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User: sirwired

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  1. Not that anyone will see this, but I'm done here. on AAPS Doctors Run Survey On Hillary Clinton's Health (prnewswire.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've been a reader of Slashdot since before they even had user accounts, and if I had felt like making my first comment with an account sooner, would have easily landed a 4-digit UID. I have a couple thousand comments to my name (though not many over the past couple of years), excellent karma, and a long history on this site. I've always been impressed with the commenting/moderation system, which I think remains the site's biggest innovation/strength, and one that I wish more websites would use to get control of their comment sections.

    But over the years, I've watched Slashdot become less and less interesting as the quality of stories has gotten lower and lower. But this is the last straw.

    Rarely have I seen the commentariat completely united in pointing out that this story was a bad idea:
    - It's purely political with zero tech content.
    - It's a direct repost from PRNewsWire
    - It's all about a pathetic self-selected internet survey
    - It comes from a group so political, it might as well be called "Doctors Against Filthy Liberals"

    The comments section of Slashdot can be lively and interesting, but only if the editors pick something other than pathetic troll-bait to get the discussion going, and they've fallen down on that job horribly. Rob & co. knew how to get a discussion going; the latest bunch alternate between click-bait and the most abstruse and boring tech stories they can find.

    After nearly 20 years with Slashdot, I'm done. I'm deleting the Slashdot feed from my RSS reader, and I guess it'll go on (or not) without me.

  2. False. Google loses money on lots of services. on Get Ready To Be Bombarded With Ads When Using Google Maps (news.com.au) · · Score: 1

    Google has a great number of money-losing products and services. Google Maps is one of them (especially without these ads.) Compared with how much it costs to collect and maintain the mapping data (not to mention the development and infrastructure cost for the application), they most certainly lose money on it. (Google tracks and uses your location to serve you search ads with or without the use of Google Maps if you have an Android phone or use any Google product or browse to any site serving Google ads on your computer.)

    Google is making precisely bupkis on self-driving cars, Google Voice, Google Docs (at least the non-commercial version), etc.

  3. You didn't pay for Maps on Get Ready To Be Bombarded With Ads When Using Google Maps (news.com.au) · · Score: 1

    You didn't pay for Google Maps (either on a one-time basis or an ongoing charge.) Yep, you bought an Android phone, but navigation is hardly a core part of Android.

  4. If you want the ability to re-sell an electronic copy of a work, then you have to accept DRM (and consequences for cracking it.) A physical book (say, a 500-page novel), has built-in "copy protection" in that it is tedious, at best, to make a copy to keep for yourself prior to sale. (And if you do make a complete copy for yourself, it is uncontroversial that this could, in theory, get you in trouble.)

    If a publisher can be reasonably assured that the user will not sell a copy while keeping the one they have, then it is reasonable for them to let said sale take place. But without solid DRM, no such assurance exists. I can't blame a publisher for being more than a but upset over an easy market for cheap "used" e-books if there's no DRM.

  5. I'm not seeing it on American Schools Teaching Kids To Code All Wrong (qz.com) · · Score: 1

    Paraphrasing: "Because kids can't code an OS from scratch after playing around with a computer for an hour, we are teaching them 'all wrong'." Seriously?

    Yes, the general public frequently confuses the writing of code with Computer Science, but that does not mean that schools are doing anything "wrong" by starting out with some simple toyboxes for kids to play with.

  6. How dare they... on Get Ready To Be Bombarded With Ads When Using Google Maps (news.com.au) · · Score: 0

    How dare Google try and make a profit off this product that they provide to the public without charge. The nerve!

  7. That's not an unreasonable 1st-run on Where Are the Raspberry Pi Zeros? (i-programmer.info) · · Score: 1

    What if they had ordered 200k of the things, and they found a defect that escaped test? Starting off with a smaller run is not a horrible choice. It sucks that the devices are late, but it's hardly an outrage,.

  8. Right after I buy my laptop fuel cell on Sony Creating Sulfur-Based Batteries With 40% More Capacity Than Li-Ion (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    Color me skeptical, but these "battery breakthrough" stories are the new "laptop fuel cell" stories, which have appeared here since about the first month Slashdot has existed, and always been shipping just a little bit in the future.

    When they put them in a shipping product, then I'll pay attention.

  9. Indentation isn't enough for DNA. on Harvard Prof. Says Cure For Aging Could Emerge Within 5 Years (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    Well, the thing is, even if we HAD a "DNA Beautifier", which we do not, even neat, organized, DNA is about as useful as handing that Google.com code over to my 96-year-old Grandmother and asking her to interpret exactly, with perfect precision, what even part of it does. We simply do not know enough about protein synthesis for the source code to be of much use at all, and there aren't any obvious efforts on the horizon for great leaps forward in that respect.

