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User: Echo_Hotel

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  1. FA Author is an idiot on The End of the Desktop? (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    "Valve has been doing pretty well for years now with its Steam variation on this theme. "
    You mean the BARELY usable for slow paced games Steam IN-HOME streaming? That product that REQUIRES you have a mid-range modern gaming PC mear meters away and requires proprietary third-party software to use any input device more exotic than a mouse, keyboard or gamepad?
    THAT is your big "America is ready to give up the PC" evidence?
    I'm sorry Journalists, for what i said about the future of bloggers back in 2000, please please please come back!
    I know it wouldn't guarantee quality but they would at least be trained to check their facts...

  2. Re:i bet landfills will be filled on Shared Scooters Don't Last Long (substack.com) · · Score: 2

    I know responding to an AC is pointless but this is some silly shit

    You know who shop at Walmart? The fucking AMISH. Nobody can claim that THEY are living a disposable lifestyle, throwing things away before their time.
    You can still darn a Hanes sock, patch a pair of Wrangler jeans, tighten the binding on a Mr.Clean broom and much more.
    You say "They don't make 'em like they used to"? You aren't fixing them like they used to.
    We are living in a time where the "Boots Theory of Socioeconomic Unfairness" is relegated to very specific classes of folks (people who buy multiple $200 beater cars because they can't afford the one time layout & new entrepreneurs) if you are here chances are you have the means to purchase and capacity to learn to maintain more durable options.

  3. Re: Police? on Ask Slashdot: How Do I Recover From Doxxing? · · Score: 2

    In the good old days any public library worth a damn would have dozens of phone books available not to mention the fact that you could just request one be sent to you for any given area and to top it all off there has always been the operator you could call for directory assistance for a few cents. The tools have always been there you just had to be smarter than the recycled tree pulp in the pages to use it back then.

  4. Re:Say Russia did it for the purpose of argument.. on Russian Missile Parts Found At MH17 Crash Site · · Score: 1

    Well the EU would be obligated to move into the Ukrainian conflict to protect it's citizens, then as the war was won and the rebels retreated into Russian territory the EU would be obligated to give some form of chase, then Russia would shoot up a few EU troops claiming they violated it's sovereign territory, the EU and Russia would skirmish unofficially until a tipping point ,then Russia would lose it's UN Super Vieto, There would finally be sanctions, the sanctions would turn into blockades, Russian assets would be seized fibreoptic lines severed pipelines emptied as Russia was isolated, world Oil Prices would soar, all tech development would dry up as any money not in oil would go into alternative energy, the old Russian Bloc would become a colder version of mad max and America would barely notice a change except for bitching about the price of shipping and the new electric cars.

    That's what would happen if there were concrete proof that the russian backed rebels shot down the airline.

  5. Re:Still don't trust SSDs on OCZ Toshiba Breaks 40 Cent Per GB Barrier With New Trion 100 Series SSD · · Score: 1

    Right but these in particular, OCZ is kinda renowned for being unreliable across their entire product range.

  6. Re:You mean NEOs like Russia? on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 1

    Isn't that the plot to one of the Metal Gear games?

  7. Re:I would not worry about such a quick adoption.. on The Future of AI: a Non-Alarmist Viewpoint · · Score: 1

    Here is a decent example of why computers can't drive trucks.
    The other day one of the drivers at my wife's company pulled into dock normally and damaged the truck.
    What happened?
    There was a dip in the pavement sufficient to, when entered while turning, fold the truck at the hitch to the point where the cab extenders (wind breaks on the side) came in contact with the trailer.
    What could have been done?
    If the driver had been significantly more experienced he would have seen the dip in the road and made a 3 point turn and backed straight into the dock, with both cab extenders folding to the side of the trailer.
    Because of this and ten thousand other possibilities and special cases I don't think autonomous delivery is going to be possible in the near future if at all.

