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User: vidarh

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  1. Re:It's probably for the best. on Philip K. Dick's "Flow My Tears" To Be Filmed · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Describing "Sheep" as "bizarre" is pretty funny, considering it's overall one of PKD novels that are most "mainstream". I don't agree with you that Blade Runner eliminated "unnecessary detail" - it fundamentally altered the story. Doesn't mean it's a bad movie, just not the same story.

    I want to see a "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep" movie. You could make one with most of the mainstream audience not even realizing it had anything to do with Blade Runner.

    And if you take PKD books literally, you don't end up with something "paced very slowly" - in most cases you'd end up with something that to most viewers would be impossible to follow because of the often non-linear story lines and large number of inter-vowen ideas. If anything, "sheep" is one of the simple ones.

  2. Re:More Information on Philip K. Dick Movies on Philip K. Dick's "Flow My Tears" To Be Filmed · · Score: 2, Insightful
    You have to watch those movies under the assumption that they are not as much "adaptations" as they are "inspired by".

    I loved reading Minority Report and Paycheck, and I liked the movies too, but they only really have the overall "in your face" part of the story/idea in common with each other - PKD's subtext and deeper stuff largely gets ignored (which makes sense - it'd be a nightmare to try to make something faithful to PKD's vision without making it unwatchable). They look similar if you read a blurb about them, but when you actually read them / watch them their character is very different.

    Especially with the stuff being adapted from older PKD short stories that's probably resulting in better movies anyway. There's too little material in many of them to make a full length movie without changing the stories, and as many other writers of the era he had an obsession with nuclear war and various technological hangups that are now really dated. He also wasn't a particularly good writer early on - his ideas were fantastic, but it took him a while to start expressing them well.

    By the time he wrote Flow My Tears..., though, his voice was well developed and it could be turned into something really interesting without changing the story all that much.

  3. Re:Copernican Heresy on Classic Books of Science? · · Score: 1
    Yeah I confused your post with another one while replying, but Galileo was still not put in house arrest and forced to recant for disagreeing with the earth being the center of the universe in any case.

    He was put in house arrest after repeatedly arguing the point in public writings and mocking the Pope. The Pope (and many others in the church) supported him initially - going so far as to specifically ask him to present both the church view and his own in one of his works, but cautioning him not to take sides.

    They went as far as they could without allowing Galileo to undermine their own power base. There's still plenty of reason to criticize them, but they weren't nearly as backwards as they were given credit for. T

  4. Re:One Resource on Classic Books of Science? · · Score: 1

    It's like the first person to eat lobster - they were either drunk, lost a bet, or really, really hungry

    Most "weird" food can be explained by poverty.

  5. Re:Copernican Heresy on Classic Books of Science? · · Score: 1
    He was put in house arrest for arguing that the planets revolved around the sun instead of around the earth and continuing to argue so after having been cautioned by the Pope against advocating the view (though he was originally expressly encouraged to continue discussing the alternative views as long as he did not express a preference) and then (possibly inadvertently) mocking the Pope in his next work, not for claiming the earth was round.

    Try again

    What the catholic church did to Galileo was idiotic, but there's little basis for asserting that they thought the earth was flat, and that certainly had nothing to do with their actions against Galileo

  6. Re:Nice on First Graphics Game Written On/For a 16-Bit Home PC · · Score: 1

    Despite that he was fined because he didn't file first-quarter taxes (he didn't know he was supposed to).

    So it's the local governments fault that your brother didn't learn even the basics of what is required to create a business before setting one up? And btw., there are hundreds, if not thousands, of companies that will handle all the work of setting up and filing required documents to get a small company set up - it can be done for anything from a few hundred dollars including first year accounts depending on the type of company. I know - I've done it many times.

    And of course before the local state government even granted him anything (ID, name), he had to provide them proof of insurance because apparently private individuals have a choice Not to get insurance, but businesses don't. You must participate in the insurance ponzi scheme.

    This "ponzi scheme" is what prevents the customers from getting screwed over by fly-by-night operators that don't give a shit and incur damage or see people hurt without having the money to pay up. It's there as a response to what used to be a significant problem, and what still IS a problem, and it is a compelling interest for society as confidence in the safety of entering into business arrangements with a company without needing to do a lot of credit checks and other due diligence for even relatively small transactions etc. is a major boon to boosting trade. People have different expectations when contracting with a company as opposed to sticking the neighbors son a few dollars.

    In the end you're complaining about $2000 in costs that includes a fine resulting from his lack of research. If it wasn't worth $2000 to get set up, then he wasn't making enough money to be setting up a company in the first place - most jurisdictions have exceptions for income from "hobbies" etc. which allows people to do work below a certain threshold without registering as a business. He would still have to declare the income, but there'd be no accounts or other paperwork. Even without that, practically everywhere will allow you to run a business in your own name without setting up a company, and with only minimal paperwork

    You're whining because you, and your brother, apparently completely fail to understand what is a fairly simple system (I've set up companies in four different countries - the principles and things to look out for are pretty much the same everywhere, and the paperwork is simple enough to do yourself - if not it's cheap to get the advice you need; heck even a lot of banks will provide free advice about the requirements as part of their business banking offerings because they want your business).

