It's no good giving me mod points every couple of days hoping I'll moderate, if you keep logging me out all the time!
I'm logged in on the home page, but when I open stories in separate tabs most of them are logged out. Developers.Slashdot is one of the few that still seems OK.
When you're done messing about with breaking things on older Firefoxes (yes I'm on v3 on Mint 7 but no reason to upgrade when it mostly still works), please fix this. Thanks. Happy 2016.
I was always bemused that they didn't seize the chance to make data drives (using the exact same discs as the audio gear - see wikipedia for what really happened) and really market them well. At the time, 100MB robust Read/Write discs would have been really brilliant.
I bought into it for audio, in 1996. Those discs, protected nicely in their little cases, have lasted well and still play. The price of the blank media came down nicely while I was really using it, but I've recently transfered it all to WAV/FLAC/MP3 and the whole lot now sits in shoe box amongst the junk in the loft to confuse my descendents who will one day wonder what it is:)
If they had embraced the format for all its possibilities, it could have been massive.
I used to SAVE programs over the CB airwaves for other people to LOAD, and never noticed any great problems with the Speccy interfering with my CB:)
(I put a socket on the back of my CB fist-mic - this was at the height of the CB craze after UK legalisation in Nov 1981 - so that I could plug in other mics, or line-level audio via a resistive dropper. I found that hooking it up to the Speccy I could SAVE over the air with a nice clear modulation (CB is FM in the UK - 27MHz) with enough quality that other people were able to hook up their CBs to the line-in socket of their Speccy and LOAD what I was sending to them. It worked just fine!)
When I was an 80s teen with my ZX Spectrum, I could write games that weren't too far behind the earliest commercial games. (back then it was even a novelty to have control over what appeared on your old telly screen!)
I wrote games that gave me as much fun as the coin-op machines back then, when things were primitive.
Now though, how can any kid write a fluid 3D FPS shoot-up? I take my hat off to any who can! Where's the incentive? Where's the novelty?
Little 2D games on the kids' Android phones, maybe. Perhaps.
You have obviously never been depressed - really horribly deeply depressed. It's nowhere near as simple as you think.
When you really can't see the point of anything, and hate being alive, you're simply not going to see the point of carrying on. Changing everything for a different experience of life? It just doesn't seem worth it.
I haven't been right down to the very bottom myself, or I wouldn't still be here. It's like a black hole, you can get to within a certain distance of it and still pull back. That's the stage where your advice holds water. But past the 'event horizon' there's no coming back, and no amount of advice will counter that slippery slope to oblivion.
That's the tragedy of suicide. If only we could stop people from getting so very very low that there's no way back, we could achieve something. But in a society where personal freedom is valued as much as we do, people are free to be left alone in their misery without any helpful intervention until it's too late. Too many of us just don't have enough positive social contact to keep a healthy mind.
I love/. for the Informative and Funny comments. I have often laughed out very loud at the wit here, and on many occasions have had my eyes opened on issues that had escaped me before. Reading what intelligent people have to say about something is fascinating and educational.
But I always have to manually determine what threshold to specify, as I want somewhere around 15 comments if possible. 3 comments at level 5 isn't enough, and if dropping to level 4 brings in a total of 11 then it's worth doing.
I'd like a way to specify "Automatically reduce threshold if required so that I always get 10 to 20 comments if possible" - i.e. if level 5 gives me 9 comments but reducing to 4 gives me less than 20, it's worth pulling in those extra ones. More then 20 is too much to care about, too much work.
Or you could automatically configure it (by option) such that if the next level down contains only 50% more comments (or less) then automatically bring them in.
But the annoying close ups don't convey just how magnificent it really is. When I finally reached the wide view I was really surprised at the size of it, and I wanted to see it for myself in real life, much more than I got from the close ups. We need a sense of scale, don't we?
And why does every shot of anything these days have to come from a moving camera? Are our attention spans REALLY so poor now that we would mentally drift away if we were presented with a static shot (but still containing motion)?
