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User: ceejayoz

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  1. Re:Stupid is as stupid does... on iPhone SDK Agreement Shuts Out HyperCard Clone · · Score: 1

    But he's not the only game in town.

    He doesn't want to be the only game in town. He wants to be the most profitable game in town.

  2. Re:Steve is so wrong here on Steve Jobs Says PC Folks' World Is Slipping Away · · Score: 1

    Uh... when has Jobs (or anyone) proposed iPads as heavy-duty professional 3D rendering workstations? Jobs would laugh at the idea, too.

  3. Re:The carriers have won. on Google Stops Selling Its Own Phone · · Score: 1

    What if I use the substantially lower monthly payments from leasing to invest in something that's going up in value instead of going down?

  4. Re:This is like a game of telephone/Chinese whispe on 9/11 Made Us Safer, Says Bruce Schneier · · Score: 1

    When done well however it is more effective than any technology-only solution. e.g. making harmless non-Muslim grandmothers take off their shoes to be X-rayed.

    And how do you know they're non-Muslim? The colour of their skin? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jihad_Jane

  5. Re:Carte blanche to hack Google? on Google Releases a Web-App Case Study For Hackers · · Score: 1

    Oh, bullshit. By that logic, a speed limit sign in one location would invalidate speeding tickets for all other locations.

  6. Re:First Apple... on Why IE9 Will Not Support Codecs Other Than H.264 · · Score: 1

    First Apple explains why they are making products which doesn't work on the internet(No flash)

    People seem pretty happy with the Internet on their iPhone/iPads.

    now microsoft joins them in explaining why their browser won't support whats out there either.

    "What's out there"? I've yet to see Theora videos anywhere but Wikipedia. H264 shows up on Vimeo, Facebook, CNN, NYT, YouTube, and lots of others. Firefox is the odd one out here that's refusing to support "what's out there".

  7. Re:HTML5 will be a screw job. on Why IE9 Will Not Support Codecs Other Than H.264 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But what's stupidest of all, of course, is that there are so many patent-free, open source options available for the vendors to standardize on.

    "Hasn't been sued yet" is different from "patent-free".

    Incidentally, HTML5 is a lot more than just video. Most of it is a great step forwards for web devs like myself.

  8. Re:propaganda vs operational security on Tweeting From the Front Line · · Score: 2

    And all the people with internet access are the ones doing Club Med tours- not the ones fighting in the trenches and caves.

    Right, because the people who fight in trenches and caves don't ever return to base.

  9. Re:Military Tracking? on Tweeting From the Front Line · · Score: 1

    I find it odd that we are so worried about their morale and their day-dreaming of home when a job that they signed up for needs to be given 100% focus.

    Yeah, because low morale doesn't interfere with a soldier's ability to fight at all.

    What the fuck is wrong with you?

  10. Re:Statistics on Officers Lose 243 Homeland Security Guns · · Score: 1

    Bingo. If this were Fark.com, this'd have been [NEWS FLASH] People lose and steal shit.

  11. Re:Fate? on Google Buys iPhone Search App, Kills It · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Otherwise, buying an app like this and not using it is a complete and utter waste of time.

    They hired the developer, though, and it's not necessarily a waste of time to deprive a competitor of a good application either.

  12. Re:Twitter is fragile on Google Mistook Jackson Searches For Net Attack · · Score: 1

    Twitter gets much more than 60,000 tweets an hour on a normal day.

    Look at the numbers increasing at http://www.twitpocalypse.com/ as an example. The page currently says 204 tweets per second - 66,000 in a little over 5 minutes. I imagine they easily hit millions when MJ died.

  13. skeptical on Man Attacked In Ohio For Providing Iran Proxies · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone remember the nutjob who carved a backwards B into her face and blamed it on a black man?

    I'm very skeptical of this without corroboration.

  14. Re:The biggest issue of the 21st century... on Air Force Planning New Drone Fleet For Pakistan · · Score: 1

    Nuclear power ... could make the earth a paradise if developed for humane ends.

    Yeah, because if anything screams 'post-scarcity', it's a technology that relies on digging up limited amounts of minerals and using them up...

