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User: Mozai

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Comments · 156

  1. spread sheet on Video Game Industry Starting To Feel Heat On Gun Massacres · · Score: 2

    "They believe it was a score sheet. This was the work of a video gamer."

    What? No; gamers use unlockable achievements. You know who uses spreadsheets? Accountants. This was the work of an accountant.

  2. "density" .... really? on Graphene Aerogel Takes World's Lightest Material Crown · · Score: 1

    I can change the density of hydrogen or helium by heating it up, or compressing it.
    If I wanted hydrogen to be less dense than whatever aerogel, I just need to move the hydrogen to a bigger bottle.

  3. Google Plus keeps me doodle-less on Google Doodle Celebrates Birthday of Douglas Adams · · Score: 1

    Now that I'm using Google Plus, I don't get the Google Doodles anymore; I'm always shunted to a vanilla search page, with a small sign that cajoles me into using Google's Chrome browser instead of whatever else I'm using at the time. Attempts to view the front page or the Canadian *.ca search page senses that I'm a Google Plus user, and shunts me back to the "you would be happier if you used Chrome" doodle-less page.

  4. we don't trust atheists on When Will We Trust Robots? · · Score: 1

    If Americans are going to trust robots, we'll have to program religion into the robots.

  5. Re:So are they going to target all bittorrent user on Copyright Alert System To Launch Monday · · Score: 1

    I'm reminded of the ISPs that shut out their own customers who were playing Blizzard's "World of Warcraft".... which uses bittorrent to distribute software patches among their subscribers.

  6. Re:In fine Slashdot tradition on Ask Slashdot: Will Cars Eventually Need a Do-Not-Track Option? · · Score: 1

    It's not a Slashdot tradition, but a rule about news reporting in any medium.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge's_Law_of_Headlines

  7. LEGO realistic space fight vehicles on Aircraft Carriers In Space · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's tangentially relevant, but this is "news for nerds": there was a contest for building realistic space fighters. The winners were clearly function over form, which was nice to see. (Space Volvos?)

  8. Re:Article has it Right on What Should Start-Ups Do With the Brilliant Jerk? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I worry that people labelled as "the Brilliant Jerk" are sometimes "the guy smarter than me who doesn't go along with what I propose."

  9. Either way, he won't see a judge. on Cables Show US Seeks Assange · · Score: 1

    If I were any more surprised by this information, I would be awake.

    I see two scenarios:
    (a) Assange gains political asylum in Ecuador. He never stands before a judge in Sweden.
    (b) Assange is extradited to Sweden, spends 12-24 hours in custody, and then he's extradited to USA, where he is "allocated" to Guantanamo Bay or some other oubliette. He never stands before a judge in Sweden.

    Either way, the charges made against him by citizens of Sweden will never be pressed nor resolved. Either way, anyone who wants to call him out for "justice for his sex crimes" will not see justice done.

  10. Re:We have a choice? on Voting Begins For Canadian Digital Currency App · · Score: 1

    ... offering it to Canadians with significantly less features and a pale imitation of the one the world uses, you know, like Netflix.

    How is Netflix Canada operationally from Netflix USA? And what does the government of Canada have to do with it?

    I'm guessing you're upset that Netflix Canada has fewer choices in the media catalogue offered. That is not due to the government of Canada nor even the government of your province instructing Netflix to restrict its catalogue -- that's due to the movie distribution companies (usually members of the MPAA) who own the rights to these movies telling Netflix "no u can not haz cheezbrgr."

    Don't yell at the sales clerk if you bought a product that doesn't work as advertised, and don't yell at the landlord for the store you bought it from -- yell at the manufacturer. That means it's not Netflix, your internet provider and not the government of Canada that is keeping episodes of Adventure Time off Netflix -- it's Turner Broadcasting refusing to release it to Netflix Canada.

  11. Re:Lol, republicans on Kim Dotcom Raid - What Really Happened · · Score: 1

    > why not vote for the third guy then?

    Because their election system is First-Past-The-Post. Voting for the third guy means the option you like less will get more votes.

    Example: Your feelings about how to run the country are pretty indigo, but the leading parties are orange and yellow. You're sick of voting yellow, so you decide to vote for the third candidate, who politically aquamarine. People who prefer their politics in the infra-red are going to continue to vote orange. Result: orange has a wider majority over both yellow and aquamarine, which gives them a larger mandate for their reddish politics, and to ignore your indigo ideals.

  12. You are the product on The Ugly, Profitable Details About Xbox Live Advertising · · Score: 1

    I'm reminded of the newspaper envelopes around actual newspapers that are made up to look like genuine journal reporting, but they're actually four full-page adverts attached to the outside of the newspaper you paid for.

  13. Your local library on Ask Slashdot: Best Way To Watch TV In 2012? · · Score: 1

    My mother and I each visit the local library in our respective cities. They have movies, documentaries, and tv-series boxed sets.

    I recently found James Burke's "Connections" at my library, and saw they had some of the old campy "Doctor Who" on DVD. My mother's been watching "Deadwood," and she's on the waiting list for more DVDs in the series.

  14. There already is an HTTP code on An HTTP Status Code For Censorship? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The proper one would be in the 5xx range, since the client's request is correct but the server is unable to comply.

    503 - Service Unavailable is the obvious choice.

    If we want to be cheeky about it, we could respond 305 - Use Proxy to hint that the client making the request can't come through here and must use some other path.