This is exactly what both Windows and Linux needs right now. In Windows our only free choices apart from the crippled Windows Movie Maker (limited in too many ways) are nightmarish utilities or trial versions of payware (like VideoPad). In Linux there are certainly projects out there, but they either seem to have stalled in development, been abandoned, crash all the time, or we're waiting oh-so-patiently for v1.0 to arrive.
This new VLMC looks like it should really hit the spot. They have a YouTube page with this demo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02vdwNsvbZI&hd=1 and with a bit more polish, transitions and effects it should be all that many of us need. Well done to the team, I for one am looking forward to the first release in February.
Heck, if they could put together a quick Live CD/USB iso so that I could play with it, I'd test it too:) (I'm not up to getting it running as it is but I've played with Ubuntu and Linux Mint ok)
Thank you for alerting me to that. I did what I could to delete those cookies, but still had a load of folders (now empty) with website names, in the folder : C:\Users\(mylogin)\AppData\Roaming\Macromedia\Flash Player\macromedia.com\support\flashplayer\sys - some with unsavoury names:)
Maybe for stills, but the video output is 'only' 1080 lines - and it seems to achieve this by skipping 2 out of every 3 lines of sensor data leading to aliasing problems. But there are ways around this and it's certainly becoming an extremely popular camera for amateur (and some pro) filmmaking.
My current car drops to 3/4 full incredibly soon after a full tank, and then drops more slowly. It's quite depressing, so it baffles me that they'd design it that way.
true.. and just think how cheap a several GB memory card is these days : soon they'll be standard in each car, hidden away somewhere and logging exactly how you drive so that they can "diagnose any faults more easily".
Then... Big Brother will get in on the action and take note of how fast you go....
At least I lived through the Golden Age of Motoring.
That's what I had hoped, when I was worried about the "Norwalk" (norovirus) vomity / The Runs bug. I had hoped that I'd be OK if I'd already had it. Then I found out that the immunity only lasts about 3 months! Bummer.
How come the the Americans call bumpers fenders and yet call car stickers bumper stickers?
I think it's an age thing. I was so proud of my first car, a Mk 1 Ford Fiesta. It ended up with wide alloys, stripes and other stickers, a CB and aerial (don't laugh too hard!) on the vinyl roof (!) and PA speaker behind the front grille, booster amplifier for the tape player with graphic equaliser, those big ol' 1980s rear shelf speakers with TSX-20 in big white letters, seatcovers, chunky gear knob, two plastic turtles on the dash in a copulation arrangement, a "spoiler", spotlights for show (not even wired up!), an aftermarket sunroof, a suction cup Garfield on a window, and probably more that I've tried to forget. Oh yes, even a novelty stick-on dummy switch labelled "Ejector Seat"!. Yes, it makes me cringe now, although it all seemed so tasteful at the time... and I remember getting very annoyed sometimes when people put my safety at risk and threatened my pride and joy.
These days, mellowed with age, I snigger at blue LED lights and neons the kids have, and I drive a car 100% as supplied - standard everything. If a garage puts a sticker on during a service, it comes off right away. It's how the car company designer intended, and looks clean and smart... like it could be newly bought.
And if anyone does anything dumb these days, I just shrug and count myself lucky I'm still in one piece and that I don't drive like that. The world is full of lousy drivers, like it's full of lousy everything-ers, you get used to it.
It's no good giving me mod points every couple of days hoping I'll moderate, if you keep logging me out all the time!
I'm logged in on the home page, but when I open stories in separate tabs most of them are logged out. Developers.Slashdot is one of the few that still seems OK.
When you're done messing about with breaking things on older Firefoxes (yes I'm on v3 on Mint 7 but no reason to upgrade when it mostly still works), please fix this. Thanks. Happy 2016.
> If you go to Twitter to get your breaking news, you're a maroon.
See that, America? Now THAT is irony!
> My name is John Kodak you insensitive clod.
Well, that was quite a moment.
The rest of the world (it does exist) treats Lego as a collective noun.
Hey America, kindly take the S from Legos and put it on the end of Math.
Thanks.
