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Comments · 5,127

  1. Re: At this point Mars is running before you can w on Kim Stanley Robinson Says Colonizing Mars Won't Be As Easy As He Thought · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it's obvious: do the moon first. We are _incredibly lucky_ to have this resource on our backyard.

    The more I think of it if the Mars One people are going to make any pretence of being serious then why aren't they trying to colonize the moon? It has to be an order of magnitude cheaper, landing on the moon is something we've actually done before, it's not a one way journey, and it gives you a chance to learn how to build an off-world colony before going all-in on Mars.

    It might even be a proposal you could take seriously.

  2. Re:Woohoo! Call off the Apocalypse! on In Historic Turn, CO2 Emissions Flatline In 2014, Even As Global Economy Grows · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow, the level of ignorance here is astounding. When Barack and company had both the White House and both houses of Congress, just how much did they get accomplished on this? Or did they too "kick the can down the road?" Politicians are all alike, and if you don't comprehend that then just keep feeding on what they're shoveling to you. Maybe your determined consumption of political bull$h!t will cut down on some cow's carbon footprint.

    Unfortunately US politics is a lot more complex than that. The Democrats as a whole probably did want to get something done, however the Republicans REALLY didn't want to do anything even on things they could agree with, for something like Global Warming they would have been able to make it extraordinarily costly to do something.

    The Democrats simply didn't have the popular support to enact a serious climate policy, especially after they spent all their political capital on health care reform and economic stimulus.

  3. Re:I'm a Member of That 1% on Steam On Linux Now Has Over a Thousand Games Available · · Score: 2

    Is 2015 the year of the Linux gaming system?

    Could we please stop this shit? Please?

    This is the one time it might actually apply (though maybe it was properly 2014). Two years ago major game being ported to Linux were virtually non-existent. Now 20% of the games from the largest game store on the Internet are suddenly available and generally functional.

    For Linux desktop users that exposition of commercial software is completely unprecedented.

  4. Re:Lift the gag order first... on House Republicans Roll Out Legislation To Overturn New Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    Bandwidth and latency are interlinked in most cases.

    Bandwidth is how much you can fit down the pipe.

    Latency is how long it takes to get there.

    If you don't have enough bandwidth, you get latency as the packet queue up trying to get past the bottleneck. Increasing the bandwidth in this case decreases latency.

    The only other reason you get latency is because of the speed of light and the distance you're trying to cover. The only cure for this is to reduce that distance.

    QoS is only a bandwidth management practice, only coming into play when you have a bottleneck. I've found that in terms of overhead and headache, more bandwidth is ALWAYS cheaper than QoS.

    So, for your desire for low latency for one and high bandwidth for the other, they're likely the same thing.

    Isn't prioritization a factor? If I'm watching Netflix you push my packets further back in the queue, but when they reach the front I get a lot of the pipe. Conversely if I'm just browsing my packets skip to the front of the line with the understanding they're going to be quite small.

  5. Re:Lift the gag order first... on House Republicans Roll Out Legislation To Overturn New Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    But users end up paying the subscription fee to those content providers, do they not?

    Not for the service they're getting. Let's say I'm a Speakeasy customer, and I also pay for Netflix.

    You're a Comcast customer, and you also pay for Netflix.

    Speakeasy is network neutral, so Netflix has no disadvantage compare to any other provider. If Speakeasy has congestion, Netflix and Amazon will be just as slow. To relieve this, they increase their bandwidth do their peering points, and all networks are again running fast. I may have to pay more to Speakeasy for this speed increase.

    However, in your case, Comcast segregates Netflix's traffic and slows it down to relieve congestion, instead of treating all networks as equal. Comcast says their networks are not the issue, because they show you perfect speed from Amazon. You complain to Netflix, who must pay Comcast to get their speed increased.

    Now, this is where the bullshit starts: Netflix passes the cost for the Comcast toll on to both you and ME, even though I'm not a Comcast customer, and this toll did nothing to increase MY speed. In fact, I already had to pay extra to my ISP to get my speed fixed.

