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User: BKX

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  1. Re:Full review on PC-BSD 9.0 Release · · Score: 3, Funny

    Fuck fuck fuck. I accidentally modded this funny. Undoing now.

  2. Re:Free software wouldn't have helped on Why Richard Stallman Was Right All Along · · Score: 2

    I believe that's argument from incredulity. It's usual form is something like, "This guy's ideas are wrong because he can't properly format a hyperlink and is therefore retarded and because of his idiocy his ideas are also wrong." While it's true the GGP can't properly format hyperlinks, that doesn't make his conclusions wrong; it just makes him either stupid, ignorant or lazy.

  3. Re:Dude, that's lame on Technical Details Behind the LAN-Party Optimized House · · Score: 1

    Generally that problem can be solved with 36 inch flexible drill bits (they exist and are awesome and not too expensive), maybe some flexible drill bit extenders (you may need the equivalent of a 100 inch drill bit), and some fishtape. Usually, you just drill down until you hit the unfinished part of your basement, or you drill over until you hit an air duct and run plenum rated through that with the fishtape.

  4. Re:What the hell is a "chocobos"? on Square Enix Admits Final Fantasy XIV Damaged Brand · · Score: 1

    A chocobo is a giant chicken that you can ride.

  5. Re:It Isn't Just Gaming on Are Games Worth Complaining About? · · Score: 1

    I think the formula is more like Satisfaction = 2 * Reality / ( Expectations + Hopes). Even if a product performs exactly as you expected, you won't be 100% satisfied if you hoped for better, thus Satisfaction is Reality divided by the average of your expectations and hopes.

    Of course since some people like geometry more than arithmetic, maybe for them it's really Satisfaction = Reality / sqrt(Expectations*Hopes).

  6. Re:Bitcoin on Krugman On Bitcoin and the Gold Standard · · Score: 1

    Ironically, I knew that and meant to put that in my asterisk as well, but submitted too quickly.

  7. Re:Bitcoin on Krugman On Bitcoin and the Gold Standard · · Score: 2

    Nope, not quite right (except the part about higher voltages needing less thick wires.). How thick a wire must be to handle a given load depends mainly on amperage. Since this is a heat dissipation issue, where you put the wire also matters: in a wall means less heat dissipation than outdoor use which means a thicker gauge. Voltage means nothing. The only thing that voltage matters for is insulation. The higher the voltage, the better able electricity is at jumping gaps in the circuit, and so you need thicker insulation to prevent this. To give you an example, in my brother's car, one of his amplifiers uses 6AWG wiring, and runs at 60A at 12V. An overhead transmission line that uses 6AWG aluminum wire will typically carry 69kV with a maximum capacity of something like 300A. The reason it can use higher amps is because of the cooling effect of having the wire exposed to air and not near anything, and that we have increased safety tolerances for wires in areas where humans are likely to be present (buildings, cars, etc.). The insulation difference is massive. The car wiring's insulation is like 1mm plastic, whereas the transmission line uses literally meters of air between the wires and ceramic insulating suspenders that are several feet tall.

    To give another example, let's take house wiring. If I have a 20A 120V circuit, I'll need to use 12AWG wire. If I have a 20A 208V circuit, I'll need to use 12AWG wire. If I have a 20A 240V circuit, again, I'll need to use 12AWG. Now you might be tempted to say, "But, there are three wire in the 208V and 240V circuits." But then I'll remind you that all the electricity, no matter the configuration*, flows back through the neutral.

    * Yes, I know that's simplistic and 3-phase is even weirder and 208V is the potential between the hots and we don't touch the neutral with 208V, but it doesn't really affect my point, so fuck it.

  8. Re:supposedly obsolete tech on PC Designer Says PC "Going the Way of the Vacuum Tube" · · Score: 1

    If you were truly cheap you would have already replaced your incandescent bulbs with CFLs. The payback for the switch is amazingly fast. At five hours of use per day, $1 per bulb and $.09/kWh, it takes one month for the savings in electricity to pay for the new CFL, five weeks if add in the cost of the old incandescent.

  9. Re:It'll never make it through FDA trials on Cancer Cured By HIV · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This argument is bullshit. Pure bullshit. If any "Big Pharma" company invented a cure for cancer tomorrow, you can bet your ass that they'd be all over it in a heartbeat. Why? Because, then that company would forever be known as the company that cured cancer. Every new product they make would be a pot of gold. Every ad they put out would be "Muhdikard, a new treatment for erectile dysfunction, from Drugco. We cured cancer.". Every drug company on the face of the planet would kill for that kind of marketing, not to mention the money from selling the cancer cure.

    Now, of course, "cure for cancer" is a worthless phrase as well, since cancer is a type of disease, and not a single disease, and therefore, it's extremely unlikely that one cure will work for more than one cancer let alone all of them.

  10. Re:Meters and miles? on Sheikh Carves His Name In Desert So It's Visible From Space · · Score: 1

    No, standard is not Imperial. In the US, standard is the common name for the US Customary System, which is different from the Imperial system of measures. While I believe the units for distance are the same between the two systems, the units for volume and large masses are quite different. Particularly, fluid ounces and gallons.

