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  1. Re:Only a fucking moron on How Silicon Valley's Tech Reign Will End · · Score: 1

    With the exception of New Orleans, public schools in the major US cities generally do quite well. They get a bad rap for having higher dropout rates, but those dropout rates go along with taking in the at-risk low income and troubled children that the public schools are required to admit. If you adjust for that then their graduation rates and college acceptance rates are no lower than with private schools.

    This is true for Chicago public schools at least, and I believe true for most public school systems. I say this because I know that the New Orleans public school system in infamous for being the only major metropolitan school system in the country that does worse than charter schools (which are not private, so I'm making an assumption here, but I don't think it's out of line).

    Of course, a person can also buck the trend you lay down simply by having no children.

  2. Re:For those of you like me who don't have a clue. on World's First Tizen Tablet · · Score: 1

    I had thought that it was the successor to Meego, but Wikipedia says otherwise. Apparently it has some of the same people, and some similarities, but is a separate project.

  3. Re:Misread their market. on Facebook Home Flagship Phone, HTC First, May Be Discontinued · · Score: 2

    I laughed, but this is sadly true. People seem to love being exploited if it means they'll feel just a little bit special for having the newest thing.

  4. Re:Namecoin on Btcd - a Bitcoind Alternative Written In Go! · · Score: 1

    Namecoin is supposed to function as a currency, just like Bitcoin. With the mining and everything, the same way. The difference is that Namecoins have some intrinsic value backing them up.

  5. Namecoin on Btcd - a Bitcoind Alternative Written In Go! · · Score: 2

    As Bitcoin alternatives go, I really liked the idea behind Namecoin. Not that it's likely to go anywhere, but it's something that puts some real backing, value, to the currency while simultaneously doing something to address the piss poor domain name allocation system that we have right now. Bitcoin is currently just floating on enthusiasm and greed, this would actually have some worth if people got behind it.

  6. Re:The answer to the question on Defense Distributed Has 3D-Printed an Entire Gun · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...drastically less gun crimes than the US.

    Replaced by other weapons of opportunity.

    Nope.

  7. Re:Equal rights on So What If Yahoo's New Dads Get Less Leave Than Moms? · · Score: 1

    You're making a joke about the cat but it's a genuine and difficult problem. Social programs which alleviate poverty and encourage healthy and educated children have wide-ranging benefits: reducing crime, boosting the economy, encouraging entrepreneurship and reducing stagnation, etc. These things are in the interest of the community at large, including childless members of that community, not just the children themselves or their parents.

    On the other hand, it's difficult to make child rearing easier without also making it more appealing. So the benefits of these programs have to be balanced against against the detriment of a larger number of babies, a larger population, and the long-term environmental and social impact.

    So one possible, but impractical, solution might be something like giving all employees the full twelve weeks off every year, to be spent on whatever they wish. That'd be nice... ::sigh:: ... Anyway. I don't have a real solution, it's a hard problem like I said, but we're going to have to figure something out.

  8. Cartoon Network did this a long time ago on Should TV Networks Put Pilots Online For Judgement Like Amazon Is Doing? · · Score: 2

    I remember the Cartoon Network did a bunch of shorts more than fifteen years ago that people were supposed to vote on (by phone, because that's how we rolled back then). Johnny Bravo was the winner (deserved. I know it got bad later on, but that original short and the start of the series were funny as hell), Cow and Chicken and the Powerpuff Girls also came out of this little experiment. Maybe more, I don't remember.

    I thought this was a brilliant way of coming up with new shows and it seemed successful from my perspective, but I don't think they ever did it again.

  9. Re:Sequestration is a gimmick on FAA On Travel Delays: Get Used To It · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's a bunch of hooey. Income is taxed instead of wealth because income is easy to measure and (more) difficult to hide. And it isn't New England Democrats who would avoid this, it's people who make the bulk of their money through capital gains rather than income - a tax the Republicans have cut again and again and done everything that they can to keep low. And further, it's Republicans, not "New England Democrats," who have opposed other taxes on the established rich (e.g.: the estate tax).

