Slashdot Mirror


User: Creepy+Crawler

Creepy+Crawler's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
3,448
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 3,448

  1. Re:Ground up shrimp? on Shrimp Bandages Clot Blood Faster · · Score: 2, Informative

    What part?

    1: Boiling the live lil tasty fuckers?
    2: Us EATING the lil things and peeling the shell off and tossing it into a community bowl?
    3: Grinding those shells up for a bandage?

    Did you know that when you flash-boil live lobsters, they let out a shriek? Its quite loud.

  2. Re:Peta will have the cow, alright. on Shrimp Bandages Clot Blood Faster · · Score: 1

    SO if I use the skin off of a recently died peta member for my shoe, will that count?

    Ill make sure to be nice to him before I cut his jugular.

  3. Re:Maybe on Dual-core Processors Challenge Licensing Models · · Score: 1

    Person who computes ;-P

  4. Re:ok, so how long on Longhorn to Require Monitor-Based DRM · · Score: 1

    That'll work until they start communicating using public key crypto and hidden pub/priv keys.

  5. Re:This should be titled... on Dungeon Master's Guide II · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Guide to Posting Inane, Unfunny, and Downright Mean AC Comments"

    (snort) Whats Armor Class have to do with that?

  6. Re:The Real Problem With Internet Security on Examining ICMP Flaws · · Score: 1

    Sure you know that?

    ---wise ass ;P

  7. Re:Her morals are suffering? on Astrologer Sues NASA Over Comet Probe · · Score: 1
    rofl... Gotta read that tripe ;P

    32. Defendant slashdot.org is an far-right wing Internet news website that posts libelous and defamatory content and is used by Open Source Community members to anonymously post hate speech, death threats, threats to murder and promotes and advocates acts of domestic terrorism within the United States. The address and location of defendants is believed to be within the State of California, but is unknown at the present time.

    Im gonna kill whoever said that!!!!!!!11111one...
  8. Re:IMHO, anyone who thinks this is a .... on Man Convicted For Hacking Xbox · · Score: 1

    unless the games were xtron, ktron, gtron, kpenguin, xtictactoe, xscreen....

    Booooo....

  9. Re:Interesting legal question on Share FIles? Get Fired. · · Score: 1

    It really depends if they are an "at will" state. You can lay anybody off for any reason (which means govt unemployment insurance) BUT firing means they have to have violated certain state regulated principles. STuff like stealing, injuring, and that sort of thing are usually on at-will state mandages.

  10. Re:Statistics on BBC Offers Beethoven Symphonies for Download · · Score: 1

    Most clients do... Except Azureus. They were one of the first for trackerless-torrents, so they dont always report to the master server for stats.

  11. Re:Prefixed natter on BBC Offers Beethoven Symphonies for Download · · Score: 1

    This is what NPR does: gives background of the piece at hand and the ideas by the author why it was done "X way".

    I personally like to know why certain songs done by the same author have soo dramatically different sound. Many times, a life-changing event (say a death of a wife or kid) will make a change of style.

  12. Re:begin? on AI Researchers Produce New Kind of PC Game · · Score: 1

    Read his journal. Expecisally the last paragraph....

    ---Worse, responsive postings seem to suggest that many people are taking this 'information' as a factual resource. To help combat this problem, I deliberately include gross misinformation in about 1 in 5 of my posts.

  13. Re:Quick Script + Gutenberg? on Amazon's 1,082-volume Classics Collection: $7,989 · · Score: 1

    Well, I would'nt have jumped on him (deliveranc3) nearly has hard, but he proclaimed his fact as being an "English Major".

    Instead, he proceeds to flame Project Gutenberg and how "sucky" their proofreading is. For a free project, Distributed Proofreaders is perfectly good enough for a free archive of literary works... but not for "Mr. English Major" (bah).

    And to top off his blasting of a free project, he makes the laughable mistake of its and it's . This same mistake was on a shirt that the English dept made in my local high school. The dept tried blaming the t-shirt printer for bungling the silk screen, but after reading the originals, the dept just shut up... (It was the school joke for that year)

  14. Re:How long can they stay in storage, anyways? on U.S. Scientists Create Zombie Dogs · · Score: 2, Informative

    ---How long can you make the frozen state last anyways?

