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User: deathguppie

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  1. Re:Overall right but unlikely to happen on Battlefield Director: Linux Only Needs One 'Killer' Game To Explode · · Score: 1

    People, keep asking why they would want a Steam box. I think you hit the nail on the head. Preconfigured, pretested, and optimized to run games. I go over to peoples houses and watch them boot their computer for 10-20 minutes into Windows just to play a game. It's obvious they don't know how to build or maintain their systems. I have been using Linux as my main desktop since about 97. Admittedly early on it was because I was a tech junkie, but I really don't work on my systems very often. My wife even switched to Linux this last year, and the amount of maintenance headaches I've had since then have dropped ten fold. I know there are people who have had nightmare issues with Linux, and I know people who have had none. I also know people that can't keep a Windows computer running properly for more than a few days, and even more that think it's normal to wait 3 to 5 minutes for an app to start.

    But excuse the rant. I think the point is that if Valve is going to sell a steam Box, that you could dual boot with windows if you want(or not), or install other applications to use it as a desktop(or not). That will just work day in day out, without the fuss of windows. People will buy it.

  2. Re:I still don't understand... on Steam Machine Prototypes Use Intel CPUs, NVIDIA GPUs · · Score: 1

    I believe Valve is consciously creating their own environment here. Much like Xbox, and PlayStation, they want to be able to offer you an end to end experience, where the software and hardware are tuned for performance. This may mean that Steam OS will give up some features as a generic linux OS to gain performance for gaming. In the case of the Steam Machine, this will more than likely mean that the hardware will have specially tuned drivers pushing it.

    So think of taking your Windows machine, and passing it to to a team of experts who would then strip the OS down, rebuild it, and tune it specifically for the hardware you have installed, so that it runs games at max performance. In this case your best Windows 8 machine may not perform as well as a mid level (hardware) Steam Machine.

  3. Re:Wow on Team Oracle Penalized For America's Cup Rules Violations · · Score: 1

    0.00001% of world population cares about the accuracy of statistics surrounding people who may or may not enjoy yachting.. sadly those people are also avid slashdot followers

  4. Re:"miniscule" on Team Oracle Penalized For America's Cup Rules Violations · · Score: 5, Informative

    The "king post" is what keeps the bow sprit from moving aft when pressure from the sail is added to it. The only reason for adding weight to it in this situation is if the bow happened to be rising to quickly. The rules imply that any wing shape added to the keel/centerboard must stay in the same angle/plane for the duration of the race. Designers skipped this rule by creating a moveable lifting plane on the bow of the boat. Tilting this plane lifts the boat up off of the water. However, this is a balancing act. It takes a lot of skill and design compitence to create and run one of these rigs. The NZ team was the first to figure out the cheat, and everyone else has been playing catch up. Team Oracles boat designed by Paul Burke, was not designed with the lifting planes originally intended. In this case some of the team members took it upon themselves to level the feild by adding weight to keep the bows from popping up to quickly and losing control of when they would and would not plane on the hydrofoils. It is a bit picky, but those people involved knew well what they were doing and went through lengths to cover it up. If they had just put a hunk of lead up there, judges would probably just have said "hey you can't do that".. but instead it was found buried purposely put there. That is pretty much willfull defiance of the rules. I'm an american shipwright from the northwest where these boats are built, so I'm definately on the US side.. but I see the significance of the decision, both ways.

  5. Re:Wow on Team Oracle Penalized For America's Cup Rules Violations · · Score: 4, Informative

    The America's cup is watched by millions. Team costs per syndicate are in the hundreds of millions making Indie racing or formula 1 a joke in comparison. What's more it is the least regulated form of racing (current situation not incumbering) of all the professional racing sports. 30 years ago they were racing mono-hull sailboats pounding through small waves. Now they are racing multihulls that litterally lift off the water on wings going faster than the traffic on the golden gate bridge and almost leaving the speed boats that trail them in the dust.
    From my personal experience sailing a boat over 25knts the splashes start to feel like pebbles and then rocks hitting you.. the intensity of having a vehicle of that size moving at that speed is akin to taking Caterpillar 797 through a downhill from Pikes peak. It's amazing and a great sport at any level.

