Slashdot Mirror


User: unassimilatible

unassimilatible's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
1,027
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 1,027

  1. "The reason we don't have these things yet..." on Rod Logic Computers and Why We Don't Already Have Them (hackaday.com) · · Score: 1

    "The reason we don't have these things yet comes down to the manufacturing process"

    Gee, that's very interesting. How about giving a summary of it in your post?

  2. LOL, "true" Android on LTE 4G Networks Put Androids At Risk of Overbilling and Phone Number Spoofing · · Score: 1

    LOL, "real" Android. Android was created "open" by design so it would be adopted by phone manufacturers to save OS development money. Open, that's what all you nerds brag about; but then you complain there's only one Android made by Google that nobody even buys and we should ignore all the insecure, unsupported versions that 98% of people own? Logic fail!

  3. Marketshare is irrelevant on LTE 4G Networks Put Androids At Risk of Overbilling and Phone Number Spoofing · · Score: 1

    Of course if you give something away people will take it. Apple only cares about profit share - who wants the poor and the Luddites (and a few thousand geeks)? Apple commands 92% of smartphone profits. Game over, man.

    And nobody cares about open other than a few thousand geeks who are statistically irrelevant.

  4. Re:Same agencies. on Group Seeks Test For Geoengineering Tool To Fight Climate Change · · Score: 1

    Except climate models do a poor job of predicting climate, which is what they are intended to do in the first place. None of them account for the 19+ year pause in warming. So they have to move the goal post after the kick, something you aren't allowed to do in science.

  5. No expectation of privacy = no search on In Baltimore and Elsewhere, Police Use Stingrays For Petty Crimes · · Score: 1

    violating the Supreme Law of the Land

    Well-settled con law: No expectation of privacy = no search = no Fourth Amendment rights implicated.

    How does a cellphone thief have a right to right to privacy on a cellphone he just stole? That's ludicrous on its face.

  6. Nonsense, it's union greed on Teaching College Is No Longer a Middle Class Job · · Score: 1

    I know math is hard, but there simply are not enough administrators to account for all the money. This is the typical union canard.

    The truth is, at many colleges, the full time faculty have gobbled up all the salary and benefits, despite teaching a small minority (~25%) of the courses. They limit the pay and hours of the part timers who teach 3/4 of the classes. So the part time faculty are limited to 60% weekly load hours, less per hour, and locked into a cycle of lower middle class or outright poverty.

    Typical union greed: They accrue all the goods for a small minority, at the expense of the unemployed or underemployed.

    The best part is, even the janitors have tenure. So what gets cut first? Classes - the ones taught by part timers.

    Ask me how I know...

  7. Tragic - Good thing the 7:19 ZR1 survived on Sinkhole Swallows 8 Vehicles Inside Bowling Green KY Corvette Museum · · Score: 3, Informative

    The ZR1 that set the 7:19.63 Nurburgring lap time survived.

    Too bad the Blue Devil ZR-1 was lost.

    Proud owner of a 2011 Grand Sport, 666 RWHP...

  8. What total BS on Bennett Haselton's Response To That "Don't Talk to Cops" Video · · Score: 1

    "Do not talk to the police."

    So if a cop pulls you over asks if you have been drinking, and you haven't, you just remain silent? Even if you reek of alcohol because your girlfriend just threw up vodka on your shirt?

    "One can never "talk" his or her way out of suspicion"

    So if a cop sees you break a car window to get the keys you locked in your car, do you just say, "I want my lawyer" and remain silent? Bullshit.

    More nonsense generic legal "advice."

  9. Re:Police and Judges. on Bennett Haselton's Response To That "Don't Talk to Cops" Video · · Score: 1

    Except that remaining silent might get you arrested. In a Terry stop detention, you have to at least give the police your name. If you really are innocent, it may be best to explain the situation. For example, if you locked your keys in your car and had to break a window to get them, would you really not tell the cop this and instead remain silent?

