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User: ZephyrXero

ZephyrXero's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 1,209

  1. Fez 2 & Phil Fish on Biggest Headache For Game Developers: Abusive Fans · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm still mourning the loss of Fez II thanks to all the haters and trolls :(

  2. They're not, Google is on Apple Isn't the Next Microsoft (and That's a Good Thing) · · Score: 0

    Well that was a silly question...I thought we all already knew Google's the one on track to be the next Microsoft. Just as Microsoft was the next IBM before it.

  3. Re:Out of date info on J.K. Rowling Should Try the Voting Algorithm · · Score: 1

    nm...just ignore that, I see where the OP mentions now. Stupid slashdot, why can't I delete posts >_

  4. Out of date info on J.K. Rowling Should Try the Voting Algorithm · · Score: 3, Informative

    She did not purposefully release that this was her pseudonym, so kind of a bad example. There have been numerous news posts today about how she's mad at the PR firm that leaked the info... http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/07/19/203548818/book-news-j-k-rowling-very-angry-that-law-firm-leaked-her-name

  5. Post-Moore Advancement on Moore's Law Fails At NAND Flash Node · · Score: 1

    Even if Moore's "law" finally runs out, we'll still find ways to advance. Just as the multi-core shift has prolonged it kinda sorta in the CPU space, 3D chip design will continue to move us forward for the time being, until quantum computing or something novel based on memristors becomes available.

  6. Re:No Print Images? on BotObjects Announces First Full-Color Desktop 3D Printer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, I thought that was weird too. Every other 3D printer company I've seen was more than happy to show some examples of what they can make. I'm gonna consider this vaporware for now...

  7. Bottom up governance on Ask Slashdot: What Planks Would You Want In a Platform of a Political Party? · · Score: 1

    I looked at your party's site, and I see one glaring thing missing for you to have my support. I'd like to see a focus on true grass roots, distributed, bottom up government be a concentrated goal. A move toward direct democracy, participatory politics and proportional representation. Obviously this is a big, complex topic that would probably take many decades to transition to, but any progress toward it would be good IMO. Power should flow up from the people, not down from the White House.

    Secondly, I think it would also fit in well with the rest of your agenda to make a concentrated effort in promoting mutualist organizations like cooperatives and other employee/member owned business models. Put in place incentives that push for them to replace the capitalist corporatism we have today. For true freedom we need democracy in the work place, not just the goverment.

    Until then, I'll stick with the Green Party.

  8. Re:Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes se on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1
    God damn it...this is why I haven't commented on Slashdot for the past 5 years >_<
    Fine...let's play your game...

    What is the middle ground? Either you have DRM or you don't. How is it anything other than binary? I guess you could have exceptionally obnoxious forms (like the recent Sims game), but it is pretty much binary.

    So, now you've made it clear you either did not even read my original post or most certainly did not comprehend it. The whole point is this: DRM on things you have purchased = Bad. DRM on things you rent = perfectly fine and reasonable.

    Yes in that a conclusion reached by a series of arguments backed up with personal experience is extremism. I happen to agree with RMS because I have previously purchased encumbered things and I can no longer use them despite paying good money for a completely legal copy. This has now happened a number of times to me, with various sorts of different DRM. At this point I'd feel that throwing good money after bad is a form of madness (inability to learn from experience) than anything else.

    Once again, we're NOT talking about things you have purchased! That IS bad...but that's not what we're frakking talking about here >_<

    You are basically advocating the polar opposite: so by your definition that is also extremism.

    No, if I was advocating the polar opposite, I'd be advocating that any and all things should have DRM! Because it's just awesome! (that was sarcasm, since apparently you need everything spelled out for you)

    Well, if anything you have at least done the service for me today in remembering how pathetic this community is for when you actually want to have a discussion rather than iconoclasts spouting off the same repetitive bullshit. Slashdot comments might as well be a thread on 4chan it still seems. Thanks...

  9. Re:Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes se on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1

    How is IP an immoral concept? You can't just make blanket statements like that and act like it's something everyone agrees with you on.

  10. Re:Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes se on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1
    Well, this is how you ended your "argument"...

    You may support defective by design software because it happens to suppor the small subset of things that you happen to do with it, but do not pretend that is is reasonable or lets people do all the reasonable things they want. There is no technical difference between a reasonable copy for reasonable purposes and an illegal copy for nefarious ones. That is why DRM is always, without exception, bad.

    So, I'm pretty sure I did read you right. Your words make it sound like you're pretty hardcore in believing this to be a binary issue, with no option for a middle ground. Pretty much the definition of extremism. That and the use of Stallman's old "defective by design" rhetoric. So, I think we're done here...or at least I am.

  11. Re:Whatever you do, Netflix on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1

    If Netflix not working just how you want it inspires you to violence, you should probably seek some professional help.

