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User: Mashiki

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  1. Re:no thanks on The 'Radio Network of Things' Can Cut Electric Bills (Video) · · Score: 1

    If by "work just fine" you mean wasting energy and costing you more, then you are right.

    You mean "smart meter" programs and all that jazz don't cost you money? Damn why has mine gone up 8% in the last 3 years since they brought this boondoggle into being here in Ontario. Well if it's on track(according to the forecasters), then by 2018 the electricity price here will have gone up by 20% oh joy!

  2. Re:ATI/AMD has had shitty drivers for 20 years on AMD Catalyst Is the Broken Wheel For Linux Gaming · · Score: 1

    Except that the parent poster wasn't talking about 'nix drivers. They were talking about drivers in general...but I could see how that's confusing.

  3. Re:ATI/AMD has had shitty drivers for 20 years on AMD Catalyst Is the Broken Wheel For Linux Gaming · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, Nvidia has had shitty drivers for the last 6 or so. So they're catching up. Otherwise there wouldn't have been that series of nvidia drives that cause incorrect fan throttling that burned up cards. Or the problem with TDR's that plagued the 299 through 330's, that's only two years worth. And of course the problem with those drives was so bad that they were paying for PC's to be shipped to California for testing. Of course that particular problem revolved around voltage issues, and the cards being forced into a lower-voltage setting that would cause the card to become unstable. That was their solution to overheating. And then of course we've got the on-going problem with firefox and hardware acceleration on the cards, either causing corruption of the browser, or right up crashes. Then there was the drivers that caused hardlocks on 400,500,600,700 series cards.

    I say all of that as someone who's owned 22 nvidia cards over the last 15 years. It was the TDR problem that broke it for me, and I switched to AMD after having swore them off in the 90's. I haven't looked back, and am happier with my 7970.

  4. Re:When the freedom of speech is taken away ... on Several European Countries Lay Groundwork For Heavier Internet Censorhip · · Score: 2, Informative

    We already have this in Canada on the books, and is codified in our charter of rights and freedoms. Basically it boils down to: "You can do whatever you want, as long as law or society deem it to be harmful." Generally it's worked out well, and when it's over-reached, people have rallied around getting the law changed and it's happened.

  5. Re:So, he is admitting that the attacks are true on Michael Mann: Swiftboating Comes To Science · · Score: 0

    Linking to media matters and using it as a factual source, isn't any different then linking to world nightly news and making the same claim. Their version of truth is "what they want to tell you" even when actual facts are against their grain.

  6. Re:Push starting a car on Ask Slashdot: Sounds We Don't Hear Any More? · · Score: 1

    Anything that's stick will still do that. More common in Europe, not so much in the Americas where most people drive automatics now.

  7. Re:Related - the clack of wheels on the tracks on Ask Slashdot: Sounds We Don't Hear Any More? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Guess you don't live in a cold part of the world in the winter, or where it can hit 35C+ in the summer. Around here in Canada, we use 30-50m segments that aren't welded because the tracks shrink and expand so much. Once the temps drop to -20C here, you can lose over an 3cm, and once it gets over 35C with the train's on them they can expand over 10cm causing them to warp off the bed.

    So if I walk outside, the next time a train goes by I can hear it hit every clack clearly. Since it's around -20C right now, I can hear it inside my house about 300m away if I pay attention.

  8. Re:So they are doing what? on Anonymous Declares War Over Charlie Hebdo Attack · · Score: 2

    Welcome to the world of SJW's, and progressives. Where "feelings" and "perceived hurtful comments" are all that's required to try and block someone's free speech. But getting yourself killed over said free speech? Say...in the Charlie Hebdo case, well you deserved it. There's no shortage of people coming out from that particular side of authoritarianism proclaiming that they deserved it.

  9. Really? We don't need to ship oil to the US? I guess that's why we have such a glut of refining capacity right. Well I guess we don't, because every time someone wants to go and build a refinery here some group of environmentalists throw a hissy fit. They even throw a hissy fit at expanding and updating existing refineries. So that's why it would be shipped to refineries in the US right? But, I guess the US has no pollution controls, no labor safety and lower wages then Canada? Well I guess the last one is mostly true. Wages in the US are lower than Canada now.

    So now you know why we'd ship it to the US, but since the US environmentalists keep throwing a hissy fit too. Canada will sell it to whoever wants to buy it. It has nothing to do with "wages, pollution controls, or wages." It has all to do with environmentalists and them throwing a fit.

    By the way, have you ever been to a reclaimed area? Like a coal mine, or an exhausted oil sand area. Places where nothing was growing before, and now it's in a pristine state. Yeah, I guess it's pretty dirty...

  10. Re:That was quick ... on Canadian Government Steps In To Stop Misleading Infringement Notices · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Probably none. Despite the whining that people go on about the government here in Canada, they actually do productive things. They have stepped in the past to deal with issues from "autonomous government agencies" like the CRTC, but I'm sure someone is going to whine and cry about my post anyway.

  11. Re:Huh? on For the First Time In 3 Years, Investments In Renewable Energy Increased · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If that was true, then in places like Canada, we wouldn't be paying $0.60kWh for solar energy, when nuclear is $0.05kWh, and natural gas is $0.07-0.09kWh. Don't even get me started on wind with it being as high $0.83kWh. Then again, you guys in the states seem to throw a hissy fit every time we want to sell you oil, or even build pipelines to ship it to you. Energy independence? Only if it fits an environmentalist agenda for some people.

