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User: OverlordQ

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Comments · 2,372

  1. Re:SMC Gigabit on Gigabit Networking for the Home? · · Score: 1


    Why should you care about jumbo frames? I found this nice guide about that here.


    Wow! I found the exact same site in the story summary!

  2. Re:Design Flaw? on Scuba-Doo Underwater Scooter · · Score: 2, Funny

    Atleast when the batteries run out you wont land on your face.

  3. Re:As long as the movie on Linux Based HD DDR used on Starship Troopers 2 · · Score: 0

    actually there's 2 ducks :)

  4. As long as the movie on Linux Based HD DDR used on Starship Troopers 2 · · Score: 0, Troll

    has another shower scene like the first movie, and they leave all the guys out. Btw, here's a

  5. UNIX-ish desktops? on Insider's Look at High-Tech High-Speed Navy Vessel · · Score: 4, Informative

    Where?
    this looks liks windows to me. This even has the windows default titlebar fade action going on.

  6. Re:I can picture it now on Inside a Mechanical Parking Garage · · Score: 1

    How is this insightful? You think people smart enough to build something like this would forget to put a *FLOOR* between levels? Last time I checked it'd take quite a long time for some oil to seep through concrete.

  7. Re:Among other things... on Google's Copernicus Center · · Score: 3, Informative

    hate to burst your bubble but that was their 4-1 Joke a few years ago.

  8. Re:Oooh, funny and mysterious on IF Quake Takes Fragging To Whole New Level · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    WEll if you would of fucking paid attention to the signup form, it defaults to GMT -5 . . so maybe . . . just MAYBE that's where the server is located.

  9. But the Press Release from Google on Google's Gmail To Offer 1GB E-mail Storage? · · Score: 1
  10. Re:Austin? on Study Says Massachusetts Best State For Technology · · Score: 1

    Umm 820 is just as bad as 35/30 during rush.

  11. Re:Is this news? on Third Space Tourist is Set · · Score: -1, Troll

    My Experiment would be if you can light your farts on fire in zero-G . . . but that doesn't make me a 'Real' Scientist.

  12. Obligatory SW Quote on Earth Acquires a Quasi-Moon · · Score: 5, Funny

    "That's no Moon!"

  13. Irony? on Latest Chernobyl Motorcycle Photos · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The licence plate on her bike is KIA.

  14. And this surprises you on Can Your ATM Play Beethoven? · · Score: 3, Funny

    how? I mean given,

    A) It's based off of Windows
    B) It was made by Diebold.

    Adding A + B != C where C equals something that works correctly.

  15. Re:Good for them on Energiya Pushes For A 6-Person Space Capsule · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Kinda like the ISS did?

    (Yes this post is sarcasm)

  16. Re:BitTorrent on Live-Action Anime: Casshern · · Score: 1

    Then who is going to foot the bandwidth for the tracker? All your solution does is put the burdeon on somebody else.

  17. Re:Direct Link on Live-Action Anime: Casshern · · Score: 2, Informative

    Torrent link here.

  18. Re:BitTorrent on Live-Action Anime: Casshern · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's an Apple site . . I dont think they're lacking in the bandwidth.

  19. How is this any different from say on Small Change, and Other Physics Fun · · Score: 2, Redundant
  20. Re:Can I sue my Cable Co ? on FCC to Regulate 'Profane' Speech · · Score: 1

    NOOO POOR BUTTERS!

  21. Re:Can't we just... on U.S. Prepares to Get Nuked · · Score: 1

    You sir . . are great. That made my day :)

  22. Re:Three reasons why this is a Bad IdeaTM on Fido Launches New Broadband Wireless Access · · Score: 1

    2) Just like you said in #1, skip the WAP alltogether and get it direct.

  23. Re:Real Spy on Real's Reality · · Score: 1

    You know you're quoting a guy who spouts about his 'ub3r-firewall-hacking-packets' but can't even correctly format one . . .

  24. Text of Article on Yahoo To Charge For Search Listings · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yahoo to Charge for Guaranteeing a Spot on Its Index
    By SAUL HANSELL

    Published: March 2, 2004

    ahoo said yesterday that it would start charging companies that want to ensure that their Web sites are included in its Web index from which research results are selected.

    The practice, called "paid inclusion," has long been a part of many search engines including Microsoft's MSN search function and Ask Jeeves. But Google, which last year surged ahead of Yahoo to become the No. 1 site for searching on the Internet, disdains the practice as misleading.

    Last month, Yahoo replaced Google, which had operated Yahoo's search engine, with its own technology to index billions of Web pages. Yahoo says it hopes to include every site on the Internet it can find in that index at no charge. But sites that pay for Yahoo's new program can guarantee that they are included in the index.

    Advertisement

    Yahoo will update its index of paying clients every two days, while it may update its listing of other sites once a month. And Yahoo will give paying clients detailed reports on when its users click on their sites and will help those sites improve their listings.

    The paying sites will be intermingled with others in Yahoo's main search results listings, which are separate from the advertising called "sponsor results" on top of and to the side of Yahoo's search results.

    Yahoo said that although sites would be able to pay to be in the index, its computer system would still pick the most relevant site for each search, without regard to payment status.

    "What our users care about is the relevancy of results, not whether the source paid to participate," said Tim Cadogan, a vice president in Yahoo's search unit. He pointed out that many companies hire firms that specialize in tweaking Web pages so that they rise in search rankings.

    Yet executives at several of those firms say that paying to be included in search indexes often does help paying sites jump ahead of nonpaying sites: paying sites are allowed to submit additional information, in a so-called data feed, which helps the search engine associate their pages with a given topic.

    "Almost without fail, any time we submit a feed, stuff that was nowhere to be found on a search engine pops up to the top," said Gord Hotchkiss, president of Enquiro, a search consulting firm.

    Sites will pay from $10 to $49 for each Web page indexed and from 15 cents to $1 each time a Yahoo user clicks on a link to their sites.

    Safa Rashtchy, an analyst with Piper Jaffray, estimates that this paid-inclusion program will produce $100 million a year in revenue for Yahoo.

    Mr. Cadogan said that the purpose of the program was simply to offer Yahoo users more relevant information. He added that Yahoo would give some nonprofit organizations like the Library of Congress the ability to add pages to its index without paying. (While Yahoo's paid inclusion program is available to any business that can enter a credit card number on its Web site, the nonprofit version will be open only to a select group of organizations.)

    Yahoo says its program is in compliance with Federal Trade Commission guidelines on paid inclusion programs because the payments are disclosed to any user who clicks on the "what's this" link that appears on each search.

    Larry Page, a co-founder of Google, argued that such disclosures were not enough. He compared search results with the news articles in newspapers or magazines, which are independent of advertising.

    "Any time you accept money to influence the results, even if it is just for inclusion, it is probably a bad thing," Mr. Page said.

  25. Firefighters by the same logic. on Cincinnati Gets Broadband Over Power Lines · · Score: 1

    By the same logic, let the firefighters sit at home 24/7 until there's a fire, THEN go train, THEN go to the firestation, THEN go to the fire . . .