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User: speculatrix

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  1. Re:Not all audiphiles are like this on $10K Ethernet Cable Claims Audio Fidelity, If You're Stupid Enough To Buy It · · Score: 1

    now now, don't come here with your rational well-reasoned statements of it being possible to have great sound without spending crazy money!!

  2. US$2500 for a RCA stereo cable from Chord??? WTF?? on $10K Ethernet Cable Claims Audio Fidelity, If You're Stupid Enough To Buy It · · Score: 1

    When Chord announced their latest cables 1m ethernet cable (GB£850 is about US$1300) , and 1m RCA stereo cable (GB£1600 is US$2500), I emailed them asking for some technical details, as if I might be a buyer, but they didn't respond. They probably sensed I had a bullshit detector.

    I had a discussion with their local Trading Standards, a government-run operation that exists to protect consumers, stating that their scientific claims were bogus, and the TS people said that since I hadn't bought the product, and they hadn't had complaints from other people who'd bought the product, and Chord could show them reviews praising their product, my complaint was invalid.

    My working assumption is this: it's like the story of emperor's new clothes. When someone had paid a rediculously high price for cables and believed the pseudo-scientific mumbo-jumbo, they will resist any efforts to debunk it lest they appear a complete idiot. I think it's actually a mechanism in the brain, akin to some cultish religious beliefs and even fanboyism.

  3. Re: YEaah.... on Verizon About To End Construction of Its Fiber Network · · Score: 1

    if two ISPs are evenly sized their peering might be free, but they may still have to pay membership fees of an internet exchange and often renting a ports too. if they're not evenly matched, the larger often charges the much smaller one peering fees, and will try and push them into buying transit too

  4. Re: YEaah.... on Verizon About To End Construction of Its Fiber Network · · Score: 1

    And internet transit doesn't come free either

  5. I have a machine that probably makes this stuff on Scientists Discover Diamond Nanothreads · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I think I have a machine that makes this stuff all the time as a waste product. Unfortunately, it is likely to be quite difficult to extract the nanothreads as they are a tiny part of the residue in the diesel particulate filter in the exhaust of my car's diesel engine!

  6. Baytrail-D boards? on Ask Slashdot: Best Dedicated Low Power Embedded Dev System Choice? · · Score: 1

    http://ark.intel.com/m/product... The Intel Silvermont Atom boards are very electrically efficient and offer surprisingly good performance. You can buy a board for under US$100 and all you need to add is case, PSU, RAM and mass storage. Some boards have VGA, some DVI, with or without legacy serial and parallel, lots of choices. Manufacturers include gigabyte, msi, Asus, supermicro.

  7. Re:Beta testers on OpenSUSE 13.2 To Use Btrfs By Default · · Score: 1

    I've used opensuse for many years, I guess because when I wanted to adopt the linux desktop, a colleague used it so I did too.

    I usually lag behind new releases by months, unless I'm setting up a new computer and so I don't have anything to lose

    our experience at work of BTRFS having poor and inconsistent performance have put me off ever using it personally except as experimental. OTOH, we found ZFS to be very good.

  8. Re:Beta testers on OpenSUSE 13.2 To Use Btrfs By Default · · Score: 1

    pah, ext3 is too new fangled. ext2 was good enough for my grandpa, is good enough for me, and is good enough for my kids. on a serious note, when ext3 was still new, I used to format /boot as ext2 and not ext3 so that all the various rescue disks would be able to fix it.

  9. Ikea style plainness? on Samsung Opens New Apple Store In Australia · · Score: 1

    Apple shops remind me very much of the plainness of an Ikea store, so why haven't Apple sued Ikea?

  10. Re:no, totally wrong on Why Internet Pirates Always Win · · Score: 1

    correlation != causation.

    anyway, surely, if you consider that murder rates lead to execution rates then it simply means they're not executing criminals early enough before they become murderers?

  11. Re:no, totally wrong on Why Internet Pirates Always Win · · Score: 1

    Regulation seems to work decently well in many European countries.

    It's a sad day for someone to consider the EU to be a benchmark of good government.
    I think the French citizenry will be sharpening their guillotine blades come the collapse of the Euro.

  12. Re:Ban libraries.... on What Happens To Your Used Games? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    mod parent up!

    Actually, here in the UK it's been worked out that it would be cheaper to close all the libraries and give all active library users a bunch of amazon vouchers and a kindle.

