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User: sp1nl0ck

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Comments · 44

  1. Re:Yup on Apple Has a Lot In Common With The Rolling Stones (Video) · · Score: 1

    Only one original release this century?

  2. The Movie-goer's Code of Conduct on The Average Movie Theater Has Hundreds of Screens · · Score: 1
  3. Waiter! on UN Says: Why Not Eat More Insects? · · Score: 5, Funny

    There's some soup on my fly!

  4. USS...? on Navy To Deploy Lasers On Ship In 2014 · · Score: 2

    USS Ponce ? Really...?

  5. Re:Try reading the article on UK MPs Threaten New Laws If Google Won't Censor Search · · Score: 1

    You should take the time to find out about parliamentary supremacy in the UK. The courts are independent all right, but the UK government can do pretty much whatever it wants, including enacting retroactive legislation and regulations (see for example the MPs expenses scandal). The courts in the UK can only dream of having that kind of power.

  6. Re:But what more could he have done? on Apple Security Chief Steps Down After iPhone Gaffe · · Score: 4, Funny

    As far as putting the devices on a leash is concerned, maybe the employees who lost them didn't want to pay for tethering.

  7. Leafycaust! on It's World Backup Day · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A cautionary tale from Ars Technica. It's a long thread, but the "fun" begins about 2/3 of the way through (page 60-something, IIRC).

  8. Splenectomy Patients on Major New Function Discovered For the Spleen · · Score: 5, Funny

    My Dad had his spleen removed when he was a kid, and a number of years ago (10) was told he had to carry a card around with him that said something like

    "I have had my spleen removed and may be subject to overwhelming infection."

    Seriously. We told him he shouldn't use that as his opening gambit when talking to girls :-)

  9. Re:Interesting... on The Guardian Shifts To Twitter After 188 Years of Ink · · Score: 1, Informative

    You realise of course that this is an April Fool. The author of the article, http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/apr/01/guardian-twitter-media-technology, is Rio Palof - an anagram of "April Fool"...

  10. Re:Stop the Presses! on Science Unlocks The Mystery Of Belly Button Lint · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Well, this brings a whole new meaning to the phrase "navel-gazing",

  11. It's Baaaaaack... on Glitch Has Users Fuming, Google 'Frantic' · · Score: 1

    Well, it seems to be working again. At least, it is for me :-)

  12. The most obvious example being... on Is Executive Hubris Ruining Companies? · · Score: 1

    The SCO Group?

    How can it be that no-one has mentioned them yet? Apart from the (equally obvious) reason being that hardly anyone cares that they are going down the proverbial drain...

  13. Re:Eheh... on PlayStation 3 Still Set For March in EU, Price Revealed · · Score: 1

    Using a combination of a calculator and the current exchange rate (as well as some very poor knowledge of VAT in other EU countries), the UK PS3 will come out at £402 using Irish prices and £399 using EU prices. So its about £25 ($49) overpriced in the UK either way. The VAT rate in the UK is 17.5%, so something approaching the £399 mark would have been nice, but hey, this is Britain...

  14. Russinovich's Take on More on Sony's "DRM Rootkit" · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Mark Russinovich's blog has a lot of detail about this particular package, including some info on how to get rid of it...

  15. Re:Search for Linux on Microsoft Offers A Peek At New Search Engine · · Score: 1

    Type in linux better than windows and MSN search turns up nothing. Type the same terms into Google and you get nearly 2.2 million pages. Go figure.

  16. Re:Ars Technica OpenForum's on Forums for Windows Admins? · · Score: 2

    Another vote for Ars here. There is, as mentioned above, the NT, 2K and XP Technical Mojo forum, which concentrates on systems management and the like, and there's the MSOS&SC (aka the Microsoft OS and Software Colloquium), which covers more application and home PC-related issues.

    There are plenty more forums to have a look at if you go the Ars OpenForum Homepage.

  17. Re:Abstract is from venus, realism is from mars. on On The Untapped Potential Of Abstract Videogames · · Score: 1

    I was a little surprised to see that The Sentinel Returns wasn't mentioned in the article - definitely a game with an abstract look, and an abstract concept. Never did finish it, though. The original's 10000 levels were a bit too much of a challenge.

