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User: ProdigyPuNk

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Comments · 93

  1. Re:Excellent time! on May 16 Now Earliest Date For Endeavour Launch · · Score: 2

    ...NASA officials said via Twitter. Really? Twitter !?

  2. Re:Interesting criminal justice system in the US on Man Gets 10 Years For VoIP Hacking · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's millions of people that WANT to be in this country. Why would we want to keep those whom have already shown themselves to be criminals?

  3. Stupid criminal... on Man Gets 10 Years For VoIP Hacking · · Score: 4, Funny

    Pena is the first person to be charged by U.S. authorities with VoIP hacking, but he almost avoided prosecution. He skipped bail after his arrest, and was only captured after his Mexican girlfriend turned him in in early 2009.

    I've said it before and I'll say it again. NEVER, EVER let your girlfriend know what is going on if you are commiting crimes/running from the law/etc. It gets you in trouble every time.

  4. 20%? on Competition Produces Vandalism Detection For Wikis · · Score: 1
    I'm sure it's relatively easy to find 20% of the incidents of vandalism when it's a blatant 'rip out half the page and write profanities' sort of thing, but even those results aren't that great. They can 'turn it up' a bit and catch a higher percentage, but that seems to be a slightly bad idea. If wikipedia is based on information from the community at large, I really doubt the people that insert such knowledge will be thrilled when their edits are deleted immediately.

    Also, what about more subtle vandalism, the kind that's hard to detect? A few edits that introduce bias in an article, for example. It's this reason that college students everywhere read wikipedia to get a general idea of a topic, and then go elsewhere to places they can actually cite in a paper.

  5. Re:Different, not necessarily better. on Digital Radio Mondiale, a Better Standard Than US-Adopted IBOC? · · Score: 1

    You got the context wrong here. Was talking about the radio stations themselves, not the consumers.

  6. No one is thinking about the big losses here... on Facebook Unveils Details of Downtime · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's look at the important thing here with this outage: How many cows, pigs, chickens, cats, goldfish, etc were made to suffer? I know my girlfriend couldn't take care of her virtual cats, and their litterbox ended up full. They were not at all happy. I'm sure the same thing played out across thousands of FarmVille, MyPets, etc accounts. Please, won't someone think of the animal?

  7. Re:Different, not necessarily better. on Digital Radio Mondiale, a Better Standard Than US-Adopted IBOC? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    True, but at least with hybrid DRM you aren't stuck paying outrageous royalty fees to a company backed by your big-station competitors.

  8. Re:not very technical on Facebook Unveils Details of Downtime · · Score: 4, Funny
    You've got to read some of the comments posted in that thread, it's hilarious.

    Anoesj Sadraee It's great to hear and see that big companies like Facebook are so open with what they do. That's rare, very rare. Thanks!

    Anne Uriarte ~facebook is stiLL sooo sLow for uz irr! >;'((

    Phil McBride this site is becoming less secure lately... hackers are becoming more and more intelligent, i would know, cuz im a white hat lol

  9. Official Technical Details on Facebook Unveils Details of Downtime · · Score: 3, Funny
    You are using an incompatible web browser. Sorry, we're not cool enough to support your browser. Please keep it real with one of the following browsers:

    Obviously, the error was caused by too many people not keeping it real.

  10. The Anti-IBOC site is an interesting read. on Digital Radio Mondiale, a Better Standard Than US-Adopted IBOC? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seems like these guys really know what they are talking about. Not only are they criticizing a position - they actually back it up with a bit of science. It really is disgusting to see any proprietary format, complete with royalty payments, forced by the government onto the populace. Makes me hate Clear Channel, et. al. even more.

  11. PR Glitter on Inside Apple's Anechoic Testing Chambers · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The linked techcrunch article sure does have some pretty pictures, but it just makes it that much more sad that Apple missed something with their million-dollar test chambers that any left-handed person will notice in a day or two.

  12. Great on German Airports Use Bees To Monitor Air Quality · · Score: 1
    FTFA:

    Could bees be modern-day sentinels like the canaries once used as warning signals of toxic gases in coal mines?

    Just what we need, there will be swarms of honey bees at airports, in parking lots, and at work, all testing the air quality. Somehow the whole "swarm of bees" thing scares me more than the actual pollution - at least canaries were cute.

  13. It's still mostly used for calls... on iPhone 4 News Roundup · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps Apple (and others) need to shift emphasis back towards the actual calling features of their phones. Who wants a phone that drops calls if you hold it wrong ? It's great that it has new software, etcetc, but any phone I would consider buying needs to include basic features like better than average reception, a decent sounding speaker/mic, and most importantly, does not drop calls if you touch it in it's no-no spot.

