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User: Scutter

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Comments · 996

  1. Re:I used to like it... on Is Google Voice Doomed To Be 2nd-Class Messaging System? · · Score: 1

    On Sprint here. When I renewed my contract and went to set up my new phone, GVoice took over completely. I can't find any way to use it for voicemail only, but when I originally set it up it was before Sprint's "full integration" with Google Voice. I'd be thrilled if you can tell me how to use it for voicemail only.

  2. I used to like it... on Is Google Voice Doomed To Be 2nd-Class Messaging System? · · Score: 1

    ...until they featured "improved" integration with my cell carrier. I used it for voicemail and transcription only. Now, if I try to replace my carrier voicemail with Google Voice, it also replaces my cell phone number with my GVoice number, all my texts come from GVoice, etc. I can't seem to simply redirect voicemail to it any more. Good service, but it needs better integration and more granular control.

  3. Re:Thou hast angered thy King on China Says Serious Polluters Will Get the Death Penalty · · Score: 1

    The purpose of the death penalty is not to prevent recidivism. You could easily achieve the same outcome by sentencing them to life in prison. The purpose is to deter people from committing the crime at all. My argument is that it DOES NOT deter people from committing the crime for which the sentence is death. And furthermore, the risk of convicting and executing an innocent person is too high.

  4. Re:Thou hast angered thy King on China Says Serious Polluters Will Get the Death Penalty · · Score: 2

    I think you don't know what "deterrent" means. Otherwise, your comment suggests that everyone should be preemptively executed just in case they might pollute. The idea of a deterrent punishment is that a potential criminal will consider the consequence of getting caught (death, in this case), but even in countries that still have the death penalty it's been shown over and over that it doesn't lower the incidents of that crime. Furthermore, the potential for executing an innocent person is a non-zero percentage. The risk of doing so is not worth the arguably dubious reward of lowering crime.

  5. Re:Thou hast angered thy King on China Says Serious Polluters Will Get the Death Penalty · · Score: 1

    The death penalty has never been an effective deterrent for any crime.

  6. Learn on Altering Text In eBooks To Track Pirates · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or, you know, maybe learn from the success of Apple iTunes and start selling eBooks for a reasonable cost and maybe they won't be pirated nearly as much. I know that the publishing process costs money that you deserve to recoup, and you deserve to make a profit, but it is offensive to charge as much as (or more) than a physical book for an eBook.

  7. Re:I can explain on Scores of Vulnerable SAP Deployments Uncovered · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When it's all overhead, maintenance fees are a very attractive number for the budget-cut knife.

  8. Re:wait... on Mars Explorers Face Huge Radiation Problem · · Score: 1

    My personal limit is none. None radiation.

  9. Re:Fuck you, MS on Xbox One Used Game Policy Leaks: Publishers Get a Cut of Sale · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're not buying anything. You're temporarily renting a license. The whole idea of "buying" any form of media has been bullshit for at least the last 15 years.

  10. Re:Wow this outsourcing has put a damper on things on NYPD Detective Accused of Hiring Email Hackers · · Score: 1

    First initial, last name, password is either their kid's birthday, or their favorite sports team followed by the number "1". I'm guessing fifty cents each.

  11. Re:Bit misleading on 9th Grade Science Experiment: Garden Cress Won't Germinate Near Routers · · Score: 3, Informative

    The point is that they are using confusing and inconsistent terminology to report on the parameters of a scientific study. Using imprecise language muddies the results and makes them hard to reproduce, or even to draw a conclusion of your own.

  12. Re:Good on Judge Refers Prenda Copyright Trolls To Criminal Investigators · · Score: 0

    >it is the few bad eggs you hear about that really do tarnish everyone

    I don't think you know what the phrase "a few bad eggs" means. The actual phrase is "One bad apple spoils the bushel". It doesn't mean that if you remove the bad apple, the rest of the apples will be fine. It means corruption, left unchecked, will spread throughout all of the apples until the whole basket has to be discarded.

