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User: Monkey+Angst

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Comments · 117

  1. ISO Mounting on Windows 8 Features With Linux Antecedents · · Score: 5, Funny

    ISO Mounting

    It boggled my mind that even Windows 7 didn't have that. At my job, I'm the Mac tech and there are a couple of PC techs. When they're overbusy, I take some of their workload... had to do an install of Office on someone's machine, so I found a folder of ISOs on a network share, downloaded it, and...? Hmm. "I may be an idiot," I said to my colleagues, "but I can't figure out how to mount this ISO file." "Burn it," they said. "Why, how do you open it on a Mac?" "Uh... you double-click it."

    Talk about your long times coming.

  2. Yup, and it's hit or miss on Ask Slashdot: Are You Streaming-Only For Home Entertainment? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm now cable-free, which has its advantages and disadvantages. Whether it's right for you comes down to one question: What do you want to watch?

    For most broadcast networks, streaming is great. I use Boxee on my Mac, which aggregates a lot of shows from a lot of sources, just not Hulu. Combine that with the Hulu desktop app, and voila. Most of the shows I watch.

    But not all. HBO, for instance, is (last time I checked) still aggressively married to the subscription-cable model. You can get their content on their website, if you are an HBO subscriber through the traditional means. I would have no problem paying for HBO, but I don't know of any cable provider that offers JUST HBO. So I have to pay for a package of nonsense like the Food Network and whatever's become of the History Channel. I want to give HBO my money, but they don't want to take it. Showtime is the same way.

    I don't know what FX's current attitude towards streaming is, but I'll look into it before Rescue Me starts back up again.

  3. Re:IS THIS WHAT YOU WANTED? on Might Shatner Boldly Lead Canada As Governor? · · Score: 1

    I like this post title, given that another name being tossed around is Leonard Cohen.

  4. Re:nVidia ION nettop on What's the Best Way To Get Web Content To My TV? · · Score: 1

    I've run Hulu Desktop a couple of times, wasn't impressed. Boxee, though, I like. One thing that is particularly useful to me is, since I still have a CRT TV, Boxee allows you to manually adjust the amount of overscan. So you don't have the cut off edges of the screen, but neither do you have the wasted space on the sides that you get if you turn on overscan compensation in the OS.

  5. Re:If you want it to act like a computer hooked to on What's the Best Way To Get Web Content To My TV? · · Score: 1

    Regarding the Mini and 1080p: After reading your post, I turned to the machine next to me, which is a Mac Mini 2.53GHz with 4GB of RAM, and tested a 1080p trailer from Apple's website. It plays back fine, with only a little slurring at the very beginning. Your mileage may vary.

  6. Re:Mac Mini on What's the Best Way To Get Web Content To My TV? · · Score: 1

    This is the solution I use. I have an older Mini (the newer ones' video chipsets don't support the old DVI-s-video adapters, and I have a CRT TV) which works fine for SD video... most 720 plays OK too, but it chokes on 1080. I use an ATI Remote Wonder II, which isn't supported anymore and I've stopped upgrading the OS for fear that this will be the one that finally breaks it. I like it, as it's an RF remote that acts as a mouse. I haven't found anything newer that I like as much.

  7. Re:Orange and purple are more professional? on Ubuntu Gets a New Visual Identity · · Score: 1

    Then you'd hate the suit I wear to work...

    Joker?

  8. Re:The only prudent thing to do with these things. on Time Warner Cable Modems Expose Users · · Score: 1

    A brief explanation of "bridge mode" as I give it to customers: When you have a router, the router generally serves to isolate the internal network from the public network (the internet, usually). This means having a public IP address on one interface (the WAN interface) and distributing private IPs to the machines on the local network (the LAN ports). Bridge mode doesn't do that -- instead of acting as a router, the device merely passes traffic to the LAN, allowing (for example) one machine on the local network to claim the public IP that the modem is passing along. Usually, a router in bridge mode is connected to another router downstream, so that THAT router is giving out IPs. You see this a lot with wireless interfaces; you've got a modem/router without wireless capability, and you want to use a wireless router to give out addresses.

  9. Re:Astalavista on ImageShack Hacked, Security Groups Threatened · · Score: 2

    ... but they ARE in favour of people p0wning sites - which requires disclosure of vulnerabilities - something they're against. Kind of contradictory ...

    Well, not if you look at it this way: They're not against finding and exploiting vulnerabilities. They're against sharing those vulnerabilities so that others can exploit them. Think of it like an anti-nuke treaty. The US has nukes and will not give them up, but we're dead against letting anyone else have them.

    They're just a bunch of assholes, same as the punks who key cars.

    Oh yeah, this too.

  10. Re:Guh. on Juror Tweets Could Create Mistrial · · Score: 1

    I'm a male. We frequently see other people in the restroom, since we don't always have to use the stalls. Sometimes we use urinals. Oh, and as for his assertion that he only tweeted after the verdict, you're all correct, I did overlook that part. My bad.

  11. Guh. on Juror Tweets Could Create Mistrial · · Score: 3, Insightful
    What part of "don't discuss this case with anyone until it's over" does this idiot not understand? Did he think his Twitter followers didn't count?

