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User: Erbo

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  1. Oh, that's nothing... on Lightsaber Dueling Registered as Official Sport in France (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1
    I saw bat'leth dueling at MileHiCon once. That would be fun.

    Among other things, the duelists tended to freely acknowledge when their opponents scored a hit. It was the honorable thing to do.

  2. Re:FTB Infinity on Minecraft Has Now Sold Over 25 Million Copies on PC and Mac (neowin.net) · · Score: 1

    Not everything is closed source. Some mods even have GitHub repos. Example: Simply Jetpacks, a mod I used in the Erbosoft Vista modpack.

  3. Re:MS Nutty aquisitions on Minecraft Has Now Sold Over 25 Million Copies on PC and Mac (neowin.net) · · Score: 1
    Notch just likes Java. It's not pure Java, though, it uses native libraries to access OpenGL and sound.

    The fact that it's Java is why it runs not only on PC and Mac, but on Linux as well. The mods you can get for it are all Java, too, so they're cross-platform compatible. (Actually, there's a few that are at least partly written in Scala.)

  4. Re:Apple seems stuck in profit trap on Silicon Valley Veteran On Apple: Company Has Become Sloppy, Missed Updates, Delayed Refreshes (chuqui.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My opinion of Apple is that it's become kind of like the Soviet/Russian space program: both of them produce some really impressive hardware, but you can still see the dead hand of their chief innovator (Steve Jobs for Apple, Sergei Korolev for the Russians) in all of it, and you can also see that they don't have another innovator of that same caliber to carry them forward. Chuq's describing what appears to be a symptom of that, in that they've lost the person who's capable of thinking strategically instead of just focusing on the business numbers.

  5. Re:Friday on 'Stranger In a Strange Land' Coming To TV (ew.com) · · Score: 1
    Well, there are kind of four parts to the overall Callahan's saga, grouped by their main setting:
    • The original Callahan's Place, Suffolk County, NY: Callahan's Crosstime Saloon, Time Travelers Strictly Cash, Callahan's Secret
    • Lady Sally's House, Brooklyn, NY: Callahan's Lady, Lady Slings the Booze
    • Mary's Place, Suffolk County, NY: The Callahan Touch, Callahan's Legacy
    • The Place, Key West, FL: Callahan's Key, Callahan's Con

    The first two parts are more or less intertwined in time; Lady Sally's House ended up closing a year after the events of Lady Slings the Booze but before the events of Callahan's Secret. The third and fourth parts basically follow on in sequence from the events of the first part.

  6. Re:Who writes these blurbs? on 'Stranger In a Strange Land' Coming To TV (ew.com) · · Score: 1

    Actually, that's right. In Stranger, World War III is set in time between the original Envoy expedition, which brought Mike's parents to Mars in the first place, and the Champion expedition, where they found Mike and brought him back. It's a "blink-you-miss" note that comes right near the start of the second chapter, something like "there would have been another manned expedition right away if World War III hadn't intervened."

  7. Re:If Sean Connery isn't playing Jubal Harshaw.... on 'Stranger In a Strange Land' Coming To TV (ew.com) · · Score: 1
    Connery? I can't imagine Jubal Harshaw with a Scottish accent.

    Now, if you really want to get people hot under the collar, James Earl Jones would be a sterling choice. Think Terence Mann in Field of Dreams, only more so.

  8. Re:Nope. Telegraph operators got there first. on 176 Original Emojis Join Van Gogh and Picasso At Museum of Modern Art (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    If you're interested in this, there's an excellent book called The Victorian Internet: The Remarkable Story of the Telegraph and the Nineteenth Century's On-line Pioneers , by Tom Standage, that talks about the telegraph and the culture that sprung up around it. Many things we recognize from modern online culture are present: e-commerce, the use of encryption, online chat slang, and even online romance. Steampunk fans should especially appreciate it!

  9. Re:Somewhere... on SCO vs. IBM Battle Over Linux May Finally Be Over (networkworld.com) · · Score: 1

    Somewhere, in an undisclosed location, PJ is going to her closet, and pulling out a much-disused red dress.

