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User: TheSeatOfMyPants

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  1. Re:Kudos on Anonymous Hacks Westboro Baptist Church · · Score: 1

    "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech" means the government doesn't interfere with what we say -- not that other citizens lose their right to express how they feel about what we say or do. That's one of the "burdens" of freedom: we have to face the consequences of our choices, including in terms of how others treat us as a result of them.

  2. Re:New features on Google Nixes Some Calendar Features and Other Software Offerings · · Score: 1

    It switched to being for folks that like technology, instead of for "geeks" -- people that never lost the childhood drive to explore, dream up creative things to do with, and generally learn about electronics & the world around them. That's my impression as someone that's been here since 97-98, at least...

  3. Re:Modern Luddites on Is Technology Eroding Employment? · · Score: 1

    No: going without food causes starvation, lacking shelter when it's too hot/cold causes hyper/hypothermia; while folks 13-40 live longer, those conditions are all eventually fatal. In addition to that, having no reliably clean water & sewage system (they require shelter) or vaccines causes often-fatal diseases to spread -- and having no medical care would mean a high moratlity rate of that women/infants during labor, people with a common disorder like asthma or appendicitis, that are seriously injured, or develop a disease their immune systems are too old/young/weakened to handle.

    Maybe you wouldn't mind suffering to death one way or another (or believe you'll be suicidal as soon as you're no longer a healthy adult in your prime)... As one of the people that would've wound up dead in infancy, childhood, or as an adult in my "prime" from those problems, I'd rather keep exploring the wacky state of existence we call "life."

  4. Re:valuable content on The SEO Spammers Behind Online Infographics · · Score: 1

    IME, they're linked to primarily by bloggers that openly love infographics and sometimes as a modern form of clipart. I follow quite a few blogs of various kinds, and the periodic infographics I see are usually posted on their own more as a factoid-of-the-day because they look cool, and virtually never convey information better than a sentence or two could.

  5. Re:They didn't want to make same mistakes others d on iPhone Finally Coming To T-Mobile In 2013 · · Score: 1

    Same in the US, especially for a prepaid smartphone BYOD -- I just spent a few months researching prepaid providers so I could switch, and T-Mo's $30 plan was the best for smartphone web access by far.

  6. Get on the waitlist for a CFFA on Ask Slashdot: Old Technology Coexisting With New? · · Score: 1

    There's a well-established project called CFFA that lets Apple II+, IIe, IIe enhanced, and IIgs computers use a CF card as if it were a floppy, though the current run is sold out... From what I've heard, it's definitely worth buying for someone that can afford the $150 and uses the system even periodically, since CFFA lets them back up all of their floppy disks before they fail.

  7. Exactly on News Corp's The Daily iPad App Shutting Down On December 15 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have to devote my full attention to understand what's said in videos thanks to audio processing disorder, and few news videos include captions/subtitles... I wouldn't mind as much if they were just as informative as reading, but it takes most 5-10 minutes to cover as much as a reasonably short paragraph, making it a huge waste of my time & energy.

  8. Reminds me of the USSR on Israeli Infrastructure Proves Too Strong For Anonymous · · Score: 1

    Back during the Cold War, the USSR went to lengths to convince the world that it was near-invincible & thriving; when horrible things happened like Chernobyl, even their own citizens were told that everything was fine and the government had it all under control. Being honest, showing any weakness, would have been like issuing an invite to attack them -- it was a big shock when we all finally got to see beyond the propaganda.

    Likewise, there's no way that Israel is going to admit it even if serious security-trashing damage is caused by hackers. Telling the world of damage would let hackers (some of which might be working for an enemy) know of a weak point, give massive cred to whichever group had succeeded, and encourage others to gain fame the same way. Did anyone really expect them Israel's leaders to not consider that?

  9. Re:Heh on Israeli Infrastructure Proves Too Strong For Anonymous · · Score: 1

    living with neighbors to a people who wish to push you into the sea tends to leave one with thick skin

    Yes, that situation has made them tougher, though I'd say "crushed with settlement construction equipment" sounds more apt than pushed into the sea -- but how has the oppressor been affected?

  10. Re:Israel is a Friend to the United States on Israeli Infrastructure Proves Too Strong For Anonymous · · Score: 1

    Exactly... I wish our politicians would quit wasting our extremely limited funds on Israel; I'm tired of seeing our society's needs set aside to back them. I watch my mother's teeth falling out & her health weakening because the severely underfunded support she gets as a disabled citizen isn't enough to buy good food or see a dentist and Medicaid is crap -- and then I think of spending all of that money in Israel only to have them oppress the Palestinians to the point that horrible conflicts (costing us still more) is inevitable.

    Other "grown up" Western countries figured out long ago that forcefully colonizing other nations and sticking the inhabitants into ghettos wasn't a brilliant move. That's because whenever the subjugated peoples rebelled, the conqueror was left to deal with the mess themselves even if it took decades (as it did in the UK's Troubles); if anything, each country had to worry about their rivals supporting the rebels (as France did when the American Colonies decided to toss England out on its ear). As Israel wishes to be one of the big boys, it should act like one, rather than as a colony demanding the protection & financial support of the founding nations.

