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User: themusicgod1

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Comments · 1,189

  1. Re:Who the fuck cares? on Will Ripple Eclipse Bitcoin? · · Score: 1

    Actually Ripple predates Bitcoin by a number of years.

  2. Re:Will Ripple Eclipse Bitcoin? on Will Ripple Eclipse Bitcoin? · · Score: 1

    at worst it sounds too complex for consumers to get their heads around

    You could have said the same thing about personal computers. Most users who use Ripple may not even know they are using it, just like computers (most people who use computers do not realize that that thing in their hand that allows them to look at youtube is a computer)

  3. Re:So How do I make a withdrawl... on Will Ripple Eclipse Bitcoin? · · Score: 1

    No, it's potentially available in any neighbourhood with a ripple user to the extent that there are sufficient connections between *your* neighbourhood and *that* one.

  4. Re:So How do I make a withdrawl... on Will Ripple Eclipse Bitcoin? · · Score: 1

    You do not have to use Gateways to use Ripple. If someone "credits" you 100$ then you should talk to that someone on how to retrieve it. Sometimes they may be connected to gateways, sometimes they are connected to the bitcoin bridge or some other bridge and you can use an exterior system. Sometimes not.

  5. Re:I started wondering... on Paypal Jumps Into Bitcoin With Both Feet · · Score: 1

    There are no advantages whatsover to bitcoin
    It's global. You can spend it anywhere in the world, assuming you can find two people who need to send/receive it. It's also not prone to being stopped by governments. If you're in Argentina and want to invest in a business in Russia, you can do that. No one can stop you. Of course, it's up to you to invest wisely - - but there are situations where it makes sense. You no longer need to use credit cards to buy things online -- no more worrying about identity fraud.

  6. Re:question: does IE support adblock and noscript? on Microsoft Considered Renaming Internet Explorer To Escape Its Reputation · · Score: 2

    What would it matter? So long as you can't know what's going on in IE's engine, ghostery is pointless as people who pay off Microsoft can still spy on you, your browser sessions can be unencrypted whenever Microsoft chooses, etc. You might as well not use Noscript, either, what's the point of forbidding people from running software on an already compromised-to-the-hilt machine required to run IE (ie Windows)?

  7. Re:Nobody kills Java on Oracle Hasn't Killed Java -- But There's Still Time · · Score: 1

    There's no "sorta" about it. COBOL was still being *actively developed in* as late as 2013. People are going to be supporting COBOL for generations at this rate.

  8. Re:Smart on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    . It is a very fine balancing act to maintain currency values but it can be and has been done for a long time.

    On the contrary, since the Federal Reserve got started, the markets have been less not more stable, and both the US and global financial system has seen more, not less panics, of greater, not less severity.

  9. My life changed for the worse on Google Reader: One Year Later · · Score: 1

    1) I took all the feeds (>4000) out of google reader, and bookmarked them
    2) Since then I've been slowly merging my bookmarks into a sqlite database, which I then pull from daily.
    It's possible that feedly or some other online service might be able to help me...but after Reader shut down I've become pretty paranoid about using online services for those sorts of things; I'd rather have something that runs local(and my computer for the past year has not been capable of running pretty much anything else...ram has been at a premium). Also it's coloured my perception of Google itself: that was really the turning point between "using google services if they add value to my life/make life easier" and "PRISM-breaking my life, including a departure from any contact point with google I can live without without *too* much discomfort"
    It took me 8 months to get everything to the point where it could be reached again and I've been trying to find a life balance that works ever since. I've really struggled -- google made it easy to get just the right amount of information about the world, every day. Generally if I read *all* of my RSS feeds for a day, I was bored or something else was wrong. Now there's really no boundary between "too much" and what I read daily. Consequently...sure I read ~95 feeds/day...but that's way too much time for what value it adds to my life.
    So tl; dr I'm paranoid, ignorant and constantly busy now that I do a fraction of what I used to do with reader, only by hand.

  10. Re:Newegg may have caused the rise on Winners of First Seized Silk Road Bitcoin Auction Remain Anonymous · · Score: 1

    Newegg takes your bitcoins, and gives you goods. That is "accepts bitcoins". Bitpay is their means of doing so. The hair-spliting over whether or not they "accept" bitcoin completely misses the point. So they use a payment processor? Many websites use paypal or credit cards for the same reason, yet you wouldn't say they don't "accept USD" because of this.