  11. Re:Not a moment too soon! on Microsoft Pulling the Plug On Windows XP In Three Years · · Score: 1

    Holy fucking shit! That's ridiculous. Of course, it makes my buddy's turning down a promotion make much more sense. He gets $50k here in Grand Rapids, MI, and was offered a promotion in San Francisco for $70k and had to turn in down because it resulted in a net loss of income when you take cost of living into account. Of course, in addition to cheap electricity, we have cheap water (like $3/100cf), cheap natural gas, and cheap housing ($700/mo will get you a 2br/1200sqft apartment in a reasonable neighborhood, $40k will get that as a house; my 700 sqft/ 1.5br house cost me $7500 cash plus $1k/yr in property taxes, utilities average $100/mo over the year and insurance is only $400/yr). I knew this area was cheap but I guess I didn't realize just how nice we have it.

  12. Re:Not a moment too soon! on Microsoft Pulling the Plug On Windows XP In Three Years · · Score: 1

    Where the hell do you live that electricity is so ungodly expensive? I pay $.09/kWh, and that's with a 7% from last year.

  13. Re:Monkeyshopped on Can a Monkey Get a Copyright & Issue a Takedown? · · Score: 1

    To answer your two questions, no, yes.

    That's right, if I steal your camera and take pictures with it you don't have any obligation to return the pictures to me upon return of the camera, but I, as the photographer (even though the camera was yours and stolen) own the copyright, and, thus, can stop you from publishing them.

    More relevant to the monkeys, in order for the owner of the camera to have a copyright on the monkey's photos, he would have had to make a conscious creative act causing him to reasonably expect the monkeys to take the pictures. I don't think this has happened so there's likely no copyright at all on the photos, placing them by default into the public domain, since monkeys can't own copyrights. Had these monkeys instead been humans, they would unequivocally own the copyrights to the photos and not the camera's owner.

  14. Re:it already is almost dead due to ISP's on BitTorrent Turns 10 · · Score: 1

    Are you sure you're not confusing kb/s with kB/s? A speed of 3Mb/s will result in downloads of around 250-350 kB/s. That's because your ISP will rate your connection speed in megaBITs per second. Your browser and BT client will tell you speed in kiloBYTES (or megabytes) per second. 8 bits = 1 byte. Furthermore, your connection speed will reflect the total number of bits transferred, including protocol overhead, whereas your browser and BT client will only tell you about throughput (the bytes that were downloaded that actually get written to the downloaded file), which doesn't include overhead, making the ratio between your connection speed and throughput more like 1 Mb/s = 100 kB/s.

  15. Re:US-only problem? on Ask Slashdot: CS Degree Without Gen-Ed Requirements? · · Score: 1

    The percentage is about 20-30 %. I think the main difference between the US and elsewhere is that ALL of our bachelor's degrees are the equivalent of Honours bachelor's elsewhere. We don't have 3 yr BA/BS programs like in most countries. I have a feeling that that's where the extra gen ed stuff comes in. If you do college right in the US, our gen ed requirements become an advantage. I'll be receiving a math degree from a state university in two years. My first three years of college will be covering the first half of the math and the gen ed at a community college on the cheap (also giving me an associates) followed by two semesters of hard core math at the senior university level. Coupled with 45 credits of CLEP an d AP tests, and my BS in math will be ridiculously cheap, like $10000 total. The other nice thing about doing the associates in this manner is that you can find out that career path X is super sucktastic and change your mind without having to redo a pile of credits because those courses you took at CC don't count, because now you can count them as electives or gen ed instead. In fact, in Michigan, an associates from a Michigan college guarantees you 60 credits (of the required 120-130) at a Michigan University toward almost any bachelors regardless of the associate's focus.

  16. Good on Want iCloud With Windows? Ditch the XP · · Score: 2

    We need to start getting away from XP anyway. It's ancient and insecure compared to other, not-ten-years-old OSs. It annoys me every time I have to work on an XP machine for someone, since I haven't used XP myself in four years, and it's damn near impossible to walk someone through OS related tasks over the phone at this point.

  17. Re:five years for 10 viewings? on Embed a Video, Go To Jail? · · Score: 1

    ..or five DVD's. Where I'm at least, theft over $100 is larceny, which is a felony. Thank Jesus we don't have a three strikes law.

  18. Re:If you don't believe him... on Jeff Bezos Calls Sales Tax Requirements On Amazon Unconstitutional · · Score: 1

    Speaking of yelling, "Get off my lawn!" I actually had to yell that at kids yesterday. They were smoking pot behind my woodshed (seriously). I thought of Slashdot and instantly felt really, really old, even though I'm only 27.

  19. Re:Translating corporate-speak on Sony Delays PlayStation Network Reactivation · · Score: 2

    Concerning 1.B: Merchants are the ones held responsible in cases of fraud. If you steal a credit card and buy $1000 worth of Wal-Mart shit, then Wal-Mart is out $1000 unless they can figure out who you are and either have you arrested so you can pay restitution or sue the crap out of you. Generally, most companies are forced to pick option C which is: bitch about it, fire someone and do nothing to stop it from happening again.