  7. Re:For those with ebook readers on J.G. Ballard Dies at Age 78 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're aware that most book writers are little guys who hardly can even make a living out of it and wouldn't do what they do if it wasn't for the hope that their work could benefit them and their family durably?

    If they do it for the "hope that their work would benefit them and their family durably", then they are fucking stupid. As you say, most can hardly even make a living out of it. Yet they still do it, and they still did it BEFORE copyright even existed. Even today, people still write to self-publish AT A COST with no hope of even recouping the printing cost.

    My contention is that the number of people who write primarily because they hope for a major monetary reward is vanishingly small. Even those that dream of being able to even live off their writing is likely a small minority.

  8. Re:For those with ebook readers on J.G. Ballard Dies at Age 78 · · Score: 1

    You do pay tax on cash savings in many countries, as well as on any other asset, though usually at a much lower rate than on income.

  9. Re:Am I missing something? on Encrypted But Searchable Online Storage? · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Here's a search index: [1,55] [2,103] [2,178] [3,1] [3,2]. Give me all documents with a document id matching the second entry in each pair where the first entry is 2.

    Do you know which word "2" represents, or what is in documents 103 and 178?

    That's how you do it. You need to ensure there's no way of doing statistical analysis on the token list to recover plaintext info, and you need to not give them the dictionary mapping from plaintext to tokens.

  10. Re:Am I missing something? on Encrypted But Searchable Online Storage? · · Score: 4, Informative
    No, it's not impossible. It's not even particularly hard. You do have some limitations though:

    Search works by tokenizing a document, and creating an inverse index from tokens to documents. The tokens does not need to mean anything to the search engine. If you generate the tokens on the client, and don't transmit the dictionary that maps from word to token id, you can have "encrypted search".

    The problem with doing that directly is that if you want to do proximity based search you need information on the token order, and they could do frequency analysis to come up with plain text guesses if they guess the language right. You can counteract that by mapping the same word to multiple tokens to even out the frequency of each token id, but it means you would need to search for multiple tokens to find all occurrences of a word.

    If you don't are about word proximity it's much safer, as the index would only contain each token once per document at most.

  11. Re:Exactly, women love cute and adoreable. on How Do I Make My Netbook More Manly? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know some couples are actually secure enough with each other not to freak out if their partners hints that they sometimes think about other people, and are actually capable of taking a joke about it.

  12. Re:Election Fraud on Kentucky Officials "Changed Votes At Voting Machines" · · Score: 1
    The main reason for a secret ballot is to prevent election fraud through vote buying and coercion. It was introduced exactly because of widespread fraud and abuse more or less everywhere that have tried voting without it.

    Any system where it is reasonably easy to find out what specific people votes is prone to vote buying and coercion.

    On the other hand it is fairly simple to protect a paper based election system (or one with a paper audit trail) relatively well against tampering: Ensure reasonably physical security and allow monitoring by any interested party at all times during transport and counting.

  13. Re:I knew it! on If We Have Free Will, Then So Do Electrons · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This is the fundamental problem with any discussion of free will: How do you even define it?

    A random event would be unlikely to be considered evidence of "free will" by most people.

    But an event that follows strictly from cause-effect definitively is not.

    Possibly people consider something "free will" if there is some limited level of randomness in the brain so that the same history of the external universe could lead to different thought processes.

    I just can't see any way of defining "free will" that doesn't involve randomness.

  14. Re:big deal on iPod Shuffle Finds Its Voice · · Score: 1

    I sort of agree, but for that to work they'd have to actually produce decent headphones first. The Apple headphones are the only ones I've used that I've managed to get to literally fall apart, and they fit me badly, and don't isolate outside noise well enough.

  15. Re:Headphone controls ... wtf? on iPod Shuffle Finds Its Voice · · Score: 1
    Some of us are "just" running for the health benefits. I have no interest in being "serious" about running, nor do I have an interest in being "serious" about my music. I listen because I enjoy it, and because it reduces the boredom of running (yes, I get bored - immensely bored). And I also hate the Apple headphones - their effect is too low and the sound quality is horrendous, and they fit badly. The first and the last of those two are most important to me when running. I don't want them falling out, and I do want to hear the music over background noise.

    If I had to use Apple headphones to use an iPod, I wouldn't be using an iPod. It's that simple.

  16. Re:I Like It on iPod Shuffle Finds Its Voice · · Score: 1

    I'd actually love one that was small enough to be part of one of the earbuds, and I'm sure that's where it'll be heading.

  17. Re:Like the phonograph.... The what? on Young People Prefer "Sizzle Sounds" of MP3 Format · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Pepsi tends to win blind taste tests between Pepsi and Coke. The moment people know which is which, a majority tends to insist Coke tastes better.

