Slashdot Mirror


User: radiumsoup

radiumsoup's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
280
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 280

  1. Re:Hard to imagine the vastness on The Deepest Picture of the Universe Ever Taken: the Hubble Extreme Deep Field · · Score: 1

    that's a crock.

    I don't meet a different cat every time I make a choice to feed mine wet or dry food. It's the same cat.

  2. Re:Hard to imagine the vastness on The Deepest Picture of the Universe Ever Taken: the Hubble Extreme Deep Field · · Score: 1

    I took a towel to opening night of Hitchhiker's. Nobody else did at the theater I went to, surprisingly.

    I got some VERY jealous looks. ("Why didn't I think of that?" kind of things.)

    wife wouldn't let me wear a bathrobe, though.

  3. Re:We have found the enemy, and it's Hasbro! on Light Bulb Ban Produces Hoarding In EU, FUD In U.S. · · Score: 1

    have you ever used one of those things? The portion sizes are insufficient to satiate the appetite of any human being, no matter the size or age. The purpose of the EZ Bake Oven is to encourage kitchen skills, not for making tasty snacks (proof of that is the fact that the food that comes out of those things is not tasty.) I challenge you to show me any child who became obese at the hands of an incandescent bulb.

  4. Re:Ban is dumb on Light Bulb Ban Produces Hoarding In EU, FUD In U.S. · · Score: 1

    where do the subsidies come from?

    Taxpayers, of course... (well, short term it's China's purchase of US sovereign debt, if you want to get picky; long term it's still taxpayers who are on the hook for that plus interest.) So, there's no practical difference from an absolute cost standpoint, except that any subsidies must first go through the HORRIBLY inefficient governmental bureaucracy first.

    Ending subsidies will (or, *should*, rather, since everyone knows spending doesn't actually shrink when taxes are cut) cause the cost of purchasing electricity go up, but with the added benefit of requiring lower tax revenues to pay for the subsidies. If we were to lower energy taxes and end energy subsidies, along with NOT REALLOCATING the funds "saved" by ending the subsidies, the market will indeed work itself into a more efficient solution (assuming no market-abusing monopolistic activities.) I'd dare say running it all through the Rube Goldberg accounting machine of the Department of Energy causes more inefficiency than a city full of incandescent bulbs.

  5. Re:I know nothing of physics, but... on Fusion Power Breakthrough Near At Sandia Labs? · · Score: 1

    I love it when people bring up that movie - it's one of my favorites in the SciFi genre, introduced to me by my NT4 MCSE instructor.

    Yes, it was one of the only practical things I learned in that class that I didn't already know.

  6. Re:Let's Just Hope They Leave Well Enough Alone on Dice Buys Geeknet's Media Business, Including Slashdot, In $20M Deal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the userbase of /. is so well entrenched, modifying the brand too much would surely kill it.

    see: Gawker

  7. Is this really a problem? on Rick Falkvinge On Child Porn and Freedom Of the Press · · Score: 1

    Aren't there existing protections limiting prosecution to knowingly and intentionally committing crimes? I can't see how legalizing possession completely will "fix" the "problem" of accidental prosecution in an effective way. Baby/bathwater and all that.

  8. Re:Had a "run in" with Wikipedia once on HOSTS on When a Primary Source Isn't Good Enough: Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    You sound young and inexperienced.

    Hopefully, grace and rational thought will come to you with age.

  9. Re:Wow, what a story on When a Primary Source Isn't Good Enough: Wikipedia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "big deal" is the systemic flaw (although I concede my description of it as a "flaw" could be argued as a "feature" by others) which prevents the actual primary source from being cited as what it is. Wikipedia is a passable experiment in group mechanics - but is itself not credible for anything unless continually fact-checked. And by continually, I mean that one can never be sure of its accuracy, fairness, or completeness on any topic, and since edits are so trivial to make, its accuracy, fairness, and completeness must be virtually thrown out at each edit and reexamined - and by definition, reexamined by persons who are not the primary source.

    Rather reminds me of AOL chat rooms at times, honestly.

    (A/S/L, anyone?)

  10. Um...... no on Why WikiLeaks Is Worth Defending · · Score: 1

    Submitter's idea of "need" and mine are apparently worlds apart. I need Wikileaks like I need a shovel for that big steaming pile of dragon shit in my front yard that doesn't exist.

