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User: frank_adrian314159

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  1. Well Happy Anniversary! on 100 Years of Chemical Weapons · · Score: 1

    'nuff said...

  2. Re:Nice work if you can get it on Pandora Pays Artists $0.001 Per Stream, Thinks This Is "Very Fair" · · Score: 1

    Does da Vinci get paid every time someone looks at the Mona Lisa?

    No, but the Louvre does.

    Ownership hath its rights in our capitalist society.

  3. Re:Didn't like it before.. on Pandora Pays Artists $0.001 Per Stream, Thinks This Is "Very Fair" · · Score: 1

    No, I'm blaming Pandora for a shitty algorithm that always eventually directs people towards the most popular music (as defined by their overall population) regardless of what the individual indicates as his/her preferences.. Start out the day listening to punk and you'll soon enough end up with Katy Perry anyway. Bayesian logic and priors work well, except when they don't.

  4. Re:"Fairness" on Pandora Pays Artists $0.001 Per Stream, Thinks This Is "Very Fair" · · Score: 1

    There's no such thing as "fairness" - it's a fairy tale concept that causes humans far too much suffering.

    As does attempting to say that because things aren't fair, it's fine if everything stays as unfair as it currently is, or becomes more unfair. In general, the better we all behave, the better off we all are. If you deny this, you are an enemy of civilization.

  5. Re: Deal of the century? on In Florida, Secrecy Around Stingray Leads To Plea Bargain For a Robber · · Score: 1

    Well, as they say, "Past Performance is Not Necessarily Indicative of Future Results". When you decide that sharks are what you're going to swim with, you don't get much choice in the bites that go along with them.

  6. Re:About right on In Florida, Secrecy Around Stingray Leads To Plea Bargain For a Robber · · Score: 1

    --- THIS IS AN AUTOMATIC MESSAGE, DO NOT RESPOND! ---

    A level 2 Potential Lack of Mememetic Acknowledgement has been detected. Lack of attribution is very dangerous and could start a copyright infringement war and ultimately involve the use of lawyers. Please consider reading comments with your IP (Intellectual Property) detector engaged to avoid further chance of litigation.

  7. Re:Television entertainers know about as much abou on Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge · · Score: 1

    Bill Nye is a poor man's Mr Wizard.

    No he's not! He's a poor man's Professor Proton!

    Christ almighty! Get your facts straight, Karmashack!

  8. Re:Nye is right on Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge · · Score: 1

    Yes! Everyone knows Clojure is the most awesomeness...

  9. Re:I agree on Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge · · Score: 1

    I suspect the latter was more scientifically based than the former.

    But I bet the former would have made more money, as there are more people interested in astrology than horse racing.

  10. Re: Good grief... on Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge · · Score: 1

    You reap what you sew.

    I wish. I can use a Singer (or a Pfaff, or...), but I've never reaped anything I've sewn. On the other hand, I have planted several gardens and, in that case, I've always reaped what I've sown.

    Is people's illiteracy increasing, or is it just me? Sew and sow are such different words, I can't actually see a well-educated person making these sorts of mistakes (unless you transposed the e and o in a right-left hand confusion thing, in which case your proofreading needs work).

  11. Re:Good grief... on Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge · · Score: 1

    Well, I had quantum mechanics and solid state theory, logic design, processor design, and various courses on memory architecture. I was a bit skimpy on some of the database/compiler work, so I took courses in those topic as well. My education was a bit odd, though, starting with a BS CompE, followed by a failed MSEE (mainly because my marriage at that time was falling apart and a job offer seemed really good by that point) and thirty year gap between my first MS attempt and my second (successful) attempt at an MSCS (and yes, I did a thesis the second time). But, yes, I do believe I understand just about everything in a modern processor/software stack. Or, at least, with enough study of the particular system, I do believe I can understand the system and, if I'm lucky, why they chose the design decisions they did.

  12. Re:How do you confirm somebody's gender online? on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    If you've seen this more than once or twice and it disturbs you, you probably (a) checked some wrong boxes somewhere on your survey or (b) you should be using a site other than TransLove.com.

  13. Re:Most important parameter for men: height on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    Wear cowboy boots. They're basically pumps for men, and a lot of people find them sexy.

    And some people find them as gay as the indian in the Village People.

