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User: DMJC

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  1. Nope on BitTorrent To RIAA: You're 'Barking Up the Wrong Tree' · · Score: 1

    Fuck off RIAA, bitorrent is distribution for Linux ISOs, nothing more, nothing less. It's like jacking a bus and using it for a robbery

  2. Re:No surprised in good ole Mass... on Massachusetts Examining Disability Access For Uber, Lyft · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes me me me me me and fuck the disabled, because the almighty dollar should rule everything. Uber/Lyft are examples of he worst of the free market system. Just bully your competition into having crap labour laws and screw anyone who falls outside of fit, high rate, low risk riders. Uber/Lyft are going to fire all their drivers as soon as driverless cars come in and they're trying to build monopoly empires right now. Americans are so gullible they'll fall for convenience for most at the expense of everyone else.

  3. Star Citizen started this. on E3 2015: A Lot of Nostalgia For Old Games · · Score: 1

    The long held dream of Privateer 3/Wing Commander: Online is what started all this. Frankly it's a good thing. Many old games deserved good HD remakes. Remaking a Dos game using HD is like reshooting a black and white film in Colour. Nothing wrong with that. The main thing to ensure is that the originals aren't trampled with too many modernisms. Dune2000 was a lot better than Dune 2. I'd like to see more of the old artwork adapted/modernised same with music. Some games had excellent soundtracks that deserve a refresh like street fighter 2.

  4. What about the EMP? on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 1

    Has anyone studied what a nuke detonated against an NEO would do with the EMP? Sure we might stop the object but the EMP could be almost as bad in its effects on life on the ground.

  5. Re:I for one welcome... on Linus Torvalds Says Linux Can Move On Without Him · · Score: 1

    Until that day, all hail Linus of house Torvalds, first of his name, king of the Sandals.

  6. Re:Linux Support on Reactions To Apple's Plans To Open Source Swift · · Score: 1

    It's basically meaningless without GNUstep support. Frankly I'd rather see GNUstep get a webkit implementation finished before they start trying to pack in Swift support.

  7. Why not 2025? on G7 Vows To Phase Out Fossil Fuels By 2100 · · Score: 1

    Why not make it 2025? Melbourne University did a study on it, it only costs $400 billion to decarbonise all of Australia. Surely we can afford $40 billion/year for 10 years. After which point we don't have to spend a single cent on it and can stop spending that money or redirect it elsewhere in the economy.

  8. Back to Nvidia on Intel Skylake & Broxton Graphics Processors To Start Mandating Binary Blobs · · Score: 1

    well, so much for that experiment. Back to NVIDIA. I'll take performance/closed blob over crap performance/closed blob.

  9. Crap resolution on Oculus Rift Hardware Requirements Revealed, Linux and OS X Development Halted · · Score: 1

    So I've used the DK1, the DK2, and the Samsung Galaxy GEAR VR. Of these the Gear VR had the best picture, but even it looked like a 1990s dithered image. VR needs to be at least 4k+ before it's going to look good. I'm really underwhelmed by the Occulus rift at this point. Sure they might have cracked the high refresh rate stuff but the resolution staying bad means it won't be an experience with anything close to presence.

  10. Re:Same on the atlantic side. on Extreme Secrecy Eroding Support For Trans-Pacific Partnership · · Score: 2

    The answer is to reform your electoral system duh. Make reform the entire purpose of your political actions and keep throwing out candidates until you get an electoral reformist into office.

  11. uh... on No, NASA Did Not Accidentally Invent Warp Drive · · Score: 1

    If anything this would be the Star Trek Impulse drive.

  12. So essentially.. on Two Gunman Killed Outside "Draw the Prophet" Event In Texas · · Score: 1

    These clowns shot first, hit a guy in the leg, then the cops opened up and took them out? Sounds like a good day at the shooting range. Honestly, fuck these wankers. For once American guns were in the right place at the right time where they could do some good.

  13. Re:Pragmatism versus Idealism on The New Struggles Facing Open Source · · Score: 1

    I think ultimately the answer will be Hurd, Stallman and co will keep it ideologically pure and eventually it'll get bigger as more people abandon corporate Linux.

  14. Meh on Draconian Australian Research Law Hits Scientists · · Score: 1

    I would be outraged, except Australia really hasn't got a tech industry. Try naming a CPU developed here since 1995....Good luck. same with Applications. I can't name a single top ten application that was written in Australia and I can barely list some games that were developed here. Australia's high tech industry is essentially dead. We do some minor solar research, never fund it enough and barely make anything any more. Hell we can't even make cars after 2017. We're the tourism/mining/agriculture country. Just waiting for a giant housing crash to wipe out all the savings now. We're more over leveraged than the US was before the GFC.

  15. Re:Tyranny on Australia May Introduce Site Blocking To Prevent Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    By the time the government figures out what a metal printing 3d printer is, there will be an assault rifle in every home.

  16. Re:Replicator prototype on New Molecular 3D Printer Can Create Billions of Compounds · · Score: 1

    This is all assuming that the machine itself is easy and low cost to create.... We're yet to see any evidence of that. I'm sure a large scale factory can stamp out cars for $500/vehicle. But that doesn't mean you can buy a car factory for $500, or even a car for that much.

