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User: tutufan

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Comments · 57

  1. It's a Hoax. on Atlanta Man Shatters Coast-to-Coast Driving Record, Averaging 98MPH · · Score: 1

    A more parsimonious explanation would be that these guys simply made the whole thing up. Someone willing to break the law to that degree certainly wouldn't have any qualms about lying.

  2. Re:Great... on Gunman Opens Fire At LAX · · Score: 1

    Depends on how they define winning. In budgetary terms, they're doing great...

  3. Re:When will he be arrested? on Atlanta Man Shatters Coast-to-Coast Driving Record, Averaging 98MPH · · Score: 1

    In addition, and perhaps as important, why are his friends, relatives, and neighbors not shunning this guy? If his mission was to have unprotected sex in each state, spit in salad bars in each state, or slash tires in each state, I suspect we'd see some uproar. But for this much-more-dangerous lawbreaking, nothing. (And I *really* want to hear from the anti-immigration lobby here, who are constantly beating their drums about obeying laws...)

  4. Yes, yes, very nice... on Computing Inside a Living Cell · · Score: 3, Funny

    but can it mine bitcoins?!

  5. Keep Gmail, but drop the other Google stuff (?) on The Case Against Gmail · · Score: 1

    I recently needed to change my Gmail account, which basically involves creating a new one and trying to migrate one's stuff across. While doing this, I realized that they other non-Google stuff (e.g., Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.) was extremely easy to move: Switch email address and you're done. For Google stuff (e.g., Google+, Drive, etc.) the story is a lot more complicated, since each of these services is integrated into the Google universe, and in its own special way. For some, it's not clear that migration is practical, so I'll probably be spread across two accounts indefinitely. Word to the wise.

  6. When Can I Code With a HUD? on 210 Degrees of Heads-Up Display: Hands-On With the InfinitEye · · Score: 2

    Everyone wants these for VR, but I want something I can code with. Anytime, anyplace. Maybe even laying in bed with a feeding tube snaked down my nose. :-) How close are these to being a replacement for a reasonable monitor? (Absolute minimum would be 24x80 text that's usable without headaches/etc for several hours at a stretch.)

  7. Tailgating on The Boss Is Remotely Monitoring Blue-Collar Workers · · Score: 1

    There are a number of behaviors like tailgating and not washing your hands after using the restroom (esp in food service or medicine) that are simply not acceptable behavior. Surreptitious monitoring to catch and correct these transgressions isn't wrong in itself--it's a good thing. Might it be used as a pretext for more sinister behavior? Yes. So we will have to remain vigilant, but it was ever thus. This is no reason not to use these tools for good. Certainly there is no right to do wrong, just because we used to be able.

  8. Cyclist Casualties are Freebies on How Safe Is Cycling? · · Score: 0

    In the US at least, cyclists (and pedestrians) killed by motor vehicle operators are generally treated as freebies. To the degree that drivers avoid running over them, they're probably motivated more by an innate sense of decency and/or the annoyance value of having to stop for an hour or two until the police sweep up the bodies and then tell you not to do it again and send you on your way. Until this changes, cycling will not be a particularly safe activity here.

  9. Re:Same as it ever was on How PR Subverts Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    Fanboys, basically. People who see competition between languages as some sort of sport, want to root for their team, and who in other times and places might be setting cars on fire to vent their rage at not "winning". I have my favorite languages, but I can make long lists of the deficits of each, and I believe they should appear on the Wikipedia pages in question.

  10. Re:Same as it ever was on How PR Subverts Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    The mechanism may be different, but the result is just as pernicious. An encyclopedia article is a wholly appropriate place to list and briefly discuss the benefits of a computer language. And most of the drawbacks of C++ are not really controversial, except in the minds of fanboys. This is not mere pedantry. It really is useful for newbies to be able to go to a Wikipedia article and get a basic sense of the pluses and minuses of a language, versus other languages.

  11. Same as it ever was on How PR Subverts Wikipedia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not sure that this is really new. The page for C++, for example, is regularly scrubbed of any critical material. At the moment, there is just one negative sentence, indicating that "C++ is sometimes compared unfavorably to [some other languages]". Whether that is an unbiased and appropriately detailed statement of the totality of current objective C++ criticism is left as an exercise for the reader.

