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User: gomiam

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Comments · 585

  1. Re:cash money on Finland's Upper Secondary School Exams Going All-Linux · · Score: 2

    You can use the € HTML entity. It's a bit longer to type but it should work to get a nice €

  2. Re:There we have it on "Piracy Filter" Blocks TorrentFreak for 4 Million Sky Customers · · Score: 1

    Troll harder.

  3. Re:Wrong Anniversary on NASA's Curiosity Rover Celebrates One Year On Mars · · Score: 1

    Erm... pounds aren't a weight measure.

  4. Re:Puny Earthlings ! on NASA's Curiosity Rover Celebrates One Year On Mars · · Score: 1

    I suspect Phobos will be fucked earlier: it is expected to collide with Mars or break up into a disk in about 50-100 million years.

  5. Re:Why are they even teaching anyone? on Paralyzed Patients "Speak" With Their Pupils · · Score: 1

    "...involuntary dilation of the... iris?"

  6. Re:Metric, you know? on Very Large Telescope Observes Gas Cloud Being Ripped Apart By Black Hole · · Score: 1

    A billion is a million million for everyone but a few misguided individuals ;-)

  7. Re:It is a good read... on NSA Releases Secret Pre-History of Computers · · Score: 1

    Thanks to both for your answers. It seems I misread this article about the limits of quantum computing.

  8. Re:It is a good read... on NSA Releases Secret Pre-History of Computers · · Score: 1
    AFAIK, quantum computing algorithms are only able to square root the complexity. IOW, since the best factorisation algorithms are exponential, you only need to double the key length to stay safe agains quantum computers.

    I repeat: as far as I know. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.

  9. Re:First post! on Subversion 1.8 Released But Will You Still Use Git? · · Score: 1
    Which is why you can:

    </path/to/file sed -e 's/what/ever/g ; s/foo/bar/g'

  10. Re:The Gillette Co. says on First Particle Comprising Four Quarks Discovered · · Score: 1

    Of course, pasting a link is such a hard task... I can't understand who ever thought hypertext would ever be useful.

  11. Re:Treason on Facebook and Microsoft Disclose Government Requests For User Data · · Score: 2

    You don't understand, you can't be 100% safe.

    Fixed that for you. Since you can't be 100% safe, safety is not an excuse for whole sale spying.

  12. Re:You can't patent math on Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics · · Score: 1
    I think you are wrong. In Europe, for example, a software algorithm is only patentable as part of a physical method and only as far as that physical method is concerned. So you can patent an algorithm that imitates a servomechanism to keep a motor from stalling but that patent only applies to the physical system it is embedded in. I can freely use the same algorithm to, say, control the pressure of a boiler, if it is appliable.

    That is, unless I have misread or forgot something.

  13. Re:Banal on An Open Letter To Google Chairman Eric Schmidt On Drones · · Score: 1

    Are all video games banal? Are any banal video games socially positive?

  14. Banal on An Open Letter To Google Chairman Eric Schmidt On Drones · · Score: 2
    "... there is a whole world of socially positive and banal applications for drones that are yet to be discovered."

    I find it a bit difficult to understand that something banal is socially positive. Then again, maybe I am just not too social.

  15. Re:I'm Definitely Antimatter on LHCb Experiment Observes New Matter-Antimatter Difference · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I am completely amatteurish, and I don't know which one is better.

  16. Re:Too little too late on Windows 8.1 May Restore Boot-To-Desktop, Start Button · · Score: 1

    Not to karma-whore, but actually almost nothing is mirrored: the gears usually handle the same way (which makes it easier for right-hand driving since the shorter gears are nearer to the driver), the dashboard is just moved around, and even the starter key hole is on the right of the driving wheel. Then again, I also know of English cars (a Land Rover to be specific) which had the starter key hole on the left, which is almost unheard of in the rest of Europe.

  17. Re:Darn Crab Lobby on Increased Carbon Emissions Creating Giant Crabs · · Score: 1

    It's just you being crabby.

  18. Re:Don't carry one on Ask Slashdot: How To Stay Ahead of Phone Tracking ? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not to raise your paranoia, but your "dumb" phone isn't as dumb as you think it is. While it is acting as cell phone it needs to keep the towers appraised of its location so you can receive calls and it can roam from one cell to the next.

  19. Re:My answer on Fighting TSA Harassment of Disabled Travelers · · Score: 1

    Not anymore, it seems :)

  20. Re:Internet in Africa on SXSW: How Mobile Devices Are Changing Africa · · Score: 1

    I actually preferred the traditional rickroll.

  21. Re:Terrible move by a dying entity on Best Buy Follows Yahoo in Banning Remote Work · · Score: 1

    It seems it does. My excuses. Now I need to check whether my workplace's firewall allows me to connect to IMAP...

  22. Re:Terrible move by a dying entity on Best Buy Follows Yahoo in Banning Remote Work · · Score: 1

    Some of us like being able to check our "old" mail even if there is no network connection available. YMMV though.

  23. Re:Engineering isn't a secret club on 83-Year-Old Inventor Wins $40,000 3D Printing Competition · · Score: 1

    Many wrong ideas have entered popular culture. So what? That only means that popular culture doesn't care much about truth or correctness. The same way the spinach iron content myth has been busted (as early as 21 years after the initial wrong experiment) and has even begotten a new myth (the decimal point myth) to explain busting the old one. And yet popular culture doesn't care about it that much. So don't try to use popular culture as a fact checker.

  24. Re:Engineering isn't a secret club on 83-Year-Old Inventor Wins $40,000 3D Printing Competition · · Score: 2

    The point is that science THOUGHT it is impossible

    The point is that a scientist doing back-of-the-evelope calculations from wrong premises concluded that the bumblebee could not fly, and someone decided that he accounted for all "science" ;)

  25. Re:Cue the "Keith's owned by big oil!!" accusation on Study Suggests Generating Capacity of Wind Farms At Large Scales Overestimated · · Score: 1
    I must insist that solar (dependent on the surface of the building, with a square growth law) doesn't scale with the volume of the building (cubic growth law). Above a certain surface/volume ratio it is not possible to fulfill the building's energy needs with solar systems alone. This, actually, is not a specific problem of buildings: trees have the same problem, animals have the same problem (though in this case it is related to the muscular strength/weight ratio) and so do birds. This problem can be partially solved by improving the building's efficiency, but it just moves the limiting ratio further away.

    As I have already written before, I don't consider this a matter of exclusion: you can have solar and wind power generators, and using building's surfaces to get more energy is a good option.