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User: r-diddly

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Comments · 141

  1. I seriously doubt... on Why Car Salesmen Don't Want To Sell Electric Cars · · Score: -1

    ...that electric cars require less maintenance.

  2. illegal to possess an IDEA on Australian State Bans Possession of Blueprints For 3D Printing Firearms (computerworld.com.au) · · Score: 2

    I know everybody here wants to get on with the business of rehashing the same old boring arguments about guns, but please notice this is about which IDEAS are illegal to possess. A drawing or blueprint is an idea and a piece of communication. It is not a firearm. In America this would be a 1st Amendment issue (not the 2nd).

  3. laughable on EFF launches Site To Track Censored Content On Social Media (eff.org) · · Score: 2

    Look at people acting as if social media is All Important and Significant and Stuff. So cute.

  4. Re:You did Something vs. You didn't do Anything on Reuters Bans RAW Photo Format (petapixel.com) · · Score: 1

    In my opinion this one principle illustrates the fundamental narcissistic egotism of the human race, most of whom somehow manage to come to the conclusion that the world was some kind of disaster before they happened to get born into it, but now finally they've arrived to fix everything. Thank goodness!

  5. Don't you mean Allah? on ISIS's Hunt For a Bogus Superweapon · · Score: 5, Funny

    The New York Times Magazine has a fascinating story about ISIS efforts to get their hands on a mysterious and powerful superweapon called [Allah]. The problem is that by consensus among scientific authorities, [Allah] doesn't exist. And yet that hasn't stopped the legend of [Allah], touted by sources from Nazi conspiracy theorists to former Manhattan Project scientists, as having magical properties. Middle East weapons traders have even spun elaborate stories for its properties (ranging from thermonuclear explosive properties to sexual enhancement) and origins and sources (from Soviet weapons labs to Roman graveyards). What can account for the enduring myth of [Allah] — is it rampant scientific illiteracy, the power of urban legend and shared myth, or something else?

  6. Brawndo! It's got what plants crave! on Texas Narrowly Rejects Allowing Academics To Fact-Check Public School Textbooks (csmonitor.com) · · Score: 1

    Electrolytes!

  7. I literally WOULD vote for that. I'd tolerate losing the rap music and skateboards if it meant getting my Matrix-enjacked friends back.

  8. Re:Dear Anonymous... on Anonymous Vows Revenge For ISIS Paris Attacks · · Score: 2

    I don't think that will work, since the exact things ISIS does -- and uses for recruiting purposes -- already show fully that they hate Allah and Mohammed.

  9. Re:Isn't anyone bored of being a consumer yet? on 'Twas the Week Before the Week of Black Friday · · Score: 1

    Black Friday falls under the general subject heading of "Bullshit." Now of course there are 10,000 Americans born every day who have to separately get bored with or otherwise reject Bullshit, and I'm sure that fact alone is what keeps some people in business, but it is Bullshit nonetheless. There are tons of us who have recognized it as such. If you're exposed to a lot of advertising, and your friends are typical consumers, you might be surprised to learn just how few people give a shit about Black Friday and how many people are doing just what you suggest. In other words, the input you're receiving might be a wee bit biased, because none of us run ads. What would that even sound like? "IT'S A NORMALCY BLOWOUT EVENT!!!! Come on down to the typical day when we don't really do anything particularly differently! SANITY! DIGNITY! It's a Friday REGULAR-TACULAR!!"

  10. A shortfall??? on An Algorithm To Facilitate Uber-Style Dynamic Phone Tariffs (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    "...citing a 50% shortfall between demand and capacity over the next five years..."

    Assuming that even happens, that will more properly be known as an "unexploited opportunity," which in capitalism is like a vacuum, which is that thing nature abhors. And considering the fact that the costs of running a network of a given size, don't increase at all during demand peaks, I think someone who knows how to get the job done for a reasonable fixed price will step in and get it done. Might even snatch the market out from under any old congestion-pricing moo-cows who mistakenly think they're indispensable.

