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User: alangerow

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Comments · 17

  1. DM as gangleader just like ... on Court Rules Dungeons and Dragons Threatens Prison Security · · Score: 1

    a coach on a sports team ... a boss at a job ... the chief of police to the officers. How dare someone be in charge of a situation. Are they advocating anarchy?

  2. Those savages on Flash Can Rob 2 Hours From MacBook Air's Battery Life · · Score: 0, Redundant

    And how much battery life does the LCD screen rob? I bet OSX robs the battery of quite a bit of life, too. In fact, the entire laptop is a savage murderer of battery life!

  3. Not getting T-Mobile on Can Apps Really Damage a Cellular Network? · · Score: 1

    T-Mobile just let me know not go to them for service, because their infrastructure is so weak and insecure that they fear IM apps. I want a phone service provider that knows how to build, manage, and run a reliable data network. T-Mobile does not appear to be that provider.

  4. Re:probably a fish researcher fake fish on New Fish Species Discovered 4.5 Miles Under the Ocean · · Score: 2, Funny

    There's a Slashdot article! "Science debunked because Anonymous Coward on Slashdot says so!"

  5. We spent billions of dollars fixing this, remember on 10/10/10 — a Nice Day To Celebrate the Meaning of Life · · Score: 1

    It's not 10/10/10, it's 10/10/2010. We fixed that bug over a decade ago.

  6. Screw ET, how about malfunctioning missiles? on Former Military Personnel Claim Aliens Are Monitoring Our Nukes · · Score: 1

    I'm more concerned that a number greater than 0 of nuclear missiles can simultaneously and inexplicably malfunction more than I am of an extra-terrestrial probing me. We have weapons that can obliterate an entire city ... and they can mysteriously malfunction? You'd think they'd work out the bugs BEFORE creating enough arsenal to destroy the entire habitability of our planet. I'm not a perfect coder, but I can say with all honesty that my code isn't putting billions of lives at risk.

  7. Re:Power from the people on GPS Tracking Without a Warrant Declared Legal · · Score: 1

    There are "Citizen Arrest" statutes. It's not the bosses permission police officer's have to enter someone's home, it's a court signed warrant, and if you can get a court of law to give you rightful access to a property, then you can enter someone's home without their permission. (Good luck with that, though) Though you can enter someone's property in case of an emergency, i.e. saving a baby from a burning building, just as the cops can. And you have the right to protect yourself and your property, so you can taze people who get unruly and present a reasonable danger to your own personal safety.

  8. Re:I hear differently from Users on iPhone Jailbreak Uses a PDF Display Vulnerability · · Score: 1

    Because people don't have to bother writing a virus to get access to Apple's products. Apple's programmers are more than good enough and leaving them backdoors all over the place. That's why it's not like PCs ... just like everything else at Apple, it's easier!

  9. Been there on School District Drops 'D' Grades · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I went to a college prep high school and we had no "D"s. A (92-100%), B (84-91%), C (75-83%), F (0-74%). The logic behind our school's system was that since we were a school for gifted kids, if you weren't at least average, you failed.

  10. Just now?!? on Adapting the Post Office To the Digital Age · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Company realizes it needs to think about the future and plan for it. News at 11.

  11. Re:Cut the cable on Sidestepping A-to-D Convertors For Town Government's Cable TV? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the summary it says: "Being a municipality, we are entitled to free expanded basic cable as a part of the franchise agreement back in 1982." Ditching basic cable will save the tax payers a whopping $0. Comcast signed a deal ... their town granted Comcast a monopoly on cable infrastructure, in return for free service. Now, it looks like the municipality is learning the joys of monopolies. They don't like Comcast's new policies, yet their own policies prevent competition from stepping in and offering them a solution. Now, they have to come to Slashdot for help.

  12. Re:I don't understand on Diaspora On Schedule, One Month In · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because the system will be decentralized. You can control your own seed, meaning your own data, and who it gets shared with. They aren't making a Facebook clone. Actually, there will be Facebook interaction, so you can host your own profile and connect with Facebook users ... it's listed in their timeline if you actually read their update.

  13. Re:The Plus stands for Ads on Subscription-Based 'Hulu Plus' Is Now Official · · Score: 1

    But you aren't paying for the content, just the access to those channels. The cable bill pays for the wire in your house to the cable company. The ads on TV are from those networks themselves. With Hulu, I'm paying $10 to the networks themselves, not a middleman, since Hulu is owned by the networks.

  14. Google doesn't charge for an opinion on Doctors Seeing a Rise In "Google-itis" · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I can get a free estimate from an auto mechanic, but have to pay a specialist just to ask me 10 questions and take my pulse & blood pressure (which I can do for free at most super markets) ... I'm going to Google my symptoms first so see if I can save $100+ from a doctor just telling me "take some aspirin and drink plenty of water." If doctors are so concerned, maybe they should offer preliminary screening services at a competitive price as Google ... free.

  15. Re:IMO E-Ink is way over hyped. on Here Come the Linux iPad Clones · · Score: 1

    "B&W, low contrast, 1 second refresh. Let's just say I wouldn't buy stock in E-Ink." Because technology never improves and always remains exactly the same as its initial consumer level implementation? I guess people who didn't buy stock in PC companies because they had 320x200 B&W text-only displays are sitting smugly now because they didn't waste their money on that worthless PC market.

  16. iPad not an eReader replacement ... on Here Come the Linux iPad Clones · · Score: 1

    Saying the iPad & its clones will kill off dedicated eReaders which have specialized hardware that cannot be replicated with software, is like saying the desktop PC will kill off the video game consoles. Whereas the opposite has come true ... video game consoles have pretty much killed PC gaming, and have themselves become less specialized. Reading while staring into a light bulb is not fun after a couple hours ... particularly when you're going to have to be tethered to an outlet more often. We're more likely to see eReaders that incorporate color & faster refresh rates to accomplish more tasks than we are seeing an iPad or clone render the e-Ink eReader market dead. The iPad is ultimately targeting a different market than the eReaders. There may be cross-over, but for people who want to read digital books, eReaders will be better ... for people who have an iPad and want to read a book, it'll be "good enough".

  17. Re:They call them geeks on The Rise and Fall of the Geek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I call myself "geek" with much pride.

    I think 20 years ago, yeah, being a "geek" was a bad thing. But, in the past several years, "geek" has become tres chic, especially after the rise of the Internet and the personal computer invading everyone's home. Hell, now if I call myself a "geek", I'm Mr. Popular with people coming up to me asking me all kinds of stupid computer questions, and in gasp of the stuff I have on my computer (such as 6 CDs worth of MacGyver episodes).

    And, "geek" is only a word. It has the meaning you give it. If you take offense to the word "geek", then that's something you have to deal with yourself. To me, I am a proud "geek" ... it's a purely positive word to me. Someone calls me a "geek", I say "damn straight!"