  15. Why Terminals used to use all-caps on Microsoft Ignores Usability With All-Caps Menu in Visual Studio · · Score: 0

    There's an old story that hackers tell each other 'round the fire. Long time ago, when line-printers were being built, the engineers didn't have enough space for the hammerheads for a full typewriter set, and they had to decide to use upper- or lower-case letters. The engineers agreed that lowercase serif was best, because it was more readable than upper-case and had enough difference between letters to recognize mistakes faster. A manager stopped them, and said "no, we must use upper-case letters, because it would be disrespectful to output the name of our Lord Almighty in lower-case letters."

    And interfaces since then have suffered because of one manager's insistence that religious observances are more important than useful function.

  16. TFA misleading on Researchers Create Life-sized 3D Hologram For Videoconferencing · · Score: 1

    The article uses the word "hologram" over and over, and comparisons to Star Trek, but the PR video avoids the term 'hologram' and uses "projection" instead. Hologram technology is not used, and people expecting features found in any hologram (paralax viewing, different views from multiple simultaneous points) will be sorely disappointed.

    If someone has created a new and useful car, don't call it "a street aeroplane just like the Wright Brothers!"

  17. false positives on Why the 'Six Strikes' Copyright Alert System Needs Antitrust Scrutiny · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've already had people get slapped for birdsong as copyrighted work. An acquaintance of mine is already wrestling with YouTube because he recorded classical music on his guitar, and he's getting slapped because someone else identified it as a copy of their recording, and YouTube has already jammed advertisements into his video to compensate the accuser, as if he already agreed to a plea-bargain.

    Too many false positives, and it costs much less for the people who are already wealthy to make false claims than it does for private citizens to defend themselves against the false claims. This stinks to high heaven.

  18. "Reader's Choice" is not "Best Choice" on GNOME 3 Wins Linux Journal's Readers' Choice Award · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am disappointed in this year's "Reader's Choice." It mentions "Gmail" as the best Linux app for instant messaging, "Google Docs" as the best Linux(?) app for collaboration, and the "reader's choice" for Linux games have been the same for the past eight years, despite eight years of new developments (Battle for Wesnoth? From 2003? When there's Warzone 2100, OpenTTD, 0 A.D., Heroes of Newerth, Minecraft, Braid, Darwinia, DEFCON, MegaGlest, Amnesia Dark Descent, Aquaria, Tiny & Big, OpenClonk, SpaceChem ... jeez.

    I think the "Reader's" part of the "Reader's Choice" may be out-of-touch.

  19. It's been done already. on Doctor Who To Become Hollywood Feature Film · · Score: 1

    How many of you have forgotten? There have been three Doctor Who movies already.

  20. Re:It's been done better by someone else on LEGO Universe To Shut Down · · Score: 1

    > what Lego Universe SHOULD have been.

    You mean logging into a server and seeing someone replaced my house with a 24m tall penis made of solid gold blocks?

    One of the problems with running an MMO "for kids" is how much operating costs you'll need to spend on the lawsuits by American parents for "exposing children to content I don't like."

  21. Confirmation Bias on Why Software Is Eating the World · · Score: 5, Funny

    THIS JUST IN
    An expert of [field of study] believes [field of study] will change the world.
    Also emphasizes that other people are not taking [field of study] seriously.

  22. Re:Property in Canada on Canadian Judge Rules Domain Names Are Property · · Score: 1

    > ISPs would not be able to take your site down without a court order
    You're confusing the server with the domain name.  The ISP could not tamper with the domain name records (wiping out or changing A records) without a court order, but it could shut down the server that responds to an IP address listed in the domain name records. 

  23. Re:Perl - the COBOL of scripting languages on Perl 5.14 Released · · Score: 3, Funny

    php5 is simpler?  What planet do you live on?

    In Perl:
    curl -sL 'http://slashdot.org/index.rss' |perl -ne 'm/<title>(.+?)</ && print "- $1\n";'

    Same thing in PHP5:
    curl -sL 'http://slashdot.org/index.rss' |php5 -r '$h = fopen("php://stdin","r"); while(! feof($h)){$line=fgets($h); if(preg_match("/<title>(.+?)</",$line,$match)){echo "- ".$match[1]."\n";}}'

    ... and if you say "well, php5 is simpler for what *I* need," I'mma gonna poke you for thinking that everyone else has the same needs as you.

  24. gdm alternatives have always been here on Ubuntu 11.10 To Switch From GDM To LightDM · · Score: 1

    Why all the butthurt? There's always been alternatives; if you do more with your login screen than "name/password", you can always replace what they gave you out of the box with something else.

    moses@deunan:~$ apt-cache search x-display-manager
    lightdm - Display Manager
    lxdm - GUI login manager for LXDE
    slim - desktop-independent graphical login manager for X11
    wdm - WINGs Display Manager - an xdm replacement with a WindowMaker look
    xdm - X display manager
    gdm - GNOME Display Manager
    kdm - KDE Display Manager for X11

  25. "I Robot" wasn't I Robot on Potentially Great Sci-fi Films Still Due In 2011 · · Score: 1

    Most people don't know that the movie version of "I Robot" didn't start that way. It was an entirely different screenplay, the studio got the rights to some of Asimov's short stories, and retrofitted pieces of the Susan Calvin stories onto a screenplay they already had.

    That's why "I Robot" didn't seem like the story -- it was another story entirely, decorated with Asimovian merchandise.