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User: blackiner

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  1. Re:Loss of jobs... on Bill Gates: AI Is The 'Holy Grail' (mashable.com) · · Score: 1

    And how long did it take you to recognize Arabic numerals? I seem to remember going over numbers and the ABCs in preschool and only truly grasping everything by kindergarten, but then again my memory is a bit fuzzy on this. Computers can do it in, what, a day?

  2. The 'few lingering hardware issues' are pretty much already being addressed by the Linux development community anyway. Linux already has perhaps the best hardware support out of any operating system, period. There are still problems with some graphics cards (especially newer nVidia cards, because nVidia started requiring signed firmware, so the already working open source firmware can no longer be used), and a few wifi card vendors. Nouveau already is getting pretty damn competitive with the binary blob for cards like the 680 when reclocking is enabled, and the open source radeon drivers keep improving too.

  3. Re:so overcomplicated on The Russian Plan To Use Space Mirrors To Turn Night Into Day (vice.com) · · Score: 2

    Yes, the Simpsons taught us the capitalist version of this plot: Local billionaire creates a device to blot out the Sun and sell electricity from his nuclear plant to the town 24/7.

  4. Re:That's great. Now for the really important stuf on LG Announces "Super UHD" TV Lineup (digitaltrends.com) · · Score: 1

    I see lots of people saying how useless these things are, but I beg to differ. 8k at 49" would be ~180ppi. These would make excellent high resolution monitors, especially if they start selling even smaller models. Hopefully they start pushing other companies to start making 8k models as well. The only question I have is, how the hell does the cabling for these things work? I seem to recall that the newest hdmi and displayport specs don't even support 5k particularly well.

  5. Re:im sure its a riveting discussion on List of Major Linux Desktop Problems Updated For 2016 (narod.ru) · · Score: 1

    All kindles have had >150dpi. As I said already, freetype does hidpi font rendering rather well.

  6. Re:im sure its a riveting discussion on List of Major Linux Desktop Problems Updated For 2016 (narod.ru) · · Score: 1

    The letters are too thick, and blur on the sides. And they are not a deep enough black... On windows it is a thin solid black. I have also noticed that in linux it seems to rather often render some text in between pixels and then blend the results, where on windows everything seems much more aligned to the actual monitor pixels. You can even see this with antialiasing completely disabled, some letters will take up an extra pixel. It is a bit difficult to explain. Slashdot frontpage in particular looks bad, it is like the main text is some shade of grey instead of black. The white on green text at the top of the page has very heavy color bleeding, while on windows it is a nice solid white line. I have no idea if this is just me being super picky, or if it is because I have a high color accuracy monitor, or what.

  7. Re:im sure its a riveting discussion on List of Major Linux Desktop Problems Updated For 2016 (narod.ru) · · Score: 1

    The fonts are a big issue for me personally. I have particularly picky eyes when it comes to font rendering I guess. I usually will spend days to weeks trying to get linux font rendering to my liking, but it just never quite gets there. Everything looks blurry and makes my eyes water if I try to read for more than a few minutes at a time. Which is a real shame, since the rendering looks very good on hi dpi devices. But in 94dpi? No thank you.

  8. Re:But Why? on Let's Encrypt Is Now In Public Beta (eff.org) · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is a pretty writeup about modern TLS issues on lwn: http://lwn.net/Articles/664385...
    It seems that certificate revocation is not working particularly well in practice. The 90 day duration is meant to help with this, you can simply let the certificate expire.

  9. Re:Pretty sure we already know where this leads... on The Tamagochi Singularity Made Real: Infinite Tamagochi Living On the Internet (hackaday.com) · · Score: 1

    Now we just need to add an evolution feature for the tamagochis.

  10. Re:Why not just lock down the radio portion? on ESR On Why the FCC Shouldn't Lock Down Device Firmware (ibiblio.org) · · Score: 1

    Back when I used an old linux box as my AP/router, it would always say something about locking the frequencies usable by the wireless card to USA frequencies or some such in the logs. Not sure how it even knew that, maybe from the timezone data, but it did it. Why can't this be standard across all firmwares?

  11. Re:Are they actually powered down? on Some Apple iPhone 6s and 6s Plus Smartphones Mysteriously Powering Down · · Score: 1

    My nexus 4 randomly powers off. Well, not quit off, the little notification light still blinks sometimes... but the screen will not power on and it is totally unresponsive. Gotta hold power to turn it off, then hold it again to turn it on.

  12. Re:This is a partnership.... on AT&T Helped the NSA Spy On Internet Traffic · · Score: 1

    What did they get out of it? Retroactive immunity for performing illegal warrantless wiretapping at the behest of the government, of course. I remember well back when Obama was starting to get popular and people kept saying how he would be different and bring "hope" and "change", yet supported this attrocity: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07...