  13. Re:Don't run on Windows7 on What Happens To Your Used Games? · · Score: 1

    so, basically, your not part of the demographic discussed in this article and so irrelevant, other than having spent a small amount on some games.

  14. a good car analogy on What Happens To Your Used Games? · · Score: 2

    Most people who buy new cars do so when trading in their old one.

    Imagine if people couldn't trade in their old car and had to keep it forever or have it scrapped/recycled?

    Or, imagine that if they sold the car, half the features on the car stopped working.. say, because the radio required a non-transferable licence key which expired when sold, so requiring the new owner to buy their own.

    Depreciation of used cars would be even worse than it is now, and the reduced sale price of used cars would fall and people would be hold onto them longer. New car sales would also fall significantly in response, and either manufacturers or dealers would reduce their prices to try and boost sales, or simply that there would be a big shake-down and manufacturers and dealers would go out of business to allow the survivors to maintain volume and margins.

    In the meantime, "piracy" would increase as people found work-arounds to renable or retrofit features to their cars to add and restore features "stolen" by official dealer network. There would be a boost in jobs for people to repair or maintain older cars, and cost of spares would rise, and thus growth in third party components, and a backlash from manufacturers trying to copyright, patent or trademark spares to prevent that loss of revenue to unauthorised parts manufacturers.

  15. the lies we tell ourselves and each other on Paul Vixie On DNS Changer: We're Dealing With Malware the Wrong Way · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I'll get round to doing backups one day"

    "I'll renew my antivirus licence next day pay"

    "The cheque is in the post"

    "I'll pull out in time"

    All are the many lies people tell themselves and each other.

    Basically as humans we tend to only do things which will have an immediate impact, and are capable of doublethink over things which might not happen or can be deferred.

  16. use an old Palm handheld? on Ask Slashdot: Hobbyist-Ready LCD Touch Panel For Embedded Projects? · · Score: 1

    there have been a number of apps which turn a PalmOs handheld into a usb-attached LCD display; Palms with mono and colour displays are cheap on ebay.

  17. Re:Not getting RDMS on Moving From CouchDB To MySQL · · Score: 1

    mod parent up

  18. 34% of iphone owners thought they had 4G in 2011 on Apple Gives In, Drops iPad '4G' Tag To Avoid Lawsuits · · Score: 1

    http://mashable.com/2011/07/14/4g-confusion-study/ 34% of iPhone Users Think They Have 4G [STUDY] July 14, 2011 by Charlie White

  19. voluntary vs commercial on Symantec: Religious Sites "Riskier Than Porn For Viruses" · · Score: 2

    I have met many clever people who are members of churches, but their time given to their churches is voluntary.

    Often the equipment has been donated as well, and so is usually not particularly modern either.

    The website design is usually managed by a committee, as is the choice of hosting provider, and costs are kept to a minimum.

    The net result is that once the web site is finally done, it may be neglected, or someone inherits the responsibility for it who knows little about its history, and might be more secretarial than technical. Thus security updates get neglected, and quite often there are many user accounts with weak passwords.

  20. Re:USA - LOL on Oracle and the End of Programming As We Know It · · Score: 1

    unfortunately the USA uses its economic might to force other countries to adopt the same bad practices.

  21. remember when Microsoft sued Stacker? on Oracle and the End of Programming As We Know It · · Score: 1

    long ago Microsoft sued Stac Electronics because, as I understand it, MS claimed that Stac abused/infringed their copyrighted/proprietary APIs in DOS.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stac_Electronics#Microsoft_lawsuit

  22. Re:Mr. Wall, please sit down... on Oracle and the End of Programming As We Know It · · Score: 1

    surely if smart people know how to weasel their way out of jury duty, then it means jury members are likely to be more dumb?

    a key problem here in the UK is that people and their employers are reluctant to do it if the case is likely to drag on, as it could mean a significant loss of income or cost to the employer, jurors can only claim relatively little expenses: http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/CrimeJusticeAndTheLaw/Juryservice/DG_197055

  23. Re:Because 32bits of addressing... on Apple Under Fire For Backing Off IPv6 Support · · Score: 1

    why, you eggplant-hater, you!
    get out of here, you broadbean-lover!!! :-D

  24. Re:Another quite famous proxy to TPB.. on Dutch Pirateparty Refuses Order To Take Down Proxy · · Score: 1

    mod parent up!

  25. Re:Oh, yeah, that'll work. on Dutch Pirateparty Refuses Order To Take Down Proxy · · Score: 1

    I did a lot of work with embedded processors, so I guess I should use port 8051