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  1. Re:When did bitcoin(tm) become a currency on California Sends a Cease and Desist Order To the Bitcoin Foundation · · Score: 1

    Gold on the other hand, has very few economic uses (rust proofing wiring, and a few other marginal uses)

    Gold has far, far more uses than you might realize. Look inside your computer some time - Most PCI slots and card edge connectors; most memory slots and connectors; the CPU socket and pins - All gold. Or hell, don't even bother cracking the case, just peek at the back. All that shiny yellow on the USB, DVI or VGA, and even your dime-a-dozen RJ45 jack? Gold, gold, gold. And going deeper, inside every single chip in your computer, you'll find thinner-than-hair gold wires used to link the chip itself to the pins.

    Older tinted windows (the kind that don't have the tint flake off after a few years) - Gold. Fillings and replacement teeth - Gold. A few classes of drugs. Jet engine turbines.

    Though we usually think of it as only valuable for its rarity, gold actually has quite a few useful chemical and physical properties that make it invaluable across a wide variety of industries. If not for its rarity, you'd see it used a hell of a lot more - Instead, because of the cost, we make do with spreading it so thin you can literally measure the coating by number of atom, or use suboptimal replacements (such as crappy organic pigments that fade or flake off after a few years).

  2. Re:Scare tactics on Tennessee Official: Water Complaints Could be "Act of Terrorism" · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When you put it that way... actually, living like a lamb doesn't sound like such a bad idea on the surface. Sounds like a nice, calm, peaceful existence. Whereas living like a lion sounds like every day would be a struggle to survive.

    One of those things eats the other.

    Hint: The lion only fears other lions. The lamb fears that big scary yellow ball chasing it over the horizon every morning.

  3. Re:Ruin the US wheat crop, get a prize! on Monsanto Executive Wins World Food Prize · · Score: 2

    Um no, they found one plot and told us about it.

    Not much of a literalist, eh?

    If they haven't told us about it, then it remains "untold". That might mean zero, it might mean a few other fields, it might mean 90% of fields. But no matter which, we have UN-TOLD acres.

  4. Google has a problem. on Google's Crazy Lack of Focus: Is It Really Serious About Enterprise? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Google exists primarily as a playground for two (actually much, much more, now) geeks. They want to do things like build driverless cars and have robot cats and sharks with frickin' laser beams.

    Unfortunately, Google accidentally became too successful, and would have needed to start filing SEC disclosures even if they hadn't gone public. So hey, free money.

    Now, Google has a problem, not unlike that of John Rigas or Dennis Kozlowski (minus the criminal aspect of it, of course) - Brin and Page both see Google as their private playground, but have to pretend they give the least damn about their shareholders... Thus, the whole reason they brought on Eric Schmidt early on, to do all that boring BS business-stuff while they play with online weather balloons.

    But make no mistake, evil or no, Google exists as a high-tech playground, not a serious business. The fact that they make oodles of money should serve as a role-model to other companies who haven't come to grips with the fact that "knowledge" workers do their best when not forced to sit in a 6x6 box for exactly eight hours a day using only "approved" apps and hardware.

  5. Re:Programmers will be happy. on Intel Announces New Enterprise Xeons, More Powerful Xeon Phi Cards · · Score: 2

    How does the performance measure up to GPUs for TFLOPS/$$$?

    If you need double precision FP, you don't have a lot of alternatives.

    If you only need single or half precision, the Radeon 7990 rates at 7x the TFlops for about 15% of the price.

  6. Why bother? on Intel Announces New Enterprise Xeons, More Powerful Xeon Phi Cards · · Score: 1

    In addition, we'll see new Xeons based on this technology later this year, in the 22nm E5-2600 V2 family, with up to 12 cores.

    ...And yet, because of corporate policies on running the shittiest AV on the planet (Symantec) cranked to the max, my desktop PC will still have the responsiveness of a sloth on 'luudes.

    Seriously, I already have 8 cores worth of Xeon (2x4) and the load meter never even twitches, enough RAM to load my entire system drive into, and an SSD system drive. More cores won't help at this point.

