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User: mollymoo

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Comments · 1,947

  1. Re: uh, no on Does Code Reuse Endanger Secure Software Development? (threatpost.com) · · Score: 1

    The "if used correctly" bit is the problem. People aren't perfect. Even the really good, really experienced, really careful ones make mistakes. It's easier to avoid certain kinds of mistakes in other languages than in C. You can, of course, write perfect, secure code in C. You can do the same programming machine code using toggle switches too. It's just harder and takes more effort, which makes it more difficult to avoid mistakes.

  2. Re:UK power, then and now on UK 4G Coverage Worse Than In Romania and Peru, Watchdog Finds (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    If you want to troll you should at least try and say something remotely plausible to somebody who was ill-informed about the world, like saying it would be 9th. You get one mark for including a percentage to make it look like you had some actual data, and one mark just for showing up. 2/10. You need to work harder than that to make the Special Olympics, kid.

  3. EEA freedom of movement only applies to EEA nationals. Countries don't grant citizenship to asylum seekers, at least not until they've been there for quite some time. So, no, all the recently arrived Syrian refugees granted asylum in Germany are not allowed into the UK - unless they get a visa or citizenship of a EEA country.

  4. Re:Show me the data on Are Tesla Crashes Balanced Out By The Lives That They Save? (eetimes.com) · · Score: 1

    As elementary knowledge of the world and well reasoned argument still haven't clued you in to the fact that a $7bn value for a single human life is obviously completely ridiculous, here's a link to the EPA website. No doubt you will be the only one to be surprised to find that the figure is indeed $7 million. $7.4 million in 2006 dollars, to be precise.

  5. Re:Hey, the pirates can help on Master Engineer: Apple's "Mastered For iTunes" No Better Than AAC-Encoded Music · · Score: 1

    http://bleep.com/index.php?page=dynamic&module=downloadinfo

    You can get 24-bit wav for some, FLAC for all of them.

  6. Re:Strategy and Tactics on BigDog Robot Gets Much Bigger · · Score: 1

    I'd shoot the people. Each one of them you take down - and I bet they're easier to take down than a robot pony - is 200 lbs more the squad has to carry, reduces the carrying capacity by 100 lbs, reduces their firepower, costs the enemy more money and personnel, and damages morale a hell of a lot more than the loss of a robot.

  7. Re:Good luck getting the protestors to support tha on Some Critics Suggest Apple Boycott Over Chinese Working Conditions · · Score: 1

    > No, the stock price is relatively high because a relatively large number of shares have been purchased recently. Stock price has nothing to do with the company's profitability.

    The high demand for Apple's shares has absolutely nothing to do with their staggering profitability. Not at all. Totally unrelated. People would be willing to pay just as much for Apple shares if they were losing $13bn a quarter rather than making $13bn.

  8. Re:How does the $70 math work? on Some Critics Suggest Apple Boycott Over Chinese Working Conditions · · Score: 1

    The cost of the people who built the factory, made the parts, mined the raw materials, drove the trucks... There is a hell of lot of labour that happens before you get to the person who clips the screen into the case.

  9. Re:Money not necessarily 'wasted' on Apple Has Spent More Than $100 Million Suing Android Manufacturers · · Score: 0

    Yes trolling, yes FUD, no it did not happen. There was a distorted image, but the judgement was not made based on that image. You are factually incorrect and none of those links support your claim.

  10. Re:The best anonymouse proxy is an open wifi on Ask Slashdot: Choosing Anonymous Proxies? · · Score: 1

    I hope you're spoofing your MAC address. Not that it's very likely random open networks will keep the log for very long, if at all, but if you really care you'd want to be sure.

  11. Re:Disagree. on PS4: What Sony Should and Shouldn't Do · · Score: 1

    I'm evidently cleverer than you if you think the Wii could be, let alone is, capable of light-gun-like pointing without any real calibration (top or bottom is not enough) and without knowing the size of the TV.

  12. Re:Disagree. on PS4: What Sony Should and Shouldn't Do · · Score: 1

    I've tried all sorts of things. It just doesn't offer a light-gun-style aim-down-sights 1:1 mapping - which it could, approximately, with a little calibration. I know where something I am holding is actually pointing, so the Wii is horrible to use for FPS because it doesn't work the way you expect. Physically it appears to work one way - as a direct pointing device - but actually it's more like a mouse. A dirty, low DPI ball mouse. There is no calibration beyond saying it's above of below the TV. You can't even tell it how big your TV is so it just doesn't have enough information to know where on the screen the Wiimote is actually pointing.

  13. Re:Shouldn't Do Obviously on PS4: What Sony Should and Shouldn't Do · · Score: 2

    The PS3 does 3D already.

  14. Re:Disagree. on PS4: What Sony Should and Shouldn't Do · · Score: 0

    The Wii would be good for FPS if the fucking cursor actually pointed where the Wiimote is pointing and it had sufficient precision. Alas, neither of those things are true. It's just a big, clumsy, imprecise floating mouse. For FPS it's worse than an analogue stick, let alone a mouse.