  10. Re:One Suspect Dead on One Boston Marathon Bomb Suspect Dead, Other At Large After Shootout With Police · · Score: 1

    On the one hand, yeah sure. On the other hand, they do this to wild animals all the time - the death rate isn't nearly as high as you seem to be suggesting. Tranquilizer darts aren't an alternative to handcuffs, or even a tazer, but they'd be fine for a situation like this as an alternative to shooting someone with bullets (provided this could be done without putting the police officers in danger).

  11. Re:And yet... on House Panel Backs 'Internet Freedom' Legislation · · Score: 1
    This is sort of what the “free from government control” business was about, I'll quote from the article:

    Eshoo told CQ Roll Call she had a “sneaking suspicion” the Republicans were using the Internet freedom legislation as a pretext to implement their anti-regulatory agenda.

    In other words, they're talking about net neutrality.

  12. Re:Bootstrapping one's career on DarkSeas Games Developing Spiritual Successor To Road Rash · · Score: 2

    You want suggestions for an aspiring game designer? You got me, you'd be better off asking an existing game designer. Here's what thirty seconds on Google found me:

    http://www.gamecareerguide.com/features/522/entrylevel_video_game_.php?page=3

  13. Re:Kickstarter advertisements on Slashdot on DarkSeas Games Developing Spiritual Successor To Road Rash · · Score: 2

    They have ten people with a combined experience of thirty five years, that's nothing to brag about. They list a bunch of games that team members have "worked on," but give no indication in what capacity. These aren't established vets, like Brian Fargo or Tim Schafer (who have kickstarted projects to which I was happy to donate), these are... I don't know what to call them that doesn't sound insulting. These are people from whom I would be happy to buy a product, but not people to whom I wish to give a donation.

    I'm also wondering how they're supposed to be funding more than a year's worth of development from ten people with only $160,000.

    I didn't see any mention of a demo. Could you provide a link? Or do you mean the video? The video sells the concept, and that's good, and it's a good concept. But concepts are a dime a dozen.

  14. Re:Bootstrapping one's career on DarkSeas Games Developing Spiritual Successor To Road Rash · · Score: 1

    Not through Kickstarter. I suppose they'd have to do it the old fashioned way.

  15. Re:Kickstarter advertisements on Slashdot on DarkSeas Games Developing Spiritual Successor To Road Rash · · Score: 1

    And... are you the daddy who touched her? And is that bad? Are you suggesting that fathers shouldn't touch their children?

    If you mean molest you should really say molest. It's not like children are going to catch the contextual difference between touch and touch.

  16. Kickstarter advertisements on Slashdot on DarkSeas Games Developing Spiritual Successor To Road Rash · · Score: 4, Insightful

    On the one hand I fully sympathize with people who are enthusiastically supporting projects like this. I wanted the Dreamfall kickstarter to make gobs of money and considered a Slashdot submission but held off, feeling that it was inappropriate. There are so many of these projects now that I'd hate to see Slashdot flooded with this sort of thing.

    As far as this particular project is concerned: I make a point of only donating to teams that already have considerable experience and who I know can do the job well and in reasonable time. These people are not that. It's otherwise a good idea, but I don't think bankrolling the dreams of some college kids is really the best use of Kickstarter funding.

  17. Re:My observation on "Choice Blindness" Can Transform Conservatives Into Liberals - and Vice Versa · · Score: 1

    One thing I've noticed (read: pure anecdote) is that most people who are enthusiastic about their party don't behave much differently from sports fans of opposing teams. It doesn't really matter what their side does, what matters is which letter wins the game. Even on Slashdot I've confronted a few people who say "well my side never does x abhorrent behavior" when all of ten seconds worth of Google found the opposite.

    This is insightful, but my experience in this last election cycle has led me to doubt that ten seconds worth of Google is actually worth anything. Certain figures (all right, Obama) are subject to fantastic amounts of criticism and with ten seconds on Google you could prove that they had stolen your car, raped your cat, and destroyed the sun with their laser eyes. On the other hand, five minutes on Google (looking into the story more deeply than most people would) will show you that that's all bullshit or has a deeper explanation.

