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User: eagle8635

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  1. Re:"the whole notion that we'd have a world's fair on The World Fair of 2014 According To Asimov (From 1964) · · Score: 1

    I was lucky enough to attend the Aichi World Expo in 2005. The "robots" were pretty good, but not really autonomous. Software is were the work needs to happen; and IBM it working on that in a sense. So, well done Asimov. Kinda.

  2. Hinged or 25U on Ask Slashdot: Building A Server Rack Into a New Home? · · Score: 1

    Second (or fiftieth) on the swing out/hinged wall-mount rack, if you want wall mounted, it's the best way to go. (I haven't used them in IT, but I have used sound equipment in a swing out rack and it's great when you need to add or change something quickly). I would avoid a 42U rack in a home environment unless you *know* that you will need all that space (also, many 42U racks will not fit through the average closet door). A good compromise may be a 25U rack, a simple four-post design is very affordable (especially when compared to the overall cost of building a new home) and should provide more than enough space. Utilizing sliding mounting rails and cable management arms should reduce the need for access to the rear of the rack enough that you can just push it against a wall and forget about it.

  3. Re:Time heals all trends on Talking To Computers? · · Score: 2

    I think you've hit on the core problem. Speech would be a very poor input method for our current computer usage models. However, speech could be useful in communicating our desires to a computer, which then carries them out in a much more autonomous fashion than today.

  4. It's like 1984..but with more Kentucky Bluegrass on Officials Sue Couple Who Removed Their Lawn · · Score: 1

    My favorite line from the article:
    "Compliance, that's all we've ever wanted," said Senior Assistant City Atty. Wayne Winthers.
    I damn near coughed up a lung after reading that. Sounds like they want some lawnthink.

  5. Re:Before the dust settles on Southwest Declares Kevin Smith Too Fat To Fly · · Score: 1

    From blogsouthwest.com: "Mr. Smith originally purchased two Southwest seats on a flight from Oakland to Burbank – as he’s been known to do when traveling on Southwest. He decided to change his plans and board an earlier flight to Burbank, which technically means flying standby. As you may know, airlines are not able to clear standby passengers until all Customers are boarded. When the time came to board Mr. Smith, we had only a single seat available for him to occupy. Our pilots are responsible for the Safety and comfort of all Customers on the aircraft and therefore, made the determination that Mr. Smith needed more than one seat to complete his flight. Our Employees explained why the decision was made, accommodated Mr. Smith on a later flight, and issued him a $100 Southwest travel voucher for his inconvenience. You've read about these situations before. Southwest instituted our Customer of Size policy more than 25 years ago. The policy requires passengers that can not fit safely and comfortably in one seat to purchase an additional seat while traveling. This policy is not unique to Southwest Airlines and it is not a revenue generator. Most, if not all, carriers have similar policies, but unique to Southwest is the refunding of the second seat purchased (if the flight does not oversell) which is greater than any revenue made (full policy can be found here). The spirit of this policy is based solely on Customer comfort and Safety. As a Company committed to serving our Customers in Safety and comfort, we feel the definitive boundary between seats is the armrest. If a Customer cannot comfortably lower the armrest and infringes on a portion of another seat, a Customer seated adjacent would be very uncomfortable and a timely exit from the aircraft in the event of an emergency might be compromised if we allow a cramped, restricted seating arrangement." It looks like the incident was cause by the circumstances of his ticket. They're saying that it wouldn't have happened if he hadn't elected to fly standby.

  6. Re:Mass would be a problem on Porsche Unveils 911 Hybrid With Flywheel Booster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That's true, and why I personally think hybrid sports cars don't generally make a great deal of sense. However, from what I've been able to find, the Porsche system is apparently lighter than the equivalent battery-based hybrid system, and in a 24 hour endurance race like the one this car will be competing in, efficiency becomes really important, probably more so than being able to overtake in the corners. That's one of the reasons diesel cars do so well at LeMans, even though many of the gasoline-powered cars can corner faster, over the course of 24 hours the efficiency and straight line speed advantages allow them to win.

  7. Re:Mechwarrior 3 on China Enforces Even Stricter Regulation On Games · · Score: 1

    I thought that too, but I guess 'MW' means 'Modern Warfare' now. But it's still Mechwarrior in my heart.

  8. I've noticed it. on Half Life 2 Stuttering Bug Official · · Score: 1

    I thought initially that it was due to my sub-par hardware, but the stuttering I've experianced coincides with this bug (also that girl's face in the begging wasn't fully rendering, but THAT's probably my hardware).