  11. Re:Governments can do whatever the hell they want on Mega Finds New Home, Dotcom Says · · Score: 1

    I've written a book about this chapter (and others) of my life but suffice to say I have had some issues with publishers who don't want to get involved in a case where it's obvious that the rulebook gets tossed out the door in favor of covering asses at high levels.

    You should look into self-publishing it online -- a growing number of professional mainstream authors and hobbyists (like retro-technology historians) have started taking that route for projects that couldn't get a major publisher's backing. If you put it up on Amazon or Smashwords for a reasonable fee and submit a Slashdot story about it, you'd probably also make a pretty tidy sum of money.

  12. Cheap hardware, Wing Commander and Ultima on Will the Star Citizen Project Fund Linux and Mac Ports For CryENGINE 3? · · Score: 1

    AFAIK, it was more because a new PC clone/parts were cheaper than other platforms while still offering equal or superior sound/video abilities. (My family switched from Apple IIgs to PCs back then in part so I could play the latest Ultima games, but we wouldn't have been able to do it without favorable pricing.) You're conflating two separate years & shifts in computer ownership, though:

    --In 1990-1991, PCs were just starting to dominate the market, and Origin Systems released Wing Commander, Wing Commander II, Ultima VI, and Worlds of Ultima, which were all developed (for the first time) on DOS PCs, with major improvements in graphics/sound as a result.

    --Ultima Underworld came out in 1992 alongside Ultima VII, at the same time CD-ROMs became affordable and a bunch of games started coming out that used them to offer greater sound/graphics. Contrary to our preferences, though, the games most often credited with driving consumers to DOS (and making the PC a major gaming platform) were Myst and The 7th Guest.

    I'm not sure whether we can draw parallels with support for Wing Commander & Linux today, though... Back then, consumers were switching to PCs because it was becoming increasingly difficult to find new games for their older computer systems -- unless MS really sabotages its own market with Windows 8, that dynamic won't be at work here. I do think that Kickstarter could be used to make developers more aware of the many people that are using Linux and only booting into Windows for games, however, and somebody like Chris Roberts taking notice would put out a pretty strong message in the game dev community, I would think.

  13. Re:Outrage! on Amazon Charges Sales Tax On "Shipping and Handling" · · Score: 1

    California has been struggling with costs since prop 13 & the rise in immigration; it's nothing new, and certainly not something that appeared after Brown took office. I've spent my 35-year life in a North Bay (Sonoma County) city, and when I first began reading the county paper in 1991, it was already starting to show articles about the early forms of financial problems we're dealing with now.

  14. Re:If only! on More Than 25% of Android Apps Know Too Much About You · · Score: 1

    In Linux, we can also set files to owner-only read access & run iffy apps with an alternative user account -- no SELinux required. I don't know how easy or feasible that would be under Windows or OS X, however.

  15. Smaller concerts aren't like that... on Crowdsourcing Concerts — the Future of Live Music? · · Score: 1

    I've gone to quite a few concerts in the last several years, but the most I've ever had the people at the entrance do is ask to glance into my purse, and that only happened once. The most likely difference is that I'm not into the current hits, which means most of the concerts can be held at smaller, more relaxed venues.

  16. Independent ISPs are not taking part on Internet Providers To Begin Warning Customers Who Pirate Content · · Score: 3, Informative

    I was curious whether a major regional ISP was taking part in this clusterfuck, and found an interesting interview from August stating that the only ISPs taking part are AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon; independent ISPs are not involved and weren't even asked.

    Relatedly, I highly recommend that anyone in the service area for Sonic.net (their CEO/founder was the one interviewed) use them as an ISP -- they're the only one I know of that has been persistently doing what we've all been saying we want ISPs to do when it comes to governmental & *AA demands and investing in fiber connections. No better way to show appreciation than voting with our wallets where we can...

  17. And pay the artists! on First Three-Strikes Copyright Court Case In NZ Falls Over · · Score: 1

    One of the main reasons I refuse to buy new albums is that in most cases, I know only a few pennies of my money goes to the artist; I attend live shows & buy t-shirts at them instead. This article is the best I've seen for detailing the matter.

    In fact, tonight I'm seeing an older artist called Les Chambers in concert that, despite being the lead singer for a couple of hits that have been used all over the friggin' place since the 60s, was never paid any royalties, even ended up homeless for a while (I don't know the story behind that, just that he never used drugs or abused alcohol). It sounds like it was one of those cases where, as a young man in the 60s, he was -- like almost all artists back then -- eager to sign the contract and trusted the RIAA to treat him fairly.