  10. Re:Police and Judges. on Bennett Haselton's Response To That "Don't Talk to Cops" Video · · Score: 1

    Except, FALSE. You are not entitled to an attorney when an officer is asking preliminary, pre-arrest questions, like in a traffic stop. So a cop pulls you over and asks you if you have been drinking and you just stay silent? That would be dumb in many situations. I've seen jailhouse lawyers go to jail because they were trying to outsmart cops, too clever by a half.

    I know a guy who got arrested for trespassing because he was working out at his old high school gym after hours. Instead of telling the police, "I have implicit permission from Coach XXXX, just call him," instead he just thought he would be clever and say, "I'll just remain silent." Guess what happened then.

    I've gotten out of tickets by admitting to a speed I know the cops clocked me at, but who wanted me to admit to a higher speed (I didn't). Had I claimed I was going 65 in a 65, or remained silent, when I damn well knew he had me at 74, I would have been ticketed. Instead, let off with a warning.

    And in most states it is not a felony to lie to a cop. It is to lie to a federal agent.

    Point being, generic legal advice worded in absolutes is worth roughly what you paid for it.

  11. Re:Shoot first on Bennett Haselton's Response To That "Don't Talk to Cops" Video · · Score: 1

    So, licensed attorney, are you suggesting that never, ever speaking to a cop, or even generic legal advice in the form of absolutes, constitutes good legal advice?

  12. As an educated professional... on Bennett Haselton's Response To That "Don't Talk to Cops" Video · · Score: 2

    I'm a lawyer, and I think the professor's generic, one-size-fits-all advice is clearly wrong. In fact, legal advice not specifically tailored to the individual and the facts of his case is arguably per se malpractice. Of course, this itself is an absolute. But in fairness, it is a maxim, not legal advice.

    Disagree? OK, well I am a lawyer, and you are presumably not. So now you're going to give a lawyer advice how to deal with a cop? #

    IAALBNYLSDNROTALA (I Am A Lawyer But Not Your Lawyer So Do Not Rely On This As Legal Advice)

  13. Re:Shoot first on Bennett Haselton's Response To That "Don't Talk to Cops" Video · · Score: 1

    Oh please, as if law professors are infallible? Appeal to authority much? You realize law professors disagree with each other on just about everything? Ironic that all the locker room lawyers here are telling Haselton not to give legal advice.

    Here's a pro tip from a lawyer: Any lawyer who gives you generic advice in the form of absolutes is full of shit. There are many situations in which a guilty person *not* talking to police will hurt you more than carefully talking to them. I've talked my way out of several tickets by being courteous, respectful, cooperative, and yes, even admitting to a little speeding (but not to my actual speed). Had I lied - or remained silent - when I knew for a fact the cop had clocked me at a certain speed, I would have certainly been cited. Cops are so shocked by real courtesy and respect, it can go a long way. And good lawyers typically don't pull the "I am a lawyer!" card with cops until asked.

    Most non-lawyers who try to act lawyerly with cops often make matters worse...

    IAALBNYLSDNROTALA (I Am A Lawyer But Not Your Lawyer So Do Not Rely On This As Legal Advice)

  14. Open source? LOL on Ask Slashdot: Recommendations For Non-US Based Email Providers? · · Score: 1

    You're really advocating open source software as a way to avoid the NSA? LOL.

  15. Re:Great country you have over there on Encrypted Email Provider Lavabit Shuts Down, Blames US Gov't · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    The amount of poverty (or near-poverty) here compared to my home country (Australia) astounds me. Huge portions of the population barely getting by...the run-down infrastructure etc. Not to say there's not nice areas too ... but it's really inconsistent. You don't see that at home (due no doubt in part to a more progressive tax structure and universal medical/housing safety-nets)

    In a word, bullshit. The US has one of the most progressive tax systems in the world, even more so than most of Western Europe, more so than Australia. Hell, half the country doesn't even pay taxes.

