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User: stavrica

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  1. No, seriously. on Stop Saying, 'We Take Your Privacy and Security Seriously' (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 5, Informative

    We took your privacy and security.

    It's gone.

  2. Re:The logic is painfully twisted. on Amazon Threatens To Move Jobs Out of Seattle Over New Tax (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    Amazon has profited from the infrastructure that the Seattle taxpayers have provided for them over the years, including an education system that has provided the workers that have been the engine that has driven Amazon's wealth.

    Your veracity and reasoning are suspect.

    I myself experienced Western Washington's education system after attending public schools in another part of the country, and I can tell you that Washington's education is sub-par. The value provided by Seattle's infrastructure is not at all what you suggest.

    This is the kind of selfish short-term thinking that will destroy this country.

    Maybe. But you're overlooking the critical fact that Washington State government is responsible for making the homeless problem significantly worse with the Deinstitutionalization policies it implemented during the 1990's. Deinstitutionalization is the name given to the policy of moving severely mentally ill people out of large state institutions and then closing part or all of those institutions.

    In particular,

      • The most compelling, wildly naïve economic case went something like this: We have a state mental hospital with a $100 million annual budget that houses 1,000 patients. Many of these patients don't need to be there. If we moved them into community settings, we free up the $100,000 average per-patient costs of this facility, which we can redirect to community mental health centers, housing assistance, and other services to help them.

        As Christopher Jencks noted in his elegant little volume "The Homeless," this argument is misguided in almost every way. Of course, state mental hospitals and other institutions included many patients who required few inpatient services. Yet the patients who spent their days playing cards didn’t draw upon many services beyond room, board, and medication, which they would still require (often at higher unit costs) in any other setting. Deinstitutionalizing low-cost patients doesn’t appreciably reduce the hospital’s $100 million budget. It wouldn’t reduce fixed costs of operating the facility. It doesn’t allow managers to lay off staff who spend much of their time working with the smaller subgroup of most-needy or most-disruptive patients.

    Source: What happened to U.S. mental health care after deinstitutionalization?

    In my opinion, Amazon can be reasonably forgiven for seeking to protect its fiduciary responsibilities in the face of a government who created the very problem that this tax is intended to resolve.

    Cheers.

  3. Collabora marketing ploy on LibreOffice Now Available On Apple's Mac App Store · · Score: 2

    The free LibreOffice Vanilla is the "Prerelease" version 4.4.4.2 while the $10 LibreOffice-from-Collabora is "Still" version 4.3.7.

    Collabora isn't doing LibreOffice any favors by putting a prerelease version that is not ready for prime time out for public consumption. More likely, they are introducing the public to a buggy experience, and then offering to fix the experience using a non-prerelease version that costs $10.

    Seems a bit underhanded.

  4. Marketing ploy by Collabora on LibreOffice Now Available On Apple's Mac App Store · · Score: 2

    The free LibreOffice Vanilla version on the App Store is "Prerelease" version 4.4.4.2 while the Collabora supported LibreOffice is the "Still" version 4.3.7.

    Collabora is not doing LibreOffice any favors by putting a version that is not ready for the mainstream out for public consumption. More likely, they're using the Vanilla as a means to drive people to their $10 version.

    Seems a bit underhanded.

  5. ...is bad for you.

    And brownies may lead to weight gain --but then again, pot alone does a good enough job by itself.

  6. Re:Pumice? on Sandy Island, the Undiscovered Country · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Pumice seems most plausible.

    We obtained worldwide elevation data from NOAA, for our BattleCell land conquest game. (a super-evolved version of Risk) Game coordinates for Sandy Island are: -1911,15956

    Sure enough, the NOAA data shows an elevation of 1 meter, for the entire Sandy Point island.

    Possibly, the island was a dynamically generated object, based on the original NOAA elevation data. What else, besides pumice could generate such readings?

  7. In other news... on States Using Cloud Based Voting System For Overseas Citizens · · Score: 1

    In a move to present itself as being even less evil that Google, Microsoft has announced its intention to decrease its lobbying budget to $0 over the next 36 months.

  8. Uhhhh... no. on RoboEarth Teaches Robots to Learn From Peers · · Score: 1

    "Basically, it teaches machines to learn without human intervention." ...no. It provides a clearing-house for downloading new routines for accomplishing a task that someone else has previously programmed on another system elsewhere.

    Please do not sensationalize what the lowly PC has been doing for well over a decade... that is, downloading information via the Internet to "learn" how not to crash, or prevent a security compromise.

