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User: ZorinLynx

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  1. Re:Someone's Gottta Say It on US Justice Blocks Implementation of ACA Contraceptive Mandate · · Score: 1

    Yeah, you're right. The mere suggestion that someone read TFA is tantamount to heresy. :)

  2. Re:Someone's Gottta Say It on US Justice Blocks Implementation of ACA Contraceptive Mandate · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yet you clicked on the link and read the article. You sure seem to be big on reading things you don't want to read. Are you a masochist? :)

  3. This is the problem with religious people. on US Justice Blocks Implementation of ACA Contraceptive Mandate · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Religious people can't simply leave it well enough alone, and just say "Well if you think contraception is wrong, just don't buy it." Instead, they have to dictate to others what they may or may not do. "We can't allow you to get contraception through our health plan!"

    This kind of thinking is wrong and needs to be abolished. Let each person decide what they think is best for themselves. If someone wants to believe a person will "go to hell" if they do something, that's fine. That someone can simply not do it. But don't try to legislate or make it more difficult for others to do what they like to do, provided they're not hurting others.

  4. Is it that hard to include a capacitor? on Power-Loss-Protected SSDs Tested: Only Intel S3500 Passes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These things are already expensive; surely spending a few more cents per unit on a capacitor to ensure power loss reliability isn't a big deal.

    The cap only has to be big enough so the controller can do a controlled shutdown.

  5. How about no? on Apple Again Seeks Ban On 20+ Samsung Devices In US · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Competition is good for the market place. Apple is already doing well enough; no need to do them any favors.

  6. Re:iOS 7.1 on Evad3rs Announce iOS 7 Jailbreak For Latest Apple Devices · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I used to think this way, and avoided buying iOS devices for a while because of this thinking.

    Then I realized, iOS devices are more like appliances and less like "computers". They're meant to do a specific task well. They're not meant to be general purpose computing systems.

    If I need a real computer, that's what my laptop is for. It's FAR more capable hardware-wise than my phone or iPad. The phone and iPad are both good at what they do, and incredibly stable and reliable. Both times I've jailbroken them, I never really ended up doing much with the jailbreak other than running console emulators, which work better on the laptop anyway.

  7. iOS 7.1 on Evad3rs Announce iOS 7 Jailbreak For Latest Apple Devices · · Score: 1

    iOS 7.1 is probably coming next month... now surely whatever exploit was used will be analyzed by Apple and double-patched for the final 7.1 release.

    You'd think they could have waited just a little bit more!

  8. What the hell is the point of these huge numbers? on Swedish Man Fined $650,000 For Sharing 1 Movie, Charged Extra For Low Quality · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How does fining someone many times their net worth accomplish anything?

    Someone could fine me $5 million or $50 million dollars. It doesn't change the fact that I can't ever hope to pay it.

    Are these numbers just meant to scare people, or do they *actually try* to collect many times a person's net worth from them?

  9. Electric cars are impressive power houses on Six Electric Cars Can Power an Office Building · · Score: 4, Informative

    A Tesla Model S sitting in a garage has enough energy onboard to run a typical single family home for many days. It's pretty impressive just how much energy our automobiles use when we're driving them; they put the power consumption of homes and small buildings completely to shame.

  10. Re:first time i play a "death match"... on Doom Is Twenty Years Old · · Score: 1

    I remember having to turn off error correction and compression on the modem to this, because the "packetizing" of the data stream made gameplay very laggy otherwise.

    You also needed a 16550A UART for smooth gameplay. Most PCs at the time had 8250s or 16450 which had NO BUFFER! Every byte that came in generated an interrupt, which slowed things to hell. The 16550A had a 16 byte buffer, but that was enough to solve the problem.

    The first time I played 4-player multiplayer DOOM on a gaming BBS with a 16550A UART (add-in serial card!) and error correction/compression turned off on the modem, I was blown away. It was the best multiplayer gaming experiences I had ever had to that point.

  11. The biggest irony of the monitoring devices... on Why Letting Your Insurance Company Monitor How You Drive Can Be a Good Thing · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Someone I know has a Progressive monitor plugged into her ODB-II port. It beeps to "berate" her when she is driving "badly".

    Apparently slowing down to stop at a red light is driving badly.

    Also, slowing down quickly to avoid an accident is also driving badly.

    She wants to throw it out the window, because the only time it ever "complains" is when she either stopped at a red light, or avoided crashing into someone who cut her off.

    If insurance companies want drivers to use these things, they really have to come up with a better definition for "bad driving" than "slowing down quickly".

  12. Re:given its failure out of the gate. on HP's NonStop Servers Go x86, Countdown To Itanium Extinction Begins · · Score: 1

    Fuck the code, what about the hardware? This machine was designed in the early 60s. :)

  13. I do often wonder what the point of Itanium was. on HP's NonStop Servers Go x86, Countdown To Itanium Extinction Begins · · Score: 1

    Did Itanium have any performance advantage over x86_64? It certainly didn't have a price advantage, if anything it was horrendously expensive for the performance you got.

