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User: ackthpt

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  1. Re:Playing God on Scientists Take Step Toward Creating Artificial Embryos (reuters.com) · · Score: 0

    A number of sci-fi writers have already explored the topic of us creating something which provides the perfect breeding ground for the kinds of diseases which would wipe us out. I believe there's merit in considering these possibilities. We don't yet have enough data to determine if GMO crops are going to produce some new vile bug which would prove disastrous, however findings now state that advances against pests and organisms (fungal, viral or bacterial) only beat the organism for a few years, before they adapt (clever little buggers) and start over from square one. What do we do if we create a host for a super bug? Not like we can modify our own DNA every few years to keep ahead of the game.

  2. Re: You'd be raided too on Alleged Bitcoin Creator Raided By Australian Authorities (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah! They're not America!

    In America you're supposed to be protected from this approach "We'll look around and then use what we find to prosecute you for something, whatever seems to fit." Though the media, interwebs and presidential candidates will destroy you at will, simply because they can.

  3. Re:You'd be raided too on Alleged Bitcoin Creator Raided By Australian Authorities (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Supposedly unrelated. He was already having tax problems before the story broke...at least, that's what the authorities are saying.

    What? They don't take Bitcoin payments at the revenue office?

  4. Win-10 Nag included in the deal? on Microsoft Kills Many Critical Flaws, Some 0-Days, Un-Trusts One Wildcard Cert · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I have Windows Update on a pure as-needed basis and glad I do after hearing about the supremely unethical 'Hey! Upgrade to Windows 10! Hey!' nag that came in some updates.

    On another front a friend was having trouble with his boot drive and as we were shutting it down Windows jumped in to install a bunch of updates - that finished corrupting the boot drive and many, many hours were dedicated to recovery and repair.

    I'll give these patches a look but want no shady behavior out of the Redmond Mob.

  5. Re:Happy the game is in still Development... on NetHack 3.6.0 Released After a 12-Year Wait (nethack.org) · · Score: 1

    Happy the game is in still Development.... I really thought all work stopped completely and 3.4.3 was going to be the last version ever made by the Dev Team.

    I'd still fire up the old version and play it. So many happy memories. I also was lucky enough to enjoy the color versions of NetHack, Larn and Moria on the Amiga.

  6. Re:I smell a wumpus on NetHack 3.6.0 Released After a 12-Year Wait (nethack.org) · · Score: 1

    Good thing I have my quiver of crooked arrows.

    I've had a Scroll labeled FOOBIE BLETCH, waiting for this day.

  7. Re:has the lawyer knocking yet? on NetHack 3.6.0 Released After a 12-Year Wait (nethack.org) · · Score: 2

    As Terry's daughter is overseeing his properties I expect she won't go all Rowling-Warner on something like this.

  8. Re:I see what they dug there on Jewels From an Ethiopian Grave Reveal 2,000-Year-Old Link To Rome · · Score: 1

    A shed-load of grave robbing is a shed-load of grave robbing, damned for an ounce or a shed-load. Amazing what passes for science now.

    I happen to know where there's a grave with a Ferrari in it, can I get the car in the name of Science?

  9. Re:Why it did not go further on Broken Beer Bottle Battle In Debate Over Merits of Android Over iPhone · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wait until they find the body of the Windows Phone fanboy.

  10. Re:I'm sorry on Microsoft's New Windows Monetization Methods Could Mean 'Subscriptions' · · Score: 1

    People are herd animals. If they think the best or most hip way is in a massively stupid direction they'll embrace it. Why pay $4.00 for a cup of coffee, right? And yet, millions do.

  11. Re:I bet Infosys and Tata are dancing in the stree on Obama's Immigration Order To Give Tech Industry Some, Leave 'Em Wanting More · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously - the two biggest (ab)users of the H1B system are Tata and Infosys... and they're both Indian corporations.

    {rant}I guess in fairness to Obama, he managed to screw both blue and white-collar workers in one fell swoop...{/rant}

    Anyone know the lobbyist money trail for this bit of it, or can I safely guess Microsoft, Apple, Google, Intel, etc... ?

    Hard time following this. The potential 4.7 million people contribute billions to the economy and without them we'd tank again. I heard the same screwing the american worker and milking entitlements myths repeatedly. It puts me in mind of what one commentator once referred to as "Factoids", arguments which have no truth at all, but people repeat over and over in hopes they will become true. Well, some of that is working, because some people are believing these tales as truths and would happily cut their own throats (mustard and onion extra) to act on these fantasies.

    Tech, agriculture, service industries, foot services, etc. all benefit from the well behaved illegals. And we, the people who buy goods or services from these people benefit, as well. It's a mystery to me that so much untruth is accepted these days. I figure it began with Rush Limbaugh and is now carried out by hundreds of others since, who wind up people for profit. Nothing seems to sell like telling people what they need to fear and whom they need to loath.

