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User: cheesybagel

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  1. Re:Oe noes! A compiler bug! on Linus Torvalds: "GCC 4.9.0 Seems To Be Terminally Broken" · · Score: 1

    The bug happens to manifest on version 4.9.0. How many Linux kernel versions have you know to be bugfree.

    GCC is the most robust compiler around. Don't compare it with ICC which breaks compiling anything other than microbenchmarks.

  2. Re:How about the cell characters? on Do Apple and Google Sabotage Older Phones? What the Graphs Don't Show · · Score: 2

    Let me guess it doesn't support all the 4G frequencies modern phones do.

  3. Re:Weird premise on Do Apple and Google Sabotage Older Phones? What the Graphs Don't Show · · Score: 1

    It does get slower with upgrades man. I have an iPhone 3GS and it is way slower after the upgrades than when I bought it. To the point I way forever for applications, even Apple's, to start, scrolling is jerky. Even the phone startup and shutdown are slower.

    Sometimes I feel like the graphics driver is not optimized and the binaries have been compiled with the wrong processor flags and aren't being scheduled properly.

  4. Re:Not Just Phones on Do Apple and Google Sabotage Older Phones? What the Graphs Don't Show · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When the old firmware has security issues like the Apple SSL bug it is a bad idea not to update the firmware.

    I do suspect they do not even bother compiling the binaries for the older architecture by switching a couple of compiler flags though. The performance difference is just too big.

  5. Re:I am also amazed. on SLS Project Coming Up $400 Million Short · · Score: 1

    They only started actually building something now. Before that it was paper studies in an office. That cost millions a year.

  6. Re:Cost on "Magic Helmet" For F-35 Ready For Delivery · · Score: 1

    Yet in the end Japan lost the war because their industrial power was much inferior.

    Guess where is that industrial power today.

  7. Re:I'm curious on "Magic Helmet" For F-35 Ready For Delivery · · Score: 1

    The F-104 Starfighter was supposed to be a cheap Mach 2 fighter. It was precisely that. It was also designed in record time with nothing but drafting boards and sliderules. It was just accident prone. The F-35 has taken forever to develop, costs more than an F-22 per unit, is slower than the F-104 Starfighter from the 1950s. It uses less fuel and has more advanced weapons. That is about it.

  8. Re:It was pretty cool in its day on The Almost Forgotten Story of the Amiga 2000 · · Score: 1

    You can downmod other people and ignore facts you want you little pseudoanonymous shit. It seems you prefer to keep to your idea of what happened instead of reading the link the other guy gave you which clearly shows the EGA version of The Secret of Monkey Island came before the VGA version but the reality is still the same. Here have a quote from Ron Gilbert himself:

    2) I was playing the VGA version that was released after the original EGA version. The original original version used 16 colors and the inventory was text only.

    http://grumpygamer.com/stuff_a...

    Idiot.

  9. Re:Bugs... on "Magic Helmet" For F-35 Ready For Delivery · · Score: 1

    I would not bet on it being the last fighter. There are already proposals for a 6th generation fighter floating around such as the Boeing F/A-XX.

    The pilots have g-limits but it is certainly possible to increase speed or reduce fuel consumption.

  10. Re:I'm curious on "Magic Helmet" For F-35 Ready For Delivery · · Score: 1

    The F-35 was supposed to be cheaper and sold to US partners. Sort of like the F-16.

    It turns out it is costing more per plane than the F-22 however.

  11. Re:Watch the F-35 get blown out of the skies on "Magic Helmet" For F-35 Ready For Delivery · · Score: 1

    Also most of their airforce was composed of utterly obsolete Mig-21s.

  12. Re:Watch the F-35 get blown out of the skies on "Magic Helmet" For F-35 Ready For Delivery · · Score: 1

    Iraq did not have the Archer (R-73) or Adder (R-77) all aspect missiles available. Had they had those on Su-27 or Mig-29 platforms the result might have been a lot different.

  13. Re:Astronomy, and general poor night-time results. on Laser Eye Surgery, Revisited 10 Years Later · · Score: 2

    I will consider doing the surgery once I see ophthalmologists doing it to themselves. For whatever reason most of them choose not to do the surgery.

  14. Re:It was pretty cool in its day on The Almost Forgotten Story of the Amiga 2000 · · Score: 0

    You just aren't old enough to remember the EGA version came out before the VGA version.

  15. Re:If on Print Isn't Dead: How Linux Voice Crowdfunded a New Magazine · · Score: 1

    They can advertise Android eq.

