Slashdot Mirror


User: pathological+liar

pathological+liar's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
239
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 239

  1. Re:Quoth Mark Pincus, CEO, Zynga on EA Sues Zynga For Copying Sims Game · · Score: 2
  2. Not sure about the name... on Meet the Robisons and Their Low-Cost RepRap Kit (Video) · · Score: 0

    What are their users? Reprapers? Reprapists?

  3. mod summary troll... on Ask Slashdot: Old Dogs vs. New Technology? · · Score: 1

    The irony is that when you get a bit older you'll realize what stupid questions those are.

  4. Their wishlist on XBMC Developers Criticize AMD's Linux Driver · · Score: 2

    What kind of piss-poor cpu can't decode mpeg2 in several times realtime?

    The article implies h.264 acceleration for levels less-than-or-equal-to 4.1 works fine as well. Scene rules for x264 releases say respect 4.1, and most hardware players top out at that as well... so who's clamoring for it, and why?

  5. Re:O RLY? on Why Bad Jobs (or No Jobs) Happen To Good Workers · · Score: 1

    I make enough that I'd max out the EI cap here, though that's still something like 20-30% below the median income for families in the area according to statcan. It's almost like different areas have different costs of living, huh?

    I live in a small but comfortable apartment, but around here that goes for slightly north of $2/sqft. If I move further away from work I can get slightly more sqft, but it doesn't get any cheaper because the difference is eaten up in transit costs. Food and misc other expenses eat up most of the rest. The only way I could afford a kid is if my wife was bringing in a second income.

    Yeah, I'm the 1% :P

  6. Re:O RLY? on Why Bad Jobs (or No Jobs) Happen To Good Workers · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately the employer doesn't exist in a vacuum, and the grocery store, my landlord, and the various other services I consume are all convinced they also deserve a premium.

  7. Re:O RLY? on Why Bad Jobs (or No Jobs) Happen To Good Workers · · Score: 5, Informative

    Citation needed.

    Up here in Canada, employment insurance currently maxes out at $485 per week. That's taxed, of course, so what you actually get comes out to something slightly over $1600/mo.

    If you live in the middle of nowhere and own your property, that might possibly be comfortable. Maybe. For some definition of comfortable. $DEITY help you if you live in an urban area though, and you rent or have a mortgage, or have dependents.

  8. Re:This is news? on Bloomberg, WSJ: Student Aid Increases Tuition · · Score: 1

    1. The guy who designed the freeway overpass, your doc, your dentist, and your kid's teacher all did a bachelor's degree at some point. It may well have had no particular application towards whatever professional/graduate degree they ended up getting, I know plenty of people with arts degrees who have Master's degrees in CS.

    2. Nobody grows up aspiring to be a shelf-stocker at Walmart. Your 'over-educated' (as if there is such a thing) waitress is stuck in a dead-end job with no use for the skills she (and you) paid for because of the grotesque un/underemployment rate. The world needs ditch diggers too, but a depression doesn't mean we should stop educating people.

    I can't believe someone is seriously proposing we need *fewer* educated people.

  9. I bet they don't want to be janitors either. on Study Shows Teen Gamers Like Tech, But Don't All Crave IT Jobs · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why go into the white collar equivalent?

    I (sometimes) enjoy my work, but glamorous it ain't.

  10. Headphones hurt my productivity. on Do Headphones Help Or Hurt Productivity? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unfortunately I work in an open concept office, so it's either headphones or listen to everything else around me, which is infinitely worse.

    Ever notice how the people who decide on an open concept office usually have a door to theirs?

  11. Re:No, video games and porn are escapism. on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    Thing is though, waking up super early every day won't make a job appear out of thin air. Working super hard doesn't guarantee my wage will match inflation, let alone be close to what a market wage is (or was.)

    Personally, I can't complain too much. I don't enjoy my job, and the pay is low, but I make enough to get by and have a little extra for entertainment. I shudder to think how fucked I might be if I'd been born a couple of years later and was trying to break into the job market now. I subsist, but I don't thrive. Savings scraped together get wiped away at the meerest hint of a rainy day. Owning instead of renting is a pipe dream.

    Marriage has never been high on my list of priorities, but the idea that I could settle down with someone and raise a couple of kids any time soon is laughable. It's the complete lack of financial security that's fucking this generation.

  12. Re:In that case I think it is great on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 3

    That hasn't been my experience. The majority of my relationships have started (talking, getting to know people) well before I slept with the person.

    I look for someone who shares my interests and is fun to be around. The plural of anecdote is not evidence, but my friends behave the same way.

    Can your friends not meet men because of porn, or is it because they're pursuing solitary activities like jogging listening to music?

    Is it video games, or that women often have strange ideas of how courting works in the modern world? I've been *thrilled* when women approach me for a change.

    That, and a worrisome phrase from your original post. These friends, when they meet a guy, do they let things progress or do they try to push the relationship? That "it's time to settle down" reeks of a ticking biological clock and/or desperation, and it's no more attractive to men than it is to women.

