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User: 200_success

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  1. Re:I can't wait for the Linus Torvalds rant over t on OEMs Allowed To Lock Secure Boot In Windows 10 Computers · · Score: 1

    Linus Torvalds has gone on record saying that Tivoization is OK. I don't see how he can rant against bootloader locking without backtracking on that stance.

  2. They should have called it Googly Eyes on Google Glass Is Dead, Long Live Google Glass · · Score: 2

    Public interest would have been higher if they had picked a more appropriate name, like Googly Eyes.

  3. Re:"AI-generated" is an overstatement on AI Is Funny - a Generative Joke Model · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, the examples are probably not a representative sample of the output. Humans probably picked a few good ones out of a set of mediocre ones.

  4. Sunlight on The Man Who Convinced Us We Needed Vitamin Supplements · · Score: 2

    It is now known that sunlight exposure leads to the production of nitric oxide, which is important in blood pressure regulation. The health benefits of nitric oxide are independent of Vitamin D, and in fact may outweigh the risk of skin cancer.

  5. Why not full service? on Electric Car Startup 'Better Place' Liquidating After $850 Million Investment · · Score: 1

    So many service attendants standing around! You would think that one of them could wash your windows while you wait for the battery swap.

  6. Sensationalist summary on French Police End Missing Persons Searches, Suggest Using Facebook · · Score: 5, Informative

    The summary is missing the important qualifier "... unless the person may be in danger". So, apparent abductions and unexplained disappearances would still get police assistance like you would expect.

  7. Translation on Eric Schmidt: Google Will Continue Investing In UK Even If Taxes Raised · · Score: 2

    What he means is, "The UK can raise its tax rate all it wants. It makes no difference to Google, since we will structure our business deals so that they are not subject to UK tax anyway."

  8. Still more efficient than resistive heating on Is Bitcoin Mining a Real-World Environmental Problem? · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, if your house uses electric heaters, you could mine Bitcoins in the winter with no additional waste of energy. You might as well get some computation out of your electricity before it turns into heat.

  9. Re:Hackers reported that the malware "just worked. on Apple Hit By Hackers Who Targeted Facebook · · Score: 1

    Write once, run anywhere.

  10. No buttons! on BlackBerry 10 Review: Good, But Too Late? · · Score: 2

    If Steve Jobs weren't dead already, he would be so regretful of the fact that he could have produced a phone with no button on the front.

  11. 999 on ITU To Choose Emergency Line For Mobiles: 911, or 112? · · Score: 1

    999 is easy to pocket-dial. It was good for the days of rotary-dial phones, but not so good for keypads in a pocket.

  12. Pirate Party on Ask Richard Stallman Anything · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Pirate Parties have recently started to become a considerable political force in northern Europe. Do you support them? Could you suggest a better name for them? What advice would you have for their political strategy?

  13. Unexpected methods to promote freedom? on Ask Richard Stallman Anything · · Score: 2

    Mr. Stallman, thank you for all the hard work you have done to promote computing freedom. I know that many people consider your views to be excessively dogmatic, but more often than not, your ideas and predictions turn out to be correct. Thank you for steadfastly holding to your principles while most people opt for convenience, as you have made the world a better place.

    It appears to me that Apple, of all companies, has ironically played the biggest role in ending the use of DRM in the music download industry. As I see it, the music companies were so afraid of Apple's rise in market share that they decided to sell everything DRM-free rather than let Apple control the distribution channel with its FairPlay scheme. As a result, it is now the norm that music tracks purchased online are unencrypted and carry at most a watermark.

    I acknowledge that Apple is horribly hostile to computing freedom in so many ways. It's therefore ironic that their dominance with the iTunes Music Store has led to the end of DRM in the music download industry, purely through capitalistic means and without preaching or legislation. My question, then, is this: Could it be possible to promote computing freedom by gaming the market (playing companies off each other) rather than preaching on a soapbox?

  14. Demand for air travel is elastic on Airlines Face Acute Pilot Shortage · · Score: 1

    If air travel becomes more expensive, alternatives like teleconferencing become more attractive. Leisure travelers may choose closer destinations or skip vacations altogether. People can also choose other modes of transport, which in the U.S. usually means driving.

