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User: RKBA

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Comments · 568

  1. If you value your job on Ask Slashdot: Using Company Laptop For Personal Use · · Score: 1

    If you value your job, bring your own laptop or tablet computer for personal browsing.

  2. Re:It's not just the textbooks on Math Textbooks a Textbook Example of Bad Textbooks · · Score: 1

    If they do as good of a job accrediting textbooks as they do accrediting teachers, it would be a catastrophe and total waste of time and taxpayer money.

  3. Re:Serious addicts who "decide to use" it? on Vaccine Could Cut Heroin Addiction · · Score: 1

    Although I can't cite you an example offhand, I'm pretty sure a few sex offenders have voluntarily asked to be castrated in lieu of a long jail sentence. Yes, it's too Clockwork Orange-y for my taste also, but we are entering a new dark age where things are similar to those in Kubrick's movie and Orwell's book 1984 (ie; a Fascist police state). The United States Constitution essentially no longer exists and is universally ignored. Most of the people who graduate from today's government education camps can barely read and have never read the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights. Have you? Has anyone?

  4. Re:aren't required to respect the rules? on Obama's Privacy Bill of Rights: Just a Beginning · · Score: 1

    I would have rated you funny if you weren't already at 5, Insightful. ;-)

  5. Re:Innovation, "digital native" style. on Developer's View: Real Life Inspirations Or Abstract Ideas? · · Score: 1

    "Hey, lets make another Myspace, only more betterer! We will call it Facebook."

  6. Re:Bad summary: the airline, not the government on Damaged US Passport Chip Strands Travelers · · Score: 1

    American Airlines used to be my favorite airline, but after reading this I will avoid them like the plague.

  7. Re:Radiation hardening on Physicists Create a Working Transistor From a Single Atom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A transistor one atom in size would be much less likely to be hit by an ionizing particle because of its tiny cross-sectional area (ie; only one angstrom in diameter).

  8. Re:Prices ARE different on Why Do All Movie Tickets Cost the Same? · · Score: 0

    Nothing, because infrared isn't visible to the human eye. An infrared LED looks the same to the human eyeball whether the LED is on or off. I think "formfeed" meant a red LED rather than an infrared LED such as those used in security cameras for invisibly illuminating an area at night.

  9. Re:Not comcast on The 'Cable Guy' Now a Network Specialist · · Score: 1

    I once had a Charter installer tell me that I should have driven to their office and picked up the Charter Internet cable modem (the thing my router plugs into) and associated cables, connectors, etc., and installed things myself instead of taking advantage of their free installation. I just may do that next time, if for no other reason than to avoid dealing with Charter's A-hole installers.

  10. Employment Contract? on Ask Slashdot: Handing Over Personal Work Without Compensation? · · Score: 1

    Read your employment contract to see if anything like this is covered. If not, it's reasonable to expect the company to pay you some money for your time; however, more likely they will refuse and perhaps eventually fire you because of their hard feelings towards you (ie; not getting something for nothing).

  11. Re:And here are the predictions for 2012 on 2012 and the Technology Blahs · · Score: 1

    Amen. Where are my mod points when I need them, arrrgghhh! You deserve some upvotes.

  12. Spitwads or rubber bands? on A Right To Bear Virtual Arms? · · Score: 1

    So what will gamers use to battle each other, spitwads and rubber bands?

  13. Re:Wow... on Aerospace Corp Pays $2.5m To Settle Rogue Software Dev Case · · Score: 3, Informative

    I once had a Section Manager who came up with a "cook book" of hours each employee should charge to each of the various project numbers regardless of what they were actually working on in order for the Section he managed (several hundred employees) to always balance its budget exactly. Please note that there are very strict government rules against allowing, much less demanding that employees charge their time to anything other than the job number for the work they are actually doing, and many of us rebelled against this obviously immoral and illegal procedure of his. Eventually he was caught, but there was no public censure. After a short while he was transferred to some other management position at the government funded company.