    Not just that they prefer Coke, but that it actually tastes better. Clearly the taste doesn't change, but how people perceive taste is dependent on other factors than the actual taste.

    Even more interesting: Play people the "bottle opening, followed by fizzing of soda" sound that's used in the Coke ads, and a lot of people will insist the soda tastes better - even if they're served the same soda twice (one with and one without hearing the sound).

    Likes and dislikes is only superficially about "quality", even if quality could be objectively measured. It's also about what you're used to, as well as what people around you like and dislike, and what advertising tells you to like or dislike. You only need to look at the massive cultural diversity in type of music people like, or how they dress or act to realize that likes and dislikes is as much about culture, tradition and what is comfortably well known to you as about what is actually "good".

    Of course it makes sense.

  18. Re:Begs the question on Why Doesn't the IWF Notify Those Whom They Block? · · Score: 1

    English grammar isn't prescribed by a central authority - it changes with use, and the "raise the question" meaning is now so common that it has been added to some dictionaries. Likely it will replace the original meaning almost totally within a generation. Give it up.

  19. Re:so they fix the list, and we move on on Why Doesn't the IWF Notify Those Whom They Block? · · Score: 1

    Is there is material you find objectionable, do not view it. The computer much like the television has an off switch.

    I agree with that sentiment most of the time, but a substantial amount of material that would be deemed child pornography is a record of abuse of the child. Allowing that material to be disseminated further victimizes that child. Irrespective of other arguments against child pornography which may or may not hold (I am not aware of any proof that availability of child pornography affects the levels of abuse, for example - maybe it does, maybe it doesn't) the protection of the child against further effects of the abuse makes legal restrictions acceptable in my book.

    That said, I think enforcing blocks on content through an organization that is not under democratic control and that there is no oversight of is despicable because of the huge potential for blocking legal material.

  20. Re:Just Like When He Led Microsoft on Bill Gates Unleashes Swarm of Mosquitoes · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Funny that you should complain about decades of populist right-wing propaganda, yet confuse communism (which as a core premise wants to dismantle the state and grant wider personal freedom) with the old Soviet regime.

  21. Hope the market is ready... on Second Prototype of the $200 Open Source Tablet · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I worked on a similar product ten years ago (it was covered on Slashdot twice in '99 or '00) which unfortunately stranded because of perpetual delays (I left at the end of '99) and lack of commitment from distributors and customers, and several rounds of re-engineering everything.

    Today it should be a lot easier, given that they can rely on much cheaper off the shelf components and don't have to squeeze everything into minimal amounts of RAM and flash (for the first version we were working with Opera to get it running with a custom GUI in 16MB or 32MB of RAM total, and about the same amount of flash)...

    Hope they make it - I want one.

  22. Re:gross on Future Astronauts May Survive On Eating Silkworms · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Cut urchin in half with kitchen shears while enjoying the spines moving about in your hand. Add a dash of soy sauce. Eat with spoon. Repeat.

    I think you just made PETA's hit list for that comment.

  23. Re:7 pounds is complete BS on The Scope of US E-Waste · · Score: 1
    Several countries in Europe and Asia have more than one active cell phone subscription on average per person. Now, not all of those are connected to a phone - some will have more than one sim and just one phone. But many have more than one. My wife has two cell phones she uses (one for "regular" use and one to call her family abroad, with a sim that gives lower rates for those calls), and one "backup". I have two - the one I used, and a cheap, extra crappy one I got for free as a replacement when I lost my last one. I just threw out a third one today.

    I know the US has been lagging behind Europe and the more high tech Asian countries in this area, but I doubt you're lagging that much.

    Also regarding replacement rate: Here in the UK the phones can be upgraded for free or a heavily reduced rate on contract renewal, every 12 or 18 months for most people. While some people may keep their phone longer, a huge percentage of phones are replaced at that rate, and a lot of people regularly upgrade because they happens to want to as well. I doubt the US is lagging that far behind in this area as well.

  24. Re:7lbs? on The Scope of US E-Waste · · Score: 1

    The lack of a free press means nobody can make a stink when something bad is happening, or to expose the corrupt official allowing it to happen, or to demand creation of a regulatory body.

    The position for the media in China is not nearly as dire as you paint it. The media does make a stink. Frequently. It does expose corrupt officials. It does demand things.

    The difference being that they are careful about not questioning ideology or the top party brass, so they wouldn't dare expose any corruption at the highest levels (unless sanctioned by the "right" people - which can and does happen when someone has fallen out of favor).

    I still agree with you, though. The limited ability they have to openly criticize things is not sufficient.

  25. Re:Is an A380 big enough? on USAF Seeks Air Force One Replacement · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just because I feel like being a pedant: The US covers less than 7% of the worlds land mass and less than 2% of the globe. Don't know where you got "a quarter of the globe" from unless you're envisaging an occupation of Russia and Canada or something.