    Wearing work apparel on a date is a double-edged sword. For every bit of macho it conveys it also conveys a sense of "Why the hell is he wearing that on a date!?" Unless you're going two-stepping or actually are a cowboy, it's probably best to leave the boots home. Just sayin'.

  14. Re:Judicial "system"? on Ask Slashdot: How Can Technology Improve the Judicial System? · · Score: 1

    ... is probably just as good as what they'd get here in the States, CRE notwithstanding

  15. Modern software... on Linux Foundation: Bugs Can Be Made Shallow With Proper Funding · · Score: 1

    Modern software security is hard because modern software is complex.

    Doesn't that just about say it all? More eyes don't solve complexity issues, only more brains and better architecture.

  16. Re:News on 800,000 Using HealthCare.gov Were Sent Incorrect Tax Data · · Score: 1

    Because then the insurers couldn't make money and the system would have collapsed. Anything that you did to the system would have had to be balanced by other players in the system, lest it collapse. This means a complicated law.

    Want a simple law? Here's one: Everyone gets Medicare and the government surcharges your taxes x% to pay for it. That's a simple law - no muss, no fuss, and done. No, all of the complication comes from the fact that we have this fu'ed system with a bunch of asshats sitting in the middle trying to make a living off it. A free market does not work for an essential good and, Libertarian protests notwithstanding, our own self-interest, if not our interest in those we love, together with the randomness of and our vulnerability to death and disease, makes healthcare, in many cases, a necessity, not a luxury.

  17. Re:The lesson here on Lenovo To Wipe Superfish Off PCs · · Score: 1

    Half a loaf, bud...

  18. Re: Youpie I just wasted 5 years of my life.... on How Machine Learning Ate Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Now, now... Don't be petty. I'm sure this will let all the BI "analysts" make the same mistakes they always do, but much more cheaply.

    The flaw in your knowledge behind your well put, albeit sarcastic, commentary is the fact that most people don't care about quality and actively dislike information that rebuts their previously-held conclusions (like well-analyzed data is wont to do). As such, quality data analysis is greatly overvalued by folks who do it, while undervalued or misused by those who most need it (the same is true with every technological field these days). Hilarity ensues.

  19. Are you pondering on Human DNA Enlarges Mouse Brains · · Score: 1

    ... what I'm pondering?

  20. Is anyone else getting a sneaking suspicion... on The Burden of Intellectual Property Rights On Clean Energy Technologies · · Score: 1

    ... that the current economic system is not providing the most efficient distribution of goods and services for the benefit of all?

  21. Re:Amateurs vs. amateurs.... on Java Vs. Node.js: Epic Battle For Dev Mindshare · · Score: 1

    Why? Your protestations to the contrary, why not?

  22. Pro's/Con's on Java Vs. Node.js: Epic Battle For Dev Mindshare · · Score: 1

    Java:

    + Huge amounts of infrastructure in place for just about anything you want to do

    + Mature frameworks

    - Still have to program in Java

    Node.js:

    + Quicker to program simple apps in

    + Simpler deployment (again for small/simple apps)

    - Still have to program in Javascript

    In reality, all systems/frameworks/whatever all suck in their own unique ways. All that matters is matching the tech to the project.

    Besides, the leading edge has moved to Clojure and ClojureScript already.

  23. This is news? on US May Sell Armed Drones · · Score: 1

    America sells weapons? Who'd a thunk it...

  24. Re:Here's the problem on Obama Says He's 'A Strong Believer In Strong Encryption' · · Score: 1

    That xkcd is just more of the recent bullshit Randall has started putting out lately.

    Don't tell me, it was the Libertarian jibe in the pop-up that cheesed you off, right?

  25. Leverage on What To Do After Robots Take Your Job · · Score: 2

    It's all about that. Eventually, the fulcrum is strong enough for a very few creatures to lift the world. And then they start fighting over which is stronger or which is right. So the world falls. More leverage, more risk; less leverage, less risk. Period. The world is now collateral damage to any idiot with a gripe. You're all going to have to learn to behave a bit more civilized to each other, regardless of who started it, or I'm going to have to send you all to your rooms for a long evolutionary time-out.

    Love,
    Mother Earth, Physics, and Mathematics

    P.S. I've worked with you quite a lot, you know... millions of years. Why can't you stop being a bunch of assholes? :cc The Universe