  15. Re:Smokescreen on Crysis 2 Most Pirated Game of 2011 · · Score: 1

    Probably a tax dodge rather than a real indication of the cost. The store will buy it from a distributor which is another part of Best Buy, but is based in some tax-friendly territory quite possibly in another country. The distribution part makes all the real money and pays virtually no tax, the store part makes a token profit and pays normal corporate tax rates.

  16. Re:Wrong Solution on Crysis 2 Most Pirated Game of 2011 · · Score: 1

    The most draconian DRM is on the consoles and it's extremely effective. Piracy rates on consoles are minuscule compared to the PC. DRM on consoles is also non-intrusive and gives you more freedom to resell and lend your games. The future is DRM baked into the hardware. As PC makers shied away from TPM the solution is obvious, and is already happening - just sell your games on platforms built around DRM: consoles. Many developers have stopped investing much money in developing for PCs, hence the console ports. Some games already aren't released for the PC. Soon even more developers will just stop developing for PCs all together, which will make people who want to play games buy consoles and buy the games.

  17. Re:How many copies sold? on Crysis 2 Most Pirated Game of 2011 · · Score: 1

    EA own DICE but not Crytek, for whom they are just a publisher. I doubt there is that level of technology exchange between the two developers.

  18. Re:correlation on Crysis 2 Most Pirated Game of 2011 · · Score: 1

    Since I got back into PC gaming last year I haven't pirated anything (games or otherwise) and I have bought several AA/AAA titles. I even bought a legit copy of Windows (the first time I've done that in my life).

    The fact is, 15 years ago when installing Windows 95 and Quake 2 required nothing more than a keycode for full functionality I would never have considered paying for software and I never did pay for any. Why bother?

    Now though, DRM makes pirating more hassle than it's worth and digital download services make legit purchases quick, simple and often very cheap. Torrenting is more effort than hitting a few buttons on Steam. Legit copies don't have nearly as much hassle with patching, getting online play working, worrying about viruses and trojans etc.

  19. Re:Still need to wait for more figures... on Intel Medfield SoC Specs Leak · · Score: 1, Insightful

    x86 is a a huge, complex instruction set. All else being equal. implementing it costs more silicon and more power than ARM architectures. Intel's great engineers and unmatched process can make up for this somewhat, but it would be a good effort for them just to achieve parity with ARM. To do so they're likely going to need to stay one process step ahead of the competition, which has cost implications.

  20. Re:No, Google like diversity on Google and Mozilla: Partners, Not Competitors · · Score: 1

    People using Google search and Chrome aren't Google's customers, they are their product. Their real customers are advertisers.

    If Google decide not to have you on their search engine they can pretty much destroy your online business. If Google decided that everyone had to have some special tags or use some particular technology on their site to be listed or to get preferential listing, people would do it because Google are sufficiently powerful that people wouldn't really have a viable alternative. For example, Google could kill Flash by refusing to list sites with Flash or take advertising from sites with Flash. Flash would be gone from the web in a couple of months because the vast majority of sites couldn't survive without a Google listing. That power, power which comes from their dominant market share, is what makes them a monopoly.

  21. Re:Self-fulfilled research on Apple Increases Dominance of Mobile Shopping · · Score: 1

    The EU is not a country.

  22. Re:android market sale...? on Apple Increases Dominance of Mobile Shopping · · Score: 1

    > Not to mention that 3rd party browsers can report themselves as whatever the hell they want, while an iOS device has no option.

    An iOS _device_ has no option? Safari on iOS may not have an option to spoof the user agent but 3rd party iOS browsers do.

  23. Re:You still can't have your pudding... on Face-Scanning Vending Machine Denies Children Access To Pudding · · Score: 1

    People are handing out free samples of stuff all the time. We're not discussing them or the product they're giving away. We are discussing the machines dispensing Temptations by Jell-O.

    They have 1) got us talking about it and 2) reinforced the notion that this is a product for adults. I can absolutely believe they spent time, effort and money developing this machine; it's a brilliant machine because it sells the product without you even needing to be near the machine. I'm not even in the same fucking country and I now know about this product - all because of that machine.

  24. Re:Compression? on Average Web Page Approaches 1MB · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Persistent HTTP connections were tacked on to HTTP 1.0 years ago and are widely supported, but you still have the "can I have that bit now please?" overhead with the associated latency between retrieving each file on each connection. 100ms of latency multiplied by a dozen assets soon adds up. HTTP 1.1's pipelining means you can ask for many things at once so only suffer that hit once (or twice - page then assets), but in practice browser support for pipelining is poor.

  25. Re:TP on Do You Really Need a Smart Phone? · · Score: 1

    You're implying there aren't better ways to clean shit off your body than using paper, but there are. Actually washing it off is vastly superior. If you had shit on your face would you just wipe it off with toilet paper? No, you wash it off with soap and water because otherwise your face would smell of shit.