  10. Somebody wants to land some grant $$$... on Harvard Prof. Says Cure For Aging Could Emerge Within 5 Years (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 2

    Not in five years, maybe not in fifty; this is so absurdly over-optimistic, it's not even funny.

    http://xkcd.com/1605/

    We know SO LITTLE about how genes actually function to produce, well, you, the idea that we can, within five years, figure out which genes are "responsible" for aging and turn them off/around is ridiculous. The amount of feedback looping going on, even if we knew which genes produced which raw proteins, is so twisted that even figuring out the protein synthesis process itself requires super-computers, much less figuring out how all those proteins interact with your body.

    We heard all this very same talk when the first Human Genome Project results were released. Please tell me what grand advances that has brought us, other than a few diagnostic tests, and some treatments for a couple rare diseases.

  11. They have some pretty strict limits on City Sued Over Smart Meter-Related Patent (chicagotribune.com) · · Score: 1

    The patent office has some pretty strict limits as to when they can actually reject a patent. As in, there are specific laws they must follow for something to qualify as "prior art" for a patent rejection, and only specific places the law authorizes them to go. As in, with the silly "Point a Laser Pointer at a Cat" patent... any idiot knows there are approx. 1B videos on YouTube about this. But internet videos aren't on the list. Nor are websites in general, unless said websites have an actual printed publication behind them.

    Certainly Internet-based prior art can be used as an effective DEFENSE to a patent lawsuit, and can lead to the patent being revoked, but they cannot be used by the patent examiners in the initial evaluation.

  12. There's gotta be a better way on City Sued Over Smart Meter-Related Patent (chicagotribune.com) · · Score: 2

    There should be a way to structure the patent laws so you can't sue somebody who bought a patented invention from somebody else. The idea that an end-user is fully liable for the development practices of an upstream company is ridiculous.

    I realize such laws would be tricky to craft (an unscrupulous vendor could "buy" IP they don't own from a shell company or patsy), but the current way of doing things is resulting in far too many patent trolls pursuing mid-sized organizations that have enough money to make the suit worth it, but not so much they can actually afford patent litigation.

    Maybe craft a law that if you want to go after end-users (instead of the organization carrying out the infringement), your maximum recovery will be a RAND licensing cost, and it better have some relation to how much you paid to develop/acquire the patented invention to begin with.

  13. Hmmm... on Airbus Patent Shows Modular, Removable Aircraft Cabins (gizmag.com) · · Score: 1

    If they can keep the cost and weight penalty low, this could work. Planes (especially short-haul planes) currently spend a significant percentage of the day loading and unloading. If they can cut that down by simply slotting in pre-loaded passengers and bags, this could speed around turnaround times enough for this to make sense.

  14. This is not in the least surprising on The Brains of Men and Women Aren't Really That Different, Study Finds (sciencemag.org) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I thought it was long-known that what might be true on a general basis has poor predictive value on an individual basis when it came to just about anything dealing with the brain.

  15. Which is why it's a bad idea... on Can Full-Time Tech Workers Survive the Gig Economy? (dice.com) · · Score: 1

    Well, it depends on the work I suppose. If you can land a long-term gig as an independent contractor then yes, you can ratchet your rate expectations down a bit. But if the jobs you are taking are piecemeal? Then needing to bill at around triple what you'd earn as a regular full-time employee is about right. Somebody working in fits and starts has to cover:
    - Benefits
    - Downtime
    - Payroll taxes
    - Liability Insurance
    - Overhead (i.e. travel, legal bills, things an employer might reimburse you for, like your cell phone)
    - Non-billable labor (time spent doing all those mundane tasks you would foist off to corporate functions (i.e. billing, accounting, marketing, etc.)

    What? You can't get anybody to pay it? Well you are almost certainly earning less than an employee doing the same job would be.

  16. Still in use today in general aviation on When Slide Rules Were Like Cellphones (hackaday.com) · · Score: 1

    While the "slip stick" is no longer used pretty much anywhere, any amateur pilot will be able to quickly demonstrate his E6-B Flight Computer. The proper use of this device is mandatory to obtain a pilot's license, and it's actually a pretty decent way to perform a lot of quick, yet otherwise-complex calculations for fuel burn, wind drift, en-route time, etc.

    In commercial aviation, they've been replaced by flight-planning software and more sophisticated avionics and navigation systems, but they are still in wide use for people flying "personal" aircraft.

