Slashdot Mirror


User: lee1

lee1's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
318
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 318

  1. Re:Good on Google Is Planning To Penalize Overly Optimized Sites · · Score: 1

    Can you provide some insight into how an utterly crude attempt to spam Google works so spectacularly, after all these years of tuning your algorithms to detect just this kind of thing?

  2. Re:Good on Google Is Planning To Penalize Overly Optimized Sites · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suspect Google doesn't actually want all the spam sites to vanish from their results, because they profit from them: these sites are designed to entice you to click on ads, which leads to revenue for Google. I feel that the ease with which crude spam pages can still rise to the top of the search results is some evidence for this. The old (pre-IPO) Google would of course know that this is not a good long-term stragegy. Today's Google? It wouldn't surprise me.

  3. Another way to make search results less useful on James Whittaker: Focus on Ads and 'Social' Destroying Google · · Score: 2

    My problem with Google's attempt to be "social" its that it makes their already spam-infested search results even worse, and it's difficult to opt-out. With all the effort that they claim to expend in fighting spam, why is it still so easy to game their system?

  4. Re:Considering how often Adderall is abused... on Aderall Or Nothing: Anatomy of the Great Amphetamine Drought · · Score: 1

    so many top level mathematicians use amphetamines

    Do you have a reference for that? I know about Erdos [spelled wrong because Slashdot can not handle Unicode and I'm too lazy (no speed) to see if there is an HTML entity for what should be here], because I read his biography My Brain is Open: he could not do mathematics without speed. But I'd not heard that it was a widespread phenomenon.

  5. Re:Considering how often Adderall is abused... on Aderall Or Nothing: Anatomy of the Great Amphetamine Drought · · Score: 1

    you give it to them. If their symptoms go away they need it, else they don't

    In fact, it is just this flawed methodology that created the false idea in the minds of researchers that speed was actually helping these children. This false idea is what has led to the current massive overprescription and probable consequent harm to millions of patients.

  6. Re:"Don't Be Evil" in action, I guess... on Indian Court Orders Google To Remove Content · · Score: 1

    But when they enthusiastically appease other, extra-legal demands for censorship they sometimes censor results worldwide, including those served to the US. Did you know that when you search on Google or YouTube that the results returned by Google are partly determined by the preferences of various Islamic pressure groups and foreign governments, including Pakistan?

  7. Re:So much for... on Google Begins Country-Specific Blog Censorship · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Google censors results in the US in response to political pressure, and lies about it. No laws involved at all.

  8. Still easy to spam Google on Google Updates Algorithm To Punish Websites With Excessive Ads · · Score: 1

    But it still seems to be trivial to spam the heck out of Google.

  9. Charged gas? on Sunspot Tosses Plasma Cloud Toward Earth · · Score: 2

    A solar physics expert will please correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe CMEs are made of neutral plasma. I don't know where the original article got the " charged gas" description. They are magnetized, like the solar wind, which is why they interact with the earth's magnetic field

  10. Re:Django on Ask Slashdot: Which Web Platform Would You Use? · · Score: 1

    But any decent editor lets you indent or unindent blocks as a whole, so it not really a problem. Especially because Python does not enforce a particular indentation, as long as you are consistent within blocks. You'd be fixing the indentation after refactoring in C, too; there's no more work in Python.

  11. Re:Django on Ask Slashdot: Which Web Platform Would You Use? · · Score: 2

    I guess that you know this, but for others reading: you need not use Django's template language, or any template language, to use Django. In fact, Python's string interpolation is so convenient that you can use that instead of a special-purpose template language.

  12. Re:wmii on Ask Slashdot: Assembling a Linux Desktop Environment From Parts? · · Score: 1

    They give me the source to some of the most useful (and beautiful) software on my machine, stuff that I use every day. And they ask nothing whatever in return. Even their website is handsome and has no advertising. And they have a sense of humor, that you seem to have trouble appreciating. It is a good thing.

