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User: rtb61

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  1. Re:AWESOME! on Global Carbon Dioxide Levels Reach New Monthly Record · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Underwater front property valuations are in for a rather rude and sharp decline. As this increases, denials and attacks will increase (they will become extremely loud, aggressive and distorted, pretty much anything goes), to allow the rich and greedy to dump those properties, into a market of the gullible. Low lying water front at this time is a truly horrible investment and governments who approve construction in low lying coastal areas are corrupt as hell. Yes, developers will be seeking to develop and on sell land with multi-million dollar new buildings on it, knowing full well, they will be flooded out because it is more profitable than just dumping the land alone.

    Other bad investments, coastal tourism companies, hotels chains with lots of at risk properties. Port facilities will of course be in major turmoil, needing to either relocate or where higher land is closely accessible shift from fixed dock design to a floating dock design. So no ifs just when, how bad and how fast and a real hold your breath when it comes to major methane releases which could trigger extreme compounding surges (fortunately the methane does readily break down over time, unfortunately, no where near fast enough and as flooding increases so does displaced organic matter and hence more methane is generated).

    Never make the mistake to think the deniers are disbelievers, they are not, all they care about is how much they can make and how much power they have and totally disregard the consequences of their actions upon other people. A whole bunch of deniers are actually believers and are simply denying now to continue destructive practices and to be able to off load at risk investments (a whole lot of pension funds are going to be burdened by at risk investments and basically glug, glug, glug).

  2. Re:let me weigh in on this on The Challenge of Getting a Usable QWERTY Keyboard Onto a Dime-sized Screen · · Score: 1

    The problem is 'QWERTY' not bloody size. Sure after much experience you get to know where the keys are but how many know the full QWERTY alphabet 'QWERTYUIOPASDFGHJKLZXCVBNM' so that you can tab through to get to the letter group you want (reduced number of keys, say 6 or 12 ie next key, 6 ABCDE next FGHIJ next). So you drop QWERTY and go back to your ABCs, so that a reduced key set works . This creates other problems for multiple devices so it makes sense to start pushing ABCs as a option on devices where it is purely governed by software.

  3. Re:Always turn off auto update anyway on Microsoft: No More 'Patch Tuesday' For Windows 10 Home Users · · Score: 1

    Business customers will simply get updates after 'home users'. Home users will be crash test dummies who will simply be blamed for configuring their machines poorly or using it insecurely. M$ is running into harsher more competitive and demanding business market and hence is working to look better for them, so the monopoly market becomes a crash test dummy market (with all their machines reporting problems back, basically paying to be lab rats).

  4. Re:$50 billion is not Huge, anymore on Report: Microsoft Considering Salesforce Acquisition · · Score: 2

    Paying taxes is about paying for the revenue opportunities those countries create. Don't want to pay the taxes, 'THEN FUCK OFF', you are not entitled to the revenue opportunities those countries create. Want to generate revenue in the 'HIGH VALUE' markets, then pay taxes in those markets where the revenue is generated and do not steal infrastructure, a customer base with money or the social services of that customer base. Countries need to start killing of companies that steal access to markets without paying, corporate deaths sentences with asset seizure. That corporate tax greed is depriving citizens of social services that ensure health and well being. Corporate greed is killing a percentage of the population every year, it is time to hold them accountable for those deaths, when they cheat on taxes that pay for those social services.

    Want out, fine, 'FUCK OFF' but don't expect access to that market any more. Sell your shit to third world sweat shop workers, good luck with that.

  5. Re:Some good data... on Google Can't Ignore the Android Update Problem Any Longer · · Score: 2

    You seem to forget it is open source. If a manufacturer wants to sell cheap phones with a old version of the software with a smaller overhead, then it is up to them to patch it, the patches are out there and really it doesn't take all that much effort, just a couple of skilled staff members as a part time effort. The Android system provides choice for everyone, manufacturers, application producers and customers. Choice inherently is fragmentation but seriously calling choice fragmentation is blatant PR=B$ and likely stems from vested advertising interest from say some other company that provides little or no choice.

    So Apple to customers, we give you no choice 'er' fragmentation, buy it like we sell it too you and pay to much for it or piss off but believe us when we tell you, that you will look cool and sophisticated when you flash our stuff about the place and not look at all like a victim of marketing and a certain gullibility when it comes to paying inflated profit margins.

