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User: h3llfish

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Comments · 295

  1. Re:What is the point? on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Feel About Recording Your Entire Life? · · Score: 1

    You would not be asking what the point was if a worst-case scenario involving your child went down, and video of the event was nearly instantly uploaded to remote servers. You could stick with GPS only, but don't you think you'd have a better shot at the most favorable possible outcome if you had video, too? Or even if you couldn't change the outcome of events in any way, the video of your child's life could very easy go from trivial to one of your most treasured possessions, heaven forbid.

  2. Re:Watch them on Ask Slashdot: Good Low Cost Free Software For Protecting Kids Online? · · Score: 1

    There is no software that can protect a you from another person who thinks it's amusing to find something disgusting on his device, and then tricking you into looking at it, just so he can laugh at your horrified expression. Many people are simply jerks. I wish it was possible to protect kids from the awful stuff that is out there. It's not.

    I don't blame you for trying to do what you can. I just know that I never sought out violent and gross content, but I definitely saw it. When I was in elementary school, no one had access to the internet, but kids were finding ways to get their hands on "Faces of Death" on VHS. There's no software to prevent that. I wonder if you wouldn't be better off exposing your kids to violence in a controlled setting and then talking to them about what they saw than you are keeping them totally innocent, and then leaving them to deal with their initial exposure to horror on their own.

    Furthermore, I know that when I was a lad, as soon as I was aware that I was being "restricted" in some way, getting past that restriction became my new mission in life. I'm sure your children are clever. They will probably defeat the software in some novel way that you didn't imagine.

    What the software does get you is the ability to say "ah well, I tried". And that does have some value, I suppose.

  3. Re:Watch them on Ask Slashdot: Good Low Cost Free Software For Protecting Kids Online? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good point. Drinking poison and exposure to human sexuality are very similar experiences, and have exactly the same type of consequences. To make sure that your children avoid all "inappropriate" materials, be sure to freak the fuck out if anything sexual should should come to their attention. This will help them to achieve a healthy sense of disgust and shame, so that they can be normal and happy.

  4. Re:All part of the plan. on Support Site For Hospital Respirators Found Riddled With Malware · · Score: 2

    Idiot. You don't just change your operating system on a whim in a medical environment. For one thing, the hospital or other institution probably doesn't even own the device, and so has no ability to change the OS. Even if they did, the device probably can't run a different OS. And even if it could, the institution would have to validate the new OS to ensure that it performed all of its functions correctly. Yeah, just change your OS, because a hospital is pretty much the same thing as your home network! Dipshit.

  5. Re:Well, if they're going to generalize, I am too on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    So "Lady Chaterly's Lover" and a 1080p movie starring Alexis Texas are the same thing? I think they're the same only in the sense that traveling by horseback is the same thing as traveling in an F-22.

    I share your skepticism regarding the mental health industry. I can't think of too many other highly paid professions where it is acceptable to fail most of the time. But the facts that Zimbardo is attempting to explain are pretty unambiguous: women now outperform men at every level of education. Why? It's easy to take potshots at "shrinks", but a lot harder to come up with your own theory to explain the phenomenon.

  6. Re:Can You SHow Me on Hobbit Film Underwhelms At 48 Frames Per Second · · Score: 2

    One thing that I found very strange about BBC productions of this time was that they would use video for the studio sequences, and then film when they went outdoors. As a child, I found it jarring to have both in the same program.

    I also remember being about 10 years old and complaining to my mother that Chico and the Man did not look "real". My mother had no idea what I was talking about, but my father figured out that they had switched from video to film. What looks "right" is usually a matter of what one is used to. I seem to recall hearing that some people complained about color films when they came out. Higher frame rates will be the norm in a decade, I am absolutely convinced.

  7. Re:Yet Another Terrible Flamebait Slashdot Summary on 88-Year-Old Inventor Hassled By the DEA · · Score: 1

    Yawn.

  8. Re:Yet Another Terrible Flamebait Slashdot Summary on 88-Year-Old Inventor Hassled By the DEA · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Nonsense. There are other ways to purify water that do not involve the ingredients to make meth. So your death toll is zero, and your "useful product" is easily replaceable. Typically well thought-out Libertarian thinking.

    Bob Wallace is a drug dealer. Do you think he would have earned 100 thousand a year without those "Beavis and Buttheads" buying his product by the case? Surely not. He profited from the sale of harmful drugs to anyone with cash. No, he wasn't out on the street, but he was only a couple of levels removed. I don't think the law was nearly harsh enough on him.

    If you don't agree with me, you may not have seen first hand the damage that meth does. Perhaps you have not lost someone you dearly love to meth, as I have.

    Clearly, the law as it stands now is a total failure at controlling meth use. I'm open to trying new approaches. But allowing retirees to line their pockets with the suffering of others is not the way forward.

  9. Re:The emperor has no clothes! on Retailer Calls Rivals' Bluff On "HDMI Scam" · · Score: 1

    And we here on /. love to say it, again and again, because it makes us all feel so darned superior. How many stories about the folly of premium cables do we need? Was there one single person who reads this site that wasn't already clued in? I get it already. I got it before the numerous stories were posted here - I'm not a blithering idiot! Congrats on that, me! Ouch... I think I just tore a rotator cuff from patting myself on the back.

  10. Re:Why Do You Hate America? on Trumpet Winsock Creator Made Little Money · · Score: 1

    I now see the error of my ways! Of course we shouldn't give this Winsock fella any money... if he deserved it, the invisible hand of the market would have bestowed it upon him. And if someone steals my bike, well, I suppose that's the market at work as well! All is as it should be in this, the best of all possible worlds... thanks for the delicious Kool-Aid.