  17. But is it 12 percent of a plan? on Feds Have a Plan For Catastrophic Solar Flares (digitaljournal.com) · · Score: 1

    Peter Quill: I have a plan.
    Rocket Raccoon: You've got a plan? Okay, first of all, you're copying me from when I said I had a plan.
    Peter Quill: I'm not copying you, I have a plan, that's not that unique of a thing to say.
    Rocket Raccoon: And secondly, I don't think you even have a plan.
    Peter Quill: I have part of a plan.
    Drax the Destroyer: What percentage of a plan do you have?
    Gamora: You don't get to ask questions after the nonsense you pulled on Knowhere!
    Drax the Destroyer: I just saved Quill!
    Peter Quill: We've already established that you destroying the ship I'm on is not saving me!
    Drax the Destroyer: When did we establish that?
    Peter Quill: Like three seconds ago!
    Drax the Destroyer: Well I wasn't listening then, I was thinking of something else...
    Rocket Raccoon: She's right, you don't get an opinion... What percentage?
    Peter Quill: I dunno... Twelve percent?
    Rocket Raccoon: Twelve percent?
    [starts laughing]
    Peter Quill: That's a fake laugh.
    Rocket Raccoon: It's real!
    Peter Quill: Totally fake!
    Rocket Raccoon: That is the most real, authentic, hysterical laugh of my entire life because THAT IS NOT A PLAN!
    Gamora: It's barely a concept.
    Peter Quill: [to Gamora] You're taking their side?
    Groot: I am Groot.
    Rocket Raccoon: So what, "It's better than eleven percent!" What the hell does that have to do with anything?

  18. Ericsson? on HP Is Now Two Companies. How Did It Get Here? (cio.com) · · Score: 1

    HP doesn't own Ericsson, nor do they have any relationship with them other than an IT outsourcing contract. Maybe you are thinking of Sony, which merged their handset business with Ericssons?

  19. Full encryption does nobody any good if the OS, as deployed, is so full of holes that the encryption isn't much of an impediment to gaining full access to everything on the device.

    I'm pretty sure that neither Android nor iOS is a true bar to getting at what's on your phone (iOS almost certainly has plenty of exploitable bugs your tax dollars have discovered or paid for information on), though it might not be information that's going to be admissible in a trial.

  20. Re:76,000 Employees? on Western Digital To Buy SanDisk (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    Manufacturing I imagine; they do, after all, sell a LOT of hard disks, and that's not the sort of thing you can farm out if you are a hard disk company.

  21. Who cares about the e-reader market? on Is Amazon Harming the E-reader Category? (teleread.com) · · Score: 1

    I don't see why we should care about the "e-reader" market; the market for e-books themselves is far more important. The sales are still growing, if not as quickly as they were.

    (Also, despite all the ribbing Amazon gets for them, the "Special Offers" aren't the least bit intrusive. They appear on the "sleep" screen and about the bottom 1/3" of the Home screen. They are not visible when you are actually reading, which is what most people spend the most time doing.)

  22. Just get another card already on When Fraud Detection Shuts Down Credit Cards Inappropriately · · Score: 1

    It's not as if there is only some tiny selection of credit cards available... If CapOne does this to you repeatedly, why haven't you defected to another card yet? Voting with your wallet is a lot more effective than whining on Slashdot.

  23. Yeah, they're doomed... on Sprint To Begin Layoffs, Cut $2.5 Billion In Expenses · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cut 33% of operating expenses and fail to invest in fixing their lackluster network? This is what a company that just wants to be put out of their misery does. They're is no clearer signal they just want to be bought out for their spectrum at this point.

  24. A single line? ROTFLOL! on How Did Volkswagen Cheat Emissions Tests, and Who Authorized It? · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure it takes more than one line of code to (sneakily) check for an emissions test, and a whole lot more lines to implement said cheaty-mode.

    The reports so far seem to indicate that they looked for an OBD connection, atmospheric pressure and temperature at a certain level (specified in the test protocol), the steering wheel not moving (because the car's on rollers), the engine being run at certain speeds (to keep somebody from spotting it during a dyno test at a tuner shop.)

    That would be one heck of a line...

  25. Nobody noticed 1%/3d was crazy? on Bitcoin Ponzi Scheme Operator Pleads Guilty To $150M Fraud · · Score: 0

    Talk about fools and their money... people believing 1%/3d for any actual investment are beyond gullible. If it wasn't BitCoins, it'd be something else, like 419 fraud.