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User: MrBigInThePants

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  1. Re:Great. Now the sloth community... on Linus Torvalds: "GCC 4.9.0 Seems To Be Terminally Broken" · · Score: 4, Funny

    No TRUE Slothman would think that funny, laddie!

    (Might as well get the logical fallacies out of the way early...)

  2. Re:no problem on Earth In the Midst of Sixth Mass Extinction: the 'Anthropocene Defaunation' · · Score: 1

    You are being an idiot - probably on purpose.

    If we did not farm cows they would most certainly be extinct also. (their ancestors specifically and therefore the current ones)

  3. Re:Moisture Farmers! on Harvesting Energy From Humidity · · Score: 1

    No, no it couldn't.

    And again, sheet metal plates in cube form.....not exactly cheap....

  4. Re:Moisture Farmers! on Harvesting Energy From Humidity · · Score: 1

    I meant 0.5 cubed or in cube form. Brain fail...

    PS: Nerd! ;)

  5. Re:Moisture Farmers! on Harvesting Energy From Humidity · · Score: 2

    Err....

    0.5m cubic of spaced sheet metal to charge a phone in a mere 12 hours and produce x litres of water.

    Why on EARTH would you want to scale this up??

    Perhaps on a distant, humid planet far from the sun?

  6. Re:So will there be criminal charges? on CDC Closes Anthrax, Flu Labs After Potentially Deadly Mix-Ups Come to Light · · Score: 1

    Lol. My emotions are not at all inflamed in the slightest. Typically i just ignore such but occasionally like to indulge. Please be aware (if you able) that my response was not in anyway for the benefit of the troll.

    I am merely making a very accurate and insightful observation. One whose truth bites deeply apparently. So i will consider this a measure of success.

    Neither of these posts were worthy of a response at all but again, sometimes i indulge.

    And yes. This post is smug.

  7. Re:So will there be criminal charges? on CDC Closes Anthrax, Flu Labs After Potentially Deadly Mix-Ups Come to Light · · Score: 1

    Polynesians tend to be physically larger and their culture's were warlike but that may have had more to do with scarcity of resources on tiny islands.

    Although murder for gain is a human trait as evidenced by all of recorded history. We tend to call it by other names as well: Conquest, expansion, empire building, etc.

    But in the end it almost always is just good old redrum.

  8. Re:So will there be criminal charges? on CDC Closes Anthrax, Flu Labs After Potentially Deadly Mix-Ups Come to Light · · Score: 1

    Then you are a sad and pathetic human being too simple minded to even begin to process it due to the brain damage that prevents you from honest introspection. I honestly pity you.

    My ancestry contains native NZ Maori hence my interest. Maori are essentially Polynesian descendants who became a separate ethnic group in their own right. There is debate as to which of the islands in particular the first Maori migrated from.

  9. Re:So will there be criminal charges? on CDC Closes Anthrax, Flu Labs After Potentially Deadly Mix-Ups Come to Light · · Score: 2

    Because the word "Polynesian" means "many islands" in its Greek derivative. An apt description of a common people's who migrated bravely across miles of ocean to populate a host of islands.

    Information easily obtained from the web also...

    Unless it was a tongue in cheek joke...in which case a bad one.

  10. Re: Umm...damage on Encryption Keys For Kim Dotcom's Data Can't Be Given To FBI, Court Rules · · Score: 1

    I am a NZer also.

    In my mind everyone involved was very naive.

    - The majority NZers are political sheep. If it was not written verbatim in the corporate paper of their choice they don't think/believe it. Its a baaaaad way for a country to be.
    - The police where exceptionally naive in calling out a swat raid on the heresay of the US authorities and the SIS.
    - The SIS were naive to think they could away with this BS without fallout.
    - The government was naive to let this all slip by them.
    - Dotcom was naive to think NZ was a country he could be safe in.

    And you are VERY naive to think London/UK is any better with regards to any of this...

  11. Re:Extreme? on NSA Considers Linux Journal Readers, Tor (And Linux?) Users "Extremists" · · Score: 1

    What I am is More Than Words.

    The NSA are just a Hole Hearted organisation Run with way too much Money. I wish they would just chill out and Play With Me and do the Decadence Dance. If not, then they can just Get the Funk Out.