  7. Re:wtf on Supreme Court Decides Your Silence May Be Used Against You · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The 4th amendment doesn't apply (as the 5th in this case doesn't)... because said right was waved through the actions of the person involved

    Inalienable (Adj): - Unable to be taken away from or given away by the possessor: "inalienable human rights".

    If you convince someone to sell themselves into slavery to you, you can't enforce the contract because they can't "waive" their 13th amendment rights.

  8. Re:If you don't want people to see the source... on Ask Slashdot: Self-Hosting Git Repositories? · · Score: 1

    The topic of open source relates to the version control manager, not the software OP wants to create.

    Aka, "I understand - and value! - the concept of FOSS. And only plan to exploit it in the as in beer sense".

    That may still make the GP a moron, but it makes the FP a hypocrite.

  9. If A, then B; If not B, then not A. on Snowden Is Lying, Say House Intelligence Committee Leaders · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If Snowden lied, then he didn't commit a crime by leaking classified information.

    So, Mr. Rogers (hehehe), why do we currently have a worldwide manhunt - Including calling in favors from our 51st-state lapdogs - For someone who didn't commit a crime?

    You'll forgive me, of course, for presuming you as completely full of shit and trying to salvage your precious unconstitutional spying campaign.

  10. Re:DPL, the ultimate sticklers on Debian Says Remove Unofficial Debian-Multimedia.org Repository From Your Sources · · Score: 1

    Except, of course, that the request wasn't pointless

    Those do not describe "real" problems.

    The first describes why "unofficial" repositories exist in the first place - So we can install non-stock versions of packages. That breaks dependencies? Hey, the user has to choose to add those to his apt sources, so keep your nose out of it, DPL.

    And the second amounts to nothing more than weaselly lawyering up. Quick poll, everyone who loves FOSS at least in part to avoid that pro-corporate "protect our IP at all costs" bullshit, raise your hand? Yeah, thought so.

    From Redhat to Ubuntu and now to games like this from Debian, has the entire Linux community sold out?

    / Glad I've always preferred Slackware. No games, no GNU/purism, no corporate BS. Just a rock-solid distro that stays true to its roots.

  11. Re:But... *COMPUTERS*! on Bill Regulating 3D Printed Guns Announced In NYC · · Score: 2

    I'm pretty sure you couldn't, certainly not without about ten years of practice and $100K worth of equipment.

    An actual clone of a Bushmaster .223, you have a fair point. Not going to just pop out a frame and barrel, file down a working action, and call it good.

    A crude-but-functional high(er than .380)-caliber magazine fed semiautomatic pistol, though? Lookin' at machinery that costs less than current low-end 3d printers (an entry metal lathe will set you back around $600, and the rest you can rough out with a Dremel and finish by hand with a sub-$100 set of metal files).

    That said, yes, you would still need to invest a good amount of time to learn how to do it right. A few months to a year, perhaps (talking about the basics to produce something functional, not designing your own new-and-improved custom actions)? Sure. Ten years, though? By then you've already mastered the art, gotten bored, and started looking into changing careers.


    Also, FWIW, you can buy all the "hard" parts to make on a gun without it counting as a gun. Only the part stamped with the serial number (the frame or lower receiver in most cases) has any controls around the purchase, and that part amounts to nothing more than a passive hunk of metal with holes in the right places (YouTube has a video of a guy making a fully functional lower receiver for an AR-15 out of... A shovel. A few folds and a few holes, and bam, it goes "blam").

  12. Re:But... *COMPUTERS*! on Bill Regulating 3D Printed Guns Announced In NYC · · Score: 1

    If I hadn't already posted here, you'd get my mod points. +5 "completely gets it".

  13. Protect those buggy whips at all costs, boys! on Professors Say Massive Open Online Courses Threaten Academic Freedom · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Welcome to the 1980s. The world no longer needs people to stand in front of a group of 20 year olds and read a book to them.

