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User: mfnickster

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  1. Re:Ugh on GitHub Registers Its 3 Millionth User · · Score: 1

    Their desktop client app is also not free software. I got an account and then they dropped support for Mac OS X Snow Leopard (10.6) in their client app - now it's Lion or Mountain Lion -only. They refuse to distribute any older versions.

    Now, if the client were F/OSS, I could get the latest version and make it work on 10.6, leaving out the Lion-only features if necessary. Instead, I'm stuck with the command-line interface.

    GitHub says they did this because they want to provide "the best experience for their users." Well, what about those of us who can't upgrade their OS or don't want to just to use an online service? How many of those 3 million users are still using Snow Leopard? Our user experience sucks now. Thanks for nothing, GitHub.

  2. Re:Beautiful code but on Doom 3 Source Code: Beautiful · · Score: 1

    If you consider palette swaps to be variety...

    No, I meant the map designs. There were wide-open grassy valleys, tight underground passages, caves, towers, bridges, ship corridors, snow-covered canyons. A hell of a lot of work went into designing that world.

  3. Re:Beautiful code but on Doom 3 Source Code: Beautiful · · Score: 1

    It was mostly the repetition, the constant stuff jumping at you. It's a very fatiguing game

    Yeah, I felt that way too. I was surprised that after the success of Halo, ID came up with such a mind-numbingly linear game in terms of settings and gameplay.

    Halo also suffers from the "repeat-this-level-until-you-get-it-right-and-advance" problem, but the settings were fantastic (if repetitious) and had a lot of variety. You also had much more freedom to play around in the space, drive different vehicles, etc.

    I still play Battlefield 1942 regularly just because it offers almost total freedom of action on the game field and the battles play out differently every single time!

  4. Re:HTML, CSS, and JavaScript on Learn Basic Programming So You Aren't At the Mercy of Programmers · · Score: 1

    Then you can catch him in a dot-net (but only if you see sharp).

  5. Re:Fonts! on An Ode To Skulpture · · Score: 2

    Someone else did too... but it also didn't catch on (maybe because it didn't ship as a standard feature).

  6. Re:Stenotype on Ask Slashdot: Typing Advice For a Guinness World Record Attempt? · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure anyone has come up with the optimal keyboard layout for typing English, which I interpret to be the least amount of effort to type the most common words.

    I did a quick comparison of QWERTY, Dvorak and Colemak on the finger movements required to type the most common trigraphs in English, which are: THE, AND, THA, ENT, ION, TIO, FOR, NDE, HAS, NCE, TIS, OFT, MEN, ING, EDT, STH. I threw in STR since that one is a very common consonant cluster.

    The result: on QWERTY, you have to reach off the home keys 39 times and use the same finger more than once in typing 7 of the trigraphs.

    For Dvorak, it was 13 reaches off the home keys, and no repeat finger usage.

    For Colemak, it was 12 reaches off the home row, and 2 trigraphs that required using a finger repeatedly.

    I see the value in increasing alternating hand usage to increase speed, but there is also something to be gained from having common trigraphs clustered so you can hit them in a rolling motion with your index, middle, and ring fingers.

    For example, S-D-F and F-D-S, J-K-L and L-K-J are quick to type on QWERTY but rarely appear in English. Those prime key locations should probably belong to S-T-R and I-O-N.

  7. Re:I didn't catch that... on Ask Slashdot: Typing Advice For a Guinness World Record Attempt? · · Score: 2

    "In a world where all words are five letters... one man can make the difference between brilliance and darkness..."

  8. Re:It goes the other way, too on Possible Habitable Planet Just 12 Light Years Away · · Score: 1

    I always thought it would be funny to do a parody where Khan is thawed out and discovers he's not on Botany Bay at all, but the Golgafrinchan 'B' ark, and his genetically enhanced crew have all been replaced by telephone sanitizers and hairdressers...

  9. Re:H.G. Wells on Single Microbe May Have Triggered the "Great Dying" · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'll see your Wells and raise you a Watts:

    "Let me tell you what happens if this thing gets out," she said quietly. "First off, nothing. We outnumber it, you see. At first we swamp it through sheer numbers, the models predict all sorts of skirmishes and false starts. But eventually it gets a foothold. Then it outcompetes conventional decomposers and monopolizes our inorganic nutrient base. That cuts the whole trophic pyramid off at the ankles. You, and me, and the viruses and the giant sequoias all just fade away for want of nitrates or some stupid thing. And welcome to the Age of Behemoth."

  10. Re:Or... on NASA On Full Court Press To Deflate Doomsday Prophecies · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We may not have to worry about supernovae, but a gamma ray burst is quite another thing.