  14. Re:Next mod... on Terahertz Wireless Chip Will Bring 30Gbps Networks · · Score: 1

    A friend of mine almost blinded himself when he was young because he was fooling around with the Klystron amplifier from a microwave oven. He thought it was turned off, but it was not. It "cooked" the lenses in both of his eyes enough to make them completely opaque. For some reason I'm not clear on, they were not able to replace the lenses as they do in standard cataract surgery, so my friend has to wear very thick eyeglasses, and carry a magnifying glass for inspecting small objects.

  15. Re:But how many of those 700,000 are alive? on Ham Radio Licenses Top 700,000, An All-Time High · · Score: 1

    Yes indeed. I had a ham license in 1961 when I was in high school but let my license expire after I entered college. Now that I'm retired, I'm thinking of taking up the hobby again. I used to be pretty fast with the key, but I understand that these days the ability to use Morse code isn't even a requirement for the test.

  16. Re:Text of AT&T response on AT&T Responds To DoJ Lawsuit · · Score: 2

    Were illegally spying on all those Americans??? Surprise, they still do, except now it's legal!

  17. Re:nobody cares on Another Unreleased iPhone Lost by Employee In a Bar · · Score: 0

    Then Samzenpus is a little late, because reddit has deteriorated so much lately that I've begun visiting Slashdot more often. :-/

  18. Re:And all of this effort will not protect you fro on Protecting a Laptop From Sophisticated Attacks · · Score: 1

    What has happened in the past (and was reported on in the news a few weeks ago), is that a judge orders you to divulge the password(s) and if you refuse he sentences you to contempt of court and keeps you in jail/prison until you do reveal the passwords.

  19. Best of luck Rob. on Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda Resigns From Slashdot · · Score: 1

    As a long time Slashdot subscriber, I wish you all the best in your future life "CmdrTaco". You will be missed (in spite of what everyone says about you, haha! ;-).

  20. Re:Well if they getting comcast tv as well then on Ask Slashdot: Best Wi-Fi Solution For a Hotel? · · Score: 2

    I shop online quite frequently but have never had a credit card number misused because I use disposable Citi-bank "virtual" credit card numbers that are only good for one merchant, expire when I want them to, and have a maximum limit that I can set so that no more than what I specify can be charged to the particular credit card number I generated for that specific transaction with that specific merchant.

  21. Re:Google+ on Popularity Trumps Privacy For Many On Facebook · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I began the sign up procedure but stopped when it got to the point of asking for my real name (or something else personal, I forget).

  22. Re:It has been seen before on Google Pulls Plug On Programming For the Masses · · Score: 1

    Google has been stinking for awhile. Now it's beginning to suck.

  23. Re:Use biological *informed* systems. on DARPA Developing Video Parser · · Score: 1

    The retina certainly does handle a small amount of processing and classification that could probably be mimic'ed with some analog logic, but the bulk of image processing is done in the much more complex visual cortex(although you do mention "visual system" in passing). Also remember that the human brain is an immensely complex analog processor. Analog logic can be simulated with digital logic of course, but digital is much slower depending on the level of precision required. Neurons have a digital component when sending an impulse along their axon, but the timing of the digital pulses depend upon biochemical and electrical analog activity (ie; a neuron is an integrator among other things).

  24. Re:I concur on 'The Code Has Already Been Written' · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You seem to overlook the fact that computer programmers usually have tight schedule and budget constraints enforced by their supervisor or other management they report to, instead of by the customer (the scientist in this case). Get a computer programmer a gig as sweet as a scientist who can take his or her sweet time to do their research and give the programmer that same open ended time frame with decent equipment and no schedule constraints and you would have a much happier, involved, and more responsive computer programmer.

  25. Re:No rage, just a lost customer. on Netflix Deflects Rage Over Price Increase · · Score: 0

    If:
    Power= Work/time
    Knowledge = Power
    time=Money
    Money= Work/Knowledge

    Therefore:
    Knowledge = Work / (Work/Knowledge)
    Knowledge = (Work/1)*(Knowledge/Work)
    Simplifying (work in numerator cancels work in denominator):

    Knowledge = Knowledge