  18. Re:Probably Not on Ask Slashdot: Dedicating Code? · · Score: 1

    Normally I don't correct spelling, but:
    discrete : separate from other parts (common in math & [audio, electrical, etc.] engineering)
    discreet : unobtrusive, subtle

    Also, he doesn't need to worry about being "tactful", more about not being tacky. Tact is what we use to discuss a subject with somebody without causing them emotional unnecessary distress; being tacky means a person or thing comes across as low-class.

    Anyway, to respond more to your message, I agree that something discreet & classy is the way to go. I see them in the 'dedication' area in fiction novels every so often -- something like "dedicated to great-aunt Mildred, whose encouragement kept me writing in the face of so many rejections" or "for cousin Bill, my childhood co-pilot of a thousand spaceships" -- and even though I'm not particularly sentimental, the ones like that often seem quite touching.

  19. Re:Never heard of this university, is it accredite on Take a Free Networking Class From Stanford · · Score: 0

    I really hope you're being facetious, but if not, look here: Wikipedia: Stanford University

  20. Not quite on Take a Free Networking Class From Stanford · · Score: 1

    It's the experience of interacting with people inside & outside the classroom that can keep up with your thoughts/knowledge, respond with ideas that challenge & invigorate you, and that share the drive to excel rather than just going through the motions. It's about finding friends and partners that understand from experience why you did things very few regular teenagers do (like spending most of your free time honing a talent as a teenager rather than goofing off), and that can tackle major projects in the future as equals even if their strengths are very different from yours. I'm a Berkeley alumna rather than from Stanford, but the basic premise is the same for any highly competitive school.

    Also, attending a university was originally intended to help people learn to view their society & the world from a variety of angles before the ones they grew up with become too entrenched to look beyond, because that ability makes them much better citizens that are far harder for the government to manipulate and are better-equipped to solve their society's problems.

    When adults whose college education spanned a variety of subjects look back on those years from that perspective, they often see that various beliefs shifted quite a bit between graduating from high school and from college, and sometimes can see which experiences changed them. Somebody that belongs at a school like Stanford is far less likely to get that kind of experience out of a regular college -- and nobody will get it by just watching lectures online.

  21. My thought exactly (as a non-programmer) on Take a Free Networking Class From Stanford · · Score: 1

    I can see non-programmers like me fulfilling the first few of them, but something tells me the probability he's referring to isn't what we used back in high school or college math, and I have no idea where we would have learned the layout of memory outside of a programming class. When I took a college C programming class (which I barely passed & didn't learn from), the instructor said that handling RAM was taught in the "advanced" C class, as we needed to master the basics first; I similarly didn't see any mention of it when I looked into college Linux/UNIX and shell scripting classes several months ago.

  22. We didn't have any computer classes ('95 graduate) on Ask Slashdot: What Were You Taught About Computers In High School? · · Score: 1

    I graduated in 1995 from an otherwise top-notch high school in California, and would have loved to take a real course on any technical aspect of computers, but all the school really offered was a series of courses for learning to use a MS-DOS or Apple II-series computer in a business environment.

    Our junior high (grades 7 & 8) was somewhat better about it, as one of the grade-specific electives rotated through a different class each quarter, with both grades having a "computers" course. Since only a few of us had a computer at home, most of the two-year class was devoted to basics like typing, how to use the computer, desktop publishing & word processing -- but there was also a segment on the internal parts & how they worked, messing around with LOGO, and a week or two each year was devoted to different aspects of computer history.

  23. Re:Drug Patents on Another Call For Abolishing Patents, This One From the St. Louis Fed · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It varies; they aren't all identical. The newer asthma preventative I started taking several years ago made me free of attacks & frequent bronchitis/pneumonia for the first time; the anti-depressant I'm on is thus far the one kind that increases energy rather than worsening lethargy (which is vital given my other health issues), and the pain patch I'm on lets me have continuous relief instead of the horrible roller-coaster ride that oral painkillers gave.

    The problem is when the pharmaceutical companies knowingly misrepresent the safety, efficacy, and potential uses of a drug. The existence of new medications, if they're sufficiently different from what came before, can give new options to patients that didn't respond well or had a bad reaction to the existing drugs.

  24. From experience in your position, SimplyMepis on Ubuntu Will Now Have Amazon Ads Pre-Installed · · Score: 1

    I was in the same position 2.5 years ago -- I don't know which distros you tried, but the one that has turned out to be the most user-friendly (and have the nicest community) is SimplyMepis. It's Debian-based, so it uses the easiest package manager I've found (Synaptic/.deb), and they set up the desktop environment (KDE4) to be easy enough for total newbies to use.

    For what it's worth, I usually describe myself as a half-geek... I find technology fascinating & enjoy learning Linux -- but my brain doesn't work in the way needed to even combine terminal commands, as it's more geared for the humanities (writing fiction, sociology, psychology, etc.).

  25. Re:I see on Ubuntu Will Now Have Amazon Ads Pre-Installed · · Score: 1

    It's likely because the Right is more corporate-friendly, consistently tries to put their rights over those of human beings and pass generous tax cuts/subsidies for corporations by slashing the funding for schools or other public services average people use.