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User: Loopy

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  1. Decentralization has costs and benefits on The Web Won't Be Safe Or Secure Until We Break It · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Frankly, I'll take the current internet with all its warts and diseases over some centralized, walled-garden approach that will STILL suffer from the same things, just in a different mechanic. The bottom line is how you decide what to trust in any system.

    I'd submit that the problem isn't that the internet is the Wild Wild West, it's that it is the Wild Wild West without any sheriffs or cowboys. No, I'm not talking about regulation of the internet; I'm talking about people who break laws (fraud, theft, etc.) being found and prosecuted regardless of what tool (postal system, telephones or internet) they used to do it.

  2. WTF guys? on 'World of Warcraft' Candidate For Maine State Senate Wins Election · · Score: 1

    My friends and family have pretty much all been avid gamers since the Atari days. What in the 7th level of hell does that have to do with anything other than gaming?

    While I wouldn't vote for a Democrat on general principle, I fail to see how her playing WoW is a detriment. I'd go further and suggest that it gives her a feel for how normal people tend to use the internet and means she's probably more in touch than the average government denizen.

  3. My brother's 3-year-old used Win7 desktop on Are Windows XP/7 Users Smarter Than a 3-Year-Old? · · Score: 1

    She figured out how to launch Firefox, go to favorites and pick her Disney princess flash game and play it, then when she was done she would close Firefox and shut down the PC. I'm not sure why this sort of hyperbole masquerading as "fact-finding" rates a slashdot post as it would appear young kids have been using Windows operating systems for years. Probably just like they've been figuring out how to use Mac OS for years. Probably just like they figure out how to unlock Mom's Android/iPhone and call random people or play games on it. Probably just like they figured out how to turn on Dad's TI calculator and delete his stored functions for this week's exams.

    Nothing to see here but FUD from the other direction.

  4. Lots of addons I use today on FF not supported on Ask Slashdot: Seamonkey vs. Firefox — Any Takers? · · Score: 1

    The list when I 'downgraded' from FF (actually, Palemoon 15.2):

    BBComposer
    Download Statusbar
    Fireform
    Flashblock
    Greasemonkey
    IE View Lite
    iMacros
    ImageBlock
    Memory Restart
    TabMix Plus

    A couple of these have other variants that will work around but several of those are dealbreakers.

  5. *shiver* on Former Australian Cop Wants Jail For Internet Trolls · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The world is a big, mean, scary place full of ill-intentioned people who will take advantage of the uneducated and the less-vigilant.

    s/people/governments/ig

    Question: do you think it is easier to defend yourself against hateful onslaught by ill-intentioned individuals or against governments that will take away your life, liberty and property just because you aren't toeing the party line? Follow-up: what do you suppose are some of the best ways to defend against tyranny? /popcorn

  6. Re:It's all tied together on Teen Suicide Tormentor Outed By Anonymous · · Score: 0

    It's all tied together. Society's rejection of morality and ethics leads to this. Atheism leads to this. The culture of consent and contraception, leads to this.

    Since when has religion had much to do with morality? It's about peer influence.

    You do realize that pointing out a fallacy of generalization (atheists are amoral) by committing another fallacy of generalization (theists are amoral) doesn't really help the point you're trying to make, right? Try simply pointing out holes in others' arguments and leave it at that. When you ascribe general motivations to individuals you obviously do not know or understand based on the vision others like you present in the media/intertubes, you end up exhibiting the weak-minded, peer-influenced, dogmatic thinking[sic] you seem to be complaining about in others.

    I'd suspect your counter-argument of being psychological projection but that would just be *cough* ad hominem *cough* as I don't know you or what values you hold dear. *hint*

  7. Re:Will this somehow cause Sprint to stop sucking? on Japan's Softbank Buying Sprint, Creating Third-Largest Global Carrier · · Score: 1

    Been a sprint customer since the late 90s. Started with a Palm Pre, upgraded to an EVO 4G (WiMax) and am now on a Galaxy S3 LTE.

    The WiMax coverage for the EVO was primarily in the larger areas as people have said but I knew that before I bought the damned phone; I'd have felt silly buying a "high speed data" phone without researching whether the product was designed to work in my area. ;) WiMax, where it was available, was always very fast and connections were reliable enough that I never noticed anything untoward.

    My S3 has much more limited coverage (which I knew) but is even faster in-zone. I primarily use 3G but I'll admit to not being the type that uses my phone as an entertainment console, so the occasional surfing I do to look things up while shopping or browsing weather radar or news while out and about works like a champ so far.

