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User: gughunter

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Comments · 163

  1. Re:Spelling.... on South Pole Research Station Hacked Twice · · Score: 1

    > People should STOP thinking that the world is black and white and START seeing the shades of gray.

    Only then will they truly be on the side of Good.

  2. Re:Want to know what makes that easy to spot as CG on Realistic Human Graphics Look Creepy · · Score: 1

    Delos: Have we got a vacation for you!

  3. Re:Bondage on Prothon - A New Prototype-based Language · · Score: 1

    Check out some back issues of COMPUTE!'s Gazette. I think they had a program to double the number of displayable columns.

  4. Re:Console vs. PC on Rockstar Announces GTA San Andreas · · Score: 1

    > I don't understand the allure of GTA/Vice City.

    For me, a big part of the appeal is the simple freedom to roam around a large city and discover the little atmospheric details of the game -- the pedestrians' one-liners, the varied styles of buildings, etc.

  5. Re:San Andreas on Rockstar Announces GTA San Andreas · · Score: 3, Interesting

    > Personally I'm hoping for more of a San Francisco setting myself.

    From what I remember of GTA 1, there was a big red Golden-Gate-like bridge, so that may be what they have in mind. Also the "San" shared by "San Francisco" and "San Andreas" could be a clue.

    > As for the time... well, the 70s could be cool and replicate the same sort of retro-vibe they've been going for, but personally I'd like to see them try their hands at something even older. I mean, how about a late 40s, early 50s noirish L.A.-based setting that draws on Chinatown and L.A. Confidential.

    Good idea, but there's one problem: no stats list item that reads "Least favorite gang: Hippies".

    I guess "beatniks" could work, though...

  6. Re:I can't wait for GTA: Boise on Rockstar Announces GTA San Andreas · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think Vice City was, in Rockstar taxonomy, a continuation of the "GTA3 line." I believe the idea was that GTA4 would be "revolutionary" instead of "evolutionary," and probably not available until the next generation of consoles arrives.

  7. Re:I hate ignorance! on Uranium Pebbles May Light the Way · · Score: 1

    You are correct to object. Eskom is actually a European privately-owned utility giant.

  8. Re:pssst: the counterfeiters are winning on Bureau of Engraving and Printing Issues New US$20 · · Score: 1

    > no, instead it was designed by someone who thought it would be a really good idea to make 1 dollar bills the same size as 100 dollar bills. now that's forethought.

    It works well for storing them in a wallet, though. I mean, lots of people like 3x5 index cards or 4x6 index cards, but there probably isn't much demand for a "random sampler pack" of index cards of assorted sizes.

  9. Re:PBF on Is There An OS On My Hard Drive? · · Score: 2, Funny

    I do not avoid Linux. But I do deny it my essence.

  10. Re:Screw taxation as social engineering on Protests, Politics And Parties In MMORPGs · · Score: 0, Troll

    Also, businesses in wooden structures are more likely to catch fire than businesses in brick structures, so they should pay the Mafia more protection money.

  11. Re:Nuclear Power is the future on World Nuclear University Launched · · Score: 1

    > All you have to do is replace fuel rods once in a while and you get emission-free, clean power.

    Or better yet, replace fuel pebbles. There is a design called a "pebble-bed modular reactor" that looks promising (granted, IANANP -- my main experience with nuclear power is playing Three Mile Island on the Apple II and Chernobyl on the Commodore 64). One of the nifty things about the "pebbles" is that they're coated with a thick layer of ceramic that can withstand very high temperatures. The idea is that the ceramic guarantees a minimum distance between fuel pellets, which puts a ceiling on the temperatures they can generate and thereby makes a meltdown unlikely. They're also somewhat portable, which could be useful for rural electrification projects.

  12. Re:bodily shame on Mystery Tiles From Around the World · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    > you act like your disgust is normal.

    I'll have to keep that line in mind for the next time I accidentally let one rip in an elevator. "Dry heaves? Bah! You act like your disgust is normal!"

  13. Re:Legal precedent? on Kids Kill, Victim Sues Game Maker · · Score: 1

    > So, in other words, a human life to you is worth less than your property? What a humanitarian.

    What if you shot Santa Claus? Then no one would ever get any presents! That would be a humanitarian catastrophe.