  6. Re:This seems batshit crazy. on Police Can Obtain Cellphone Location Records Without a Warrant · · Score: 2

    Privacy, what about accuracy. My cell phone location data had me travelling to locations, I had never been, even overseas. Live in Adelaide, never left Adelaide since having the phone, but location data showing me travelling to Singapore.

    So moron courts, how about placing some real legal risks on those providing that data, to ensure accuracy. So what is the penalty for the company providing inaccurate data, how many millions of dollars in penalties would they pay for providing inaccurate data, that threatens a conviction for what could be extremely serious offences. What is the legal warranty that the data provided is accurate, what is the penalty for failure in this regard, what right of challenge of accuracy of data does the defendant have.

    Proper legal defence, prove the accuracy of the data to beyond a shadow of a doubt and I already know from first hand experience how inaccurate that data really is. Lawyers really need to put companies on legal spot when they provided data of questionable accuracy.

  7. Re:Streisand Effect on Cyberlock Lawyers Threaten Security Researcher Over Vulnerability Disclosure · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Never forget lawyers. Lawyers first advice, you need us to advise you, so that you can pay us for each and every phone call, for each and every letter read and response written, for each and every email read and response written and, for researching your problem (you pay them to learn how to solve the problems they create for you). The problem here is reaching for the lawyers, the advice they give you and that you pay for, usually will be to pay them more and they will wrap that up in some sell able story. Once you reach for the lawyers, you have already lost. So they did not shoot themselves in the foot, their lawyers tricked them into paying the lawyers to shoot them in both feet.

  8. Re:They reall don't mean this on AI Experts In High Demand · · Score: 1

    AI is actually far different to data analysis, it is all about different layers or levels (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQyXeLSL0II ;) ) of decision making. So you start off with very simple solutions and if they are good enough you stop there, if not enough you use those outputs in the next higher or adjacent level or and add more different levels for more outputs, until your arrive at the answer. Not based upon the current level of analysis only but also on all the previous ones, it becomes a composite solution, which readily varies processing time with regard to the complexity of the question and complexity the final solution. The greater the number of possible solutions you can generate, the greater the ability of the artificial intelligence, by using composite outputs from different levels analysis, you greatly increase the number of potential outputs.

  9. Re:The 30 and 40-somethings wrote the code... on Recruiters Use 'Digital Native' As Code For 'No Old Folks' · · Score: 1

    You do understand in the world of statistics and reality, you represent the trailing edge of the bell curve for your age group. You can readily guess my age and I distinctly remember for decades going through that cringe when people my age and quite some years younger seemed to want brag about their lack of computer skills, how their children knew more, a badge of ignorance. Things are tough out in the employment market and there are a whole bunch of unemployed, past middle age computer illiterates and you don't want them clogging up your recruitment process. Having been on the other side, all those applications are a real pain and the reality is you want only one application and one interview, the right one and how quickly you can thin down hundreds or even thousands of apps down to that right one is useful. So yes, toss out a few of the good because you can get rid of a whole lot of the futile at the same time is going to happen most of the time. Just sucks to be associated with digitally inept but that is the way it is.

    New employment question, what are your gamer tags on what game servers, we would like to see how you play (this is actually far more accurate than looking at social media and will reveal far more about a person over an extended period of interaction). Steam in reality does count for far more than other social media sites, how well people play together will define how well those people will work an old rule that works well in the digital era, if you pay attention. In a digital sense, Geeks tend to hang well together regardless of age, nerds not so much.

  10. Re:Time on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    The biggest energy demand in a house, air conditioning (fully air-conditioned, not just one room), any idea at all how many HP (horse power for slow Americans, rather than kW) a large domestic air conditioning unit is (single digits) and now compare that to the HP of car (triple digit). So power to spare in some locations, not all (yep, snow is a real problem). So for most locations no if and you choose whether or not to take the risks but when others don't that energy insurance will get expensive (likely over the long term cheaper to buy a second smaller stand by battery for lighting). Flip side of course brown outs or black outs of mains, no longer a problem, this will get much worse over time, as they take more short cuts to maintain profit with reduced revenue, especially maintenance and customer support short cuts.

  11. Re:give it up on In Second Trial, Ex-Goldman Sachs Programmer Convicted of Code Theft · · Score: 1

    Face, the target should be thankful, that a major corporate political player is not claiming the defendant murdered the data and should be executed. Clearly they feel infringed upon and are using their control of the US department of in-Justice to persecute the individual. I am surprised they did not go the espionage route if the code just appears in another country.

