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User: sharkbiter

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Comments · 75

  1. Too fast by far! on Use Open Source? Then You're a Pirate! · · Score: 1

    Way too quick to attempt the quashing of OSS, my little corporation! Only just yesterday had we learned of your attempts at imprisoning of the common man with DMCA and ACTA. Now, just now in an attempt of the equivalent of a "one-two" punch do you try to destroy what is left of our very liberty with a lobbyist group! Just how much is the populace capable of absorbing prior to a public lynching?

  2. Established Patterns on Beliefs Conform To Cultural Identities · · Score: 1

    Y'all will probably kill my karma for this, but: Established dogma is more acceptable than a new theory. Hear me out! If it were proven that "god is in the machine" (ex deus machina) to a group of individuals that don't believe in god but rather; a higher belief in an ultimate creator (one who creates and steps back allowing the course of events to fall as they may), then said group would obviously reject any belief, theory or proof that god is alive and well and influences their daily lives. Think about it. If I were to raise you to believe that god exists but not as a deciding factor but rather as an observer of his experiment, would you not reject out of hand any other individual that came along and insisted that the very same guiding hand that created you is determining which way you should/will live your life?

    This is what I believe the author of this article is premising. Sorry to ramble. I hope you can see what I'm attempting to hypothesize.

  3. Re:A super calculator on Looking Back From the 1980s At Computers In Education · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I forgot about that period of time. In 1981 I bought a VIC-20 (don't laugh) for 90 dollars at K-Mart. By the time I got to Japan in 1984, I had a C64 with cassette and 12 inch color monitor. While in Japan, I built several Apple II/][+ knockoffs for friends with parts purchased in Akihabura. I considered it game over in 1986 as the Amiga 1000 that I'd acquired, was slowly being overtaken by the IBM architecture (can you say "yuck!"?), with EGA graphics then VGA graphics and soundblaster cards. It's utterly amazing that the Van Neumann architecture continues to rule the computer roost.

    My point here is that in the 70's, there was Apple and mainframes. By the 80's there were arcade consoles, home computers and the like. By 1988, there was Apple and IBM architecture. All the other computers were dust-binned or in the case of the Amiga soon to be. In a span of 10 years, we saw an entire generation of thought become obsolete. What a time in history!

  4. Re:A super calculator on Looking Back From the 1980s At Computers In Education · · Score: 1

    Wow! They must have had limited resources at your school at the time. In 1978, I was the part-time sysop of an IBM S/32 (16K of core memory). The other kids in my Data Processing class would use 8 inch floppy disks with their programs on them (COBOL), as entered by the "typing pool" on IBM 36's and line up for batch processing. Being the sysop, I was able to monopolize the first 3 days of the week with my assignment using the S/32's console and green screen VDU and put out my assignment, extra credit and extra extra credit. I got an A+ (the plus was merely the instructor's tacked on opinion as it didn't count). After Wednesday, the lines would be long (there were about 12 kids in the course), as the rest of the class entered their now "last minute" assignments.

  5. Re:Carriers can mess with this? on Google Deducing Wireless Location Data · · Score: 1, Insightful

    With all due respect, the carriers have enough on their hands currently to not bother with this. Unless the priority of the information becomes tantamount, in which case we would see a scenario like "Gee that's a nice geo loco information gathering program you've got there. A shame something might happen to it".

  6. Re:Full text on White House Holding Piracy Summit · · Score: 0

    In short, 30 million tax payer dollars are going into this effort. I can think of a lot of better things that 30 million dollars could go into instead of a few individuals' bank accounts. As a tax payer, I insist that the Music Companies pay a reward to the hard working people who made it possible for them to do this.

  7. Re:How cool is that?! [Re:Release it.] on Ethics of Releasing Non-Malicious Linux Malware? · · Score: 0

    Yes all 2 of the current Linux users might download it and you'll have a mighty botnet!

  8. Re:Banking INternationally on EU About To Grant US Unlimited Access To Banking Data · · Score: 0

    I see... The US doesn't own the New York property. So based upon your reasoning, The NATO bases aren't owned by the the European Nations that they are hosted upon...

  9. Re:Banking INternationally on EU About To Grant US Unlimited Access To Banking Data · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UN_Building

    So the land where the UN building is at and the upkeep for the building (built by US with US materials by US construction workers), isn't an issue here?

  10. Let Them. on MPAA Asks Again For Control Of TV Analog Ports · · Score: 0

    The more that they control the sooner that Joe Sixpack becomes aware that he can't watch what he wants to. When the sales of entertainment drop below a sustainable figure and the MPAA/RIAA flogs their congress-critters to pass even more draconian laws, only then will the populace wake up from their Pop-culture stupor and vote the congress-critters out of office.

    Heck, maybe they'll even grab up the CEOs of the various "entertainment" community and put them up against the wall. Followed shortly by the ambulance chasers with an apperegio of a few financial institutions' COOs as well.

  11. Re:Penalties on Microsoft Patents Sudo's Behavior · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    You spelled "you're" wrong.

  12. Re:Lord corporation and his end-user vassals on EU Wants To Redefine "Closed" As "Nearly Open" · · Score: 1

    I agree. I simply can't believe that it's gone this far. Is the current generation so hung up on entertainment that they can't band together and lobby (harass) their respective representatives? I see the next generation flaunting the "rules" whenever and wherever they can, but it's not in the spirit of Jefferson who commented that "a little rebellion now and then is a good thing" to Madison in regards to Shay's Rebellion.

    No longer do I see earnest learning with the spirit of improving oneself, instead I see profiteers.