    That being said bandwidth when I'm watching something on Netflix, big deal, latency when I'm watching something on Netflix, fairly inconsequential.

    But latency on Amazon, or particularly an online game? Big deal.

    So I could see an argument for allowing ISPs to mess around on that basis. Increasing bandwidth on Netflix and decreasing latency on Amazon would be a win-win for the end user. How to stop ISPs from using that power to screw around with providers is another issue.

  6. Re:Same guy? on The Mexican Drug Cartels' Involuntary IT Guy · · Score: 1

    Only someone so naive as to not have heard about multiple instances of government officials using personal email addresses to evade record keeping requirements.

    A significant portion of people looked at her address and understood exactly what she was doing form the start.

  7. Re:Same guy? on The Mexican Drug Cartels' Involuntary IT Guy · · Score: 1

    known only to the select few of anyone with whom she exchanged email.

    You really think that everyone swapping email with her knew that their communications were being stored on a poorly configured server kept in her house? So far, the general level of panic being displayed by her many party confidants and lots of people in the business suggests that yes, indeed, the completely absurd circumstances were indeed a secret.

    They likely didn't know the storage circumstances but that's just carelessness, that's not the legal issue.

    The legal issue is the fact that she was using a personal email to evade record keeping requirements. That much would be obvious to someone by the fact she was using a personal email address.

  8. Re:Same guy? on The Mexican Drug Cartels' Involuntary IT Guy · · Score: 1

    Wow, you were really straining to make that unrelated political rant seem on topic.

    Not at all. I think it's humorous (or would be, if it didn't contribute to a large body of evidence about the Clinton way of doing things)

    It could be humorous if you didn't turn it into a political rant. People rarely laugh when you make endorsing your political views a prerequisite.

    to think that one of Obama's would-be (at the time) cabinet secretaries, the moment she was named for the job, ran out and paid cash to have a personal mail server set up under a false registrant's name, specifically so that nobody could ever know which or her emails was, or wasn't part of her official legacy in that job - despite the law requiring her to make all such communication part of her ongoing records at State. That she did this under the table, and never even set up an official mailbox at State, and was magically able, for years, to avoid FOIA requests for her official communications, is just fantastically corrupt.

    Sure it's corrupt, and sadly business as usual since Bush II.

    The parallels with some IT guy in Mexico being asked to set up a shadow communications platform for a corrupt cartel there aren't imaginary, they're actually interesting.

    Very, very tenuous parallels.

    It's topical because new of Clinton's furtive behavior along these lines is breaking right now, and it's a related topic. The main point of interest for this audience is the notion of being asked (or forced, in the example of TFA) to set up systems under dubious conditions (legality-wise), and keeping mum to avoid the sort of heat that can come down on them from the people who want the work done.

    Yes, it was completely top-secret, known only to the select few of anyone with whom she exchanged email.

    This wasn't some quiet conspiracy, this was a dodgy practice that is sadly typical in government. And it didn't just come out now because some insider leaked, it came out because for whatever reason this fact that must have been fairly common knowledge finally got around to a reporter who understood it was wrong and actually decided to write about it.

  9. Re:Same guy? on The Mexican Drug Cartels' Involuntary IT Guy · · Score: 1

    I wonder if that's the same guy who worked under a fictitious name, for cash, to set up the private e-mail server and domain that Hillary Clinton used for HER back-channel communications, in lieu of an official mailbox, throughout her entire tenure as Secretary of State. It has to be odd to be an IT consultant with a high profile customer like that and be unable to mention the gig on your CV. We've all worked under NDAs, but I guess working for a well-funded person or group that insists you actually use a fake name with the registrars and take cash (if you're lucky!) for the job would certainly take on a different flavor.

    Wow, you were really straining to make that unrelated political rant seem on topic.

  10. Re:Politics aside for a moment. on Hillary Clinton Used Personal Email At State Dept., Possibly Breaking Rules · · Score: 1

    This seems indicative of sense that the rules do not apply to me.

    Nobody who would vote for Hillary Clinton will care about things like this.

    That's a broad and largely inaccurate statement.

