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User: Remus+Shepherd

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  1. Re:FTL Faster Than Light on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 1

    I've beaten FTL using every ship -- both configurations -- except for the Crystal ship which I've never unlocked. But even so, I still get into unwinnable situations now and then. The game sometimes gives you a death ship opponent specifically designed to take your ship apart. I can't believe that's completely random. But it's a roguelike, so you can't expect to win every game.

  2. Re:Dwarf Fortress on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 1

    I played the hell out of DF years ago, but I don't like the direction the game is going now. I'm only interested in Fortress mode but most of the latest enhancements are to Adventure mode, and that doesn't appeal to me. On top of that the releases have gotten further and further apart -- it's nearly two years now since the latest patch.

    Still a fun game if you like micromanaging complexity, but it's gotten very old and I don't believe Toady cares much about improving it anymore.

  3. Re:Moving on to the next MMO on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 1

    Was Playing The Secret World but it looks like Funcom has killed the development budget, replaced content updates with insane grinds for gear and made false promises about delivery dates to string along the subscribers.

    This is my impression about The Secret World as well. I played through the main story line, looked at the outrageous time requirements for the high level game, and walked away. A neat game, but not something I'd recommend for long-time play.

  4. Re:Superhero MMOs on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 2

    I miss City of Heroes sooo much. No other game is like it. Tried Champions Online years ago and it didn't appeal to me.

    Since CoH died I played and finished or dropped Borderlands 2, Guild Wars 2, The Secret World, and Bioshock: Infinite. Only ones that I'm still playing are League of Legends (I dabble; nothing serious) and FTL.

    I still hunger for an MMO as sweet and exciting as CoH. Might try Everquest Landmark someday, if I can get over my hatred for all things Sony.

  5. Re:What about GNU/Linux ? on FileZilla Has an Evil Twin That Steals FTP Logins · · Score: 2

    Sounds like they cut out the auto-update code. That would drop a few megabytes.

  6. Apples and Oranges on Swarms of Small Satellites Set To Deliver Close To Real-Time Imagery of Earth · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work on the Landsat program. The article pulls Landsat out as an example of mid-resolution satellites, but it's really an apples-to-oranges comparison. Landsat 8 has 11 spectral bands, including thermal IR, a Cirrus band, a coastal aerosol band, and so on. All of these are used for scientific purposes. The Dove and Skysat instruments have 3 or 4 bands, just enough to get an RGB picture and maybe some chlorophyll distinction for agriculture producers.

    Landsat is used to study land cover change, find new resources, map fire scars, and other applications that require precision and data depth; the swarm satellites will be used to make maps and that's about it. Both are important, but comparing one to the other is like comparing a smart car to a grain combine. They're used for totally different purposes.

  7. Re:But will it repel deer? Enquiring minds want to on Next-Gen Windshield Wipers To Be Based On Jet Fighter "Forcefield" Tech · · Score: 1

    Repel the deer? No. However, the splattered innards and guts of the deer you just hit will smoothly slide right off your windshield.

  8. Projection =/= Simulation on Simulations Back Up Theory That Universe Is a Hologram · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I got into this discussion too late to be noticed, but I feel the need to help people understand that this theory is *NOT* stating the universe is a simulation. Projections are not simulations.

    What the theory suggests is that of all the dimensions we know about (the article mentions 6, which is how many dimensions you get with one flavor of string theory), some of them are illusion. Like a hologram -- a 2D plastic or glass toy that displays a 3D image. The universe does not contain 6 dimensions; it contains a smaller number, and the rest of the dimensions only appear to be there.

    It's likely that the universe contains at least three dimensions, because we would have noticed non-isomorphic behavior in space. But the jury is still out on whether the fourth dimension -- Time -- is an illusion. The same goes for the fifth and sixth dimensions.

    None of this says anything about the universe being simulated. That's a philosophical question that physics will probably never be able to answer.

  9. Re:Some Hammer on FTC Drops the Hammer On Maker of Location-Sharing Flashlight App · · Score: 1

    Nerf hammers *are* technically hammers.

  10. Re:First sandwich on Geeks For Monarchy: The Rise of the Neoreactionaries · · Score: 1

    Hitler was neither handsome (by his own standards; no blond hair, not tall, not very muscular) nor intelligent (no noteworthy education, his military decisions were rather suicidal, his ideas were rather incoherent), nor do I see any particular evidence of fitness.

