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User: dodongo

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Comments · 334

  1. Re:This is novel? on Why Waste Servers' Heat? · · Score: 1

    Right there with ya. I used to have a P4 furnace but have upgraded to something a little newer and cooler. The GPU and TV Tuner cards have picked up the slack, however.

  2. Re:You can still watch sports? on Time To Ditch Cable For Internet TV? · · Score: 1

    There are sports other than football, y'know.

  3. Re:Lets see here... on What Happened To the Bay Bridge? · · Score: 1

    The point GP was trying to make was, I think, that the negative cash flow to the federal government was approximately equal to the amount of the budget deficit for 2010. So the assertion that if there was neutral cash flow to the feds, we wouldn't have had a deficit isn't incorrect....

    I think you read the larger picture properly, but I think you got your nose too far from the computer screen for the point GP was after ;)

  4. ..but easy connection to a PC is why I HAVE cable! on An End To Unencrypted Digital Cable TV and the HTPC · · Score: 1

    You know, I try to leave the door open for benefit of the doubt. Yes, I understand Comcast believes it to be in their best interest to lock down content and ensure that they control as much of the signal chain as possible. Yes, they're probably under some pressure from content creators to ensure as much encryption as possible is used.

    What I really don't understand is why they don't get that the ubiquity of equipment I can use to tune into their programming, and specifically, the ability to run that signal into my computer for my system to record the programs I want to watch is A) *increasing* not decreasing the amount of Comcast / content creators' content I'm enjoying, and B) basically the only good reason I can think of to maintain Comcast's service.

    If they break my setup and insist I get one of their boxes for each TV (or PC) I want to run the A/V signal into, Comcast loses its single compelling, discriminator. IOW, for me, by making themselves as locked down as everyone else, they effectively *increase* the number of players in my marketplace, and at that point, I'll almost certainly choose a different provider as a result, or at the very least, kill my TV "service" altogether. Either way, net loss to Comcast.

  5. Re:This is a common stack in wifi APs on Critical Flaw Discovered In DD-WRT · · Score: 1

    "a significant portion of huge nerds ... uses this software"

    I'll pass up this opportunity to rave about your excellent long-distance subject-verb agreement and just accuse you of being an insensitive clod, how's about that?

  6. Re:How does Microsoft define what is 'explicit'? on Bing Gets Porn Domain To Filter Explicit Content · · Score: 1

    That would be an interesting job. Microsoft Smut Engineer.

    Heh. I've actually done this; not for Microsoft, but another search company (for a _real_ search company, one might say to get in a cheap shot ;)

    It's actually not nearly as much fun as it sounds. At some point, your soul just feels dirty -- it's not just porn; depending on the strength of the filter, you could also be looking for drugs, innuendo (OK, I really like the innuendo...), hate sites, etc. Hate sites are the worst.

    While blocking the domain really does sound like a nice feature for anyone running a network they want to lock down, this of course doesn't block the explicit content from any other search engine. And it's relying on dolts like me (only they work for Microsoft) to make it happen. I hope they have a lot of dolts. There's a damn lot of explicit stuff out there!

  7. Re:I bet someone misuses the part about empty buse on Analysis Says Planes Might Be Greener Than Trains · · Score: 2, Funny

    And if you quit calling it an "omnibus" everyone on the bus would quit calling you a "prick" which would, I'm sure, make your time on the bus more pleasant.

    I haven't a clue what to do about the French people, though.

  8. Re:Still have to Operate within the system. on Believing In Medical Treatments That Don't Work · · Score: 1

    Emergency admit, 4 days, 7 hour surgery, $106k here. :-P Believe me, I have a thing or two to say about the insurance / medical billing industry in the states.

  9. Re:And next up on Believing In Medical Treatments That Don't Work · · Score: 1

    Or (for anyone who's recently seen the people in the emergency room) illegal immigrants who are an even more universal drain on services.

    Though I don't care for the tone of your comment, I will grant you that if they weren't performing the dangerous, uncomfortable or just downright shitty jobs that no American citizen wants to take, they'd be spending less time in the ER. True.