  11. Re:Great, now I feel old. on Mario Bros. Clone Released For Atari 2600 · · Score: 1

    Also, Pitfall.

  12. Re:Unsurprising responses on Ask Slashdot: To AdBlock Or Not To AdBlock? · · Score: 1

    if I had mod points today, I'd spend one to +1 this.

    I've never understood the "information is free" mantra. It's simply based on false ideology from a perspective of one who hasn't thought about the implications of what they're saying all the way through to the end.

  13. New business model emerging on German Government Wants Google To Pay For the Right To Link To News Sites · · Score: 1

    I think I just discovered a new business model (if the German plan goes through, anyway): Make content (or buy it from someone else, like the AP or Reuters), get it indexed by Google for several years, then "suddenly realize" that Google is indexing your pages in a way that generates income via pageviews/ads, then sue Google for back-royalties for all the years they "unfairly" linked to said content. Brilliant, if I do say so myself.

  14. Re:Piracy jumpstarts any industry in a new country on How Plagiarism Helped Win the American Revolution · · Score: 4, Insightful

    so it's hypocritical for people who are alive now to act in a manner opposite of people who are no longer alive? Tell me more about how this works, I'd like to start blaming the Mongols for not keeping up with the ways of Attilla.

  15. Unconstitutional? on House Representatives Working On NASA Reform Bill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If we can go 3 years with no Federal budget whatsoever and count it as "constitutional", I'm pretty sure we can finagle a multi-year budget or two.

  16. Re:how long till the lawsuits start flying? on Nokia Feeds a Patent Troll · · Score: 5, Informative

    different lawsuit - Vringo has sued Google for patents owned from a previous merger not related to the Nokia patents... but it does support the idea of Vringo going after patent infringements for a primary source of revenue.

  17. Re:how long till the lawsuits start flying? on Nokia Feeds a Patent Troll · · Score: 4, Informative

    already in process - Vringo has settled part of a suit against AOL, but stands to receive as much as $1B from Google (that's not a misprint, it's widely estimated that damages could go as high as one billion US Dollars.) Trial starts around Oct 18th if memory serves

  18. Re:Welcome to the New World Order, Where Privacy i on Is Your Neighbor a Democrat? There's an App For That · · Score: 0

    ah, yes... "the" corporations, much like "the" [insert racial stereotype here]

  19. Re:RIM's private keys on RIM Agrees To Hand Over Its Encryption Keys To India · · Score: 2

    give it a few days and someone will do it for them.

  20. Re:Rights mean nothing if they can be infringed on Washington, D.C. Police Affirm Citizens' Right To Record Police Officers · · Score: 1

    to use that logic, you'd have to argue then that any cooperative association of people should not have rights to report - including nonprofits, educational institutions, or even ad-hoc meetings of friends who might choose to identify with each other using a common name. Or do you somehow make a distinction when costs are shared between the members of the group? Corporations are made up of People.

  21. Re:Helps the platform... on App Developer: Android Designed For Piracy · · Score: 2

    Windows succeeded largely because both it and the applications running on it could be pirated.

    That and because it came bundled with pretty much every PC made since 1991.

  22. Re:Cables double as space heater on USB 3.0 100W Power Standard Seeks To End Proprietary Chargers · · Score: 1

    Sweet... so, I guess in addition to the "charging batteries" use case, we can add "pencil lead bending". Sounds like something RIM would try to patent.

  23. Re:Americans fixation with (a) deity on Sally Ride Takes Her Final Flight · · Score: 1

    Oh, you must be right because you're not an American, is that it? Because all Americans are xenophobic, and all non-Americans aren't, right? Like you? Right? You probably don't even wonder why I don't care to know where you're from. And if that's true, that'd be the most telling thing of this entire exchange. I'll let you stew on that for a while. For your sake, and that of your neighbo(u)rs, I hope you take an objective step back and do some self analysis on it.

  24. Re:Americans fixation with (a) deity on Sally Ride Takes Her Final Flight · · Score: 0

    Wow, I'm not sure I've seen such reliance on straw men and xenophobia than with this AC post. I gotta hand it to you, you've really honed the art of focusing hatred on people you've never met before. Not sure I'd hope to meet you in a dark alleyway with a U.S. sports team on my shirt, though, if only for fear of being bigoted to death.

  25. Re:Really? on The PHP Singularity · · Score: 1

    AC seems to be the one who submitted the bug and is looking for validation for his complaint from /. readers.