  13. Hopefully the mere fact that this thing even exists means that lower capacities will start to fall in price. They are obviously getting better at making SSDs... a few years back, the mere idea of a 4TB SSD would be unthinkable.

  14. Already solved on Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industry? · · Score: 1

    "The desire to figure out how to bring ad blocking to mobile consumers is a worldwide phenomenon," says Roi Carthy Ad blocking, he says, "is an inalienable right."

    This was already solved via firefox mobile + uBlock origin. I'll admit firefox mobile isn't really the best browser out there in terms of performance, but the ad blocking more than makes up for it, and it is the only browser I use on my phone.

  15. Re:sandboxing on Firefox 38 Arrives With DRM Required To Watch Netflix · · Score: 1

    Can it access the video card or TPM? It clearly MUST have access to some sort of hardware resources, otherwise the DRM scheme is completely useless (you could just grab the stream of anything decrypted via CPU). I seem to recall news sometime back about microsoft's drm scheme requiring video card driver support in order to secure the stream all the way to the monitor. Sandboxes have breakout vulnerabilities all the time (well, at least on linux... I have no idea how good windows' sandboxing is).

  16. Re:Any ideas for improvements? on Longer Video Shows How Incredibly Close Falcon Stage Came To Successful Landing · · Score: 1

    To expand on this just a bit: I feel like the landing platform itself should somehow be helping the rocket land. It is like when you toss a ball up and catch it. If you just leave your hand at a certain height, the ball smacks into it real hard. But if you move your hand down with the ball as you catch it you provide a much smoother deceleration and it lands more softly. Obviously finding equipment and mechanisms that could assist a rocket will be hard though (massive ass weight and extremely hot fuel).

  17. Any ideas for improvements? on Longer Video Shows How Incredibly Close Falcon Stage Came To Successful Landing · · Score: 1

    Watching this got me curious if there were any radical ideas that might help something like this work better. What if you fired a bunch of harpoons that latched on to the rocket as it approached to try to help guide it down? Although they would need to be on some kind of spinning track since the rocket could spin a lot, and any latches added to the rocket would almost certainly mess with the aerodynamics of it. So probably not that good of an idea. I dunno. I feel like there is room for improvement somewhere though.

  18. Re:So.. Why? on NVIDIA's New GPUs Are Very Open-Source Unfriendly · · Score: 1

    Just about everything the card does has already been done open source by nouveau, including the firmwares described in this article. It does change a bit between card generations, but not too much. You can already go read the reverse engineered source for these firmwares (go on, it is distributed with the linux kernel source). This is simply a matter of the card not accepting non-signed firmware. There are no trade secrets protected by this.

  19. Re:allergies on Obama Says Climate Change Is Harming Americans' Health · · Score: 1

    I've yet to find a single allergy medication that even has an affect on me. Spring is awful. Cats are even worse.

  20. Re:Meh on Generate Memorizable Passphrases That Even the NSA Can't Guess · · Score: 1

    Actually I did the math wrong, only would last 28 days. Time to get better passwords.

  21. I just use a completely random 13 digit alphanumeric password for my important stuff, and weaker more memorable passwords for random websites. Memorize the hard stuff for the important stuff. Calculator comes out to 401008959688303753940.6 years at one trillion guesses per second. Unless I did the math wrong... I ain't even give a fuck if someone gets the hash... the password practically already IS a hash.

  22. Re:Compaq sk-2700 on Ask Slashdot: Good Keyboard? · · Score: 1

    It is no biggie. My skin has adapted to the germs already.

  23. Compaq sk-2700 on Ask Slashdot: Good Keyboard? · · Score: 1

    I am still using the keyboard that came with our compaq presario from ~1995. This thing is a beast, you could develop some serious muscle just lifting it up all day. It has more stains on it than a motel mattress, the space behind the keys is a highly effective lint trap, and it has never been cleaned even once. It has also never broken even once, and it is the most comfortable thing I have ever typed on. The keys have an incredible amount of resistance to them and make an astonishingly loud noise when pressed. Perfect keyboard.

  24. Re:Calories in/out, but nobody measures OUT on Doubling Saturated Fat In Diet Does Not Increase It In Blood · · Score: 1

    Very true. I eat quite a bit some days. I work out quite a bit. I actually want to gain weight, so that I can lift more, but no matter how much I eat in a day (sometimes I will eat an entire pizza for dinner), it all evens out... I am always within a couple pounds when I weigh myself. The days I eat a lot of food? I have massive shits the next morning. The days I eat very little? Very little poo. My body is simply too good at regulating itself I guess.

  25. Re:The New Magic on Machine Learning Used To Predict Military Suicides · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is also such a general term as to be useless to anyone with some AI know how. Did they perform Bayesian analysis? A neural net? Get into the details. Anyway, I think the general public would be shocked to see how utterly simple some of these algorithms are. Most are just really basic probabilities generated off some input...