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User: itsme1234

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  1. Re:MathML is Retarding on A MathML Progress Report: More Light Than Shadow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While MathML can be used to describe stuff related directly to computation (like for example 1+2+3+...+n written with the big sigma symbol) more often is used for things that aren't computations and don't have a program equivalent (or at least not a useful one).

    Try to use a program to communicate some abstract theorem you just discovered.

  2. I like how they black taped ... on Atlanta Man Shatters Coast-to-Coast Driving Record, Averaging 98MPH · · Score: 1

    the stupid (probably blue) LEDs on the chargers.

  3. Re:Theories about science... on Cornell Team Says It's Unified the Structure of Scientific Theories · · Score: 1

    Thank you Sir,

    this is now on my top "to read" list once I manage to push away a little bit the usual clutter.

  4. Re:Good luck with that! on Fight Bicycle Theft With the Open Source Bike Registry · · Score: 1

    ... for who's paying attention: I meant IMEIs of course.

  5. Good luck with that! on Fight Bicycle Theft With the Open Source Bike Registry · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I was saying the same about IMSIs earlier ... we can't agree on what's the decimal separator, if today is 12/10 or 10/12, user1@gmail.com can't chat to user2@yahoo.com but somehow we'll get a reasonable percentage of the owners AND buyers to register in some specific database. Good luck with that.

    Not only that but it also assumes you can't tamper with the serial and doesn't address what happens if somebody starts to spam the DB.

  6. I remember ... on The Game Controllers That Shaped the Way We Play · · Score: 4, Funny

    when a friend was playing some adventure game and at some point he got stuck because he was looking for a "mouse" and for a "stick of joy". That is because one of the F-keys allowed him to select mouse for example and then it said "mouse not found".

  7. Re:Makes sense on Bill Gates Acknowledges Ctrl+Alt+Del Was a Mistake · · Score: 1

    Some of my friends knew quite well some particular Spectrum Z80 clone that had an (albeit recessed) reset button on the keyboard (well, the computer was inside the keyboard so to speak).

    Somewhere around windows 95 and all ping of death variations (valid for NT3-4 as well) we used to regret the lack of such key on PC keyboards. We were actually discussing how to include such key somewhere on the keyboard as cleanly as possible.

  8. Re:Nay, Google Play reviews Google+ on Can Internet Pseudonymity Be Saved? · · Score: 1

    I bet you wouldn't be so happy if you were looking for a job and the first 666 things that appear when somebody searches your not-so-common name are reviews of Angry birds spin-offs. Written on a phone in "SMS-English".

    And by the way Amazon does accept reviews under pseudonym.

  9. Re:Nay, Google Play reviews Google+ on Can Internet Pseudonymity Be Saved? · · Score: 1

    I don't understand how it solved the problem with fake reviews. I think you need a google account to even have google play working at all so if I'm going to write bogus reviews I can still make it a Google+ account and use whatever name, it isn't like they're checking.
    Google knows who you are if you're using an android phone (they DO know a lot about you, think, they have your location, your IPs both from inside and outside the network, your IMEI, IMSI, possibly your phone number, your address book, your email, even before you start giving them credit card no, pictures, documents, etc). It's not hard to weed out the non-users.

    The only problem they had was that nobody was using Google+. This is why they're pushing it to play store, youtube and who knows where else too.

  10. Nay, Google Play reviews Google+ on Can Internet Pseudonymity Be Saved? · · Score: 2

    Google killed a good part of "pseudonimity" with this crazy move to link your Google+ profile to your play/market reviews (even for just giving X stars without any comment).
    WTF? Ok, google knows a lot of stuff about me, where I am, it reads my email, some documents, knows a good chunk of what I browse, etc. WHATEVER. However, I just don't want to have a list of apps and apps rating associated with my name. It just feels wrong.

  11. Re:Color me suprised on Romanian Science In Freefall · · Score: 1

    You got it the wrong way, the MINIMUM wages are the ones that matter. If thousands would be the regular wage why would the state bother to say by law that you need to give at least hundreds?

  12. Color me suprised on Romanian Science In Freefall · · Score: 1

    Minimum wage of less than 200 EUR monthly (and even that is hard to get for young people), before tax , pension, etc (and that is recent, around Y2K 30-100$ wages were common, even for engineers), VAT at 24% and prices just a bit lower than the rest of the EU. That is wages 2-3 times lower than freakin' Turkey. For a EU country, with almost EU prices.

    And you can get thousands of Euros in the "normal" EU, plus all the other benefits that come from non-retarded country like medical care (I mean the actual services that really don't exist, even the head of state went to Austria for some minor intervention).

    Even the freaking gypsies are leaving the country. Science? Forget it.

  13. Re:Who else should comment on your games? on Biggest Headache For Game Developers: Abusive Fans · · Score: 1

    We are talking about millions of customers. Because of the numbers involved I'm sure that includes beside people who are well ... dead by now also people that pee on themselves, people who have both AIDS and cancer and (gasp) people who leave in a fantasy world that involves running around killing as many people as possible.

    Sure, bad mouthing on a forum, sucks. Death threats, sucks much more. But in the end that's it, do your best to prepare for the worst, hope for the best and life goes on (until it doesn't).