    Time for me to watch some more Pornograffitti.

  12. Re: Umm...damage on Encryption Keys For Kim Dotcom's Data Can't Be Given To FBI, Court Rules · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Assuming his separation from his wife is not so that she wont go down with the ship and can retain assets etc afterwards...

    I have no evidence for this but I did have to wonder when I heard the news. Also he is cheeky, dodgy and clever enough to do such a thing.

  13. Re:Cool solution looking for a problem on Ask Slashdot: What Would It Take For You To Buy a Smartwatch? · · Score: 1

    I mentioned in my post that I assumed this was so and that a bluetooth ear piece would be required.

  14. Re:Cool solution looking for a problem on Ask Slashdot: What Would It Take For You To Buy a Smartwatch? · · Score: 2

    I think you are being a little closed/small minded about this. You are limiting the domain to historical uses of watches when these are capable of far more.

    In my opinion a technology's true value (after the hype cycle has stabilised) is defined by its utility, cosmetic appeal and price. (there are probably others but they are less important)

    You have artificially limited it to one of those (appeal) and I think this is unfair - especially considering most people no longer wear watches.
    Having said that I personally stopped wearing a watch because I realised I had my phone on me 24/7 and it was no longer necessary. If my watch meant I no longer needed my phone on my person (say in my bag or car instead) this would be a big cosmetic bonus in my opinion. A watch on the wrist is far more appealing than having a bulge in your pocket. (that's what she said?)
    It should be noted that utility and cosmetic appeal are in direct conflict in this product. The smaller and nice looking the watch, the less utility it is likely to have and vice versa.

    Price is a big turn off at the moment. They are FAR too expensive for what they are. For elitists this may increase appeal but for most this will not. One assumes that like most things this will decrease sharply in time so this will improve over time.

    My opinion is that utility will make or break these.
    For example: if I can get to a point where all I need available is the watch and perhaps a bluetooth headset then they have a very solid product IMHO.
    My phone (I assume the watch cannot replace these entirely) can be in my bag or car or tucked away. A glance at my watch (even when driving) tells me if I have msgs, who is calling, etc without having to take my phone out. Those annoying car mounts become unnecessary except for GPS.
    And that is just core phone utility without going into the other more niche features or the addition future tech.

    I am not saying they are a guaranteed success but I AM saying that they could be the reason people start wearing watches in the future again. :)

  15. Re:Awesome! on Federal Judge Rules US No-fly List Violates Constitution · · Score: 3

    Farcical bureaucratic process resulting in the same outcome at more expense in 3....2...1.....

  16. Re:not a record on NOAA: Earth Smashed A Record For Heat In May 2014, Effects To Worsen · · Score: 1

    Nope - not in the way you mean.

    If action was taken right now, with current technology, we could make a meaningful long term impact. The fact that this will not happen is due to lack of will, not lack of ability.

    Now when being pessimistic, people refer to the above as "unavoidable". But this is quite obviously the wrong word since it could be.

  17. Re:All wars ... on China Builds Artificial Islands In South China Sea · · Score: 1

    PS: Now realise in my morning haze I combined your post and the very different one above into one mega post and replied to that as if it was a single post.

    The irony of this mistake is rather awesome though: since my posts are about combining different wars together and treating them as a single war.

    Regardless, I apologise to you the grandparent of this post.

    The great grand parent of this post can kiss my as. ;)

  18. Re:All wars ... on China Builds Artificial Islands In South China Sea · · Score: 1

    Your inability to assume anything else is due to intellectual deficiencies and bias rather than logical means.

    The wars mentioned may or may not be wars - they certainly meet my definitions and I would call them that.

      My point was that gaggling together a bunch of minor wars in different countries which started for different (vaguely related) reasons is not enough to make a war.

    The "Cold War" was not a war. It was a period of hostility between super powers. That is all.

  19. Re:All wars ... on China Builds Artificial Islands In South China Sea · · Score: 1

    And as such was not a war...

  20. Re:All wars ... on China Builds Artificial Islands In South China Sea · · Score: 2

    Also the cold war was not really a war...right guys?...because hostile diplomatic relations is not actually a war?