    That's where your point 1.C comes in. VISA is going to do exactly 1.C by threatening to issue their contractually allowed $100,000 fine for a data breach if Sony doesn't fix the original problem, which can escalate to $500,000 if VISA wants to be a dick about it. That's probably the main reason why the PSN isn't back up. Well, that and if Sony reactivates the PSN without at least looking like they took care of the problem, VISA could terminate Sony's merchant contract altogether. So I agree with you that Sony fixing this problem for real instead of for fake is caused by VISA acting in their own interests. It just happens to be that it's in Sony's best interest to shut up and take the hit for the team, lest they have real problems like not being able to take VISA. If it wasn't, you bet your ass the Sony wouldn't have shut down the PSN and would already be on our third or forth breach.

  20. Re:Ribbons? on Another Windows 8 Pre-Beta Surfaces · · Score: 0

    Jesus H Christ, I hate it when people say this kind of crap. Have you used Word 2007? Oh, OK. I see, you used it for five minutes, couldn't figure it, felt stupid and then decided it was crap. Fuck that. Use Word 2007 for real work for two weeks (like 8 hr/day) and then tell me if it sucks. I assure you that it is the most awesomely usable interface you'll ever use for word processing.

    And don't bitch about it sucking up too much vertical space on widescreen monitors. Rotate your monitor 90 degrees with a $20 stand from Menards. If you use a laptop for real work and you don't drive to other places to do that work, then you're dumb. Get a desktop OR an external monitor (rotated 90 degrees) plus keyboard and mouse for when you're at home or work.

  21. Re:avoid vendor lock, please on The Future of In-Car Computing · · Score: 1

    This. Seriously.

    Why do people insist on spending an extra $5000 for leather, power seats, an underpowered "premium" soundsystem, heated seats, etc.? I will never understand this. Those things are anti-features for me. Leather is uncomfortable in the summer, and freezing in the winter. Heated seats make my butt sweat. Soundsystems ten times better sounding than anything Toyota makes are dime a dozen. Brush your mirrors off when you brush your windows, for pit's sake. And learn how to shift a gear, and save some cash now and forever.

    The only accessory-type features that I wouldn't to live without in a car either mandatory by law (power steering and brakes, anti-lock brakes and/or traction control, seat belts, air bags, all of which are either currently required in the US or slated to be required in the future) or hard to find cars without anyway, like power windows and locks (I don't care so much about keyless entry, but power locks are necessary in my neighborhood).

    Air conditioning is nice but I've lived without it before, and is therefore a neutral feature.

  22. Re:Non-issue really on New Houses Killing Wi-Fi · · Score: 1

    I give the thin tin sheeting probably not being a problem, since I have no issues with my soundboard (my first paragraph was most disagreeing with OP about the use of insulation on interior wall.) The chicken wire from stucco thing, I can assure you, is 100% true. Now, it's possible that water is the actual cause and the chicken wire a coincidence since we're in Michigan and there are streams in everyone's back yard and pools, ponds, and lakes are everywhere, but it seems like a bit too much coincidence that phones work near the windows and doors, but not the walls and interior spaces.

  23. Re:Non-issue really on New Houses Killing Wi-Fi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wouldn't say it's a non-issue, but it's certainly not a new issue. A lot of houses use insulation or soundboard (which is metal coated, like in the picture in TFA) in bedrooms, to deaden sounds (who wants their kids to hear sex noises?); even older houses have it. In fact, my brother and I both put insulating soundboard in our master bedrooms for noise reasons, and because the stuff was on sale for $2/sheet at our local Habitat for Humanity Re-Store. As these materials become more common, we'll be seeing them and their problems in more and more new houses and in more and more retrofits and remodels.

    And another annoyance, in many older homes, such as my father's and my old college dorm building, is the use of "Stucco of Death". That stuff is aw[esome|full]. It will cause severe roadrash when you're drunk and fall into it, much to your detriment and friends' laughter. And the chicken wire that is used as a backing for the stucco is a very good Faraday cage. It's nearly impossible to get signal for any cell phone in my dad's house even though you get full bars outside and at open windows/doors, and no one can get his wifi signal outside, even though he has four APs throughout his house.

  24. Re:1 is not prime on Using Prime Numbers to Generate Backgrounds · · Score: 1

    Nope, Sorry. The definition of a prime a number is a whole number with exactly two distinct whole divisors which produce whole quotients. Note the exactly two distinct part. One is divisible by one and itself, yes, but itself is also one, and thus it does not have requisite two distinct divisors but rather one divisor of one used twice.

  25. Re:Almost makes you want to feel pity for Microsof on Microsoft Files EU Competition Complaint Against Google · · Score: 1

    You know, I always hate it when people call them Social Security "Benefits" and Unemployment "Benefits", as if it's free money for dumb/poor/broke people who don't deserve it. Those two programs are INSURANCE policies, that just happen to be government run. What would you say if Progressive or All-State just up and decided that they're too poor to pay you collision benefits after auto accidents anymore, but you still have to pay your premiums?