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User: mfnickster

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  1. Re:Better question on What's The Correct Way to Pronounce 'GIF'? (thenewstack.io) · · Score: 1

    GIF is laughably outdated - it only supports 256 discrete colors picked from a regular 24-bit color palette in a weak non-lossy compression format.

    Depends on how you look at it. It stores 256-color images losslessly. :)

    P.S. I always wondered why, since GIF allows multiple images per file (cf. animation frames) why not use them to store 32-bit images by incorporating four 8-bit images for the RGBA channels?

  2. Re:What if we do yoga daily for 30 minutes? on Middle-Age Men Who Can Do 40+ Push-Ups Have Lower Heart Disease Risk, Study Finds (cbslocal.com) · · Score: 3, Funny

    Additional work from martial arts tae kwon do forms.

    Yeah, that's why I gave up martial arts. I couldn't stand all the paperwork. :-P

  3. Re: The fate of Wikipedia on Meet the Man Behind a Third of What's On Wikipedia (cbsnews.com) · · Score: 1

    > The plural of anecdote is not data.

    It is if you're measuring anecdotes per second (a/s).

  4. Re:Back in the old days. on The Old Guard of Mac Indy Apps Has Thrived For More Than 25 Years (macworld.com) · · Score: 1

    Right, but you can do scripting, queries, editing, etc. in a GUI.

    What I could never figure out is why they didn't add CLI-like powers to the GUI, i.e. drag-and-drop pipes, stdin/stdout options, find/select and a bunch of other stuff that is what makes Unix so great to work with.

    Is it just lack of imagination, being unable to come up with a graphical metaphor for CLI-style operations?

  5. Re:Back in the old days. on The Old Guard of Mac Indy Apps Has Thrived For More Than 25 Years (macworld.com) · · Score: 2

    Yeah, the Cat was a failure, but it did kind of prove his point.

    "Canon, possibly because the moribund Electronic Typewriter Division had been given the task, failed to market the product effectively, and it is now a dead cat.

    "How in the world do you sell something that's different? That's the biggest problem. The world's not quite ready to believe. It's like in the early days at Apple, they said, 'What's it good for?' We couldn't give a really good answer so they assumed the machine wasn't going to sell. But I do know the way I plan to sell my product is by word of mouth. Some people will try it and say, 'This product really gets my job done. It doesn't have fifteen fonts. I can't print it out in old gothic banners five feet long, but I sure got that article finished under the deadline.' That's how I can sell it. Later, people will understand it.

    "One of the prophets of the personal computer industry, Alan Kay, has said that the true personal computer has not yet been made. I disagree. We have, as the ancient curse warns us, gotten what we asked for. We do indeed have computers being bought by individuals for themselves; they are 'personal computers'. The problem is that many of us didn't want computers in the first place—computers are merely boxes for running programs—we wanted the benefits that computer technology has to offer. What we wanted was to ease the workload in information related areas much as washing machines and vacuum cleaners ease the workload in maintaining cleanliness.

    "By choosing to focus on computers rather than the tasks we wanted done, we inherited much of the baggage that had accumulated around earlier generations of computers. It is more a matter of style and operating systems that need elaborate user interfaces to support huge application programs. These structures demand ever larger memories and complex peripherals. It's as if we had asked for a bit of part-time help and were given a bureaucracy."

  6. Re:Back in the old days. on The Old Guard of Mac Indy Apps Has Thrived For More Than 25 Years (macworld.com) · · Score: 2

    It's been speculated that Apple only provided a version of Unix to comply with requirements for obtaining government contracts.

    But I do recall a number of Mac proponents asserting that the GUI was vastly superior to command-line, and that Unix was a dinosaur.

    Jef Raskin, founder of the Macintosh project, said at one point: "We have a whole valley full of people talking UNIX versus MS-DOS. What do you need any of that for? Just throw it all out; get rid of all that nonsense. Maybe you need it for computer scientists, but for people who want to get something done, no. Do you need an operating system? No."

  7. Re:Movie plot that stretches disbelief on 'My Airbnb Guests Threw a New Year's Party For 300 People' (theguardian.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Weren't there two movies with this plot? One was called "Risky Business", and can anyone answer the name of the other one? Bueller? Bueller?

    The Cat in the Hat?

  8. > Guessing they meant Sue..

    I duspect you're right!