  15. Re:Turn a park into a museum? on No Museum Status For UK Home of Enigma Machine · · Score: 3, Informative

    Uh, what? Bletchley Park is an estate. The buildings would be the museum, not the grass.

  16. Re:Science errors (spoilers) on Special Effects Lessons From JJ Abrams' Star Trek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Or, how about the "space dive", where they leaped out of a shuttlecraft and suddenly lost all their inertia? How about re-entering the atmosphere in a space-suit without any worries about friction or heat?

    Or how about that giant drill? Why did it fall when they cut it off the ship? If the ship was in geosynchronous orbit, then the drill must have been traveling slightly slower than geo-synchronous orbital speed; it should have very gently drifted eastwards.

    The Bad Astronomer covered this.

    First off, something they got right once I thought about it some. The shuttle left Enterprise to go to the Romulan ship. At first I thought both ships were in orbit, but thatâ(TM)s not true! The Romulan ship had lowered the mining drill from above the atmosphere, but it had to be hovering above the ground to do that, not orbiting the planet, or else they wouldnâ(TM)t be stationary over one spot (true, there is a geosynchronous orbit that keeps you over one spot, but itâ(TM)s tens of thousands of kilometers over the surface, and the ships were clearly just above Vulcanâ(TM)s atmosphere).

    So when the trio jump from the shuttle, my first thought was that theyâ(TM)d still be in orbit; to deorbit means theyâ(TM)d need to change their velocity by several km/sec, which is clearly not possible. But they werenâ(TM)t in orbit, so they just fell. OK, +1 internets for the movie.

    They would fall fast. And they did! Their speed was a little less than a kilometer per second, which sounds about right. At their altitude there wouldnâ(TM)t be much if any air to slow them, so theyâ(TM)d free fall; as they plunged deeper air resistance would slow them down. At first I thought theyâ(TM)d actually burn like meteors, but in reality (ha! Reality!) they werenâ(TM)t going that fast.

  17. Re:Huh? on Biden Reveals Location of Secret VP Bunker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, what next... revealing the existence of a secret bunker under the White House?!

  18. Re:In The Real World... on Lawsuit Says Google's Sale of Keywords Is Illegal · · Score: 1

    Bingo.

    See also Microsoft's anti-Mac commercials they're running lately. Mac's a trademark, but there's no way Apple can prevent them from mentioning it in an ad.

  19. Re:Google marketing on Lawsuit Says Google's Sale of Keywords Is Illegal · · Score: 1

    If you got a call from a "Google salesman" for a $10/day AdWords budget, it was likely a scam, not Google.

  20. Re:creationists on Nuclear Testing Helps Identify Fake Vintage Whiskey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is not technically "carbon dating", it's detecting the presence of a newer isotope that wasn't present in any quantities prior to a certain date.

    Nice try, but they're checking for Carbon-14, discovered five years before the first nuclear bomb was detonated and used for "carbon dating" materials up to about 60,000 years old. 14C is, in fact, the reason it's called "carbon dating".

  21. Re:And the other half... on Kindle 2 Tear-Down Reveals Price of Components · · Score: 1

    The cell modem is likely subsidised by the prices of books more than the initial hardware sale. Plus, they're relatively tiny files.

  22. Re:But will they share their code? on Looking To Spammers To Solve Hard AI Problems · · Score: 4, Informative

    Spammers sell their code to other spammers all the time.

  23. Re:One question: on How Facebook Runs Its LAMP Stack · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that's why they call it the GNU General Public License , eh?

  24. Re:i like it on Senator Proposes Nonprofit Status For Newspapers · · Score: 1

    This tends to force the writing to be polished, which online articles, blogs specifically, never achieve.

    Bullshit. Newspapers have been cutting costs by firing copy editors for years, and many of the blogs I read have better writing and fewer errors than the local papers.

  25. Re:Extended Warranty on Office Depot Employee — "We Changed Prices Too" · · Score: 1

    I read your links. Seriously? "100% of Circuit City's profits are from warranties"

    I seriously doubt that claim. It sounds a little like irresponsible journalism.

    Considering Circuit City went out of business due to not making a profit, the claim is a little more believable than it seems at first glance... :-)