Slashdot Mirror


User: bmo

bmo's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
5,130
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 5,130

  1. Re:Market Share in 2019? on Firefox Signs Five-Year Deal With Yahoo, Drops Google as Default Search Engine · · Score: 0

    while threatening to jump ship to a browser they can't even customize at all.

    You can't possibly be talking about Google's browser.

    Chromium is properly FOSS.

    https://chromium.googlesource....

    Chrome itself is closed source, but Google really does an awful lot for the FOSS community.

    The browsers you truly can't customize consist of the likes of IE and Opera.

    petty little complaints

    I've been an open source user/abuser and proponent going on 20 years now. It's stuff like this that make me think that if you're an actual Firefox dev, you need to GTFO right now before your toxic attitude spreads.

    --
    BMO

  2. Re:I think on Halting Problem Proves That Lethal Robots Cannot Correctly Decide To Kill Humans · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Product liability never results in anyone being actually responsible for the death going to jail or huge penalties.

    A multinational might> pay out a couple of million in product liability, but then it will just be chalked up to the cost of doing business.

    If the multinational is a defense contractor (BAE, Raytheon, Lockheed, General Dynamics, etc), it will all be swept under the rug and more money will be thrown at the contractor to "fix" it.

    That's the reality.

    --
    BMO

  3. Re:easy solution on AT&T To "Pause" Gigabit Internet Rollout Until Net Neutrality Is Settled · · Score: 1

    1) execute the AT&T executives

    Among others.

    If you want a CPM-10V guillotine blade with TiCN coating, I can get one for you.

    Durability, because it's gonna get a lot of use.

    --
    BMO

  4. Re: Automate! on The Disgruntled Guys Who Babysit Our Aging Nuclear Missiles · · Score: 1

    The tapes are just the bootstrap. They only need to be run once.

    See? THIS is how handwaving is done.

    --
    BMO

  5. Re: All well and good, but... on Scientists Discover a Virus That Changes the Brain To "Make Humans More Stupid" · · Score: 1

    Eat more real food and less carrageenan?

    It is real food, and as a Rhode Islander, I'm officially offended.

    http://quahog.org/factsfolklor...

    --
    BMO

  6. Re:don't use biometrics on Virginia Court: LEOs Can Force You To Provide Fingerprint To Unlock Your Phone · · Score: 1

    You'd be surprised how many felonies and misdemeanors they could find on your phone. If they find anything suggesting you committed a crime, they can make your life hell for quite a while. This affects everybody.

    You know those pill organizers, because you're taking so many drugs each day (heart, etc)?

    If you carry around prescription drugs without the actual bottle without the actual sticker, it's a felony. This actually happened to one of the members of my DBSA group.

    No, you do *not* have permission to search my bag, Mr. Officer.

    http://edfolsomlaw.com/2013/01...

    --
    BMO

  7. Re:Standard Document Retention Policy on Labor Department To Destroy H-1B Records · · Score: 1

    The county had to buy a spare server and restore each monthly tape to it and manually pick out the email messages

    It's a fucking computer. How do you not even try to automate stuff like that? How stupid do you have to be to not even write a script, but sit there and fucking vgrep everything?

    The cost was not because of the documents being requested or that the county kept the records too long, the cost was that their IT department is run by retards.

    --
    BMO

  8. Re:So what? on OEM Windows 7 License Sales End This Friday · · Score: 2

    Most of what you talked about are annoyances, rather than serious issues.

    An annoyance that appears every day becomes a serious issue.

    --
    BMO

  9. Re:So what? on OEM Windows 7 License Sales End This Friday · · Score: 1

    It's fashionable to complain about the replaced start menu in Win 8.

    It wasn't just that, it was all the touch shit crammed into a desktop OS that failed to work well with a mouse and keyboard. Ballmer et al., were chasing after the "golden fleece" of a "universal interface" by j-j-j-jamming touch into desktops/laptops. They thought that mobile interface on desktops would work better than desktop interface on mobiles (XP tablet edition, to be specific).

    They're finding out that people use different form factors in different ways/use cases and that the interface should follow the use and form factor.

    Winidiots swear up and down that Linux "will never be ready for grandma." I have to tell you that from personal experience "grandma" hates 8 more than any Linux desktop environment.

    --
    BMO

  10. Re:Meet somewhere in the middle on FTC Sues AT&T For Throttling 'Unlimited' Data Plan Customers Up To 90% · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    AT&T doesn't want to throttle these people just to limit their effect on the network. AT&T wants them to leave and never come back.

    Then they should have never sold "unlimited" plans and your friend was an idiot for not having tiered pricing.

    Have a nice day.