    Unfortunately, the main function of government in the US has become the opposite of the original Lockean purpose of the social contract - i.e., separating citizens from their wealth and giving it to others, while taking a huge cut. We have 45 million fucking people on food stamps! TWICE the population of Australia!

    And what have we gotten for it? One of our Founding Fathers, Ben Franklin, said the worst thing you could do for the poor is to make them comfortable, lest they not want to escape it. Our "poor" in the US have cable TV and cellphones and are suffering from diabetes due to their obesity. Just enough to keep them voting for the Party of Handouts, exactly as planned...

  16. False on Sequester Grounds Blue Angels · · Score: 1

    If Obama averages a golf trip and vacation every 4 months then that would make the number of trips taken around 16

    Obama averages a lot more trips than that. You aren't counting his golf outings, his record number of fundraisers (or taxpayer-paid political events), some of which he flies in for an hour and leaves.

    He certainly is not the king of vacation days. That honor falls to President George W. Bush

    Not analogous, since Bush never presided over a sequester, let alone was one his idea, let alone did Bush threaten to veto a bill offering him budgeting discretion on a sequester, and then close the White House to tours and stop the Blue Angels, and then cry, "we have no money!"

  17. And the golf trip with Toger? on Sequester Grounds Blue Angels · · Score: 1

    And those golf trips and vacations every 4 months Obama takes? How much do those cost taxpayers? Like a million dollars each flight?

    Any sentient being knows Obama threatened to veto congressional bills to give him some budgeting discretion in the sequester, so he can blame Republicans for the arbitrary cuts. So far, based on polls, the public doesn't seem to be falling for it, despite the media not reporting this key little fact.

  18. This is true of all crimes on Laser Strikes On Aircraft Becoming Epidemic · · Score: 1

    "There is not a legal solution that is going to work. People just don't get it. Throwing people in jail doesn't solve the problem."

    Tell me about all the types crimes that have been eliminated from throwing people in jail. So I guess we should legalize rape and murder.

    Deterrence is but one purpose of the criminal sanction.

  19. Exactly! on Android Hacked Via NFC On the Samsung Galaxy S 3 · · Score: 1

    Android fanboys all over the Net pilloried iPhone 5 for not having NFC.

  20. It's funny that Android users turn off a feature on Android Hacked Via NFC On the Samsung Galaxy S 3 · · Score: 1

    that the iPhone 5 was criticized by Android fanboys for not having.

  21. And yet, you were able to on Why Juries Have No Place In the Patent System · · Score: 1

    Criticize their decision in shorter time. Amazing! Sign that guy up for jury service!

  22. Nonsense on Why Juries Have No Place In the Patent System · · Score: 1

    Who better than the average person to decide if the average person is confused by dilution of trademark/patent when buying a phone?

    And there is that whole BILL OF RIGHTS thing.

  23. What are your patent qualifications? on Why Juries Have No Place In the Patent System · · Score: 1

    >>Patent law is too complex for the average person.
    If not, then SHUT THE FUCK UP.

  24. Stop quoting Groklaw for crissakes on Why Juries Have No Place In the Patent System · · Score: 1

    Groklaw is an obviously anti-patent site. Don't quote them as authority on mainstream patent law.

    The whole point of this article is that the average juror isn't smart enough for these cases (forgetting the 7th Amendment).

    Now we have a foreman with a patent, and he's too smart? Catch-22 much? I guess we need these ivory tower philosopher kings to administer your "software and hardware should be free, fuck Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution" ethos.

    "The foreman told a court representative that the jurors had reached a decision without needing the instructions."

    Fucking lie. Stop relying on Groklaw and listen to the actual foreman's interview:

    http://www.bloomberg.com/video/apple-vs-samsung-foreman-we-focused-on-evidence-eRnU07ChTjeV8MuvEiBSxw.html

  25. Bullshit on Why Juries Have No Place In the Patent System · · Score: 1

    Anyone who owns physical property can't sit on a theft or burglary or robbery trial? Women can't sit on rape trials because they have vaginas?