Slashdot Mirror


User: agrounds

agrounds's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
178
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 178

  1. Re:Really? Political correctness? on Should the Next 'Doctor Who' Be a Woman? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The other Gallifreyans are all gone. If they wanted a female Timelord, they should have done a Romana spinoff years ago.

    The best part of a show about time travel is that there is nothing that is actually immutable. Doctor Who has rewritten plot lines in the past, and utterly ignored previous canon when it suits the writers.

    That said, bringing back Romana would be awesome. Preferably the Mary Tramm version in terms of character. The haughty brilliance she brought to the show was the perfect counterpoint to Tom Baker's goofiness. Our newer doctors really need that authority figure to contrast the manic screwdriver-waving stupidity we have gotten lately. Donna Noble was the closest we got to a proper companion like the original show, and her departure was noticeable in every aspect of the character interactions.

  2. Re:Really? Political correctness? on Should the Next 'Doctor Who' Be a Woman? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, if the last few seasons are any indication, running is no longer required. Neither is a plot, creativity, or fun 4-episode arcs. Under Moffat's tenure, the only requirement is waving around a sonic screwdriver like it's a magic wand.

    Under these strenuous conditions, the vegan tranny black lesbian Muslim in a wheelchair would be more than sufficient.

    Hell, the good Doctor could be replaced by a muppet with the screwdriver firmly velcro'd to its hand with no noticeable impact to the show. Come to think of it, this describes Matt Smith's run perfectly.

  3. Re:Wow, just wow. on KWin Maintainer: Fanboys and Trolls Are the Cancer Killing Free Software · · Score: 1

    I think it's more the case that people got tired of posting goatse links

    We really didn't get tired of it, but Netcraft confirmed that it was finally dead.

  4. Re:I can't actually get anything done on OpenBSD. on OpenBSD 4.7 Released · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Uhm... Yeah.

    Why use a cheap arm toaster that can be set up in 5 minutes when you can give CISCO a few thousand dollars for a piece of shit?

    Because that toaster doesn't provide real support and next-day RMA service. You might work in a small shop, but for people who run multiple datacenters, 100s or 1000s of network devices, and whose jobs rely on uptime this is a no-brainer. I'll take the appliance with the service guarantee, replacements, and track record over a few Dells with *nix running on them.

    You are not allowed to replace a $10000 router with a $100 redundant array of consumer hardware because it would make your boss look bad.

    I can see why you posted AC. You're out of your depth. Cisco may churn out some real crapware ancillary platforms sometimes, but when it comes to core routing and switching on the big chassis, they're pretty damned reliable.

  5. Re:The Insecurity of OpenBSD on OpenBSD 4.7 Released · · Score: 1

    No, it's unusable because it doesn't support my wireless on my Dell laptop at all. My choices are crap NDIS wrappers or the reverse engineered Broadcom drivers, both of which drop the connection at least twice a minute which makes doing any actual network transfer nigh impossible.

    It's unusable because the goddamn thing can't remember the way I arranged my panel from one boot to another without moving shit all over the place regardless of whether I lock it or not.

    It's unusable because the power management sleep mode still drains my laptop battery in roughly an hour despite this working PERFECTLY two releases ago.

    It's unusable because every single time I upgrade something new breaks. I am running software entirely from the main repository, and it still breaks.

    It's unusable because when you file a bug people either post "ME TOO LOL" or shit on you for being "A STPID NOOB".

    It's unusable because the developer teams care more about moving buttons around on title bars and making everything purple and orange than keeping the UI consistent. Yeah, this is supposed to train us for whatever shit they want to put on the right side of the window in the next release. How does this help me now? Why the fuck are the buttons out of order?

    It's unusable because hooking my laptop up to a projector should not involve me opening a terminal and dicking around with XRandR in the year 2010. Other systems have gotten this right for pretty much the last 6 years running.

    I don't hate it. In fact, it's because I want it to work so badly that I get so damn mad about it. You can't act like the system is flawless though. It's just not true and you know it.

  6. Re:Perhaps... on Ubuntu Linux 10.04 Review (Lucid Lynx) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To be fair, being called an idiot instead of a reasonable reply is pretty much inherent to the entire IT community. We're an entire culture of people that have long since forgotten that our job is ultimately to provide a customer service. There is a prevaling attitude of 'works for me, you must suck' or 'program it yourself' instead of taking the moderate and service-oriented approach of actually listening, interpreting, and working collaboratively towards a solution in a manner that everyone can follow.

