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User: DumbSwede

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  1. Kind of a Kludge on It's the 40th Anniversary of Radio Shack's TRS-80 (smithsonianmag.com) · · Score: 1

    Never owned one, but was using an Apple ][ at the time. Spent a lot of time back then going to various computer stores and obsessing over things like the Commodore PET (before the Commodore VIC20 and C64). Couldn't believe how enthusiastic the Radio Shack employees were as cheerleaders for the thing. Me, I couldn't get past the fact you needed to boot it from a cassette drive to use a floppy drive (at least when demoed to me at the time).

  2. Do have an actual rebuttal something here other than an ad hominem snarky reply. It wasn't Republicans chanting "Let-them-die"? Or are you a let-them-die advocate?

  3. I have mod points, but your are already at 5. This state of affairs can't go on much longer. I'm an independent who has voted for Republicans in the past, I even gave a campaign contribution to McCain once. But the Republicans have almost become the enemy of the people by their actions over the last 20 years. I suspect this is because the balance between conservative and liberal has been broken by demographic shifts within our population. The Republicans are on the wrong side of that shift. So they have settled on a course of using the money from moneyed elites to dupe the less educated by appealing to their desire to return to some imagined better days when Christians and Whites ruled the roost. If you are educated and support Republicans because of a fiscal conservative reason --.STOP. The economy is not a zero-sum game. Taking away healthcare or job training or other forms of financial assistance will not make our economy stronger in the long run. Trickle-Down doesn't work. Get over the "I-worked-hard-to-get-where-I-go-so-everyone-else-can-too" attitude. One, I suspect you had more luck and advantages than you realized and Two, if someone is truly unable to climb the ladder because they are weak or not smart enough, then it follows they should suffer or even die? And yes it was Republicans chanting "let them die" at various rallies before the last election.

  4. Not Prove, but Yes IMPLY on Degenerative Brain Disease Found In Nearly All Donated NFL Player Brains, Says Study (npr.org) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Correlation does not PROVE causation. It can however strongly imply causation, especially as we can plainly see and infer the other mechanisms at play here. Let's not be like the cigarette companies here and turn a blind eye to the likely health dangers with misdirection. As for sample bias, when you are 110 for 111 I don't care what your bias is, the likelihood is that far over half of serious football players suffer brain damage of some sort or severity. Football and boxing are not likely to go away in our generation, but they will have to be modified greatly or they will eventually be considered a sport only us ignorant ancients would engage in.

  5. So if this test where to be administered, it would indicate that close to 100 million people in the US alone have schizophrenia.
    Though when I look at my co-works I sometimes wonder... :-)

  6. Wasn't funny even when George Carlin Said it on Era of 'Biological Annihilation' Is Underway, Scientists Warn (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    I’ve found this reasoning specious ever since it was part of a George Carlin skit. The Earth is essentially a large rock that happens to have a thin coat of delicate living goo on it. The rock of course will go on. Now if that thin goo is reduced to just some kind of primitive microbial mat, well then yes the Earth and life has gone on, and evolution will kick in to start the climb again. But the whole “Earth will go on” statement seems to imply Earth and its ecosystem are just too big to fail or that it doesn’t matter that it is no longer habitable by humans, all that matters is somehow, some form of life be here and start evolving again. How about we care about the all the life that is here now, both animal and human?

  7. You don't know what Da Sux is. on Stream-ripping Is 'Fastest Growing' Music Piracy (bbc.com) · · Score: 2

    In the late 70’s and early 80’s I worked as a DJ in a roller rink. Kids would line up their boom-boxes along the wall and record our whole show. Then they’d play it back to their friends in the parking lot. The recorded sound was awful (those built in mics were crap, not that the speakers were much better), but they didn’t care. They had their music – the quality of which must have been augmented by the memories of it when they heard it over our actually pretty good Altec-Lansing sound system. They would have totally shit their pants to have the quality of a YouTube rip.

    A shout out to anyone that ever skated at The Skate Ranch in Milan Illinois. I’m the guy that designed and built an Apple ][ controlled scoreboard style sign in the parking light with 8,556 light bulbs (in four colors none the less). I’m talking full text scrolling, animation, and WYSIWYG on the monitor. Circa 1980. I was the shiz before I went to college (self taught programming and TTL logic circuit design). Now I'm struggling to keep up with the new kids.

  8. How bad to you have to be... on Opinion: Google Unleashes Terrible New Update For Google News Upon the Net · · Score: 1

    That Slashdot posts a story about the UI change on a news site. That said, it is awful. I went to the "blog" about the change to comment on how ugly it was, but the "blog" doesn't have a comment section -- just an explanation of why this is such a good change. Slashdot has changed over they years, sometimes I didn't like the new look, but they were usually minor changes that grew on me -- apart from the god-awful moderation changes they tried to force (I set my account to classic, has that rework been withdrawn?). That said, why doesn't CNN offer a range of Skins for frequent visitors. They could even choose the most popular Skin as the default, or allow users a random choice if they like a different look every time. For that matter, Slashdot could offer Skins. Users could design and post them in their accounts like blog skins.

