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User: SciFurz

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  1. Re:Potential Damages? on A US Ally Shot Down a $200 Drone With a $3 Million Patriot Missile (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    It does sound like a modern art project to me.

  2. computers will have human-level intelligence

    There will be smart ones but most will be stupid when connected in groups together, and only perform short time calculations instead of working on a long term plan to raise the quality of all components for everyone?

  3. Re:Love to update the OS on my phone on Many Smartphone Owners Don't Take Steps To Secure Their Devices (pewresearch.org) · · Score: 2

    Probably take someone suing them until this changes in the UK

    Or anywhere else, actually.
    I haven't had an update in a long time (Samsung S4) but I only checked when it was convenient as well. Now I've rooted it, and secured it more by installing a firewall, hosts list, and program permission tool on it through the F-Droid repository.
    But the main thing is to not install every silly app from the store, especially whhile not checking latest reviews and permissions.

  4. Re:I don't add to the problem on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Solve the Instant Messaging Problem? · · Score: 1

    What about things that aren't super urgent that you need_now!

    That's urgent then, isn't it? If it's not urgent you don't need it now.
    And the same in a meeting, either the meeting pauses to get an answer, or it will be given later.

  5. Re:IM mandated by disability rights law on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Solve the Instant Messaging Problem? · · Score: 1

    Was one of your co-workers deaf or hard of hearing? If so, the use of instant messaging for urgent things may have been an accommodation for your co-worker's disability, pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act or foreign counterparts.

    Most were hard of hearing, but that had nothing to do with the health of their ears, and this wasn't a US company.

  6. Re:I don't add to the problem on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Solve the Instant Messaging Problem? · · Score: 1

    That's what I felt when the boss at a previous job wanted us to use instant messaging when there was already a phone for urgent things and email for non-urgent matters. I didn't want to be distracted by constant popups from another communication source.

    I use two instant messaging clients now on my mobile, one I've used the longest for work/friends, and since last year another for chatting securely (read: keeping away from facebook/google) with my girl.
    The mobile is set to silent and no vibration so it's not too distracting.

  7. Repeat after me on Will WebAssembly Replace JavaScript? (medium.com) · · Score: 0

    A browser is not an operating system!

  8. Re:Too many cores. on Intel Supercharges Atom Chips With 16 Cores and Pro Level Features (pcworld.com) · · Score: 1

    They're like that guy who sits in a basement full of military archives and watches TV all day, only doing actual work for a couple minute once every week or month when someone comes to visit him.

    Yeah, but he's really going to need them when he has to save America 500 years later with toilet water so it's better to have them and not need them than not having them in the first place.

  9. t's for people that enjoy tinkering with computers rather than getting work done

    I do like tinkering, but one of the advantages of using Limux/BSD is the lack of annoying disturbances while working.
    No nagging about Windows updates or forced reboot, no nagging about the virus scanner doing anything, no nagging of programs needing updates (Adobe, Java, etc.), no nagging advertising (apparently), no nagging about no internet connection if the router or firewall reboots, etc.

    My barebones desktop environment (by default totally blank with a clock in the bottom corner) provides me the setting to do what I want to do on the PC; use the programs I started without any distraction.

  10. Re:Good job on Anonymous Takes Down 10,613 Dark Web Portals (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 3

    how the hell do you get sexual satisfaction out of swallowing somebody whole?

    Welcome to human nature.
    I guess this fetish is sort of like the one for asphyxiation. The thrill of getting close to death or dying.

    Anything that can cause a physical reaction can also be a trigger for a sexual reaction when the link has established in the brain. It might be best for your sanity to not search for these things on internet.

  11. It's just logic to me on 'To Live Your Best Life, Do Mathematics' (quantamagazine.org) · · Score: 1

    Numbers have been nothing but logic for me.

    Those five basic human needs are what I have found in reading and writing. There you deal with emotions and subjectivity.

  12. Re:It had to happen some day with more HTTPS use on EU Announces Deal To End All Wireless Roaming Charges (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 1

    And what protocols are used for those things?

  13. It had to happen some day with more HTTPS use on EU Announces Deal To End All Wireless Roaming Charges (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since HTTPS can't be cached and more and more multimedia is being used on weebsites (not to mention the increased size of pictures on some sites), the amount of data usage is getting higher every year. The cost of that would be too much if limits are kept the same as they are now.

  14. Re:It's a fluff piece for Uber on Eavesdropping Uber Driver Helps Rescue 16-Year-Old From Her Pimps (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 2

    I'm glad the girl got rescued, but whenever I hear these stories I always think, what now? It's not like the systemic problems that lead her down that path are just going to vanish...

    But the hope is that each time such a story gets in the news it'll lead to something being done about it sooner. (but honestly, I doubt it looking at human nature)

  15. Omission in story on Baby's Skull Rebuilt With Help From A 3D Printer (newsday.com) · · Score: 1

    What they didn't say was that they had to do it all over again after they realised someone had fed the 3D modelling software a copy of the Coneheads movie

  16. Re:Not the real top ten on Slashdot's 10 Most-Visited Stories of 2016 (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    The high number of hits could have been from the popcorn eating crowd expecting huge flamewars in the comments.

    Sometimes the comment section is much more interesting and entertaining than the article itself.
    ...
    Okay, maybe most of the time.

  17. Re:Why do you dorks hate technology so much? on Microsoft Patent Suggests HoloLens Could Keep Track of Your Small Items (theverge.com) · · Score: 2

    -no greedy corporations
    -no opressive government
    -no shoddy security on private data

    A bit idealistic, but none of the things we currently deal with in how those technologies are abused.

  18. Re:don't protect the targets. cut off the sources. on Bigger Than Mirai: Leet Botnet Delivers 650 Gbps DDoS Attack (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    When will we finally learn to just cut internet connections that participate in botnet attacks?>

    When manufacturers learn not to cut corners on the security or upgrade options of these IoT devices, a.k.a. never.

  19. Re:Uh oh, honesty. 53 million songs by 14M artists on Torrent Website ExtraTorrent Under DDoS Attacks; Pirate Bay Also Down (torrentfreak.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Uh oh, someone told the truth. Around here we're supposed to pretend that it's something else, other than being cheap.

    I can't speak for eveyone, but I have adopted the see-first-pay-after-if-worth-it attitude.
    I've paid enough for disappointing music and movies that I now want to see and hear it first before paying a dime. Them trying to hustle me with a spectacular preview and delivering nothing more is not going to work anymore.

  20. Re:It's the sexbots, stupid on Humans Marrying Robots? Experts Say It's Really Coming (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    Within 10 years there will be robots that are good enough to satisfy most of a man's needs. They'll be kind, forgiving, sweet, feminine, encouraging - pretty much the opposite of today's woman who has to make it in a man's world.

    Which is why it wouldn't surprise me it's the women who'll most likely marry a robot.
    Have a caring husband at home who's smart, children selected from the finest DNA through artificial insemination. Who needs men?