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User: Seumas

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Comments · 7,256

  1. Reality. on Swedish Dad Takes Gamer Kids To Warzone · · Score: -1, Troll

    It sounds, to me, like the father has an issue of his own with discerning reality from fantasy and fiction.

  2. Re:Why would this be good for Twitter's stock?! on Twitter Reports 23 Million Users Are Actually Bots · · Score: 1

    I think the more bots using twitter, the better it would be for the stock. I tried following some people on twitter for awhile and even the most interesting and intelligent had feeds that were largely repetitive and self-absorbed or served to do nothing but mindlessly parrot the common attitude about any given topic that the poster had no clue about. I don't need a twitter update every time you post a picture of your kid to facebook, which I don't use because I don't want to see stupid pictures of your family in the first place.

    If twitter dumped all humans and became just the pipeline for automated short message systems that facilitated interactivity between disparate applications and services around the web, it would be far more interesting and useful and that is something I'd invest in.

  3. Re:Wrong website. on Samsung Announces Galaxy Alpha Featuring Metal Frame and Rounded Corners · · Score: 1

    Nope. Not in the least.

  4. When I see NGO after an organization's name, my assumption is that their source of funding is shady and that their actual purpose other than that which they position to the public, because that is often the case.

    It's important to say "NGO" the same way it is important to say that your PAC is not directly endorsed or paid for by the candidate or cause it is supporting. Obfuscation and deniability. They aren't a government organization, but they're not a private organization, either -- yet they are funded *by* governments, businesses, other organizations, and people. And... there are something like two million of them in the US alone.

  5. Re:Tech Community on Silicon Valley Doesn't Have an Attitude Problem, OK? · · Score: 1

    No, I'm making the distinction between the technical people and get-rich-quick snake-oil scum who happen to have chosen the current popular field to scheme in.

  6. Wrong website. on Samsung Announces Galaxy Alpha Featuring Metal Frame and Rounded Corners · · Score: 1

    Granted, I don't come here much anymore, but . . . seeing the top post on the front page being about an updated cell phone style change makes one wonder if they've accidentally stumbled upon gdgt.com, engadget, gizmodo, twit.tv, or cnet, instead of slashdot.

  7. Tech Community on Silicon Valley Doesn't Have an Attitude Problem, OK? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can we, perhaps, not refer to the entire tech community as one thing? Let's have the tech community, and then have the community that makes parking space auctioning apps, social websites, and "break-through" instant messaging apps who think they're on par with Tim Berners-Lee or Packard or Wozniak, because they made an iphone app where you can leave reviews for your favorite pigeon feeding seat in the park.

  8. Fortunately, abundant litigation when dealing with US employees will surely make them want to hire more US employees, in the future.

  9. Re:Yes. YES YES YES. on Japan To Launch a Military Space Force In 2019 · · Score: 1

    I would be satisfied just in knowing that there is a branch of the service called SPACE MARINES.

  10. Yes. YES YES YES. on Japan To Launch a Military Space Force In 2019 · · Score: 2

    Bring on space battles. I want space battles in my life time. I know aliens probably won't happen and neither will colonizing aonther planet or even the moon, but at least let me have space ship battles.

  11. Re:Well at least they saved the children! on Google Spots Explicit Images of a Child In Man's Email, Tips Off Police · · Score: 2

    And then, we start using automated algorithms at Google to report drug users. ... and people not reporting every cent of income in their taxes. ... and alerting local authorities to "belligerent, non-compliant attitudes".

  12. Couldn't be worse. on Driverless Buses Ruled Out For London, For Now · · Score: 1

    I've seen bus drivers take a corner without considering the other lane, and wipe out a driver and passenger in a truck, waiting in the turn lane. I've seen a bus driver carelessly activate the bus-stairs-convert-to-wheel-chair-lift before it was safe, completely knocking over an elderly wheel-chair bound person onto the concrete, head first . . . and then just sit there, not doing anything, requiring myself and another passenger to jump off and assist the person.

    I don't see how automation can do much worse.

  13. That's not how Netflix works. on PlayStation Now, Sony's 'Netflix For Games' -- Pros and Cons · · Score: 1

    Netflix gives me unlimited access to an enormous library of content for $8/mo. Playstastion Now gives me temporary access to individually purchased items. The two are nothing alike, other than the fact that they transmit temporarily owned content over the internet to the customer.

    As to the pricing issues -- yes, they are destined to fail. Netflix and Amazon Prime made it cheaper and easier to pay for content than for people to acquire it through other means. Services like RDIO made it almost absurd to bother acquiring music any other way, for the mere $5/mo. A gaming service could accomplish this, but they need to provide a massive catalog of consistent content without a thousand strings attached and for a really low price. Additionally, it needs to be through a unified distribution channel; nobody wants to subscribe to EA, then to Ubisoft, then to Valve, then to Activision/Blizzard, then to Riot, then to Sony, then to Microsoft.

    Gaming suffers from the problem television still does and that others (music and movies) used to (but still do, to a smaller extent). They want to profit from constraining their distribution; not operate like the manufacturer of ANY other product. Almost every company in the world wants their product in as many stores as possible for as many avenues to the customer as possible. They don't care if they're sold at the gas station, convenience store, Amazon.com, Target, Albertson's, and Safeway. Unfortunately, when it comes to digital media -- especially games -- some are available only on Origin. Some only on Steam. Some only on GOG. Some only on one platform for awhile, then no longer. This model has to change. Constraint and hassle needs to be eradicated. Distribution channels need to compete not on exclusivity, but on price and service and interface and community.

