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User: 192939495969798999

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Comments · 1,930

  1. Re: Land of the free on Reaction To the Sony Hack Is 'Beyond the Realm of Stupid' · · Score: 1

    the most famous gun battles in American history were in towns that had active gun bans,I am of course referring to dodge city and tombstone,doesnt mean a gun ban cant work but it is a mixed blessing at best even with the best lawman in history backing it up

  2. Re: What the hell is wrong with Millennials?! on Peru Indignant After Greenpeace Damages Ancient Nazca Site · · Score: 1

    Socrates said this same stuff about the next generation thousands of years ago,before any modern advancement etc. ancient things get ruined,thats why they are called ruins. the smart people will make things better enough that it mostly negates the idiots.when it doesn't work anymore finally,well thats when we go to mars and try again.

  3. Universal lock pick on MIT Students Release Code To 3D-Print High Security Keys · · Score: 1

    In USA, you 3d print a custom key after months of work. In Soviet Russia, you just use a sledge hammer.

  4. Re:I don't know on Project Anonymizes Your Writing Style To Hide Your Identity · · Score: 4, Funny

    Those blend right in with the rest of the internet.

  5. Nonsense is inescapable on Robert Boisjoly Dies At 73, the Engineer Who Tried To Stop the Challenger Launch · · Score: 1

    It's one thing if your dimwitted construction boss makes you use 4x4's when 2x4's will do, but this is the space shuttle, you'd think they could source someone who can do the following:
    1. listen to an engineer when they are telling you its gonna blow up
    2. realize you dont want it to blow up
    3. take the stand necessary to make sure it doesnt blow up

    Whenever i try to watch a launch live, they cancel it from like slight wind or a bird within 5 miles, I don't understand why they HAD to launch that day with such a big objection. Note: I saw the challenger live... i won't ever forget that.

  6. Re:LIAR on Man Claiming He Invented the Internet Sues · · Score: 1

    prior art - "Tim Berners-Lee, who invented the World Wide Web together with Robert Cailliau, built the first working prototype in late 1990 and early 1991. That first prototype consisted of a web browser for the NeXTStep operating system. This first web browser, which was named "WorldWideWeb," had a graphical user interface and would be recognizable to most people today as a web browser. However, WorldWideWeb did not support graphics embedded in pages when it was first released. "
    I believe that's called checkmate!
    haha.

  7. true on Selling Used MP3s Found Legal In America · · Score: 1

    Mp3's and other digital media actually do exist in the form of 0's and 1's that are present in some sort of electrical charge or optical divot. rabbits are easy to duplicate and you can sell those, so the ease of duplication does not preclude something which exists from being sellable.

  8. Re:Mark to market on The Zuckerberg Tax · · Score: 1

    See Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. Mark to Market was a primary cause of their implosion which really kicked off our current economic situation as much as any housing issues did.

  9. Re:Audiophiles on Pink Floyd Engineer Alan Parsons Rips Audiophiles, YouTube and Jonas Brothers · · Score: 1

    Have you ever heard an audiophile system for real? I have. You can hear a difference between that and your crap sony at home. if you can't, then you are missing out because I sure can hear a difference. It's like they are in the room with you. It's spooky.

  10. Solved with dogs on TSA Investigates Pilot Who Exposed Security Flaws · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How much of this security theater can be solved with a bomb-sniffing dog? Instead of checking each new thing for a bomb and still not being able to find them, a dog can just smell the explosive wherever it happens to be hidden. But no, we don't want to do that, that's too obvious, cheap, and easy. We'd much rather have a 1000x more expensive, incomplete and cumbersome solution.

  11. Why? Coverage on The Odd Variations On 3G Per-Megabyte Pricing · · Score: 1

    3g is wireless, and wireless varies on cost depending on coverage. A 5mb connection with nearly seamless nationwide coverage can't cost the same to maintain as a 5mb connection that has spotty intermittent coverage, and that cost has to be passed on. What you suggest is that a speed limited rolls royce should cost the same as a same-speed limited honda civic.