  16. Re:It was pretty cool in its day on The Almost Forgotten Story of the Amiga 2000 · · Score: 0

    For example when Monkey Island came out there was no VGA version. The best you could get was 4 color CGA graphics while the Amiga had more colors than that. Same deal with the sound when the PC version had FM synthesis in Adlib while the Amiga had 4-channel PCM digital audio.

    The best experience for Monkey Island is installing the much later VGA version with Roland MT-32 audio. But for some games a VGA version never came out and the Amiga version of the game is still superior to the PC version in some way.

    Once VGA and SVGA became commonplace the PC had better graphics. But the Amiga had better graphics than PC CGA or EGA.

  17. Re:Free market economy on US Senator Blasts Microsoft's H-1B Push As It Lays 18,000 Off Workers · · Score: 1

    More often than you would think it does. If the trading partner is a supplier then conquering it may reduce import costs. If the trading partner is a consumer it is not like you cannot find someone else to consume your products.

  18. Re:Local testing works? on States That Raised Minimum Wage See No Slow-Down In Job Growth · · Score: 1


    But what all the violence of the feudal institutions could never have effected, the silent and insensible operation of foreign commerce and manufactures gradually brought about. These gradually furnished the great proprietors with something for which they could exchange the whole surplus produce of their lands, and which they could consume themselves without sharing it either with tenants or retainers. All for ourselves and nothing for other people, seems, in every age of the world, to have been the vile maxim of the masters of mankind. As soon, therefore, as they could find a method of consuming the whole value of their rents themselves, they had no disposition to share them with any other persons. For a pair of diamond buckles, perhaps, or for something as frivolous and useless, they exchanged the maintenance, or what is the same thing, the price of the maintenance of a thousand men for a year, and with it the whole weight and authority which it could give them. The buckles, however, were to be all their own, and no other human creature was to have any share of them; whereas in the more ancient method of expense they must have shared with at least a thousand people. With the judges that were to determine the preference this difference was perfectly decisive; and thus, for the gratification of the most childish, the meanest, and the most sordid of all vanities, they gradually bartered their whole power and authority.

    The Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith.

  19. Re:Local testing works? on States That Raised Minimum Wage See No Slow-Down In Job Growth · · Score: 1

    The curious thing is even Adam Smith knew trickle down economics were plain bullshit. The fact is the wealthy already had their basic needs covered with the amount they spent. Any additional money they spend buying toys more likely than not will be buying crap from outside the US and thus funneling wealth outside the US. Case in point: where did Steve Jobs buy his yatch?

    When income taxes were high a lot of the wealthy funneled the money into their corporations instead which ended up being a better deal overall rather than buying more useless shit.

  20. Re:Local testing works? on States That Raised Minimum Wage See No Slow-Down In Job Growth · · Score: 1

    What would happen is everyone else's wages would go up as would inflation. The idea that raising the minimum wage would increase unemployment assumes the state cannot increase the money supply which is plain bogus.

    Of course what it would also means is that in the long term that minimum wage would be worth the same in real terms as the current minimum wage...

  21. Re:nice job on "Intelligent" Avatars Poised To Manage Airline Check-In · · Score: 2

    Clippy check-in:
    I see you have some bags. Would you like to hear about our wonderful in flight services?

  22. Re:Silly argument on US Senator Blasts Microsoft's H-1B Push As It Lays 18,000 Off Workers · · Score: 1

    When you say H-1B salaries you mean the salaries that the person working gets paid with or the money Microsoft pays to some Indian intermediary company that actually pays the person doing the job much less?

    Plus how much of the money Microsoft pays that Indian company gets back to the people at Microsoft doing the hiring as kickbacks?

    Plus how much does Microsoft pay in an H-1B if they want to lay him off?

    etc.

  23. Re:Oberon ,Modula 2, Pascal on US Senator Blasts Microsoft's H-1B Push As It Lays 18,000 Off Workers · · Score: 1

    Blech. Not a fan. Too verbose.

    I will admit there were some interesting concepts in Modula-2 and the later languages like separation of interfaces from implementation but programming in those languages felt a lot like using a straitjacket.

  24. Re:Australia? Canada? Hello? on US Senator Blasts Microsoft's H-1B Push As It Lays 18,000 Off Workers · · Score: 1

    WWI was a mess because they wanted to use Napoleonic War era infantry tactics at a time where armies had machine guns.

    All infantry soldiers back then were treated like disposable crap to feed the machine guns and artillery. It had nothing to do with where they came from.

  25. Re:Australia? Canada? Hello? on US Senator Blasts Microsoft's H-1B Push As It Lays 18,000 Off Workers · · Score: 1

    A lot of it is due to geography and some is due to scale. After WWII and the breakup of the European Colonial Empires no European nation could have the economic muscle to compete against the US. The exception was the USSR which, at the time, had about the same population and a lot more natural resources.