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User: Pieroxy

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Comments · 3,907

  1. Re:Send it out as a ternary attachment on Beware the iPod 'slurping' Employee · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of kiddos out there in the streets whose parents have decided the street would be the best training for them. Thay are 'would-be' trespassers just awaiting for an opportunity to actually become one. There are kiddos out there just looking for something stupid to be accomplished. There are deranged people. There are people looking for a quick buck but not willing to 'break and enter' but perfectly willing to enter. I've seen some of those.

    Granted, these are not the norm. But an open door is just too good of an opportunity.

    I've had a friend whose car has been stolen because he left it open. It was a crappy car and the thief just needed transportation to go point to the justice dept in a neighboor town. He was on parole and needed to get there by the end of the day. He stole the car BACAUSE it was open, for no other reason.

    Well, enough for today. Good day my friend, and sleep well with your doors unlocked.
    --
    Krazy Kat, by George Herriman

  2. Re:No Mac version. Less functions than Acrobat. La on Unipage - A PDF Alternative? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unipages are superior to PDF in their ability to hold functionality (Javascript), Flash animations and practically anything normally possible in a web page

    Superior or different? This looks quite nice, but how can one compare this with PDF? This is just... something different.

    PDF is a "portable document format". A way to port a (static) document so that it will be viewed and printed identically everywhere.

    HTML is a way of describing documents so that they can be viewed and interacted with on a lot of platforms. It will NOT look the same on all platforms, it will NOT print well on all platforms (as a matter of fact, it will probably print very poorly on most platforms)

    Different goals, different products. Why is that everyone wants the "do-it-all" product?
    --
    Krazy Kat Online

  3. Re:Send it out as a ternary attachment on Beware the iPod 'slurping' Employee · · Score: 1

    So you don't think there is anything in between outright criminals and non-criminals... You live in a black and white world my friend. Just let us know when you're back in our grayish world.

  4. Re:Send it out as a ternary attachment on Beware the iPod 'slurping' Employee · · Score: 1

    As I said, it is all a question of degree. A door wide open is less secure than a door closed, which is in turn less secure than a door locked. There is nothing to debate around this, it is plain and simple.

    Is a screen door locked very secure? No, by no means.

    Is a screen door locked more or less secure than a screen door not locked? Of course it is more secure, even if by a tiny amount.

    THAT is my point, door wide open or unlocked aside. Point still stands.
    --
    Krazy Kat, The Reference

  5. Re:Send it out as a ternary attachment on Beware the iPod 'slurping' Employee · · Score: 1

    My guess is that you don't understand the difference between a door unlocked and a door wide open.

    As for the difficulty, I think that if you want to enter my house while my screen door is locked you will have to break in which might not be very difficult, but is a step you have to go through in your mind. You are effectively breaking the law. So if you are a loner in a search for a phone (just an axample) to call someone (or willing to grab a quick buck lying around), you will not trespass my doorstep if my screendoor is locked. Or you will be less liklely.

    That said, I lived some places where my neighboors would come in in the middle of the day to give us back some tool I might have lended her an hour earlier. This was fine with both of us, but the screendoor locked would be enough to let her out.

    If you don't want to think about it as security, think about it in terms of privacy. It is really the same thing, in a lower degree.

    --
    Krazy Kat, The Reference

  6. Re:Misleading on Silverstone ST30NF 300W Silent PSU reviewed · · Score: 1

    Add a fan, you don't gain anything.

    You know, as I have discovered recently, the more fans, the less noise. I bought 3 Noiseblocker S1 and recycled two old Antec 80mm fans (plugged serially, so 6V each) to make my PC cooler and quieter. Effectively, two fans can blox as much air as one making no noise at all where one fan would be very noisy.

    Airflow still remains the easiest way to cool a computer. Just double the number of fans you have but make them run twice as slow. Silence you will have, and for a very little price!

    --
    Krazy Kat, The Reference

  7. Re:Quiet PSU's should not be hard on Silverstone ST30NF 300W Silent PSU reviewed · · Score: 1

    You lost the right to complain about bad product design, dude, the minute you decided it was a good idea to buy a Microsoft product. Suck it up.

    You know, it is perfectly possible to find it a good idea to buy a badly designed product, and yet not being insane. It all depends of what you need. Buying a product does not mean you approve its design.
    --
    Krazy Kat, An American Comic Strip

  8. Re:Send it out as a ternary attachment on Beware the iPod 'slurping' Employee · · Score: 1

    My guess is that you don't understand security very well. It is virtually impossible to make something 'unbreakable'. Would it be computers or houses.

    Security is about raising the effort needed to break in, nothing else. When your screen door is locked, it takes more effort to get into your house. That will avoid (for example) the neighboor's dog to come in and pee on your carpet. If your door is wide open, that's just likely to happen. Door closed it is more difficult.

    Remember, there is no absolutes. Security is about making it difficult for others to break in. How difficult is your definition of an 'acceptable security'.

  9. Re:Nice deal on Pixar Eaten by Mickey Mouse · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with Disney, is that they made most of their early money out of public domain stuff. Yet, this stuff would not have been in the public domain if the copyright extensions had been active then.

    So on one end they should protect their interests... And on the other, according to their own views of copyright, they stole it all.

    Go figure...
    --
    Krazy Kat

  10. Re:Next ad campaign: Hardship for Bill Gates. on Microsoft Spending $120M To Look Smaller · · Score: 3, Funny

    I, for one, will not be donating, however

    Why not? The poor lad could use new glasses or a new haircut for sure.