  12. Re:Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes se on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1

    There is no DRM in HTML5. The spec everyone's so up in arms about simply adds hooks where a 3rd party plugin can connect with it. The actual DRM component will never be part of the actual HTML spec.

  13. Re:Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes se on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 0

    Because the viewpoint you're posting with is exactly why I felt the need to make my first post at all. Slashdot is unfortunately filled with so many zealots that it's hard to put out a moderate viewpoint sometimes. Your assumption that "DRM is always bad because it's DRM" comes off pretty extremist to me. Sorry if I somehow misread your sentiment though...

  14. Re:Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes se on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 0

    And this is why extremism, even with the best intentions is also bad.

  15. Re:Silverlight greatness on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1

    DASH and other technologies will soon make it just as easy to do adaptive streaming based on your current bandwidth.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_Adaptive_Streaming_over_HTTP

  16. Netflix is one of the places where DRM makes sense on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I know it's blasphemy to say so, especially on Slashdot, but I have zero problem with Netflix using DRM. Why? It's a rental service. I have not purchased these videos. I do not own them. Therefore I have no expectation of any sort of rights to do what I want with them. So, as while I'm totally against it for things like iTunes or a BluRay. It completely makes sense to me that Netflix needs some sort of mechanism, even if it only keep 99% of people from keeping a local copy.

  17. Re:not much better on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The point of DRM is not to give you absolutely no way to capture the content, but simply to make it difficult enough that the average person doesn't just right click and say save file to disk. It's like the lock on my front door. Do people know how to pick it? With enough effort can it be knocked down by brute force, sure. But most people will not attempt to open a locked door, so it serves it's purpose.

  18. Too many factors on Blood From Mosquito Traps Car Thief · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I could see the mosquito based evidence as enough to consider him a suspect, maybe even to get a search warrant perhaps (although that's already a stretch), but by no means should this even remotely count towards conviction as that mosquito could have come from almost anywhere. Still if finding the DNA in the mosquito leads them to find actual evidence, I suppose it's okay.

  19. Avoid Microsoft products at all cost on Remote Access Policies · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No Windows allowed unless on a company owned machine with absolutely no privaledges and a hardcore resident anti-malware tool running. If possible disable IE & Outlook too. If user is accessing via wifi require wpa2 encryption. Otherwise your users are gonna get you infected with their home Limewiring habits or at least have their login info stolen by a keylogger

  20. Re:Yarr harr fiddledy dee... on Vital Parts of Games As DLC? · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of that new Gran Turismo with only one car...

  21. Re:Boring games on Vital Parts of Games As DLC? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I do that all the time. I've played 100's of games over at my friends' houses over the past few years and within half an hour, I've more than gotten my fill. For every game I've found fun enough to warrant a purchase (as well as investing the time to play them) there are hundreds that I was more than happy to skip. Poor quality, plus over inflated price equals you don't get my money.

    For example: Thank god I didn't buy Spore! What a dissapointment... I was so excited for that game over the past 3 years, but then this guy had to ruin it. Not even beginning to mention the draconian DRM.

  22. Re:Killing used/rental on Vital Parts of Games As DLC? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Exactly. If the game industry wants to kill off the used game market...and piracy for the most part too...in one fell swoop, all they need to do is lower the average game's price to around $20-30. If I can get a brand new copy of a game for $20, no way in hell I'm gonna pay Game Stop $15 for a used copy. It's simple economics really...

    Not only that, but if the industry really truely wants to make gaming a mass market affair, they are going to have to lower the costs for players. If movies cost $50-60 per title, hardly anyone would buy them either.

  23. Re:What's the point ... on Students Evaluate Ray Tracing From Developers' Side · · Score: 2, Interesting

    To take Ziakll's argument even further... One problem with today's game industry is how long it takes to make a video game. Back in the 80s games could be made with a small handful of people in less than a year. Now it takes about 10 times as many people and anywhere from 2 to 5 years to produce a game. The biggest time (and of course money) sink in this process is art and level development. If raytracing can make things simpler and quicker to get accomplished for an artist then that will equal less time for production, and less development cost (maybe even cheaper games for the consumer in the long run). Real time raytracing is only inevatable just as it's only a matter of time till tools like Natural Motion's Endorphin and Euphoria take over the animation aspect. Any aspect of the development process that can be simplified or even better automated, will eventually win out.

    I'm betting that AMD's upcoming Hybrid chips will greatly benefit from Real Time Ray Tracing taking off. I'd just love to see someone come out with an open source RTRT engine that we could all start playing with right now, no matter how rudimentary ;)

  24. Re:Linpack? So does it run Linux? on "Intrepid" Supercomputer Fastest In the World · · Score: 3, Funny

    Better question: Does Intrepid run Intrepid?

  25. Re:WINE/*nix Requirements? on Spore System Specs Released, Creature Creator Coming Soon · · Score: 1

    Is there any official/documented proof that it's not a true native port?