  8. Re:And the Firefox bloat continues to swell on Mozilla Plans To Build Virtual Reality APIs Into Firefox By the End of 2015 · · Score: 1

    Not defending this as anything more than an update of VRML but..
    Bloat as compared to what exactly, Chrome? IE? That totally not IE new Microsoft browser? Safari?

    The only browsers not adding more junk than needed are the ones with totally minimal market share like iCab who trade on being a niche product.

  9. Re:Okay, what is it? on Yubikey Neo Teardown and Durability Review · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's a USB/NFC multi-factor authentication token.
    It acts as an additional requirement to logging in to a computer, cellphone or network beyond a password.
    YubiCo is a company that makes budget security tokens with the YubiKey Neo being their "top of the line" at a price of 50usd
    One of the main security features of tokens of this nature is their inability to be tampered with since it is guaranteed to be connected to a computer.
    Many manufacturers achieve this by "potting" the circuit board (coating it entirely in plastic rather than using a shell like most electronics) in some sort of difficult to remove chemically resistant plastic.
    The YubiKey Neo was potted in a plastic that melted totally in nail polish remover
    The fact that the plastic can be removed so easily along with a poor USB connector and keychain loop disprove YubiCo's claim that the YubiKey Neo is "virtually indestructible".

  10. Re:Not sure if smart or retarded on Blizzard Bans 100,000 Cheaters In Massive "World of Warcraft" Ban Spree · · Score: 1

    WoW has 7.1 million subscribers this quarter (Q1 '15).
    Q4 '14 (When the Warlords of Draenor expansion hit) WoW had 10 Million subscribers.
    Q3 '14 there were 7.4 million.
    Q2 '14 There were 6.8 million
    It is pretty obvious that new content is not helping retain players for more than a month or teo.
    It's all downhill from here, unless some miracle happens.

  11. Re:This is not Arduino on Linino-Enabled Arduino Yun Shrinks In Size and Cost · · Score: 1

    They gave that up in the update last week.
    They took out all the "not a genuine arduino" popups and even added expanded and simplified tools for adding board designs including the ESP2866.
    Obviously they want your money, everyone does, but they have seen the error of their methods and moved forward in a positive way.

  12. It can't be done on The Economic Consequences of Self-Driving Trucks · · Score: 1

    All these people who know nothing about trucking logistics spouting off about free markets and whatnot when nobody is even asking the bigger question, can it be done?
    Leaving out the basics of piloting a high profile high weight vehicle during various weather conditions and in a defensive manner, anybody who has used a GPS knows automated trip planning is lacking even basic information on roads, much less current overpass heights and road weight limits which are often not recorded anywhere but on the local signage, add to that the complexities of call ahead loads, loads that can't unload at the exact time of arrival but won't let you park on premises, multiple stop loads where you have to supervise unloaders, terrible dock conditions and a myriad of other things this just becomes an impossible task for a computer.

    IF autonomous trucks become common they will likely fill a train like roll moving over much simpler highways to depots for local delivery but then you've just INCREASED the facilities and manpower needed to deliver goods so no replacing the national logistics chain with computers and autonomous trucks is just not going to happen any time soon or even possibly at all.

  13. Leave it to the loonies on What's the Business Model For Commercializing Cyborgs? · · Score: 1

    Because "citizen-scientists" don't require any liability on our part we'll just wait for the body-mod scene to figure out the details of implant rejection and how best to jam something under the skin for the long term.

  14. It's a trick of your brain on Star Wars Battlefront Game Trailer Is So Realistic It Looks Like Movie Footage · · Score: 2

    This is only going to look good for an hour or two till you've seen all the animations a few times and the lack of variation to things kicks the realism down a few notches.

