashdot Mirror


User: Bisqwit

Bisqwit's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
72
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 72

  1. Re:document.referrer on Thwarting New JavaScript Malware Obfuscation · · Score: 1

    Because website authors can use the referrer field to improve their services, by figuring out which access patterns are most common, and which links should be made more or less prominent.
    By hiding that information, you are depriving them of that possibility, and you are therefore depriving the Internet a certain means of becoming better.

  2. Re:Obligatory on Blame Your Mistakes on Technology · · Score: 1

    Mine did, but I didn't.

    The device interpreted a road going below a bridge as an intersection, and it suggested turning right, i.e. jumping down the bridge.

    Also, often it suggests turning left where turning left is forbidden, etc.

    Despite these problems, it is an useful tool as long as you remember to use your own brains.

  3. Re:Yay!!! on NASA Will Go Metric On the Moon · · Score: 1

    I have never heard of "mil" before. We measure liters per 100 km in Finland (which is also part of Scandinavia according to [1], although disputably).
    And as Anonymous Coward pointed out, Denmark also does not use your "mil"s.

  4. 20-40 times faster than CPU?! on Folding@Home Releases GPU Client · · Score: 1

    > Folding@Home team is saying that the GPU-accelerated client is 20 to 40 times faster than their clients just using the CPU

    What kind of hardware they tested it on? If the CPU is 2 GHz, doesn't 20-40 times faster mean that the GPU runs at something like 40-80 GHz? That's incredible.

    Or do the triangle rendering algorithms in the graphics card somehow help the folding calculations?

  5. Re:Once upon a time... on Cameroon Typo-Squats all of .com · · Score: 1

    Indeed, pakwrpgkarwpgkrwah.cm seems to also give the advertisement page.
    So I don't think they have a database of valid .com domains.

  6. Re: $7/gal gas on The Hybrid Scooter · · Score: 1
    Same in Finland, according to Google.

    Ps: Google calculator rules.

  7. Re:Video? on Cheap, Open-design Humanoid Bot - Runs Linux, Too · · Score: 1

    http://www.aist.go.jp/aist_j/press_release/pr2006/ pr20060526/choromet.wmv

    Download, play with mplayer.

  8. Cool on Cheap, Open-design Humanoid Bot - Runs Linux, Too · · Score: 1

    Now that's something I'd want for a toy.

  9. Zyoptix LASIK rocks! (Really) on The U.S. Navy's Doctrine of Laser Eye Surgery · · Score: 1

    About 1.5 years ago I had a LASIK+ surgery on my both eyes. After the pre-examinations and stuff, the actual procedure was really quick, it took only a few minutes. It was also painless, and it did not make me panic. I'm happy with the results, too. It was only a minor surgery though -- I didn't use glasses before, but now I don't need them. What I previously needed two meters distance to read, I can now read from four meters distance. My sight is still not as good as my sister has -- she wears no glasses or lenses -- but I'm satisfied. It's good enough to drive a truck if I wanted.

    The biggest discomfort of the surgery was the going home after having it. It was a bright winter day and my eyes were soaking wet, and I had to wear those protective glasses and they became constantly filled with tear, making it quite uncomfortable and nearly impossible to see anything. But it was much better already the next day. I had to wear the protective glasses on nights for two weeks and not to go to sauna for a few weeks, but I recall that I was already at work the next day after the surgery.

    The most exciting part were the eyedrops that caused the iris to open wide open, wider than they do normally in a pitch black night. They applied them in order to do the precise measurements of eye refraction. I think my eyes looked very cool that way. Alas, that effect lasted for only a day.

    In the long term, there's one thing that I lost. Before the surgery, I could watch a computer screen for hours upon hours without my eyes getting tired. The eyes were at relaxation at my normal computer-use distance. I was myopic. After the surgery, that was no longer the case. My eyes need to look far away every once in a while in order to be relaxed. I can't stare at < 1 meter distance for hours upon hours continuously anymore. If I attempt to relax my eyes on that distance, the screen is not sharp. However, it's likely that this change was actually for the better.