  17. iWatch fails at being Jewellery on Reactions to the New MacBook and Apple Watch · · Score: 2

    I worked as a network admin inside a Jewellery store last year. I can tell you the iWatch is going to fail as a jewellery piece. Jewellery is about exclusivity, crazy engineering, and status. The iWatch fails too many of these points to matter. Another problem is it's a square faced watch. It falls under the traditional Women's timepiece category. They might sell a few, but it's not going to be the giant smash they are assuming it's going to be. Most jewellery store staff I showed it to thought the moto 360 looked much more like a men's watch. However even then they thought that their core client base would choose the traditional watches over the electronic ones. At the end of the day, Apple just isn't trying to compete with a hand cut $20,000 Grand Seiko watch. They are going to be laser cutting these things on a fabrication line. Works great for cheap electronics, not so much for exclusive high end luxury items.

  18. Why VMs suck at Windows 3D on The State of Linux Gaming In the SteamOS Era · · Score: 1

    Quite simply, Virtual machines suck at emulating Windows Direct3D because they use wine for their emulation. If you actually look into Virtualbox/VMWare, they both use wine's DirectX to OpenGL implementation to emulate Direct3D. That implementation doesn't properly support DirectX 10/11/12 or crucially DirectX 4/5 so old games won't work properly in it, and neither will new games. This is a problem that has plagued both wine and virtual machines for years. Won't be solved until some resources are put into fixing wine's older DirectX implementations.

  19. Metalicarap will be the equaliser on 5 White Collar Jobs Robots Already Have Taken · · Score: 1

    Frankly I'm not worried, anyone who can scrape together the metals to build a metalicarap will be able to manufacture pretty much anything. I think we'll see a massive reaping of the super rich and a redistribution of wealth amongst everyone once the need for Labor is completely eliminated.

  20. Re:Replicators on Wired On 3-D Printers As Fraud Enablers · · Score: 1

    What I suspect will happen is that this technology is so revolutionary that the first country to adopt it and not ban it will see an explosion in material wealth across the entire population. That will cause everyone in other countries to start politically agitating for access to the technology.

  21. Replicators on Wired On 3-D Printers As Fraud Enablers · · Score: 1

    So what happens when this appears on the scene?: http://reprap.org/wiki/Metalic... high quality high detail 3d printing of metals and other materials. Good luck trying to enforce IP rights once this tech hits the market.

  22. Cool on Trans-Pacific Partnership Enables Harsh Penalties For Filesharing · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So big media is finally going to off itself, or cause an uprising, one way or the other. So either everyone who was pirating and consuming more content will stop, and their sales will plummet. Or the people who can't afford media, due to unemployment/low wages are going to have even less stuff to keep them entertained. Should be fun to watch the crime increase as these people have to leave their homes for entertainment. Personally I think it'll just cause a shift away from film/tv back to gaming. Games last longer, are replayable, and cost less than films.

  23. Lack of corruption on Ask Slashdot: When and How Did Europe Leapfrog the US For Internet Access? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Basically it's because of the lack of corruption in Europe and the Asian nations that achieved high speed broadband rollouts. The USA is a pretty corrupt place, and it's embedded in the culture from the very bottom of the food chain: Tipping for basic goods and services (where a decent minimum wage should be paid by employers rather than just ripping off customers with tips and surcharges which are still a form of corruption), to the top of the foodchain: Golden parachutes, kick backs, earmarks etc. In an environment that allows corruption to flourish, and where people expect to get something extra for just doing the job they are paid to do. Of course there is going to be gross program mismanagement and failures. The US has up until now not been completely destroyed by the internal corruption because it's been focused elsewhere, fighting WW1/2, rebuilding the world, fighting communism, stealing other countries resources etc. Now that the wars against communism in South America (1980s) have ended. The corruption has settled on he closest target: The American People. Until the USA deals with the gross corruption within it's own borders (yes that includes the two-party system, minimum wage, drug wars, war on terror (military handouts) golden handshakes etc) They will continue to decline as a nation. At the same time that America has been declining there has been a serious move in most of the world to stamp out corruption. Sure it hasn't been 100% effective, but it's more than the USA has done and it's why we're seeing other countries pull ahead. Basically when your politics aren't being bogged down with bullshit issues from corrupt people. You get things done. This is why Germany is doing so well, they have strong laws against corruption and they are the manufacturing heart of Europe. Sure countries like Greece and Italy have stuffed up (mainly due to high levels of corruption) But the Nordic/Germanic countries are pulling the whole of Europe with them.

  24. Five Eyes on Young Cubans Set Up Mini-Internet · · Score: 1

    If you think five eyes wouldn't act against a group planning to change the government in the USA/Australia/Britain etc without going through the standard election process you'd be dead wrong. I would even be willing to bet money that they would act against groups calling for new elections trying to force current governments to resign.

  25. Re:It's not simple to just go and upgrade on Windows Server 2003 Reaches End of Life In July · · Score: 2

    So all those servers that are running the internet, and the VoIP servers that require 100% uptime and can be sued for any downtime by large call centres/organisations of people are being stupid by running Linux? Linux meets SLA's, it's idiot engineers who slap systems together without proper testing/maintenance who break SLAs and Windows doesn't save them, it just buys them a bit of time until the excuse that "Microsoft did it" stops buying customer patience.