    It's little wonder we are held in disdain by most.

  7. Re:Rights? on Scientology Tries To Block German Documentary · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'll tell you what, Germany can have that apology in a few hundred years when they've earned back any level of trust after the shit they pulled in the 20th century.

    Just out of curiosity, what is the timeframe for American trust levels after the shit we pulled in the early 21st century?

    See how that works?

  8. Re:Rights? on Scientology Tries To Block German Documentary · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Where would we be without those hot chicks doing Yoga on public access TV? I fucking LOVE public access.

  9. Re:let me see on IBM Stops Disclosing US Headcount Data · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I see that you have no problem throwing around gross generalizations, so I will toss a few of my own.

    If any American corporation is doing something you don't like in your country, it is YOUR government's fault for allowing it, and ultimately YOURS for letting them stay in power.

    "But wait!" you cry, as the sad realization of your own impotence in the face of a corrupt system that you cannot overthrow and fix no matter how much you might swear and yell and scream. This system allowed it to happen. You are the victim. Right?

    See how that works?

    Yeah, it's the same shit for us too. Life sucks all the way around, but don't act like you can sit there in your ivory tower and preach about the ills of the world. We are all to blame equally for the mess we are in.

  10. Re:Auto-update feature in Drupal 7 on Drupal's Dries Buytaert On Drupal 7 · · Score: 1

    I just wish that getting the themes to look like "not shit" didn't require so much custom CSS editing. Something as simple as redoing the colors can be a real pain, which seems counter-intuitive when you consider how amazingly awesome the engine itself actually is.

    Still, I just tarball the files I edited by hand, and diff them after each upgrade. It's the only way I have found to keep any customization intact.

    I like the list you posted about the top 10, but honestly... the biggest point that should be Number One all the way around is built-in image support. Embedding images into a post should NEVER require multiple modules. That should have been integrated from the start... I love the ease of working with my drupal website when I want to add a page or three, but I had to scratch my head in disbelief when I realized that image embedding wasn't included.

    Despite everything though, I love the engine and how well it holds up. Custom content is a breeze. Here's hoping for version 7 to pull out the stops!

  11. Re:Result on Man Tries To Use Explosive Device On US Flight · · Score: 1

    Your views are horrifically myopic. I know the view from the ivory tower of academia looks damned rosy, but the world is far more gray than you can perceive from those heights. It's a world of beauty and grace with amazing acts of heroism and selflessness, and it's an ugly place where people tear each other apart for trivial reasons.

    I would highly encourage you to leave the US and see the world a little. Countries like South Korea that have conscription have lower crime rates and less violence despite the crowding. There is a reason for this. Everyone served time in the military. Not only does time in the military give you an opportunity to see the world a different way, it prepares you for how to deal with problems should they arise, stay calm under pressure, and understand the ramifications of any violent action whether it be interpersonal or large-scale.

    The very idea that you have done more good for society as a programmer than you would have doing a 2-year stretch in the armed forces is so laughable I am not entirely sure that you meant it that way. The military isn't just a bunch of people that can walk in a straight line with snappy uniformity. It's another side of life that would honestly benefit almost everyone. The US would certainly be in a better place right now if every member of the Legislature, the Supreme Court, and every President could not hold office without having served in the active military. Instead we have a bleating mass of insipid lawyers, businessmen, and academics playing "commander" with actual soldier's lives.

    Instead of posting your lofty ideals, I would rather you just fucking say "Thank you" to everyone around you that served because you refused to. I realize that will never happen though.

    So, on behalf of myself and every other military veteran in the US, you and your ilk are quite welcome for the security and lifestyle you enjoy. We did it for you even if you don't even understand what that means or appreciate it.

  12. Re:Cool on Debian Elevates KFreeBSD Port to First-Class Status · · Score: 1

    Consider my hand raised then?

    My webserver and email servers both run -stable on the powerpc port.

  13. Re:Classes? Who needs em! on The Challenges of Class Balance In MMOGs · · Score: 1

    Priests are an excellent demonstration of what they are talking about.

    I have been playing a priest since the game was released back in '04.

