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User: StClaraOperationIvy

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  1. Re:Another link for this topic on Why Physicists Don't Like To Talk About Friction · · Score: 0

    fuck my karma fuck your karma fuck the scores fuck off all of this off shit of moderating.

    you're just a mortal and will die like I'm just a moratl and I'll die off too.

  2. It's all about quantum/relativity mess on Why Physicists Don't Like To Talk About Friction · · Score: 0

    Friction generates electricity, and other magnetic beings too, before going on atomic scale, and before you go on these argues please don't forget gravity, which does a particular behaviour.
    Nowadays science cannot 100% assume gravity is any type of particle -wave-, like quantum theory, or if it's a single modification caused by presence of mass in time-space, like it was stated in Einstein famous theory.
    This is rediculess, but there's also a little influence over "classic mass" friction, and it should be considered into quantum-based models, which were extensively used by the scientific community.

  3. Re:Cowards! on Cowboy Bebop Back on Toonami · · Score: 0

    "Just because your trolling is well-intentioned doesn't mean you aren't a complete fucking asshole."
    If you're at home sitted in the front of a computer, I estimate chances in 80% of you being a lousy coward asshole without you go trolling anyway.
    Nothing against geeks.

  4. Re:dear slashdot on Cowboy Bebop Back on Toonami · · Score: 0

    "nobody cares!
    cartoons are for kids!
    (unless they show bewbs)"

    Yes I'm a kid-grown-up. And ain't need pornographics inside toons, I've an active sexual life.

  5. The lack of interesting titles. on Cowboy Bebop Back on Toonami · · Score: 0

    Some cool anime like Cowboy Bebop maintain the average art, it's an interesting one.

    What's anyone thinks about Blue Gender? When I knew it was directed by, huh...(nothing against the family) a Saban I did imaginated an "animated Power Rangers", but in truth the result in my opinion is far above over that I've expected.

  6. Re:Why didn't they use it earlier? on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    An common person can live about 10 days without any food or water, just has to keep nerves into control also is needed to eat himself -or herself- defects.
    Also the poly-propelene buried there should be used to stanch blood until the saviors arrives on -or should be "under"?-.

  7. Re:Well... on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    "Stupid, stupid :( I just wish it had one of these "Edit/Delete" functions."

    Not so fast, dude, I think CmdrTaco and Mods they have these commands available.

  8. Could any mod explain to me... on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    ...if that post above it's any type of sophisticated trolling or it's a poetry?

  9. Re:Fight terrorists by buying shares on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    You can be right this point, misty cow, hoMeWer the terrorist attack clear it was only a "provocation" and they expect USA to react agressively.
    For now, if the people keep investing without fear and if USA drifts out recession, should possible that terrorists will attempt for other "provocation".

  10. Re:Well... on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    ...seems like we're finally to see some SimCity 2000 model patterns in action.

  11. Re:similar technology on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    "I think you read it in "Rainbow 6", dude!"

    Thus if it really exists in the game I think the USA Army already have it but it's in secret.

    -- "My shameful troll statement will be rewarded by the laughs of yours"

  12. Re:Cell Site Offline on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    High precision is needed to detect the right location of signals, moreover some high-tech candies still are needed, also is needed to register and mark a possible weak signal which can do pass the blocks and a device has to hold relative GP data if in case of the cell-phones' signals ending.

  13. FEMA? I don't think so. on FEMA To Use Cell Phone Signals To Find Survivors · · Score: 0

    Who must help and support FEMA are cell-phone technology specialists from Europe, it's hard FEMA to help anyone using this method without a hand from some European IT's.

  14. Re:SlashTroll all over again on Fast, Open Alternative to Java · · Score: 0

    "When it comes to performance, I will not mention the obvious all over again (Java not being slow today etc) but rather point that you can produce an impressive gfx demo even with GW-BASIC, if you have a good interface to OpenGL (or other native, hi-perf graphics library) simply because it's the native code (and better: dedicated HW)"


    Ok. In case of you're wanting for "good performance", I recommend this "dedicated homework":

    - 1GHz+ cpu or G4
    - graphics card from a brand which provides decent API)
    - 256 MB RAM
    - fast SCSI hard drive if you intend your demo to fit it usable in a praxis environment.

