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User: cl3v3r

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  1. Ashamed to say... on Ask Slashdot: What Old Technology Can't You Give Up? · · Score: 1

    ...but I still have a USB 3.5 floppy drive.

    Nary a 3.5 floppy disk in the house, but I just can't bring myself to throw it in the trash :)

  2. If you're going to geoengineer... on Climate Scientist Pioneer Talks About the Furture of Geoengineering · · Score: 1

    ...let's do Mars first, and *then* take those lessons back to earth.

    The law of unintended consequences for well intentioned human interventions into natural systems is legend. Diurnal mongoose introduced to Hawaii to eat nocturnal rats, ended up attacking the same endangered bird species as rats.

  3. Monopolies are bad when competition is prevented on When Customer Dissatisfaction Is a Tech Business Model · · Score: 1

    Monopolies, in and of themselves, aren't anathema to customer satisfaction at all. The only real damage a monopoly can do is to create a climate (almost exclusively with government regulations and controls) that prevents competitors from its space.

    About the only way that a monopoly can do harm without government is if they're sitting on such a pile of cash that they can undercut new competitors to drive them out of business...which, isn't a sustainable model for a monopoly - eventually they run out of money and competition makes it in. The undercutting the competitor model also ends up benefitting consumers, in a sick and twisted way.

    That being said, Facebook isn't a monopoly unless you consider "Facebook" some single industry. It's certainly a shitty company, but that's another item entirely :)

  4. Re:Where would we flee to? on When Customer Dissatisfaction Is a Tech Business Model · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up - government regulated monopolies (de facto or de jure), create corporations whose success isn't predicated on customer satisfaction or customer value, but on their ability to manipulate the government to preserve their power.

  5. Thought is hard, physical is easy. on Apple's Diversity Numbers: 70% Male, 55% White · · Score: 1

    Corporations tend to have a hard time dealing with diversity of thought - pandering using something superficial like internal or external genitalia or melanin content of the skin is the easiest thing to do to hit the "diversity" buzzword.

    That being said, there is something to be said about having *some* similarity of thought in corporate culture. I mean, obviously it's not easy to have pro-fracking people work for the Sierra Club, or atheists working for Catholic Charities...there are some corporations out there that rightfully screen (and perhaps unfortunately screen) for a specific type of thinker.

    I think the problem Apple has is that it's having mission creep - they're a technology company delving into social issues. I might appreciate some of their corporate choices, and decry others, but their forays into these kinds of topics are generally cynical marketing tools to shape brand image, or more disturbingly, arbitrary displays of power by leadership for their own personal convictions.

  6. Maybe take it a step further. on Slashdot Asks: Should Schooling Be Year-Round? · · Score: 1

    Your critique seems to tilt in favor of eliminating government schools entirely, and allowing responsible individuals decide exactly how and when, and if they send their kids to school. The fact that government schools have become de facto babysitting centers leads me to believe that if we're going to run them that way, we should just build them to that specification - eliminate any pretense at curriculum, and just hire babysitters to keep law and order amongst the inmates.

  7. Privacy is an illusion on John McAfee Airs His Beefs About Privacy In Def Con Surprise Talk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A compelling illusion, but an illusion nonetheless. The metadata generated by even the most privacy conscious individual leaves a mark, and given the resources of an interested government, only the most dedicated living off the grid can escape their view.

    The only thing we have going for us, is that the vast majority of us won't raise the eyebrows of any government employees in our lifetimes. The sad part is that a lonely few will, and they'll be dealt with unfairly and harshly.

    The general masses don't have much to fear, but anyone who raises the ire of a nameless bureaucrat will.

  8. Unspecified "liquid assets"... on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    ...doesn't really seem like a tangible promise :)

    That *definitely* sounds like "because I say so".

  9. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    "full faith and credit" is not the same as "gold, silver, oil, sheep"

    Fiat is backed by something imaginary ("full faith and credit").

    Non-fiat is backed by something real (gold, silver, oil, sheep).

    Ecuador has neither.

  10. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    Depends on what those liquid assets are. Backed by another fiat currency? Still a fiat currency. Backed by a gold backed currency? Sure, it's not a fiat currency anymore.

    That being said, I'm not convinced Ecuador has either.

  11. EPS != digital currency on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    EPS, I get - like you said, there are already banks using phones like credit cards. Centralized banking, based on existing currencies, using cell phones for electronic payment is trivial and common.

    The "digital currency" device - that's something a bit tricker, especially given the double (or more) spend problem from truly decentralized digital cash.

    That being said, the whole "digital currency" bit being sold here is just the buzzword on top of "we're offering a new fiat currency".

  12. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    You're mistaken.

    If it is backed by a government with real assets (gold, silver, oil, sheep), it's not a fiat currency.

    If it is backed by a government "full faith and credit", it's a fiat currency.

    Ecuador cannot possibly hope to convince the world of *either*.

  13. What could possibly go wrong? on Ecuador To Forge Ahead With State-Backed Digital Currency · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Because, of course, every last man, woman, and child in Ecuador has a PC or other digital currency device, right?

    Ignoring the red herring of "digital", this is a bankrupt country trying to build a fiat currency that nobody is going to trust.

  14. Aren't most large scale utilities... on Why Morgan Stanley Is Betting That Tesla Will Kill Your Power Company · · Score: 1

    ...heavily regulated/subsidized/driven by municipalities?

    LA DWP, for example, essentially has the backstop of ratepayers/taxpayers for whatever financial missteps or misfortunes they might suffer.

    Hard to go out of business when you're not driven by market forces.

  15. The more you tighten your grip... on Edward Snowden Is Not Alone: US Gov't Seeks Another Leaker · · Score: 2

    ...the more star systems will slip through your fingers.

    http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki...

  16. Didn't they already have this thing... on Robotic Suit Gives Shipyard Workers Super Strength · · Score: 1

    ...called a forklift?

    Yes, we use tools to move things that we can't - is an exoskeleton that has a 3 hour battery life really more effective than your plain old forklift?

  17. Dammit, I got fooled again. on Sony Tosses the Sony Reader On the Scrap Heap · · Score: 2

    I thought minidisc was the bees knees. Then the Clie. Now the Sony E-reader bites the dust. I need to find a different brand :(

  18. If it bleeds, lt leads. on "Secret Serum" Used To Treat Americans With Ebola · · Score: 2

    Flu deaths aren't nearly as sexy as hemmoraghic fever. Someone passing away while sweating and shivering is nothing compared to having your internals turn to goo. This scared the shit out of me, no matter how small of a scale ebola currently is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T...