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User: deadweight

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  1. Re:Rewarding the bullies... on Student Records Kids Who Bully Him, Then Gets Threatened With Wiretapping Charge · · Score: 1

    No - because the kids he hates are there because he GOES THERE. The *one* nutcase that attacked the elementary school was an outlier.

  2. Re:NSA boogeyman on Snowden Used the Linux Distro Designed For Internet Anonymity · · Score: 1

    WTF??? I can only say so much on here, but NO WAY are NSA employees running around being "agents". If some guy knocked on my door and said he was an NSA agent I would be falling over laughing.

  3. Re:NSA boogeyman on Snowden Used the Linux Distro Designed For Internet Anonymity · · Score: 1

    Ah.........NO. Let us just say I live in an area where you can meet these people and they are NOT agents. ROFLMAO

  4. Re: instant access to computers around the world on This 1981 BYTE Magazine Cover Explains Why We're So Bad At Tech Predictions · · Score: 1

    Fun thing was knowing the local BBS Sysops.I could use "mysterious phreaking power" to "break into" someone's session. They never did figure out how I did it LOL ( I was at the BBS console - that's how!)

  5. Re: instant access to computers around the world on This 1981 BYTE Magazine Cover Explains Why We're So Bad At Tech Predictions · · Score: 1

    And then getting 49 good sections out of 50 :(

  6. Re: instant access to computers around the world on This 1981 BYTE Magazine Cover Explains Why We're So Bad At Tech Predictions · · Score: 1

    In the early-mid 80s it was no sure thing your email and your friend's email addresses could find their way to each other. I do remember gopher and archie being very cool. The "web" was annoyingly slow to me when I first started playing with it. Also remember USENET! It still exists I guess - haven't looked - but rec.xxx had awsome "forums" and who can forget their first furtive foray into alt.binaries....

  7. Re:When the FAA chimes in on New Service Lets You Hitch a Ride With Private Planes For Cost of Tank of Gas · · Score: 1

    As a commercial pilot for many years I can tell you day 1 of "how to be a commercial pilot" class was why this scheme is totally illegal and that is before you hurt someone. Do so much as shut the door on someone's hand and lawyers will rip you so many new assholes you will be farting in 5 part harmony!

  8. 134-and-a-half FAIL on New Service Lets You Hitch a Ride With Private Planes For Cost of Tank of Gas · · Score: 2

    I am a commercial pilot. This scheme will fail because the FAA really really does not want anything like this going on. Flying people as paying passengers falls under part 135 or part 121 of the regulations. People have been trying there "134.5" scams for decades now and getting busted for decades as well.

  9. Re:Whenever I hear anti-NSA rhetoric... on TCP/IP Might Have Been Secure From the Start If Not For the NSA · · Score: 1

    Bletchley Park is in the UK. No doubt he would have hung, just wondering if he would have had a public trial. My guess is not. And yes - non-state actors are a bitch because they don't have anything you can threaten. The USA attacking their "home" country is often a GOAL of theirs, not a fear.

  10. Re:Whenever I hear anti-NSA rhetoric... on TCP/IP Might Have Been Secure From the Start If Not For the NSA · · Score: 1

    In 1943 Mr. Snowden would have been quite lucky if he got a trial before he was executed. We were fighting for our lives back then. As to the rest, it is a matter of scale. In 1790 I could follow you around and publish your daily activities in the paper. Unless you hired 50% of the population to be reporters to follow the other 50% and then switched them off every other day, no one could possibly publish what everyone did in every country every day. In 1980 the CIA/NSA/KGB/MI5/MI6/Mossad/etc. could do a fair amount of spying, but the analog nature of much of it and the primitive computers pretty much made sure they weren't spying on YOU because no one had the time and money to waste on Joe Average. The STASI in East Germany actually did try the 50% spies on the other 50% system and buried themselves under an avalanche of data they had no time to deal with. The various agencies aren't doing anything they didn't do in 1914, it is just the scale of it is beyond the wildest dreams of any old cold war spy. We really can spy on everyone all the time forever :(

  11. Re:Flamebait on TCP/IP Might Have Been Secure From the Start If Not For the NSA · · Score: 2

    Exaclty. Kind of like saying my home-A-bomb project for the kids science fair was ruined by the DOE not letting me take the secret plans home from work.

  12. Re:The map is Biased on Oxford Internet Institute Creates Internet "Tube" Map · · Score: 1

    OTOH it made instant sense to me. It looks exactly like the Metro map in DC, which I guess they copied from London. Been awhile since I rode the tube.