    The very institutions of learning; Universities and Colleges are _giving_ out sheepskins for dollars. Some still value their grade points and will refuse to pass, but others...

    I realize that "Joe Six-Pack" is alive and well, that issues with a technical bent are beyond a certain group of technophobes, but I just can't understand when it equates to a loss of the very freedoms and liberties that our forefathers held dear being tossed by the very individuals that are elected to protect them for mere piddling material gains.

    I'm sickened.

    Truly.

    Want to know who the next President of the USA/USR/EU is? Just ask the corporations, they'll tell you with their special vote: Monetary Units of whatever currency the candidate prefers.

    What will happen when China weighs in with their marker? The future isn't looking very bright...

    Yeah, joke about overlords. Pass off the Draconian measures to an antiquated business system. Explain that the new sharing isn't theft but a system of "Nottingham redistribution of wealth". I don't think those that have and will continue to consume the power base will permit it for much longer.

    The bottom line is money.

  13. Re:Doublespeak and Redefining on EU Wants To Redefine "Closed" As "Nearly Open" · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It sucks to have to face the reality that in an almost infinite universe, a spiral galaxy's arm (one of many) of which an insignificant blue planet, (third from the sun), spins that there are such small minded individuals that are incapable of seeing future generations and simply not caring for the inhabitants that they're borrowing resources from. All to get a few material possessions or to feel that they have importance. Yes, they even think that digital watches are still pretty neat.

    To the future generations we leave a legacy of distrust, distaste and disgust. They in turn will do the same for the next, until the life-form known as Homo Sapiens will be no more.
    --------
    “Believing in Father Christmas is important,” says Pratchett. “It trains our imaginations on the little lies so we can believe the big lies like justice [and] truth.” - UK Times.

  14. And another thing... on Asimov Estate Authorizes New I, Robot Books · · Score: 1

    'Nuff said. (Don't go Dirk Gently into that night)...

  15. Re:conficker on After 1 Year, Conficker Infects 7M Computers · · Score: 1

    "That was easy!"

  16. Re:I'm safe! on After 1 Year, Conficker Infects 7M Computers · · Score: 1

    I agree. There hasn't been any sort of posting concerning the Japanese Linux Symposium yet and the event is nearly over. I also note that the "Torvolds thumbs up" hasn't been posted either.

  17. Re:I'd never do it, but on Moving Away From the IT Field? · · Score: 1

    You left out "I opened that viral e-mail attachment just like you told me not to".

  18. Re:Firmware on Palm Ignores USB-IF Warning, Restores iTunes Sync · · Score: 1

    Sic Semper Tyrannis? Are you certain?

  19. Re:That's what a basic income is for... on DoJ Recommends NY Court Reject Google Book Deal · · Score: 1

    Ah sweet sweet welfare! Where the poorest and laziest of humanity can drive Cadillacs and dine on steak whereas everybody else is sweating there collective lives away, barely making ends meet, working for the "man".

  20. Re:WTF? on Amazon Offers To Return Pulled Orwell Ebooks · · Score: 1

    It's copyright, not "copy right" or are you attempting to differentiate between legal rights and ill-gotten gains?

  21. Re:Family values facade on LittleBigPlanet Delayed Due To Qur'an-Sampling Audio · · Score: 1

    Washington D.C.

    'nuff said...

  22. Shapes are Public Domain... on The Apple Name Game · · Score: 1

    You can't patent the name Circle, Square or Triangle unless it's an appended one,(Circle-K, Square-D, Triangle-Services).

    Why should common fruit be any different?

  23. Jackass in Space on Firefly Likely to be Cancelled · · Score: 1

    Perhaps this is what the public wants? Given the popularity of the movie and the general public's ever growing desire to see this sort of "genre", I would conclude that the only way to create a popular and lasting show would be to apply Science Fiction/Fantasy to a Jackass theme.

    So how about: Bob similtaneously introducing matter and anti-matter together in sufficient quantities to create a stunning effect. Darwin theory takes over at this point and we don't have to worry about Bob polluting our gene pool anymore.

    OR: Jim and Frank take two spaceships and hit each other head-on at near-light speeds, while the math and probability nearly cancel out such an event, it'd be neat to see them try.

    Best bet: Take all the Bean Counters and Network Execs from Fox, and introduce them to a Black Hole. I think that the effect of the Event Horizon would be a rather cool display for future generations to come...

  24. Re:bad news for linux users on FCC Clears Comcast Purchase Of AT&T Broadband · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm a Linux user (clean of windows in my apartment for 4 months now), I use a linksys firewall-hub to connect to them. I had to "bless" the cable connection with windows before I took over the connection with the Linksys and have never looked back.

  25. Hang In There. on Ask An Ordinary Teenage Slashdot User · · Score: 1

    Do you ever feel that even though the other people are your age physically, they have the mental IQ of a carrot? This isn't a joke question. At 16 I was a tall, skinny, and clumsy person. Classes were too slow, few teachers could reach me. Tests were a breeze, libraries consumed most of my time. Granted that the times were different, and that the liberal encroachment of the minority societal kneebiters not as extent as today. My "peers" were a bunch of ignoramuses who would rather destroy than to build. But that is the essence of youth, is it not? They couldn't see ahead one day much less a whole lifetime. Ah cartharsis! Ah epiphany! It wasn't until I left the old hometown and got in with a bunch of more likeminded individuals that the party really began. A bit much to ask your average sixteen year old maybe, but I've met a lot of really intelligent youngsters since my days as one. I truly enjoy seeing that there are "serious" youths out there. I wish you the best of luck in future, and don't let the dark side of technology pull you in. I've also seen enough bright individuals sucked in to that trap as well. Am I not right, K?