  9. I beg to differ on EFF Launches New AI Progress Measurement Project (eff.org) · · Score: 1

    You seem to contradict yourself “Computers are less good at autonomous driving because the rules aren't as clearly defined”, and yet here we are with self driving cars already and soon to be affordable by the masses. Computers are becoming better at dealing with messy data. They are getting better at just about everything across the board and yet you would mark their progress at 0%, because evidently they can only follow rules. Is a neural network just following rules when it teaches itself to play Go? I’m assuming you would say yes. How about this, the neurons in your brain are just following rules when they sum action potentials across your synapses. I would concede that computers are not highly self-aware (yet). Are all animals highly self aware? I remember when people use to lament that computers where not as smart as a mosquito. I think we are probably at least to reptilian levels of self awareness and intelligence by now. AI is progress far faster than evolution did in creating human intelligence and only seems to be accelerating. No one thought 15 years ago that we’d have self driving cars by now, that computers could parse speaker independent speech, and identify objects in pictures even the species and bread of animals in pictures. By denying that there is true AI now, you seem to imply any true breakthrough in self awareness and self motivation are decades away if not impossible. I suspect self awareness will coalesce as AI gains more skills in more domains. I don’t mean coalesce on its own, but knowledge feeds on knowledge and AI workers will eventually crack problems that seem insurmountable now. Seems they get no credit for doing things that just a few years ago where suppose to be decades away.

  10. Never Happens (Till it Happens) on Self-Driving Cars Will Boost the Job Market, Says Marc Andreessen (recode.net) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As they say in the stockmarket:

    Past Performance Is Not An Indicator Of Future Results

    Educating our general populace to a higher degree will help, but at some point the knowledge curve will be too steep for most people to get educated enough to get a job that really adds to production. There will be jobs gains for sure from new and novel activities, but I'm willing to bet starting in 5-10 years job destruction will far outpace job creation. You really think all the truckers in America are going to become coders or entrepreneurs?

  11. 24 cans on Diet Sodas May Be Tied To Stroke, Dementia Risk (cnn.com) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So don't drink more than 24 cans of Diet Coke a day (125mg) or 52 cans of Diet Mountain Dew (57mg).
    Good to know

  12. Why the unnecessary units change? on World's Largest Dinosaur Footprints Discovered In Western Australia (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why the sudden switch from meters to cm when 106cm is 1.06 Meters? Comparing 1.7 to 1.06 is much easier to process, instead of making us go through the double check in our mind that we got the units right.

  13. Nothing Ever Happens on AI Scientists Gather to Plot Doomsday Scenarios (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah this kind of stuff never happens. I remember hearing a whole lot of hooey about some scientists trying to release enormous amounts of energy in a an explosive fashion by splitting the atom. Like that would ever work...

  14. All-In-One likely to be the future norm on Tesla Is So Sure Its Cars Are Safe That It Now Offers Insurance For Life (mashable.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you bought a chauffeur service you would expect the service to pay the chauffeur, maintain the car, and maintain the insurance. This isn’t much different (other than you own the car). Tesla is large enough to create the shared risk pool that insurance is founded on. Better yet, by also being the insurance it incentives them to make their cars as safe as possible. I don’t image regular insurance companies are too happy about this and will propose various strawman arguments in an attempt to keep Tesla and others from doing this once self-driving cars really get popular. In fact this all in one model is about the only way self-driving cars will be able to work. Self driving cars will only be safe as long as they are always maintained in top condition. Sensors have to be functioning and calibrated. Brakes have to be in good working order to maintain the cars safe expected stopping distance. Software upgrades are needed. Etc...

    Once driver error is not the major factor in accidents it just doesn't make sense to keep the old insurance structure as the fault will almost always be with the manufacturer. This does of course reduce the insurance company's incentive (in this case the manufacture) to really go after claims due to negligence, though that will still be a private legal suit option. Let make sure providing the insurance doesn't also take away your right to sue.

  15. DumbSwede Update on Google Releases TensorFlow 1.0 With New Machine Learning Tools (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 1

    Sorry about misspelling Ad as Add so many times. I was a bit aggravated and in a hurry posting my rant. I have AdBlock on several other browsers and machines, but the one I'm on now is a company box and I don't use it for as much random surfing as my home box. That said, I've installed AdBlock now and all is well again, though I'm still a little unhappy about having to do this to continue to use Slashdot in a a sane manner. It reminds me of having to specifically choose classic mode when they changed the Mod system. Note, there was a substantial decline in the quality of posts after that change. When you decide the user experience is less important than the Ad revenue it can only lead to decline. Slashdot use to be great because its text dense comment system was fast and you didn't have to have 10Mb download speed. Please don't become like every other overly ad crowded bullshit site out there. Please let us have one forum that reminds of us of some of the simpler and better times on the internet.

  16. OMG fix the banner adds on Google Releases TensorFlow 1.0 With New Machine Learning Tools (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have been a contributer on Slashdot for over 15 years. There have been things to complain about over the years, but FOR GOD SAKE don't let the banner adds chase everyone away. What's more annoying than a Banner Ad? A banner add that doesn't scroll away as you read.