    --
    Krazy Kat

  11. Re:Tag & Rename on An Accurate ID3 Tag Database? · · Score: 1

    When I was ripping my database, I decided to tag "styles" manually for the reason the original poster is exposing. CDDB is just a messy try at an attempt to that. Nothing I could find did match my expectations, by far.

    The problem you will soon encounter is that even you will not be able to clearly categorize some of your music. There is always stuff in between styles, and depending on your mood-of-the-day you will categorize some of your music more in one or the other style.

    It is a weird subjective problem, and I haven't found a solution as of now. Even tagging manually didn't do it 100% for me.

    --
    Krazy Kat

  12. Re:No comparison on Robot Pets Almost as Good as Real Ones? · · Score: 1

    As far as today is concerned, a robot is executing a program, which means that it will never do anything it has not been programmed to do by a human being. This is inherently different from a real dog, where more or less noone has a clue of what's going on inside.

    A dog is the only master of its behavior, not a robot (ie: a program).

    --
    Krazy Kat

  13. Re:A small step in the right direction on Standby Electronics a Waste? · · Score: 1

    When your DVD player crashes, you can 'reboot' it by ejecting the disk and reinserting it without moving your ass. This causes the whole DVD reading routines to reset.

  14. Re:I don't think many people too Gibson seriously. on WMF Flaw not a Backdoor · · Score: 1

    The thing is, with all the lines of code in Windows, you don't really think that they looked at all of them ? There are most certainly a bunch of other flaws in Windows. It's just that nobody with the will to share it has found any yet.

    --
    Krazy Kat

  15. Re:The solution on First Impressions Count in Website Design · · Score: 1

    After three posts, I got the message and I finally read the article ;)

    It is utterly crap. While flashing a page in front of a user for 50ms is enough for the user to make a decision whether it's crap or not, it's not the same as saying that the user made his decision in 50ms. The user made his decision probably well after a long full second had elapsed. Many things could have happened in the meantime, modifying the user's first impression.

    --
    Krazy Kat

  16. Re:Erm on Top Ten Open Source Projects · · Score: 3, Funny

    On a side note:
    It was hard getting the list down to ten, but we did; here's the top ten: *enumerating 12 items*

    It was indeed pretty hard, so hard that the editor couldn't resist the temptation to slip 12 in there!

    lol
    --
    George Herriman's Krazy Kat

  17. Re:I don't get it on Fakes, Coming to a Store Near You · · Score: 1

    Chinese ones are supposed to be more crap. I know, it's hard to believe, but it is true.

    But you raise a good point: If a fake was released that was much better than the original, would they still attack them? It's a legitimate question.

    --
    George Herriman's Krazy Kat

  18. Re:I don't get it on Fakes, Coming to a Store Near You · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The biggest problem (IMHO) is loss of revenue, for one, and decrease in perceived value from the brand. If I buy a fake SONY DVD player and it is crap, I will think SONY DVD's are crap. This is why they fight these guys as much.

    A battery exploding, while problematic, does not really impact the company being faked in a direct fashion. And they hold the stick for repression.

    They just use the battery explosions as a banner to say "Hey, we are not evil and fighting for our beloved revenue. We fight for customer protection."
    --
    George Herriman's Krazy Kat

  19. Re:Suuuuure on Linux/Unix Tops Charts for Vulnerabilities in 2005 · · Score: 3, Funny

    what is the down side of source code availability?

    The inability to maintain a monopoly by using scare tactics?

  20. Re:Get a sense of proportion on Grokster Launches Fear Campaign · · Score: 4, Funny

    People who are knowledgeful about washing powders balk at nonsence spewed in adverts

    What?? Do you mean there is no scrubbing bubbles? I just can't believe you. These tiny little guys looks soooo cute!

    --
    Krazy Kat

  21. Re:So what? on Vista Won't Play With Old DVD Drives · · Score: 1

    But if you think about it, it is illegal to play a DVD under Linux (at least in the US). So HOW exactly can you watch your DVDs? Legally, I mean? Vista won't allow it, Linux neither...

  22. Re:How very ironic! on Free P2P In France? · · Score: 1

    Well... It's not as good as it sounds. Because for P2P to be "legal" you would have a "tax" on every single internet connection, that'd go to the RIAA's french subsidiary.

    After blank CDs and DVDs, here comes the internet "tax". An open Wifi network would be illegal.

    Not all that great overall.
    --
    Is eBay loosing it?

  23. Re:Why?? on Beagle 2 Probe Spotted on Mars · · Score: 0

    The thing is, when you look at the picture in the article (I know, you need to RTFA), you wonder how they deduced from this that it was the crashing site...

    Anyway, what are they to do about it? Send a shovel and a cross to bury it?

    --
    Is eBay loosing it?

  24. Re:Funny? NO it is not, this is already the truth on Analog Hole Legislation Formally Introduced · · Score: 1

    You need to calm down, seriously. Home Theater components that can burn a CD *cannot* burn a DATA CDR, it *needs* a MUSIC CDR. At least it was so a few years ago. This was a 'legal' way for Philips, Sony et all to sell CD burners intended for music and still the RIAA would get something out of it. That was before this stupid tax on all other CDs was settled of course.

    As far as reading is concerned, they can read either.

    I find it somewhat bothersome that such ignorance can even be seriously repeated in public
    And yet, you do it the same way... funny isn't it?

    --
    Is eBay loosing it?

  25. Re:Audio Copy Protection on Analog Hole Legislation Formally Introduced · · Score: 1

    But you can buy **AA products. As long as the content you throw in it does not have the copyright flag on, you are perfectly safe.