    -- "Do you want to see a Win2K bug? Quite simple. Play a CD-ROM on it."

  15. Re:Cross platform? on Fast, Open Alternative to Java · · Score: 0

    Or so he's mistaking Java by Jscript, I guess.

    Check out these guys too: Bombshell Rocks

  16. Re:There is already a good alternative to Java on Fast, Open Alternative to Java · · Score: 0

    AmigaDE can also host Java execution. Amiga software always did for performance, compatibility and less complication -contrary of Windows-, thus why had years ago its platform was been a hit in Europe. Amigas -always using a M68K- were a must for price/performance in business apps, running games, and if you'd some extra buck, you would even do video editing on them!! -- "My shameful troll statement will be rewarded by the laughs of yours."

  17. Re:Did I miss something on Fast, Open Alternative to Java · · Score: 0


    Talking about gcc, it nowadays has that promised 3dnow! support? This is just a question I'm asking here because about 3 or 4 months I've expecting for it and I gave up 3 monts ago.

    If you do want decent support, you still have to go M$ and, obvious, you've to pay VC compiler.

    It's hard to me say this, I like gcc tools, but M$ strives for a rotten open-source and M$ is always leading with some tool inside a box on which it's drawn a puzzle or something like.

  18. Re:Let's re=invent the wheel again! on Fast, Open Alternative to Java · · Score: 0


    Hmm...I'm thinking of a Quake engine which benefits from CORBA.

  19. Seems good and it should to be widely adopted. on Fast, Open Alternative to Java · · Score: 0


    But IVM tends to support 3D ambients, its utilisation will remain pitched from mainstream until webmasters -by the way most of them still continue as sons of Java- do include massive reformulation of current proven design projects.

    Other hand it's a virtual machine, until it gets refined and providing high level of parallelism, including the alleviation of a big flaw found in Java, that's much of slowness when executing machine operations with intensive use of hardware floating-point.

    The games, which are a "recognised" part of fp-intensive family, they hadn't benefit from Java, which speeds up dynamic execution, but they do benefit of C++ -with some hand enhancements-, and originally C it was just designed for the "static-style" software!

    It's necessary to know that even using an efficient language as C++ is difficult to extract good 3D performance if the software platform hadn't there specific adaptation for specific hardware.

    Combining Java and C qualities and the need of a language capable to supply the end of internet connection as a bottleneck will make IVM really a champ, at least that's my opinion.

  20. Hawks on World Trade Towers and Pentagon Attacked · · Score: 0

    Fuck the scores Moderators gave the comments. All way this is a tragedy and ain't personally nerves to brain this tragedy now.

    Terrorism, brutality and fanatism are shit and USA never got on to the point those blazors did.

  21. Re:Look at me, I'm an over-priced, ugly iBook! on Slinky Little Crusoe Notebook Reviewed · · Score: 0

    Software emulation of x86 set it might gives some disadvantage to Crusoe, between, VLIW is the Crusoe's hardware leverage and it shines: a 128-bit instruction word does great, with fast loads, stores and instruction scheduling it makes this cpu specially clean.

    x86's torment always was the big deficient it earned keeping compatibility with an instruction set exceeded however looking for maximum performance, also with the most recent x86 cpus using RISC cores.

    The parts of software emulation at their own they aren't that bad, case if you do consider that the decoded instructions are cached inside an internal cache of the Crusoe, and that cache -which it will to be fast- by itself will not to harm performance. The biggest losses of performance happen because of cpu operations with the external RAM.

    Moreover, the decoding of x86 set is important because it presents an option to keep cpu busy saving clock cycles that cpu would go to worthless use trying to load data from RAM without having what to do, RAM is slow, data load is empty, and finally the cpu's units do hang -expect it just for a while, he, he, he-.

