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User: Viol8

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Comments · 6,079

  1. Re:Good Thing on Inside BitFury's 20 Megawatt Bitcoin Mine · · Score: 1

    "I'm sure you spend 24/7 of your wakened time working on the betterment of humanity, such as curing cancer, resource capture and use (energy), materials science, space mining and other such industries."

    What a pathetic argument. You might as well say that only people who work in child abuse should find it distasteful. Get back under your bridge you pathetic troll.

  2. Not really that scary on "BadUSB" Exploit Makes Devices Turn "Evil" · · Score: 0

    Whats the point of the device sending keystrokes if it has no idea where they are going? "rm -rf /" ? Won't do much if you don't have a root xterm in focus or the focus is a word processor/browser/game/whatev er. Unless it acts like a mouse too and is smart enough to navigate its way around the screen, kick off an xterm , su with the root password etc etc...

    But then thats with a proper OS. I guess if you're running windows all bets are off.

  3. If you want to earn big bucks... on Programming Languages You'll Need Next Year (and Beyond) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Learn C++, Java or C# and get yourself a job at a big corporate.

    But hey, if you want to be a hipster coder and dick about all day doing "groovy" websites at some here today gone tommorow startup and earning fuck all by all means go down the web development route along with every other 14 year old school kid.

    Erlang? Nice language but too niche. Never really got momentum outside telecoms and its probably too late for it now.

  4. Re:China-based threat actors on Chinese Hackers Infiltrate Firms Using Malware-Laden Handheld Scanners · · Score: 2

    "Or are we talking about thespians who specialize in instilling apprehension and dread, while standing on top of dinnerware?"

    Well if they call everyone "Daaahhling!" and have endless anecdotes about how they were at the RSC with Daaahhling Larry doing a particularly evil modern day interpretation of Richard III involving hackers then that may well be the case.

  5. Re:HTML5 & JS should just crawl away and die on Famo.us: Do We Really Need Another JavaScript Framework? · · Score: 1

    I didn't mean run java or C++ in the fucking browser you knobend. I meant to code standalone apps!

  6. HTML5 & JS should just crawl away and die on Famo.us: Do We Really Need Another JavaScript Framework? · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If you want fast 2D or 3D graphics you DON'T code them in an interpreted script language welded onto a markup language pushed well beyond its sell by date running in a bloated client which in turns runs on the OS. If web devs want to climb out of the web playpen and do grown up programming then learn a grown up language such as Java or C++.

  7. Re:Good. on Google Starts Removing Search Results After EU Ruling · · Score: 2

    Wow, lots of capital letters. That really adds weight to your riposte.

  8. Re:We'll be overrun by double-wides! on A Physicist Says He Can Tornado-Proof the Midwest With 1,000-Foot Walls · · Score: 2

    Calm down or you'll break your trailer springs!

  9. Pity Whitney Houston isn't still around on How Vacuum Tubes, New Technology Might Save Moore's Law · · Score: 3, Funny

    Stick her in front of a mike then tell her no more drugs and press record. That would have got you pretty close to that frequency range.

  10. Computers always were boring on How Vacuum Tubes, New Technology Might Save Moore's Law · · Score: 1

    Its what you can do with them thats interesting and thats only going to get more fascinating as the years go by.

    A computer without a program is just a plastic brick.

  11. Re:sigh on How Disney Built and Programmed an Animatronic President · · Score: -1

    Well I've never heard of him or his novel either. Nor do I give a damn about Disney one way or the other. Its a company run to make money from kids. Who cares?

  12. Re:Speaking as a guy in his 40s... on Age Discrimination In the Tech Industry · · Score: 1

    "In short, you are not being insightful in any way. You are... stereotyping. Stereotyping is the basis of incompetent and ultimately destructive discrimination."

    Call it what you like pal - its my own personal experience from 20+ years in the IT industry. If you have an issue with it then thats your problem, not mine.

  13. Speaking as a guy in his 40s... on Age Discrimination In the Tech Industry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... I've encountered a tiny bit of what seemed like discrimination but then its hard to tell. Perhaps I just was just being a bit precious about it.

    But what I do know is its horses for courses - younger people are (generally) better at thinking up new ideas/paradigms and novel ways to do things , older people are (generally) better at the detailed implementation of a system as they'll have encountered a lot if not most of the problems before and have X number of years experience

  14. Re:Mozilla doesn't build hardware on Mozilla Is Working On a Firefox OS-powered Streaming Stick · · Score: 1

    Are you smoking something? You appear to be confused about what hardware is and what creating it actually entails from design through to manufacture. Its a *teensy* bit harder and more expensive than writing a VM.