  14. Re:Totally the fault of the USA on Criminals Use 3D-Printed Skimming Devices On Sydney ATMs · · Score: 1

    This would be a nice idea, if I manage to do it cleanly. (I still want to pay with the card at the stores, in fact I'll be using the card that way mostly).
    I wouldn't be able to do it cleanly probably but I'm sure it is possible.

  15. Who else should comment on your games? on Biggest Headache For Game Developers: Abusive Fans · · Score: -1

    Your mom, who never played them? I strongly suspect this is just a case of content creators expecting the "content consumers" to have an attention span of under 30s, similarly to what happens with "Lost" or "Star Trek" fans bashing the product for not being consistent with itself.

    Just shut up and buy, damn it!

  16. Re:Totally the fault of the USA on Criminals Use 3D-Printed Skimming Devices On Sydney ATMs · · Score: 1

    The thing is fraud is just not making a dent in their finances to bother. Even with mag stripe the PIN is checked in real time with your bank for any non-trivial transaction, you could have any type of one-time-pass device for ATM transactions (or for purchases over let's say $100 or similar): paper, SMS, token, smartphone offline app, etc. You could have two cards, one without mag stripe. But no, that's just not possible. Even getting one card but without the mag stripe is not possible. I've been thinking to just go ahead and wipe with a magnet the stripe on one of my cards just to be on the safe side. Any experience/tips? I assume just using a strong magnet a couple of times on the stripe would do.

  17. just have police do their thing! on It's Time To Start Taking Stolen Phones Seriously · · Score: 2

    We all know there is no security without physical security.
    But let's forget about that for a second.
    Even if you make it ueber-secure (not like today when in many Samsung devices the IMEI is actually in some obfuscated file in the efs partition!) and you really manage to bound each device to an IMEI you still have the challange of managing the blacklist/"nuke from the orbit" authorization list.

    It costs 5-10-15EUR to send a box full with phones across Europe, and no customs at all if it's within EU.
    You need to have (at least) EU-wide database. How do you manage that? What recourse you have if you bought your phone in Germany, you leave in Belgium and it gets blacklisted by an operator in Bulgaria based on some typo from a dodgy police station in village? How can you argue that (hint: they don't even use the latin alphabet in Bulgaria)?

    We had enough of this country-coded DVDs and network locked phone and all the crap. Any more of this and will give (another) unfair advantage to your operator: the only safe phones will be the ones bought directly, they know for sure it's legit. Anything else is a risk.

    The real way out here is just to have police go after the thieves. Even the older phones could be tracked well enough and with some social engineering (if you had access to the list of calls) you could find out who has the phone without any GPS or camera and whatnot. However, they just don't bother even if you give them the position of the phone within meters, inside a single-house and a picture of the user.

  18. Re:Why not block by IMEI -what the rest of world d on It's Time To Start Taking Stolen Phones Seriously · · Score: 1

    You are correct, except for the fact that carrier locks are country based. They are not (I think they are bound to MCC+MNC of the IMSI), in fact this is how most people learn their phone is locked, they go abroad and try a local prepaid SIM.

  19. Re:I always thought illness killed people on Surgeries On Friday Are More Frequently Fatal · · Score: 1

    Maybe they injure themselves worse on the weekend?

  20. Re:Give up on Real World Stats Show Chromebooks Are Struggling · · Score: 1

    Sure, first reader is 119.99$ and the second one 250 EUR, yay for people with more money than sense!

    Of course if you pay enough somebody will make you some adapter to shove data into the iPhone despite iPhone's lack of connectivity (not only over wifi but there are some adapters that use the microphone analog input to send data to the iphone!). All that because of SPP Apple refuses to implement, even if it's present basically everywhere else since more than 10 years ago (yes, that includes mobile OSes like Windows Mobile 2003, symbian, etc).

  21. Re:Give up on Real World Stats Show Chromebooks Are Struggling · · Score: 1

    I think the program GP has in mind is Torque (that can read OBD 2 data and do many other things).
    iphone lacks the serial port profile for bluetooth so it's quite a sure bet it can't do that.

  22. Re:They x-rayed my burrito on TSA Log Shows Passengers Say the Darndest Things · · Score: 1

    x-ray the burrito seems to be the correct answer (no joke).

    As a side-note I've seen at some point a sign saying "no food" before the screening area. I was a bit amused; however later on a half eaten sandwich comes in one of the boxes where you are supposed to put your watch or belt to be X-Rayed ....

  23. Re:Welcome on Stolen Cellphone Databases Switched On In US · · Score: 1

    Not EU, UK maybe.

  24. Re:No market on Mozilla OS Looking Grown Up On Its Own Developer Phone · · Score: 1

    Oops!

    There was a problem starting Bananabread. Please see the Troubleshooting section below for more information.

    Technical Details: WebGL is missing.
    =======
    That much about web based apps that just work.
    Wiki says:
    "Mozilla Firefox - WebGL has been enabled on all platforms that have a capable graphics card with updated drivers since version 4.0"

    Last firefox, ati 5770, what the heck?

  25. He should be very happy ... on Twitter Jokes: Free Speech On Trial · · Score: 1

    ...that they didn't shot him 7 times in the head:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Jean_Charles_de_Menezes