    So far, I can't complain about Sprint. I haven't had any trouble with them jacking my rates or failing to grandfather in the All Everything All The Time plan I've had since 2002 or so. Based on my experience, I suspect this is mostly due to being both cognizant of realistic expectations for coverage and vigilant about letting the sales reps not screw up my paperwork.

  8. Re:Bloated or obsolte? Make up your mind. on Firefox 16 Released: More HTML5 Support · · Score: 1

    Giving up my mod points in here just to say THANK YOU! That max_viewers tip isn't one I've found anywhere else and considering my browsing habits, this made a huge difference. /salute

  9. I don't care how great you thought it was, MSFT... on Even Windows 8 Users Prefer Windows 7 · · Score: 1

    I didn't ask for a completely different UI. I actually LIKE Win7 as is. It's (so far) rock solid stable. My ATI and NVidia drivers Just Work(tm). The apps for the most part all use a familiar menu/hotkey structure so all those little keyboard shortcuts still work without me having to learn new ones (we won't talk about Office 2010's changes to that.../grumble). On the off chance I download an app that does crash or I experience a beta video driver crash, everything recovers at least well enough to allow me to close my work normally and reboot at my leisure. I don't have performance issues after weeks of uptime. I don't have app compatibility issues. I don't have any complaints about being able to find stuff. My desktop and start menu work the same way they've worked for most of the last 10 years.

    WHY? Why would you think Metro is something I'd want on my desktop? I partly understand re: tablets but my desktop??? It's bad enough that I'm considering going out to buy another few copies of Win7 just in case family wants to upgrade older PCs (or have me build new ones) expressly so that when Win7 disappears from shelves, we won't be forced onto it.

    Then again, if the linux nerds could get their heads out of their asses (I'm looking at you, Ubuntu Unity/Gnome3 idiots), and more game developers start supporting it, I might just start migrating everything to linux.

  10. The 3 laws do have some...interesting quirks on Suitable Technology's Telepresence Robot Lets You Roll Remotely · · Score: 1

    Example: someone sustains an injury to an arm or leg such that amputation is the only way to save their life. How do all the nuances of directly or by omission of action harming a human get resolved to the satisfaction of the robot? How much explanation does an experienced medical expert need to give a robot to "convince" the robot that the course of action the surgeon is going to take is correct? How do the personal choices of the injured human enter into the decision process?

    Seems easy until you start applying them to actual humans. ;)

  11. Re:Incidentally... on Beer Is Cheaper In the US Than Anywhere Else In the World · · Score: 1

    When the majority of the entrants are from one country, is it a surprise the majority of the winners are from the same?

    With the presumption that you're not being a pedantic jackass and we're only talking about the top 5-10, what does the number of beer contestants have to do with anything?

  12. Hmm... on Obama and Romney Respond To ScienceDebate.org Questionnaire · · Score: 1

    The linked site has posts sub-titled "Climate Denial Crock of the Week," indicating that they're part of the "science is settled" camp. So, anyone that disagrees with any part of the pro-climate-change-thus-pro-green-everything platform is a denier, rather than an alternative viewpoint? We're at an interesting time in the evolution of science, indeed.

  13. Aside from the obvious "new shiny" stuff on Side-Effect of the Apple v. Samsung Trial: Increased Sales for Samsung · · Score: 1

    The biggest reason is probably the basic economics of the suit. Sure, the GS3 might not end up included in the suit eventually but if they have to pay out a billion+ and are restricted in sales of other models and in where they can sell, it will probably drive prices up on every other Samsung model. This may happen if for no other reason than people like Samsung phones and were just waiting for a good excuse to buy one (especially the most recent full-featured model).

  14. Re:I've been uxing Xubuntu on Debian Changes Default Desktop From GNOME To XFCE · · Score: 1

    Damnit, that "XP still available from Dell" date should have read October 2010. /wrists

  15. Re:I've been uxing Xubuntu on Debian Changes Default Desktop From GNOME To XFCE · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The difference is we get a choice, we don't have to accept what they create. Pity the poor fools on Windows, they are about to get Metro whether they want it or not and they aren't going to have many options. Heard the latest? The prereleases have been hacked to default to a normal desktop but the RTM has 'fixed' those hacks so they won't work. They aren't going to allow em to escape. Of course corporate types will be able to stay on Win7 for years; end users won't be able to buy a new PC without 8 after the new year.

    Agreed regarding the Metro loophole business, though I'm sure this isn't the last we've heard on this.