    That, sir, is the "Million Dollar Question". Normally, cells take 'hits' from different causes. Those causes can be cancerous cells, allergens, clots, rogue bacteria, viruses, radiation... all sorts. Your body continually heals from this stuff until you gradually am not able to heal any more. Hence aging and sickness the older you get.

    In a cryogenic bath, you can assume that celluar damage wont occur as the cancer cells, bad bacteria and the viruses cant do stuff (you know, frozen and all) and you cant get injured as you cant move. My big consideration is that of radiation. We get roughly 70 rads of radiation per year, no matter where we're at on the Earth. Now, when we're up and functioning, our body can handle those 70 rads/year hits with no problem... but how does it heal when we're in cryostasis?

    If our cryo-statsis bodies cant heal radiation damage, will we just have a brain-damage time limit (eg: shelf life)? Kinda scary if they cant figure out a way to fully shield us (of if they can..).

    I know lead is a nice high density element that absorbs a good quantity of radiation, but would a osmium shielding work better? It is, after all, the denseist(sp?) element on the periodic table. Has there been any experiemnts with radiation and materials that than lower risk? That, to me, would be best for cryo-sciences now.

  15. Re:No stem cells on U.S. Scientists Create Zombie Dogs · · Score: 1

    Good reason TO ban stem cells.

    Make 'em think about getting around a "moral ban" and you end up with cool stuff like this.

    ---Imagine what they'd do if lab rats were banned?

    No more homeless problem? muhahahahahahha

  16. Re:Quick Script + Gutenberg? on Amazon's 1,082-volume Classics Collection: $7,989 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Um as an English Major I...


    Ok, you intelligent, eh?

    It's catalogue falls far short.


    Lets expand that, ahall we... It's = It is (contracted form)

    "It is catalog falls far short."

    Sounds like "All your base" speech. Yeah.. Engrish Mager.
  17. Re:This is so stupid on Death On Demand Drive Tech · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You assume that some complex number crunching formula will solve the problem of harvesting said data. The DoD, nor do most other govt agencies believe that. They use industrial shreeders and then sometimes even melt said shreadded metal into slag.

    A thermite coupled over a drive might be the wiser thing, with an (internal uplinked) serial device that ignites the thermite using outlet power (which you can derive from power supply.

    Then, there's fire hazard....... and Thermite reactions are mighty hard to stop ;)

  18. Re:FreeBSD's geom disk encryption has something li on Death On Demand Drive Tech · · Score: 1

    Unless its based on ellipics, I dont trust it...

    Unless you believe that the NSA and such dont have Qubit based computers.....

  19. Re:You'd think this would be obvious on Microsoft Genuine Advantage Cracked · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ---Why should Microsoft, or any other corporation, use its money and waste its time providing patches and other OS updates to people who have illegally obtained the OS? OS patches are a privilege, not a right.

    They had better consider it a "privilege" that I pay for any product that they make. After all, the 2 computers that I bought pre-done had licenses that I COULD NOT REVOKE and get my money back. And there's something I heard about bundling being illegal... and something about being a convicted monopolist illegally playing the system.

    To me, its just a Wintendo, good for games, and not much else. I have a nice hardened Ubuntu desktop in which I do work in. The Windows box is good for stuff like NWN, console emulators, and Mechwarrior games. Thats it.

  20. Re:If I may state the bleeding obvious on Inventor of Proxy Firewall Blames Hackers · · Score: 1

    You really are stupid.

  21. Re:I use Linux and OS X, do I care about this rap? on Microsoft Genuine Advantage Cracked · · Score: 1

    Like, if somebody's that stupid, he deserves the viruses, worms and other creepy crawlies.


    HEY! I take offence at that!

    They're rabbits I tell you!!! RABBITS!!!!!!!.....
  22. Re:If I may state the bleeding obvious on Inventor of Proxy Firewall Blames Hackers · · Score: 1

    Grr. What idiots you are.