  12. Re:Another bad parenting example on Unable To Hack Into Grading System, Georgia Student Torches Computer Lab · · Score: 1

    As long as you include genetics in bad parenting, you are likely right. Yep, pretty much, some kids are just born to be bad, psychopaths and what final frustration triggers what action is often just a matter of chance and access to guns and ammo.

  13. Re:Lies, all lies. on Bill Gates Owes His Career To Steven Spielberg's Dad; You May, Too · · Score: 1

    Cough, cough, IBM did the work, M$ just ran off with the benefits due to a very, very shonky contract. IBM could have still wiped M$ out if they had not been stupidly greedy when they released their own much better OS. Lotus blew it by not reducing prices to compete, same with Word Perfect. Xerox also gave away ideas for free. So rather than M$ success it was others failures. So luck and yeah corruption with regard to corporate lawyers had a lot to do with.

  14. Re:How Detriot Got That Way -- and Why It Will.... on How Silicon Valley Got That Way -- and Why It Will Continue To Rule · · Score: 2

    Cheaper to live there brings to the fore, desirability of location to attract employees (cheaper to live there not so much, as cheaper to live means it likely sucks, supply and demand you know). So can companies attract better people and at lower costs by providing a better live, work and play environment, not only within their facilities but in the community at large. So locating according to this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W..., likely makes the most sense if you want to attract and keep the best people. Ain't the bosses that make companies (time to drop the main stream media celebrity illusion), it's the workers (that is the reality).

    Note, one huge advantage with locating at the best locations away from major competitors, it makes it much harder for staff (and their families) to leave to go to those competitors especially if those competitors are in cheap ass undesirable locations in the middle of a desert (you'll keep the most long term productive and lose the greediest often medium term destructive).

    So pick a city from the lists, check regional language use, check for competitors and, then check costs. Equipment can go anyone, good staff will be much more choosy and where does count a lot for them. Give the staff good quality of life and they are unlikely to leave to go to a competitor at a worse location, you might still lose them to local industry at that location but at least they will not be going to major competitors. Don't forget things like universal health care (means you don't have to pay for it and can discount their wages because they don't have to pay for it either). Climate, beaches, parks, recreation, choice of schools etc. (smaller capital cities will generally work best).

  15. Time on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Time will alter everything. Reality is, the more batteries produced the cheaper they will become and much more interestingly, the more batteries installed, the fewer people paying for electrical mains infrastructure, the much more expensive per user it becomes. That economic boulder rolling down a hill, faster and faster and faster, inevitable. Tesla still needs to do a complete system, ready to install by franchised installers (ensure quality installs), keep it simple. Not to forget, the Tesla power pack would be a strictly utility device, much like adding air conditioning, or a verandah, it adds capital value to the property. So forget the incumbent PR=B$ about measuring it against electricity charges because that is only part of it's value, it has real capital asset value and that value also needs to be added in, to more effectively compare it what is in affect rent and burn (rent your part of the infrastructure and burn your capital inputs).

  16. Re:CHANGE EVERYTHING! on My High School CS Homework Is the Centerfold · · Score: 1

    Who cares about the emotive content of the image. That makes absolutely no sense at all. Why isn't a more effective image sought, one that will more effectively test video compression techniques, specifically to make flaws more visible, in pattern and colour transitions. Holding to that image is a stupid as holding to QWERTY keyboards.

  17. A New Hope on NASA Gets Its Marching Orders: Look Up! Look Out! · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hopefully this is a sign the space race is back on. Far more to do out there, then to squabble back here with, who can destroy the world the most number of times with their military, a real dead end and I mean dead end. Something is needed to drive humanity, to focus it's efforts and who is the greediest and most selfish or who can kill the most, are insanely, stupendously pointless and self destructive of society.

    Making use of the resources of the solar system, is not about bringing stuff back to earth, it is about humanity expanding it's horizons further out. The difference between dwelling upon your genitals (hollywood et al) or dwelling upon your mind (NASA et al).

  18. Re:Detector, please on Unnoticed For Years, Malware Turned Linux Servers Into Spamming Machines · · Score: 1

    Especially in light of this particular comment on a forum https://www.atomicorp.com/foru.... Nothing new here at all.

  19. Re:Cost of Programmers Cost of Engines on Should Developers Still Pay For Game Engines? · · Score: 1

    Upfront cost? Most engines are charging percentages of revenue which means they can quite readily chew up 100% of the profits ie if your margins are only 10%, then 5% of revenue means they will be demanding 50% of your profits. How can programmers be so bad at math. If anything the crytek models looks suspiciously cheap. Can a programming house with 100 programmers get one subscription or do they need 100. How far out into the future will the subscription and its conditions hold, ie at least 3 years and preferably ten years but the customer can drop it at any time.

