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Comments · 151

  1. Re: What are the odds? on Apple Says Apps Must Now Disclose Odds For Loot Boxes (kotaku.com) · · Score: 1

    Chance would be a fine thing:. I have a two year old android phone so no chance of an OS update.

  2. IceCat on Ads Based On Browsing History Are Coming To All Firefox Users · · Score: 2

    And that might be the push needed for me to try out IceCat (formerly IceWeasel) https://www.gnu.org/software/g...

  3. Ad blockers? on Microsoft Is Confident In Security of Edge Browser · · Score: 1

    A great news to many is that old unsecure plugin interfaces are not supported at all: VML, VBScript, Toolbars, BHOs, and ActiveX are all nuked from the orbit.

    I take it this also eliminates any existing ad blockers? Is there an alternative plugin mechanism that would allow for new ad blockers?

  4. Re:FFS on Researchers: Alcohol Health Risks Underestimated, Marijuana Relatively Safe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Causation is hard to identify in your example though: does smoking pot encourage teens to drop out; or are the teens that are on track to drop out, more likely to smoke pot?

  5. Re:insufficient information... on UK Users Overwhelmingly Spurn Broadband Filters · · Score: 1

    That's part of the tragedy of the ISP filtering though. While the more tech-savvy parents will recognise that the filters are - at best - a partial solution, other parents will be given a false sense of security.

  6. Re:More inconvienient than the average filter. on UK Users Overwhelmingly Spurn Broadband Filters · · Score: 1

    the connection owners have to call in to turn the filter off.

    I've used BT as an ISP, and the filter option came up as a web page after signing in (I was signing in to watch their BT sport channel, but I assume if you signed in for e.g. the admin site, it would have appeared). I hadn't noticed any blocked sites prior to disabling it, but the option to enable or disable the filter may have appeared prior to it defaulting to being on. One click, and the filter was off, so disabling it really doesn't add much hassle to the end user. I don't doubt the implementation was a lot of hassle at their end, however.

  7. Re:EMACS 2.0 on GitHub Open Sources Atom, Their Text Editor Based On Chromium · · Score: 1

    Well this is just EMACS circa 2014. But instead of elisp we have Javascript. And instead of the emacs-platfrom-which-has-no-name we have a browser.

    Anyway, here's a few lines from my top window: 13226 user 20 0 902280 187184 27300 S 0.0 18.3 57:49.63 firefox 26114 user 20 0 35532 8680 4344 S 0.0 0.9 0:12.53 gvim

    see the difference?

    (but hey it's in a browser so it's officially cloud and webscale and at least web 3.1.0-RC2)

    It doesn't run in the browser - it's a standalone app. FWIW, it's using 5.7Mb on my computer at the moment - while emacs is using 41.2Mb. Your emacs analogy is perhaps more apt than you realise though: it's essentially emacs using HTML/javascript/CSS instead of lisp.

  8. Re:Fuck me. Romney has a case of.. on Obama and Romney Respond To ScienceDebate.org Questionnaire · · Score: 1

    Wonder if he was including dial up ISPs?

  9. Re:Common or not? on Windows 8 Tells Microsoft About Everything You Install · · Score: 2

    App stores do this for apps installed via the store; the difference here is that Windows is doing it for every app being installed whether via an app store or not.

  10. Re:No. on Why Intel Should Buy Nokia · · Score: 1

    OK I looked up the data. Nokia got €800m from Apple and is to receive further royalties of €8 per iPhone sold. Apple is currently doing about 35m phones per quarter so something is definitely wrong since Apple alone is paying more than .5b. Though not the $1.5-2b I had heard either, sort of down the middle.

    Could be that the 0.5b figure is there net patent income - they may be spending a fair bit on licencing from other companies.

  11. Further evidence on Fundamentalist Schools Using "Nessie" To Disprove Evolution · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think the Lousiana schools are ignoring important documentary footage of the family of Nessie from the 80s, as described here.