  13. Re:wmii on Ask Slashdot: Assembling a Linux Desktop Environment From Parts? · · Score: 1

    Actually, I use some contributed patches and changed the header file myself a bit. But I don't seem to need to do any maintenance on these. On the very rare occasion that I install a new version, there doesn't seem to be a problem in applying the patches. But I can see where it might be. Also, I think that changing the source to configure is cool. As they say on their webpage, "Because dwm is customized through editing its source code, itâ(TM)s pointless to make binary packages of it. This keeps its userbase small and elitist. No novices asking stupid questions."

  14. Re:wmii on Ask Slashdot: Assembling a Linux Desktop Environment From Parts? · · Score: 1

    How come I use dwm but don't need to "maintain custom patches"?

  15. Re:It's Not ALL Bloggers on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    When I said that "the government is not punishing her for speech" I meant speech in the general sense in which it is commonly used in discussions about the 1st amendment, not just vocalizations. Sorry if that wasn't obvious. I was replying to "The blogger was stripped of her right to freedom of the press" and to another claim that she was stripped of a "constitutional right." I'm still wondering why anyone thinks these things, especially as the government did not punish her in any way for any form of expression.

  16. Re:It's Not ALL Bloggers on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    What does "those" refer to?

  17. Re:It's Not ALL Bloggers on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    No, she wasn't. The government is not punishing her for speech.

  18. Re:It's Not ALL Bloggers on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And in those days, as now, if you libeled someone and they found out who you were and were wealthy enough to get a lawyer to go after you, you suddenly joined the ranks of the destitute. The shield laws providing extra protection to bona fide members of the press are a modern invention. This protection from lawsuits did not exist 200 years ago. This judge just doesn't think they apply to this "blogger".

  19. Re:It's Not ALL Bloggers on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    Who got stripped of what constitutional right?

  20. Re:It's Not ALL Bloggers on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    Didn't you read what the judge in the case said? It has nothing to do with whether the writer expresses an opinion.

  21. Re:Corruption on Indian Minister Seeks To Censor User-Generated Content Online · · Score: 1

    How do you know that the screen she was looking at had anything to do with the scanner? Couldn't she have been looking at Facebook?

  22. YouTube already censoring on Indian Minister Seeks To Censor User-Generated Content Online · · Score: 3, Interesting

    YouTube [i.e., Google] is already providing some of the censorship this guy is asking for. Perhaps not for him yet, but certainly for the Chinese and Pakistani governments and various Muslim groups. And not just for overseas consumption: much of this censorship applies to content served in the U.S.

  23. Re:Corruption on Indian Minister Seeks To Censor User-Generated Content Online · · Score: 1

    Last time I went through the TSA's full body scanners, I looked at the woman watching the results.

    With your x-ray vision? I thought the people viewing the images from the pornoscanners were supposed to be in a different room.

  24. Re:GO GOOGLE! on Google Throws /. Under Bus To Snag Patent · · Score: 1

    I often post from a position that is critical of Google. My karma goes from Excellent to Terrible to Excellent to Terrible

    I've posted a handful of comments strongly critical of Google. Some of them were upvoted, and my karma never changed from "excellent." Maybe you were unlucky, or maybe there was something else about your comments that provoked this response.

    Of course, some of us still can't moderate because we replied to The Post nearly a decade ago

    What's that? I'm curious because for years, despite my "excellent" karma, I did not get mod points, after getting them a few times shortly after joining. This year I suddenly started getting mod points again. Very mysterious.

  25. Re:Not necessarily. on Ask Slashdot: Unity/Gnome 3/Win8/iOS — Do We Really Hate All New GUIs? · · Score: 1

    This is all depressingly familiar. I've made comments very similar to the parent's and received a similar barrage of weirdly hostile, obscenity-laced responses. He happens to be correct. Those who disagree just never learned how to use a computer. LaTeX is great. Word processors suck. And the last time I edited some video, I did it from the command line.