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User: careysb

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Comments · 258

  1. Reduce usage - pay more on California Fights Drought With Data and Psychology, Yielding 5% Usage Reduction · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In Denver we suffered through a drought that lasted a few years. There was a big campaign to get people to reduce their water usage - and it worked! People significantly reduced their water usage - so much that the water board was no longer getting the revenue that it said it needed. So, the rates went up.

    Funny how the rates didn't go back down when the drought was over.

    Also, not surprisingly, the golf courses got all the water they wanted.

  2. WOW! $12 million ??? on U.S. Border Patrol Drone Goes Down, Rest of Fleet Grounded · · Score: 1

    You can buy a whole load of DJI Phantoms for that price. Quantity over quality.

  3. Cool, p0rn while I'm driving.

  4. Peeping Toms on US Senator Warns Against Political Surveillance By Drone · · Score: 1

    After her admission, one cannot help but wonder if peeping toms the world over are not weeping for joy of this new technology?

    I have a drone (DJI Phantom) and it sounds like a small weed whacker - hardly a stealth device.

  5. The solution on FISA Judges Oppose Intelligence Reform Proposals Aimed At Court · · Score: 1

    The whole solution is to slash the NSA budget and let them figure out where to get the most bang for their buck. They'll never tell you the truth about what they're up to and the "secret" courts are a joke. Cut their budget in half and they may have to choose between spying on their citizens and spying on foreign nationals.

  6. Re:Custom Builds on PC Shipments In 2013 See the Worst Yearly Decline In History · · Score: 1

    I replaced my Vista machine 1-1/2 years ago with a custom built. I had no problems with Vista but I was getting deeper into video editing and my old machine couldn't handle it. So now I have a gaming machine that handles it very nicely. Should last me a while, or until I transition to 4K video.

  7. Re:I believe it on New Study Shows One-Third of Americans Don't Believe In Evolution · · Score: 1

    This is a sad reflection on our education system. Unfortunately we are a country of many education systems and they are extremely localized and the locals have gotten what they've asked for.

  8. Re:Change you can believe in! on Member of President Obama's NSA Panel Recommends Increased Data Collection · · Score: 1

    I didn't actually "believe" that Obama would make things better. I did hope though. On the other hand, I did believe that Romney would have made it worse.

  9. Re:WTF?! on Member of President Obama's NSA Panel Recommends Increased Data Collection · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seeing as how I haven't really heard anything to the contrary, this is what I expect will happen. And even if I had heard something to the contrary, this is what I would expect.

  10. Who are the "they" that are selling the list. Let's see names, addresses, phone numbers, family member names, etc..

  11. That's our job on Google, Apple, Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft, Yahoo Form Alliance Against NSA · · Score: 5, Informative

    How dare you collect and analyze personal data on our clients! That's our job!

  12. Re:I know! Let's send email to show our support. on Employee Morale Is Suffering At the NSA · · Score: 1

    I send my uncensored opinions to whitehouse.gov just to make sure the NSA sees it.

  13. Why are you spying on your ex-girlfriend? on Employee Morale Is Suffering At the NSA · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Washington Post:
    "Last month, we reported on LOVEINT, the facetious term used to describe NSA analysts who misuse their surveillance powers to spy on romantic interests instead of terrorists. Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) asked the NSA to get more specific about the misconduct the NSA had uncovered. So the NSA sent Grassley a letter with details of the 12 LOVEINT incidents it has uncovered since 2003.

    The incidents have a number of things in common. Almost all of them involved spying on foreigners outside of the United States (one man targeted his American girlfriend, and a few others spied on communications involving both Americans and foreigners). In seven of the 12 cases, the misbehaving employee resigned while the disciplinary process was ongoing. The rest received letters of reprimand, got demoted, lost pay, were denied security clearances or faced other punishments. None of the individuals were prosecuted for their actions."