    As Phil Plait points out, we're practically staring down the barrel of WR-104!

  11. Re:Unreliable hardware on The Scourge of Error Handling · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I agree that it's possible to develop defect-free software. All hardware is unreliable. Mean time between failure.

    Just to clarify, "defect-free" doesn't mean the software will always run correctly under any conditions regardless of hardware state. It just means that *given* the integrity of the hardware, the software will not have any uncontrolled failure modes.

  12. Re:Uh...it's still there, you know on The Web We Lost · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yep. Folks who got on the Internet/WWW after about 2001 don't realize that it wasn't always just another medium for slapping ads in front of people.

  13. Re:What about you, Mr. Brainiac? on The Scourge of Error Handling · · Score: 2

    Exactly. That was my first thought on reading this: "If there's a better way, show us. Come up with a solution. What's stopping you?"

    In reality it's not that obvious, or someone would have thought of it already. I would look at engineering practices and see how they handle failure modes. Sometimes it is better to let the thing break as long as you design it to do the least amount of harm when it does.

    It's possible to develop defect-free software as long as all factors are under your control. E.g. a program that runs on unreliable hardware can never be made reliable.

  14. Re:Pull a few Billion... on Apollo Veteran: Skip Asteroid, Go To the Moon · · Score: 4, Funny

    > and who is going to build these spaceships? Toyota?

    I heard that Nissan put a Pathfinder on Mars.

  15. Re:Deduct? on Form1 3D Printer and Kickstarter Get Sued For Patent Infringment · · Score: 1

    Don't be disingenious.

  16. Re:anti-recommendation on Ask Slashdot: Mathematical Fiction? · · Score: 1

    don't bother with anything by rudy rucker. except the hacker and the ants, or maybe white light if you're desperate.

    Oh, I don't know... I loved Rucker's "Software" trilogy, but it's not about math at all.

    If you like pondering infinities, White Light is a lot of fun (but be sure to read The Divine Comedy first).

    I haven't read Bruce Sterling's Involution Ocean, but a friend of mine highly recommended it to me.

  17. Tough cookies on Free Online Education Unwelcome In Minnesota · · Score: 1

    I live in Minnesota, and I'm going to take courses through Coursera starting today!

    Civil disobedience, bitches!

  18. Re:we need a litmus test on US House Science Committee Member: Evolution Is a Lie From Hell · · Score: 1

    If you are religious, you should be prohibited from serving in public office.

    Really? You want to amend the Constitution just to keep out some bad apples? What about the majority of reasonable, competent, intelligent people who are also religious, they get no say in self-government?

    Not to mention the First Amendment guarantees free exercise of religion. I am not religious and I certainly wouldn't mind if everyone else gave up religion too, but you have to have the freedom to decide for yourself or you have no freedom at all. What if you change your mind while in office?

    As Thomas Paine said, "I have always strenuously supported the right of every man to his own opinion, however different that opinion might be to mine. He who denies to another this right, makes a slave of himself to his present opinion, because he precludes himself the right of changing it."

  19. Re:Obligatory Spelling Comment on New Study Shows Universe Still Expanding On Schedule · · Score: 1

    Shirley, it should be Messierments ?

  20. Re:Is Steve Jobs image no longer protected? on Steve Jobs Joins House of Wax · · Score: 1

    Fake Steve Jobs will be pissed that there is now competition!

  21. Re:Aha! so that's what Indiana Jones was doing... on US Military Tested the Effects of a Nuclear Holocaust On Beer · · Score: 1

    Raiders of the Lost Artesian

    "Throw me the Budweiser, I throw you the whip!"

  22. Re:This is too much on One Company's Week-Long Interview Process · · Score: 1

    I've been at companies that do all day interviews and those are pointless.

    Yep, if the interview process is that frustrating, imagine how bad it would be to actually work there. Of course, you can always just walk out.

  23. Re:One question on Bring On the Decentralized Social Networking · · Score: 3, Funny

    When you put all the humans in one place, it makes it easy for the Cylons to find and destroy them.

    Sandpeople always write a single file, to hide their numbers.

  24. Re:RIP on Sci-fi Author Harry Harrison Dies at 87 · · Score: 1

    Li vere estis remarkinda autoro.

  25. Re:It's about damn time on TextMate 2 Released As Open Source · · Score: 1

    Different time frame? I use vim everyday, and I live in 2012.

    So? I watch the original Star Trek everyday, and I live in 2012.

    ...Well, not absolutely every day, but most days in the week. I expect I must watch it, oh, at least four or five times a week...or more, really, but some weekends, like last weekend, there really wasn't the time, so that brings the average down a bit. I should say it's a solid four days a week...