Slashdot Mirror


User: bmcraec

bmcraec's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
19
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 19

  1. Re: Misnomer on Vigilante Malware Protects Routers Against Other Security Threats · · Score: 1

    Symantec would just hate the possibility of a free and better protection introducing itself into their marketplace. They've been coining it for a long time on threat awareness and creation.

  2. Re:Not just meth on 88-Year-Old Inventor Hassled By the DEA · · Score: 1

    When people are discouraged from learning any science, you can make up any old bullshit about anything, call it dangerous and a threat, or beneficial and life-preserving, and sell it to them by the arcane black arts of marketing. How many industries and mega-corporations owe their very existence, much less their hegemony, on some unprovable BS or some over-simplified model of the reality & universe? Education and open debate and the freedom to be able to call bullshit is the only way H.Sap will ever crawl from the mud. And we would still have a long way to go to get all of our eggs out of the basket[case] Earth.

  3. Program Counting Good Can you? on William Shatner Answers, in 826 Words · · Score: 1

    Say, slashdot management & maintenance—why does the comment count always say “N+2 of N loaded”? That does not compute, is illogical, and will cause a rift in the space-time continuum if left unrepaired.

  4. Re:The Governor General UpperCut on William Shatner Answers, in 826 Words · · Score: 1

    You are of course aware that the Governor-General is an appointed position, selected by the Prime Minister and they usually hold office for only a few years. It’s got to be a pretty special kind of person who gets picked to be a figurehead, then disagrees with and actively opposes the person/party that appointed them. It happens, but it’s the very rare exception, instead of the rule.

  5. Re:Hugh Laurie on William Shatner Answers, in 826 Words · · Score: 1

    The next Doctor will be about 14 years old, if the regeneration trend carries on with any pattern.

  6. Computronium v0.3? on IBM, 3M Team To Glue Together Silicon "Bricks" · · Score: 1

    HAL in your pocket, doing double duty as a pocket-warmer heat-source for those long ice-skating parties. Awesome.

  7. "It's Unix! I know that language!" on DOS, Backdoor, and Easter Egg Found In Siemens S7 · · Score: 1

    I blame Wayne Knight. If he had been a bit thinner, perhaps with a German accent, and been less bumbling, maybe the world would THINK about the means it uses to keep various carnivorous dinosaurs from leaving their security enclosures. And Crichton should have named the character von Nedry-Schleswig, or something. You've got to take the bad guys seriously if you have NO IDEA how they do their evil plans. No, no metaphors at all in that paragraph.

  8. Re:Change the biz name on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With the Business Software Alliance? · · Score: 1

    You've hit the gaming strategy nail on the head. The corporations, suppliers, advisors, allies, assets, customers and competitors, et al, aren't the game players. They are the pieces in the game. It's the lawyers who are the game players, and they win regardless what happens to you and your company. Effectively, you now need to hire your own mercenaries to protect your settlement from the ronin threatening to attack. And yours have to be better than the ronin. Looking at history, the rulers of kingdoms stand a relatively good chance of being replaced by the mercenaries they hire to protect their kingdoms.

  9. Laser probing for everyone! on 3D Nausea Solved By Eye-Tracking · · Score: 1

    Does the eye-tracking technology involve lasers scanning pupil position? Because this will create a brand new way for fiction writers to kill/enslave their characters. Let's not worry about the power/modulation issues right now. Someone will figure out a somewhat plausible hack for it.

  10. 3 Guesses on War Texting Lets Hackers Unlock Car Doors Via SMS · · Score: 1

    My selection bias suggests the two targets identified will be General Motors, Ford, or Chrysler. I wouldn't rule out Mazda or Toyota either.

  11. Re:Bleak. on Better Copyright Through Fair Use and Ponies · · Score: 1

    I want someone to conduct a neuro-anatomy study on the people who back legal recourse over winning business models. I really suspect that they will demonstrate larger amygdalas and generally not be very capable of seeing long feedback loops that don't have large amounts of cash being taken from others and deposited in their accounts. Those who know intuitively that fair use is good for everyone will clearly have larger anterior singulate cortexes, and be able to feel compassion for the whole eco-system, and be able to craft concepts that benefit more people for longer than their brutish, neanderthal-like legal attack dogs.

  12. Finally, a cargo worth $10,000/kilo! on Cocaine Found At Kennedy Space Center · · Score: 1

    If the cartels have invested in submarines, then what could be next but orbit delivery? Plenty of scifi smugglers in the literature for inspiration! Hey, Han, what's that white powder under your nose?

