Slashdot Mirror


User: jamie(really)

jamie(really)'s activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
225
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 225

  1. Re:Hmm on Facing 16 Years In Prison For Videotaping Police · · Score: 1

    It kills innocent people? You sure that's the reason? Drug laws kill innocent people: 8 out of every drug related death is an innocent, yet we still have drug laws.

    And how do you assess "speeding"? If we all drive at 5mph there would be no road deaths. None. So whats your point? If granddad is ok to drive at 55 in his '75 buick with bouncing suspension, then I'm ok to do 90 thanks: including reaction time, I can stop in the same distance.

    Speed limits were introduced to save GAS not LIVES. Now they are there to save money.

    Around schools and through residential areas, 5mph should be the limit if you want to save lives. You up for that?

  2. Re:The problem with that approach on Indian Government Threatens RIM, Skype With Ban · · Score: 1

    Capitalism isnt the problem. Our fiat currency is the problem. If we were on the gold standard we'd have sent all the gold overseas, the dollar would be worthless, and US manufacturing would be competitive. In the absence of the gold standard we could actually require that China stops "managing" its currency, or we could just impose "fair" trade regulations, or best of all we could get rid of bullshit income tax so that the Chinese wouldn't want dollars: the dollar's only value is that our government will come to our house and take our stuff if we refuse to keep paying back the money we owe the Chinese bond holders. We are Chinese slaves. You have to admire the way China won world war 3 without anyone even knowing.

  3. Sony, Microsoft? on Apple Reverses Rejection of Ulysses Comic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why no complaints about Sony and Microsoft? They both have a number of machines for which you must pass a draconian test to even get a dev kit. Basically, if Apple made the devkit $10k then you'd all be happy? Locked in systems have been around for more than a decade. The difference with Apple is that the devkit is $100 and anyone can publish on them.

    I've had games rejected by Sony and Microsoft: you fix the problem and send it back. No different on the Apple store. Apple is usually quicker tho.

  4. Maybe you could start with... on Modern Day Equivalent of Byte/Compute! Magazine? · · Score: 1

    How to write a fucking search engine Or maybe you could post a stupid question to /. about "Where has all the print media moved to?" and have idiots here give you the answers. Good job, btw!

  5. Re:If only. on The Men Who Stare At Airline Passengers, Coming To the UK · · Score: 1

    Get a clue. If it is accepted by the populace, or at least the judicial system, that a "trained security officer" can spot a terrorist just by looking at him, then that means that They can lock you up and hold you indefinitely based purely on the say-so of an individual.

    No due process, no evidence, just "He's a terrorists - lock him up". Ultimate Police State power. You are NOT free if at any time, on a single persons word, you can be locked up indefinitely.

  6. Re:If only. on The Men Who Stare At Airline Passengers, Coming To the UK · · Score: 1

    I read that as "covered in hot girls". *sigh* I like my meme better.

  7. Free advertising on /.: claim apple banned you on Apple Blindsides More AppStore Developers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anybody bother to check to see if the app has been pulled before providing a billion web hits to this app? No? Great! I have a feeling my app is about to be pulled too.

  8. Gynecology? on How To Get a Game-Obsessed Teenager Into Coding? · · Score: 1

    "How do you keep them interested if the only thing they can do after a week is..."

    Then keeping them interested is not your problem. Getting them interested in the first place is your problem. Would you ask a football player if they want a career mowing the lawn, or laying the chalk? When he learns to drive a car, are you going to suggest he becomes a mechanic? How about when he calls his girlfriend? Are you going to suggest being a telecoms engineer or a gynecologist?

    My dad bought a computer when I was 11. I wrote my first text-based adventure game when I was 11. When I was 14 I made my dad drive me 50 miles to the only place in the country (the UK) that sold a hardware debugger for my computer so I could debug assembly language properly.

    I've worked programmers who didn't start programming till college. Their heart just isn't into it and it shows. I get frustrated with them, and they get confused by my passion and excitement.