    A lot of them will care very much, but not enough to vote for a candidate with much more serious flaws.

    I highly doubt it, her cult of personality is too big. Articles defending her using the tu quoque defense are already popping up. Hillary Clinton could tap dance in stilettos on a box full of puppies and PETA would praise her for mercifully saving them from a life of enslavement. If you really cared, you would simply abstain from voting for that particular office. A vote for the lesser of two evils is still evil. If the only choices I had for 2016 were Clinton or Bush, I wouldn't vote for either.

    I think that's a mistake.

    I think the politicians are terrible, I also know my knowledge is limited, and it's possible that I'm either underestimating them, underestimating the difficulty of the job, or underestimating the necessity of getting your hands dirty.

    Just listen to this interview with someone who ran for Prime Minister of Canada and failed quite spectacularly, dirty hands are amazingly effective.

    Either way abstaining entirely just hands power to the extremists who have made the situation so awful to begin with. The real solution is for as many people to vote as possible, if you vote for the politician who is slightly less evil then the next pair of candidates are going to be slightly better. It wasn't luck that trimmed the 2012 GOP field of everyone not-Romney, the Republicans realized that when dealing with an election where people paid attention and voted they couldn't get away with a Tea Partier heading the Presidential ticket. If you make a habit of not voting for "evil" candidates you're going to go from Mitt Romney to Ted Cruz, is that really the outcome you're looking for?

  11. Re:Politics aside for a moment. on Hillary Clinton Used Personal Email At State Dept., Possibly Breaking Rules · · Score: 2, Informative

    This seems indicative of sense that the rules do not apply to me.

    Nobody who would vote for Hillary Clinton will care about things like this.

    That's a broad and largely inaccurate statement.

    A lot of them will care very much, but not enough to vote for a candidate with much more serious flaws.

    There might be some hoopla on Twitter and Fox News for a few days, and then there will be some stragglers like with Benghazi, but it will mostly fade out of the mainstream media within a few hours from now.

    What does this have to do with Benghazi? If anything there's a major difference in that Clinton actually did something wrong in this one.

  12. Re:Live on Spock and the Legacy of Star Trek · · Score: 1

    I fear that with the death of Gene Roddenberry and the worlds ever intense focus on money, which while always existing, has become sharpened the last decade or two, you're just not going to see a classic return to original, cheesy, fun Star Trek. It has to have an edge to appeal to the mainstream. Maybe some tits or a fistfight or someone lying or cheating or bullshit drama.
    In TnG when someone cheated or did something bad, it was addressed, it was weird, they investigated, found why the person was sad / angry / hateful and they fixed it because it's not productive, it's not good to be like that. Nowadays as per /the norm/ someone is going to be a piece of shit with all these complexities in a TV show, cheating / lying / playing games / one upping people is normal behaviour on standard television :/

    The sad thing is that Star Trek had far more edge than almost anything on currently, they just put the edge in the ideas rather than the personal relationships.

    Modern SF is either dramas or action set in space, original Star Trek was short stories set in space, I don't know if TV is ready to try that again.

  13. Re:The state is easy to see. on The State of Linux Gaming In the SteamOS Era · · Score: 1

    Have you actually talked to an average user? Have you ever tried to get people to use Firefox over Internet Explorer? Do you remember what an uphill battle that was? Now step back and understand that you're now trying to change their operating system.

    How well do you think that will go over if it was virtually impossible to get them to stop using the worst browser in the world?

    The problem with arguments like yours is they're made on the basis of rationality. However the people you're talking about aren't rational most of the time.

    It's not about changing their operating system. It's about choosing a different operating system when they get a new computer.

    Linux is now a viable default.

  14. In related news on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    The city announced work on a new interchange involving the major arterial road running through the city, significant delays are expected while construction is underway.

    When asked for a timeline on when the construction would be completed the lead engineer answered "Who knows? We generally underestimate these things by months or years so I might as well not bother."

    Work is expected to commence sometime after they finish their current set of maintenance roadwork.

    Good night, this was your 11 o'clock news at 11:23 because we needed a little more time to finish writing our stories.