    Prenda is a corrupt organization because the lawyers who make it up learned the behavior from somewhere else, and they in turn learned it from somewhere else. The only way to eliminate it is to remove all of the corruption, not just these bad lawyers. Severely punish those who seek to game the system. Better yet, fix the system that allowed and encouraged gaming to being with.

  13. Re:In other news... on Researchers Report Super-Powered Battery Breakthrough · · Score: 1

    I think you are misinterpreting what I said. The media has a habit of misreporting scientific studies and the scientific community has a habit of falsifying data to get published. Therefore, when I hear a claim of a sudden breakthrough that is unbelievable, I...don't believe it. Or at least maintain a healthy skepticism. While these batteries may very well be exactly what the story claims, the real proof in the pudding will be if this ever makes it off paper, which it surely will if it's as amazing as the story makes it sound.

  14. Re:In other news... on Researchers Report Super-Powered Battery Breakthrough · · Score: 1

    Virtually all of that magic has been incremental steps, not exponential leaps. Whenever I read a new report of a scientific breakthrough that is suddenly orders of magnitude beyond the level of what we have now, I'm skeptical of it. When there is an actual working product that is actually on the market (and not just promises that it will be there within 5 years), then I'll get excited about it. Until then, this is just another vaporware.

  15. In other news... on Researchers Report Super-Powered Battery Breakthrough · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...Magic was discovered today and practical and affordable applications for it are now only 30 years away!

  16. Re:Mentioned this last week on How NASA Brought the F-1 Rocket Engine Back To Life · · Score: 1

    >It seems pointless to send humans to do something a machine can do better.

    Because PR. People can relate to a human stepping foot on the Moon/Mars/Asteroid/etc. and get excited about it. Excited people will want to spend more money doing it. It's good for the whole program. Now, whether that is worth the extra expense is obvious up for debate, but you can't deny that there is a benefit to having a human go to these places.

  17. Re:Why the crypto? on Open Sauce Foundation Created · · Score: 2, Funny

    *facepalm*

  18. Re:Finally! on Electronics Arts CEO Ousted In Wake of SimCity Launch Disaster · · Score: 5, Funny

    His one-time payout should be a game of his choice from EA's portfolio or five dollars off of his next purchase of an EA game.

  19. Are you listening, Big Media? on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With Flagged Channels For XBMC PVR? · · Score: 1

    But ideally I'd like to cut the cord completely as the service is otherwise useless.

  20. Re:All the way to the top. on US Attorney General Defends Handling of Aaron Swartz Case · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Fast and Furious wasn't enough to even make him break a sweat. Hell, Waco happened and Janet Reno skated. This won't even be a blip on the DOJ's radar.

  21. Re:And Evernote Is? on Evernote Security Compromised · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you don't know what it is, then you probably don't need to worry that it's been compromised. But if you absolutely must know, then it's literally the first page of hits on Google.

  22. Re:Back it up on Planetary Resources To 'Claim' Asteroids With Beacons · · Score: 1

    You won't need space defense for your asteroid claims. If this process is held up by international treaty, you can simply control it that way. Space travel (at least at this time) isn't Firefly. You don't just hop in a grungy cargo ship and go where ever you want. It will be trivially easy for anyone who cares to track a mining ship launch to its destination asteroid. Smuggling space ore will be virtually impossible. When the poached ore is returned to Earth, the people who mined it are held accountable by whatever legal methods are agreed upon by world governments, or not held accountable at all if space is deemed a "free for all".

  23. Re:read this on Book Review: The Rise and Fall of T. John Dick · · Score: 1

    You're shilling your own submissions in other threads? Classy.

  24. Re:I think BES is the key obstacle to adoption her on BlackBerry 10 Review: Good, But Too Late? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, the dual profile feature sounds really nice. I wish more phones did that. It'll be interesting to see how well that works out and what kind of security holes will appear.

  25. Re:Complex and difficult for you? on BlackBerry 10 Review: Good, But Too Late? · · Score: 1

    I didn't say it was complex and difficult for me. I said the software licensing and support were an expensive mess. I don't know where you got any of what you're accusing me of.