    --
    BMO

  11. Re: Nah, this is just stage 1 on Hungary To Tax Internet Traffic · · Score: 1

    A treasury bond is as good as cash.

    >There is nothing backing up that bond other than the word of our gov

    What the fuck do you think a dollar bill is backed by?

    --
    BMO

  12. Re:Moral Imperialism on Manga Images Depicting Children Lead to Conviction in UK · · Score: 1

    The FCC exercised much more control over television broadcasting

    Oh, you're one of /those/ nutcases that believe that Net Neutrality would be a re-implementation of the Fairness Doctrine, repeating Fox Snooze/TW/Cox/VZN FUD.

    Industry shill spotted. Go fuck yourself.

    --
    BMO

  13. Re:Moral Imperialism on Manga Images Depicting Children Lead to Conviction in UK · · Score: 1

    The only true statement in that message is your signature.

    --
    BMO

  14. Re:Moral Imperialism on Manga Images Depicting Children Lead to Conviction in UK · · Score: 1

    So the "'net neutrality" rules every idiot is screaming for means that ISPs will be required to scan for and block this from being transmitted over their networks. Because it's not "lawful content".

    but.that's.wrong.jpg

    Net Neutrality is all about classifying the ISPs as what the other telecom and freight companies are: common-carriers.

    Verizon, as a telephone company, doesn't censor "illegal" voice traffic, does it? They do not, last I checked. That's because Verizon is a common-carrier and is not held liable for telephone content over its wires. UPS is not held liable for a pound of weed being shipped through its system, either, because they are a common-carrier. Being held not liable is exchanged for the duty they have to not discriminate against customers and traffic for the common good.

    Back in the day of the local BBS being your ISP, system operators could discriminate against abusive/disruptive/trolling users (we wanted that freedom, because resources were tight) being able to ban users/delete traffic. Because BBSes were classified as "information services" (as ISPs are classified right now), holding a kind of editorial power, we fought against common-carrier classification because it would have been onerous. But once a sysop exercised editorial power he/she was held liable for illegal/defamatory/copyright-infringing content hosted on the drives.

    Like what happened to Rusty&Edie's.

    ISPs have grown beyond the local BBS for well over a decade-and-a-half and ISPs are no longer "editorial." They have become common-carriers in everything but name, and the ISPs like TimeWarner/Cox/Comcast/Charter, etc, want to have their cake and eat it too - they want to be able to discriminate various kinds of traffic and retain editorial power while being not held liable for that traffic.

    Sorry, no, they don't get to do that. They are now common-carriers and should be classified that way.

    And that's what Net Neutrality is all about.

    --
    BMO

  15. Re:Terrific counter to Monsanto's herbicide messag on Irish Girls Win Google Science Fair With Astonishing Crop Yield Breakthrough · · Score: 1, Interesting

    In contrast, companion planting is mixing your crop (e.g. beans + carrots together) so that they work together.

    That's not Kosher according to Leviticus 19:19.

    Why aren't there "conservative" christians whining about this?

    --
    BMO

  16. Re:Now all they need to do... on New MRI Studies Show SSRIs Bring Rapid Changes to Brain Function · · Score: 1

    I think that the point of /my/ message is that maybe you should not be painting with such a broad brush and implying that anyone taking SSRIs is a time bomb waiting to go on a shooting rampage.

    Asshole.

    --
    BMO

  17. Re:Now all they need to do... on New MRI Studies Show SSRIs Bring Rapid Changes to Brain Function · · Score: 1

    Is figure out why so many who are on SSRI's or had recently stopped taking them, become suicidal or go on shooting rampages, or both.

    It's people like you who encourage the stigma that we're in this mess where people go untreated for decades/lifetime, in spite of the fact that over 1/4 of everyone suffers from a diagnosable mental illness in any given year.

    One in four adults - approximately 61.5 million Americans experiences mental illness in a given year. One in 17 - about 13.6 million - live with a serious mental illness such as schizophrenia, major depression or bipolar disorder.1

    -- NAMI http://www.nami.org/factsheets...

    I ask you, where the fuck is the Ice Bucket Challenge for mental illness? That's something I asked last Wednesday at my DBSA meeting. I'm asking it here. Where the fuck is it? We've got the Susan G. Komen foundation for breast cancer, yet more women suffer from mental illness than have ever had breast cancer. But there is pink everywhere.

    Unfortunately, NAMI is only there for caregiver support and even for that they are absolutely silent in the media. They do absolutely bupkis for people who actually suffer from mental illness. Support is nearly nonexistent. I don't know of any foundation that supports the treatment of mental illness, raises awareness or even works to end the stigma. And for people who suffer from mental illness, there is not anything in the way of patient support/guidance (like who you should see for what). It's all "fly by the seat of your pants" stuff, and when you are in the middle of a major depressive episode even asking for help from anyone is daunting or even impossible.