  6. Re:KDE a "leading technology"? Surely not. on Kubuntu Announces Commercial Support · · Score: 1
  7. Re:KDE a "leading technology"? Surely not. on Kubuntu Announces Commercial Support · · Score: 4, Informative

    I still remember when kde2 came out. There was all this talk about everything as a file, like plan9, but in a user oriented fashion. KDE4 did away with all that, but kept the idea of user functionality. If for you functionality is having a button in a specific place, or having settings preordained and hidden, then KDE is not for you. KDE allows for some amazing things, like workspaces. (I gaurantee that this concept will be picked up eventually by the major players as something they came up with)
    KDE has in most cases at least two ways do do everything, if you can't find it in one place it's in another. This is a pain to some people, but to someone trying to figure out the system, it means that they have at leas two chances to figue it out before they go to the forums.
    KDE is by far the most configuable DE bar none. Where other systems have hacks to change things KDE gives it to you on a platter. There is almost nothing that you cannot change to suit your needs.

    While I understand the desire to have a simple desktop setup, any power user who has had more that a couple months with KDE will tell you, there is hardly any DE that can stand up to it for useability.

  8. Re:Hey on Pastafarian Wins Battle To Wear Colander In License Photo · · Score: 2

    Actually atheists don't (by their very nature) worry about the afterlife. That's like saying dog's are worried about books, because they don't read them.
    Many atheists these days are more vocal because of the growing attacks on science. If people want to believe that we can be healed from the sin of an ancient relative (who was talked into eating an apple by a talking snake), by a human sacrifice, where god had his own son (who is himself) killed. That's fine. Just stop trying to force it on everyone else.

  9. Re: If you don't mind a dead battery on Google's Second Generation Nexus 7 Benchmarks · · Score: 2

    Mine must be a fluke then. I'm writing this response from one and haven't plugged it in in three days. Admittedly I haven't been playing movies the whole time just surfing playing YouTube videos and the like but it lasts at least twice what my galaxy s2 does for the same usage. I've had other tablets and this one needs the least charging of any I've owned. 72 he's and still a third of a battery left.

  10. Re:Here's the reason... on Tim Cook May Not Know Why, But Samsung Is Winning in China · · Score: 1

    McCarthur was pissing over the Yalu river from the start. He backed bombing runs into China to stop supplies coming in to NK. If you remember Truman was pretty pissed about it. McCarthur assured him that the the Chinese were a bunch of pussy's and not to worry about it. He was dead wrong on both counts. Truman was right to want to keep China out of the war. How long would you allow your people to be bombed in your own country before responding?

  11. Re:Patent Protection not Patent Troll on Forget Apple: Samsung Could Be Google's Next Big Rival · · Score: 1

    For those people unfamiliar with the patent wars. Think of it as two large spanish galions loaded with treasure recently pillaged from the new world. If they both make it home they have to share in the bounty, but if one takes the other ship. Then only one ship goes home with the plunder.

    So now we have two ships circling each other firing canon at close range hoping the other will surrender or sink..

    In this case MS sued Motorola, and it's actually Motorola's shitty h.264 patents you are talking about not googles... and I seriously doubt they are anywhere near as bad as the list of patents that Barnes & Nobles releases when MS went to sue them for not using Windows. Google to my knowledge has not initiated a patent war with any major company. It has however been fighting as hard as it can.

  12. Re:All Jokes Aside... Still No. on MIT Uses Machine Learning Algorithm To Make TCP Twice As Fast · · Score: 2

    Interesting, that when I read your post I couldn't help but think that very same though about politics, and social engineering. People seem to think that any solution that looks good on the surface should work, and yet hardly ever bother to measure the result of any given solution. On the whole we understand that things are f'd up but understanding why is simply beyond us. Makes me wonder what solutions machine learning algorithms would come up with given more and more criteria, and if those solutions would seem reasonable to humans or not. Just don't allow it access to Petman..

  13. Hrm.. funny I had read that on the web. Couldn't find the off. I tried it before and after posting here.. then I shot video of the settings to show I wasn't making it up, and while viewing the video before uploading, I saw it. Right at the top, blue button. I'd been looking at it the whole time, and just couldn't see it. God knows this is the biggest problem I have when writing code too.. just some dumb spelling error that takes me an hour to debug because I can't see it right in front of me...

  14. I actually like some of the things google does.. but I had to unistall google+ from my phone because I couldn't find a way to stop it from uploading all of my photos, and videos. I don't like the fact that they took out the setting that allows you to only upload what you want to. I don't care that they don't automatically share. I don't feel like going through and deleting 50 million images and movies every time I log in to G+

  15. Re:1000 times better? on Graphene-Based Image Sensor To Enhance Low-Light Photography · · Score: 1

    Kind sir, but really we are talking about graphene here. That miracle of all miracles, that elixer for the gods. If anything could pull 1000 times better out of a 20% increase it would be graphene. Actually I had some in my breakfast this morning and it was quite tasty as well.