    My $0.02

  13. Re:And the Female side of things? on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    Actually, I think that's called being a douche.

  14. No, video games and porn are escapism. on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unemployment and wage stagnation are ruining a generation.

  15. Over 7000 ports on Bug Busters! OpenBSD 5.1 Released · · Score: 0

    ... unless you don't feel like putting X on a server, in which case building from ports is unsupported and sometimes obviously broken.

  16. Is this significantly different from SRT? on Is the Time Finally Right For Hybrid Hard Drives? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't imagine it is. Anandtech found it wasn't that difficult to evict stuff from the cache you actually wanted. Not to mention that if you start copying anything especially large (your MP3 collection, or installing a couple games from a Steam sale, say) you nuke the cache and are back to mechanical HD performance.

    Personally, I prefer to do it manually. Stuff I want to load fast (Windows, applications, games, my profile folder) sit on an SSD. Bulk data sits on a mechanical drive.

  17. So why do I trust the notaries? on SSL Certificate Authorities vs. Convergence, Perspectives · · Score: 2

    These systems depend on notaries, why do I trust them any more than the CAs? The Perspectives notaries are... AWS and a handful of servers from a single American university (MIT)

    Not exactly diverse.

  18. Re:Fileserver on Why We Don't Need Gigabit Networks (Yet) · · Score: 1

    Slashdot I know, but neither of you actually read the fucking article, did you? They're talking about last mile connections, not your home LAN.

    Still, I don't know many computers built in the last few years that DON'T have gigE, and even though 802.11N doesn't come anywhere close, it still delivers >100mbit in real world settings... so the idea that most computers can't handle it is inane. Yeah most people can't stream 100MB/s to disk or something, and lower powered gear or cheap chipsets may not be able to max it out. But who cares? They can still do an order of magnitude better than what we have now.

    These guys must have the imagination of a turnip if they can't see a use for faster transfers. The reason there's no killer app for gigabit residential connections is that most people can't get them, and that when they can the transfer caps are (relatively, at least) anaemic. Fix that and who CAN'T think of a use for it? Just off the top of my head, how about better quality streaming video? Forget dinky little 3-5mbit streams, you could pull down blu-ray quality 1080p all day long.

  19. Re:Pedestrians are green and can bleed red, too. on What's the Carbon Footprint of Bicycling? · · Score: 1

    You're sort of right. The problem is bad drivers, regardless of their choice (or lack) of vehicle.

    Everyone has a bad driver story, a bad cyclist story, a bad pedestrian story. They're all hazards, and it doesn't matter who's worse. They're all bad.

  20. I haven't noticed a problem either on OS X Lion Ships With Faulty NVidia Drivers · · Score: 1

    I've seen SOME strange video behaviour since upgrading (usually when resizing a window) that I assumed was driver-related, but I haven't had any panics or lockups. Why do Mac users always blow issues like this way out of proportion?

  21. Re:HD formats are a kind of DOS attack on Beyond HDTV · · Score: 1

    Your theory is kind of nutty.

    An ISO of a bluray disc might be 30-40GB. The feature, with 30 different subtitles, 7 different audio tracks, and occasionally a 480p stream tossed in for shits and giggles is usually 20-30GB. Re-compress it with x264 and strip out the extra tracks, and you're usually down to 8-12GB, even if you leave the audio untouched.

    The first 2TB disk I found on newegg costs $70. It will hold around 80 average-sized bluray features (untouched), or around 200 average-sized rips. In comparison, assuming you manage to find every bluray you might ever want on sale for $10, that's $800 worth of untouched rips, or $2000 worth of re-compressed ones.

    Storage isn't the limiting factor here :P

  22. "Powerful Darwinian Forces" huh on The Rise of Polymorphic Malware · · Score: 3, Informative

    Whale is more than 20 years old now, and it was polymorphic. An issue of 40hex from 1993 provides source for a polymorphic engine. This isn't a new development, the technique was "mastered" 20 years ago :P

    Maybe they've seen a recent spike in it, but... who cares? Well, unless it means they'll put a little more thought into AV than signature-based bullshit. "heuristics"-based detection that isn't a complete joke, for a start.

  23. Re:Another reason for vacations: crooked employees on IT Crises vs. Vacation: Sometimes It Isn't Pretty · · Score: 2

    Investment banks do that already. Guess it's not a magic bullet :P

  24. Re:Danger, Will Robinson! on Jailbreakme 3.0 Released · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, why learn a lesson about backups, when you can just buy a new phone, replace any applications you bought, and then... uhh... learn to backup the new phone.

    Why is this modded insightful?

  25. Re:Untethered jailbreaking? on Jailbreakme 3.0 Released · · Score: 1

    Like they fixed Stefan Esser's bug that (iirc) was open for every 4.3 version?

    This bug was stolen and leaked prematurely, who knows, it may well have been in iOS5.