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User: ichthus

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  1. Re:The future of MIDI on Android M To Embrace USB Type-C and MIDI · · Score: 1

    With that mentality, we'd all be using phones with low-rez, monochrome screens, non-touch (button) interfaces and GPRS data capability. Hell, yeah -- I want my Nokia 8290 back! Best phone ever!

  2. Memorable on 25 Years Today - Windows 3.0 · · Score: 1

    Windows 3.0 was part of my first venture into the PC platform. I got my first computer, an Atari 800, in 1984. I stayed with the Atari 8-bit platform until 1991, when I was able to purchase my fist PC: an 80386SX-16, running DOS 3.3 and Windows 3.0. Windows 3.0, despite it's repeated UAE errors and other frustrations, was absolutely AWESOME. I was a junior in high school, and using a mouse and icons felt so cutting-edge and... just fun. I still used DOS WordPerfect 5.1 for serious document creation, but Write was a lot of fun to work with, because of the pre-TTF fonts and pseudo WYSIWYG display.

    > I purchased a Logitech ScanMan plus, B+W half-page scanner, and I was the envy of my classmates. This scanner worked great in Windows, if you didn't move the scanner too fast and overload the buffer. There was also a more competent DOS scanner utility, but the Windows one was just more fun.

    I really enjoyed using Win3.0, and then Win3.1 with its TTF fonts. But, by then, I had moved to college and really depended on the stability of the OS. In 1994 I was using MS Word 6.0 and the stability of the whole system was simply atrocious. If I didn't habitually save my document every few minutes, I risked losing work due to lock-ups and crashes, which happened repeatedly and often. This was total CRAP! There had to be something better! I couldn't work like this -- how could anyone?

    In 1995/1996 some of my fellow engineering student friends were talking about a new way -- "Lie-nuks". This new operating system that was a lot like the SunOS systems we were using in the lab. It was more stable and, even though there weren't as many applicationss available, it promised a more reliable way of getting work done. I tried Yggdrasil "plug and play" Linux in 1995, but it wasn't until 1996 that I was able to get Red Hat 4.1 (kernel 2.0.27) up and running that I completely fell in LOVE.

    Since then, I've used Windows only as a necessary evil -- either for gaming or video editing (something Linux still lags in). But, for absolutely EVERY other task, I've used and enjoyed Linux (with Windowmaker, Gnome, Enlightenment, KDE; WordPerfect 8.0, WingZ, StarOffice 5.0, Liberoffice, and on and on, etc.) since 1996.

    I have fond memories of Windows, sure. But, the best times I had with computing (even as I was a PC/Windows tech support guy for Packard Bell computers in the 1990's (and with the advent of Windows 95 and 98)), Linux has been the most fun, most stable, more secure, least worrisome and most productive OS in PC land for me. So, while I do certainly share in the Windows nostalgia, Micro$oft can totally SUCK IT! I lost more work and time and patience with your crappy, bloated, insecure and unstable OSes throughout the years than I care to chronicle and, while you may now be making strides to right the wrongs of the past, I will always view you with contempt and blame you for holding the home PC platform back from the more excellent potential it could have had if you had not been the dominant player. FUCK YOU.

  3. PUBLIC school on Student Photographer Threatened With Suspension For Sports Photos · · Score: 2

    The article isn't clear on this, and I'm too lazy to google the school, but it looks like this is a taxpayer-funded, public school. And, the sporting events look an awful lot like public performances. No privacy violation and, since the school is not [supposed to be] a for-profit corporation, no rights can be claimed on the photos.

  4. What's the problem? on A Visual Walk Through Amazon's Impact On One Seattle Neighborhood · · Score: 3, Interesting
    So... I just don't see what the issue is here.

    ... without regard for aesthetics of any kind

    No, that's a contemporary, high density housing style. You might not like it, but there is regard for aesthetics. You just don't agree with the aesthetic value.

  5. The bomb on How the NSA Converts Spoken Words Into Searchable Text · · Score: 4, Funny

    This technology is the bomb! But, I will provide a colloquialism, ala Admiral Ackbar: "Take evasive action!" Incinerate any predisposition you may have to using keywords, like: bomb, infidel, jihad, Great Satan, etc. Instead, peace be upon you, and all your phone conversations.

  6. Re:Typical American University on University Overrules Professor Who Failed Entire Management Class · · Score: 2

    Watch the documentary Ivory Tower. It's all about keeping graduation stats up, which leads to more enrollment and, you guessed it, more money.