  12. Two thoughts on Red Cross Debates If Virtual Killing Violates International Humanitarian Law · · Score: 5, Informative

    Firstly, this is a Daily Fail story - take with a large pinch of salt. As shown in the Leveson inquiry, they're happy to run "Organisation wants to ban something" story one day, then "Our campaign has forced organisation to back down" the next - despite no such banning effort happening. In addition, they do have a "anything invented after 1900 is suspicious" agenda. Secondly, if the Red Cross actually are debating this, perhaps it's in an effort to revise International Humanitarian Law to keep up with the times, inasmuch as International Humanitarian Law actually exists.

  13. Re:there's an app for that! on Ask Slashdot: Project Scope For MLB Robot Umpires? · · Score: 2

    Don't the human umpires rely on optical sensors?

  14. Re:Will Invite on Google+ Already At 10 Million Users · · Score: 1

    Could you (or some other kind soul) send an invite to: hdyson@gmail.com Thanks!

  15. Re:Will Invite on Google+ Already At 10 Million Users · · Score: 1

    I'd be grateful for an invite too. Thanks!

  16. Denny Crane on Happy 80th Birthday, William Shatner! · · Score: 1

    Denny Crane

  17. Re:Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human on Blade Runner Sequels and Prequels Happening · · Score: 1
    The reason Blade Runner was a great film was precisely because they made a film using concepts from the book, but didn't slavishly follow the text (Watchmen, I'm looking at you here). Don't think the plot followed the original book closely enough for the sequel to the book to make sense as the sequel to the film.

    I haven't read the book Bladerunner 2, by the way - I retract the above if it was a follow up to the film, rather than "Do Androids Dream..."

  18. Re:Mac Spotlight on File Organization — How Do You Do It In 2011? · · Score: 1

    For me, spotlight became much more useful when I discovered you can use it from the command line - mdfind. The man page is a must to use it well, of course.

  19. Re:Is there a How-To on moving the window icons ba on Ubuntu Linux 10.04 Review (Lucid Lynx) · · Score: 1
    It's a pet hate of mine that the minimise/maximise buttons are beside the close window buttons on pretty much every window manager on pretty much every OS. It just seems obvious to me to have minimise/maximise on one side and close on the other so there's less risk of closing a window by accident.

    It can be changed on KDE (and I see in the other replies it can be done in gnome as well), but it shouldn't need to be.

  20. Re:They did it for the money. on How Did Wikileaks Do It? · · Score: 1

    The question isn't why, but how.

  21. Re:Misidenttified on First Impressions of the 11th Doctor Who · · Score: 1

    I'm tired of this trope being repeated without evidence. Care to provide some?

  22. Re:It actually makes sense on In Israel, Potential Organ Donors Could Jump the Queue · · Score: 1

    Yes, well, however, suitable donors make very unlikely receivers (or is it "acceptors"?).

    Is that true? I can certainly believe it for a single organ ("suitable heart donors make very unlikely heart receivers"), but I would expect that at least some of the other organs would be viable in most cases?

  23. Re:The List on The Worst Apple Products of All Time · · Score: 1

    Now I do have a complaint that Apple decided to cripple Quicktime so if you want to do anything useful with it you have to buy Quicktime Pro. That's annoying. It costs as much as the Snow Leopard upgrade.

    Quicktime pro was abandoned when quicktime X came out - although I don't think there's a windows version of quicktime X, it is built in to Snow Leopard so is included in that Snow Leopard upgrade.

  24. Re:No it wouldn't on Draconian DRM Revealed In Windows 7 · · Score: 1

    Sadly, not going to happen though. Big companies aren't going to throw away their existing applications, so need a version of windows. They won't be able to get XP any more, so the choice will be Vista or Windows 7; also known as rock or hard place. Nonetheless, they will pick one of them.

  25. Re:Some favorites on (Stupid) Useful Emacs Tricks? · · Score: 1
    This is now bound to f4 by default, see:

    here.