    Until that happens, this ridiculous "pay a dollar or more an hour for a twenty year old game streamed over the internet" idea is dead.

  14. Sorry, but... why? on How Many Members of Congress Does It Take To Pass a $400MM CS Bill? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry, I don't buy into all this "we need to get kids using computers and programming in grade school!" crap. Or this "we need everyone to be in STEM!" crap.

    Why do we need this, exactly? To keep the pool of employees huge and the pay low? Where is the push for teaching kids automotive skills in grade school? Cooking? Surgery?

    Let's just focus on the basics. Teach kids to be inquisitive, critical thinking, human beings with a strong grasp of reading and writing and math and history and geography skills and knowledge. Those with an interest in other things will pursue them and doing so will be much easier with a solid primary foundation in these universal fundamentals.

  15. Re:Well .... on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    Brought to you by Carbonite.

  16. Re:Makes Sense to Me on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    I enjoy kids, but when I sit down and figure out the math, I don't like them enough to risk my retirement (or early retirement). This is the driving force behind making sure what kind of people I get involved with and ensuring that protection is always a necessary precaution. There are also a lot of other things I would like, in life, but am not willing to risk a couple hundred grand or more on for the limited return that comes with it.

    If I were a multi-millionaire, it would be a simple thing to accept (well, no it wouldn't - lack of sleep, diapers, screaming, babysitting, teen years, mooches, layabouts, etc). Not being a multi-millionaire, it is an easy decision -- just like deciding not to buy a yacht is an easy decision.

    I just feel bad for my parents. The burden of raising three children has made it a difficult life of sacrifice and less reward or stability. One, likely, without even any promise of affording a retirement as they now approach that age. This won't be a burden I shoulder, however. As most parents desire for their children to have more successful lives than they had, I will be saving myself that burden. (But let's be frank, I'll probably die very young from shitty health anyway, so it isn't like there's a long retirement to contend with anyway!).

  17. Re:Title should read "Affluent Women" on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    Exactly. People who work for minimum wage for a prolonged period of time don't have the foresight or fortitude to do any such thing and just pump them out like pez.

  18. Re:why not just have a baby earlier? on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    God damn.

    I read "male for perspective" in the same mindset as "banana for size comparison".

    I've had enough internet, this week.

  19. Re:Or foregoing kids altogether on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    Better to be smug about being child free than smug about being burdened with children that you can barely tolerate and can't afford.

    Kind of like all those "smug" people who rub it in everyone's faces that they didn't get 0 percent down mortgages that they could never afford and therefore didn't go into financial ruin due to poor decision making. The audacity of such people!

  20. Re:It's not a doll on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    This is what really disturbed me about Sarah Palin playing the whole "look what a saint I am, caring for a child with downs/autism/whatever it was!". Despite the fact that she was a "saint" for caring for *her own damn kid*, the fact was that she had him when she was like 40. The risk at 30 is something like 1:1200. At 35 and later, it goes to 1:30 and so on.

    Don't get me wrong - I'm all for people not having children when their lives aren't together, they don't know who they are, and they are not financially capable without the aid of the rest of us coming to their rescue -- but that doesn't negate the risks you assume in waiting too long, either. And, really, it won't hurt anything if you just don't have any at all. The planet isn't exactly hurting for human resources.

  21. Re:It's not a doll on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 1

    No. In a few decades (at best), I'll be dead. What do I give a shit if my "genetic material" is left behind? I'LL BE DEAD.

    If you really want to leave something behind, go murder a few thousand people and guarantee a spot in history books. Or help some people. . . but frankly, you're better killing them. Everyone remembers Manson after a few murders, but almost nobody remembers Borlaug after a billion and counting lives credited to his work.

  22. Re:Useless without a surrogate on Women Increasingly Freezing Their Eggs To Pursue Their Careers · · Score: 2

    Christ, what male wants children and decades long financial burdens that badly?

  23. Am I the only one.. on Non-Coders As the Face of the Learn-to-Code Movements · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course I'm not.

    But seriously, am I the only one who doesn't give a shit?

    Look, don't code. Don't encourage your kids or students to code. It'll make those who do more valuable. Do mechanics worry about everyone on the planet knowing how to fix their car? Do carpenters spend countless hours navel-gazing about bringing carpentry to school children and girls and the average CEO? Do HVAC specialists?

    Do whatever the hell you want to do. The fewer who want to code, the better for the negotiating power and leverage of coders and technologists going into the future.

  24. It's 2014. on Leonard Nimoy: Smoking Is Illogical · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It has been at least suspected that smoking caused cancer for about one hundred years, now.
    It has been widely known, including the Surgeons General warning, for at least fifty years.

    I am long past the point of having any concern for people who can't kick the smoking habit or are ill from it (other than simple human sympathy for anyone suffering, of course). Unless you are at least 70 years old, today, there is no excuse for you to have any real smoking problems. You know it is going to kill you, today. You knew it would kill you, when you started. We are almost to the point where anyone with even the slightest "well, I didn't know back then" excuse for smoking is dead.

    Anyway, this is sad news. I know that Nimoy is in his 80s. I know he has lived a full life. However, I have been dreading his passing. As many people my age likely have, I've a mental list of older guys whose passing I'm sure to be alive for and who are going to really gut me. He's one of the guys on that list.

  25. Engadget. on Slashdot Tries Something New; Audience Responds! · · Score: 1

    It's painfully clear that whoever holds the reigns at Slashdot these days just wants it to become another Engadget/Gizmodo/whatever. Just dump the existence community, revamp your site, and get on with the 78 cell phone news stories per day and native-advertising.