  10. Re:Advice. on New Windows Media Player Leaks · · Score: 1
    > If a piece of software is not quite ready for Beta, it's generally
    > not a good idea to install on a machine that's vital to your operations

    Exactly my thought. The first thing that crossed my mind when I read the news was "security holes found and no patches available".

  11. Re:Account Cancellations on Nonsense with Google's AdSense? · · Score: 1

    Well I don't know of those cases, but in the AdSense application of my site (the one mentioned in this Ask Slashdot topic) I had submitted all the relevant information to the best of my knowledge and understanding.

  12. The board game Go on Two-Player Games for Mixed Skill Level Players? · · Score: 1
    The board game Go is great for mixed-skill players.
    Because of the handicap system used in it, players of differing skills can play challenging games against each others and get a result that is close to draw. Beginners can also start playing meaningful games quickly.

    This page introduces the rules of Go, http://playgo.to/interactive/ and this page gives background information about it: http://senseis.xmp.net/?WhatIsGo
    The second site mentioned contains a Wiki with lots of Go-related information.

  13. Re:Completely Off Topic, Disappearing main page st on Torvalds & Linux Dev Process · · Score: 1

    I don't know what you saw and what is there and what not and where is there, but an article with the name you mentioned, "Windows Is Officially Broken" was indeed published today.

    It is also featured (and linked to) in Digg:
    http://www.digg.com/software/Windows_Is_Offically_ Broken_-_Microsoft_has_admitted_it

  14. Re:A guess at the new format on Microsoft Ends Era Of Closed File Formats · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who actually tried to base64-decode the parent posting's data?

  15. Re:nobody sees the downside? on Photoshop for DNA · · Score: 1

    Fight weapons with weapons.
    Use the same trick to create medicins. Bioengineered medicins.

    Or perhaps bioengineered humans to endure those plagues...

    Yes, it is scary.

  16. Re:Torrent file on Seeing Around Corners With Dual Photography · · Score: 1

    Now deleting this torrent. The site isn't slashdotted anymore.

  17. Re:mass increases on Excursions at the Speed of Light · · Score: 1

    > So if mass increases as speed increases wouldn't some of your bodily processes
    > start to take on some rather bizarre side effects.

    Yes, that would most certainly happen if it were the case, but mass doesn't actually change - at least not the mass you're thinking of.

    There are a few different things called "mass":
    - inertial mass
    - gravitational mass
    I recall there was a third one too, but I can't find a link describing it right now.

    Anyway, try a simple Google search: http://www.google.com/search?q=mass+inertial+gravi tational
    and see what it turns up.

  18. Re:Duh... on Self-Replicating Robots · · Score: 1

    Software copying is easy. Read bytes, write bytes. Hardware copying is not easy. (But that's not what's happening in the article.)

  19. Re:Format FAQ on 45GB Triple-Layer HD DVDs · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD and follow the links on the page.

  20. Re:Lost information on Seeing Around Corners With Dual Photography · · Score: 1

    It doesn't. Information that was behind an obstacle in the first image will be shadowed in the next. This amplifies the illusion of that the original camera is now a lightsource.

  21. Re:Watching TV on Seeing Around Corners With Dual Photography · · Score: 1

    Doesn't work that way. The calculated image is of the same resolution and focus as the light source.

    While the data projector projects light in a focused form, a computer display or TV shines the light everywhere without focusing it anywhere in particular.
    You can use the technique to gain a picture from the perspective of the display device or TV, but it's too blurry to be useful at all.

  22. Torrent file on Seeing Around Corners With Dual Photography · · Score: 4, Informative
  23. Re:doesn't work on Time Travelers' Convention · · Score: 1

    Like I said...

  24. doesn't work on Time Travelers' Convention · · Score: 1

    But won't the problem be that when nobody participates, the history will record that nobody participated and thus nobody will ever travel back to the event in fear of changing the history?

  25. Re:what stallman sez will help on Microsoft Wants Sit-Down With OSS Advocates · · Score: 1

    > The remedies proposed above are what we really
    > need. They will clear the way for us to develop
    > a truly superior alternative to Microsoft
    > Windows
    And that's exactly why Microsoft is not doing it.