  10. While examining potential security threats... on San Francisco Bay Area In Superbowl Surveillance Mode (wired.com) · · Score: 2

    ...they'd better not forget the Goodyear blimp.

  11. Re:In high school on 30 Years Since The Challenger Disaster: Where Were You? (space.com) · · Score: 1

    Oh, if only I could mod you "+1 Funny" for that :-)

  12. In high school on 30 Years Since The Challenger Disaster: Where Were You? (space.com) · · Score: 2
    I was a senior in high school that day. My civics class was interrupted by the principal coming on the PA system to tell everyone that Challenger had exploded and crashed into the ocean. We were all rather stunned by that news.

    After that class was our morning break period. I immediately went to my next class, which was physics. In the back of the classroom, many of my classmates were huddled around a portable radio, listening to the news. No one said much. (I didn't actually see the video footage of the explosion until I got home that day.)

    Yet the gods do not give lightly of the powers they have made,
    And with
    Challenger and seven, once again the price is paid,
    Though a nation watched her falling, yet a world could only cry,
    As they passed from us to glory, riding fire in the sky!

    - From "Fire In The Sky," written by Jordin Kare

  13. Blatant ripoffs on A Crowdfunding Site To Help Pay Patients' Medical Bills · · Score: 4, Insightful
    So, the health care industry, not content with sucking down one dollar in every five in the U.S. economy, wants to grab a few extra billion?

    When you take your car in to be serviced, the law requires that you be given a binding estimate of the costs involved before any work is done, and the mechanic is forbidden to exceed that estimate (within a small margin, like 10%) without getting your permission first. Mechanics who violate that law go to jail. Why do we not have those same kinds of consumer protections in the health care industry?

    Pharmaceutical companies routinely charge people in the U.S. more for their products than in other countries, such that a drug which costs $100,000 for a full course of treatment in the U.S. costs only $5,000 in India, or scorpion antivenom that is billed at $40,000 a vial in the U.S. is available for $100 a vial in Mexico. Yet, if you were to go outside the country, buy those drugs, and bring them back to the U.S., you would go to prison, thanks to a law bought and paid for by the pharmaceutical industry, a blatant infringement on the Doctrine of First Sale (which is that, once you buy something, it is yours to do with as you wish). The Supreme Court recently ruled (Kirtsaeng vs. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 568 U.S. ___ (2013), Docket No. 11-697) that this practice was impermissible in the textbook industry. Why, then, should it be permissible in the pharmaceutical industry?

    If we were to get rid of all the special exemptions that the health care industry has under law, and force it to abide by the existing law of the land (such as the Sherman, Clayton, and Robinson-Patman Acts), including prison time for health care and insurance executives where applicable, the cost of health care would drop by 80% or more. Most people could then pay cash for their health care needs for about the same as they pay in a deductible today...meaning "health insurance" would no longer be necessary (except for "catastropic care" policies for unforeseen circumstances, which would cost about the same as your car insurance). Some form of Medicare and Medicaid would still be required for the truly less fortunate, but would cost a lot less. Obamacare would no longer be needed and could be trivially repealed. The economy would experience a massive boost because health care would no longer be draining it, and every government budget deficit problem, Federal, state, and local, would be instantly solved. (Leading to secondary effects such as stopping the erosion of your purchasing power because the government keeps "printing money" to fund its deficit spending.)

  14. "Custom OS" on Gene Roddenberry's Floppy Disks Recovered (pcworld.com) · · Score: 5, Informative
    Some sources claim that Roddenberry's computers ran a "custom OS." However, in those days, CP/M was often customized for different brands of computers, which used different disk formats and layouts (for whatever reason). Roddenberry's machine may have used a particularly obscure layout.

    They do mention that the disks had about a 160 Kb capacity, which was fairly standard for Shugart 5-1/4" floppy drives of the time.