  9. Re:That's very nice of you Adobe on Adobe Founders On Flash and Internet Standards · · Score: 1

    Except that they wont tell you how, (the documentation is not detailed enough), and if you reverse engineer theirs then they can sue you.

    Do you actually believe words posted on a corporate website? Forget even basic fact checking, you're telling me you're default setting is "believe"?

    1. I Believe
    2. Take with a pinch of salt.
    3. Will fact check.
    4. Its probably corporate bullshit, but will fact-check.
    5. It all evil corporate lies

    You're at 1 on this scale are you?

  10. Re:That's very nice of you Adobe on Adobe Founders On Flash and Internet Standards · · Score: 1

    See, I'm kinda confused on the economical part, as a developer.

    Java developer: OS=linux (free). Editor = Eclipse (free) or IntelliJ ($499(
    Silverlight developer: OS = Windows $199. Editor = Expression Blend $599
    Flash Developer: OS = Windows $199. Editor = Flash CS5 $699

    So, Flash costs the most money.

  11. Re:This depends on the site... on Adobe Founders On Flash and Internet Standards · · Score: 1

    I think the issue may be, however, that jQuery is open source, while Flash isn't. If Adobe open-sourced the flash player, all this trouble would go away.

  12. Re:This depends on the site... on Adobe Founders On Flash and Internet Standards · · Score: 1

    You seem to be assuming that only Adobe makes a browser plugin that does graphics / video / audio etc.

  13. Re:This depends on the site... on Adobe Founders On Flash and Internet Standards · · Score: 1

    Uh huh. Yes we all remember how great Flash ran on Linux from the get-go. For a while you had more luck running win32 apps on linux than a flash app. So I disagree with your statement that they have a point. It may be that it currently runs on all PC-based platforms, at this present time but that was not always the case, and is unlikely to be the case in the future. It certainly runs like ass on OSX, and leaks like hell.

    When you talk about apple, you seem to be suggesting that what they are doing is bad. So Apple driving people to their platform is bad, but Adobe driving people to their platform is good? How odd.

    Flash is a platform, just like win32, windows forms, silverlight, Carbon, Cocoa, X etc are platforms. Some are open, most are not. Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, all want to drive you to their platform because that is how they make money. This is capitalism. But you don't have to buy any of the bullshit any more than you have to buy their products. I find it odd that you like that taste of Adobe's. Apparently even people who eat shit like to argue about whose tastes better...

  14. 2009 on One In Eight To Cut Cable and Satellite TV In 2010 · · Score: 1

    Windows MCE, Netflix, DVD/HD-DVD/BluRay
    Netflix on OSX, Windows, iPad :-)
    John Stewart is online.
    For "OTA" TV, I just use ABCs internet player.
    Ah, speaking of which, there's a new V to watch. When ever I want.

  15. Except that GPUs arent CPUs on Moore's Law Will Die Without GPUs · · Score: 1

    The reason GPUs are so fast at raw number crunching is the same reason that they are bad at general purpose CPU work: they delete everything from the die except what they need for doing the same instruction on many cores at once.

    They don't handle random memory access, they don't branch effeciently, and most importantly, they don't do any of this for a single core: a single core executes the exact same instruction stream as 16 or more of its neighbors.

    The result is much less cache, and much less instruction logic, which means many more cores per GPU. But all that extra logic is exactly what makes a CPU good at doing what it does. Running apache on a GPU?? Forget it.

    Now there are certainly some interesting and esoteric things that we can do with processor and software design to make a massively parallel apache server possible, but turning the CPU into a GPU isn't one of them.

  16. Ah, thats you, is it? on Recourse For Draconian Encryption Requirements? · · Score: 1

    So every single reply has been "don't use your computer for work", or "make them give you one". I have to wonder if you ever read slashdot. That you even asked the question in the first place makes me think that you actually do not know *why* everyone is posting the same answer:

    How many times have we read about "stupid companies" that let their employees wander around with sensitive data on unencrypted devices, like credit card numbers and health care information.