    A hacker is someone who enters OTHER devices when normally not expected or intended to. A cracker is someone who enters SOFTWARE or FIRMWARE of an object you own.

    YOu can hack into a friends computer for testing for X problems, you can hack into a "hotmail acct" (all idiots want this, so I put it here), or you can hack into a wep encrypted 802.11b hotspot and gain entry into the bastion network in a corporate network.

    Or you can crack that wifi software driver which controls frequency min-max, or you can fake software that you "registered" when you really didnt, or you can update the firmware of your graphics card (or solder a resistor or few) and turn it into a graphics card of *4 the cost.

    Hacking involves somebody else and cracking involves YOU.

    Now, you can be a black hat hacker who intentionally enters a network probably not meant for you, or you can be gray hat and test new exploits (which you plan to make public) on an unwilling host. A funny way of thinking of it is a simple 2d scale from lawful-chaotic and good-evil ;P Yeah, AD&D has infiltrated everything I think.

  23. Re:Don't worry -- the data's already been "cleanse on Court Rules GIS Data Can't Be Kept Secret · · Score: 1

    Doesnt that mean if you look for "Mosiac Mode" you also find the 'secrets'?

    Good for amateur detectives.

  24. Re:WRT naturalistically formed universe on What Ancient Tech Do You Do? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ---1. The existence and complexity of the universe

    Of course not. The universe was obviously created 5000 some years ago in a 7 day even in which the creator rested. ....Ok onto facts. There's a 3k background radiation that seems somewhat uneven in a honeycomb shape millions of ly wide. There's how many particles along with weird types of matter and energy. There's 4 forces, in which one is something on the range of 10^-30 as strong as magnetism, yet controls the orbits of the moons, planets, suns, galaxies, and even local superclusters of galaxies..

    Complex indeed. I want to discover WHY and literally become a god myself.

    ---2. The accuracy of the biblical record

    Ok, it makes it a good history, AS long as you can get the unassaulted "translations". Compare translations as "All your base are belong to us". Whats the quality, and how in the heck do you check?

    3. The evidence of the changed lives of the people who knew Jesus personally

    You personally know any of them? WHat evidence there was is corrupted by transcribing those very events no sooner than 60 years after He was murdered, bad translations, or just plain loosing the transcribed events.

    4. The evidence of the way that my relationship with Jesus Christ has changed my life.

    My relationship with myself has changed my life. Yes, I was a Catholic, and still believe in basic ideas.... I do not reject that a ultimate God exists, nor do I reject that Jesus did not live. I also believe that this God is not what people normally think, as in the holy angels flying and all that crap. If God exists, our univerrse exists as a particle in his body, or the way we exist outside of a computer emulating (in softwre) a device.

    I abide with the basic idea that we all hold the truth what we are, how to unleash that truth, and how to bring ourselves to godlike stature through eterenal death. A form of Buddho-Catholicism, if you will. I violate no commandments from the 10, and I abide by ethics that Shakyamuni and descendants have proposed that we follow.

    If this God many pray to actually listens, let him consider me on what I have accomplished and who I am, and NOT who I can offload "sins" to. Anybody can say "Forgive my sins, oh Lord, Jesus Christ" but whoever cannot conqueror problems of conscinousness mean nothing.

    ---I agree with you, and I think that IUDs and birth control pills are not morally acceptable because they are abortifacients.

    Let me ask you something from a totally different angle..

    Is it ok to kill a mammal (say, a great ape)? Why or why not?
    How much of a person is a "person"? If even one cell froma human is dropped, is that a lost 'life'?
    And to iterate a joke used by Cleese, "is every sperm sacred"? Why/why not?

  25. Re:Orwell just rolled over in his grave on EFF: 48 Hours to Stop the Broadcast Flag · · Score: 1

    Wrong bucko.

    Just like medical records... Who owns the medical record in a doctors office? The doctor "owns" the record (the folder, paper, paperclips..). The patient owns ALL the content on it.

    Just like DVD's. You own the DVD, the copyright holder owns the information stored on it. It goes back to basic copyright law..

    Now, the question is should we allow transferrence and mediation with copyright? If we dont allow transferring copyright, you end up with no media companies...