    The problem being that spending five minutes on Google to look into every one of the literally thousands of slanderous stories is just too much time. So after a while you begin to depend on the bias that you've developed: "Well it wasn't true the last dozen times, it's probably bullshit this time too."

    That's terrible of course, it allows your favored guy to get away with things that he shouldn't, but with certain news organizations making their bread and butter on these sorts of slanderous stories, there's just too many of them to deal with them all in the serious way that they should be dealt.

  18. It's a good idea, but... on Internet Defense League To Be Deployed Against CISPA · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've said this before, but again: the Internet Defense League is doing good work, but playing defensively like this is a losing game. It's not enough to kill bad legislation, like CISPA it will just keep getting reintroduced - we need to be supporting good legislation. If people took the same enthusiasm that killed SOPA and put it into supporting something like the OPEN act we'd have a significantly stronger barrier against further negative legislation.

  19. Re:Hrmph on Jammie Thomas Denied Supreme Court Appeal · · Score: 1

    According to Ars, the average settlement offered by the RIAA is $3000 plus a written statement by the accused saying that they will not do it again (and probably a confession). That sounds reasonable next to the fines that Thomas-Rasset has been saddled with, but $3000 for $24 worth of music is still outrageous. And even if she was able to swallow that, the written statement that they demand would put you at the RIAA's mercy if they decided to come after you again. It's no wonder that she fought this.

  20. Ugh, why would you link to a slideshow? on Smartest Light Bulbs Ever, Dumbest Idea Ever? · · Score: 1

    All this junk and doesn't even mention the LuminAR bulb (I assume, I wasn't about to click through a slideshow to find out):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XV5V-dQW8CI

    It's not an awful idea to use a light socket as a standardized power source for more interesting things, but we can do better than some remote controlled colored lights. (Which is what I assume the article was about, I'm never going to know for sure.)

  21. Re:Better off enforcing an EA boycott on Is It Time To Enforce a Gamers' Bill of Rights? · · Score: 1

    In regards to your #3: it's not like these are hostile takeovers. Making video games is a high risk business - from the outside we might be disappointed when EA buys a studio, but from the studio's perspective this is the result of one of two things - the studio owners, who have probably been busting their butts for this day, are finally cashing out, or the studio is on the verge of bankruptcy. Either way, blaming EA for it is crass.

    For your #2: Spore failed because the game was weak. A good idea that was ultimately too ambitious and had a weak release. The DRM didn't help, of course. I think Mirror's Edge might be a better example of a game that EA screwed up - a good runner, a budget game, with a bunch of pointless combat added as filler in order to inflate the price.

    For #1: Agree fully, the success of negative business models inspires other companies to adopt those models. Not sure that EA is to blame for this, as opposed to their customers, but their continued success hurts everyone.

  22. Re:Whistleblower on What If Manning Had Leaked To the New York Times? · · Score: 1

    Your first three points are plausible, but payment is not permitted. That would put both the whistleblower and reporter in a bad position legally.

  23. Not really, not even Russia is a plausible reason. Our conventional munitions are more than enough to fight an effective war against Russia, even in the case that they used their nuclear weapons. It would be an extremely costly war, but that doesn't change in the circumstance that we also have nukes.

  24. Re:if it's all about women's protection... on EU To Vote On Proposal That Could Ban All Online Pornography · · Score: 1

    Well okay, but this isn't an argument against the grandparent. What you're basically saying is that the useful aspect of feminism has run its course and those modern feminists who are left are the radicals.

  25. Wish the Dreamfall Kickstarter was as popular on Planescape: Torment Successor Funded In 6 Hours · · Score: 1

    This is great of course, but there's another Kickstarter going on for Dreamfall that hasn't gotten as much money in a month as this has gotten in a day:

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/redthread/dreamfall-chapters-the-longest-journey

    It's not too late, and the game is funded so this is hardly a tragedy, but it would certainly be nice if Dreamfall could get a similar level of support.