  17. Re:Dual folding screens were always a non-starter on Microsoft's Touted iPad Rival Courier Becomes Less Than Vapor · · Score: 1

    Very small bricks, one assumes. Or perhaps you should work out more. Oh, wait, where am I? Sorry!

  18. Re:Tablets are dead on Microsoft's Touted iPad Rival Courier Becomes Less Than Vapor · · Score: 1

    I agree. The iPad, however, doesn't.

  19. Re:Tablets are dead on Microsoft's Touted iPad Rival Courier Becomes Less Than Vapor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was ill for two days this week. I grabbed my iPad and watched some new shows that I've not had time to check out. ABC's iPad app let me watch Castle and V in 720p. Then I watched some movies on Netflix. I also bought the latest book from Steven Erikson using iBooks.

    It wasn't too heavy.
    It has a bigger screen than my netbook, and its stunning.
    It didn't get too hot like my netbook does when watching movies. I *hate* frying my balls.
    The wife's netbook can't watch 720p movies at all.
    I didn't have to have it plugged in, so I could move it about easily while I tried to get comfortable. Charged it overnight.
    When I was done puking, I wiped it clean with disinfectant.

    I'm not sick all the time, of course. The wife uses it and her iPhone. Her netbook hasn't been touched for months. The iPad is "just" a more usable iPhone for her. Its set up with her email, not mine (and she did it herself - amazing what she can do when I'm not around). I will be buying two more for our children.

  20. Re:Lapels? on Life Recorder · · Score: 1

    Why would it not *be* your cell phone? Motorola Droid: linux, 5mp camera, 3G + wifi, battery.

  21. Re:Rogue-like on Life Recorder · · Score: 1

    A jammer would work against the hacker version I just wrote for my Android, but for these devices to really take off, they would have to be immune to such a trick, which is extremely easy to do assuming the military would allow the public to own such a device.

    However, if everyone had one, at least it would reduce the chances of some prick in a bar who thinks violence is an acceptable expression of offense, jammer or no jammer. And of course, turning on the jammer would be useful warning in and of itself.

    The "right" to not be recorded benefits no one but criminals. It means proof of a crime cannot be admitted as evidence. If *everything* was recorded all the time, we'd live in a much better, and freer world.

  22. Re:the best programmers? on The Struggle To Keep Java Relevant · · Score: 1

    Well there was a study that I read once (but I'm fucked if I can find a link to it) that measured people's IQs, and their perceived IQ. People with lower IQ universally thought they did well on the tests. People with high IQs thought they did worse. Specifically, there was an inverse correlation between how well a person thought they did and their IQ.

    This appears to be matched by experience. If someone tells me a task is going to be easy, or that they can do it "no problem", then 99/100 its going to be a train wreck.

    Caveat: if there is a manager in the room, its ok to say something is going to be easy because managers get scared easy. I'm talking about if its just a bunch of programmers talking. :-)

  23. As ever, video games way ahead of academia on Memory Management Technique Speeds Apps By 20% · · Score: 1

    I always find it interesting when academics write papers about things that games programmers have been doing for years. Not that we had a client-server memory management thread mind you, because that would be fucking crazy, but preallocation of memory, and avoiding locks and syncs etc. Seriously, if you have a program that does 13 million allocations per second (see Table II), wouldn't a better memory manager be on your list?

  24. Re:Hack for ordinary Mac OS X on iPad Review · · Score: 1

    No but you can use LogMeIn.

    Why not just write an App :-)

  25. Don't know about grandmas... on iPad Review · · Score: 1

    But my wife loves it. I think CmdrTaco forgot to read the manual, or just assumed he knows more than any one else.

    1. GPS: It knows your location. Maps asked if it. Could get your location. If you had hit Yes, you would have found. Good job you knew better, eh, Cmdr! Hit No because it cant possibly work!

    2. The keyboard. I make only slightly more mistakes typing using this keyboard than my regular one. But since the keyboard has correction built in it usually makes more sense than myusual emails.

    3. Grandmas. It is NOT a PC replacement thank goodness. My wife loves it. So much easier than the Eee or our 14" notebook.