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User: carpenoctem63141

carpenoctem63141's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 23

  1. Re:Umm. No credibility on LulzSec Calls For PayPal Boycott, Spokesman Arrested · · Score: 1

    What a bitch.

  2. Re:What is an Internet? on Is Twitter Rendered Obsolete By Google+? · · Score: 1

    It's like a Chuck E. Cheese prize - you can't buy an Internet, but you can win it.

  3. Re:They tried this already. on Scientists Breeding Super Bees · · Score: 1

    Are there any birds left? I hear there's this thing you can do with the two.

  4. Re:"Hacker Cell" on Italian Anonymous Hacker Cell Arrested · · Score: 1

    Now watch where many waves meet and get extra-high for a short time-span.

    I think Afroman did a song about this. Anyway, it seems you're the one who needs a bit of a reality check. Supposedly the people in the article acted as a group of 3 people. Since you claim anybody can act under the name of Anonymous, bam, there exists a grouping within Anonymous.

  5. Re:Candidate? on Anti-PowerPoint Party Formed In Switzerland · · Score: 1

    All these productivity issues would be solved if they could just figure out that magic bullet.

  6. Re:Next step.. on Magnetic Nanoparticles Fry Tumors · · Score: 1

    It depends how large the nanoparticles are, I suppose. Down to a certain size and they can just be filtered out by the kidneys. I have some minor experience working with iron oxide nanoparticles to be used as MRI contrast agents and I believe there was just a window of time during which the MRI could be done and then after a few days the particles would be cleared from the bloodstream. To be honest, I didn't really think too much about it and was kind of shooting off the cuff. Obviously a lot depends on the size and type of the nanoparticles, how they are injected, and how they targeted the tumors. Being too lazy to RTFA, I don't really know what they did in this case.

  7. Re:Next step.. on Magnetic Nanoparticles Fry Tumors · · Score: 1

    They're probably tested to make sure that they are cleared from the body the same way anything else is.

  8. Re:Formula for a hit song on Is There a Formula For a Hit Song? · · Score: 1

    Newsletter? I'm hoping for a magazine.

  9. No prior art for common sense on Copyright Common Sense From Telecom Ericsson · · Score: 1

    Read the title initially as saying that Ericsson was trying to copyright common sense. Which seems pretty reasonable to me, there's definitely no prior art on common sense on the internet.

  10. Re:genres and trends on Is There a Formula For a Hit Song? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What if I told you that 90% of movements written in sonata form had the sequence structure 'Exposition-Development-Recapitulation'? What if I told you that blues used a lot of ii-V-I progressions? Nothing interesting in this study, move along.

  11. Re:Good for them on Anonymous Leaks New Batch of Data · · Score: 3, Funny

    Now that they've dealt with Zimbabwe, maybe they can find out what's going on with all those Nigerian princes.

  12. Re:Paper Rock Scissors? on Future Actions Predicted From Brain Activity · · Score: 1

    They should have done the ESP card test from Ghostbusters.

  13. Re:How long until we prefer a machine? on The Science of Human-Robot Love · · Score: 1

    I hear they have these things called vibrators and fleshlights. Apparently some crazy people still prefer human contact. Besides, if it ever gets to that point, we'll all be cyborgs anyway, so we'll still be loving our own kind.

  14. Re:maybe its just me on Los Alamos Fire Idles NSA Supercomputer · · Score: 1
  15. Re:Yes it can. on Can Ubuntu Linux Consume Less Power Than Windows? · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah, but if you don't have it, your only other option is to kick ass.

  16. Re:Not irony on 7 Hackers Who Got Legit Jobs From Their Misdeeds · · Score: 1

    It's ironic that they decided this was news even though it's not the first time it's happened.

  17. Re:Doesn't take much on 7 Hackers Who Got Legit Jobs From Their Misdeeds · · Score: 1

    http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3161#comments An interesting link on that subject. I'm not a fan of dropping the "to be" myself, but it appears to be fairly common in certain regions.

  18. Re:"Arcane" on The Lesson of Recent Hacktivism · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, arcane means something is known to few/obscure. So an arcane security method could be interpreted as a security method that relies on obscurity.

  19. Re:Tau is already used on Happy Tau Day · · Score: 0

    Ah, which is why we should adopt Chinese characters. There's no way we'd ever run out of those.

  20. Re:really scraping the bottom of the barrel on Happy Tau Day · · Score: 0

    If future generations can't deal with multiplying a constant by 2, they probably shouldn't be doing math.

  21. Re:Funny... on LulzSec Document Dump Shows Cops' Fear of iPhones · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't get it, how does this situation at all resemble a black fly in your Chardonnay?

  22. Re:Label works on "Do Not Eat iPod Shuffle": 30 Dumb Warning Labels · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but just wait for the iPod Pico. That'll be so small that you can't help but accidentally ingest it

  23. Re:2 weeks on Lawsuit Claims Sony Canned Security Staff Just Before Data Breach · · Score: 1

    Well, Obama is literally a puppet, a mechatronic puppet; controlled by brainwaves from the fleet of orbiting spacecraft piloted by angels who protect us from the lizards. And....

    Much simpler and more nefarious than that. He's receives his control messages from one or more visual cuing devices placed in front of him whenever he appears in public, which contain encoded messages for him to speak at the appropriate times.

    Humans, I mean we, call them 'teleprompters'.

    So you're saying he's like a black Ron Burgundy.