> (2.4GHz is used in microwave ovens for a reason, water has an absorbtion band there)
Something of an urban myth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_absorption_by_water
- "water has a broad absorption spectrum in the microwave region"
The only reason 2.45MHz is used for cooking, is because it's a ISM (Industrial/Scientific/Medical) band which is licence-free to use.
73 OM
and you don't get to see anything unless you tell NoScript to enable his javascript.
All for a few piccies.
I despair.
I was always bemused that they didn't seize the chance to make data drives (using the exact same discs as the audio gear - see wikipedia for what really happened) and really market them well. At the time, 100MB robust Read/Write discs would have been really brilliant.
I bought into it for audio, in 1996. Those discs, protected nicely in their little cases, have lasted well and still play. The price of the blank media came down nicely while I was really using it, but I've recently transfered it all to WAV/FLAC/MP3 and the whole lot now sits in shoe box amongst the junk in the loft to confuse my descendents who will one day wonder what it is :)
If they had embraced the format for all its possibilities, it could have been massive.
I used to SAVE programs over the CB airwaves for other people to LOAD, and never noticed any great problems with the Speccy interfering with my CB :)
(I put a socket on the back of my CB fist-mic - this was at the height of the CB craze after UK legalisation in Nov 1981 - so that I could plug in other mics, or line-level audio via a resistive dropper. I found that hooking it up to the Speccy I could SAVE over the air with a nice clear modulation (CB is FM in the UK - 27MHz) with enough quality that other people were able to hook up their CBs to the line-in socket of their Speccy and LOAD what I was sending to them. It worked just fine!)
When I was an 80s teen with my ZX Spectrum, I could write games that weren't too far behind the earliest commercial games. (back then it was even a novelty to have control over what appeared on your old telly screen!)
I wrote games that gave me as much fun as the coin-op machines back then, when things were primitive.
Now though, how can any kid write a fluid 3D FPS shoot-up? I take my hat off to any who can! Where's the incentive? Where's the novelty?
Little 2D games on the kids' Android phones, maybe. Perhaps.
You have obviously never been depressed - really horribly deeply depressed. It's nowhere near as simple as you think.
When you really can't see the point of anything, and hate being alive, you're simply not going to see the point of carrying on. Changing everything for a different experience of life? It just doesn't seem worth it.
I haven't been right down to the very bottom myself, or I wouldn't still be here. It's like a black hole, you can get to within a certain distance of it and still pull back. That's the stage where your advice holds water. But past the 'event horizon' there's no coming back, and no amount of advice will counter that slippery slope to oblivion.
That's the tragedy of suicide. If only we could stop people from getting so very very low that there's no way back, we could achieve something. But in a society where personal freedom is valued as much as we do, people are free to be left alone in their misery without any helpful intervention until it's too late. Too many of us just don't have enough positive social contact to keep a healthy mind.
I love /. for the Informative and Funny comments. I have often laughed out very loud at the wit here, and on many occasions have had my eyes opened on issues that had escaped me before. Reading what intelligent people have to say about something is fascinating and educational.
But I always have to manually determine what threshold to specify, as I want somewhere around 15 comments if possible. 3 comments at level 5 isn't enough, and if dropping to level 4 brings in a total of 11 then it's worth doing.
I'd like a way to specify "Automatically reduce threshold if required so that I always get 10 to 20 comments if possible"
- i.e. if level 5 gives me 9 comments but reducing to 4 gives me less than 20, it's worth pulling in those extra ones. More then 20 is too much to care about, too much work.
Or you could automatically configure it (by option) such that if the next level down contains only 50% more comments (or less) then automatically bring them in.
Does anyone else agree?
But the annoying close ups don't convey just how magnificent it really is. When I finally reached the wide view I was really surprised at the size of it, and I wanted to see it for myself in real life, much more than I got from the close ups. We need a sense of scale, don't we?
And why does every shot of anything these days have to come from a moving camera? Are our attention spans REALLY so poor now that we would mentally drift away if we were presented with a static shot (but still containing motion)?
Bugs - that's exactly what they would have expected.