  18. Dell DJ Site on Dell DJ: Yet Another MP3 Player · · Score: 1

    The Dell DJ site is worth a look for a review and fairly in-depth discussion of the DJ, without being too fanboyish.

  19. Re:I can decipher it! on "Stolen" SCO Linux Code Snippets Leaked · · Score: 1

    And it says...

    As part of the kernel evolution towards modular naming, the
    functions malloc and mfree are being renamed to rmalloc and rmfree
    Compatibility will be maintained by the following assembly code:
    (also see mfree/rmfree below)


    How pointless is that? It looks like the only thing there that is identical is the comment.

  20. Re:Jeez... on The Impending IP Crisis · · Score: 1

    When I first read the headline, I read IP as intellectual property - which kinda shows where the headlines have been recently.

    OTOH, given the whole RIAA/MPAA/DMCA carry-on at the moment, maybe it did mean intellectual property, and the wrong story just got pegged on...

  21. Re:Perhaps the censor can explain... on Matrix Gets Egyptian Ban For Explicit Religion · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The second film is Neo's quest for a purpose. On the basis of the Q&A between Neo and The Architect, Neo's purpose seems to be that he is the reboot switch for the Matrix.

    He destroys the Source and the Sentinels waste Zion, with the exception of the 23 people he chooses to perpetuate the species. And the whole thing starts over.

    Presumably Revolutions will show Neo to be the worm that turned, so to speak...

  22. Re:Iain M. Banks SF Books on A Good Summer Read? · · Score: 1

    Gotta agree on Iain M. Banks. To be honest, I didn't think Consider Phlebas was all that great by comparison with the rest, but The Player of Games is probably the best one to start with if you've never read anything by him before, and Excession is probably the best of the bunch that I've read.

    Use of Weapons is a good read as well (polished it off on a two week holiday recently), and got through Feersum Endjinn on the same break. Feersum Endjinn is a shorter book than the rest (unless you count The State of the Art, his short story collection), but needs a bit of concentration - one quarter of the book is written in the style of a (seemingly dyslexic) 10-year-old - it's all written semi-phonetically. Yood reelay need 2c it 2 get th eyedea. It's a damn good read though.

    Just started on Against a Dark Background - don't know what to make of it yet...

    A while back, I read The Illuminatus! Trilogy. Talk about fscked up. One of the toughest reads I've ever encountered, because for the most part it's an apparently structureless morass of utter twaddle. It took me a couple of months to get through it and it was, shall we say, less than completely enjoyable...

    On the non-sci-fi front, if you want a really challenging read, try Moby Dick - I've tried and failed to finish this book three times, and it is the strongest contender for the title of Great American Novel by a very long way. My uncle (a prof of English Lit) recommended it to my Dad, who never finished it, and he recommended it to me. I don't know what I did wrong to receive the recommendation though. Oh, and it'll take you the whole Summer (and possibly all of Autumn and part of Winter) to get through it ;-)

  23. Re:Peace? on E.U. Agrees To Launch Galileo Satellite Location System · · Score: 1

    Well done to BJH for spotting the deliberate mistake :-) For some reason I remembered it being from The Iliad, but it's from Juvenal's Satires. Duh.

  24. Re:Peace? on E.U. Agrees To Launch Galileo Satellite Location System · · Score: 1

    It's a little difficult to see how this can be bad for world peace, given that the US and Europe are supposed to be (broadly, at least) allies.

    To paraphrase the first post, "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?", or, for those of you who don't know classical Greek, "Who guards the guards?". A competing system can only be a good thing, as there are - believe it or not - governments out there who don't think that relying on US technology is a good thing. The existence of competing systems will go some way to keeping them both honest.

    And anyway, isn't competition what the US is all about, or do they prefer entering competitions where they are the only runner?

  25. Re:giving up common carrier status on Have You Really Read Your ISP's TOS? · · Score: 1

    If you do stuff people don't like in New Zealand they make you do what they call an "extra safe bungee jump".

    They call it that because, to minimise any risk of the cord breaking, they use a chain instead.