  13. Re:most of the PAY warez sites seems to seen scams on RIAA, MPAA Recruit MasterCard As Internet Police · · Score: 1

    It wouldn't be the first time I've found errors in otherwise reputable sources. It's hard work to track down all the details in the original sources for things, and even supposedly primary sources can be inaccurate, especially if there is any PR controversy involved. I expect that if you searched other lyrics sites you'd find slightly different information. It's very difficult to clearly identify the canonical information, perhaps especially on sites created by volunteer enthusiasts, although current thinking about Wikipedia's accuracy and relevance is clearly swaying to better, not worse, credibility. Whatever the case, I've heard the Louis Prima version, and I've heard Roth's version, and until looking at the Wikipedia article, just now, had no idea that the song came from Austria in the 1920s. History can sure drag you to some funny places, can't it?

  14. Re:most of the PAY warez sites seems to seen scams on RIAA, MPAA Recruit MasterCard As Internet Police · · Score: 1

    Not arguing against what you're saying, but there is one teensy challenge that D/L & BitTorrent champions never volunteer, beacuse it splashes a little water on their bright shiny fires. Until you download and start watching the file will you have any real idea of whether the quality is there. I know a lot of people who seem to care more for the fact that they got something from a BitTorrent site than if the file itself was created and bundled with a quality experience in mind. Recorded something off your iPhone 4, cut it with iMovie on your phone, then uploaded to the BitTorrent, where the file is labelled "Tom Waits: Private Concert" and you grab it, thinking it's some gem, and it tunrs out to be a botched pile of crap, low res, badly cropped, with really, really crappy homemade titles with the name of the doufus who "made" it over the first 40 seconds. Yeah. That was a good use of my time. Like I said, I'm not arguing at all about D/L of info. If it's valuable, you'll make money, even if the information is given for free, If you're that smart to recognize you'll benefit more from the strategy of abundance (which implies an economics of abundance), you're probably smart enough to come up with more brilliant ideas which will do the same. Isn't only only 1 in 10 VC-seed capital companies make it? It's that return that keeps the VCs in the game.

  15. Re:most of the PAY warez sites seems to seen scams on RIAA, MPAA Recruit MasterCard As Internet Police · · Score: 1

    Did David-Lee Roth change the lyrics from the original? I've never tried listening to both songs back to back. It doesn't seem like a song that needs that much analysis. Say, is that a good idea for a mashup app? Shazam + Diff! We know the song, we know the arrangement and recording, we know the singer. Diff the lyrics, and show who monkeyed with the Lyrics.

  16. Re:most of the PAY warez sites seems to seen scams on RIAA, MPAA Recruit MasterCard As Internet Police · · Score: 1

    Interesting...perhaps there's a field of anthropological economics, or economic anthropology, that needs a TED talk and an RSAnimate session. That's a whole area of human interaction that needs a more scientific understanding of how and why we work, rather than the handed-down morality taboos that make up the bulk of the code in our OS.

  17. Re:Spain beats with a fascist heart on Spanish Congress Rejects Internet Censorship Law · · Score: 1

    THAT is chilling. Perhaps WikiLeaks could not have waited any longer, as this small building block of ACTA may have been rushed a little, causing it to fail. There should be an echo effect against Canada's Bil C-32, which holds TPMs as the trump card over top of every other "gimme" spun by the PR machine pushing for it's passing. Enough of these documents come out and get examined by lot of smart people with access to pattern recognition techniques and some simple cause & effect logic, and the Illuminati may be revealed!

  18. Re:Heinlein springs to mind on ITC Investigates Xbox 360 After Motorola Complaint · · Score: 1

    Holy Crap! I thought I KNEW my Heinlein! I swear I heard that on Jesse Brown's SearchEngine podcast in the last week or so.

  19. Re:Patents are terrible for the little guy on ITC Investigates Xbox 360 After Motorola Complaint · · Score: 1

    You've pointed out a real problem with the obsolescence of both monetary systems and the rules that govern them, as well as the legal system that is used to achieve balance. This is a bit like Galileo and the Roman Inquisition; "Never mind about he proofs and that mumbo-jmbo we don;t understand! We're the power, and you'll do as we say! Or Else!" The hamstringing of real creativity is the business constraints. I have no idea what could make the paradigm shift here, but clearly with the large number of variable in flux, the conservatism inherent in current economics and legislation is woefully wasteful.