  13. Re:Greatest, but maybe not the most damaging on Book Review: How I Discovered World War II's Greatest Spy · · Score: 1

    Just FYI, the Boers, while "African", were either from Holland or descendants of these settlers.

  14. Re:What society really needs to do on Department of Transportation Makes Rear View Cameras Mandatory · · Score: 1

    My mother has neck issues from several surgeries. A rear-view cam was 100% required when I got a car for her. Also dogs, cats, and kids are TOO SHORT to see in a mirror or even turning your head 180 degrees. ONLY a camera can see them in real time. I also know someone who killed their own 2-year-old backing over them. It was not a good day and they never really recovered from it.

  15. Re:Aren't most wireless networks still on 2.4Ghz? on FCC Boosts Spectrum Available To Wi-Fi · · Score: 1

    I am going to call BS on this. My access point does both and once you get beyond about 2 walls worth of penatration the 5 GHz signal is notably down from the 2.4 GHz.

  16. Re:Good for the NSA on GCHQ and NSA Targeted World Leaders, Private German Companies · · Score: 1

    Because none of them would ever DREAM of spying on anyone, right? Jesus-On-A-Moped, every nation spies on every other nation to the extend that they can do so and have done for the last few thousand years at least and will likely always do so.

  17. Re:Watch "how it's made" first on The 3D Economy — What Happens When Everyone Prints Their Own Shoes? · · Score: 1

    As I mentioned earlier, 3-D is awsome for when you want ONE part for some old car, machine, airplane, etc. that no longer is supported. For making thousands of parts, not so much.....

  18. Re:Amazing on The 3D Economy — What Happens When Everyone Prints Their Own Shoes? · · Score: 1

    Well AOPA just had an article about 3D printing plastic interior pieces for old airplanes that cost many hundreds of dollars if you can even find one. The printed stuff is usually around $100 or so. This is a HUGE deal for old cars and planes that need one-off trim and interior pieces.

  19. Re:Crow behavior on Crows Complete Basic Aesop's Fable Task · · Score: 1

    The crows were not CAUSING the Nazi behaviour, but apparently they learned the schedules or otherwise picked up a clue as to when food was about to be on the table and when it wasn't. Speaking of food on the table, crows live near where we like to eat lunch outside, When they see usm they send once crow over to watch. If we leave the food unattended the one spy crow gets the rest and they eat it and throw our stuff around.

  20. Re:Space travel on Gunshot Victims To Be Part of "Suspended Animation" Trials · · Score: 1

    Fsk the slow guys. Those things are like 500 years out of warranty anyway.

  21. Re:Space travel on Gunshot Victims To Be Part of "Suspended Animation" Trials · · Score: 1

    I vaguely recall a short story where the ships got 1 year faster every year for hundreds of years and all showed up at once generating a giant traffic jam at the other end and a huge bitch fest from the earlier crews that thought they were "getting away from it all".

  22. Re:Science fiction on Gunshot Victims To Be Part of "Suspended Animation" Trials · · Score: 1

    So there is a risk of turning into a grate? OMFG! As a side note, I bet the zombie medicine only really works well on Haitians. I suspect the average American, far from thinking they were a reanimated corpse under the control of a voodoo priest, would be running around looking for a lawyer within minutes of zombie-reanimation.

  23. Re:Science fiction on Gunshot Victims To Be Part of "Suspended Animation" Trials · · Score: 1

    I can't count the number of sci-fi books where a badly injured person is put in suspension until they reach a hospital that can deal with their injuries. This really will be life imating art. In other news, Haitian witch doctors can do something similar. Real life "zombies" are not dead, but they THINK they were. Might want to look into that as well. If memory serves, puffer fish poison was the main part of their zombie drug.

  24. Re:UPMC Presbyterian Hospital in Pittsburgh on Gunshot Victims To Be Part of "Suspended Animation" Trials · · Score: 5, Funny

    I may get an informed consent form tattooed on my chest. "Dear Mr/Mrs Doctor Person, If I am pretty much dead, feel free to try your experimental zombie procedures. Signed Iwill EatYourBrain

  25. Re:What does he have to hide? on Jimmy Carter: Snowden Disclosures Are 'Good For Americans To Know' · · Score: 1

    Very true. Big business LOVES complex regulations because the little guys cannot afford a squadron of lawyers to ensure compliance and a brace of lobbyists to make sure the regs are tilted their way.