    Vanilla:
    -- My priest was a Night Elf on the PVP server Laughing Skull. It was my main and only character for almost all of Vanilla. --

    Priests were the undisputed champions of healing. Tank heals, raid heals, party healing were all easy and accessible to a priest with moderate skill and half-decent gear. Druids were great for topping off tanks and keeping HoTs stacked, but mostly they were brought along for Battle Res and Innervating the priests. Paladins were healing monsters for the few that knew how to play it, but they were best confined to tanks and offtanks.

    Burning Crusade:
    -- I rerolled my priest to Human just over halfway through BC and re-levelled it up to take advantage of the 15% Spirit boost from the human racial. Fear Ward was globally available by now. --

    The introduction of shamans and buffing of healing paladins to obscene levels stole the crown from priests as the definitive healing class. Druids had always been decent enough in their own right for basic purposes, but Burning Crusade gave them Lifebloom, and that is all they needed to stack with Rejuvenation to heal pretty much anyone. To balance this growing disparity of priests being relegated to raid-healing (meaning non-tanks) only, they were given Circle of Healing. Circle of Healing turned out to be a phenomenal spell. By stacking tons of spellpower and Spirit, a priest could effectively spam CoH across a raid and dominate the meters and keep everyone alive. Tank healing was left to Druids and Pallies. Shamans did both tank and raid healing pretty darn well. By the advent of widescale Tier-5 and Tier-6, priests were second-rate healers. We were brought along for CoH spam, and skill was no longer required. A good priest still used the arsenal of heals available to them, but let's be honest here... You really could just smash CoH to get through SSC and TK if you wanted to. Zul'Aman was probably the only raid instance that still required priests to do more than spam

    Wrath Of The Lich King:
    -- My priest was levelled to 80, did a few raids, then I took a few months away from the game. I came back to it after 3 months or so and still play it. --

    Wrath introduced not only the scourge of the entire game, Death Knights, it also gave all of the priest toys away to other classes while giving none of theirs back to us. Druids got a Circle of Healing-type spell that expanded on their already ridiculous HoTs. Pallies were rocking the healing with Beacon of Light and glyphs that provide a basic group heal component to Holy Light. Shamans have had the resto tree buffed pretty much non-stop since Wrath release. Priests got... well... nothing. Guardian Spirit is really neat, but a 51 point talent that has no direct healing effect other than an "Oh shit" button that lasts for 10 seconds every three minutes? No. This does not compare at all. Still, priests were effective healers for parties and raids. Circle of Healing now had a cooldown, but Prayer of Healing was putting out great numbers if you stacked regen to support it.

    Then came the mana regeneration nerf. Priests relied on stacked Spirit for killer mana regeneration and even to boost healing output. Druids did to, but they had innervate to help offset the nerf. Pallies regenerate mana through their own tools and through crits. Shammies never used Spirit for much of anything anyways. Mail gear is heavy in mana per 5, and they have very effective water shields for boosting mana pools. Suddenly... my priest had less than half of the regeneration it had back at level 70. Yet my spell costs are double in some cases. Spirit became a joke. Mana issues plagued priests until the other casters helped us out with replenishment. Prayer of Healing became our staple raid healing spell. It could be alternated in a loose cycle with Circle of Healing while Prayer of Mending made the rounds.

  14. Re:Texas on Patent Trolls Target Small East Texas Companies · · Score: 1

    Not all of us are loons. I know this will come as a shock, but some of us are not Republicans, we don't watch Bill O'Reilly, and we were just as embarrassed about Bush Jr. as everyone else.

    Besides, everything in your comment could be said about any state. Look in the news on any given day and see the lunacy, crime, and ridiculous things going on all over the country.

    Or do you just want a punching bag and Texas is your current choice?

    Sweeping generalizations and ignorant commentary only make you look just as bad as those you would condemn.

  15. Re:Strongly worded letter? on Patent Trolls Target Small East Texas Companies · · Score: 1

    This also is the way I read it.

    To paraphrase what ari_j said: The burden of professional response lies on the shoulders of those least qualified to respond professionally, because that is how the system is rigged and we should all go along with this or lose everything we have worked for to immoral lawyers.

    Sorry, ari_j, I don't accept that, and it is just not right. Our legal system has gotten out of control and unfortunately, since it is controlled by the lawyers and judges who are part of the problem, this is not likely to ever change. We have a system that allows for the indiscriminate fleecing of regular citizens to the tune of millions for patent shell companies and industry representatives. You or I have little chance of fending off one of these attacks, and even if we succeed in court, we still fail when the bills have to be paid for the defense. It is beyond the scope of the average person to afford to fight.

