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User: Sean+Trembath

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Comments · 16

  1. Somewhere in the Universe..... on The Jet Fighter Laser Cannon · · Score: 1

    Greedo is starting to sweat

  2. Re:The goal is FUN on LGP Announces Two More Titles · · Score: 2, Funny

    I didn't know you made $278 a day working at EB.

  3. Prediction: on Cleveland Public Library Readies E-book Downloads · · Score: 4, Funny

    Mom: Stop messing around on that thing. Read a book for once.

    Son: I am reading a book.

    Mom: Keep lying like that and you're grounded.

  4. This is ludicrous. on Scientists Don't Read the Papers They Cite · · Score: 4, Funny

    We should crush all those who make foolish mistakes, just like that guy Karl Marx says in his "Communist Manifesto" (Marx, 65)

  5. Coincidentaly.... on Escher Paintings with Lego Bricks · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    I just finished my MIDI version of John Cage's 4'33". How do you like it?

  6. Re:Site down or not found on Linux 2.6 Multithreading Advances · · Score: 1

    I couldn't get too the one ypu linked too. The slashdot cure has been slashdotted. We have entered a whole new era on slashdotism. Oh dear. What is next. To many slashdotisms.

  7. Sorry for my Idiocy on Idaho Gets Serious About Broadband · · Score: 1, Informative

    Bill Gates Views What He's Sown in Libraries
    By TIMOTHY EGAN

    OLFAX, Wash. -- Bill Gates predicted in 1995 that the Internet would help rural people stay put, in part because they would have the same advantages as city slickers in the virtual world.

    He made that prophecy in "The Road Ahead," a book whose jacket showed Mr. Gates standing in the middle of an empty highway in remote eastern Washington.

    But when Mr. Gates, the richest man in the world, returned recently to the land of no stoplights as part of the last phase of a five-year philanthropic effort to put computers in every poor library district in the United States, he acknowledged that the road ahead was full of blind curves.

    There is scant evidence, for example, that the wiring of rural America has done anything to make Mr. Gates's prediction about population flight come true. The new computers may even be aiding the exodus from rural America, as people go online to find jobs far away.

    "I thought digital technology would eventually reverse urbanization, and so far that hasn't happened," Mr. Gates said, munching on a cheeseburger and fries at the Top Notch Cafe in Colfax, population 2,880. Among the bib overall set at lunch, he was largely unrecognized.

    "But people always overestimate how much will change in the next three years," Mr. Gates said, "and they underestimate how much will change over the next 10 years."

    He could well apply that maxim to himself. Three years ago, when stock in Microsoft, the company Mr. Gates co-founded, hit an all-time high of $119 a share, Mr. Gates was worth nearly $75 billion in Microsoft holdings alone.

    Now, he is about $40 billion lighter, on paper, but he shrugs it off. "My value is still so much higher than I ever expected it to be by a factor of about 50," Mr. Gates said. "So the fact that at one point it was say, a factor of 60, well -- that wealth is all going back to society anyway."

    The charitable group that Mr. Gates started with his wife, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is now giving away $1.2 billion a year. Mr. Gates said he was pleased that its first major philanthropic effort, the library project, had helped to narrow the digital divide. More than 95 percent of public libraries now offer free Internet access, including those here in Whitman County, which mainly serve wheat farmers and received $93,000 from the Gates Foundation.

    Inside the Seattle headquarters of the foundation, a giant map shows the progress of the campaign to give computers to libraries in every state. The campaign started with the poorest regions, mainly in the South and Great Plains, though distressed urban areas are included, too. But if superimposed over a map of population decline, it would show that many of these areas are not holding onto people, no matter how wired they become.

    "They come into the library, and they may use the computer to get a job and leave," said Kristie Kirkpatrick, who is in charge of a library district in Colfax.

    This land of rolling wheat fields has lost 10 percent of its population in the last two years alone, Ms. Kirkpatrick said. But she said the new computers had also changed many people's lives for the better, giving them more access to medical and agricultural information.

    The foundation has fared much better than Mr. Gates's personal fortune. Other philanthropies, notably those started by David and Lucile Packard and by Ted Turner, have seen their assets shrink considerably with the stock market collapse. By contrast, the Gates Foundation has grown, and now has assets of $24 billion -- far more than any single philanthropy in the country. The foundation weathered the storm, Mr. Gates said, because less than 2 percent of its money is invested in stocks, though Mr. Gates said that could rise to 25 percent over the next four years, as it pursues bargains in the market.

    "They are the only major foundation that is still doing great," said Stacy Palmer, editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy.

    Mr. Gates used to think he would wait until he was in his 60's to give his money away. At 47, Mr. Gates has handed out $5.5 billion for global health issues, education and the library project, which is the first major initiative at the foundation to essentially run its course.

    "The more I learned, the more I realized there is no time," he said in a recent speech to the United Nations.

