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User: TRS80NT

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Comments · 118

  1. Re:Sloppy Half-circle on Aboriginal Sundial Pre-Dates Stonehenge · · Score: 1

    That's what I was thinking. Didn't we all just get our sun signs reassigned?
    Or something.

  2. Re:Another unfunded mandate on DOJ Seeks Mandatory Data Retention For ISPs · · Score: 1

    My ISP at home is literally a Mom and Pop operation.
    I'm going to miss them.

  3. Re:This is so sad... on Actor Leslie Nielsen Dies at 84 · · Score: 1

    Surely you're thinking of Peter Graves. Wait. He's dead too.

  4. Re:Fear mongering 101 on Students Banned From Bringing Pencils To School · · Score: 1

    ...she eventually got it taken off her permanent record..

    Slashdot archive notwithstanding ;) .

  5. Re:GEOS on The Software That Failed To Compete With Windows · · Score: 1

    Me too. It's good to get the ransom letter phase out of the way early ;)

  6. Re:OS/2 on The Software That Failed To Compete With Windows · · Score: 1

    It was fun on the C64 but I didn't really get into it until I got my C128 and a second floppy drive. Program in one drive, data in the other. 80-column screen! Whoo boy that was fun.

  7. Re:Sooo..... on Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Generates a 'Mini-Big Bang' · · Score: 1

    I thought it was LibreFreeon, but maybe I'm thinking of something else.

  8. Re:I still have a copy... on The Secret Origin of Windows · · Score: 2, Informative

    "...better file management programs at the time..."
    including from Microsoft itself. DOSSHELL, included with DOS 4?, 5? (been too long) was a file management and task switching environment that actually was more stable than Windows at the time. YMMHV (...May Have Varied)

  9. Re:How do you know when it's decrypted? on Parallel Algorithm Leads To Crypto Breakthrough · · Score: 1

    Heh, heh. Soon after I got out of the Army, a writer for Rolling Stone was reminiscing about his days in the Navy. They had had approximately the same mission we had, just offset a little bit geographically. I'm not sure if he got in trouble for it, but he "declassified" a LOT of information.
    Let me just repeat the motto of the Army Security Agency: In God we trust, everyone else we monitor.

  10. Re:How do you know when it's decrypted? on Parallel Algorithm Leads To Crypto Breakthrough · · Score: 1

    A good question. An analog from simpler times:
    More years ago than I care to count on my fingers I was a cryptanalyst in...let's say, near, the Mideast. The traffic we were intercepting and working on was in Russian, Italian or one of several dialects of Arabic, none of which I speak, or more to the point, read. But when you are applying decryption techniques you don't necessarily have to know what exactly what the message says to make progress, just what the plaintext should LOOK like.

  11. Re:A simple solution on Rupert Murdoch Says Google Is Stealing His Content · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "...everyone (especially readers)."
    There. Fixed that for you.

  12. Re:Spoiler requested... on New Comic Book About Logic, Math, and Madness · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yes, but unfortunately it's demonstrating Zeno's Paradox, and Captain America never connects.

  13. Re:IT Industry on The Case For Mandatory Touch-Typing In High School · · Score: 1

    Touch typing can be unlearnable, too. My first job-related computer experience was on an IBM AT using an in-house COBOL program that made extensive use of the F keys, which in those days were on a pad to the left (where God intended them, per Jerry Pournelle). After some time I found that I had shifted my hands to the left and was using my right hand for the right two thirds of the keyboard and left for the rest and the F keys. Now, years after last using that program and years after the F keys migrated to the top of the keyboard, I still type with that offset.

  14. Re:Not the observatory! on Mount Wilson Observatory In Danger From L.A. Fire · · Score: 1

    Sorry, Dude. That was the Griffith Observatory, further down the mountains.

  15. Re:Retirement on South Korea Deploys Cloned Drug-Sniffing Dogs · · Score: 1

    "Mmmmm. This dog smells good."

  16. Re:You can Do that? on Wells Fargo Bank Sues Itself · · Score: 1

    Effectiveness also depends on the lay of the land. A building I work in (in Wisconsin) has heated sidewalks for the front entrance, which is on a hillside slope. Under certain conditions of snow amount and temperature the heated area produces runoff which freezes into layers of ice which make the nice, clear sidewalk almost impossible to get to. Several times a winter they have to turn off the sidewalk and clear it the old-fashioned way.

  17. Re:An extention of the Sharks with Lasers Idea... on Could We Beam Broadband Internet Into Iran? · · Score: 3, Funny

    You laugh but it could be true. In the early 70s I lived in Asmara, Ethiopia (now Eritria). Our place was on the edge of town and we often saw camel trains plodding in from the hills headed for the marketplace. The lead camel usually had a blaring transistor radio around its neck. I always wondered if the lead camel driver had a radio because he was the leader or if he was the leader because he had a radio.

  18. Re:I agree on Study Shows "Secret Questions" Are Too Easily Guessed · · Score: 2, Funny

    Somehow my idiot brother was able to figure it out. Bummer.

  19. Re:Wrong generation? on Can the New Digital Readers Save the Newspapers? · · Score: 1

    The generational factor is a good point, but I think there may be more to it. For the record I'm fifty-something and grew up in a newspaper-reading household. "The paper" was always around, even if we were on vacation and the paper had been bought from a rack. When I left home I always subscribed, whever I was, or at least bought one regularily.
    A few years ago though, I let my subscription lapse after a delivery dispute and have never gotten back in the habit. I buy a Sunday paper maybe once or twice a month. And I read it for days. I honestly can't figure out how I used to get through a newspaper every day.

  20. Re:Were nerds here... use the f'ing metric system on The 100 Degree Data Center · · Score: 1

    Well, yeah, except for that 98.6 thing.

  21. Re:I always buy boxed games on How Much Longer Will Physical Game Distribution Survive? · · Score: 1

    It doesn't get much more tangible than Feelies . I mean really -- how can you download a functioning ball of pocket fluff?

  22. Re:Or more reasonable policies on Students Are Always Half Right In Pittsburgh · · Score: 1

    When I was a senior in high school, having observed how graduation and other end-of-year celebrations worked, I started jockeying for fourth or fifth (I forget) in class rank. This was the highest place that didn't involve having to make a speech.

  23. Re:I've seen that happen on Google To Digitize Millions of Old Newspaper Pages · · Score: 1

    Like most generalizations (including yours) it contains a kernel of truth. My intention in citing it in this queue was to point out that most people are wilder in their youth and tend to mellow out as they get older, leaving a dossier that might prove embarrassing in certain contexts.
    Or were just making a "generalization" joke?

  24. Re:I've seen that happen on Google To Digitize Millions of Old Newspaper Pages · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Besides...
    "Any man who is under 30, and is not a liberal, has no heart; and any man who is over 30, and is not a conservative, has no brains." Attrib. various, including Churchill.

  25. Re:Cheeping Weasel... on Magpies Are Self-Aware · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's not new. Dave Barry did it years ago. And it can't be random -- there has to be some insight applied.
    As to the Self Aware Magpies, I think they're great. I have all their album.