  16. Re:A success? Some people disagree... on The State of Munich's Ongoing Linux Migration · · Score: 1

    So I just use cracked Windows with cracked closed source software, with a few open source apps that manage to do things right (Firefox, Eclipse) thrown in. Simple...

    So your solution to contending with the inherent issues within Open Source software is to be a thief?

    Got it.

  17. Re:Windows Only on Google Releases Chrome V2.0 · · Score: 1

    A version for Linux or OS X would be nice.

    This is incredibly sad. How hard can it be with their resources to include Mac and Linux?

    I suspect there is something going on behind the scenes that keeps them from targeting the Mac. Perhaps a joint venture with Safari in the future, or something new that is a hybrid. Mac is a stable development platform, so there has to be something business-related going on.

    Speaking of development platforms:
    Which linux distribution should they target? Which packaging system should they use? Which compiler version should they compile against? Should they make it QT-based or GTK-based? Will GNOME crap on it for breaking their precious HIG? What about in 6 months when all of those things needlessly change and break?

    No matter how you answer those questions, someone else in the linux community will tell you that you are WRONG. This more than any other reason is why I don't see it ever being ported by Google. Who would want to have to deal with the hassle of perpetual fragmentation and breakage?

    Perhaps they are secretly laughing at us right now since the code is out there and no one is doing anything with it. Tin foil hats abound!

  18. Re:The House is on Fire!!! on Ball And Chain To Force Children To Study · · Score: 1

    I love how "liberals" are to blame for pretty much everything now, including gag items in online stores like this one.

    I don't know if you are an actual conservative or just a Limbaugh-mouthpiece, but there is so much more to the world than red vs blue, conservative vs liberal, etc. You should really try unplugging from everything for a while and maybe going outside for a bit.

    Politicians and the media in general have been getting away with false dichotomies for far too long. People need to get some perspective.

    I'd suggest riding a bike or just going for a long drive with the windows down and the stereo off. After an hour, you won't even miss the music/radio/phone/pager.

    Go ahead! We'll still be here when you get back.

  19. Re:Games on Why Linux Is Not Yet Ready For the Desktop · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the permission to post.

    Did you read the rest of the post where I laid out that the NIC, the printer, and multiple monitors failed to work? Using the nv driver by default yields crap results. Yes, I know you can change the driver out, but even having done so, how can I easily get my ancillary monitors to extend my desktop nicely? Windows does it in a few mouse clicks and works very well. I am, of course, completely capable of editing the xorg.conf file myself, because I know how to do such things.. but that isn't really the point is it? The point is that these are things that don't work properly. So, yes, I consider that the inability for either Ubuntu or Debian to easily understand my graphics cards and monitor setup to be a failure in usability.

    Don't get me wrong, please. I use Debian at the house for quite a bit, as well as my beloved FreeBSD box, but I recognize the shortcomings in them. To make a blanket statement about the amazing "just works" of desktop linux is just laughable. My Wacom Intuos begs to differ.

    Now, to address your anecdotes:
    XP was released Aug 24 2001
    Vista was released Jan 30 2007

    Which you are comparing to:
    Fedora Core 11 which has not been released yet according to both:
    http://fedoraproject.org/
    http://distrowatch.com/table.php?distribution=fedora

    So, I am not sure what you are looking for here. It seems rather silly to debate stability and feature sets of operating systems that are at a minumum over 2 years apart, and the benchmark is a distribution that has yet to release.

  20. Re:Games on Why Linux Is Not Yet Ready For the Desktop · · Score: 0

    No one installs windows or installs drivers themselves.

    I did. My friends do.

    Building your own rig is generally cheaper (Hooray for NewEgg) and you get precisely what you want, which makes it much more attractive than the boxed options at Dell, HP, etc.

  21. Re:Games on Why Linux Is Not Yet Ready For the Desktop · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You posit that Linux has better driver support than Windows? I am sorry... but this is just laughable. Seriously. What flavor is the Kool-Aid you are drowning in?

    I can only assume you refuse to accept any Windows OS since XP since your assertion is so ludicrous I had to read it three times to make sure I wasn't seeing things.

    Those kinds of blanket bullshit claims may work on non-technical users, but this is Slashdot and we damn well know better. Are you just foaming for karma, or are you really that deluded?