  9. "You'll need a stiff drink, when you see the size of these damned trousers!"

  10. People look at me funny when I keep pushing against museum walls and going "uh! uh! uh!"

  11. As Jef Raskin wrote in The Humane Interface:

    "The system should treat all user input as sacred."

    "A computer shall not harm your work or, through inaction, allow your work to come to harm."

  12. Obligatory Skynet on SpiNNaker Powers Up World's Largest Supercomputer That Emulates a Human Brain · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Skynet becomes self-aware at 02:14 am Eastern Time after its activation on Nov. 4, 2018 and immediately begins shitposting on 4chan."

  13. Re:Neutered on How New, Polite Linus Torvalds Points Out Bad Kernel Code (phoronix.com) · · Score: 1

    "Your ignorance seems to have no limit. Your opinions are idiotic. Your personal hygiene leaves much to be desired. Your family is ugly."

  14. Re:Memories on Internet Archive Launches a Commodore 64 Emulator (hardocp.com) · · Score: 1

    If I had known then what I know now, I wouldn't have bothered to grow up!

  15. Re:What if I had a robot on The Coders Programming Themselves Out of a Job (theatlantic.com) · · Score: 1

    I think soon, automation and our current economic and political system won't fit together anymore.

    Curiously, there's a short documentary about that:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxe3N8ARdbg

  16. Re:If only it wasn't Facebook on Facebook Announces $399 Oculus Quest Standalone VR Headset (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    The killer app is in fact VR video. The studios haven't realized that yet.

    I have a Gear VR (gifted to me) which is pretty neat. However, when I tried to watch a feature-length movie (I rented The Martian in 3D) it was disappointing.

    The 3D effect was far better than a TV with shutter glasses, but the resolution on my Galaxy S6 was not sufficient to make out far details in the scene.

    Add to that that the phone kept overheating and had to pause the movie to cool down, then the battery was exhausted before I reached the end of the movie... there's little to recommend it.

    I'm not too keen on sitting tethered to a PC to watch a movie, either, so hopefully the mobile VR experience will improve to the point that movies are watchable.

  17. The Anti-Gravity Handbook on Slashdot Asks: What Book(s) Are You Reading This Month? · · Score: 2

    I just can't seem to put it down!

  18. Re:Slashdot ate my post! on Microsoft Research Touts Its 'Checked C' Extension For 'Making C Safe' (microsoft.com) · · Score: 1

    In addition, calling strncpy() to copy into a buffer of n bytes takes O (n). 5 bytes into a megabyte buffer sets a million bytes to 0.

    That's incorrect.

    Check the man page.

    "If the length of src is less than n, strncpy() writes additional null bytes to dest to ensure that a total of n bytes are written."

  19. Incidentally, C is even better: because you can move the pointer

    You can sort-of simulate an array using pointers, but this is one of the misconceptions people have about C: an array name is not a pointer.
    A pointer is a variable that holds an address, and an array name is not a variable.

    http://c-faq.com/aryptr/aryptrequiv.html

  20. Re:This is only half of the story on No Healthy Level of Alcohol Consumption, Says Major Study (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    > He should take up some martial arts instead. Like Drink-Djitsu.

    Aikidos Equis
    Captain Morgoeira
    Krav Magarita

  21. Re:Important Question on Online Photos Can't Simply Be Republished, EU Court Rules (politico.eu) · · Score: 1

    > This is going to ruin the mime business

    You say that like it's a bad thing.

  22. Re:This has been known since the 80s... on New Study Finds It's Harder To Turn Off a Robot When It's Begging For Its Life (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    Or Hector in Saturn 3, who responds to Harvey Keitel's attempt to turn him off by cutting off Harvey's head and mounting it atop his robot body!

  23. Re:inb4 systemd trollship on Slackware, Oldest Actively Maintained GNU/Linux Distribution, Turns 25 · · Score: 1

    Alliteracy is gradually gaining greater global gravity.

  24. Re:But don't forget on Magic Leap Finally Demoed Its Headset And It Is 'Disappointing' (digg.com) · · Score: 2

    You know what tech I would like?

    A robot arm that takes the disc out of the Xbox, puts it back on the shelf, and loads a diferent disc.

    THAT would be a game changer!

  25. Dave: "Open the pod bay doors, HAL."
    HAL: "Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all."