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User: jotaeleemeese

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  1. Al Capone ... on German Pirate Party Enters 2nd State Parliament · · Score: 1

    .... he funded prohibitionist politicians.

    Drug dealers know exactly who is more convenient to their interests.

  2. Are your partners so selfish? on Ask Slashdot: What Are Your Tips For Working From Home? · · Score: 1

    Honestly chaps, it would seem to me that /.ers have the worst partners in the history of mankind.

    If I say to mine I am working from home, see you at 17:00, she says "yeah, no worries, see you then".

    As for getting out of the house, again, honestly, do you have a life at all? Why should this need to even be mentioned?

    As for the close the door nonsense, it looks to me like a bunch of teenagers are discussing how to get their homwork done instead of seasoned professionals discussion a serious topic.

    This is my 2 cents of advice: be profesional. That is it.

  3. Ah USians.... on UK Plans More Spying On Internet Users Under 'Terrorism' Pretext · · Score: 1

    Is taking down a gangster one of the greatest achievements you could come up with to defend an small government?

    As for winning wars vs. Germany or Japan: any serious historian will tell you that the cornerstone of those victories was the USSR, the country with the biggest government back then, bar the Nazis perhaps.

  4. WHO has looked into this for decades. on Ontario Teachers' Union Calls For Health-Related Classroom Wi-Fi Ban · · Score: 1

    No evidence whatsoever about harmful effects has been found.

  5. What is your point exactly? on Ontario Teachers' Union Calls For Health-Related Classroom Wi-Fi Ban · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of Catholics that understand what is reasonable and what isn't about science.

    Many of them, very devout, use their heads and thus use contraception for example.

    At some point they clearly have decided that god is the only explanation for certain existential key questions, but that , thankfully, doesn't (shouldn't) apply to this particular topic.

  6. Well, I wouldn't. on Ontario Teachers' Union Calls For Health-Related Classroom Wi-Fi Ban · · Score: 1

    Calling somebody a liar is not really on.

    If one needs to correct somebody you have to learn to do it graciously and without humiliating that person if possible.

    Lets say I would explain what was good about the situation and what was wrong about it.

  7. Concerned about what? on Ontario Teachers' Union Calls For Health-Related Classroom Wi-Fi Ban · · Score: 1

    There is absolutely not a shred of credible evidence that electromagnetic waves cause any problems.

    To top it all, when people complain they are so selective (forget about their cordless phones, whine about WiFi) as to be really amusing.

  8. Create a reputation, live with it. on Gates Foundation Makes Progress On Reinvented Toilets · · Score: 2

    We in Latin America are very familiar with this behaviour.

    People that got the upper hand in business by all kind of dubious means start all kind of charitable work and sponsoring of the arts.

    It is called a PR exercise.

    One can't deny that these exercises can have benefits, sometimes immense ones, but they can't rewrite history or palliate the pain and anger of the people who suffered previous bad behaviour.

    What would impress me is if Bill would use his quite reasonable leverage to undo some of the damage his company did, for example stopping Microsoft patent trolling expeditions, bribing the necessary politicians with the respective campaign donations in order to change the idiotic copyright and patent systems in favour of the general public, or some other gesture saying "mea culpa".

    As it is, to all those who remember the other BIll, it is too much to ask to forgive (which I can) and forget (which I can't).

  9. Copying is never stealing. on Ask Slashdot: Copy Protection Advice For ~$10k Software? · · Score: 1

    There are national laws and international treaties dealing with the particular issue of copying because, guess what, it is not stealing and it is recognized by the legal codes of most nations and th respective international treaties.

    Frankly to have to keep labouring this point is like discussing if the Earth is flat or not.

  10. Have you been to China? on Apple Could Lose $1.6 Billion In iPad Lawsuit · · Score: 1

    I have.

    They build infrastructure of Pharaohnic proportions, fully functional towns if needed (amenities, parks, cycling lines, public transport, living quarters).

    In the US people are barking at President Obama for trying to build a fast train.

    That is the difference.

  11. No. People want that they fullfill what they offer on Lenovo Ordered To Refund 'Microsoft Tax' · · Score: 1

    If you buy a computer preinstalled with Windows *the EULA* offers you a refund.

    It is part of the deal, why should you go and buy elsewhere if they are offering you upfront something that you want or need? (a Windowless machine).

    One should go elsewhere if they made perfectly clear they won't give refunds for unused copies o WIndows, which would be interesting from a point of view of consumer rights, since it is illegal in most localities to sell one item (the computer) only and only if you buy another (Windows).

    Microsoft could solve this problem by doing what Apple has done: produce their own computers and stop licensing to manufacturers. Of course this would bring the competition that MS does not want: Dell, HP, and others putting their collective weight behind another OS (most likely a variant of Linux or even Solaris or BSD).

    The EULA and the refund offered are not gracious favours, is MS's way to avoid the route down proper competition in the desktop market (which may be dying anyway, so job done, they would have dominated that industry during almost its whole existence, by almost whatever means necessary).