    Serious, I will never visit Slashdot again if this isn't fixed ASAP.

    Don't be like the thousands of other crap sites that are doing this now. I don't care if it is in the advertisers JavaScript, find somewhat to stop that shit OR I AM GONE!

  17. Lithium is more common in Earth's crust than lead. Plus unlike coal and oil, you use it over and over again and can be reclaimed after batteries are no longer rechargeable (or obsoleted by newer technology). Any shortages are just because we haven't ramped up mining/recovery of it. Once demand is really there we will probably extract it from sea water where it is in relative abundance (and fare less destructive than your apocalyptic mining hyperbole would be).

  18. A tale of two Chinas on China To Add More than 50 Million New Urban Jobs in 2016-2020 (reuters.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anything with the word China in it seems to be red-meat for the Slashdot crowd. Having actually RTFA there isn’t much in there that is different from how liberal democracies go about trying to encourage economic growth. China is mostly Communist in name, but this isn’t to say their system operates identical to ours. I have been to China seven times in the last ten years, so I can give you a reasonable impression of life there. People going about their day-to-day lives do not liver under constant fear and oppression. Life in the big cities is very modern. The country is virtually two countries in one. The modern cities and the backward villages. That said the government wields a big stick in getting big projects done (sometimes without enough forethought). I find most people fear China is going to far outstrip the west in science and economy in the not too distance future, most of the rest think it is a powder-keg about to self-destruct. Neither view is very close to the truth. As China pulls into parity with the west, it’s economy is slowing down because it no longer is leaping from behind by leveraging cheap labor and because labor is not longer staying cheap (because economic success has created a prosperous middle-class) and because automation is destroying cheap labor’s advantage anyway. China is desperate to raise everyone into the middle-class so as to sustain their economy on internal domestic consumption. So while the party is coming to a close, they still hope to get the job largely done without have two separate classes of citizens (city dwellers, versus farmers and villagers).

  19. Or you could do a quick fact check. on Google Responds On Skewed Holocaust Search Results (bbc.com) · · Score: 2

    In 1933, approximately 9.5 million Jews lived in Europe, comprising 1.7% of the total European population. This number represented more than 60 percent of the world's Jewish population at that time, estimated at 15.3 million.

    So basically they wiped out 2/3 the Jewish population in Europe. I'd call that a Holocaust. You sir an an imbecile. You fashion yourself an iconoclast by questioning doctrine, but don't really have any true evidence to support your skepticism.

  20. New Normal on UK Homes Lose Internet Access After Cyber-Attack (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    Get use to the new normal. It may get harder and harder to use the internet as bad actors (whether criminal or State) adopt AI to compromise systems. Of course we will use AI to protect systems, but this is probably an asymmetrical fight. What use are captchas or security questions if a basic enough AI can pose as a human and has enough background information to draw from? I don’t know whether the coming AI proxy wars will speed AI development, or slow it down as the internet grinds to a halt.

  21. I know latency is an issue, but surely we can use compression to some degree. 4:1 10:1? Run length encoding comes to mind. Maybe give up some theoretical resolution with a compression type that isn't designed to be 100:1 but nearly instantaneous in encoding and decoding (again, something like RLE).

    Note, the same goes for transmitting to your TV from your phone, focusing more on ease of encoding (to save phone battery life).

  22. Because you know some people just make you sick.

  23. Only fair when we do it on Microsoft and Sony Are Debating Over Whose Console Really Offers 'True 4K' (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This seems like a lot of whining from Microsoft considering they marketed the XBOX 360 as a 1080p machine, though almost all the games rendered in 720p (the PS3 had many more games rendering in higher resolutions that generation). Since the PS4 Pro will play 4K video and render at higher than 1080p (then do some extrapolation tricks), I’d say Sony can call it a 4K Box.

  24. I'd say Glass Houses is the real reason on Guccifer 2.0 Releases More DNC Documents (politico.com) · · Score: 1

    There is reluctance to take actions base on evidence uncovered by illegally hacked emails. Doing so would invite more entities with political motivations to just hack more. Republicans have just as many (if not more) skeletons in the closet as Democrats. I’d say these are very close to Fruit of the Poison Tree kind of findings. Add to this the suspicion that the Russians are trying to game our political system by hacking and leaking and it all becomes a morass.

  25. Sept 14th GAIA data likely to change things again on Second Irregularly Dimming Star Found (phys.org) · · Score: 2

    We have known for quite some time that young stars can behave this way. The reason Tabby is odd is because it DOESN’T appear to be young. I doubt the same mechanism will explain both unless Tabby’s age is radically down graded. I suppose that could happen, but the reason I believe it won’t is the highly symmetric first dip and the another dip indicating a huge ring structure object, then came the wacky random fluctuations that without the other two anomalies would like a young planetary forming nebula. On September 14th, GAIA will release its first trove of data on star distances and motion. Likely this data will give us a much better idea about what Tabby’s star is. Still only if and when another occlusion occurs we will really be able to draw some real conclusions.