    The current percentage of revenue model is nuts and should only be around .1% not 5%. Imagine M$ bringing in that model on spread sheet software, we demand 5% of your revenue if you want to use our software.

  20. Re:They are burning down a city on Inside the Military-Police Center That Spies On Baltimore's Rioters · · Score: 1

    Kind of late for that mate, it is already happening and unless you intend to pass on shortly you will be a part of it getting much worse, good luck, you'll need it in America. Emigrate early, rather than late because whilst the asshats that caused it all the 1%, most certainly will make sure they can leave with a substantive portion of their wealth intact, their victims the 99% not so much. Collapsing Empire's trying to force the continuance of their waning dominance, inevitably become self destructive. The US is becoming such a laughable example of this it will simply be easier to refer to them as characters out of star wars, the evil empire, the president as Emperor and his Darth as vice president and futile and corrupt congress and senate and of course the US military, the storm troopers, "the tighter you squeeze the more they will slip through you fingers".

  21. Re:Sanders amazes me on Bernie Sanders, Presidential Candidate and H-1B Skeptic · · Score: 1

    'ER' Dude you are electing a representative president that is meant to implement and administer the laws provide by the senate and the congress, not fucking god. What the fuck are you talking about except typical PR=B$ hyperbole ad hominem attacks. Yeah sure, a bunch of very corrupt rich exploiting the poor laws need to change in order to rebuild the core, the middle class, but all the president can do is implement the policies provided and either do that well or do it incompetently or do it some what competently but extremely poorly because actions where based upon very unsound and corrupted information designed not to provide solutions but feed insatiable vested interests (corrupt advisers produce corrupted outcomes).

  22. Re:I want this to be true, but... on New Test Supports NASA's Controversial EM Drive · · Score: 1

    Easiest hypothesis to explain the reaction, a teeny tiny undiscovered particle, likely it would explain a lot of other things as well. So the real question is, could a particle be small enough that it is impossible to directly observe outside of it's interactions with other particles. It is there because we can observe the outcomes of interactions but it is not there because it is simply too small to directly observe. Those interactions would likely be indirect field actions rather than direct actions. The measure of the engine less likely to be concentrated power output but how large an interaction the engine can produce, an engine that operates more outside of itself rather than within itself.

  23. Re:Style guide on American Psychological Association Hit With New Torture Allegations · · Score: 1

    How about this reference http://www.apa.org/pubs/info/r..., yet they still train psychologists to work in marketing targeting children. Did the American Psychological Association, play with the torturers and in the most sick fashion imaginable the victims? Was there a buck in it? You betcha, it's the American way, your American dream and fuck their nightmares.

    So which is worse damaging the psychology of children to sell products or participating in the psychological torture of suspected terrorists, pretty fucking much, equally evil. Unless of course those suspected terrorist are also minors, yes, the US military managed to achieve that level of evil, with the aid of professional psychologists. Well, at least Darth Cheney managed to truly earn his spot in history and so did Uncle Tom Obama for failing to prosecute.

  24. Re:Never a good idea on Climatologist Speaks On the Effects of Geoengineering · · Score: 1

    The catch with the whole idea is they are just forecasts based upon limited range of scientific theories and do not take into account everything that could happen. For example major steps could be taken to reduce solar inputs, only to be followed by a significant impact that throws a lot of dust into the atmosphere and now the opposite is the problem. A major solar flare could also cause significant environmental impact, that could again compound any active attempts at cooling the atmosphere.

    The only sound method of control is to stop doing things that could cause problems, rather than take risky actions that could be negated or have far more impact than expected because of unexpected climatological inputs, even a major volcanoes could cause severe problems if it occurs in conjunction with major attempts at active cooling of the planet.

    Scientific theories explain would should happen under a very set specific range of circumstances and are not a crystal ball of what will happen at some point in the future taking into account, everything that could happen to the sun, earth's geology and all possible astronomical events. So the idea is to use scientific theories to reduce risks on this planet and not to increase them.

  25. Re:acceptance is the only fair outcome on Scientists Have Paper On Gender Bias Rejected Because They're Both Women · · Score: 0

    Hard to tell if it was an attack, perhaps the unnamed reviewer was just in a position to get closer to one of the scientists mentioned and wanted to be asked to review the paper as an opportunity for relations. With them of course not knowing who wrote the crappy review.