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User: mrchaotica

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  1. Re:sigh... on The Vicious Circle That Is Sending Rents Spiraling Higher · · Score: 1
    1. 1. Offer sub-prime mortgages to people, enticing them to buy houses they can't afford them long term. Profit.
    2. 2. Repackage the bad parts of the debt and sell it off to chumps (like the retirement plans of the mortgagees from step #1). Profit again.
    3. 3. Foreclose on the mortgagees when they stop being able to pay. Profit a third time.
    4. 4. Use the huge losses on paper (because the foreclosed houses are now worth less) to get a gigantic bailout from the government. Profit a fourth time.
    5. 5. Incorporate an REIT and buy up almost all of those houses at below-market value. Profit a fifth time.
    6. 6. Rent them back out (at inflated "post-recovery" market rates) to the same poor chumps whose life savings you stole in steps #2 and #3. Profit a sixth time, and again and again, and then profit some more!

    Unlike so many Slashdot business plans, this one requires no ellipses.

  2. Re:For people who don't speak buzzwords on The Open Container Project and What It Means · · Score: 2

    Screw the computer stuff; I'm excited to hear about this new technology that lets gigantic cargo ships sail to Wyoming!

  3. Re:Apparently it mean you can get arrested on The Open Container Project and What It Means · · Score: 3, Funny

    They had a perfect opportunity to use a bottle inside a paper bag as their project logo, but no, they had to use a stupid yellow square instead!

  4. Re:I'm spending 60% of my monthly income on rent on The Vicious Circle That Is Sending Rents Spiraling Higher · · Score: 1

    Or would you claim that the video game industry is itself unacceptably narrow?

    Yes, it is.

    I certainly don't recommend going into that industry, but if you insist, you could try Atlanta. Georgia has a tax credit that's caused some companies to locate here. They're not making AAA games and they're startups that'll fail in a year or so, but at least you can get experience in a city with reasonable rent.

    (I know this because my wife worked in that industry as an artist for several years, at a series of startups. She got laid off once a year, on average. When the tax credit expired the work dried up and she switched to graphic design. Even though the tax credit was renewed, she hasn't been able to find another gaming industry job.)

  5. Re: Colorado sure has nice beaches on The Vicious Circle That Is Sending Rents Spiraling Higher · · Score: 1

    The point is that it's a problem when people who were born and raised in an area can't buy there

    This can happen due to

    1. land monopolists/collusioninsts, and

    Of course, that point #1 is in fact what's happening. First the investor class made a bunch of money off mortgage-backed securities, then when the bubble burst they got bailed out by the government while normal people lost their homes to foreclosure, then they formed REITs and bought up all the devalued homes, and now they're making tons more money renting them back to their victims.

  6. Re:That's no domestic surveillance on New Snowden Leaks Show NSA Attacked Anti-Virus Software · · Score: 1

    We both know damn well you had no interest whatsoever in a "quality argument." If you had, I would have given you one.

  7. Re:Stop interconnecting systems on Car Hacking is 'Distressingly Easy' · · Score: 1

    The problem with this logic is that "read-only" access still implies that the unprivileged system can poke the privileged one and cause it to do something.

    No, "read-only" implies exactly the opposite of that. The privileged system (ECU) should be sending exactly the same signals to the interface whether the non-privileged system (infotainment) is connected to it or not. The ECU shouldn't be able to even know the difference.

  8. Re:If it doesn't include nuclear... on The Presidential Candidate With a Plan To Run the US On 100% Clean Energy · · Score: 1

    The part were they get less biodiesel from the crop than they use to get the crop

    Oh, the part that's a lie? Got it.

  9. Re:I WANT a hackable car... on Car Hacking is 'Distressingly Easy' · · Score: 2

    let's be realist: is it your daily commuter, or is it your weekend fun car?

    Until last week, it was my daily commuter (60 mile round trip). The only reason it isn't now is that I just started a new job that's close enough to commute by bicycle. The thing may be 25 years old, but it's only got 85K miles on it and is in great condition (except for the fact that it has a tape deck, pop-up headlights and only one airbag, you'd think it was brand new).

    I admit, it's also my fun car since I use it for autocross, too.

    FYI, before I bought the Miata, I'd been doing the same commute for years in my 1996 pickup truck with 215K miles on the odometer. My wife is now using it for her 50 mile round trip daily commute. That's actually more impressive, since the truck is much more worn-out than the Miata even though it's newer.

    My newest car, a 1998 VW, is currently partially-disassembled because the transmission broke. Clearly, age isn't everything.

    Is it also a "pre-electronics" car? Do you expect it to last as long as you?

    It's got electronic fuel injection, but it's pre-ODBII. I don't expect any individual part on the car to last forever, but certainly I expect it to be repairable (or even upgradable) indefinitely as long as the chassis doesn't rust out.

  10. Re:I WANT a hackable car... on Car Hacking is 'Distressingly Easy' · · Score: 1

    Good luck with that, since the industry is going the opposite direction

    Fuck the industry! I refuse to buy any new car because of this. (And I'm not just saying that: my new (to me) daily driver is a 1990 Miata. If it weren't for this bullshit, I'd have a pre-order in for a 2016 one right now.)

  11. Re:I WANT a hackable car... on Car Hacking is 'Distressingly Easy' · · Score: 1

    Damnit! I have mod points, but I already posted. Somebody mod this up please; the parent is exactly right.