    For example, specifically in the case of K6, a lot of people they criticize it because its Aritmethic Logic Units -ALUs- can process up to 6 RISC instructions per clock cycle, but its decoders in optimal condition only collect up to 4 ops -internal operations of cpu, x86 after decode-, which in they become the comparatively slow decoders paired with the faster ALUs. The processor so must wait much time until the operations are ready to be stored in the scheduler and from there they will go to be processed.

    This in the truth it never had to be an issue therefore K6 is designed to calculate branch addresses -K6 does not keep addresses of branches, it keeps only astounding 8 KB of data on the behavior of the processed software- during the time in which the ALUs doesn't only have what to do. Branch prediction -beyond the short pipeline- it's the key for the whole integer performance in K6, not only how many instructions had been thrown into units per clock cycle! Other x86 cpus, quite obvious they lose much of processing power with excessive flaws and feeds in the prediction scheme.

    Of course, likely AMD, Transmeta gets on x86 flaws to develop and to make its flagship, that Crusoe microprocessor.

    My opinion, Crusoe is a good child thanks it was conceived as simple. But its simplicity pulls it badly from the throne of x86 cpus too.
    Do you want run most common software and you shouldn't imagine results of Athlon's performance vs. Crusoe's performance?

    bb, might do you accept a bet? If Crusoe 600 MHz does lead in tests, you will win the entire long, large, tall, big, and deep universe. Thus if it the Athlon mobile 1200 MHz leads, I'll snack your baseball cards.

    G3 in notes it has an advantage: extensively optimised software for it, a great deal it runs bonanza cool that movies and multimedia stuff.

  22. Re:Look at me, I'm an over-priced, ugly iBook! on Slinky Little Crusoe Notebook Reviewed · · Score: 1

    Crusoe in reality is a good performer, G3 has that CodeWarrior, yes that CodeWarrior it makes dozen Apple users to believe their buddy can even whoop on any other competitor.

    Crusoe it's an ingenious, except by floating-point execution.

  23. Re:Explosion of hate into Slashdot boards on Slinky Little Crusoe Notebook Reviewed · · Score: 1

    No way, misty cow. Grammar there it is correct, methods for my subjectives are correct too.

    I roll over a post adding some more object pronoumn defs, and also aliasing terms causing the text a expandedum which it to increase ten or twenty lines I agree you it should be readable for kiddies. Might.

    Negative. Ain't asiatic and I did never used to know pulled-eyes home in persona.

    I do have difficulties personally reading some zine-sized crap a dumb could do consider written by any "GOD".

    I think compact is much better, thus why PCs are very popular contrary to clusters and we're talking about nb's.

  24. Re:Explosion of hate into Slashdot boards on Slinky Little Crusoe Notebook Reviewed · · Score: 1

    Thus tune ya head it to work in kernel mode, so I try to do sharp speaking and, gosh, none did understood.

    Maybe better for my talk it doing as yours do.

    "I do read mostly bashing and cutting-egde (mispell: edge) flames I hadn't saw any other MB.

    I hadn't saw.

    Never-before-seem to me.

    It's cutting edge - for me.

  25. Re:Explosion of hate into Slashdot boards on Slinky Little Crusoe Notebook Reviewed · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Hmm...not that suitable for boys the language skill I did used, at least grammar in there is correct, oh, a misspell: "an" by "a". OK.
    If there's you've any doubt ask your English teacher.

    "I use to read the MB's, except computer-related (message boards).
    Shining (-to appear-) a story about cpus, I imagine how many Apple employees join (the) discussion to make cheap-ass (also) worthless propaganda.
    (The) Same about other silicon topics, companies do build battle camps and do attack other companies.

    (Case) You('re) working at a company which has a big market share or if you're a(n -misspell-) investor, do protect your anus against Slashdot message boards."

    Of course, my post wasn't targeted at you, but last discussions of this site aren't that graceful. I do read mostly bashing and cutting-egde flames I hadn't saw any other MB.