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User: Haxagon

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  1. WE ALREADY KNOW HOW TO WORK THE MIRROR API. on Not Even Investors Know What Google Glass Is For · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is absolute bullshit. If anyone who approved this fucking article knew what they were talking about, they would know that Google held a Glass developer conference wherein they explain the capabilities of Glass, guidelines, and API abilities.

    Source: http://www.theverge.com/2013/4/5/4186182/google-explains-how-to-create-glass-services

    Fucking idiots. The entire Mirror API is explained in that video. Developers(or anyone) who have done a simple Google search know how the hell to develop for Glass right now, why doesn't the author of this /. post?

  2. Re:Public vs. inside information on Did Steve Jobs Pick the Wrong Tablet Size? · · Score: 1

    Seeing as how the iPad Mini is LITERALLY an iPad 2 in almost every meaningful component, I don't think it took that long.

  3. Re:Hyperbole on Did Steve Jobs Pick the Wrong Tablet Size? · · Score: 1

    What? That's meaningless context.

  4. Re:This is fantastic on Public Domain Prosthetic Hand · · Score: 1

    Additive manufacturing has been around for a long time, and automated subtractive manufacturing for longer. 3D printing is great, but that BBC story was just their misunderstanding of invention and creativity. They think it's Something That Has Never Been Done Before And Doesn't Include Other Inventions, when that includes very few things in the history of mankind. Everything is iterative. Even the first simple machine a human used was most likely created by some other organism years before.

    I propose that we adopt the controversial Cory Doctorow's definition of invention/creativity: something that isn't obvious. That way we don't have these mainstream news dodos bumbling around about "but what happened to invention? " every couple of months.

  5. Re:mythical creature on Is 'Brogramming' Killing Requirements Engineering? · · Score: 1

    Never. It's obvious this is just linkbait. If Software Engineering came before people actually having a good time and being able to intuit about their code (what they call "brogramming" doesn't really exist, except in code-focused parties and cheap Hollywood flicks), then the vacuum tube predates the abacus. This is absolute bullshit.

    I also have a problem with people using this idea of "brogramming", blaming it on testosterone, and then denouncing both. It's just college kids who are doing this, and I've seen women at those code-oriented parties, too. In some, they outnumber the men. This is conflating being able to intuit your code and having fun with your code, while trying to push the idea that "if you're not a tightass, you're not a good author". Complete bullshit. Some of the most elegant KLOCs I've seen have been because someone's "gotten in the groove", not because they've precisely engineered their code. That's not to say that standards of programming and clean code don't have their place (they do!) but the idea that clean-cut engineering is unequivocally superior to intuitive coding is unfounded.

  6. Re:"brogramming" = nothing to do with testosterone on Is 'Brogramming' Killing Requirements Engineering? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, men enjoying things with men is now gay. Next, testosterone will be oppressive, and castration preferred. Give it a rest.

  7. Re:Anything that screws monsanto ? on Hidden Viral Gene Discovered In GMO Crops · · Score: 1

    My friends were veterans, one of whom was drafted into the Vietnam conflict. The chemicals were Agent Orange and another of the swath of chemicals Monsanto and Dow developed for the deforestation/urban-center-driving movement the government. I don't remember the chemical responsible for Paul's lung condition, but I believe the diabetes and integumentary condition experienced by John were due to Agent Orange, because his position in Vietnam during the war corroborated that. The chemical Paul ingested might have been Agent Blue.

  8. Re:Anything that screws monsanto ? on Hidden Viral Gene Discovered In GMO Crops · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... and millions of people have died and become gravely ill because of it. You're not going to tell me that because lots of people ingested harmful chemicals and developed cancer and terrible, terrible conditions because of it, the human race as a whole should keep on ingesting (patent-able!) feedstock from a company that's so interwoven with the government that it's earned a basic degree of effective immunity for its actions.

    I've had one friend die from lung complications and another deal with lifelong diabetes and a skin condition due to exposure to chemicals Monsanto and Dow were contracted to develop. I do not trust this company with turning my food into closed-source fodder made to sell RoundUp. If there were lean, open biohacking firms that were able to operate, I would support proper testing of their GMOs and I would trust the community much more than I'd trust such a vile group as Monsanto, but the fact is that the patents and legal restrictions bought off by Monsanto make that impossible.

  9. Stupid fucking name. on Researcher Warns That Military Must Prepare For "Mutant" Future · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Calling this "mutant powers" is trivializing this entire issue. It makes light of the fact that millions of people are using stimulants and nootropics that lie in a legal gray area pertaining to employment and schoolwork. Calling this "mutant powers" is the most inappropriate thing you could do.

  10. Re:Why would you want to game on Linux on Valve Begins Listing Linux Requirements For Certain Games On Steam · · Score: 1

    "Dead product" means that their hardware is literally two generations behind, and they're still selling it for the most exorbitant prices. Not that they're not selling it right now.