  10. Re:Still have to Operate within the system. on Believing In Medical Treatments That Don't Work · · Score: 1

    Yes, because that's exactly what any rational person would do when they have a screaming child with a broken arm. Jesus Christ... I hope GP fought the hell out of the charges. I did for my treatment and managed to receive just treatment. After a year of haggling, yelling, stressing, and tracking down points of contact. Good times.

  11. Re:To Flamebait: on Cable Companies Want Bigger Share of Online TV Market · · Score: 1

    See, you think you're making an empirical point, but you simply refuse to ground it in reality and empirical evidence. It's very hard to refute your facts when you bring nothing but speculation to the table. Have a nice day!

  12. Re:To Flamebait: on Cable Companies Want Bigger Share of Online TV Market · · Score: 1

    You say: "Since Limbaugh airs from 3-6 on the west coast, 6-9 would have to be given to the liberal show in the same area."

    Actually, can you point me to where you find the requirement that any Fairness Doctrine type directive requires strict adjacency in programming? And if so, why does that adjacency requirement not consider average cume listener by daypart? Because any program in the 3-6 slot is gonna outperform the 6-9 slot unless the PMD show totally sucks. It's just a fact of life in radio.

    You say: "Suppose that the advertising on the 6-9 slot now sells for $750k/week, and the Limbaugh show goes for $1M/week."

    No, let's not suppose, because that's crazy. Evening shift spots sell for well under 75% of the cost of PMD spots, at least in my experience. Moreover, I'd love to know where you're broadcasting from that pulls down a million a week in PMD.

    THEN you say: "Given that the liberal show is only about 10% as popular, we'll assume that advertising would go for $100k/week."

    Well, it ain't being helped by the fact it's not in PMD while Limbaugh is. But why are you prorating rates already prorated based on the decreased number of impressions between PMD and evening?

    You say: "Therefore, in order to keep the Limbaugh show, it would cost the station $650k/week, effectively lowering the returns on the Limbaugh show to just just $350k/week because of the unpopular liberal show."

    Based on your entirely fabricated, unsupported numbers you're throwing out there to pretend you have empirical evidence to support your view of how you imagine things will go when you don't even have, you know, a piece of policy to point to that shows anyone is going to enact your fictitious doomsday scenario.

    And then, after making up a bunch of shit, you say: "Your argument isn't well thought out. The Fairness Doctrine is all about silencing conservative speech on the radio."

    Hmf. Get back to me on that, OK?

  13. Re:To Flamebait: on Cable Companies Want Bigger Share of Online TV Market · · Score: 1

    Quite simply, you're wrong. If Rush airs three hours / day that leaves 21 hours of void that has to be filled. If the stations are forced to put some liberal bloviator on the air for 3 hours to clear the air of Limbaugh's flatulence, then that still leaves eighteen hours.

    Morning and afternoon drive dayparts in radio are 4 hours each (6a-10a, 3p-7p) and even if you include the five hours of non-prime midday airtime in between, you're still looking at a 13 hour window, not even half of which is filled up with Limbaugh + Anti Limbaugh.

    So don't make this about the Democrats wanting people to cut back on Rush Limbaugh. We both know he'll be the last one to go. This has nothing to do with Rush and much more to do with the floozy hacks who get hired to fill in around Rush Limbaugh's corpulence. Like Sean Hannity :)

  14. Re:I feel bad for these people on Whistleblower Claims NSA Spied On Everyone, Targeted Media · · Score: 1

    LOLZ right, "Live Free or Die". What a motto. Why aren't they all dead, is what I'd like to know :)

  15. Re:Probably not an issue for beginners? on The Evolution of Python 3 · · Score: 1

    Good catch :)

  16. Re:In all seriousness on The Evolution of Python 3 · · Score: 1

    Agree completely. Though I have a heavily brace-oriented background, I've found learning Python while ignorant that you could use braces to contain code blocks, I've embraced the tab delimitation completely.

    I've simply never had a major tab problem, and while I don't write terribly complicated code, I nest the hell out of things sometimes. I develop on Windows and use PythonWin and there's just never a problem with indentation. I totally don't get people who troll (not accusing you!) on the topic.

