Slashdot Mirror


User: darkfeline

darkfeline's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
191
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 191

  1. Re:You were trying to be funny but... AAYSR on Can There Be Open Source Music? · · Score: 1

    Amazing. Perhaps one of these days Emacs will finally get a half-decent text editor so I can justify switching from Vim and seeing what all the fuss around OrgMode is about.

  2. Re:One Note? on Ask Slashdot: Best Software For Med-School Note-Taking? · · Score: 1

    I'll chip in for Vim and vimoutliner+VOoM. Much better in my opinion than Emacs and its twisted C-chords.

    voom: http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2657
    vimoutliner: http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=3515

  3. Re:Even More Betterer on Playing StarCraft Could Boost Your Cognitive Flexibility · · Score: 1

    Do you have any sources for that statement? It seems to me that many games potentially have a higher skill ceiling than Starcraft. And if we're talking about cognitive skill instead of various kinds of twitch skill and brute skill (e.g., repetitively queuing up units every 30 seconds, sending different commands to multiple units as fast as possible because Blizzard doesn't want to make it "easy", etc.), Starcraft is left in the dust, in my opinion.

  4. Re:Not the mistrust issue we were thinking of on NSA Firing 90% of Its Sysadmins · · Score: 1

    So if I download pirated content, but don't watch it or view it, then it's not piracy!

  5. Re:Fun Fact on Campaign To Kill CAPTCHA Kicks Off · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I jumped the gun there a little. You posted on a news item about captchas in general without mentioning a thing about reCaptcha, so I assumed you meant all captchas only use one word for verification, which is completely false.

  6. Re:I've never used CAPTCHA'S on Campaign To Kill CAPTCHA Kicks Off · · Score: 2

    Thank you for that information. We will keep that in mind while we work on the next version of our spambot.

  7. Re:Fun Fact on Campaign To Kill CAPTCHA Kicks Off · · Score: 1

    That's only for reCaptcha, you dolt. reCaptcha is charity-ware, and each captcha goes toward scanlating texts. That's why one of each pair looks much neater (and more comprehensible) than the other. The idea is that you solve a captcha and digitize some text for goodwill. Of course, this is open to abuse, which emerged most clearly during 4chan hijack of that one Time Person of the Year poll a while back. But reCaptcha does have mechanisms in place to prevent you from bullshitting the real text word (so as not to have /b/tards placing the word "penis" in every digitized text in the future), to some extent, but that is not infallible to the best of my knowledge.

  8. Re:And you think they're the only one why? on Samsung Caught Boosting Galaxy S4 Benchmarks · · Score: 1

    The point of a benchmark is to give a benchmark of REALISTIC performance on a device, as a user would get under normal daily usage.

    Is it? In my mind, the point of a benchmark is to test the maximum performance of the device. If I wanted to measure normal daily usage, I'd test it under, y'know, normal daily usage conditions. Which for most people is checking email and playing Angry Birds on Power Saver mode, in which case I doubt the CPU and GPU would hit half of either of their (claimed or otherwise) max clock speeds. So a benchmark should only test the CPU clock speed for low-demand applications? Sure, whatever you say.

  9. Shameless Related Self-plug on Ask Slashdot: Tags and Tagging, What Is the Best Way Forward? · · Score: 1

    This concerns more file "tagging", but a while ago I grew frustrated with the lack of real solutions for file organization (the oft-discussed but surprisingly absent-in-implementation semantic file system), so I decided to start writing my own. It can best be described as a multidimensional hierarchical abstract file system that is implemented on top of regular POSIX file systems using hard links and a handful of scripts and FUSE. It's still not feature-complete as I want it, but the basic tagging framework is done. Here's the repository for anyone interested: https://github.com/darkfeline/dantalian

  10. Re: Chrome? Why the love? on Firefox Takes the Performance Crown From Chrome · · Score: 1

    This has got to be the poorest reason to use any web browser over another. The only situation where this might be a valid reason is if both browsers are completely satisfactory, it's just this one browser has one default setting that I prefer over another. (Actually, I'm just assuming that Chrome allows you to adjust tab width too? It doesn't? Shame.)

  11. Re:practicalities make it impossible.. on Why Are Japanese Men Refusing To Leave Their Rooms? · · Score: 1

    It is possible that these people missed out on that stage in your life when you have a strong biological motivation to change your situation from living with parents to living independently.

    Might want to rethink that statement. There's no biological reason for wanting to live independently or to change your life situation. Plently of peoples through history lived communally/in a large house as one family, and/or stuck in one place and one occupation throughout their lifetimes. There's no designated stage where one becomes an adult. In the past, one grew up gradually, a children of the past would be treated as much more mature than one now, but a young adult of the past would've been treated as much more immature than they are nowadays. Gradual growth in a safe environment was considered obvious, but in the modern age we have somehow lost even that bit of common sense. Now, you're a child until you hit 18/21 then poof, you're an adult, go and get out of the house and get a job and feed yourself and raise a family. I'm surprised we don't have more hikkikomoris here, but then again, I suppose they've manifested in all those nutcases/psychiatrical patients nowadays. Back in the day, who needed a psychiatrist?