  12. Re: Is that engine even running? on Linux Controls a Gasoline Engine With Machine Learning · · Score: 1

    I can't say there's much of anything interesting at all. Since a lot of the stuff, except what's covered in your last sentence has been done by the old ECU's since the 90's. Even varying supply voltage has been under control since around 1996, the variation of voltage for ECU connected components was down to 0.03v, it's 0.01v these days. It doesn't *have* to be any better than that when the tolerance is +/- 0.04v per sensor. There isn't really a problem with injectors though. It's not hard to figure out the pulse timing per injector when measured against the cam and crank sensors. Even the TBI injectors that came up in the late 80's through 90's before MPFI became the mainstream used only a crank sensor.

  13. Re:There is another word they studiously avoid on Canadian Copyright Notice-and-Notice System: Citing False Legal information · · Score: 1

    The case law on this stuff is a mile long in terms of fraud here. If they're looking to be criminally charged, they're going about it the right way.

  14. Re:Same ole, same ole ... on Canadian Anti-Piracy Firm Caught Infringing Copyright · · Score: 1

    It's government. Last time I did a government job here in Canada, there were old as dirt IBM and netware servers made in 1988 running everything.

  15. Re:The obvious question... on Who's Responsible When Your Semi-Autonomous Shopping Bot Purchases Drugs Online? · · Score: 3, Informative

    Can you prove that your teenage kid is sentient and fully autonomous?
    Actually that an interesting question :) And at what age does this happen?

    Well....

    Yes. It's called mens rea. And it depends on where you live, in some cases it's 9 years old in Canada it's 12 years old. That's the legal definition of "sentient and fully autonomous" while knowing the difference between "right and wrong."

  16. Re:What the fuck is this shit? on Writer: How My Mom Got Hacked · · Score: 1

    /. turning into gawker/vox/etc. You want it, you got it! Clickbait all the time baby!

  17. Re:Cat and mouse... on Netflix Cracks Down On VPN and Proxy "Pirates" · · Score: 1

    Probably fairly easy, since the US has treaties in place for trans-national bank accounts.

  18. Re:Cat and mouse... on Netflix Cracks Down On VPN and Proxy "Pirates" · · Score: 1

    Try opening a U.S. bank account tied to a U.S. address as somebody who is not a U.S. resident. Good luck.

    I'm a canuck citizen, I have bank accounts at: Chase, Wells Fargo and Toronto-Dominion(US). I walked into Wells Fargo in Florida a couple of years back to do some banking for my grandmother the Power of Attorney, I opened an account there in 8 minutes. I own property in Florida, I'm not a US resident, I've never held a green card, I have had a work permit back 15 years ago though.

  19. Re:should five per cent appear to small on 2015 Means EU Tax Increase On Cloud Storage, E-books and Smartphone Applications · · Score: 2

    I live in Canada, and sure people like the public services here ... as long as they can get them. Then again, I've been waiting 9 months to see a ENT specialist...dem public services...

  20. Re: And who will watch it? on South Korean Activist To Drop "The Interview" In North Korea Using Balloons · · Score: 1

    Oh look, someone left the stormfront open again.

  21. Re: And who will watch it? on South Korean Activist To Drop "The Interview" In North Korea Using Balloons · · Score: 1

    Somehow I'll trust the chaos computer club calling it a intranet over your definition.

  22. Re:How about mandatory felony sentences instead? on Drunk Drivers in California May Get Mandated Interlock Devices · · Score: 1

    I have a problem with that because by ruining their lives, what we create is a bunch of criminals. That's much worse than a bunch of idiots.

    Yeah, I really don't see a problem here. Even up here in "liberal canada" you drive drunk, you get your car towed and impounded, then you can end up anywhere between a steep fine, and a criminal conviction. In fact, the problem was considered so serious at one time that the RIDE program was given a defacto bypass on our new charter of rights and freedoms. Allowing the program to operate as an unlawful search.

    While not so much of a problem in most of the country now, there are many areas where it is even 35+ years later after the DUI laws were put in place.

  23. Re: Vandalism unnecessary. on Prosecutors Raid LG Offices Over Alleged Vandalism of Samsung Dishwashers · · Score: 1

    Newer fridges are much more energy-efficient and cheaper compared to those old models. If you bought an expensive one marked as reliable instead of the cheapest one out there then it would last more than 5 years. The stuff that wasn't as over engineered from the past hasn't survived so we only see the stuff that was.

    Sure, energy efficent is about all the newer models boil down to. As for "reliable" and "expensive" yeah...just keep telling yourself that. It's just like at one point there was one company in north america making all fridges, and dishwashers. There's around 5 now. Said "quality" is "buying brand name."

  24. Re:Vandalism unnecessary. on Prosecutors Raid LG Offices Over Alleged Vandalism of Samsung Dishwashers · · Score: 2

    Hell that holds true with fridges among other things. I've got a 1940's style fridge that was my great-grandparents and it's still working. My parents are still using the fridge they got when they were married in 1977. On the other hand the new fridge that I bought 5 years ago has already died, the 3 year old fridge that I bought for my place in florida is already dead. And the same happened to my sister out in western canada, bought a new fridge 3 years ago...already dead. In all those cases, either the compressor died or the coolant leaked out somewhere.

  25. Re:Most places I know start around 8am on Boston Elementary, Middle Schools To Get a Longer Day · · Score: 1

    Back 15-20 years ago it used to be all 9-15:30 in my neck of the woods. Now it's 8-14:30(highschool) and 9-15:30(K-8). Why you ask? Buses. That's the only reason they did it, so they could stagger the bus schedule. Then again the distance that kids get buses are pathetic, it used to be that I walked ~5km in g1-5 to head to school in the 80's. Anything over 1km(0.62mi) now can get a bus. It's similar to snow days, freezing rain, and fog. Merest hint of it, NOPE they either cancel buses or school altogether. And here I remember crawling up a damn hill to go to highschool 20 years ago...after we had 8 hours of freezing rain and the school was open for classes, buses only being called back to take bus students home when fog rolled in, snow? Haha...get to school.