  15. Re:You don't make OS's either on Mozilla Is Working On a Firefox OS-powered Streaming Stick · · Score: 1

    Its not a case of thanking them , its merely a case of acknowledging the fact that its not entirely of their own making. But instead they pretend they wrote the entire thing. Point taken about GNU.

  16. You don't make OS's either on Mozilla Is Working On a Firefox OS-powered Streaming Stick · · Score: 2

    You've done the same as google did with Android - take Linux, write a few hardware specific drivers and shove a roll-your-own graphics interface on top. Its a pity you and Google don't give credit where its due frankly but oddly enough the word linux never seems to mentioned in any of your or their presentations. As if the effort of the thousands of people who helped develop linux counts for sweet FA in your marketing.

  17. Re:As a Motorcyclist, I Declare "Meh" on Harley-Davidson Unveils Their First Electric Motorcycle · · Score: 1

    "A 54 mile range per charge is not sufficient for anything but a typical daily Home - Office - Grocery Store - Home - Recharge cycle and the price will kill consumer interest."

    Err, ITYF a lot of people don't much like the image of scooters and buy a bike anyway just to commute. For those sorts of people this is ideal. You have a point about the price though.

    " No one is going to buy this EV motorcycle for weekend back road twisties or poker runs. Or Track Day. Or pretty much anything else people use motorcycles for."

    No one buys current harleys for any of the above either - they're for going in a straight line and posing. End.

  18. Wonder if they'll improve the firmware on Cable Boxes Are the 2nd Biggest Energy Users In Many Homes · · Score: 2

    Seems you can't buy any form of digibox these days without some serious firmware bugs whether its just picture freezing , "buffering" remote control key presses until it can be bothered to process them, missed recordings for no apparent reason or just complete crashes requiring a hard reboot. Or if like me you were dumb enough to buy a Sagemcom box - then all of the above.

  19. No one will know on Microsoft To Launch Machine Learning Service · · Score: 1

    Nobody watches F1 anymore anyway. Its just an out of touch travelling fashion show with cars these days with utterly boring racing and overpaid drivers who've all had a personality bypass. Eventually it'll disappear up its own exhaust pipe with barely a squeak of tyres and nobody will even notice.

  20. Oh dear on Why the Moon's New Birthday Means the Earth Is Older Than We Thought · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Feeling a bit precious about our fairy tale beliefs are we?

    If you can't handle a bit of piss taking it doesn't say a lot about the strength of your beliefs now does it? You might want to pull that bible/koran/torah our of your arse and get a sense of humour.

  21. Not convinced by the safety arguments on Cockpit Revealed For Bloodhound Supersonic Car · · Score: 2

    It may well be one solid piece of carbon fibre with a 2 cm thick windscreen and a front struct that can take 30 tons of force , but it wouldn't make any difference if it was made out of reinforced unobtanium - if he looses it and has a rollover at 1000mph he's dead. Even if the structure survives - which I doubt - the G forces will probably kill him anyway.

  22. So it goes up to 11?? on Cockpit Revealed For Bloodhound Supersonic Car · · Score: 1

    They'll have no problem getting to 1000mph in that case! Wonder if Spinal Tap will do the after record party music?

  23. Re:Or maybe... on Google Engineer: We Need More Web Programming Languages · · Score: 1

    "not suggesting anyone takes away your C, though I do have to wonder why you're too much of a pussy to write your drivers in assembler."

    Oddly enough I'm quite familiar with x86 assembler and some stuff still needs to be written in it that even C can't manage. But your assertion that suddenly because a new language has some safety features de jour that prevent the programmer shooting himself in the foot its going to lead to better software is utter cock. If that were the case the best software in the world would be written in Visual Basic.

  24. Re:Or maybe... on Google Engineer: We Need More Web Programming Languages · · Score: 1, Funny

    "These are simply not possible in the new language. And thus software quality will be improved."

    What type of software? Good luck writing device drivers in Swift. Yes I know its a niche area, but you know, it is kind of an important one.

    If the new languages that came along brought something new to the table then no one would complain, but often its just the same old cola with a bit of extra sugar. Wooah , garbage collection! genetic types! no pointers! Yeah, I'm really going to spend months getting up to speed just for that. Not.

  25. Only 100kg on Gecko Feet Inspire Hand-Held Spider-Man Paddles · · Score: 1

    "In a recent test, a man weighing almost 100 kg (220 lbs) "

    They've got a way to go before it can support your average fat american then. But then I suppose if you need to get one of those land whales up the side of a building you'd use a crane anyway.