    People above appear to have forgotten this.

    Perhaps because they come from the society that brought us the "war on"(TM) drugs, terrorism, obesity, aids, jesus, christmas, immigration, gays and a whole host of other things that are in no way at all wars.

  21. Re:Administrators on Teaching College Is No Longer a Middle Class Job · · Score: 2

    This too, but also marketing, the corporate/profit-driven approach and other concerns apart from teaching and research.

    To answer the question: "At a time when tuition prices are rising faster than ever, why are we skimping on the most fundamental aspect of college?"
    Because you allowed your (entire) education system to be run by people who do not have education as the foremost priority.

    The issues with other parts of the education system are of a different nature (e.g. they are run as a cost centre) but the fundamental problem is the same.

  22. Re:Why? on Google Engineer: We Need More Web Programming Languages · · Score: 1

    This WAS going to happen and would have but unfortunately Microsoft killed it.

    Very roughly speaking from memory and summarising a great deal of history to a few paragraphs:

    During the "browser wars" (they were actually the "internet platform wars") M$ decided that the next new monopoly for them had to be the browser. They were highly successful in this and crushed many competitors even though they had a substandard product. Mostly this was because they had a monopoly on desktops and IE was the default and most people were too new/inept to look to an alternative.
    Netscape gave them a good run for their money early on (and had a FAR superior product) but was ultimately crushed due to the anti-competitive nature of the competition.

    Later on it became apparent that the browser was become a programming platform. The emergence over time of the java applet, javascript and flash showed that the browser was capable of running apps inside a sandbox - theoretically without having to download an exe and all the virus problems associated with that (although IE would show time and again in spectacular fashion that they were not capable of delivering this).
    A host of competitors (open or otherwise) came up and of course M$ was pushing its own proprietary solutions which would only work on IE. They also "supported to death" any of the competitors - pretending to support the cross platform standard but in a way that forced them to become single platform. (There was a famous anti-trust court cases over the java version of this.) In addition the core web standards such as HTML and CSS were also corrupted by MS's implementation.
    This all led to a staggering number websites and apps that only ran on IE and left implementers struggling to support disparate "standards". The only reason any of this was possible was, you guessed it, people sitting with the default/standard browser and had a desktop monopoly.
    In amongst this you had flash trying its proprietary take over by side stepping the whole issue with some success, the search engine wars, various browsers and lately the google suite of products. A lot of money and effort went into fighting this war but in the end it was a pointless and fruitless war.

    In war there are always innocent casualties and the effects of this are still present within the web standards you see today: although they are much better than they were. This is the main reason why we don't have the killer internet platform we should - proprietary interests undermined any and all standards.

    This post sounds very anti microsoft and it is, but this here is the core of why MS is and should be considered "evil" - at least for the google definition. You may disagree but I lived through this in both a private and professional capacity.

    I know what I saw...

  23. Re:Democrats voted on House Majority Leader Defeated In Primary · · Score: 1

    What is funny is that your entire electoral system has been so corrupted by the duopoly of parties even the voting system itself is rigged to only allow two parties to compete. And few here seem to see that as the REAL problem - rather than this sideshow.
    People are left arguing about the anal details of how the dem/rep candidates should be allowed to maintain their duopoly (like they have a say in how it works) as if it makes any real difference.

    Truly amazing...

  24. Re:"Physically restricted"? Get real. on US Marshals Seize Police Stingray Records To Keep Them From the ACLU · · Score: 1

    I believe I was using Socratic irony. :)

    From my perspective "this" is nothing different to what has occurred over all of human history. This is not an American thing, this is a human thing.

    The rich and powerful wanting to be more so and using death, destruction, threats and violence to achieve this. With every new age come new tools that are used to achieve the very same aims with even greater ferocity and/or efficiency and/or mass effect.

    When has it ever been different?

  25. Re:"Physically restricted"? Get real. on US Marshals Seize Police Stingray Records To Keep Them From the ACLU · · Score: 1

    Was that during the cold war/vietnam pray tell?

    Or the bit in between with the war on drugs and desert storm.

    What is this "old USA" you speak of?

    I am failing to see what has changed except the technology...

    I am actually being serious here...