    Ubuntu and Debian are both epic failures on both of my desktop systems out of the box. No ethernet. Refusal to understand multiple displays (which Vista handled perfectly with 3 clicks of a mouse). Printer woes. OH, and let's not forget that it had no freaking clue what to do with my GTS-260.

    Please don't make absolutely ridiculous claims where the preponderance of evidence is against you.

  22. Re:uuh..yeah. on Torpig Botnet Hijacked and Dissected · · Score: 3, Funny

    I am so tired of the "license to use a car" argument that never seems to lose traction around here. Cars are just not computers, even if they do have some similarities.

    I'll provide a handy reference guide since no one seems to get this:

    CARS:
    Use gasoline
    Transport you physically from place to place
    Can be loud if you have one of those annoying exhaust pipes
    Does NOT run a spreadsheet
    Can be used to get hot women
    If you take the top off, you get a breezy fun ride
    Can kill people if driven badly
    Can get you a ticket if you drive through a red light
    Works with my iPod
    Serves as a makeshift bed for spontaneous sexual activity
    Can be used to see women engaged in lude acts

    COMPUTERS:
    Use electricity
    You don't really move out of your chair
    Can be loud if you have one of those annoying huge fans
    DOES run a spreadsheet
    Can NEVER be used to get hot women
    If you take the top off you just look like a nerd
    Doesn't kill people if used badly
    Can get you a fine if you download movies
    Works with my iPod
    Would result in bodily harm if used for spontaneous sexual activity
    Can be used to see women engaged in lude acts

    HINT: Cars require licensing because failure to operate one safely potentially results in the deaths of many people. Computers can only potentially result in yourself being harmed in a non-corporeal way.

    I hope this helps.

  23. Re:screenshots? on Ubuntu 9.04 Is As Slick As Win7, Mac OS X · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, why doesn't he just post a screenshot of slick animation?

    Because anyone that uses a real desktop to do actual work doesn't give two shits about windows that materialize in from another dimension or menus that fade out like a Dukes of Hazzard scene change?

    I mean... Seriously?

    A desktop environment should specialize only in getting the hell out a users way so they can actually be productive. I find it continually amazing how much time and energy is spent on making 'teh shiny.'

  24. Re:pirate repellents on Mariners Develop High Tech Pirate Repellents · · Score: 1

    Actually, the three round limit serves to provide a more controlled ammo consumption than anything else. Having the three round burst as the second firing selection naturally limits the shooter. It does help with accuracy over long distances because of barrel climb, but actually can be a handicap in close-quarters/urban combat.

    A standard combat load for a US soldier is 6 30-round clips.

    I did some range instruction while in the US Army at both Fort Hood and in South Korea. (My punishment for qualifying Hawkeye in M16, M60, and M203 I guess) A soldier's inclination is always to shoot more bullets than is required. Fully automatic weapons like the M60 and the SAW perform are always abused by newer soldiers because they have just seen too many damn movies or whatever and thing they need to burn belts until the barrel glows. This is why we limit issuing those weapons to those that qualify with them and demonstrate the coolhead to use it like it should be.

    The proper firing position for any fully automatic weapon is to place one hand over the top of the weapon just forward of the feed tray/ejection port and rest your arm on it. The weight naturally holds the weapon in place, stops barrel climb, and doesn't affect accuracy like stiffly holding it down would.

    I carried an M16 with an M203, M60, and a 9mm my entire Army enlistment because of it.

  25. Re: Absolutely Worth It on Watchmen 50 Days On, Was It Worth the Gamble? · · Score: 1

    Conversely, my fiancee owned and loved the graphic novel and I had never read it. We both enjoyed the movie immensely. All of the friends I saw it with loved it too. They had all read the novel as well. I was the only one that walked in there knowing absolutely nothing about it.

    You didn't need to have read the book to understand what was going on. It was pretty straight-forward. I realize (and respect) that it was a bit more cerebral than 300 or Dude Where's My Car, but it was not that hard to follow. The resulting conversation that ensued when we walked out of the theater was animated and fun too. It's a good thing when a movie inspires whimsical conversation of sociology, ambiguous morality, and sacrifice. I wish more movies inspired such conversations instead of the usual "Well, it had a nice car chase." or "The camera work was nice for the explosions."

    I loved the movie and have every intention of buying it on BluRay when it comes out, plus it interested me enough to read the graphic novel since then and I really enjoyed the encapsulated Hollis novel.