    Substituting a solenoid or motor output for a memory write command to claim that a "robot learned something" does not make this a novel concept.

  9. Time to change his name... on Malicious Online Retailer Ordered Held Without Bail · · Score: 2

    From Borker to Borkee...

  10. Re:Bloody idiots on Open-Source Social Network Diaspora Goes Live · · Score: 1

    We've all been there. It works on every browser, except for IE. The trick is to respond intelligently, and not fall victim to emotional despair when Internet Explorer refuses to act like the mature browser it should be by now.

    Flinging mud at something, even when deserved, will get you dirty as well.

    Why not solve 2 problems at the same time? Do this instead:

    http://code.google.com/p/chromeframeiebar

  11. Bluetooth / WiFi incompatibilities on Bluetooth 4.0 Spec Adopted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That's nice, but are the interference issues between WiFi and Bluetooth fixed yet?

    It would be nice to have the laptop connect to the stereo via Bluetooth while I'm lounging in the living room without cutting out while I'm watching YouTube.

    (more info here: Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Coexistence)

  12. A house built on sand cannot stand. on IE9 Flaunts Hardware-Accelerated Canvas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We developed a web based game BattleCell that uses Ajax/CSS instead of Flash for all the heavy lifting. We discover at least one new bug in the IE rendering engine every month. Our pile of IE bugs in the back room that we have to track every time we develop a new feature is testament to the dread with which we view this new hardware-based rendering engine. We know what we're doing.

    Just last week, we learned that once you have a stack of enough semi-transparent layers (combination of PNGs with alpha channels coupled with DIVs with various opacity CSS settings), IE fails to render the top-most layers. This doesn't happen after 20-30 layers. This happens after 5-7 layers. At first we thought our code was faulty, until we realized that scrolling down such a page with multiple layers will cause text that was previously "invisible" to suddenly be rendered in its specified color... as we kept scrolling, the text would then disappear again. You get the idea.

    Obviously, this all works flawlessly in Safari, Chrome, Opera. For IE, we get to re-architect all sorts of work-arounds --a house built on sand.

  13. IPV6 on When Will the Automotive Internet Arrive? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they're smart, they'll build it out on IPV6.

    (Those who consider this to be obvious should remember that the government is involved.)

  14. Once upon a time... on US Students Suffering From Internet Addiction · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Merchants, immersed in the bustling commerce of Rome, who suddenly found themselves shipwrecked along with a handful of other sailors on some island in the Mediterranean would likely have, "showed signs of withdrawal, craving and anxiety along with an inability to function well without their " ...familiar environment around which their lives had come to revolve.

  15. And I promise to fully believe them... on Microsoft Promises To Fully Support OOXML ... Later · · Score: 1

    ...when they do.

  16. Stereoscopic != 3D on Sony Announces First 3D Blu-ray Disc Players · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Is anybody else bothered by the false advertising that well funded corporate marketing and headline-seeking news is shoving down the public's collective throat?

    Claiming that a stereoscopic picture is the equivalent of a 3 dimensional projection is the equivalent of presenting a stereo entertainment center and claiming that it is surround sound.

  17. Re: Slime Mold Could Lead To Better Tech on Slime Mold Could Lead To Better Tech · · Score: 1

    ...or not.

    I sincerely hope that this wasn't someone's doctorate thesis.

    There are too many such "learned" individuals out there who are incapable original thought. I wonder if this has always been the case...

  18. Re:Games on Ideas For Exploiting NASA's SRTM Data · · Score: 1

    You mean like BattleCell? Offensive/defensive military strength of each cell depends on troop counts as well as altitude differences between cells. (Yes, we used STRM data to acquire our altitudes.)

  19. Mark Newheiser is right: hello digital pet on Farmville, Social Gaming, and Addiction · · Score: 1

    Mark makes some excellent points. We are rapidly evolving the BattleCell game (BattleCell.com) to fit the gaping-wide hole that has become today's Social Gaming world: If it's a Social Game, how come I can't interact with my friends and other players? Zynga has brilliantly demonstrated that you can build a successful business model by effectively marrying good viral marketing (aka, News Feed) with the addictive behaviors identified in your article. Today's Social Gaming offering is comprised of hyped up Tamagotchi digital pet reproductions that allow players to look over their friends' shoulders. One can't really argue with success, of course. But, Mark's final statement nails it --players are left wishing that the game was more fun, that it had more depth after all their investment, that it offered something more meaningful than just another way to spend one's time.