    God, it really seems that as we've adopted more and more ways to communicate, we've completely forgotten how to do it properly, and etiquette hasn't kept pace. When I was a kid we had corded phones. No real chance of taking one into the bathroom with you, so there never needed to be a rule against talking on the phone while taking a crap. But if you asked anyone whether it would be acceptable were it technologically possible, they'd probably have reacted with disgust. But today? I see and hear people on their phones in the restroom all the damn time.

    So maybe it's the judge's fault for not realizing what mouth-breathers people can be, and explicitly forbidding tweeting, blogging, etc? I dunno.

  12. Re:well on Will ParanoidLinux Protect the Truly Paranoid? · · Score: 1

    Our security auditing team typically has between six and twelve members who continue to search for and fix new security holes.

    Which works out to between five and eleven people who are not me, and therefore cannot be trusted. No thank you.

  13. Re:Pop culture != scientific consensus on New Evidence Debunks "Stupid" Neanderthal · · Score: 1

    They discovered Ceremonial Burial? I'm impressed. Too bad they didn't build Temples or they would have been happier.

  14. Re:Don't worry NASA is not stupid. on NASA Plans Probe to the Sun · · Score: 4, Funny

    Oh for fuck's sake... for some reason, this thread has brought out some of the most malfunctioning humor sensors Slashdot has to offer. It always happens during a full sun.

  15. Re:Musicians seem to have crappy luck on Peter Gabriel's Web Server Stolen · · Score: 2, Informative

    Jimmy Page had all his tapes for Outrider stolen, and was forced to rerecord the entire album from scratch. In that case I expect the theft was targeted, while in this case, I imagine it's just guys busting into a data center to steal equipment. This has also happened to, ironically, Thievery Corporation.
  16. Re:They do NOT say it's legal on Disabling the RFID in the New U.S. Passports · · Score: 1
    Why not? This is Slashdot, not a courtroom or a law office. There is no ultimate arbiter of rightness or wrongness here
    True, but everyone should bear in mind this disclaimer: Taking legal advice you find on Slashdot can land you in prison. Don't drop the soap.
  17. Re:summary of ted stevens' bill? on HR 5252 Bill Dies · · Score: 1
    Ridiculous! Such blatant lies, disinformation and verbal diarrhea this commercial spreads, should be punishable to maximum extent of the law.
    I wonder what the law does prescribe for verbal diarrhea?

    I'm inclined to agree, but I don't think the cable companies' ads are actionable. IANAL.

  18. Re:When space access becomes cheap and ubiquitous. on Do We Really Need Space Weapons? · · Score: 5, Funny
    There will be no need to worry about weapons based in space...someone will just send a ship up and steal the whole satellite.

    This is why we need the snooping powers provided by the USA-PATRIOT act. All we need do to foil the plots of satellite-stealing villains is track the purchases of large numbers of silver jumpsuits and miniskirts. An ounce of prevention...

  19. To add insult to injury.... on Shuttle Delayed Due to Cloudy Skies · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Moon People keep holding up "If you lived here, you'd be home now" signs every time the shuttle swings by.

  20. Re:Not #2 yet, and no chance for #1 on March of the Penguins Tops Box Offices · · Score: 1
    You're right. Most documentaries document reality.

    Where on earth do you get this idea? You've been talking to documentary filmmakers again, haven't you?

    Documentaries show an interpretation of reality. Through the act of choosing what to show and what not to show, filmmakers do more than just "edit" reality -- they construct their own reality, which exists only for the running time of the movie.

    Those who think Fahrenheit 9/11 is factual are deluding themselves. Those who think it's less factual than, say, March of the Penguins are deluding themselves even more.

  21. Re:A Windows admin, Unix admin and a Mainframe adm on What is Mainframe Culture? · · Score: 1

    Boy, I remember when that joke was about soldiers and Marines.

  22. Re:Next week's column on Googling for CIA Agents · · Score: 1
    What's his scare tactic for next week? How about "Did you know that your name and address are recorded in a privately-produced book that's located in every house and street corner in your town? For a city like New York, that's over 10 million copies of your private information."

    Ha! When I was a kid, they had a book like that. Everyone's name and address was in it.

    What? They still make them?

    Here's a question that won't get much response on Slashdot: Who among us is actually in the phone book anymore? (Business listings aside) Anyone? Anyone?

  23. Re:Good news! on Intel Developer Macs Outperform G5s · · Score: 5, Funny
    Yes, the MacOS port of Firefox is an embarrasment. The interface is responsive in the same way that steering a rocket by sending olfactory messages to slugs is responsive.

    Your frame of reference makes me really wonder how the hell you spend your weekends!

  24. To save money, though... on Marketers Scan Blogs For Brand Insights · · Score: 1
    ... they're only scanning the fake blogs their marketing department puts up to plug their products.

    Hey, customer satisfaction is 100%! Let's knock off early!

  25. Re:Armor ? on How to Become A Real-World Superhero · · Score: 1
    But then again, if they cast Batman as a martial arts expert, they'd need an actor who actually knows martial arts to make it look believable. Just compare Darth Maul to Count Dooku - which one has better fight scenes?

    While I'll grant that Maul's fight scenes look better than Dooku's... Christopher Lee does a pretty good job for an 80-year-old guy. And yeah, he did a lot of his fighting himself. He's old-school.