    I only asserted that he was better at all of those qualities than the Kim Jung family.

    My pet golden retriever also beats the Kim Jungs at most of those metrics, so I stand by my earlier statement.

  11. Re:First sandwich on Geeks For Monarchy: The Rise of the Neoreactionaries · · Score: 2

    You didn't read my comment, did you? Hitler was white, not ugly, and somewhat intelligent. In the neoreactionary view, those attributes make him more desirable as a monarch than any of the Kim Jungs. His family background and political connections mean *nothing* -- in fact, basing leadership on social networking is exactly what the neoreactionaries are trying to get away from.

  12. Re:First sandwich on Geeks For Monarchy: The Rise of the Neoreactionaries · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you read TFA, the neoreactionaries are proposing that the monarch at the top of the hierarchy be selected by genetic fitness. The smartest, fittest, and most handsome men (one assumes only men) would rule. So there's no danger of anyone from the Kim Jung family being in charge. We're much more likely to end up with Hitler.

  13. Re:This is a training problem. on Snowden Used Social Engineering To Get Classified Documents · · Score: 1

    Everything you say is true. However in this case, Snowden *asked* for the password and the employees *gave* it to him. That's just stupidity on the users' part.

  14. This is a training problem. on Snowden Used Social Engineering To Get Classified Documents · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In other news, there are a lot of stupid employees at the NSA regional operations center in Hawaii.

    If the NSA had trained its employees competently, they wouldn't be so naive as to give their login passwords to anyone, even an admin.

  15. Re:SNOWDEN !! DOUBLE-AGENT ?? on Edward Snowden's New Job: Tech Support · · Score: 1, Informative

    'Traitor' and 'whistleblower' are not contradictory concepts. Snowden committed treason to reveal illegal behavior in the NSA. I am in favor of using his information to force the NSA to follow the law, *and* in favor of putting him in jail for treason.

    It's also wrong to suggest that whistleblowers should receive automatic pardons. There were ways to reveal this information without committing treason; Snowden chose not to take that route. He's a traitor *and* a hero, and ideally his actions would cause positive change in the world while he's rotting in jail.

  16. Re:Hmm on First Experimental Evidence That Time Is an Emergent Quantum Phenomenon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the Copenhagen interpretation, one would say that according to the entangled observer the "wavefunction has collapsed" whereas according to the unentangled observer, it hasn't.

    I prefer the Copenhagen interpretation, but this experiment is also interesting if we use the Many-Worlds interpretation. Then the God-like outside observer sees every possible quantum state and all of its outcomes simultaneously, as if they all have already happened. That sounds to me like a recipe for strict determinism.

  17. Re:Meh. Do people think before they write this jun on Shutdown Cost the US Economy $24 Billion · · Score: 1

    Hundreds of thousands of federal workers bore the economic brunt of the shutdown

    This should read, 100's of thousands of federal workers, got an extra 16 day paid vacation this year.

    Hardly what I would call "bearing the economic brunt" of anything.

    Note that alongside the hundreds of thousands of federal workers were even more contractors who were also furloughed and will *not* be paid for their time off. If you focus only on the federal workers you'll miss the bigger picture. The contractors and subcontractors are the ones who took the real economic hit.

    (Full disclosure, I'm a contractor and I'm not getting paid for the past three weeks. My client, who is a federal worker, will be given back pay.)

  18. Scientist here: IDL, Matlab, SQL, C++, Perl. on Ask Slashdot: Best Language To Learn For Scientific Computing? · · Score: 1

    Where I'm coming from: I'm a satellite physicist working as a contractor for the USGS on the Landsat program. I work very closely with NASA.

    Almost all the scientific programming we do -- and by 'we' I mean USGS and NASA -- is either in IDL/ENVI or Matlab. They're the defacto standards for scientific processing. We do need to know SQLPlus to get our data out of the databases, and we need rudimentary C++ skills in order to make prototype code for the IT coders to turn into an operational release. Sometimes it's easier to code something in C++ then IDL or Matlab, so it's nice to be able to jump straight to that when warranted. Add Perl for text manipulation (which always turns out to be useful in some way) and that's all the programming I've done for the past ten years. Many scientists in the building swap out ARCGIS or ERDAS for IDL/ENVI. (Matlab doesn't seem to be swappable; you either need to use it or you never touch the stuff.)

