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User: Lumbre

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Comments · 38

  1. Re:WOW AOL is still alive on Microsoft Buys 800 AOL Patents For $1 Billion · · Score: 2

    *Raises hand* My spam/special offer email goes to an aol address.

  2. Re:Unclear antecedents are dangerous! on Here's What Facebook Sends the Cops In Response To a Subpoena · · Score: 1

    Indeed, if the cops are going around robbing and murdering, why should any of us worry about a Facebook profile?

    Let's hope they aren't tagged in hundreds of photos; that would mean hundreds of pages in the report. Captain Planet and the Planeteers would not be happy.

  3. Definition: Amicably on CBS Uses Copyright To Scuttle Star Trek New Voyages: Phase II Episode · · Score: 5, Funny

    Amicably (am i ka blee): An adverb meaning money exchanged hands to simulate a friendly conflict resolution.

  4. Re:The other way to read this... on Android Phones More Prone To Hardware Problems · · Score: 1

    What I haven't seen someone point out is that the average Android user is more technologically advanced than the average iPhone or Windows Phone user. Therefore, percentagewise, as given in the article, there will be less people calling for simple software/computer illiterate tech support and more people calling for true failures/critical errors.

    Remember back in your tech support days where you got calls asking how to open up Office or how to get to the Internet or why your laptop won't turn on... oh wait that happens to me anyway just because I've got a job in 'computers'.

  5. Re:Cheers for Egyptians Everywhere! on Egypt Coming Back On the 'net · · Score: 1

    Why are people so foolish that they think they don't have the right to free speech? (Or travel, or privacy in their homes, et cetera.)

    People do have a right to free speech (I'm assuming you were going towards US constitutional rights). However, they may not have a right to using the medium. Things don't construct and maintain themselves magically. You need manpower, which converts to money, to do it. If you want the Internet, you A) pay a private company for your usage of the medium, or B) pay a public company (aka government) to give access to the Internet.

    You're welcome to go ahead and dig trenches connecting cities, states, and countries.

    Eventually, whether I agree with it or not, I believe Internet companies are going to be regulated and managed like the essentials: electricity, gas, and water.

  6. Re:Horrible. on Slashdot Launches Re-Design · · Score: 1

    The post had 3 parts:

    1: "I love it"
    Funny because the consensus is 'horrible', from the title.

    2. Steve
    Steve Jobs would say that because it's WHITE. I don't know if you've noticed, but Apple loves white.

    3. Sent from my iPhone
    Builds on 2. Would you really expect anyone on /. to carry an iPhone over Droid? Why do you care if it's sent from an iPhone or via telegraph?

    I hope you're now sure why it got modded funny. If not, please look for the rainbows and unicorns someone else found on the website.

  7. Re:This is slashdot? on Slashdot Launches Re-Design · · Score: 1

    Exactly what I was thinking. I looked at my email and was happy I won the lottery. Then I got back here and realized it was all a joke.

  8. Re:Tried it today on LibreOffice 3.3 Released Today · · Score: 1

    And I just assumed MS was being a b**** by removing shortcuts in 2007 ant 2010. Good thing I use OpenOffice (and soon LibreOffice) for everything. Though it was annoying not being able to save simply by pressing Ctrl+S

  9. Re:What idealistic state? on LibreOffice 3.3 Released Today · · Score: 1

    MS might implement features they aren't aware of therefore when OO encounters corruption it just assumes it to be a new feature MS have implemented but which hasn't been reverse engineered yet.

    Don't you mean bug? =)

  10. Re:More Surprising... on Tech History Behind New York's New Year's Eve Ball · · Score: 1

    Well, look at these people. They've tried.

  11. Re:Grumble on Tech History Behind New York's New Year's Eve Ball · · Score: 1

    Well if you're going to be picky, they're using significant digits. 400 is accurate to within 50 pounds; 6 tons is accurate to within 0.5 tons, 1,000 pounds.

    Essentially, 400 pounds +/- 50 pounds and 12,000 pounds +/- 1,000 pounds.

  12. Re:This isn't helping. on Crookes, RIAA, MPAA, ICE — 'Linking Is Publishing' · · Score: 1

    Adobe and Autodesk certainly. No student could afford the price of their design products, and they know it. I imagine they tolerate student piracy so that those students will go on to become professional users and pay for a licence, rather than turn to free software or lower-cost competitors.

    Doesn't it seem awkward to you that engineers are held to a strict standard on ethics yet they're pirating Autodesk? Just throwing it out there.

  13. Re:Good on Oregon To Let Students Use Spell Check on State Exams · · Score: 1

    I do care, however, if a developer doesn't understand the difference between O(n) and O(logN).

    Obveusly it's O(n) - O(logN)

  14. Re:And high school biology students on Do High Schools Know What 'Computer Science' Is? · · Score: 1

    I took keyboarding in 6th grade, around 2000. Schools should be teaching it at the middle school level, if not earlier. Calling a high school class 'computer science' when it's just simple keyboarding and common-sense surfing the net is misleading to colleges and not fair to other applicants. Fortunately, my high school actually tought languages, but not much beyond that. Then again I only took the first year since all future years conflicted with my required language class >:( ...