The US should have placed NO bugs in there whatsoever - that would have had the Chinese really worried :)
This is exactly what both Windows and Linux needs right now.
In Windows our only free choices apart from the crippled Windows Movie Maker (limited in too many ways) are nightmarish utilities or trial versions of payware (like VideoPad).
In Linux there are certainly projects out there, but they either seem to have stalled in development, been abandoned, crash all the time, or we're waiting oh-so-patiently for v1.0 to arrive.
This new VLMC looks like it should really hit the spot. They have a YouTube page with this demo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02vdwNsvbZI&hd=1
and with a bit more polish, transitions and effects it should be all that many of us need. Well done to the team, I for one am looking forward to the first release in February.
Heck, if they could put together a quick Live CD/USB iso so that I could play with it, I'd test it too :) (I'm not up to getting it running as it is but I've played with Ubuntu and Linux Mint ok)
check out Audacity Recovery Utility - worked for me the one time I needed it.
http://www.mesw.de/audacity/recovery/
Thank you for alerting me to that. I did what I could to delete those cookies, but still had a load of folders (now empty) with website names, in the folder : :)
C:\Users\(mylogin)\AppData\Roaming\Macromedia\Flash Player\macromedia.com\support\flashplayer\sys
- some with unsavoury names
I'm glad I've been able to get rid. Thanks.
no, it's because we're all sinners and it's our own fault for being born :)
If you a 5D-II forum with a lot of activity, see http://www.cinema5d.com/search.php?search_id=newposts
> The 5D Mark 2 is 5616x3744.
Maybe for stills, but the video output is 'only' 1080 lines - and it seems to achieve this by skipping 2 out of every 3 lines of sensor data leading to aliasing problems. But there are ways around this and it's certainly becoming an extremely popular camera for amateur (and some pro) filmmaking.
Can we PLEASE have back the ability to go back to specific days??
Like with http://slashdot.org/index.pl?issue=20090413 ???
I'm a week or two behind and want to catch up a day or two at a time without missing anything.
thanks
My current car drops to 3/4 full incredibly soon after a full tank, and then drops more slowly. It's quite depressing, so it baffles me that they'd design it that way.
(no it's not leaking!)
true.. and just think how cheap a several GB memory card is these days : soon they'll be standard in each car, hidden away somewhere and logging exactly how you drive so that they can "diagnose any faults more easily".
Then... Big Brother will get in on the action and take note of how fast you go....
At least I lived through the Golden Age of Motoring.
That's what I had hoped, when I was worried about the "Norwalk" (norovirus) vomity / The Runs bug.
I had hoped that I'd be OK if I'd already had it.
Then I found out that the immunity only lasts about 3 months! Bummer.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norovirus
How come the the Americans call bumpers fenders and yet call car stickers bumper stickers?
I think it's an age thing. I was so proud of my first car, a Mk 1 Ford Fiesta. It ended up with wide alloys, stripes and other stickers, a CB and aerial (don't laugh too hard!) on the vinyl roof (!) and PA speaker behind the front grille, booster amplifier for the tape player with graphic equaliser, those big ol' 1980s rear shelf speakers with TSX-20 in big white letters, seatcovers, chunky gear knob, two plastic turtles on the dash in a copulation arrangement, a "spoiler", spotlights for show (not even wired up!), an aftermarket sunroof, a suction cup Garfield on a window, and probably more that I've tried to forget. Oh yes, even a novelty stick-on dummy switch labelled "Ejector Seat"!. Yes, it makes me cringe now, although it all seemed so tasteful at the time... and I remember getting very annoyed sometimes when people put my safety at risk and threatened my pride and joy.
These days, mellowed with age, I snigger at blue LED lights and neons the kids have, and I drive a car 100% as supplied - standard everything. If a garage puts a sticker on during a service, it comes off right away. It's how the car company designer intended, and looks clean and smart... like it could be newly bought.
And if anyone does anything dumb these days, I just shrug and count myself lucky I'm still in one piece and that I don't drive like that. The world is full of lousy drivers, like it's full of lousy everything-ers, you get used to it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_interaction_of_antimatter