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User: dffuller

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Comments · 68

  1. Embrace, Extend, Extinguish on Microsoft and GitHub Team Up To Take Git Virtual File System To MacOS, Linux (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 0, Troll

    Business as usual.

  2. Re:Quality doesn't matter when it's disposable any on iPhones Are Priced 'High in the Extreme' But They're Worth It, Says Apple Co-founder Wozniak (scmp.com) · · Score: 1

    No, they're just continuously improving on it.

  3. Re:Jabba... on New Research Shows Humans Could Outrun T. Rex · · Score: 1

    So, survival of the fittest?

  4. Re:SCOTUS overturns 9th Circuit a lot on US Appeals Court Upholds Nondisclosure Rules For Surveillance Orders (reuters.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    THE 9th is the most often overturned appeals court of any, so maybe there is hope for a Supreme Court overrule.

    They are 3rd on the list of most frequently overturned decisions, not first. Please do a little fact checking before you post.

    Source: http://www.politifact.com/pund...

  5. Re:Print quality has gone downhill on O'Reilly No Longer Selling Individual Books, Videos Online · · Score: 1

    I'm curious, who do you consider to be way better these days? I'm certainly willing to try somebody else.

  6. Re:Safari has books now? on O'Reilly No Longer Selling Individual Books, Videos Online · · Score: 1

    They had the name first.
    Web Browser: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    Online Books: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

  7. Re:Non-Compete Deal should be full pay and full be on Amazon Sues Former AWS VP Over Non-Compete Deal (geekwire.com) · · Score: 1

    I already tired of the winning.

  8. Its the NSA chiefs jobs to talk to foreign leaders and representatives and normal during the transition.

    The National Security Advisor does not lead the NSA.

  9. Re:Twitter is a PRIVATE company. on Slashdot Asks: Is Trump's Blocking of Some Twitter Users Unconstitutional? (usatoday.com) · · Score: 2

    ABC is a private company. Does that mean that opposing party response to presidential speeches is no longer required?

  10. Except that the White House just said that those are official statements.

  11. Re:how far down does land ownership go? on Elon Musk Is Really Boring (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Why do they loose them down the sinkholes? Is this an effort to fill them?

  12. Re:I question the list on Nearly 56,000 Bridges Called Structurally Deficient (usatoday.com) · · Score: 1

    There's no reason a recently completed bridge can't be Structurally Deficient. It shouldn't be, but poor construction could lead to it being classified as such.

  13. Re:Structurally Deficient on Nearly 56,000 Bridges Called Structurally Deficient (usatoday.com) · · Score: 1

    Structurally Deficient in the context of the National Bridge Inventory (NBI), which this report is based on, is well-defined federally, not by states. It means that the bridge is rated 4 or less for its Deck, Superstructure, or Substructure (or if a culvert, Culvert rating is 4 or less) or if its Structural Evaluation or Waterway Adequacy is 2 or less. The structural evaluation is generally just the lower of the Deck, Superstructure and Substructure ratings (or culvert rating), with some guidance involving average daily traffic and Inventory Rating.

    TLDR: Feds define criteria for SD, not states.

  14. Re:propaganda headline on Nearly 56,000 Bridges Called Structurally Deficient (usatoday.com) · · Score: 1

    Actually, I'm fairly familiar with the data here. Structurally Deficient in essence means a bridge that is in poor condition in either it's deck, superstructure or substructure. Bridges that do not meet current standards (e.g., not being wide enough for the number of lanes they carry) are called Functionally Obsolete. The National Bridge Inventory (NBI) system allows states only 3 categories: 1) Structurally Deficient, 2) Functionally Obsolete or 0) Neither. Bridges that are both Functionally Obsolete and Structurally Deficient are coded as 1) Structurally Deficient.

    I'm not sure why the group decided to confound SD and FO bridges when there really wasn't any reason too, unless they were ignorant of or confused by FHWA's system or they were trying to make the problem seem worse than it actually is. Advocate groups will advocate, after all.

  15. Re:Subsidize via Taxes on Should College Tuition Vary By Major, Based On the College's Costs For the Major? (qz.com) · · Score: 1

    But we're not talking about taxes here, we're talking about tuition. Your argument may make somewhat more sense at a public school, but doesn't really work when looking at private schools.

  16. Re:What's wrong with Android uniformity? on With Cyanogen Dead, Google's Control Over Android Is Tighter Than Ever (greenbot.com) · · Score: 1

    %s/SPQR/Amazon/g

    There, FIFY.

  17. Re:Reality does not have a rest button son. on FCC Chairman: a Former Cable Lobbyist Who Helped Kill the Comcast Merger · · Score: 1

    Well there was widespread deregulation of financial markets that made for the great recession

    You do realize that the biggest deregulation of the financial markets occurred on Clinton's watch, right? Glass-Steagall ring a bell?

  18. Re:RT.com? on Cuba Calculates Cost of 54yr US Embargo At $1.1 Trillion · · Score: 1

    It's not from Ben Franklin.

  19. Name five. Also, outgunned isn't merely being opposed with a weapon with higher killing potential. The police can quickly assemble overwhelming "mass" (something on the order of SUM(count(i)*weapon(i).killing_potential), even with less capable weapons.

  20. Re:Mmhmm on High Frequency Trading and Finance's Race To Irrelevance · · Score: 1

    by volume about half the trading is done by the large long term funds or corporations buying their own stock. the other half by hedge funds.

    Simply false. If half of trading was done by large long term funds or was for buybacks, we would see two things: 1) tremendous turnover in ownership of stocks on an annual basis and 2) disappearing of stocks from the market because they were all brought back into the companies' holdings. Neither of these are true, so something else must be true.

  21. Re:Missed the obvious on I Want a Kindle Killer · · Score: 1

    I'm curious about the use case for this. Doesn't printing out stuff miss the entire point of having an e-reader?

  22. Re:K. S. Kyosuke gets called out & ran on US Navy Wants Smart Robots With Morals, Ethics · · Score: 2

    APK, you are a fucking psycho. Enough with the stalking, already. And no, I'm not K.S. Kyosuke, nor do I have anything to do with him.

  23. Re:Activist investors on Stanford Getting Rid of $18 Billion Endowment of Coal Stock · · Score: 1

    To put it another way: the value of coal stock is a feature of the value of coal.

    False. If this were true, every coal stock would have the same PE ratio and would pay the same (relative) dividend. They don't. Think about this. Also, decreasing demand (which would happen if there are fewer bidders) will (generally) result in lower prices.

  24. Re:Dead reckoning technology is very old on Dead Reckoning For Your Car Eliminates GPS Dead Zones · · Score: 1

    Dead reckoning technology is actually very old. It has been used to guide missiles, submarines, and of course cars for decades even before the GPS was invented.

    Dead reckoning was very old before it was used for any of those things. Like 700-800 years old. Before the first of those things.

  25. Re:Sorry, but not here on Prison Is For Dangerous Criminals, Not Hacktivists · · Score: 1

    But our lack of focus on rehabilitation, the fact that somewhere around 80% of Americans are now near or below poverty guideline according to recent reports coming out now, suggests that the major motivator of criminal activity today is desperation.

    I keep seeing this number thrown out. I live in one of the poorest states in the country (Arkansas) and I don't see but one or two people in my area who could honestly described as impoverished. I think someone has cooked up a new definition of poverty to fit their agenda.