  15. I wish BOTH sides could lose here on "Clock Boy" Ahmed Mohamed Seeking $15 Million In Damages · · Score: 1
    If the school and the cops had actually believed or even suspected the clock was dangerous, they would have evacuated the school and called in the bomb squad. The fact that they did not indicates that they knew there was no danger...but, if that's the case, why did they come down so hard on the kid? I put that down to insane "zero tolerance" ( = "zero intelligence") policies. And, in doing so, they played right into the hands of the kid and his Muslim activist father, who I suspect deliberately baited the school to provoke such a reaction so they could claim "Islamophobia." The two of them shouldn't be allowed to profit from that.

    This is one of those lawsuits where you wish both sides could lose.

  16. Re:THIS is the ONLY "Code of Conduct" I will adopt on Could Go Community's Threat of Public Shaming, Lifetime Bans Make Go a No-Go? · · Score: 1

    What can I say? I believe in old-fashioned values like working code. ;-)

  17. THIS is the ONLY "Code of Conduct" I will adopt! on Could Go Community's Threat of Public Shaming, Lifetime Bans Make Go a No-Go? · · Score: 1
    The one and only criterion that will be used to determine whether a contribution to this project will be accepted is the quality of the contribution and how well it solves the problem it was contributed to solve. Period.

    I do not give one milli-micro-nano-fraction of a fuck what race you are, what gender you are or identify as, who you want to sleep with, how old you are, what your height or weight is, what if anything may be different about your body or brain, what language you speak, what country you're from, what God you pray to, where you work, how much money you have, et fucking cetera. Is your contribution any good? That's all that matters.

    There is one exception to the above rule: If you're an asshole, you're banned from the project. Permanently.

    If your contribution is not accepted, and you start whining about how it's "actually" because you're of some-or-other gender/race/religion/nationality/whatthefuckever, you are attempting to have the deck stacked in your favor because you're "special." That makes you an asshole. And you're gone.

    This project explicitly rejects the "Open Code of Conduct" as published by the TODO Group. Anyone complaining about this is an asshole, because who the fuck are you to tell me how I should run my goddamn project? And you're gone.

    I reserve the right to change this as I see fit...but anyone who tries to force me to change it in ways that are offensive to me is an asshole. And they're gone.

    (Reprinted from my Quora blog)

  18. I hope that there are others out there... on A Remarkable Number of People Think 'The Martian' Is Based On a True Story (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 1
    ...who wish that The Martian was based on a true story.

    Because the world as depicted in The Martian is a world that still gives a shit about space and the space program. And that's the kind of world I, for one, want to live in.

  19. Re:This just pushes the problem overseas on Trump Targets the Abuse of H-1B Visas · · Score: 1

    That sort of tariff, namely, a wage- and environmental-parity tariff, is a good idea, as it would also bring manufacturing jobs back to the U.S. from countries like China, where companies are able to save money by employing de facto slave labor and spewing poisons into the ground, air, and water. Once the economic advantage to outsourcing is thereby neutralized, the jobs will come back.

  20. Different quote to keep in mind on At Black Hat: Square Reader To Credit Card Skimmer In 10 Minutes · · Score: 1

    This story brought a quote from Gibson to mind for me: "The street finds its own uses for things." (from "Burning Chrome")

  21. Holy Mother of God and all her wacky nephews on Skype Translate Reportedly Has a Swearing Problem In Chinese · · Score: 2

    Obviously, it's not the Star Trek translator, it's the Firefly translator. :-)

  22. Re:How to ALMOST die on Mars (multiple times) on How To Die On Mars · · Score: 1

    Mark Watney: Stranded on Mars, with nothing but disco.

  23. LONG LIVE THE FIGHTERS! on Coup in Arrakis Capitol Leaves Region in Flux · · Score: 1

    We will fight until no Harkonnen breathes Arrakeen air!

  24. Re:Great. on World's Most Powerful Laser Diode Arrays Deployed · · Score: 1

    "Making enormous Swiss cheese?"

  25. Re:Combine that with a large spinning mirror, on World's Most Powerful Laser Diode Arrays Deployed · · Score: 1

    Or pop a lot of popcorn.