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User: purpledinoz

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Comments · 975

  1. Re:Happens here in the U.S. too.. on How Ireland Got Apple's $9 Billion Australian Profit · · Score: 1

    If the top 5% have 80% of the wealth, shouldn't they be contributing 80% of the tax base. Or am I missing something here?

  2. Re:Overages on Government Accuses Sprint of Overcharging For Wiretapping Expenses · · Score: 2

    They probably bought the unlimited plan, but didn't read the fine print, where unlimited is defined as 1000 wiretaps.

  3. Re:Really? on The Next Keurig Will Make Your Coffee With a Dash of "DRM" · · Score: 1

    What's the big deal? The market will either accept or reject this. Just don't buy it! Or buy a real espresso machine. Over the lifetime of an espresso machine, the cost of a coffee is really small, probably in the range of $0.15 - $0.25 range.

  4. Re:Easily available loans on U.S. Students/Grads Carrying Over $1 Trillion In Debt · · Score: 1

    The worst part is that these loans cannot be discharged, even if you go bankrupt. In a way, I guess it makes sense. Once you finish university, you could just go bankrupt and have a free education. However, if you're stuck working low-wage jobs the rest of your life, you will never get rid of this debt.

  5. Re:Chers slashdotters... on Quebec Language Police Target Store Owner's Facebook Page · · Score: 1

    I wonder if the language police got a whiff of programming languages being in English only. I would love to see them legislate a french programming language.

  6. Re:Ever work in a high school? on Why We Need To Teach Hacking In High School · · Score: 1

    Germans split the kids into 3 different streams after grade 4. That's far too young for parents and teachers to decide whether the kid is interested is suitable for University or not.However, Germany has really great vocational schools though. Every plumber, electrician, construction worker, even baker knows their field extremely well.

  7. Re:At last on Microsoft Said To Cut Windows Price 70% For Low Cost Devices · · Score: 1

    Too bad that Windows is so bloated, that money savings will be eaten up by extra hardware.

  8. Re:It's simple: provide a choice on Microsoft Confirms Windows 8.1 Spring Update, To Focus On Non-touch Devices · · Score: 1

    Don't you see that Microsoft is secretly helping us prevent degenerative brain diseases? Forcing us to learn a new UI is like learning a new language, which is correlated with better brain health. Thank you Microsoft! I bet their next step is to randomly move buttons around after every boot. Now that would be a great workout for the brain!

  9. Re:increasingly inaccurate acronyms on Wine On Android Starts Allowing Windows Binaries On Android/ARM · · Score: 1

    Great, now I can have my blue screen of death on my smartphone too?

  10. Re:sounds like they have a case on Florida Arrests High-Dollar Bitcoin Exchangers For Money Laundering · · Score: 1

    I'm not defending the dude, just pointing out how corrupt the justice system is.

  11. Re:sounds like they have a case on Florida Arrests High-Dollar Bitcoin Exchangers For Money Laundering · · Score: 5, Insightful

    His biggest mistake was not being politically connected, like HSBC, where they have laundered money for drug dealers and terrorists. They just got a slap on the wrist with a fine. There are two classes of people in America, those who are politically connected, and are immune to jail time, and the rest of America, who are bound to infinite arbitrary laws which are selectively enforced.

  12. Re:Burden of proof on German Domain Registrar Liable For Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    This is Germany, where they love to play hot potato with responsibility. That's why it's essentially illegal to have a non-encrypted wireless connection. They want to be able to easily place the blame on someone. And Germans comply, well, because they're Germans.

  13. How are the registrars supposed to know? on German Domain Registrar Liable For Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    They receive a notice of copyright infringement from some company. How are they supposed to know if that's legit? Some random person can send the same e-mail. What is obvious copyright infringement? What if the artist intends to share his material? Are they supposed to read their minds? Actually, the court should be the one to determine this and be the ones to send out a court order to shut a site down. If this is a precedent, Google should be taken offline because they make it possible to search for pirated material. Besides, they should be happy people give a shit about Robin Thick. It would be nice if the RIAA et al got their way, and everyone just simply stopped pirating their music, and stopped caring about mainstream pop music.

  14. Re:It is a symptom of the industry and human natur on Ask Slashdot: Why Are We Still Writing Text-Based Code? · · Score: 1

    Exactly. No matter how easy and user-friendly you make graphical programming, you still need to implement complicated logic. You still need someone who can think logically, think of the corner cases, implement error handling properly, and debug unexpected problems. I think a lot of management people are fooled into thinking they can shortcut "expensive" developers, and have non-technical people implement everything. In reality, it is the developers who are taking care of the dirty work of handling those corner cases and error scenarios.

