Slashdot Mirror


User: nekid_singularity

nekid_singularity's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
155
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 155

  1. Re:Attention Span on Why Can't LEGO Click? · · Score: 1

    Man, a father at 18. I don't think I will be mature enough at 30!

  2. Re:Test, IGNORE on Covad Files For Bankruptcy Protection · · Score: 1

    please ignore

  3. Re:Test, IGNORE on Covad Files For Bankruptcy Protection · · Score: 1

    hrshgfdhdfgh

  4. Test, IGNORE on Covad Files For Bankruptcy Protection · · Score: 1

    just testing to see if my sig is right

  5. Re:Because MS Bugs == Planned Obsolescence on Windows in 2020 · · Score: 1

    Actually, MS's let's you legaly put a OS on two computers, namely a desktop and a laptop. Even XP is going to let you do this!

  6. Re:Sad state of affairs on Double-Whammy Look At The Pentium 4 · · Score: 1

    Yes, and a review I read showed it to have the performance of a 100MHz Pentium!

  7. Re:Uh-oh on The Joys of School And "Website Protection" · · Score: 1

    I did that to a freind of mine at college. He forgot to log out and so I wanted to really teach him a lesson. Problem was he didn't know how to change it back! But he never forgot to log out again.

  8. Re:God does not play dice. on Resolution Of The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle · · Score: 3

    I know that you are a pathetic troll, but I feel I should list the proof that Einstein's theory's have: The tiny precession in Mecurys orbit was explained perfectly by Special Relativity, the Gravitational lensing effect it predicted was observed, the time dilation has been proven in at least two ways, one that subatomic particles that should decay extremely rapidly when at rest last a lot longer when moving at close to the speed of light, and atomic clocks put on planes that rack up a great deal of miles run slow by exactley the amount einstien predicted. Finally, binary neutron stars slow down at a rate that is predicted by relativity from the energy loss of gravitational waves. The measured rate matches what the "dumb Jew" predicted to TWELVE or so decimal places. Its one of the single most succsessful theories in all Physics.

  9. Re:Super efficient insulators? on Perv-y Material Heralds Move From Silicon · · Score: 1

    They are not referring to a THERMAL insulator, they are referring to an ELECTRIC insulator! The former is a poor conductor of HEAT, the latter is a poor conductor of ELECTRICITY.

  10. Re:It's not really the pricing anymore on Intel To Drop Rambus Exclusivity, Support SDRAM · · Score: 1

    The real question is "Will Intel build a dual channel DDR motherboard?". nVidia's upcomming nForce will have a dual channel DDR design, enabling peak bandwidth much greater than RDRAM, i.e. about 4.2GB/s with 133MHz DDRRAM, compared to Rambuses 3.2 or so.

  11. Re:Minutes into? How many minutes? on Fleeing Jurassic Park III · · Score: 1

    I liked his review of Final Fantasy. He knew the plot sucked, but didn't care because it was the equivilent of the first talkies or the first 3D movies, i.e. significant because they are the first to introduce a major technological breakthrough.

  12. Re:I thought everybody knew.. on Amelia Earhart Mystery Solved? · · Score: 1

    "The 'cost to advertiser' is the amount a GoTo advertiser chooses to pay each time a customer clicks that advertiser's listing in our search results.

  13. Re:Bernoulli's principle on Solving the Great Shower Curtain Mystery · · Score: 1

    What always confused me about B's law was the fact that "symmetric airfoils" can still create lift, which is essentilly a complete contradiction of the usual explanation because it hinges on the asymmetry of the airfoil.

  14. Re:Well, ALL lossy formats are inferrior to PCM. on Lossy Music Formats Compared · · Score: 1

    Also, if your proccessor can decrompress the data faster than it can be read from the hard drive, you effectively increase file transfer rates.

  15. I thought everybody knew.. on Amelia Earhart Mystery Solved? · · Score: 1

    that AE was abducted by aliens and put in suspended animation until the Federation Starship Voyager discovered her.

  16. Re:Only a geek on What Does Your Command Prompt Look Like? · · Score: 1

    I once saw one that said "I have no command prompt, and I must type>"

  17. Re:Flammable Materials on Water Guns · · Score: 1

    A much better way to get rid of a hornet's nest is to get a insect fogger and tape it to a stick. Start the fogger, jamb it into the nest, and enjoy a rain of dead hornet's! Works great for two story houses.

  18. Re:Oops... on The Psychology of Passwords · · Score: 1

    Don't feel so bad, I thought the same thing! I also thought that FUD stood for fucked-up disinformation.

  19. Re:No regrets here on Seagate Claims New Drive Silent and Fastest · · Score: 1

    If the data was that important why didn't you just use a data recovery company?

  20. Re:The problem with Intel on Can SSE-2 Save the Pentium 4? · · Score: 1

    Intel wants AMD around because it gives some credibility when they say they are not a monopoly. Say AMD went out of buisiness tomarrow, that means Intel would be the only source for high-performence x86 chips, and the government wouldn't like that.

  21. Re:Reversibility and Thermodynamics on The Ultimate Limits Of Computers · · Score: 1

    That brilliant bastard Stephen Baxter used this in his novel Manifold:Time. Far, far, far future (10^120+ years) intelligences use reversible computers to think without using energy, but the catch was that you could not interact with the universe in any way or else you would use energy. Thus the inteligences were trapped in a "lossless substrate", doomed to repeat the same 10^(10^123) finite machine states for all eternity.

  22. Re:Knowledge is unlimited on The Ultimate Limits Of Computers · · Score: 1

    "powerset of the cardinality of the number of..." What does that mean? I have read that the number of electrons in the universe is estimated to be 10^80 or so, and that if the universe were to be stuffed full of electrons like neutrons in a neutron star, the number would be 10^50,000.

  23. Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: on Experiment Shows Neutrinos Have Mass · · Score: 1

    Photons DO NOT have mass!

  24. Re:$15 apples, too. on Signs of the Apocalypse · · Score: 1

    Shit, I saw them being individualy exercised and the handlers spitting wine on the damn things. Last I heard, beef costs $15 a pound in Japan.

  25. Re:sigh, *cough* on Internet-Ready Car · · Score: 1

    He is only missing the word "it", and since the subject of the sentence is the same as the subject of the previous sentence, it doesn't seem to matter much because an intelligent reader would realize that.