    We only have a SINGLE Itanium based server here, purchased more out of curiosity than anything else, years ago when the platform was new. There's nothing special about it whatsoever.

    I keep thinking the platform should have been declared a failure years ago, unless there was some specific thing it was really good at that I'm not aware of...

  14. And nothing of value was lost... on Microsoft To Can Skype API; Third-Party Products Will Not Work · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who still uses Skype? There are better alternatives now, and a lot more open, too.

    Seems Microsoft is shooting themselves in the foot... again. They're really good at this. Ya think they have special guns specifically designed to shoot downwards into feet? Weighted so that you can comfortably hold them as you fire? With special scopes to ensure you fire accurately and ammo custom-tailored for maximum damage to a foot-shapred target at close range?

    I wouldn't be surprised. :)

  15. Why can't we manufacture this stuff here? on US Executions Threaten Supply of Anaesthetic Used For Surgical Procedures · · Score: 1

    Outsource, outsource, outsource everything!

    We should be making the stuff we need here in the US. It's not like we don't have the manpower (what's the unemployment at again?) or the skills (so many college-educated people out of work). I'm tired of depending on others for our essential materials and being subject to their political whims.

  16. Re:How much revenue are they really protecting?? on AMD Intentionally Added Artificial Limitations To Their HDMI Adapters · · Score: 1

    I'm still of the firm opinion that the iPhone 4 shouldn't have received iOS 7. It's just too slow for it.

    Hell, it was somewhat slow for iOS 6!

  17. Try finding a room in Manhattan... on New York Subpoenaed AirBnb For All NYC User Data · · Score: 2

    Try finding a room in Manhattan (that isn't a shithole) for under $200 a night.

    Yup, that's exactly why this company is being harassed. The established hotels are enjoying their little collective monopoly that causes the concept of an affordable hotel room in Manhattan to be a pipe dream.

    You see things like this (ridiculously high hotel room prices) and become suspicious that there is some sort of "cartel" or organization propping them up. Then you see news articles like that and your thoughts are vindicated. There is so much damn corruption out there...

  18. How much revenue are they really protecting?? on AMD Intentionally Added Artificial Limitations To Their HDMI Adapters · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's crazy that companies go through all this trouble to protect a revenue stream from something as inexpensive and generic as a DVI to HDMI adapter.

    Really, if they want to make a little more money, why not charge an extra dollar for the card itself and be done with it?

    DVI/HDMI don't even carry power, so you can't use the "it might fry the device" excuse that Apple uses with their lightning plugs.

  19. Re:Open source browsers? on Tim Berners-Lee, W3C Approve Work On DRM For HTML 5.1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why does this need to be made part of HTML, though? The existing plugin infrastructure works just fine. You can implement whatever the fuck you want in a plugin. Just use that and leave HTML alone. Things are complicated enough already without introducing new artificial complexity that is purposely designed to break things.

    (All DRM is purposely designed to break content. It provides absolutely no benefit to the user)

  20. Open source browsers? on Tim Berners-Lee, W3C Approve Work On DRM For HTML 5.1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How does this affect open source browsers like Firefox? If something is open source you surely can't enforce any sort of DRM restrictions; someone can just build a hacked version of the browser.

    Is this possibly the beginning of the end for open source browsers?

    Why in the hell are they even THINKING of approving this bullshit?

  21. Natural selection on First Cases of Flesh-Eating Drug Emerge In the United States · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I think the availability of this substance should be encouraged. If anyone is supremely dumb enough to inject this into themselves, our overall gene pool can only benefit as a result.

  22. ...and suddenly on Martha Stewart Out To Exterminate Patent Troll Lodsys · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ....out of nowhere I have a heck of a lot more respect for Martha Stewart.

    It's like MAGIC!

  23. Alright folks, prepare for Twitter to suck... on Twitter Seeking To Go Public · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've seen more than one awesome company go to suck after going public.

    Why? Before going public, they only have to follow the wishes of themselves (the board) and maybe a few investors. They have a lot of freedom on what to do. Not everything the company does MUST be for maximum profit.

    After going public, they are subject to the only desire stockholders have: Make money. Period. That's it. Taking risks and not going for maximum financial gain can mean a stockholder lawsuit.

    Enjoy Twitter while it lasts, folks.

  24. Note that it's against the rules on Ask Slashdot: Can Creating New Online Accounts Reduce Privacy Risks? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Notice that a lot of these services, particularly Facebook and Google+, specifically say it's against the rules to have more than one account.

    It shows precisely their intent: To gather as much information about you and your habits as possible. They can't do it as effectively if people have multiple accounts.

    This, along with not allowing pseudonyms is one of the worst things that has happened to the Internet in the past decade or so. It used to be you could have as many different accounts on different sites as you wanted. Now everything is being condensed into a small handful of services, all of which have gestapo-like policies requiring your real information and name. It's just sad.

  25. Re:Vocal Minority on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    There were millions of people complaining about the new forced threaded view on Twitter. Twitter, of course, completely ignored them.

    It's not always a "small vocal minority". Companies make stupid changes, users hate them, and they refuse to back out the changes because it would mean losing face.