  20. Seriously flawed studay. on IE8 Beats Other Browsers In Laptop Battery Life · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ok. Let me get this straight. The conclusion is to use IE 8 because it uses the least battery life? Presumably, that implies (loosely) that it has the most effective algorithms for rendering modern pages. AnandTech should really compare apples to apples, and leave the orange out of the picture. What good is a modern browser that saves a bit of battery life, when it doesn't have a working Javascript garbage collector to free up memory on Javascript-heavy sites? I suspect that any user who's IE8 browser session just caused their Windows[File] Explorer to crash due to memory resource starvation might not care about how much battery life their IE8 session just saved them. I could be wrong, of course. "They tested on simple web pages..." --kudos. Because, that's what surfers are most likely to encounter on today's modern world wide web. My impression is that this study is seriously flawed, although I might have missed the point.

  21. Re:Risk on Google Maps instead on Monopoly Uses Google Maps To Go Live Online · · Score: 1

    I don't know what game you are pitching but it doesn't sound like risk.

    Pull my finger and find out.

    If you're going to have the whole world playing... (well, a few million players, anyway) ...then 42 countries just won't do. So you'd need to break the world into smaller units... say, 1 minute by 1 minute cells.

    Likewise, you can't really do a turn-based system... You'd have to use a time-based troop-earning mechanism instead. But, earning money in time makes a bit more sense than earning troops... so each "cell" can earn some currency every-so-often, and then you can buy the troops with that currency. (or maybe buy a few other extras as well... We've survived Y2K after all, so the board game should evolve into something more current. No?)

    ...or did you really expect the new Monopoly game to be turn based?

  22. Risk on Google Maps instead on Monopoly Uses Google Maps To Go Live Online · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why not Risk on Google Maps instead? Something like BattleCell ? It should have:

    1. Troops that travel (of course)
    2. Ships that can attack by sea (new)
    3. Topographic component (altitude matters in a battle)
    4. Instant Messaging (language translation?)
    5. Allies (allies are important... maybe they can give me stuff?)

    It would have to be all AJAX. Flash slows everything down. Plus, Google Maps API is a great AJAX implementation anyhow. The graphics would have to be decent. It can't look like a web page... should look like a console instead... something like Starcraft. That would work.

    Ballistic Missiles could make things interesting too. That would be a new concept. But, it would have to be something similar to Scorched Earth that requires players to refine their projectile settings. Maybe make things interesting depending on the warhead used?

    Then, one guy can conquer the whole planet... I wonder how that would compare to Monopoly...

  23. Collecting IE's garbage... on IE Losing 10% Market Share Every Two Years · · Score: 1

    ...and it will continue to fall until IE can get its act together. Browsers have evolved far past where they just need to render pretty CSS pages properly.

    IE 8's Javascript may be faster, but it's still broken. When coupled with its garbage-quality garbage collector, this just means modern sites that use things like jQuery and Prototype crash sooner. IE has had trouble with their garbage for years now: JScript Memory Leaks, QuirksBlog: IE 7 and Javascript

    Now this may all seem trivial to those who visit traditional sites and regularly restart their IE, but sites such as BattleCell can cause memory starvation issues within 30 minutes or less on IE.

    Some people are initially surprised when we tell them to use any browser other than IE. Though, after a few months, their own conclusions of what this all means creates an effort barrier that Microsoft must overcome in order to bring people back...

  24. Already in the works... on Making a Game of the News · · Score: 1

    We're doing this with BattleCell. (Risk on Google maps for millions of players)

    Slashdot Submission

    There are many variations, but the weather makes a good example. Say that you have cells in Florida. Now, suppose that the real-world Florida gets hit with a hurricane. Naturally, production rates of your cells in Florida will suffer.

    Obviously, news can be applied in many ways to keep things interesting.

  25. This is getting old. on AI Could Power Next-gen CCTV Cameras · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Every schmuck who wants to get in the news slaps "Artificial Intelligence" on their contraption and suddenly the world stops to take notice.

    Unless this system:

    1. employs (or provides) some sort of multitiered malleable logic established by prior experiences that can identify a scenario based on inputs,

    2. identifies the best case response to the identified scenario, using not only stored experiences (preprogrammed memory), but relevant characteristics of the scenario itself.

    3. implements that best case scenario, checking constantly (or at least regularly) that the implemented actions are yielding results along the desired/expected solution path.

    4. identifying the resolution phase of its response, so it can consider the scenario resolved and cease its response process. ...then there's no intelligence to it. What these fellows have sounds more like an advanced sound analysis engine that autonomously controls a camera swivel.

    Good for them. Yay. Fun. Hurrah.

    But, where's the AI again? Next...