  9. That's not the issue... on Stern Will Jump To Sirius In 2006 · · Score: 1

    The real issue here is that Howard Stern's show should have reached Sirius over 13 years ago! Oh, you meant Sirius the radio network...

  10. You just need to be more agressive. on Best Buy Says Customers Not Always Right · · Score: 2, Funny
    First, on the rebates, if you take all of five minutes to accually fill out and send in rebates you CAN save money, so far I've saved about four hundred dollars on various rebates.

    Secondly, if you want attention from employees and can't seem to get it, there are two ways to guarantee a conversation with an employee. The first is to dress nicely (collared shirt, nice slacks, belt) and act really confused. They will see a person with money and little technical knowledge and will pounce. The second way to get attention from employees is to look kind of scruffy and act as if you are about to shoplift something. I promise that an employee will come right over and ask in a rather stern voice, "can I help you?"

    The last thing that people seem to be bitching about is the salespeople pushing PRP/PSPs. There are a few ways to avoid this.
    1. don't shower (this is a little gross)
    2. act as if you don't speak English/or are deaf
    3. wear a thinkgeek shirt (whenever I wear my Linux shirts I get A LOT more respect from the salespeople)
    4. start to hit on to the salesperson.
    5. inform them that you are allergic to "stupid" (and then start to cough)
    6. just say yes to whatever they want you to buy, and then when you get to the register, don't buy it!

  11. John Woo is my new hero on John Woo to Direct Spy Hunter Movie? · · Score: 1

    He becomes sexier with each passing day

  12. Re:offsite backups on Gmail Users Get A Storage Boost [updated] · · Score: 1

    Yeah IF it's true I'll be backing up my hard drives to gmail during reinstalls.

  13. centralized on Wiring a Neighborhood? · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    the only thing better than centralization is censorship.

  14. A sad day... on Comcast Fires TechTV Staff · · Score: 1

    The shroud of darkness has fallen on what was once TechTV

  15. IT error? on U.S. Gov Agency Blunders With Keyword Blacklist · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is this the improper setup of a filter? I know that a lot of filters have settings for say, blocking explicit sites (pr0n), but it is possible to tell them to also allow them to visit medical related sites (breast cancer). Did someone not configure it?

  16. Re:Money to burn on Flexiglow Illuminated Keyboard · · Score: 1

    I think I saw a bigger one at CompUSA once. I'm not sure though.

  17. This is not new. on Flexiglow Illuminated Keyboard · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think this product is new, but the concept of a lighted keyboard is not new, they have been selling one on Think Geek for years.

  18. Only for Computerized signals? on NYC Crosswalk Buttons are Inoperative · · Score: 1

    Is it only for computerized traffic lights? That would explain why all the buttons work where I live.

  19. Re:Not from a Pc but used with it... on What (non-PC) Hardware Do You Hack? · · Score: 1

    Ah, yes style over substance, the credo of many (myself included).

  20. Re:Not from a Pc but used with it... on What (non-PC) Hardware Do You Hack? · · Score: 1

    You can also achieve the same effect by using a power on password. (if your BIOS supports it)

  21. We're all using prototypes right now! on Phantom Game Console Presentation · · Score: 1
    Here's the quote i like,

    "He then went on to say that they had but five of these prototypes, which goes in direct contrast with previous statements from Tim Roberts that they "have several hundred prototype models here in the office." Well, perhaps those were earlier (Alpha?) prototypes."

    Yeah, these "alpha" prototypes are known as PCs to the rest of the world. It really sounds like someone's been licking toads.

  22. Re:Not me but a friend.. on Hybrid/Electric Vehicles: Should I Buy? · · Score: 1

    I live in Phoenix, AZ and we just had one of the two pipelines that brings gas into the city break. It started a panic and gas rose to over four dollars (yes American dollars) in some places. It's fixed now and prices are hovering at just under two dollars.

  23. Re:Maybe I have missed somthing... on Florida Proposes Taxing Local LANs · · Score: 1

    They will vote on it using electronic ballots, so they don't have to deal with "dimpled chads" and someone (not me) will hack into their system and screw the vote over anyways.

  24. Re:Huh? on New Longhorn Screenshots Leaked · · Score: 1

    The reason Microsoft is not treated the same as Ford is when it's product is faulty, is that software crashes don't kill people.