    That said, plenty of classes do benefit greatly from a live instructor. But virtually any "core curriculum" class really only requires a professor as the equivalent of a janitor - Count the filled chairs, sweep in the homework every week, polish the doorknobs and desktops, refill the quiz dispenser, and do a quarterly inspection of the knowledge sieves.

    So the real question here needs rephrasing - Instead of figuring out how to pay professors for "producing" the same course material year after year when we have the ability to completely automate that, how about:
    1) Find the "best" professor for each class in the world, buy the rights to his materials and make that "The" foo-101 course,
    2) Refocus the in-person college experience around classes that actually involve thought rather than rote, and
    3) Use the savings to cut tuitions back to a level that doesn't leave people in debt for the first 40 years of their professional careers.

    I know, I know... Crazy talk.

    / Player Piano.

  14. Re:But... *COMPUTERS*! on Bill Regulating 3D Printed Guns Announced In NYC · · Score: 1

    I think it's for the people of New York City to decide how New York City wastes its tax dollars.

    In general, sure. When it comes to doing things explicitly banned by the US constitution, not so much, because it means you and I, in other states, will have to pay to process this BS through the federal court system.

  15. But... *COMPUTERS*! on Bill Regulating 3D Printed Guns Announced In NYC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can legally manufacture my own firearms in the US. So can most of you. I can make them, own them, and use them.

    The only thing I can't legally do? Sell them.

    So I could legally manufacture a more-or-less perfect replica of the gun used in Newtown. But New York gets its knickers in a knot over someone printing out a single-shot low-pressure piece of crap?

    Dear politicians - We all know you couldn't think your way out of a paper bag. But can you at least prioritize the crap on which you waste our tax dollars?

  16. Re: Microsoft Hired People To Make Positive Commen on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 1

    Thank you. This anti-XBox-One rant from just last week might have put the nail in that particular coffin, if most people had bothered to look. ;)

  17. Re:windows vm for tax software & work related on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 2

    If your tax software won't run in Wine then it's probably time to get some better software.

    My tax software company didn't target Wine, so although I might fault them for failing to have a Linux version, I sure as hell won't complain that it has bugs when run in an emulator they might never even have heard of.

  18. Re:because desktop linux is a toy and novelty on What Keeps You On (or Off) Windows in 2013? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Excel...the Windows killer-app. You Sir^H^H^H"Power-User", made my day.

    Sorry that it hurts so much, but so, so true in the business world.

    I love Linux. I use it for servers, I've rolled my own kernels, even my own embedded distros (and I mean back before Knoppix remastering made that trivially easy). But for day to day desktop use?

    Quite simply, Linux sucks ass as a desktop OS. Some of that doesn't count as its own fault, but rather, that of a Windows-centric world. Others (like getting something as basic as sound to work reliably), I consider a major shortcoming. Either way, sorry, but I just can't call myself a desktop Linux user. And I say that as someone who would switch in a frickin' heartbeat if it really counted as a serious option.

    For home use, I could probably get away with it. But at the office, no way in hell.

  19. Re: Cannot someone else do the updates ? on Oracle Discontinues Free Java Time Zone Updates · · Score: 0

    Java is interesting you need to be a very good programmer to use Java well, and any good programmer doesn't want to use Java.

    Wow... Quite possibly the best description I have ever seen of the biggest problem with Java (outside its corporate ownership, which makes even MS-controlled C# look like FOSS by comparison).

    Speed (or more accurately, responsiveness) seems like the most glaring example of that - Yes, the absolute gurus of Java coding can produce samples that meet or beat any other interpreted language; yet, I have yet to encounter a real-world Java program that doesn't make me rage-kill it from the task manager when it - without exception - grinds to a crawl and eventually stops responding to input altogether.

    I don't quite know why other interpreted languages don't have the same problem, but they just don't.

  20. Re:First to file vs first to invent on Apple Files Patent For Digital Wallet and Virtual Currency · · Score: 1

    I'm not aware of any prior art.