    I came here to call you a jerk, but I figured I'd say something more informative.

    Bye.

    --
    BMO/Dan

    "it has to be emphasized that if the pain were readily describable most of the countless sufferers from this ancient affliction would have been able to confidently depict for their friends and loved ones (even their physicians) some of the actual dimensions of their torment, and perhaps elicit a comprehension that has been generally lacking; such incomprehension has usually been due not to a failure of sympathy but to the basic inability of healthy people to imagine a form of torment so alien to everyday experience."
    -- William Styron, Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness

  18. Re:Why not stronger punishments for... on Star Wars Producers Want a 'DroneShield' To Prevent Leaks On Set · · Score: 2

    all of this media that has already ruined the next Star Wars movie.

    The only thing that has ruined a Star Wars movie is George Lucas.

    http://redlettermedia.com/plin... - the best ever deconstructions of Star Wars that are more entertaining than those movies ever were.

    Watch and learn, Grasshopper.

    For a shorter version:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    --
    BMO

  19. Re:Why so much fuss? on Dealership Commentator: Tesla's Going To Win In Every State · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The dealer shill thus spake:

    the local dealer may have overpriced their product so you buy elsewhere, but that local dealer is still obligated to do the warranty service (for which they are paid quite well by the manufacturers).

    In no other industry is this true. In electronics, white goods, etc, there are "certified warranty service centers" where you can call up and get them to fix your stuff. For example, you don't have to go to an Apple dealer to get your high-priced computer fixed under warranty - you can bring it or ship it to one of many service centers.

    https://www.apple.com/lae/supp...

    Please note that the requirement to become a service center does not include having to be an Apple reseller.

    Ford, Volkswagen, Jaguar, Chevrolet, etc., should be able to certify garages for warranty work. But no, the automobile industry is the only industry where you have to go to a dealer to get warranty work done.

    Leeches, all of you. Die already.

    --
    BMO

  20. Re:More importantly on Is the Tesla Model 3 Actually Going To Cost $50,000? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That battery will NOT last forever,

    And neither does an internal combustion engine, either. Your point?

    and when it needs a new one you'd be better off scrapping the entire car and buying a new one.

    Citation needed. Seriously.

    How good is that for the environment?

    Awesome, actually. The battery can be recycled, and there aren't any heavy metals to deal with either.

    --
    BMO

  21. Re:tanslation for the masses: on Tim Cook Says Apple Can't Read Users' Emails, That iCloud Wasn't Hacked · · Score: 2

    The fact You refer to "4chan" as a "notorious hacker" shows Your interpretation should be presumed erroneous.

    And your reading of his message is erroneous, because it was reported in the media that the notorious hacker was indeed "4chan."

    --
    BMO

  22. Re:Apple? on Windows Tax Shot Down In Italy · · Score: 0

    Linux in the nineties was simply not a mass market OS.

    But OS/2 certainly was.

    MSDOS and Windows ecosystem were god-sent

    Blow it out your ass.

    --
    BMO

  23. Wait... wait... on Is It Time To Split Linux Distros In Two? · · Score: 1

    You want to take one of the most important advantages of a Linux distribution like Debian, the flexibility, and take it away?

    This is one of the dumbest things I've seen on /. and I've seen some dumb.

    There are already "specialist" distributions for people who don't know what they're doing or simply want something to plug-and-play. But Debian is not only a distribution unto itself, it is the basis for other distributions, like Kali, a meta-distribution if you will. And the OP wants to basically take this away from Debian or the other large distributions.

    This has to be a joke, or the OP is a softie. If not a softie, then a quisling. Certainly not someone playing with all cards in the deck.

    --
    BMO

  24. Businesses are out to make money and not friends on Japanese Publishers Lash Out At Amazon's Policies · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Halve your margin and triple your sales.

    >NO BREAKS TO ANYBODY, ESPECIALLY STUDENTS

    It's like they're begging for piracy to happen.

    --
    BMO

  25. Re:Don't feed the parasites! on For Microsoft, $93B Abroad Means Avoiding $30B Tax Hit · · Score: 1

    I thought people were allowed to have their own beliefs in this country without others attacking them for it.

    >modded insightful

    Yeah, well moderation here isn't perfect. Because you are wrong, and I will demonstrate how in the next two sentences.

    You are perfectly free to spout inane bullshit.
    Other people are perfectly free to call you on it.

    That's how free speech works.

    And your post was complete bullshit supported by toddler logic.

    Have a nice day.

    --
    BMO