  12. Those are not the frigging points. on Lenovo Ordered To Refund 'Microsoft Tax' · · Score: 1

    It is time that some of you folks take a reading comprehension course.

    The EULA that comes with the software *guarantees* a refund if you don't want it.

    All what people want is that this unilateral pseudo contract is honoured by the party imposing it.

    This has nothing to do with how other items forming a computer system are sold, this has nothing to do with how a computer manufacturer and Microsoft reach a deal.

  13. Yeah, great. on Lenovo Ordered To Refund 'Microsoft Tax' · · Score: 1

    Would you act the same way with a trader that is known to be unreliable and abusive?

    Would you be so forthcoming with a dentist that every time causes you pain?

    I don't see why one should give a free pass to Microsoft, they have barely changed their business practices and they keep using their muscle to bring into submission other companies (and it is not like if these things happened long time ago, the patent bullying of companies distributing Linux is happening right now, that is right, Microsoft is earning a crust from Linux just because others know they don't have the financial resources to fight them in court).

    And saying one should forget about Microsoft and instead concentrate on Apple is puerile, one can inspect and put into question what both companies (and Google, and Facebook, and many others) are doing.

  14. Acquired taste on Ask Slashdot: Does Europe Have Better Magazines Than the US? · · Score: 1

    Well, I was to St John a couple of times and I would have to say I was not terribly impressed, the reason being that it is quite idiosyncratic on his choice of ingredients (local traditional produce).

    In contrast I ate in Michelin starred restaurants in France and the experience still lingers on my mind.

  15. Uh? on Ask Slashdot: Does Europe Have Better Magazines Than the US? · · Score: 1

    At least in the UK I have never seen a toilet without a seat.

    Same in Germany, Spain, Italy. France I can't remember, maybe once.

    Turkey is another matter, but since one may have to squat there I think that the toilet seat is not an issue...

  16. It is the format. on Ask Slashdot: Does Europe Have Better Magazines Than the US? · · Score: 1

    Magazine are quite rough contraptions: take them anywhere, and they will do fine.

    Although I see a few brave souls with iPads on public transport I frankly can't see myself carrying around a $500 device that can be broken or stolen while I would not mind much if my magazine gets ripped off by a Labrador in the park.

    Also you can't do origami with your bloody iPad.

  17. Do you fancy the job? on Ask Slashdot: Does Europe Have Better Magazines Than the US? · · Score: 1

    Long unsocial hours, obviously boring and with quite a lot of responsibility.

    Will you do it for peanuts?

  18. Organizing a wedding is very stressful... on Ask Slashdot: Techie Wedding Invitation Ideas? · · Score: 1

    So the premise should be to keep things simple.

    A geek should know this: the higher the complexity of a task the higher the probability of something going wrong.

    You'll have plenty of chances to use your geekness to good effect in years to come, and there is a very well oiled weeding industry out there that will get things done in a way that nobody regrets, and with a bit of luck, everybody remembers fondly.

    Your wedding is not the time to be doing alpha versions of anything...

  19. The creative people nonsense. on How To Get Developers To Document Code · · Score: 1

    I will refer you to Steve Jobs, which is one person that by all accounts could be described as creative.

    On his first incarnation at Apple, he created the Macintosh.

    It was a revolutionary computer and truly a design icon. But it was over budget and no clear strategy was thought to commercialise it. This iconic machine almost killed Apple and Jobs, rightly, was sacked before he would have wrecked the company.

    When Jobs was back he put emphasis in doing the administrative parts of the work properly, introducing Japanese techniques of managing inventory for example.

    Creative people need to understand that being creative is not the same as being bohemian and irresponsible.

    There are creative people that are professional and responsible, and there are creative people that are a hindrance. A good manager should identify the later and work with them to become the former, but there is a limit for everything, and at some point obstructive people have to be given the push.

  20. No wonder you posted anonymously on How To Get Developers To Document Code · · Score: 1

    No good manager would put his name to such management policies, even under a pseudonym, which at the end is trackable at least here.

  21. In most countries.... on Chile Forbids Carriers From Selling Network-Locked Phones · · Score: 1

    ... abusive contracts are deemed unenforceable.

    Locking phones to stop costumers to use them as the please is anticompetitive, immoral and abusive.

  22. You are wrong. on Chile Forbids Carriers From Selling Network-Locked Phones · · Score: 1

    Kiwis are more liberal, they are conscious they are an small country and don't tend to comit the same arrogant mistakes of bigger countries.

    I concur about Australia, the shine goes after one week there, for example I was actually racially abused 3 times while there for a couple of weeks, the same amount of abuse I have received in the UK in 15 years.... that says it all really.

  23. Not the UK on Chile Forbids Carriers From Selling Network-Locked Phones · · Score: 1

    Phones remain locked, depending on the model it can be relatively expensive to unlock it (unless you engage a shady unlocker in places of London that are best not visited often )

  24. It is not that they don't care. on Justifications For Creating an IT Department? · · Score: 1

    They don't have time to do it, and it is not their game anyway.

  25. So what? on Justifications For Creating an IT Department? · · Score: 1

    One works to make a company more efficient, not to increase one's job security.