  12. Re:Universe 25 on Why Are Japanese Men Refusing To Leave Their Rooms? · · Score: 1

    If you read the article, you'd know it's not overpopulation per se, but too many people and not enough social roles. I'd say that applies in this case, especially since one of the common factors that come up in the precious few books and papers on the subject mention not feeling needed, which leads to suicide.

    Coddling is certainly one aspect of it, which is why the syndrome is more acute in Japan due to cultural reasons, but such bouts of isolation to depression and escapism sometimes culminating in suicide is not uncommon in other parts of the world either. It's important to note that this only appears in developed countries, where it is much more likely for someone to literally be useless and unneeded (see recent increases in unemployment).

  13. Re: Universe 25 on Why Are Japanese Men Refusing To Leave Their Rooms? · · Score: 1

    I lived in Japan for some time.

    There's your problem. Growing up in Japan is completely different from living there for some time. Much of it is subtext. Employees and CEOs are not fired, they "voluntarily resign". Kids do not bully each other, they just "joke" and "tease" and "teach social behavior". Everything is an act; the concept of being yourself simply doesn't exist. Of course, foreigners are not held to the same expectations, generally.

  14. Re:You know on Kickass Torrents' KAT.ph Domain Seized By Philippine Authorities · · Score: 1

    By your logic, the Internet is illegal, since you can access all manner of illegal content in as few as three clicks. Hell, illegal pron viruses sometimes flows to your computer without you even doing anything.

    Heck, by your logic, people are illegal because they enable piracy. We should ban those annoying buggers.

  15. Slashdot claims another victim on TreeSheets (Cross-Platform Data Organizer) Now Open Source · · Score: 1

    Looks like the TreeSheets website is down. The term slashdotted is still relevant, it seems.

    So, while I wait for the site to resuscitate, anyone care to enlighten me on how TreeSheets is different from any old spreadsheet program down the street?

  16. Re:chicken or egg on Video Gamers See the World Differently · · Score: 1

    A bit of both, I'd imagine. Thank you for reminding us that correlation does not imply causation. There should be an automatic reminder below every /. post containing such studies, so we don't need an obligatory reminder post every time.

  17. Re:Shocking... on Video Gamers See the World Differently · · Score: 1

    And what distance is that, precisely? Shotguns are much more dangerous in real life, contrary to most video game representations. A quick google search turns up about 50 yards for the danger zone, but blindly guessing, it'll still sting a bit a 100 yards, depending on the guage and shot.

  18. Re:MIT Hacks on MIT President Tells Grads To 'Hack the World' · · Score: 1

    Yes. I know all of this. But if you, say, reconstructed a police car on a building outside of MIT, I doubt you'll find the authorities there as accomodating of your technological accomplishments as you'd like. So go "hack the world". Even if you leave no damage and put everything back where it was, you may just find an arrest warrant out for your name.

    People are commonly called out for finding exploits and security vulnerabilities. Do you honestly think a practical joke would get away unpunished? It's awesome that MIT promotes this kind of culture, but it's best to keep reality in mind, especially for new graduates.

  19. Re:Well... on Linus Torvalds Promises Profanity Over Linux 3.10-rc5 · · Score: 2

    This is important to keep in mind. As much as I want better Linux support for these things, first and foremost I want stable support, not buggy support as Windows is known for. The proper process reserves RCs for bugfixes, which is something I can stand behind.

  20. Re:MIT Hacks on MIT President Tells Grads To 'Hack the World' · · Score: 1

    Substitute "less" for "worse". I wasn't thinking properly, that's how much parent post's lack of thought angered me.

  21. Re:MIT Hacks on MIT President Tells Grads To 'Hack the World' · · Score: 0, Troll

    Do you seriously think just because a prank or practical joke is "clever", "benign", or even "ethical", that it isn't criminal? People have been thrown in jail for worse.

  22. Re:Science works on Fear of Death Makes People Into Believers (of Science) · · Score: 1

    Now you're just twisting the definition of "believe" in this context. People don't "believe" science produces reliable results, they "know" because of the scientific method. That's the key difference between religion and science.

  23. Oh well on TSA Decides Against Allowing Small Knives On Aircraft · · Score: 1

    There goes my knife. And my pen. And my glasses. And my belt. And my teeth. And my finger- and toenails. It's been said many, many times, but sooner or later perhaps the TSA will realize that people are potential security risks and ban everyone altogether.

    On a less ranting and more constructive note, when were small knives banned? I recall back in the day of airport security small knives with blades less than, oh, I don't know, six inches? were allowed.

  24. Re:Be active and committed on Ask Slashdot: How To Start and Manage a University LUG? · · Score: 1

    I'd mod up, but I used all my points. This is sound advice that should go in those myriad self-help books.

  25. That's nice... on Funding Open Source By Donations: Lighting the Path · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's nice, but is this kind of blatant self-promotion allowed on /.? This is not your personal blog. Can't we abide by the secondary source rule that Wikipedia has, so that we can guarantee some degree of notability? If you've finished your study and it caught someone else's eye because it's well-written and interesting and they post it here, cool, but "Funding Open Source By Donations: Lighting the Path", really? You are not the first person to do this, sorry to burst your narcissistic bubble.