    On the other hand, if you shot a burglar, he'd never burgle anyone else. That is maybe not so much a humanitarian catastrophe.

  14. Re:Sadly... on Computer Game Improves Children's Hearing · · Score: 1

    D.W. Griffith presents: "Birth of a Catchphrase." Look for "Some X would argue that this is a Good Thing" wherever hot grits are sold.

    Some trolls would argue that this is a Good Thing.

  15. Re:"There is a terrorist behind every fear seller. on Blaster Writer Caught · · Score: 1

    You're wasting your figurative breath. America's war machine will not relent until the Ten Commandments monument is removed from the Baghdad courthouse.

  16. Re:Ho, you think so? on Walking Animatronic Dinosaur At Disney Park · · Score: 1

    Disney lied! People died!

    Yanks 132:
    9 Even though there weren't any communists in Washington or the Army or Hollywood,
    10 No one really wanted to fight with McCarthy,
    11 Because McCarthy had lists of names,
    12 Which somebody's name might be on,
    13 For some reason,
    14 And so why risk it,
    15 Especially when McCarthy also had a pair of vicious legal attack dogs,
    16 With names like Roy Cohn,
    17 And Robert Kennedy,
    18 Who were dying for any chance to end somebody's career,
    19 Forever.

  17. Re:Rare and unintentional exception?!? on Hall Of Technical Documentation Weirdness · · Score: 2, Informative

    > Their job isn't to humor us on how this toaster can kill you when soaked in water while plugged in - it's to be serious and prevent injury and death in many cases.

    If The Boomer Bible taught me anything, it's that a funny cautionary message can often be more memorable than a "serious" one.

  18. Re:Who are ESR's "people" on Eric Raymond's Homebrew SCO Poison · · Score: 1

    "My people" wasn't necessarily meant possessively, as in "I'll have my people call your people." There is another sense in which it can be used:

    "Let my people go!"
    "My people call it maize."
    "Meesa people gonna die?"

  19. Re:Well, when *I* asked the computer... on How About A Cup Of The Answer To Everything? · · Score: 1

    Maybe the 1% in this case is a recipriversexcluson.

  20. Re:Cases like this are rediculous on Jesus Castillo, Supreme Court, And Free Speech · · Score: 1

    The behavior of customers is not the issue -- it's what behavior the owner of the establishment permits, or is permitted to permit. If "Bob's Clean-Air Pissatorium" disallows smoking but encourages buckets of urine, that's for Bob to decide (and for most others to avoid like the plague).

    Of course, there will always be cases where property rights have to be suspended for the public good, like when juvenile delinquents store illegal copies of songs on their computers. The government should definitely get involved there.

  21. Re:Nonetheless... on In The Beginning & The Keys of Egypt · · Score: 1

    Ira 27:
    (20) Once, though, someone almost put one over on Harry,
    (21) Because when he asked if they'd read [the Bible],
    (22) They said right back, "Have you?"
    (23) But it took Harry only half a second to smile,
    (24) And then he said, Nah.
    (25) But I've read the Cliff Notes.

  22. Re:Rheingold Beer "Chug-A-Mug" on Rheingold Preaches Mob-Logging · · Score: 1

    My mob is Rheingold, the smart mob!

  23. Trick question alert! on Estonia: Where the Internet is a Human Right · · Score: 1

    > How come the US government doesnt seem to extend these rights to non citizens?

    You, sir, are trying to mess with my mind! Stop it!

  24. Re:Microsoft on A Condensed History Of The Keyboard · · Score: 1

    Just FYI -- shift + insert is equivalent to ctrl + V (paste) in many applications. I use it all the time.

  25. Re:Anyone Else for a New Keyboard??? on A Condensed History Of The Keyboard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To each his own. I prefer the buckling spring keys so much that using a "mushier" keyboard is almost distracting. Also, one benefit of the buckling spring keyboard is that the little click corresponds exactly to a keypress. If you heard/felt the click, the computer got the data; if you didn't, it didn't. With rubber dome keyboards, on the other hand, you have to keep an eye on your text at all times. Between the uncertainty and the overall mushy feel, rubber dome keyboards have at least two strikes against them in my book.