    "Not prosecuted"? No wonder they're not getting any support. (amongst many, many, many other reasons)

  14. Re:"Can you hear me now?" on The Dismantling of POTS: Bold Move Or Grave Error? · · Score: 2

    Absolutely! Talking on a cell phone is often like talking on a walkie-talkie, --over-- The pauses and delay are extremely annoying --over--

    So, if the phone companies will save "vast" amounts of money by doing away with POTS, they why aren't they upgrading their lines already on their dime? Are they waiting for the tax payer to foot the bill? And by "lines", I mean replacing the last mile of copper with fiber, not cell phones.

  15. It's too late on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Protect Your Privacy These Days? Or Do You? · · Score: 1

    Your personal information is accessible.

    • School
    • Military
    • Employment
    • Health
    • Financial
    • Communication: email, phone, internet, mail, social network, skype
    • Legal
    • Relationships
    • Purchases
    • Insurance
    • Driving: cameras, radar, black boxes, On-Star (etc)
    • Travel
    • TV watching, TV watching you
    • Surveillance
    • Current location of you or your electronics
    • Possibly live audio and video feeds
    • Anything you type or save to your computer or show on your screen and webcam
    • Biometrics: DNA, finger prints
  16. A less doomed one [Douglas Adams] on Scientists Forced To Reexamine Theories In Light of Massive Gamma-Ray Burst · · Score: 1

    "Well what happened you see was," said the Captain, "our planet, the world from which we have come, was, so to speak, doomed." "Doomed?" "Oh yes. So what everyone thought was, let's pack the whole population into some giant spaceships and go and settle on another planet." Having told this much of his story, he settled back with a satisfied grunt. "You mean a less doomed one?" prompted Arthur.

  17. Re:many problems become much easier on Ask Slashdot: How Reproducible Is Arithmetic In the Cloud? · · Score: 1

    "Large" is a relative term. Original estimate for healthcare.gov was 5 billion. They went with the cheapest bidder for 1 billion.

  18. Aaaaaaarg, "Conduit" crapware on SourceForge Appeals To Readers For Help Nixing Bad Ad Actors · · Score: 1

    I hadn't used SF in a while but I was expecting the same straight forward, no BS install I've always had. I didn't navigate the fine print and whamo! "Conduit" is installed. OK, uninstall Conduit. Not so much. It inserted itself all over the place. I had to resort to regedit and directory deletion to (mostly) wipe it out. I still have someplace that's causing a "cannot find .dll" pop-up to show. SF you are now flagged as "BAD-BAD-BAD" in my list.

  19. Re:Solution: Make SSNs Public Record on Experian Sold Social Security Numbers To ID Theft Service · · Score: 4, Interesting

    +1 I've had to argue with more than one health insurance company to get them to not use my SSN as an ID number. Tell you what, along with publishing numbers lets also guarantee duplicate SSNs. That'll fix 'em.

  20. Thank you on The Cost of the US Government Shutdown To Science · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thank you G.O.P. and the Tea Party

  21. Re:following a changing spec list on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Hardest Things Programmers Have To Do? · · Score: 1

    +1. My last place was so ridiculous in this regard that I decided to take early retirement.

  22. Matching multiple simultaneous regular expressions on Ask Slashdot: Speeding Up Personal Anti-Spam Filters? · · Score: 2

    Many years ago I worked with a Unix development tool called LEX that could handle matching multiple patterns simultaneously. Perhaps there is an updated tool that would do the same thing. Java has a 3rd party library called ANTLR that might do the trick. It would involved re-compiling every time a new pattern is added but it should be extremely fast.

  23. NY Times on Cookieless Web Tracking Using HTTP's ETag · · Score: 1

    OK, so how does the NY Times track me. I'm running Firefox on Win 7, I've cleared my cache, I've cleared my cookies, I've cleared the Flash cookies, no luck.

  24. Ooooops on Ask Slashdot: When Is It OK To Not Give Notice? · · Score: 1

    Ooooops, I left my resume in the xerox machine.

  25. Sorry, misread on NASA To Send Poems To Mars · · Score: 1

    Misread that as "sending PORN to mars".