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User: Zimluura

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  1. Re:Iraq for less on North Korea Threatens US With Preemptive Nuclear Strike · · Score: 1

    not just oil, iraq had a much weaker military than the dprk.

  2. Re:Ron Wyden on Rand Paul Launches a Filibuster Against Drone Strikes On US Soil · · Score: 1

    I don't think the US Navy is allowed to attack people on US soil with F18s at the moment. I'm pretty sure the US military in general (aside from the recent change regarding drones) isn't allowed to do that.

  3. Re:DONT TALK TO THE POLICE on The Accidental Betrayal of Aaron Swartz · · Score: 1

    If I had the mod points.

    this is an old video but very important
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8z7NC5sgik

  4. Re:Carmack wants to strap a tablet to your head on Carmack On VR Latency · · Score: 1

    Balance the weight of the VR screen with counter-balances around the head, and you produce a hideous unwieldy 'helmet' that will still cause neck-pain when the head is 'snapped'.

    throughout time military helmets have had a certain amount of weight to them.

    It is no coincidence that military flight simulators do NOT use VR goggles, even though they have the funds to do so.

    Such systems are about training a pilot to use a real jet. a real jet has an large amount of very small controls.
    here's an enthusiast simulator startup video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBFb45nPSNs
    in a military simulator you can physically interact with all of those switches. so I would guess the military doesn't use VR goggles yet because of the latency and the difficulty of tracking exactly where the pilot's hands are.

    You see, modern games now render using a high-latency pipeline, with some work for future frames being calculated before the current frame is even done. It is ESSENTIAL that the input loop is low frequency compared to the render system.

    I think that's the other way around. at least with race-car games it's the other way around. in those you do several input and physics frames, and render every fourth frame or so. or they can be asynchronous, with the render thread drawing the latest complete physics frame.

  5. Re:You see... on Swedish Pirate Party Threatened for Hosting the Pirate Bay · · Score: 1

    Nicely worded.

    The modern legal system in most developed countries generally favors the clown with the deepest pockets

    If I only had the mod points...and there were a "+1 quotable".

  6. Re:almost never? on Valve Sued In Germany Over Game Ownership · · Score: 2

    Clarification: I've almost always been able to resell my PC games. Only relatively recently has DRM really been difficult to get away from. I've been playing PC games since the early 90s and there was a time without DRM restricted resale.

  7. almost never? on Valve Sued In Germany Over Game Ownership · · Score: 1

    Almost never?

    I've almost _always_ been able to resell my games. Fallout 3 was late 2008, thats the last big bethesda game i can recall without drm. Aside from the past 5 years of drm bs, I'd say being able to resell is the norm. Though I guess if you're younger you may think it's always been this sucky.

  8. Re:Shady? Really? on How Videogames Help Fund the Arms Industry · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't really be able to copyright the look on guns.

    The utilitarian nature of these objects should make them useful articles
    http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl103.html
    which can't be copyrighted (though I'm sure they're trying).

    Various parts could be covered by design patent, but quite allot of cool military hardware should have no patent on it anymore (barret's 1982 rifle shouldn't have any live patents anymore given the 14-20 year lifespan).

    Side note on creative IP litigation: In the EA vs. Textron lawsuit. Textron alleges EA, in violating their trade dress, is confusing gamers about Textron's involvement(lack thereof) in the game. Hopefully EA will win on free speech grounds; and then games, like other forms of artistic expression, won't be as encumbered by licensing fees.

  9. Re:Hmm... on 150 Copyright Notices For Mega · · Score: 1

    you must cache it on your computer and that, in a technical sense, is duplication.

    still what you are saying is *probably* right (insofar as no wealthy copyright holder has yet forced the us courts to decide).

  10. Re:Hmm... on 150 Copyright Notices For Mega · · Score: 2

    it's worse than that. nearly all material on the internet is copyrighted. even this post i am typing. how are you supposed to know if you have my permission to view it?

  11. Re:It would be fair... on Unlocking New Mobile Phones Becomes Illegal In the US Tomorrow · · Score: 1

    on the surface this seemed fair to me. if you're under contract, then the phone isn't really your property yet.

    but then i remembered that if you break contract they charge you the remainder of their investment in the phone +a little more (just 'cause), and they don't reclaim the phone. so yeah, this is pretty stupid.

  12. Re:British Nurse Suicide on After Aaron Swartz's Death, the Focus Now Falls On the Prosecutors · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just saw it here:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Swartz ...Prosecution of the case continued, with charges of wire fraud and computer fraud, carrying a potential prison term of up to 35 years and a fine of up to $1 million.[50][51] One of Swartz's lawyers revealed prosecutors told him two days before Swartz’s death that "Swartz would have to spend six months in prison and plead guilty to [all] 13 charges if he wanted to avoid going to trial."[52] After Swartz's death, his attorney Marty Weinberg told press that he "nearly negotiated a plea bargain in which Swartz would not serve any time", but that bargain failed because "JSTOR signed off on it, but MIT would not."[53]

    Here are the links 50 and 51:
    http://crln.acrl.org/content/72/9/534.full
    http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120917/17393320412/us-government-ups-felony-count-jstoraaron-swartz-case-four-to-thirteen.shtml

    True, he might not have gotten the full 35. I would even feel fine placing a $20 bet that he would get a shorter sentence. For him the stakes were much higher. To me the threat of such a sentence seems like a form of psychological warfare.