  15. Re:The state is easy to see. on The State of Linux Gaming In the SteamOS Era · · Score: 1

    It's not great. It's only good for staunch advocates who refuse to run any other operating system. Linux still isn't good enough for joe sixpack to run it as a daily driver. Until they get joe sixpack on board, it'll forever be a niche product without enough inroads to support a gaming ecosystem.

    Developers have had decades to get Linux right on the desktop, and they've failed at every turn. Even distros which did a lot more right than the others still aren't as polished and usable as the alternatives. It's time to get your head out of the sand on this, and start examining the reality. OS X has more of a chance at becoming a capable gaming OS than Linux does, and that's really saying something.

    What does the typical joe sixpack need?

    Web browsing? That works aside from some newer niche Flash stuff

    Word processing? That works for a big majority of cases

    Email? Works.

    Playing Music? No iTunes, but otherwise works.

    Games? .... well this is the big one.

    For every common usecase there's a fairly generic app you can use to get things done regardless of the OS. Sure there's sometimes warts on Linux, but you get warts on Windows and Mac OS as well. My mother has had trouble with her Mac that take me just as much esoteric googling to figure out as anything on Linux.

    But games, well that's been the problem. If you want Joe Sixpack to use your system he needs to be able to run almost every game, since Linux has never had that capability of course it's not going to become big on the desktop.

    Now that's changed. Linux can do a lot of games and the major obstacle to Joe Sixpack is gone.

    It's still not great (gaming is still a problem outside of Steam), and Linux still lacks the marketing power. But I could really see a lot more casual users coming on board, or even some OEMs coming on board with well configured pre-installed Linux machines, either low-end machines made cheaper by not having the Windows tax and having some crappy OEM apps added, or higher-end machines targeted towards power-users who just want a laptop with an Ubuntu or RHEL system where all the esoteric hardware works.

  16. Re:Companies ask for it on Jury Tells Apple To Pay $532.9 Million In Patent Suit · · Score: 1

    I am an independent inventor (and Uni. scientist by day). I have tried to sell a basket of CMOS-related patents for 10 years. All I ever hear is "not invented here."

    Now, the big Corps. are suddenly "discovering" what I already patented 10 years ago. I have no choice but to sue, sue, sue.

    They bring this on themselves.

    This is a legit question, did you actually contribute anything when you made your patents? The 10 year lag suggests they weren't ripping off your original patent or sale proposal, though maybe they're using your academic publications the patents are based on, more likely these were simply problems they weren't interested in yet.

    Not knowing anything about your patents in particular I suspect that most patents are fairly obvious once you start addressing the problem in question. But the idea that you can address a future problem with a bunch of patents, but not actually build anything to go along with it, I just don't see the value to society. It seems like a perversion of the system, like someone taking the cab to the finish line of a race without doing any actual running, the true value isn't in the finish, it's what's created along the way.

    Patents are supposed to promote innovation, by your own admission your patents were ignored and didn't seem to do anything to push the technology forward, why should you be rewarded with a pile of money?

  17. Re:Artists paid 16 times as much for Spotify than on Pandora Pays Artists $0.001 Per Stream, Thinks This Is "Very Fair" · · Score: 1

    They need a new model. Streaming on its own for $10/month is clearly not enough money to go around. Spotify has infrastructure costs and has been bleeding money (I think they had a break-even or profitable quarter just recently?). Meanwhile, they also need to distribute the remainder of the already paltry $10 between a zillion artists. It makes no sense.

    This strikes me as highly non-obvious, do you think the average person spends more than $10/month purchasing music?

    Annual US music sales are about $7bn

    With the US population at 320 million that's only ~$22/year per capita, not counting Spotify's cut (and whatever portion of that already comes from streaming) that's means if no-one bought music any more only 22% of the US population would have to stream to make up the difference.

    I doubt there are many people spending $120/year purchasing music long term. $10/month strikes me as a wildly lucrative prospect for the music industry.