  11. Portland? meh... on Ask Slashdot: Undervalued, Livable American Tech Towns? · · Score: 1

    Until recently I would've said Portland OR, but it appears it has been "discovered" and there's no such thing as reasonable rent anymore.

  12. Re:Not slashdot too..... on Explosions and Multiple Shootings In Paris, Possible Hostages (cnn.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah but a war on staircases? How am I supposed to make money off that?

  13. Re:First Rule About Watchlists on Ask Slashdot: How To Determine If One Is On a Watchlist? · · Score: 1

    ...they'll just laugh at you.
    For now.

  14. Just to be clear, there's nothing specifically anti-French about an AK-47. It is the rifle of under-funded underdog armies and guerrilla bands the world over, because it's cheap, durable, reliable, and easy to get parts. Rich armies like the US Army use other weapons.

  15. I recommend... on Google's Robotics Group Lacks Leadership (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 1

    ...Nelson "Bighead" "Baghead" Bighetti

  16. Except no, Syria and Iraq got to be a mess precisely because of outside interference toppling (Iraq) or trying to topple (Syria) their governments.

  17. Alternate Headline Idea on Going Dark Crypto Debate Going Nowhere (threatpost.com) · · Score: 2, Informative

    One Gang of Criminals Claims They're Way Better than the Other Gangs
    Wants Privileged Data Access

  18. Sadly that seemed to be the message of the original computer engineer Barbie book. Not exactly useless advice either, but that kind of bimbo doesn't have a shot with me - not only are there plenty of tits attached to smart women, I hate being manipulated and thanks to years of TV I can always tell when my magical penis powers are being invoked when they're not actually called-for.

  19. Right, and that can happen either on purpose (cynicism, looking for efficiency), by accident (incompetence, bad planning), or some grey area (poor impulse control, rage). All excellent prerequisites for a career in the ransom business. Someone who didn't have such problems, causing them to constantly fuck things up, would presumably have a legitimate job where they didn't have to take such risks.

    So easy to break the analogy between this and a real kidnapping though: A loved one is unique and irreplaceable, whereas data can easily be copied infinitely. People really need to take advantage of this beforehand and at regular intervals. No need to negotiate to get something you already have!

  20. Sounds a lot like NBC, CBS and ABC. on Virginia Radio Station Broadcasting Chinese Propaganda (reuters.com) · · Score: 5, Interesting
    - avoids any criticism of [the US] - CHECK
    - critical of [Washington's] political enemies - CHECK
    - for example, a report on pro-democracy protests in [New York and nationwide] [in 2011] did not explain why people were in the streets, and said only that the demonstrations had "failed without support"

    On the other hand, one key difference is that the Chinese propagandists claim they're just passing along government propaganda, whereas the American ones deny they are.

  21. Great lesson about... on Greenland Ice Sheet Not Covered In Soot · · Score: 2

    ...observation of the truth. You're always looking through a sensor of some type.

  22. Headline: Mother Nature Grateful... on Bumblebees Used For Targeted Pesticide Deliveries (gizmag.com) · · Score: 1

    ...for Belated Human Assistance

    Marvels At How Badly She Screwed Everything Up Thus Far

  23. Sharing! Who can argue with sharing? on Real-World Roadblocks To Implementing CISA · · Score: 1

    That's why I'm urging my Congressman to vote for this, and for the Copyright Violation Persecution and Snuggling Act!

  24. Shit! on Lessons From a Decade of IT Failures (ieee.org) · · Score: 1

    Revisiting the old article, I notice there is only ONE of the 12 failure categories that DOESN'T apply to the project I'm on now! We are so fucked!

  25. Re:Brits love to complain on UK Plans To Allow Warrantless Searches of Internet History (telegraph.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    You're both right: The US is probably writing the UK's book.