  16. Re:really need this on Intel's Linux OpenGL Driver Faster Than Apple's OS X Driver · · Score: 1

    sorry, but the answer is no. I'm running 13.04, with steam on a laptop running the same intel chipset they used for the test. Luckily it has an Nvidia card, so I can play the games using bumblebee.. (a hack that needs to be fixed IMHO) but portal will not run using just the intel graphics. It crashes and goes bye bye..

  17. Re:I tried this... on Adobe Creative Suite Going Subscription-Only · · Score: 1

    Moving to open source, has been done. Even by profesionals http://www.davidrevoy.com/article170/the-choice-of-open-source

  18. Re:I tried this... on Adobe Creative Suite Going Subscription-Only · · Score: 1

    Gimp will have full 16 bit per channel support in the upcomming 3.0. If you can't wait for that and must have it Krita already supports 16 bits per channel.

    Personally, I don't understand this. It does make sense for print ads, or high end photography, but for web, it does not even make a slight bit of difference."

  19. Re:bets? on $200 Intel Android Laptops Are Coming · · Score: 1

    I'm using CyanogenMod 10.1.. what mod do you recomend?

  20. Re:He's right on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    Ya, I recently designed a settop for my ungodly raspberry pi monsters.. I wanted it all contained and nice looking. I priced out having them printed by Shapeways, but it would have cost me over a $1000. I ended up making it out of stainless steel using my tig welder, and some starboard plasic parts that I machined. The plastic printer makes a lot more sense to me after pricing out things at Shapeways.

  21. Re:He's right on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    Complex programs are expensive and require training, or are free and require more training (Blender).

    I've done both parametric and polygonal modelling. Solidworks is a lot harder to learn than Blender. On top of that it's about $5000 and takes twice as long to create anything in. Don't get me wrong, Solidworks creates accurate reliable objects to a degree Blender can only dream of. But in most cases for the purposes of 3d printing Blender should work fine, and you don't have to know tons of higher math to use it.

    For some reason, 3D printers care about the normal of a surface. Why should that matter?

    The "face normals" show which is the inside and which is the outside of your surface. I'd think that would be pretty important to a 3d printer

    As to the rest.. I'd love to try. I just can't afford the machine right now. I have the feeling that it would be a lot of fun to try

  22. Re:Seems pretty spot on to me on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    Working with parametric or polygonal 3d modelling, is by it's very nature difficult to conceptualize, much less learn. I've been doing it for years, and there is still a lot I don't know, and the amount of things you can do keep growing, and growing.

    But I digress, the reason I'm responding to you is that, if you're an artist, then you may not need to use a parametric modeller. If you can create your base mesh (cube, sphere, tube.. whatever), to your needed dimensions then you can just sculpt it. No need to learn tons 3d modelling stuff. And yes Blender can export for 3d printing. Check this video out, to get a good idea of the state of sculpting in Blender, and what you can do with it.

  23. Re:Cost of the raw materials on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    Filabot is one simple way around that. The problem as I see it is the initial price of the printer. The current iteration of the Reprap project is the Mendal Max. This is the best deal out there. For $1500US you get a kit that you can put together yourself. I want one so badly it hurts.. but I don't have the money. I'm assuming I'm not the only one.

  24. Re:bets? on $200 Intel Android Laptops Are Coming · · Score: 2

    Ubuntu for phones.. hrm. I'm on the mailing list. It's a very empty mailing list. I'd love to see it. Hell I'd buy one.. but so far nothing.

  25. Re:stripping us of our privacy on Google Fiber: Why Traditional ISPs Are Officially On Notice · · Score: 2

    Lemme try reframing the REALLY sticky question:

    Which would you rather have, the ISP whose business model includes Six Strikes programs in league with the Govt, or Google that just might not, but at the cost of stripping your privacy?

    Perhaps you can explain how googles high speed internet service will strip you of your privacy any more than any other internet service. Personally I don't see it. Comcast/Time Warner et. al. are already monitoring what you do on the web for their own purposes. If you want unmonitored bandwidth try the Post Office. It's slow but no one reads you mail.. most of the time.

    Really though, this is just two sides of one coin, and I don't see how this changes anything, except my bandwidth speed.