  15. What's it for on World's Most Powerful Laser Diode Arrays Deployed · · Score: 1

    Or in layman's terms "They'll use it for doing fusion reaction experiments more quickly"

  16. Re:Sounds cool on New Paint Based On Titanium Nanoparticles Creates Self-Cleaning Surfaces · · Score: 1

    "been shown to cause genetic damage in mice"
    Well there go my plans for scotch guarding my mice.
    But seriously Citation Needed, "been shown to cause genetic damage in mice" is the "Kills Cancer Cells in a Petri Dish" of hazardous chemicals.

  17. Re:Wasteful? on Ikea Unveils Furniture That Charges Your Smartphone Wirelessly · · Score: 1

    it's not wasteful when it's not being used but it sure is wasteful when it is. The efficiency is something like 50% of the radiated energy actually making it to the device in usable form, I'll stick with copper for now.

  18. Re:Regulation Strikes again on Farmers Struggling With High-Tech Farm Equipment · · Score: 2

    Thats some lovely F.U.D. there. Truth is new combines aren't any safer than the old ones were just harder to repair, forcing cash and time strapped farmers to run malfunctioning equipment oftentimes not even knowing precisely what is wrong now that everything is obfuscated behind proprietary software.

    P.S. Deere has been closing factories all over in addition to seasonal shutdowns lately. I think the magical mystical invisible hand of market forces is a little much to hope for, given other historic examples in the manufacturing sector.

  19. You are mis reading this. on WA Bill Takes Aim at Boys' Dominance In Computer Classes · · Score: 1

    Let me see if I can help...
    What BlueFoxlucid is saying is that perhaps the efforts to attract more female students lower quality students (who happen to be female) will also be encouraged to join therefore flooding the market with passionless female graduates who will in turn reinforce a stereotype of poor performance and in turn prevent passionate females from gaining a foothold and creating success stories that encourage other girls to start down the path.
    I agree that "people will learn that women are directly inferior as engineers" is provocative in itself but in context it should be read as "people will learn, incorrectly so, that women are directly inferior as engineers".
    That is what people are trying to say to you.

  20. Re:It's a regressive tax. on US Wireless Spectrum Auction Raises $44.9 Billion · · Score: 1

    It's called copper you should look into it, very good conductor I hear.
    Plus if you are unemployed what are you doing wandering around away from home and your land line anyway.

  21. Re:Always Check the Source on US Wireless Spectrum Auction Raises $44.9 Billion · · Score: 1

    I think AC's point is that the "Wireless Industry" may be inflating or simply making up numbers to encourage Government cooperation.

  22. Re:Won't be enough on Safety Review Finds Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Site Was Technically Sound · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What makes you think the material is going to be left there for 500 years much less 500,000?
    At some point long before half a million years, reprocessing this waste is going to be economical at some point.
    Plus what the hell man THIS IS SIMPLE BURYING, there's no magic super lead lining these tunnels, this is simply the most geologically stable place where an earthquake / volcano / water table won't crack open the cases, the cases aren't super over engineered for radiation they are over engineered because of nigh impossible demands that these be the last surviving creation of man standing steadfast in their tomb as the Sun goes red giant and engulfs the Earth.
    AND ANOTHER THING
    We CAN process the high level nuclear waste down but we won't because the result can be weapons grade and the last thing we need is another nuclear arms race, especially now with all the people that would be participating.

  23. Vast... Tracts of Land on New Study Says Governments Should Ditch Reliance On Biofuels · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Lets face it, the land is going to be used for corn or soybeans anyway biofuel is just a matter of what you are using the produce for.

  24. Check Amazon lately? on Ask Slashdot: Where Can You Get a Good 3-Button Mouse Today? · · Score: 1

    Link 3 on the Google search for "3 button mouse without scroll wheel"
    http://www.amazon.com/HP-Optic...
    Plus the 2 new models you found there does not really seem to be a real shortage of your niche product.

  25. Re:I won't notice on UHD Spec Stomps on Current Blu-ray Spec, But Will Consumers Notice? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the other hand, the color space of current TV grade LCDs is absolutely atrocious and any improvement is going to be noticeable.