  14. Re:Yet another argument for Open Source. B-) on Arrests For Selling Poison-Ware In Spain · · Score: 1

    How often does anything that looks like an obfuscated C contest entry actually get committed to a repository ?

  15. GPS Is New! on California Tracks Parolees With GPS, Then Ignores Alerts · · Score: 1

    “We have stated several times that GPS is an evolving science, where technology and best practices continue to be fluid,” Hinkle said by e-mail. “This is a new policy, and as CDCR leads the nation in

    Now their ineptitude makes sense... I didn't realize that GPS was still an evolving standard with constantly changing technology. Maybe these guys need to hire some devs from Twitter/FaceBook/etc ?

  16. Re:I will submit on Guggenheim To Showcase YouTube Videos · · Score: 1

    With Debian Squeeze flash *usually* works (in IceWeasel/SwiftFox), but occasionally the sound will glitch and repeat the same half a second sound over and over again for about 5 minutes at a time. That's when I break out some techno and scream "REEEEMIXXXX!" ...You should try that some time ;p

  17. New genre of games ? on Video Games Linked To Reckless Driving · · Score: 1

    Perhaps we need a new genre of driving games. Anyone remember Driver, where the cops would leave you alone so long as you stopped at traffic lights and whatnot ? We need that, only if you do get in a high speed chase you almost always lose, and your xbox/playstation/etc is deactivated for the length of your would-be prison sentence. Maybe that'll get through to the kids ;p

  18. Companies will WANT their employees to use this ? on The Matrix For Businesses · · Score: 3, Insightful

    FTFA: Players start out as citizens of an empire, and can collaborate and compete with other players to become leaders of young companies or presidents of countries. Depending on their interests, they can also become criminal overlords, military strategists, bounty hunters, or business tycoons. The game itself will be free, but Novel will charge money for transactions within the game, like when players want to purchase clothing, weapons, or housing. “Our innovation is that players have never been given the ability to explore real business practices and politics before,” Olson says. “We’ve never had the ability to do anything but kill stuff before [in MMOs].” ...Doesn't sound like something I would want my employees doing instead of, you know, being productive...

  19. Not losing much... on Adobe (Temporarily?) Kills 64-Bit Flash For Linux · · Score: 1

    I've only ever used 32bit versions of Flash on Linux, and even those have tons of bugs (or just plain don't work). I can only imagine what the 64bit version is like. I really doubt that it worked any better - Flash on Linux sucks, in general, and whatever makes it die quicker is okay with me.

  20. Re:They really ought to save their money on BP Buys "Oil Spill" Search Term · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're out of your mind if you think they are going to get the bill for "what they have destroyed". I'm sure they'll be fined an amount that SEEMS like a lot to everyday joes, but is in fact next to meaningless to a huge corp. like BP. A big enough fine should preclude them from declaring any profit for that quarter - wait and see, I'm sure they'll be declaring plenty of profit...

  21. LINPACK on Latest Top 500 Supercomputer List Released · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think this is the first benchmarking article I've read in years where the organizers actually know what their benchmark program does: http://www.top500.org/project/linpack. Refreshing to see real statistics (as good as they can make them), instead of the normal crap that is most hardware articles anymore.

    I wonder what kind of score these beasts would get on 3DMark ?

  22. Re:Even though Fedora is my desktop of choice on Fedora 13 Is Out · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Best thing I ever did when I installed Debian was to rip out Pulse Audio. Haven't had an audio related problem since then. It's really not needed for 99% of the applications in the repos. Do yourself a favor and just ditch it.

  23. Direct Link to Changelog on Fedora 13 Is Out · · Score: 4, Informative
  24. This mission was not a failure. on NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander Killed By Ice · · Score: 5, Informative

    Remember that the lander was not meant to last through the Martian winter, and in fact was only tasked with a three month long mission. It lasted five months, which was longer than expected. The newer rovers are supposed to be able to survive for much longer, but this mission accomplished all that it was supposed to.

  25. Really? on BP Prepares Complex "Top Kill" Bid To Plug Well · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know what I really can't understand ? Why wouldn't there at least be tested methods for this sort of thing? I can't believe that industries are allowed to do things like drill for oil underwater (which is complex and when failure can cost billions USD and human lives) without having set, tested plans in place in case of this sort of catastrophe.