  7. Agree. How is Pandora any different from radio? Artists' labels fight to get air time for singles in order to promote the art, the artist and potentially increase ticket sales when the artist tours. Pandora provides the same service.

  8. Re:"...crammed into a dongle about 10cm long..." on Intel 'Compute Stick' PC-Over-HDMI Dongle Launched, Tested · · Score: 4, Informative

    It would be an upgrade for me. :(

  9. Nuclear Wessels... in Alamida on Cetaceans Able To Focus Sound For Echolocation · · Score: 1

    How many of you know what cetaceans are, because of Star Trek IV?

  10. Pronunciation on GNOME 3.16 Released · · Score: 2

    Agh! It's even ambiguous in their video. Is it pronounced "Nome", or "G'nome"? The female narrator in the video says g'nome at the beginning, and then makes the 'g' silent toward the end.

    I can't take this anymore. And that, my friends, is why I use KDE.

  11. Then ID would be required on Obama: Maybe It's Time For Mandatory Voting In US · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One big problem with this plan for democrats: Voters would have to present ID to get credit for voting.

    Nice try, though.

  12. Dammit! Landmarks, not dandmarks. Friday night, a couple shots of vodka... typos ensue.

    *mumble mumble* Overbearing motherfuckers.

  13. You know what? Prove that the video was shot within the confines of US airspace. Recognizable dandmarks are present, you say? Well, then prove that it's not a computer rendering and is, in fact, a drone-shot video.

    Overbearing motherfuckers.

  14. Where is your town? I believe there are some places in the US where only one broadband provider is available, but I'm not privy to any of them. I live in a rural part of Utah, and there are no less than four options available to me (Comcast, Century Link, and a couple of WISPs). I currently get ~60 Mb up/down for $45/mo with my WISP.

  15. Novel idea on Microsoft Finally Allows Customers To Legally Download Windows 7 ISOs · · Score: 1

    Being able to download ISOs of your favorite OS -- what a novel idea!

  16. Re:tic - toc + marketing on Intel To Rebrand Atom Chips Along Lines of Core Processors · · Score: 1

    That's not the market that matters for the Atom. ARM-based micros are their real competition and, with processors like Samsung's Exynos, Qualcom's Snapdragon and Apple's A8, Intel doesn't have any lead at all.

  17. Re:Get ready for metered service on FCC Approves Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    No, we used to have that, back in the days of dial-up. It went away and never returned, except for wireless telcom carriers -- who are now also abandoning metered service.

  18. Yellow folders on Users Decry New Icon Look In Windows 10 · · Score: 1

    It looks like a clean, white shirt with mustard stains. Why do the folders have to be yellow? Why not choose a color that actually blends nicely with the rest of the scheme?

  19. Ratio..? on Researchers: Alcohol Health Risks Underestimated, Marijuana Relatively Safe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ratio between toxic dose and typical human intake? That's their scale. Pretty meaningless. Yeah, put water on that scale, and I'd bet it would be somewhere down around heroin's risk.

  20. Re:Yelp is so full of shit sometimes on Company Promises Positive Yelp Reviews For a Price; Yelp Sues · · Score: 1

    Why should I give a rat's ass what some pretentious, beany-wearing hipster communications major thinks about a restaurant? What kind of statistical accuracy can a data set of one (1) provide? No. I want many opinions from many average Joes -- being an average Joe myself.

  21. Re:Yelp is so full of shit sometimes on Company Promises Positive Yelp Reviews For a Price; Yelp Sues · · Score: 1

    You actually pay attention to "customer" rating????

    As opposed to.... what? MPAA rating?

  22. Quality over quantity on Too Much Exercise May Not Be Better Than a Sedentary Lifestyle · · Score: 1

    I don't care now long I live. I do care about how well I live. I'd rather be muscular, look good and have the freedom to go snowboarding as much as I want, and die in my 70's, than be out of shape and have difficulty getting around until I'm 100.

  23. Re:The credibility of science? on Science's Biggest Failure: Everything About Diet and Fitness · · Score: 1

    It's doctors and "nutritionists", not just journalists, who have propagated these falsehoods.

  24. Re:Encrypted External Drive in a Fire Safe on Ask Slashdot: Best Medium For Personal Archive? · · Score: 2

    He didn't say they were his. Aaaand, his name is Mr. Intel. So...

  25. Re:Until... on New Advance Confines GMOs To the Lab Instead of Living In the Wild · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Righto -- statistics is in favor of evolution not happening. Gotcha.