  13. Re:British Nurse Suicide on After Aaron Swartz's Death, the Focus Now Falls On the Prosecutors · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, even though he was young at 26, he was facing 35 years in prison. So he would have possibly gotten out when he was 61, maybe earlier with good behavior, but who knows.

    options:
    a) End your life at 26, you'll be remembered well by your accomplishments and won't have to suffer.
    b) A stressful slog through a court case that will leave you in jail for a very long time. In jail the boredom is broken periodically by suffering. If you survive jail, you'll get out, when you're elderly, and then maybe you'll be able to re-acclimate to society after you've spent more than half your life a prisoner.

  14. Re:Been there done that on Russia Says Next-Gen Spacecraft Design Ready · · Score: 1

    in the article they talk about de-orbiting satelites. so, those were likely the other places.

  15. I wasn't trying to be funny. on Krugman: Is the Computer Revolution Coming To a Close? · · Score: 1

    I wasn't trying to be funny. These kinds of stories are a problem that should be addressed.

  16. Betteridge's law of headlines on Krugman: Is the Computer Revolution Coming To a Close? · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No

  17. Re:*confused on Adam Lanza Destroyed His Computer Before Rampage · · Score: 1

    only if you ignore wound location entirely.

    damaging internal organs contributes more to lethality than muzzle velocity. one could be shot in the hand with a .50bmg and have a better chance of survival than a .22 in an organ such as the heart/lungs/brain. unless you follow the "hit point" thoery of medicine.

    merely saying that it is often more difficult to diagnose damage from a .22LR than a .223 (which is faster, heavier, and more expensive) because the .22 often doesn't exit, and it does bounce.

  18. Re:*confused on Adam Lanza Destroyed His Computer Before Rampage · · Score: 1

    according to wikipedia he used a bushmaster xm-15, which is basically a semi-automatic m-16 with a 16 inch barrel.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushmaster_XM-15

    your dad was probably using an adapter to shoot .22LR bullets through his M-16 to save money
    http://www.cheaperthandirt.com/product/ARR-059

    differences in the catridge here
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.22LR
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.223_Remington

    EMTs i've met have more trouble working the .22LR shootings because it often tumbles and is still in there somewhere, where as the .223 mostly makes wounds like hamburger but at least isn't still in there.

    not trying to be a dick or pick a fight. actually a firearms enthusiast.

  19. vector window objects have been around for a really long time. x even does allot of that stuff. i think e17 uses them allot.

    only ever tried a little 2d opengl programming, but the 3d cards i used then (before programmable pipeline) had no hardware support for 2d ogl functions. that being said if you used the 3d functions to draw 2d elements (and leave all your z values 0) it was really really fast.

    but i think it's all been static because display resolutions were static for so long.

    resolutions basically went up slowly, then hdtv hit the mainstream with "1080p" actually lowering the bar, and only now that apple has pushed the buzzword "retina_display" are the mainstream consumers wanting more than "1080p". not an apple fan by any means, but i'm glad someone has been pushing a little bit for dpi.

  20. Re:Presidential rule by fiat on How Yucca Mountain Was Killed · · Score: 1
  21. Re:Just don't do it. on Ask Slashdot: Good Linux Desktop Environment For Hi-Def/Retina Displays? · · Score: 2

    Car analogy, huh?

    Bentley... Expensive, Heavy, Thirsty, Status symbol.

    I think you're entirely correct.

  22. The next one I want to play. on Ask Slashdot: What Video Games Keep You From Using Linux? · · Score: 1

    Though with all the nasty DRM, lately (and unfortunately) I've been gaming on consoles.

  23. you sound like you trust the police on In Mississippi: 15-Year Jail Sentence For Selling Pirated Movies and Music · · Score: 4, Insightful

    never trust the police. in the united states their goal is to make arrests. if they start talking to you, they're trying to get you to incriminate yourself.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc

  24. Re:An Opportunity on RIAA Failed To Disclose Expert's Lobbying History To "Six-Strikes" Partners · · Score: 1

    There's someone out there that sees the RIAA as credible?

  25. DOWN-loading? on Internet Providers To Begin Warning Customers Who Pirate Content · · Score: 1

    Probably just for uploading.

    If this is really for downloading it's sorta scary as it bypasses the legal system for default guilty with your ISP. If enough people go to smaller ISPs after being gigged for listening to a song on youtube the big ISPs may learn to stop treating their customers with contempt though.

    If it's illegal to DOWN-load copyright material without permission...well, in that case things are pretty messe.....err... Ahem, In that case I'd like to inform YOU that by viewing this message you've clearly illegally downloaded this message without my permission and you owe me 150000 usd (150000 per time you've hit the refresh button).