  12. Re:Azure is blue, ain't it? on Microsoft Azure Outage Across the Globe · · Score: 1

    Global BSOD!

    Happy little Blue Cloud of Death

  13. Anthill Inside on Steve Ballmer Authored the Windows 3.1 Ctrl-Alt-Del Screen · · Score: 4, Funny

    +++OUT OF CHEESE ERROR+++

  14. Re:It was pretty cool in its day on The Almost Forgotten Story of the Amiga 2000 · · Score: 1

    I still like mine. It's got some cool stuff on it, available on no other platform and one of the biggest pluses is I don't go on the internet with it, so that distraction and annoyance isn't an issue. :)

  15. Re:Prior Art Exists. on Zazzle.com Thinks Depictions of Pi Are Protected Intellectual Property · · Score: 1

    Actually, the greeks invented the symbol being held as IP.

    Well, the Greek alphabet is based on the Phoenecian alphabet, so possibly even older than that.

    Nearly as old as Beer?!? That's awesome.

  16. Re:Prior Art Exists. on Zazzle.com Thinks Depictions of Pi Are Protected Intellectual Property · · Score: 2

    No, No: somebody should do a little research on this Ingrisano character and let him know that we know where his kids go to school and the route his wife takes to work (if no wife or kids, mom and dad would do, too).

    Then smile.

    Scum like this deserve no better

    From the pictures you can find I dunno if he's likely to have a wife or kids...

  17. Re:Prior Art Exists. on Zazzle.com Thinks Depictions of Pi Are Protected Intellectual Property · · Score: 3, Funny

    Paul desperately needs to be kicked into a large, deep pit while someone shouts, "This is Sparta" or suchlike.

  18. Re:Prior Art Exists. on Zazzle.com Thinks Depictions of Pi Are Protected Intellectual Property · · Score: 1

    Greeks invented the Pi character, it's in their alpha bet and much older than Paul the Trademark Troll.

  19. Re:How does one determine the difference... on In First American TV Interview, Snowden Talks Accountability and Patriotism · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't be much of a problem here. Snowden's already shown all the cards the NSA didn't want anyone to see.

  20. Re:Oblig frosty on US To Charge Chinese Military Employees With Hacking · · Score: 1

    I'm more disposed to this particular view...

    You put your secrets on computers which are exposed to the internet? STUPID!

    I can't blame the Chinese or the Russians or some school kid in Vallejo, California, for prying in and having a look around, if companies are so damn stupid about erecting barriers between Trade Secrets hosting systems and an outside world. How about building an intranet, encrypting resources, creating VPNs which require a key, employing something like Kerberos to verify some user on a workstation should have access?

    All down to laziness and paying the executives too much for their massive blind spots.

  21. Re:Save your breath. on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Tell a Compelling Story About IT Infrastructure? · · Score: 1

    I usually start by telling where I've buried the bodies.

  22. Re:Avast! on UK ISPs To Send Non-Threatening Letters To Pirates · · Score: 2

    Nope. Your not cynical enough.
    Did you not catch the part "alerting users to legal alternatives"

    This will be a whole new stream of advertising revenue for the ISPs.

    I .. I suddenly have the urge to buy all the soundtrack music played over the tannoy at Tesco.

  23. Re:lesson to be learnt on Court: Oracle Entitled To Copyright Protection Over Some Parts of Java · · Score: 1

    There is a lesson to be learnt here: Never depend on programming language, which is not under appropriate free license.

    Apache Foundation, do you hear me?

    Once the ballyhoo and excitement at the birth of a new language have subsided it is quickly supplanted by the motherly urge to control and protect.

  24. Re:Avast! on UK ISPs To Send Non-Threatening Letters To Pirates · · Score: 4, Funny

    More like...

    Dear Valued Customer,

    Please try not to be noticed, but do continue to use a lot of bandwidth to protect our revenue stream.

    There's a good chap.

    Cheerio,
    Your ISP

    PS If you do get noticed we, most regrettably, shall be forced into the position of writing a stern letter to your mum.

  25. Numbers do not reflect quality on Netcraft: Microsoft Closing In On Apache Web Server Lead · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I once lived in the heart of the US auto industry. Anonymous tin-box Chevy and Ford cars ruled the roads by shear numbers. Not many people remember these high volume cars, the Vega, Maverick, Nova, Fairlane, Granada, Chevette. And the Pinto is only well remembered due to an engineering oversight which made it a mobile crematorium.

    So Microsoft has higher numbers, yeah? So who is using these things? Quick and dirty websites or real e-commerce, media, commercial/industrial?

    Numbers alone aren't very meaningful.

    We demand, lies, damned lies and statistics