  8. NY Times Article on Idaho Gets Serious About Broadband · · Score: -1, Redundant

    For those who dont feel like registering... Bill Gates Views What He's Sown in Libraries By TIMOTHY EGAN OLFAX, Wash. -- Bill Gates predicted in 1995 that the Internet would help rural people stay put, in part because they would have the same advantages as city slickers in the virtual world. He made that prophecy in "The Road Ahead," a book whose jacket showed Mr. Gates standing in the middle of an empty highway in remote eastern Washington. But when Mr. Gates, the richest man in the world, returned recently to the land of no stoplights as part of the last phase of a five-year philanthropic effort to put computers in every poor library district in the United States, he acknowledged that the road ahead was full of blind curves. There is scant evidence, for example, that the wiring of rural America has done anything to make Mr. Gates's prediction about population flight come true. The new computers may even be aiding the exodus from rural America, as people go online to find jobs far away. "I thought digital technology would eventually reverse urbanization, and so far that hasn't happened," Mr. Gates said, munching on a cheeseburger and fries at the Top Notch Cafe in Colfax, population 2,880. Among the bib overall set at lunch, he was largely unrecognized. "But people always overestimate how much will change in the next three years," Mr. Gates said, "and they underestimate how much will change over the next 10 years." He could well apply that maxim to himself. Three years ago, when stock in Microsoft, the company Mr. Gates co-founded, hit an all-time high of $119 a share, Mr. Gates was worth nearly $75 billion in Microsoft holdings alone. Now, he is about $40 billion lighter, on paper, but he shrugs it off. "My value is still so much higher than I ever expected it to be by a factor of about 50," Mr. Gates said. "So the fact that at one point it was say, a factor of 60, well -- that wealth is all going back to society anyway." The charitable group that Mr. Gates started with his wife, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is now giving away $1.2 billion a year. Mr. Gates said he was pleased that its first major philanthropic effort, the library project, had helped to narrow the digital divide. More than 95 percent of public libraries now offer free Internet access, including those here in Whitman County, which mainly serve wheat farmers and received $93,000 from the Gates Foundation. Inside the Seattle headquarters of the foundation, a giant map shows the progress of the campaign to give computers to libraries in every state. The campaign started with the poorest regions, mainly in the South and Great Plains, though distressed urban areas are included, too. But if superimposed over a map of population decline, it would show that many of these areas are not holding onto people, no matter how wired they become. "They come into the library, and they may use the computer to get a job and leave," said Kristie Kirkpatrick, who is in charge of a library district in Colfax. This land of rolling wheat fields has lost 10 percent of its population in the last two years alone, Ms. Kirkpatrick said. But she said the new computers had also changed many people's lives for the better, giving them more access to medical and agricultural information. The foundation has fared much better than Mr. Gates's personal fortune. Other philanthropies, notably those started by David and Lucile Packard and by Ted Turner, have seen their assets shrink considerably with the stock market collapse. By contrast, the Gates Foundation has grown, and now has assets of $24 billion -- far more than any single philanthropy in the country. The foundation weathered the storm, Mr. Gates said, because less than 2 percent of its money is invested in stocks, though Mr. Gates said that could rise to 25 percent over the next four years, as it pursues bargains in the market. "They are the only major foundation that is still doing great," said Stacy Palmer, editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy. Mr. Gates used to think he would wait until he was in his 60's to give his money away. At 47, Mr. Gates has handed out $5.5 billion for global health issues, education and the library project, which is the first major initiative at the foundation to essentially run its course. "The more I learned, the more I realized there is no time," he said in a recent speech to the United Nations.

  9. Cheating on Doom Ported to Nokia phone · · Score: 1

    Now what is the touch tone code for IDKFA?

  10. Surprised? on Microsoft's Political Lobbying Record · · Score: 3, Funny

    I don't think it comes as any great shock that Microsoft is doing all they can to get their hads in politicians pockets.
    Microsoft walks and talks like a big tobacco company. All that's missing is Bill Gates in cowboy boots.
    It's interesting how the tobacco companies (also huge lobbyists) ancestors owned slaves, whereas Microsoft has enslaved the human race with their craptacular software.

  11. This must be... on Tetris Is Hard: NP-Hard · · Score: 0

    MIT's "Game Theory" division we heard about in A Beautiful Mind

    I'm sorry.

  12. Re:That's crazy! on Flash Version of Adventure · · Score: 0

    There is a board game version of Quake out called FRAG! You roll dice to move around and calculate damage from various weapons that you pick up along the way. Literally minutes of entertainment. Now that is news for nerds.

  13. A Vote for the Directors on Directors Counter-Sue Movie Bowdlerizing Company · · Score: 0

    No artist wants to see their work changed for public viewing. A true film maker ensures that every image in the piece is important. Editing the content of a film is akin to refurbishing Michaelangelo's David with a leaf covering the genitalia.

    If anyone needs an example of how 'clean' editing ruins a film see both versions of Darren Aronofsky's Requiem For A Dream. The edited version lacks the emotional punch that makes the real film excellent.

    Here's hoping the directors get what they're after.


    Funny how in today's world a fourteen year old can go see heads exploding in slow motion, but he can't see an exposed female breast.

  14. Rubber Bullet Umbrella on Thailand's "Q" Banks on Rubber Bullets · · Score: 0

    I'm trying to think of a situation where an oficer using rubber bullets would need to disguise his weapon.

    The thing about rubber bullets is they are generally used in riot control by police, and usually the officers are not covert about their attempts to stop whatever riot has erupted. Seem moot, IMHO.

  15. Re:MJ-12 on Little Green Men · · Score: 0

    The Majestic 12 is a popular conspiracy theory regarding a group of 12 individuals who pull all sorts of strings in the American government. Depending on whose theories you listen to, they are involved in cover-ups of alien landings, JFK's true killer, and even Bigfoot, The Loch Ness Monster, and Atlantis. They sure do get around. The 12 have been mentioned in numerous tv shows, movies, and video games (the most obvious one being the short-lived 'reality game' Majestic). They were mentioned on the X-Files, (I think Mulder's father may have been a member), a film that screened at Sundance this year (something about Blue Apples, I kid you not), and numerous other programs. That's all folks.

  16. But what does this mean... on Expect DVD Chip Price Wars · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    to the everyday Napster-Porn user?