  11. Re:I'm sure he did fine... on Trumpet Winsock Creator Made Little Money · · Score: 1

    What you "imagine" about my opinions is incorrect. Some people do deserve a million dollar paycheck. And even if I happen to feel that a person is not worth that much, that's not the same as saying they should work for free. Not even close. There are many, many numbers between zero and a million.

    If you feel under-valued, then demand more pay. Take action. Making angry and incorrect assumptions about me isn't going to change things.

  12. Re:I'm sure he did fine... on Trumpet Winsock Creator Made Little Money · · Score: 1

    Obviously the value of labor is not simply measured in hours, which is why I also mentioned the feasibility of someone else doing the work. Software engineers are valuable, doubtless, so he certainly deserved to be paid more than someone who had spent the same amount of time making pizza, which also creates value but is something that far more people are able to do.

    A dollar a person is low? Thinking like that is why Bill Gates is so rich.

  13. Re:I'm sure he did fine... on Trumpet Winsock Creator Made Little Money · · Score: 3, Informative

    But why does he deserve millions of dollars? How many hours did he spend working on this software? I suspect not enough to justify a million dollar paycheck. If he hadn't written it, would someone else? Surely. So how big of a payday does he deserve? Obviously, there are a lot of people in this world who contribute little and get millions anyhow, so I would much rather see this guy be rich than some brainless beauty or Wall Street crook. But the best of all possible worlds would be one where people are paid a fair amount for a day's work.

  14. I'm sure he did fine... on Trumpet Winsock Creator Made Little Money · · Score: 2, Interesting

    once you consider the fact that it must have been pretty lucrative to have "author of Winsock" on his resume. Not all of the financial rewards of creating something are direct, and not all are financial.

  15. Why do you care? on Web-Based Private File Storage? · · Score: 1

    You'll be dead, after all. We are all food for worms. Get over it.

  16. Re:My only question is... on HDMI Labeling Requirements Promise a Stew of Confusion · · Score: 1

    Wow... you have right and left TVs? Nice! What do you use them for? I like to play video games and watch tv at the same time, but I just have a tv connected to htpc, and then a pc and xbox on my coffee table. That's great for me, but the limit of my rig is that I can't play video games with friends and watch tv at the same time (unless the visitor sits on my lap, and I don't rule that out). So is that what you do, or something far more sinister? Please, do tell.

  17. Re:My only question is... on HDMI Labeling Requirements Promise a Stew of Confusion · · Score: 1

    >>Please give me my distinct audio and video cables back, I hate having a bottleneck.

    I don't know how your video card works, but mine gives me the option to turn off the audio over hdmi feature. The audio goes through my soundcard if I want... same as it always did. It's just that now I have the *option* of using one cable.

    I do agree with you about the weight distribution... it seems like the jack on my monitor bears all the weight of the cable, and having had usb ports go bad on me, I don't want that happening to my new monitor, rendering it less useful, since it only has an hdmi and vga input. It seems like an hdmi cable with a 90 degree turn right at the end would help a lot, but I haven't bothered to look for one yet.

  18. Re:Seriously? on Sound As the New Illegal Narcotic? · · Score: 1

    Hey, there are legitimate medicinal uses for dihydrogen monoxide! Plus, it just plain feels good when you drink some before Pink Floyd show! Why shouldn't I have the right to crack open a frosty cold bottle of DHMO after a hard days work? Don't judge me, you insensitive clod!

  19. Re:ClamWin on Stand-Alone Antivirus Software? · · Score: 0

    I'm called on to remove malware frequently (at least once a week), and it's been my experience that ClamWin misses more malware than it catches. Plus, if your flash drive is write-protected, then how can you update to the latest definitions? If you aren't using the latest definitions, again, you're probably going to leave some malware behind. If you're able to update the flash drives frequently, then that second one is not an issue.

  20. Re:Gartner is shilling on Time To Dump XP? · · Score: 1

    VB6? That's nothin! My company's main product is written in VB2. I am not joking! Many of our customers just upgraded to XP, from the Windows 98 machine that had served them well for over 10 years. Windows 7? What does that do for me again?

  21. Re:And this is different... how? on Taylor Momsen Did Not Write This Slashdot Headline · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Were things so much better in the days of William Randolph Hearst? Hardly! The whole "kids these days" thing is just tiresome.

    What these J-school types never seem to mention is that there is far more real news out there now than ever before, due to the amateurs. For any major news story, there are hundreds and hundreds of photos online for you to puruse, taken by unpaid de facto "journalists", and page after page of blogerific commentary. Who is credible and who is a partisan windbag remains, as ever, for the reader to decide.

  22. Re:Someone who's not lazy... on Google Stops Ads For "Cougar" Sites · · Score: 1

    Dude... Dude, mountain lion is not the preferred nomenclature. Felis Concolor, please.

  23. Both of the guys who ran it were hard core... on Is OS/2 Coming Back? · · Score: 1

    Those were not guys, they were nuns (so the confusion is understandable).

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmQ3f1PRnw0

    It was good marketing, in the sense that it got your attention, but it was awful in the sense that it told you nothing about why you would actually want this, or what it does.

  24. Magneto! on Magnetism Can Sway Man's Moral Compass · · Score: 1

    I always thought that Magneto's "magnetic personality" power was stupid. How does having control over electro-magnetism give you control over other people's actions? Stupid! Or is it?!? Next they'll publish a story about radio-active spiders and their numerous health benefits...

  25. Re:Lightweight! on Drunk History Presents Nikola Tesla *NSFW* · · Score: 2, Informative

    That is incorrect. It's certainly a highly potent alcoholic spirit, but it has no hallucinogenic drugs in it. That part is pretty much made up. It's basically just regular booze. It's certainly nothing like Psilocybin mushrooms.

    This site has a pretty good FAQ:

    http://www.wormwoodsociety.org/