  15. Italian waste disposal on Sweden Imports European Garbage To Power the Nation · · Score: 1

    Southern Italy: where toxic waste is reclassified and dispersed in random places in the countryside.

  16. Re:Apple needs to stop the thin on the desktop on Shake-up at Apple: Forstall Out; iOS Executive Fired For Maps Debacle? · · Score: 1

    The original iMac was the first popular computer to ditch the floppy drive, SCSI, ADB, and expansion card slots. The newest iMac just continues that tradition.

    I agree, though, that neglecting the Mac Pro for so long is sending the wrong signal to the professional power user market. Apple must not care any more, now that their main profits are coming from iOS.

  17. Two parties don't offer enough choice on US Election's Only VP Debate Tonight: Weigh In With Your Reactions · · Score: 2

    In Canada, you essentially vote for a party. Due to strong party discipline and the indirect way the Prime Minister is selected, it doesn't matter much who you actually send to Parliament, but rather which party he/she represents. In the US, the candidates actually matter a little.

    Also, two parties are not sufficient for a healthy democracy. Suppose a politician of your preferred party does something corrupt while in office. When election time comes, do you vote for him/her anyway? Or will you vote for the opponent, whose values are the opposite of yours, just to toss the bum out? Politicians know that in a two-party system, they can get away with a lot of crap and still get re-elected.

  18. Workaround on Mozilla To Bug Firefox Users With Old Adobe Reader, Flash, Silverlight · · Score: 2

    To bypass this nagging, just continue to use an old release of Firefox.

  19. Which meaning of "free"? on Open Source Beer Served Cold, With a Heated Licensing Discussion · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is that Free as in beer, or Free as in beer?

  20. Re:Hair? on Scientists Find Gene That Predicts Happiness In Women · · Score: 1

    That would explain dumb blondes.

  21. Sticking with Windows 7 on Windows 8 Tells Microsoft About Everything You Install · · Score: 2

    The world moves on. You can't live in your sheltered world forever. One day, you'll buy a computer that comes with Windows 8, and Windows 7 drivers aren't available for it. Then software comes out that requires Windows 8 or later. You would have a hard time living with Windows 2000 today. The same thing will happen with Windows 7 in a few years.

  22. My conclusion: No to financial transaction tax! on This Is What Wall Street's Terrifying Robot Invasion Looks Like · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From this, I would draw the opposite conclusion: we should oppose proposals for a financial transaction tax at all costs! If high-frequency trading is the disease, then a tax on transactions is not the cure. It would make government addicted to the new revenue and therefore dependent on the high-frequency traders, thus ensuring that those leaches will never go away.

    A better solution, I think, would be to require stock exchanges to operate on a once-per-second clock. Any trade orders that arrive within each timeslice would be executed in a random order, so as to defeat any advantage the high-frequency traders would get by being fast.

  23. Chinese math on History Will Revere Bill Gates and Forget Steve Jobs, Says Author · · Score: 1

    The Chinese term for 13 is "ten three" (the word for "ten", followed by the word for "three"). Furthermore, every digit is one syllable. It really does make learning easier for children. The ease of learning is even more apparent when learning multiplication, since there is a certain rhythm when you recite the multiplication table.

    Gladwell actually does address the concept of cumulative advantage, as applied to sports. Kids with January birthdays are more likely to do well in children's sports leagues, and the slight advantage they have at every stage in their sports training leads to a preponderance of professional athletes with January birthdays. Likewise, Chinese children learn to count earlier, start learning multiplication around first grade, and can move on to more advanced topics. This is not to say that all Chinese people are good at math, though. There still exist analytical and artistic students, and generally Chinese school systems allow students to specialize in math/science or the arts after elementary school.

  24. US on UK Home Secretary Bans US Martial Arts Expert · · Score: 1

    I believe that the analogous crime in the US is called disorderly conduct.

  25. Re:Security Through Obscurity on Canadian Mint To Create Digital Currency · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, the Mint is currently not publishing details on how the cryptography works. I would assume that the system relies on the assertion that the paying chip will only generate a MintChip Value Message with a valid Transaction Authentication Code after decrementing the value stored on the card.