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User: benjonson

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Comments · 55

  1. facebook? on Facebook Will Introduce Ads As Videos Start Playing (recode.net) · · Score: 2

    slashdot users use facebook?

  2. Or,:

    "In 10 plus years, we are going to have a half-baked approach to what we thought was the future more than 10 years ago and now realize _was_ the future! Dang!!"

  3. Google and social skills on Google Replaces Gchat With Hangouts Today (axios.com) · · Score: 1

    Look at Google's hiring criteria. Gee, They don't do well with social media? But the IQs are enormous! Hire based on social skills if you want to do social media.

  4. gone off script, picking out its own targets for analysis -- precisely as planned

    If that was planned, then by definition it's not off script. If a music score says "imrovise" or a sc-fi script says "// technobabble here" then that's what was planned.

    It is worse than that. If a music script says "improvise", or a sci-fi script says "technobabble", one can do anything, using creativity, deliberation, whatever and however. All the rover is doing is operating according to pre-defined algorithms -- defined by the programmers. There is nothing "autonomous" about it.

  5. Re:convenient timing as usual from mr. diplomacy on CIA Tricked Antivirus Programs, Claims WikiLeaks (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    The CIA is a bigger threat to us than Russia is.

    Sure, right. Because Wikileaks has also given us equivalent info on Russian espionage.

    Wait, they haven't? What's going on here?

  6. Really, how much does a comma cost? The Oxford comma is not only the more simple rule, it is unambiguous.

    Now if you think about it, this could be an unnecessary comma for some folks, or in some situations where it is really not needed. But in information theory, redundancy is a plus--it avoids common errors. For example, in common English text, a period (or other end-marker like a question mark) ends a sentence, an extra space may follow, and a capital letter begins the new sentence. Three indicators that say -- OK, sentence ending, new one beginning. Very useful practically, because it reduces parsing time.

  7. Re:Can they now convict the U.S.? on Justice Department Charging Russian Spies and Criminal Hackers in Yahoo Intrusion (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    Since the U.S. hacks 1,000s of computers (both foreign governments and individuals), does this mean any other country can now pass laws against hacking and immediately convict the U.S. for criminal behavior?

    Why should they, if the U.S. does not?

    Or perhaps you confuse "indict" with "immediately convict"?

    Certainly if U.S. citizens, say employees of the CIA, engage in economic espionage of say, China's Baidu, why on earth wouldn't they file whatever legal claims they can? And I think they should.

  8. Elon is all out of ideas, begs 5th grader to do his job for him

    Yeah, what's it been? A month?

  9. let's open this up on Pentagon: Chinese Ship Captures US Underwater Drone Fom Sea (usatoday.com) · · Score: 2

    China -- were we spying on you with this tool? Show the world -- show us the software and hardware spy tools you have found.
    U.S. -- innocent drone? Show the world -- show us the software and hardware tools on our innocent drone-- certainly this should be transparent?

  10. Re:yes they should on Slashdot Asks: Should The US Abolish The Electoral College? · · Score: 1

    We live in a Republic, not a democracy. The Electoral College does serve a purpose, one that you disagree with, but it still serves a purpose. The GP outlines it very nicely and in unbiased terms.

    It did serve a purpose. A long time ago. Now it unnecessarily makes some citizen's votes more powerful than others.

  11. Re:Interesting timing on Someone Is Learning How To Take Down the Internet, Warns Bruce Schneier (schneier.com) · · Score: 1

    Exactly. Prepare for Vlad the Poisoner's October surprise.

  12. No market? on Apple's Secret Weapon To Win the Tablet Wars · · Score: 2

    Maybe there is no real tablet market. Only an Apple gadget market.

  13. Re:Gutenberg on Vatican Warns That Internet Promotes Satanism · · Score: 1

    Warning, the above tinyurl in the posters sig sends you to http://www.tkqlhce.com/ a site banned by the hosts file I get from http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ .

  14. Re:Doomsday Machine on Soviets Built a Doomsday Machine; It's Still Alive · · Score: 1
    Say what you will about nuclear weapons but they are probably the only reason that humanity hasn't fought World War III yet.

    But you wouldn't be writing about it if we had.

  15. ...will anyone take them seriously? on Microsoft Launches Its Own Open Source Foundation · · Score: 1

    nope.

  16. Re:Boring Story on Bing Search Tainted By Pro-Microsoft Results · · Score: 1
    The bing results has NO results about Windows OS on the first page.

    Looks like either MS is biasing the search, or the Bing search engine *really sucks*.

  17. Re:WINE on Sandia Studies Botnets In 1M OS Digital Petri Dish · · Score: 1
    I hope Microsoft issues a statement that only Genuine Windows software can fully support viruses and malware in an effective fashion.

    Actually, that is true. It is an undocumented feature.

  18. Re:I'm Linux... on He's a Mac, He's a PC, But We're Linux! · · Score: 1
    I imagine a little dwarf coming out and saying, "I'm Linux, do you guys know how to get my wireless card working? I'm having trouble printing. Why can't I play this damn DVD?"

    Actually, I think this would be far more useful (please do not mark this "funny"). Ef the marketing, let's get the engineering and UI working to take care of the marketing.

    Yes, you may shoot me now.

  19. Re:How can people expect... on Arctic Ice Extent Understated Because of "Sensor Drift" · · Score: 1
    All I'm saying is that most of the 'studies' I've seen floating around the press smell fishy to me. And unless that changes, I'm rather inclined to label this stuff as simple FUD.

    I think this is great to go by smell instead of science.

  20. wtf? on Politician Forces German Wikipedia Off the Net · · Score: 1

    Secret police types are opposed to open information? Next thing we'll be reading is that bunny's are cute.

  21. Viral at best on Biologist (Almost) Creates Artificial Life · · Score: 1

    Constructing something that can hijack some or all of a life form is no doubt impressive, but ultimately no more than a virus. And is that creating life? I certainly don't think so, any more than putting some robotic exo-skeleton on a soldier will be creating a human being.

  22. Re:Pledge on Microsoft's New Leaf On Interoperability · · Score: 1

    A pledge is when you cross your fingers behind your back.

  23. Re:TFA says it all on Microsoft's New Permissive License Meets Opposition · · Score: 1
    Other than the fact that the license was written by Microsoft, I don't see anything possibly controversial about it.


    Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?

  24. Re:Someone's lying here... on IBM Sued for Firing Alleged Internet Addict · · Score: 1
    This is not necessarily a bad thing


    I believe you have a bright future in corporate America.

  25. Re:How about we take the easy way out? on The Future of Packaging Software in Linux · · Score: 1
    ..and it must do all of this without telling me what it's doing, because I don't care what it does as long as the software then works.


    Because you don't care no one else should? In this and all cases of simplifying the UI, I suggest making an optional "Show Details" check box. Some of us like to understand what is being done with the software.