  12. Re:Stop interconnecting systems on Car Hacking is 'Distressingly Easy' · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There's no reason why the infotainment system can't have read-only access to the engine control module (with write access physically prevented by the hardware). You won't be able to modify the engine management without physical access to the car, but that's the way it should be anyway.

  13. Re:That's no domestic surveillance on New Snowden Leaks Show NSA Attacked Anti-Virus Software · · Score: 1

    Fuck off, fascist.

  14. Re:If it doesn't include nuclear... on The Presidential Candidate With a Plan To Run the US On 100% Clean Energy · · Score: 1

    First, materials (primarily steel) comes from non-US locations (eg China).

    So either use US steel, or hold China to the same environmental standards! You seem to think we some how "can't" do that, when really we only choose not to.

    Second, incidental mining operations are carbon positive. Fugitive dust emissions...

    Most dust is not made of carbon. (Exceptions include coal and carbonates like limestone, but those are not greenhouse gases unless you chemically decompose them. So don't do that!)

    vehicular/equipment like gennies all running on coal/diesel for obvious reasons

    What part of "run the equipment on biodiesel" did you not understand?

  15. Re:If it doesn't include nuclear... on The Presidential Candidate With a Plan To Run the US On 100% Clean Energy · · Score: 2

    Those kinds of arguments are uniformly bullshit, because they assume that the construction and decommissioning activities, etc. somehow can't possibly also run on energy derived from the same source!

    Equipment used to build nuclear plants can run on electricity generated by (previously-built) nuclear plants.

    Feedstock for biodiesel can be harvested by farm equipment running on biodiesel.

    Photovoltaic panel factories can run on solar electricity.

    Or you can mix and match!

    The idea that green power isn't "really" green because you need fossil fuels to build it is fucking moronic.

  16. Re:That's no domestic surveillance on New Snowden Leaks Show NSA Attacked Anti-Virus Software · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People defending Snowden as a pro-american whistleblower that should be pardonned by US authorities.

    As one of those people, I'm very willing to forgive Snowden (and the journalists who are sorting through/releasing the info) if he accidentally mixed some disclosures of legitimate* NSA actions in with the many, many illegitimate ones.

    Important caveats:

    1. This assumes that (a) the release is accurate and (b) that Snowden is responsible for it. At the moment, we have no reason to believe that either is the case. In particular, I contend that it's much more likely for disclosures of legitimate* NSA activities to be falsely attributed to Snowden as a smear campaign than to be genuinely done by him.
    2. You may notice that I used the word "legitimate" with an asterisk. By this I mean "legitimate from the US perspective." Other countries my disagree, but they don't get to decide what is and isn't legal under US law. They're free to defend themselves, of course... (Similarly: I don't get upset about foreign spy agencies attempting to attacking the US; I get upset at the NSA if it fails to stop them.)
  17. Re:TNSTAAFL on Sprint Begins Punishing Customers For FCC's Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    So, let me get this straight: you want to keep the shitty status quo in telecom because "OMG the 'Free Market' is great!," but calling a third-party IT guy (the equivalent of your plumber example) when your router has a problem would be terrible?

  18. Re:What are... on US Airlines Say Smaller Carry-Ons Are Not In the Cards · · Score: 1

    I was actually half-trolling (implying that the US is no longer a first-world country), but intentionally wrote it so that it could be interpreted either way.

    Besides, the US does use the metric system for a lot of things, including most manufacturing and science. A lot of goods people buy are really created in metric sizes, which are then converted when they print the label.

  19. Re:What are... on US Airlines Say Smaller Carry-Ons Are Not In the Cards · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Zero first-world nations still use imperial measurements.

  20. Re:Do they ever follow up? on FCC Votes To Subsidize Broadband Connections For Low-Income Households · · Score: 1

    So would you rather we put a gun to your head and make you cough up $50 and have $10 of it go to waste, or put a gun to your head and make you cough up $80 ($40 plus another $40 to make sure the first $40 wasn't wasted)?

    (Note that those are the only two choices. We have a gun to your head, remember? Refuse to choose and we pull the trigger.)

  21. Re:I don't see the downside of this on FCC Votes To Subsidize Broadband Connections For Low-Income Households · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seattle is a special case: apparently, your Internet access is fucked up because you keep electing shitty city councilpeople who make rules that ISPs hate. You should quit doing that.

  22. Re:The five bullet points on Reasons To Use Mono For Linux Development · · Score: 1

    IIRC, VB.NET is going away in the next version of .NET. (Good riddance, too!)

  23. Re:The article is useless without benchmarks on AMD Announces Fiji-based Radeon R9 Fury X, 'Project Quantum', Radeon 300 Series · · Score: 1

    I had a sapphire radeon (talk about a nightmare combination)

    What do you mean? (I just bought a Sapphire Radeon R7 260x; should I be worried?)

  24. Re:On Planet Millenial on Facebook Has a New Private Mobile Photo-Sharing App, and They Built It In C++ · · Score: 1

    Today, Slashdot disparages narcc for not understanding "damning with faint praise" when he reads it.

  25. Re:"Sometimes the best tool for the job is the old on Facebook Has a New Private Mobile Photo-Sharing App, and They Built It In C++ · · Score: 1

    So, what, it's written in Lisp with some Fortran libraries?

    Why is that modded funny? It's not a half-bad idea!

    (Of course, these days when you want half-Lisp, half-Fortran, you use a different syntax and call it Matlab (or GNU Octave). It's better than using C++, at any rate!)