  18. Re:What's the matter with Canada? on The Disastrous Privacy Consequences of Canada's Anti-Terrorism Bill · · Score: 2

    I used to think Canadians - even those out in the forsaken, endless prairies - were far more wise and progressive than us USians, but no. How long has GOP-backed and advised Harper been in power now? What happened? Was it tar sand greed? Pure apathy? The assumption they were all as 'funny' as Laughable Bublefuck Rob Ford?

    Quite sad; I thought the Canadians were better than, well, just about everybody, but now no different than the rest of the Right-Wing Police State, Might Makes Right, Western world. [le sigh]

    It's a combination of three things.

    1) Harper isn't nearly as bad as the US right. There are certainly elements of that in his party, but he would still be a better fit as a Democrat than Republican in the US.

    2) First past the post exaggerates strong minorities into big majorities. He should be PM but he shouldn't have a majority.

    3) Even being a decent PM, he's still too far right for Canadians. The reason he's stuck around is he is good at winning elections, and the Liberal candidates not nearly as much. That might change, since Justin Trudeau took over he has actually out polled Harper fairly regularly, but whether Trudeau holds up through an election campaign is a big question.

  19. Re:Unpaid volunteer != unemployed on Torvalds: "People Who Start Writing Kernel Code Get Hired Really Quickly" · · Score: 1

    My interpretation of the comment was that 88.2% of Linux kernel developers have Linux kernel development in their job description.

  20. Re:Patent trolls are useful arbitragers on Patent Troll Wins $15.7M From Samsung By Claiming To Own Bluetooth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    First, yes some patent trolls are evil. But some are very good.

    The key service a Non-producing Patent holder provides is that they purchase patents from inventors. This allows the inventing company to convert their Ideas into cash. When companines die they may cease producing but their IP is still valuable. And it can be sold. It's that value that the shareholders of the company were investing in. So they were entitled to sell it. Patent "trolls" create this marketplace for Ideas and the money they pay goes on to be re-invested in other good things.

    I think I understand your argument. But I think there's an important distinction: Is dead company A selling the technology to new company B, or just the right to use the technology?

    If they're selling the technology, ie "company A knew how to do X, lets buy their IP so we can do X" then they're contributing something and new company B benefits from the exchange.

    But if the situation is more like "we want to do X, but it turns out company A has patents on X, therefore we need so pay off those patents" then I'm a lot more skeptical. Sure company A's innovative investors make some money off of B, but that money came from B's innovative investors so I'm not sure you're actually promoting investment in innovation. Not only that but the patents added a lot of overhead, cash that would have been better used innovating by both parties.

    It's sometimes hard to tell these apart because sometimes a cherished technology we all love really does have a legitimate patent holder not an ogre behind it. The Eolas patent on all web browser plug ins seems like a reasonable case. If they can really show that the basic concept of the web browser plug in was not obvious and had no prior art and that they legitmately patented it with sufficient breadth of description then it really doesn't matter that this catches everyone by surprise. It's worth a fortune obviously but that too is not a reason to say it's wrong. It would be wrong if they got lucky an patented as trivial idea and then tried to extort people with it.

    As to my point I'm very skeptical Eolas actually did anything to further the development of browser plugins. Why are they entitled to a fortune when they never actually contributed anything of value?

  21. Re:Obvious prior art on Patent Troll Wins $15.7M From Samsung By Claiming To Own Bluetooth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've come to a more nuanced view on patent trolls. They aren't themselves so evil, they are basically hackers, but of the law instead of tech. The real evil is the patent system itself, not the hackers who take advantage of it. If by their actions they persuade giants like Samsung that patent law needs major reform, then that's good. It's not their fault that patent law is such a mess, it's the fault of giant corporate backers. They're dancing delicately, trying to have it both ways, that is, little people have to ask them for their patents, but they don't have to ask little people for theirs. The bigs are the reason the scope of patent law has been expanded beyond all sense. Possibly the biggest expansion was that originally a patent was supposed to cover a working implementation. A machine that achieves the same thing through a different method was not in violation. Now patents can cover a vague concept. That kind of patent may be shot down in court, but that it was granted at all is one of the problems.