  17. Re:Probably not an issue for beginners? on The Evolution of Python 3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The reason is consistency. If I have:

    print "Hello world."

    and

    print("Hello world.")

    Which do you suppose is easier to find-and-replace to:

    o.write("Hello world.")

    The second, of course, because you can do it without a wildcard.

  18. Re:Deposits and core fees. on The Scope of US E-Waste · · Score: 1

    As a resident of a state with deposits on bottles and cans (California) and being generally eco-friendly when given the opportunity, I feel I must add that it's bunk to thing those fees encourage recycling of bottles and cans. It does, however, encourage people without a good revenue stream to collect / scavenge / rummage through bins for them. Now, I suppose you can argue that the litter collection and what we must assume is, in fact, a net increase in recycling is worth the fee (I do believe this to be the case), but let's not kid ourselves that the refund is causing most people to behave differently.

    That said, your $50 (arbitrary, I realize) tax is three orders of magnitude larger than the bottle / can fee, so maybe it would have more of a direct effect, but I think w/r/t cans and bottles, you're overstating the effect.

  19. Re:Eliminate redundancy?... on Obama Moves To Link Pentagon With NASA · · Score: 1

    As a US national, let me be the first to say we HATE eliminating redundancy in bureaucracies. Mostly because there's so damn many forms we have to fill out (in triplicate!) to do it.

  20. Re:My favorite: the black display on Five PC Power Myths Debunked · · Score: 1

    Stop doing all that sciency shit and 'tests' and things. Your empirical evidence is going to raise the quality of discussion out of many people's grasp!

  21. Re:Learn C and Python on What Programming Language For Linux Development? · · Score: 1

    At the risk of sounding glib -- and though I do write Python code, I am probably not a good Python coder by any measure -- but did you just totally not look at the stack trace? I have never seen anything close to 'indentation bullshit' that amounts to much of a puzzle. I don't mean this to sound like a flame or anything, I'm just interested as to whether there's actually a case where if you were following Python code practices at all, you'd actually encounter a problem like this that took hours to debug that wasn't caused by your own inability / lack of awareness with respect to how Python handles its whitespace.

  22. Re:I'll elaborate for you on Magnetic Portals Connect Sun and Earth · · Score: 1

    Wow, and here I was thinking I just lived way the fuck above sea level despite living in Oakland, CA, the shore of which is... sea level.

    But you're right! That bastard called us all fat! That's way more important accuracy-wise :)

  23. Re:Turn down the volume on Study Links Personal Music Players To Hearing Loss · · Score: 1

    "why do people slow down when they see a police car with blinking lights by the side of the road?"

    In many parts of the country, it's the law that if you can't move over to a nonadjacent lane you *must* slow down when passing an emergency vehicle parked on the shoulder with its lights on.

  24. Re:Support The Municipality (We're Onto You) on Telco Sues Municipality For Laying Their Own Fiber · · Score: 1

    I know "thank you" is the kind of crappy reply we're not supposed to give around here, but seriously, thank you. That was exactly the point I was going to make. For all the talk of earmarks and accountability and change that emanates from political campaign rhetoric, I think it's unconscionable that the amount of federal underwriting goes largely unacknowledged by anyone. No talk of accountability; no questioning of results. For as much attention as the Bridge to Nowhere has received lately, why isn't there any talk of the acquiescence to the current policy of basically No Fiber to Anywhere.

    Also, I do want to give a nod of deference to grandparent, because while I agree with parent that we done got screwed, I'm also not against public subsidy of private development where it makes sense -- but without recourse for the gubbmint on behalf of the taxpayers whose money is being spent / squandered / wasted on projects that go nowhere, I think it's totally a case of socialism for the rich.

  25. Re:the bulk of "his" pipes... on How Networks Interact — Peering and Transit Explained · · Score: 1

    Socialist!

    On a related note, bless you.

    If you've not read any of Larry Lessig's books on the topics (like The Future of Ideas), check it out. It sounds like you'll really appreciate the way he lays out his argumentation and really structures the ideas behind the necessity of the commons.