    The Nokia 6131 NFC debuted at CES2007.

    For that matter, all my credit cards have had passive NFC chips in them for the past few years. I have yet to see a reader work with them though - Every now and then I try just waving my card near a reader with the usurped volume symbol on it, only to have the cashier look at me like I have two heads because it never works and no one uses it.

    Putting the same tech in a heavier device doesn't really seem like much of a win. Yes, most people already have one; how often do you lose or break your phone compared to your credit cards, however? I've killed three phones in my adult life, but have yet to break or lose a credit card. And that doesn't consider things like dead batteries, no cell service, etc.

  21. Really going on? Let me spell it out for you... on Inside PRISM: Why the Government Hates Encryption · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The current US government has a complete disregard for the rights of its citizenry. Name a single Bill of Rights amendment that remains in full efffect. Go on... Name just one. Secret courts? DNA collection? "Free speech zones"? Compulsory self-incrimination? State imposed limitations to the 2nd amendment (which in effect guts the 10th, commerce clause aside)?

    In this case - Just straight up fuck the government. No sane reading of the rights guaranteed us by the constitution allows for such a tortured interpretation. And I don't care how you use it Barry O - I care that you collect it in the first place. The constitution doesn't say "we can stop by and take a look around your place as long as we don't press charges", it says "no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized". Doesn't take a legal scholar to parse that, you worthless floaters atop the DC sewers!


    / For those who would inevitably bring up the 3rd amendment - We lost that one over a century ago - Thanks, Mr. Lincoln! They just haven't had a reason to casually disregard it in the past century, but make no mistake, they would (again) in a heartbeat.

  22. Re:That doesn't fix anything on Microsoft Confirms Xbox One's Phone Home Requirement, Game Resale Rules · · Score: 4, Funny

    Which is funny because were I live it's in the hand of the law. The law that says "I can resell my own games."

    And you still can!

    You just can't play any second-hand games. But feel free to exercise your legal right to buy and sell all the box art and shiny-but-useless DVDs you want.

    / Yet another next-gen console I won't buy. Looking more and more like I'll go pure-PC for gaming in the near future.

  23. Re:Finally looks exactly like Chrome on Mozilla Plans Major Design Overhaul With Firefox 25 Release In October · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hey now, whipper-snapper! We greybeards use IP addresses, not these new-fangled "names" you weak kids seem to need to find anything.

    Now quick, calculate the tip on a $27.50 meal, without asking Siri!

  24. Quad? on Quadcopter Guided By Thought — Accurately · · Score: 1

    Now make it available to "pilot" quadruplegic people.

    The military already has basic mech-suits. Combine it with a functional BCI, and we've effectively made one of the most horrific of human injuries a mere nuisance.

    That said, as an able-bodied person, I'll still gladly take a few BCI-enabled toys - When can I get one of these?

  25. Re:He has a point on Too Many Smart People Chasing Too Many Dumb Ideas? · · Score: 1

    There are kids today going to middleschools around this country who can't read.

    There are kids today going to school. For free. And whether or not they meet the acadamic standards we expect from them - FWIW, "can't read at grade level" doesn't mean the same thing as "can't read" - We have very close to a zero illiteracy rate among legal citizens in the US, a quality unprecedented in human history and only even matched by a handful of countries today.


    please don't pretend that you understand the hardships of others from behind a lawnmower.

    I see you missed that at self-debasing humor, despite the winking smiley. Yes, I have it easy. I know that - Pretty much my entire point. We all have it easy. Even the homeless guy living beneath the overpass (an overpass! The luxury, he has a roof over his head covering a few thousand square feet!), thanks to our society of consume-and-dispose, has no shortage of goods and even money - Not only can he afford to eat, but drug overdose counts as the leading cause of death among the homeless! You bought any illegal drugs lately? They ain't cheap.


    I don't claim everyone has it as easy as a white middle class DINK living in the burbs. Not everyone can afford a house and a family and more toys than they can keep out of storage at a time. But getting the necessities to stay alive has never come any easier.