  12. Game reviews are absolute on Analyzing Game Journalism · · Score: 1

    The main issue seems to be in the ratings systems. Game reviews rate games on an absolute scale, not a relative scale. If reviewers honestly rated EA's crap games relative to EA's gems, then there would be a whole lot of sub-5 ratings. However, even a relatively crap EA game, assuming you had never played a game before in your life, is still an impressive piece of work. Consumers would have to start demanding relative scales on ratings before they would help out in selecting a game for anyone but someone who had perhaps never played a game before, in which case any major release correctly would be really impressive to that person... until they play one that really is a 10/10 on the relative scale.

  13. Games dont have proper endings on Why Don't We Finish More Games? · · Score: 1

    That's easy, many of today's games don't have linear gameplay or a proper ending. I bet lots of people finish games that have level 1-10 and then you win. How do you "win" world of warcraft? Sure, people finish the quests, etc. and in that way, they are finishing the game because the game doesnt have any other "you win" at some point.

  14. Good thing for regular news on Replacing Sports Bloggers With an Algorithm · · Score: 1

    Good thing for regular news here in the USA that our news isn't data-driven... it's opinion driven, and you need a person to make up an opinion... or do you? I'm pretty sure someone could generate the fox news content just by scanning cnn's articles and negating all of the opinion statements.

  15. The computer isnt going to die on Bees Beat Machines At 'Traveling Salesman' Problem · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The computer isn't going to die if it doesn't get the right path, the bee might. Death is a remarkably strong motivator to be efficient.

  16. wait wait wait! on The Time Travel Paradoxes of Back To the Future · · Score: 4, Funny

    You mean to tell me that in the movie about the time travelling, flying delorean, that runs variously on a fusion engine and stolen libyan plutonium, that there's something unrealistic about the plot of that movie? NOOOO!
    haha.

  17. Re:This is second place on Proving 0.999... Is Equal To 1 · · Score: 1

    (obviously 10*.3=3 not 10.3)

  18. Re:This is second place on Proving 0.999... Is Equal To 1 · · Score: 1

    oh yeah? watch this. A=.3
    10a=10.3
    subtract a from both sides
    10a-a=10.3-.3
    10a=10
    thus a=1! but a=.3! so does .3=1? This is why I get paid the big bucks. Don't try to do a digit proof that .99999... = 1.

  19. CLI doesnt guarantee same changes on Take This GUI and Shove It · · Score: 1

    " If you write a script, you're certain that the changes made will be identical on each box. If you're doing them all by hand, you aren't.'"

    No... if you write a script, you're certain that the change ATTEMPT made is the same. The changes may very well not be the same, if one of the boxes is messed up, but you can be certain it wasn't because you did it differently on that box. That's the difference between a GUI and a CLI... you get a same attempt guarantee, which allows you to blame the box instead of yourself when management comes asking why it failed.

  20. Most modern games do this still on The Misleading World of Atari 2600 Box Art · · Score: 1

    Most modern game ads on tv still show hardly any gameplay. The Wii will show gameplay, but a ton of other systems' games do not. They just show the pre-rendered payoff sequences. If you're not showing the actual gameplay, you are lying to people. It's that simple.

  21. Re:Wow on 'u' — the First Authentic Klingon Opera On Earth · · Score: 1

    It seems like an interesting study in meta-creation, meaning in order to create from a fictional work you have to make the fiction that exists into the rule boundaries for your work to be considered part of the same fictional narrative.

  22. John Smith Defense on Google CEO Schmidt Predicts End of Online Anonymity · · Score: 1

    If something like this were to happen, everyone could just use "John Smith" as their name and use the same pics, address, etc. on anything internet-facing. Once enough people do this, and it wouldn't take that many, it would be impossible to tell which "john smith" had posted what.

  23. Re:Albini's story redux on RIAA Accounting — How Labels Avoid Paying Musicians · · Score: 1

    The point is that the company will find some way to try to claw back that investment, and unless you do extremely, exceptionally well on ROI, you will not be rich at all. The truly insidious part is that as you start to make more, the label rigs the ROI against you by taking out more pr and stuff in the name of selling more, when really it just eats away at your profit.

  24. Albini's story redux on RIAA Accounting — How Labels Avoid Paying Musicians · · Score: 5, Informative

    Reminds me of this horrific classic of how recording artists get ripped off:
    http://www.negativland.com/albini.html

  25. invisible keyboard on The Mouse Vanishes · · Score: 1

    There's already an invisible keyboard, and we all know how well that's selling and how it's replaced all our regular keyboards. Oh wait, it didn't? Dang.