  12. Re:What purpose does HFT serve? on Barbarians At the Gateways · · Score: 1

    Without commenting on whether or not HFT is socially useful, I'll just point out that many (if not most) economic activities in the modern world have little obvious social value. I can assure you, however, that the direct customers/counterparts of HFTs very much want the service that HFTs provide. If they go dark for even a day, their customers get very, very unhappy. It's kind of like Facebook: Do we need it? Not really. Shall we shut them down? You first...

  13. Re:PCLoad Letter? WTF does that mean? on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Hardest Things Programmers Have To Do? · · Score: 1

    This might sound like a wisecrack, but it is in fact the answer. You can be a Michaelangelo of programming, but if your boss comes in and tells you that from now on everyone will be using six-letter variables names, programming in Visual Basic, and using nothing but Perforce for version control, the quality and power of your results will be so-limited. Some people imagine that a really good programmer can overcome any set of such constraints, but it's easy to see that that's not the case.

  14. Awesome Concern Trolling on RMS: How Much Surveillance Can Democracy Withstand? · · Score: 1

    That was a truly awesome concern troll, but it worries me that people might not appreciate it if they discover that old BenEnglish still programs in COBOL and stores his excrement in baby food jars in his cellar...

  15. Re:Government waste on Boston Dynamics Wildcat Can Gallop — No Strings Attached · · Score: 1

    Because horses can't be programmed to subdue (and maybe mulch) protesters.

  16. I'm sorry I was quoted... on Social Networks Force Barilla Chairman To Apologize For His Anti-gay Remarks · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...and that the Internet exists, and that gay people are not the pariahs they once were, and that I'm not quite rich enough to buy you all off. I will work harder in the future to address these faults. A boycott can only delay the day when I will succeed in doing so. Thank you for paying attention, but please stop.

  17. There's always GCC on Work Halted On Neal Stephenson's Kickstarted Swordfighting Video Game · · Score: 1

    Sorry to hear it, but luckily we still have GCC...

  18. Re:actually.... on Student Arrested For Using Phone App To 'Shoot' Classmates · · Score: 2

    Unfortunately, it's far from clear that the defendant would prevail, and he would be seriously harmed even if he did. I personally know of a kid that now has a juvenile record for something even more innocuous than this incident, but that was also twisted into something terror-y by some seriously vicious adults. It's kind of like the whole Satanic Ritual Abuse thing (remember that?). It'll keep going until we finally decide as a society to call bullshit.

  19. Bake a Cake Wirelessly from Any Room in your House on Wireless Charging Start-Up Claims 30-Foot Radius · · Score: 1

    This is pretty awesome, but do I really need it? Yeah, the generic charging pad is a great idea, but I'm not that crazy about "spooky energy at a distance"...

  20. Choose your poison on Survey: Most IT Staff Don't Communicate Security Risks · · Score: 1

    In the bureaucratic world, I've only seen two kinds of security: nonsensical and nonexistent. On the whole, I prefer the latter.

  21. TI-99/4A on For Education, Why TI-83 > iPad · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that read that as "TI-99/4A"? Personally, I found this device quite educational... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Instruments_TI-99/4A

  22. This is Self-Preventing on Inspired By the Peter Principle: the Peter Pinnacle · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've certainly seen cases where an organization could realize a substantial likely profit by paying someone millions of dollars to go away (or to just sit quietly in a room and stop working mischief). But any organization smart enough to realize this would not find itself in such a lopsided position to begin with. So mostly this state is just an observable marker of a poorly functioning organization.

  23. The Computer Said It, So It Must Be True on Data Visualization: Too Easy To Be Too Slick? · · Score: 1

    This sounds like a rehash of the old "Computer Said It, So It Must Be True" meme from the not-so-distant past. If that experience can provide any guidance, people will mostly learn to ignore these flashy new graphics after 50 or 100 years or so...

  24. Re:At $39.99, they'll be a total bargain on Microsoft Slashes Prices On Surface · · Score: 1

    I want my spider-squasher to be cloud-ready...

  25. At $39.99, they'll be a total bargain on Microsoft Slashes Prices On Surface · · Score: 1

    But until then, they're kind of pitiful...