    I've dabbled in Php when they asked me to prototype a web site but that never went far. I've done a little Flash programming that they eventually decided to hire out for. (I did a fine job, but they wanted the application to go bigger.) In the early days of my career FORTRAN was everywhere, you couldn't get away from it. There are still some FORTRAN programs in-house that I could fiddle with if they asked me to, although I'd blanch at the prospect.

    All that said, what you need depends on what your role is. If you're a scientist like me then these self-taught languages might be enough. If you're a science-oriented IT person, you'll need more -- most importantly strong C++ skills, at least around here. And different disciplines will have different needs; I worked briefly for NIH (National Institutes of Health) and they still had COBOL programs.

    I know of one person in two organizations (USGS and NASA) who knows Python, and he's an IT guy not a scientist. He's also the only person I know who has ever used Hadoop. I have never met anyone who knew R. Visual Basic is used occasionally here and there for prototyping, and almost immediately switched out with C++ as soon as management decides to support the project.

  19. Re:Fucking idiots on U.S. Government: Sorry, We're Closed · · Score: 1

    If congress want to repeal Obamacare then they could, and should, try and pass a bill doing so

    It should be noted that the House of Representatives already has passed 41 bills that repeal Obamacare. The Senate rejected them all. That's how our government works -- nothing happens unless both halves of Congress agree.

    The republicans are now trying to make policy by going outside of the government's normal mode of operation. We'll see how that works for them.

  20. Re:kinja on Comments About Comments · · Score: 2

    Have you tried Kinja? It is *not* a positive in any sense of the word. It is terrible, bloated software packed with bugs. It often doesn't work at all, or on some major browsers, and when it does work it often screws up any formatting the author attempts.

    Worst of all, it's run by free moderation -- as in, there is no oversight or appeal process for bad moderation calls. You can get into an argument with a moderator and find yourself blocked from the entire site, with no recourse. Kinja enables overzealous moderation and petty forum dictatorships, the situations that many good discussion forums take pains to avoid.

    If Kinja is the future of internet commenting, then internet comments are truly dead. The net will become balkanized groups of friends chatting in their own echo chambers, a worse situation than in the BBS days.

  21. Re:We owe our thanks to Mr. Snowden on Are the NIST Standard Elliptic Curves Back-doored? · · Score: 1

    Is America still the land of the free, and the home of the braves ?

    Or has American turned into the land of the enslaved, and the home of the cowards ?

    I'd reassure you about American courage if I wasn't afraid of speaking publically on this topic.

  22. It's only creepy if you speculate. on UW Researchers Demonstrate First Direct Communication Between Human Brains · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, let's just speculate about all the ways this could be misused:

    *-- Vending machines that make you reach into your pocket and pull out money whenever you pass by them.

    *-- Rich handicapped people buying time on poor people's bodies.

    *-- Rich people buying time on poor people's bodies, in order to do criminal things.

    *-- Police officers with a 'lay down with your hands behind your back' raygun.

    I'm sure I missed a few, any suggestions?

  23. Re:Blame the IT guy on Goldman Suspends 4 Senior Tech Specialists After Trading Glitch · · Score: 2

    This is why I didn't go into computer engineering as a young lad. I recognized that computers were tools, and the people trained to maintain and program them were going to end up as essentially service personnel. The high-level managers consider sysadmins to be one notch above a janitor. Shameful, but true. I realized this quite young.

    Instead, I went into physics. I'm not appreciably higher in the corporate architecture, but what I do is so arcane nobody believes that I'm easily replaced. If sysadmins are treated like janitors, a scientist is treated like a skilled seamstress -- I'm still 'labor', but it costs so much to find someone who can do my job they're willing to cut me a little slack.

  24. Re:Fool me once...maybe I'll be back in ten years. on Diablo 3 Expansion Announced: Reaper of Souls · · Score: 1

    I agree with everything you wrote except 'great game'. I thought I was buying a sequel to D2, where hardcore item grinding was possible but not obligatory. D3 was not designed to be similar to D2. It is a hardcore game -- the kind of game I do not want to play.

  25. Re:Fool me once...maybe I'll be back in ten years. on Diablo 3 Expansion Announced: Reaper of Souls · · Score: 1

    The point of avoiding a bad game producer is not just to hit their bottom line. If they're playing mind games with their players, I don't want to be involved with them at all. I also don't want to inflate their player numbers, even if I'm not a paying customer.

    That said, I might give EQ Next a try. It sounds like they may have learned their lesson about how to treat their players.