  11. Re:A collosal waste of energy. on As Crypto Mining Grows, Data Centers Begin Accepting Bitcoin · · Score: 2

    ...and the legacy financial system runs on unicorns and fairy dust, I take it?

  12. Re:The irony of the 1919 data is overwhelming on Happy 95th Anniversary, Relativity · · Score: 1

    Relevant LessWrong: "If Einstein had enough observational evidence to single out the correct equations of General Relativity in the first place, then he probably had enough evidence to be damn sure that General Relativity was true."

  13. Re:I'll be waiting for something without DRM baked on Firefox OS Powered Flame Available For Pre-order; Ships Globally · · Score: 1

    how do you expect to be able to rent movies and television programs produced by major studios?

    I don't intend to rent these things, or buy these things. If it's produced by a studio which uses DRM I don't want it to be in my life.

  14. I'll be waiting for something without DRM baked in on Firefox OS Powered Flame Available For Pre-order; Ships Globally · · Score: 1

    Sure it may be a comparative alternative to Android; but still, designed to help Adobe hurt the user, even if this hurt is minimized, rather than designed to let the user do what they need. I hear the Jolla is nice, any word on how it compares?

  15. Re:Drugs and programming on This Is Your Brain While Videogaming Stoned · · Score: 1

    Please tell us that the source code to your equalizer is online somewehre

  16. Bailouts on Fiat Chrysler CEO: Please Don't Buy Our Electric Car · · Score: 1

    So what you're saying is that I can fuck chrysler over for over 10,000$, after they took government bailout money? I've got the money, this is very tempting.

  17. Re:The Problem Isn't "Free Speech vs Privacy" on The US Vs. Europe: Freedom of Expression Vs. Privacy · · Score: 1

    CocaCola has maintained a cocacola-labeled military force and has attacked villages with it. They can get away with it because they justify it by talking about the threat of unions.
    There are mercenary armies (such as Xe) that are willing and able to do the bidding of whoever pays them, and there's plenty of money both flowing to them and available to continue to pay them.
    Resource companies like Barrick Gold are just as dirty as the East India company ever was, but it's brown people far away from cameras and internet connections who get targeted by them so we don't tend to care or notice.

  18. Re:This kind of thing is why FDIC exists on Mt. Gox Gone? Apparent Theft Shakes Bitcoin World · · Score: 1

    Everything you say is true, however with Bitcoin we have *provable deposits* -- you can actually verify that your bitcoin is stored, or is not stored in the bank. MtGox, of course, did not support this, and due to their first mover advantage they were able to stay in business regardless. This is likely not something that will be repeated very often -- sooner or later people will figure out the security requirements to store their bitcoin. Of course, that's a moving target -- motivated attackers will then force us onto higher ground, but still.

  19. Re:When upgrades break code on Why Do Projects Continue To Support Old Python Releases? · · Score: 1

    ...that was not where that comment was supposed to go

  20. Re:When upgrades break code on Why Do Projects Continue To Support Old Python Releases? · · Score: 1

    I truly regret every line of Perl I ever wrote

    Have you at least purchased Bad Code Offsets? Sounds like you could use them.

  21. Re:Overpopulation destroys Middle Class on The Internet's Network Efficiencies Are Destroying the Middle Class · · Score: 1

    If additional people meant a lower need for other resources, why expand at all?

    Because hunter-gatherers cannot colonize other relatively nearby earth-like planets. The planet is not our limit, we are.

  22. Congrats soulskill on The Text-Your-Parents-Your-Drug-Deal Experiment · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You have been excluded. I haven't done that to a /. editor in years. But this is NOT news for nerds that matters.

  23. Re:Easy to answer. on The 'Linux Inside' Stigma · · Score: 1

    Linux is not an operating system, it is a kernel.

  24. Re:New Proposal on The ATF Wants To Know Who Your Friends Are · · Score: 1

    Just so you know, if you try this they will kill you.

  25. Let's admit it guys on Open Sauce Foundation Created · · Score: 1

    You weren't going to RTFA anyway.