  15. Re:Insilvent? So what? on A Blue-Sky Idea For the USPS — Postal Trucks As Sensors · · Score: 1

    You rarely have mail stolen

    A few times throughout the year, I find that I either receive a neighbor's mail by accident or someone else receives one of my bills, addressed correctly. I know this is a bit of a tangent, but what if one of your neighbors keeps it or operates ID theft?

  16. Re:Would you prefer a completely clueless jury the on Judge Declares Mistrial Because of Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    Well I'd prefer them doing some research rather than being a clueless bunch of fucks who make their decision about my freedom based on a hunch.

    Well I'd prefer they do research from scholastic, peer-reviewed sources. Even that can be subject to interpretation. Wikipedia is good for general information, but not something you want to rely on. Anyone can decide to edit the article and include something false, intentionally or unintentionally. Other sites can also be unreliable or biased, but this isn't the place to discuss that.

    The judge can provide additional information, when asked. Jurors may look something up in the wrong place. For example, the definition of rape is different in Webster's Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary, dictionary.com, urbandictionary.com, a medical dictionary, an encyclopedia, state law, local statute, etc. Likewise, the information on the term she looked up may have been one-sided or directed towards a specific audience or situation.

  17. Re:What a Mess.... on Google Patents Browser Highlight All Button · · Score: 1

    The irony behind this is, the Patent website does the same thing in its patent searches (try it), except it bolds instead of highlight and it's on a web page and not on a "tool bar". Can the PTO hire competent employees to determine 'prior art'?

  18. Re:so you want a low level IT guy to take the heat on Sheriff's Online Database Leaks Info On Informants · · Score: 1

    Yes. The low level IT guy (or PHB) shouldn't be handling, accessing, or even seeing the information in the first place if s/he isn't responsible and knows how to take proper precautions. That takes a high level of trust having people's lives in your hands, with sensitive information such as social security numbers or informants in dangerous situations. Have low level IT's work with other databases (or tables) under a different user and permission set that don't require such security.

  19. Re:So what are they going to do about it? on 68% of US Broadband Connections Aren't Broadband · · Score: 1

    All companies will do is take away the word 'broadband' from everything. People will still buy with commercials saying "$19.99/mo*" and "10x faster than dial-up**". Haven't you learned anything from your company's management? The * and ** will be too small and too fast to read on an 18" TV, 1 foot away.

    These companies will still advertise speeds UP TO 5 Mbps. Those words mean zero to me. A cheetah can run up to 70MPH. Does that mean I'll always see it running at 50MPH? They're empty words, though numbers should be generally close to what they imply, or at least have an "ideal" location where a customer actually gets at or very near the maximum speed.

    Personally, I'd force them to advertise their median (or mean/"average" if you must). Have them be accurate within x standard deviations or x%.

  20. Re:Huh? on What To Load On a 4-Year-Old's Netbook? · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yeah, why would you encourage him towards a life of living in his mom's basement, fighting brain-dead management, and with a computer as a girlfriend.

    Oh, is that just me?

  21. Re:Money == Time on Pirate Bay Trio Lose Appeal · · Score: 1

    I'd rather do 4 months and not pay a dime, just like Sunde said. Then again, that' probably not a real option either.

    If Sweden's courts are anything like our courts, the courts will adjust their fines to more realistic amounts on appeal.

  22. Re:Based on the summary on FCC To Allow Texting To 911 · · Score: 1

    It's more like they hoped 911 would accept texts. What seems riskier to you: making a phone call and lowering the volume on your phone or pressing keys on your cell phone?

    Personally, I wonder whether insufficient information will create more deaths, indirectly. 911 can't text back. What if your phone makes noise when a text is received? How are police supposed to know what they need to do? Do they need SWAT? Where is s/he exactly? Sure, we think we can just rely on the police to do something, but they're people too. Without more information, they're going into the unknown and take more risk.

  23. Re:does it run Linux - yea but it is "boring" on Intel Talks 1000-Core Processors · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's boring with the same architecture we have now. But imagine if someone came up with a creative solution besides the current memory model. Memory management is probably hideous on a 1000-core system; they seemed to pose that lightly in the article.

    This might even be a solution for a particular type of dedicated computer, not a personal computer.

  24. Re:Of course... on Google Warns Irish Government Against Tax Increase · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, Microsoft isn't avoiding taxes in Washington by "selling" from Nevada. Oh, right, they are.

    Are interstate commerce excise taxes somewhat proportional to international tariffs? I'd like corporations to feel a pinch of pain when they export, just like what I feel with my small business. Then again, corporations have less personal liability.

  25. Re:Adobe Reader, now even slower! on Adobe Launches Sandboxed Reader X · · Score: 1

    I probably use custom install, though it probably works on quick install too:

    Instead of blindly accepting the license agreement, click the next/accept button. The checkbox says something like "I accept the above agreement and would like to install the Ask Toolbar". Notice the "and". You do not need to check any of these checkboxes to continue installation.

    Out of all the computers I've built, I've only had the Ask toolbar installed once, and that might've been when they truly forced you to install it, or I might've checked that box like everyone else.