  15. Re:Go after the real thieves lol on Press Used To Print Millions of US Banknotes Seized In Quebec · · Score: 2

    Oh, and inflation primarily hurts 1%-ers

    This is absolutely false. The Fed essentially bailed out Wall Street and gifted the 1% in the range of trillions of dollars via zero interest. Have you gotten a 0% loan from the bank lately? The Fed essentially funded the stock market would rise, which the 1%'ers are piled into, enriching them even more, while pretty much none of the lower income Americans were able to participate in. What are corporations doing with their record profits? Stock buybacks. That money isn't going into hiring people.

    Inflation has been quite high in food and energy (and very high in the stock market), which hurts the 99% because they spend a larger portion of their income on food and energy. Why is food stamp usage highest on record? Why is the labour participation rate the lowest since the 70s? The economy is not well. The 1% is pretty much the only winner in the recent GDP gains.

    I'm not saying the general idea what the Fed did was bad. Just that it was implemented in a way to make the 1% even richer while taking away from the 99%. I think it would have been better if the money was distributed to the 99%, rather than gifted to the 1%.

  16. Re:Worth the Price Or Waste of Time? on Super Bowl Ads: Worth the Price Or Waste of Time? · · Score: 1

    Isn't this question really only relevant to companies considering buying ad time? To the average Joe, who cares. It's just interesting how high price is. The price is determined by the market. If it really was a waste of money, then advertisers buy and the price would go down.

  17. Re:Wasn't this a movie? on Now On Video: GCHQ Destroying Laptop Full of Snowden Disclosures · · Score: 1

    Why did they have to destroy all the microchips on the motherboard too? It seems like a lot of work for nothing. Plus, who knows how poisonous ground up microchips are.

  18. Re:No on Is the West Building Its Own Iron Curtain? · · Score: 1

    Like Detroit, or South Central LA?

  19. Re:Good news! on Yep, People Are Still Using '123456' and 'Password' As Passwords In 2014 · · Score: 1

    I'm going to go even a step further, I'm going to use 1234567.

  20. Re:Guy is a loon on 20,000 Customers Have Pre-Ordered Over $2,000,000 of Soylent · · Score: 1

    The placebo effect can be very strong. But I think it's a really interesting experiment. I can't believe this mix of powders doesn't already exist as a product. I can see this being a great meal replacement every so often, or maybe even as a breakfast routine. There have been many instances while traveling, where I wished I had a cheap healthy option to eat at the airport. It would be awesome to have some powder I can mix up and drink to hold me over until the next meal. Also, it might be also a great option to have in the plane itself, since it won't make you poop.

  21. Re:I have zero problems with BU's patents on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft & More Settle Lawsuits With Boston University · · Score: 2

    Nor should they care how it's made. Can you imagine, for every single resister, capacitor, LED, chip, you have to check how it's made and ensure they have the proper licenses or patents? That would be ridiculous.

  22. Re:It costs money to store them on Canadian Government Trucking Generations of Scientific Data To the Dump · · Score: 1

    You mean the fiscal conservatives who managed to turn a budget surplus into a deficit? OK, I'll give them benefit of the doubt because of the financial crisis, but they didn't need cut the GST, that tax money would have helped keep the budget in check. What about Harper's hard-on for the F-35 Joint Strike fighter? Extremely over-budget and possibly unnecessary for Canada, who I thought just wanted aircraft for defence.

  23. Re: Bitcoin is vulernable to government manipulati on A Rebuttal To Charles Stross About Bitcoin · · Score: 1

    Oh crap. I don't know how I missed that... I think I had too many beers.

  24. Re:Bitcoin is vulernable to government manipulatio on A Rebuttal To Charles Stross About Bitcoin · · Score: 1, Informative
    From Charles Stross' arguments:

    You think our wonderful investment bankers aren't paying their fair share of taxes? Bitcoin is pretty much designed for tax evasion.

    This really pisses me off. Our wonderful investment bankers are defrauding us, our government, and are paying a smaller share of taxes thanks to lower taxes for investment income and dividends, helping terrorists and drug cartels move money, etc.... the list is long. Which world does he live in? The fact that Bitcoin is hard to control is the whole idea. When a few people have so much power, it pretty much automatically corrupts. Look what's happening in the US. The Fed prints money, gives it to rich people, everyone else suffers with higher energy and food prices.

  25. Re:Ends of Moore's Law in software ? on End of Moore's Law Forcing Radical Innovation · · Score: 2

    It's cheaper to buy more computers than hire more programmers.