  11. Re:Why would you want to game on Linux on Valve Begins Listing Linux Requirements For Certain Games On Steam · · Score: 2

    He's right, though. A C2D/C2Q plus a more up-to-date card than the (*snicker*) 5570 he has now can handle most things you throw at it with ease.
    He just said "It's already been upgraded, and upgrading it more would be a waste of money because I hold the idea that the CPU isn't powerful enough."

  12. Uh... on Hello, I'm a Mac. And I'm a $248 Win8 PC. · · Score: 1

    They were really just looking for a cheap Windows laptop, and that's what they found. This summary seems needlessly snarky and I fail to see why this is news at all.
    I mean, it might be news that Windows 8 isn't crashing and burning as it looked likely to, but it sounds like this exists just to make fun of people who bought 250 USD PCs.

  13. Re:Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 1

    Hamas: radical, but not a corrupt puppet government that the US and Israel were trying to set up.
    Fatah: said puppet group.
    Those were the only two choices in the election that the US forced.

  14. Re:Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 3, Informative

    You seem to have left out the US and Israel funding Fatah to wage a proxy war against Hamas (democratically elected, by the corrupt system that the US and Israel pushed), the IDF killed a thirteen year old boy last month, then a twenty-three year old mentally disabled man who walked too near Gaza. Then, when the PFLP wounded four in a rocket launch near the border, Israel ASSASSINATED one of the leaders of Hamas and the strip.
    Just thought you could use that background info.

  15. Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: -1

    ... the innocent civilian refugees dying in Gaza from missiles that are accurate enough to hit one car yet somehow manage to strike crowded residential areas every single day don't have the money to buy one of those. Or eat.

  16. Re:Mac Mini wannabe on Hands-On With Intel's "Next Unit of Computing" Mini PC · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's not like there are already cheaper and more powerful options for a mini-pc than a Mac Mini; I'm sure Intel was just so threatened by Apple's second least popular product.
    Face it, this Intel initiative is about semi-ubiquitous computing with a bit of a general twist. Not a response to the Mac that's seen the least innovation/interest.

  17. Re:Few things on iPad Mini Costs $24 More To Make Than Kindle Fire HD · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No, it's most certainly not surprisingly low.
    Apple has piles of money; they're not recouping losses from development with the price, just wanting more profit.
    Amazon also has an app store of their own.
    It's not surprisingly low, it's surprising how high it is and how someone could possibly be open to the idea of higher profit margins on their devices.

  18. Why not... on Linus Torvalds Tries KDE, Likes It So Far · · Score: 1

    ...make submissions about RMS, then? Are we waiting for HURD to ride his every sentence?

  19. Just greed. on Valve: Linux Better Than Windows 8 for Gaming · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Windows 8 isn't had for gaming, it's just bad for Valve. Vale has wanted Steam to be a general App Store for a long while, and if regular plebes start using the Windows Marketplace, they'll lose that battle before they even begin. Valve's just concerned with their potential market being at risk.

  20. Nice beard. on Rare Photos: Gnu Crashing a Windows 8 Launch Event · · Score: 4, Funny

    "The gnu — which, on closer inspection, was an activist in a gnu suit"
    It's hard to tell the two apart sans suit, sometimes.

    Said as a GNU/Linux enthusiast.

  21. Re:Another angle... on Now That It's Here, Is There a Place For Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    Exactly that. Windows Phone 8, Windows RT, and Windows all have a common kernel, so MS wants people to port their Windows 8 apps into Windows Phone apps with "a few" lines of code. They chose this way for a number of reasons, one of which was an attempt to make developing, internally, Windows RT cheaper/easier than adding all that they wanted to do to Windows Phone.

  22. Re:Another angle... on Now That It's Here, Is There a Place For Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    Windows Phone was never meant to. I don't know where you get the idea that it was from.

  23. Re:Cold? on A Supercomputer On the Moon To Direct Deep Space Traffic · · Score: 1

    Perhaps not. This is a very poorly-thought out idea, and definitely not a complete one.

    I personally don't think that this specific idea is ever going to be feasible, but the general idea of using the moon as secondary hub for a large scale, interbodied military/scientific/navigation network isn't going to be feasible for at least twenty-five years at the earliest, and probably more than thirty. I feel like most of the investment in information is going to be confined to Earth until the hardened technology underlying space travel/exploration improves a bit.

  24. Re:Cold? on A Supercomputer On the Moon To Direct Deep Space Traffic · · Score: 1

    I think the idea is to use the actual mass of the moon to cool, not the vacuum of space.

  25. Re:A fish rots from the head, down... on Why Eric Schmidt Is Wrong About Microsoft Not Mattering Anymore · · Score: 1

    I think it's more than 69%.