    Hating a small patent troll is like shooting the messenger.

    The evil is the term of the patent.

    Change the term of software patents from 20 years to somewhere between 2 and 5 years (maybe hardware gets to be 10).

    Small companies and independent inventors can still develop something new and have a healthy head start in either selling it or developing it into a product.

    But 2-5 years isn't long enough to build an ecosystem, so you don't get a ridiculous situation where someone suddenly owns a piece of a fundamental technology like Bluetooth or MP3.

    Moreover it fixes the incentives regarding patents. The current 20 year term means you can patent and forget, hoping someone else doesn't the work of developing the idea and you can then swoop in for license fees, that's where the patent trolls come in.

    But a short term doesn't give you that option, the only way your patent is going to have value before it expires is if you make a push to build something with it, which is the kind of the point.

  22. Re:That is close! on Another Star Passed Through Our Oort Cloud 70,000 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    I wonder how many comets it kicked out of the cloud and have cause some ruckus here on Terra.

    There was a human population collapse right around that time. The population may have fallen to less than 10,000, and we nearly went extinct. This has been blamed on the eruption of Toba, an Indonesian volcano, but that may not have been the only cause.

    FTA:
    Currently, Scholz's star is a small, dim red dwarf in the constellation of Monoceros, about 20 light years away. However, at the closest point in its flyby of the solar system, Scholz's star would have been a 10th magnitude star - about 50 times fainter than can normally be seen with the naked eye at night.

    Unless it's gravitational effect was way larger I'm not sure it would be large and close enough to have an affect.

  23. Re:Sigh... Yet another scam on Mars One: Final 100 Candidates Selected · · Score: 1

    I know the idea of going to Mars is pretty awesome but this just reeks of scam. They are claiming they will launch the first people by 2024, a mere 9 years from now. You will note that except for a Donate link there is no mention of funding. They even say "No new technology developments are required to establish a human settlement on Mars", which is demonstrably false.

    Why is slashdot giving scammers like this the time of day? This is not a real mission to Mars. This is not even a credible attempt at one. There is no funding, no realistic plan, no details, no technology development, and nothing else that should even give the slightest hint that this is anything more than a scam.

    It doesn't strike me as a scam as much as a sincere attempt by a group of moderately accomplished yet fairly typical geeks to take their best shot and go as far as they can.

    I look at their plan and my thought is that it's more-or-less what I would do if I really wanted to launch a mission to mars. The big asterix is cost and technical expertise. They say they need 6 billion which might be feasible, big Hollywood blockbusters can run $200 million and Olympic broadcast/sponsorship would be enough to cover the budget, so if they get something credible (or at least entertaining) going then the networks might get interested. More likely might be some eccentric billionaire willing to dump a large percentage of their net worth into a vanity project.

    For me the big thing is the technical and organizational expertise, I suspect they're massively underestimating the difficulty of the technical challenges and it will be a very long time before they've built up the organizational expertise to even address them. And because they're underestimating the technical difficulty I also suspect the budget is massively underestimated.

    I suspect the best case for the project is a moderately successful media venture that either sets up the organization for a proper attempt in 20+ years, or spurns a government to action.

  24. Re:First Post on What Your Online Comments Say About You · · Score: 3, Insightful

    John Gabriel's Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory:

    Normal Person + Anonymity + Audience = Total Fuckwad

    Face it, it explains everything.

    I think it explains half, mostly the trolling half.

    The other half is the fact that people speak up when they're passionate about something, and there's nothing that makes you as passionate as thinking you know the truth when everyone else is wrong.

    Personally I think the solution is to speak up even when you don't care that much. You can't convince the fringe players that they're wrong, but you can demonstrate to them (and others) that the fringe viewpoint is a minority one.

  25. Re:Not quite comparable on Japan Now Has More Car Charging Points Than Gas Stations · · Score: 1

    Assuming they can find a way to avoid people scamming them off widescale all they have to do is bake the price of the new battery into the car.

    Car rental companies have built a business around lending people a very significant asset, I don't see why electric car manufacturers couldn't do the same with batteries.