    Sadly, though, I'd like to present you the Flamebait of the Day award for that last bit.
    Windows Vista release = Jan 2007
    Windows XP still available from Dell = October 2012
    My sources are telling me Windows 7 will follow much the same plans as XP did, with availability as a "downgrade" option for the next year at the very least.

    Furthermore, Microsoft STILL allows downgrades from some Win7 editions to WinXP! (see http://www.microsoft.com/oem/en/licensing/sblicensing/pages/downgrade_rights.aspx)

  16. Corrected title on Google Clamps Down On Spam, Intrusive Ads In Apps · · Score: 0

    "Google clamps down on Spam, Intrusive Ads In Apps from competitors

  17. Should? Who are you asking? on Should Developers Support Windows Phone 8? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is what phone/OS a developer supports supposed to be up to some groupthink decision based on some "prevailing wisdom?"

    I may be picking a few nits but this seems to be a thinly veiled form of Begging The Question considering the obvious bias in the submission.

  18. "Unprecedented" on NASA Satellite Measurements Show Unprecedented Greenland Ice Sheet Melt · · Score: 1

    You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

  19. RTS/etc. on A Fresh Look At Multi-Screen PC Gaming · · Score: 1

    RTS games almost universally get the shaft in these stories. Main combat screen on one monitor, status/minimap on the other. Supreme Commander is a great example of well-done multimonitor RTS games. Alas, RTS tends to suck when you only have like 5 buttons and a poor pointing interface on your controller. ;)

  20. Re:Ah don't worry... on Nobel Laureate Wiped From Pakistan's Textbooks As Heretic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Might have been helpful to read the rest of the conversation about how most of the other religions (Christianity especially) have learned from their mistakes.

    Furthermore, nobody asserted Islam was the "silliest" of the bunch -- just the most lethal to non-believers.

  21. Original story on Microsoft Engineer Discovers Android Spam Botnet, Google Denies Claim · · Score: 2
  22. Asus and Acer "in lockstep with Redmond?" on Microsoft's Surface Caught Windows OEMs By Surprise · · Score: 1

    Intel, HP(Compaq) and Dell are pretty much the only major OEM players that have worked directly with Microsoft for anything other than business deals and high-level stuff, or were up through 2011 or so. HP/Intel have been the two primary partners for low-level tech development such as UEFI, with Dell playing a sort of Mongo to HP's Sheriff Bart simply because they were the biggest OEM before HP/etc. outsourcing to ODMs in China (Acer, Foxconn, ASUS) killed Dell's profit margin advantage.

    You can bet that HP/Intel will share in the benefits of any new tech that comes out of the Surface product due to the above close relationship. I can almost guarantee Microsoft will delay giving anything new and profitable to Chinese ODMs because as soon as they get it, history has shown it will be on the shelves in knockoff products as soon as they can retool to get it done (usually 6-9 months).

    And really, considering the fiasco with Palm/Touchpad, does anyone really think HP had any interest in trying it again on their own? If this tablet goes well for MSFT, HP will be happy to become a partner and develop their own version(s) with similar build quality and the usual tight integration with Microsoft.

    TL;DR = nothing to see here but another disgruntled or otherwise axe-grinding article against the PC industry. The people at HP/MSFT/Intel actually still making things happen are I'm sure laughing their asses off (to the bank?) at these sorts of drama-laden missives. ;)

  23. Re:Christian country on U.S. Students Struggle With Reasoning Skills · · Score: 1

    I can only pity those who believe themselves immured in such a wholly polarized society.

    The test of a first rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.
            F. Scott Fitzgerald, "The Crack-Up", Esquire Magazine (February 1936).

    Not all adherents of religion are wacko nutjobs. More importantly, not all religions require nutjobism of its supplicants. ;)

  24. Those who cannot remember the past... on Venezuela Bans the Commercial Sale of Firearms and Ammunition · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...are condemned to repeat it.

    Past tyrants are, I'm sure, cheering from the grave.

  25. Funny how it's always corporations' fault on Comptroller Accuses HP of Overcharging NYC $163m On 911 System · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The old jokes about $500 hammers notwithstanding, it's amusing to me how corporations are almost universally blamed when government contracts overrun. Nobody seems to notice that it's only government contracts that do this regularly -- normal companies that do this go out of business or into bankruptcy.

    Back here in the real world, we call this piss-poor planning, usually traced back to marketing/sales causing constant feature creep or declaring ex post facto that a certain spec (that THEY WROTE!) doesn't meet customer/program demands.

    I wonder, has anyone ever seen a post-mortem review of a government contract? Does government ever even attempt to figure out where the inefficiencies lie and correct them or at least plan for them next round?

    Also, in before the NASA boogeyman shows up.