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User: billstewart

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  1. Bad English is the world's most common language on New Unicode Bug Discovered For Common Japanese Character "No" · · Score: 1

    I was once at a conference in Germany, most of which was given in English because it was an international crowd. One of the German speakers started off by saying that he used to start by apologizing for his bad English, but the host (who was Turkish) told him not to worry; Bad English is the most widely spoken language in the world. (Which is fine; English is flexible enough about most things that if you don't need to be subtle, Bad English will usually do.)

    German's the only non-English language that I'm even vaguely functional in, and even then it was much more useful for me in Czechoslovakia, where people had learned German in school to deal with tourists, and I mainly wanted to talk to them about the same sets of things, like train schedules and getting food and hotels and which bridge went to the castle. Northern Germans speak a relatively comprehensible dialect, though too fast for me to do much in real time; understanding Austrians is more like being a New Yorker in deep Alabama. (I play music at a local German jam session, and some of the tunes have the lyrics translated from Bavarian or Swiss into German...)

  2. Re:Kanbun: Reordering Chinese to Japanese on New Unicode Bug Discovered For Common Japanese Character "No" · · Score: 1

    And apparently Korean's even weirder. (I'm going by my childhood memories of my mom describing her job translating Korean during the early 50s. Unfortunately, I don't think she still has her books on basic Chinese characters these days, though I could just as easily find them in a bookstore around here.)

    Some parts of Silicon Valley have a lot of Korean restaurants. I don't think I've seen any Chinese characters on their signs or menus, just alphabetic Korean.

  3. MOD PARENT UP, PLEASE! on New Unicode Bug Discovered For Common Japanese Character "No" · · Score: 1

    Even using vector fonts doesn't fix the problem that Unicode wasn't a great solution for managing the diversity of characters in many Asian languages.

  4. You're comparing it to bacon... on Scientists Develop Nutritious Seaweed That Tastes Like Bacon · · Score: 1

    Yeah, too much seaweed might be bad for you. Too much bacon is also bad for you, between the fats and the salt and the nitrates or other curing chemicals and the other dead pig parts that you eat to make up for getting the bacon. You probably shouldn't overdo either one.

    Of course, frying the seaweed in cooking fat probably brings it more into balance with bacon's nutrition-to-bad-stuff ratios. And even then, it's probably better for you than those fake bacon bits you get in a shaker bottle.

  5. Re:Shut up.. on Scientists Develop Nutritious Seaweed That Tastes Like Bacon · · Score: 1

    I'm a vegetarian, and while I thought bacon was ok back when I ate meat, it wasn't all that exciting; it's not like it was a good steak or even a good breakfast sausage or country ham. Sorry if FARK and the pork marketers tell you differently :-) But yeah, dulse is good, and a more bacony dulse would be fun to try.

    And most veggie burgers need all the help they can get. (Some are good - I got a vegan burger at a concert the other week, and either it was the best imitation cooked beef I've ever had, or the person behind me was really disappointed to get my vegan burger instead of their meat burger.)

  6. Re:encryption won't help you against malware on Samsung Releases First 2TB Consumer SSD For Laptops · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Doesn't matter whether they use security-by-obscurity or real hardware-driven or OS-driven encryption. The malware's running on top of the OS, which already has access to all the data on the drive (unless you're doing something fancy with multiple user logins, each of whom has differently-encrypted home directories, but even then, the malware can attack whoever's logged in right now.)

    Drive encryption mainly helps you against stolen hardware, and not usually very much, because that would require an inconvenient user interface.

  7. Thin notebooks - Lenovo X1 Carbon didn't use 2.5" on Samsung Releases First 2TB Consumer SSD For Laptops · · Score: 1

    It has an SSD daughter card on the motherboard. (As I ranted above, three different generations of them had three different interface formats, but to be fair, the market was changing rapidly.) There's no room for a 2.5" drive. There are probably other ultra-thin notebooks with that limitation as well.

  8. Re:SSD Card Formats - Arrgh! on Samsung Releases First 2TB Consumer SSD For Laptops · · Score: 2

    My wife's Lenovo laptop power connection fried recently, and we got to discover the joys of different SSD formats. The first generation X1 Carbon had a Sandisk 20+6 format, and I think the second was M.2 and the third some mSATA format, but I may have the latter two backwards. After looking around online for a while, I found a $25 adapter board from China that lets you plug in the 20+6 drive so you can read it on a "standard" SATA connector, so we were able to back up the data before sending it in for (Yay! Just under the deadline!) warranty repair.

    (We even got lucky, either they didn't need to replace the motherboard after all, or they did replace it with the same kind and the old SSD worked, or they replaced both and really transferred everything; in any case there's still an operating system and her data. I really wish Apple would lease their magnetic-connector power cord patent cheaply enough that everybody would use it, since it prevents all kinds of damage.)

  9. You need to try Nethack, then on Samsung Releases First 2TB Consumer SSD For Laptops · · Score: 2

    "My Documents"/prog/nethack on my laptop is about 7MB, including a bunch of bones files and a saved game or two...

    But yes, bigger hard drives can be useful. My last laptop refresh at work went from a 300GB rotating hard disk to a 256GB SSD, and I had to move my music and Linux ISOs to an external drive. (Eventually I added a 128GB SDXC card, but the news keeps saying that the latest iTunes has serious bugs, so I haven't reinstalled it yet.)

  10. Re:Range and Price on Why Electric Vehicles Aren't More Popular · · Score: 1

    The hidden costs are in the "lease them like any other vehicle" part. It's the difference between "it costs you $X/month" and "Ok, $X/month, and $ZZZZ upfront, and Y cents/mile if you drive too far any month, and here's what you pay us at the end of your lease" and also "$WWWWW out the door, the vehicle's actually yours now."

  11. Ubuntu Support plans? on Linux 4.2-rc1 Is One of the Largest Kernel Releases of Recent Times · · Score: 1

    While we're talking about monoliths, I don't usually build my Linuxes from scratch - I either use Ubuntu, or occasionally a Red Hat version, or sometime soon one of those cloud-vm-thingies. (I also run Raspberry Pi, but I don't expect it to have a full-sized kernel.) So when will Ubuntu start supporting the newer kernels? 15.10, or some updates to 15.04?

  12. Range and Price on Why Electric Vehicles Aren't More Popular · · Score: 1

    Until recently, production electric cars cost way too much, even when you figure you're saving most of the cost of gasoline over the lifetime of the car. (A 50-mpg Prius will use about $20k in gas over 200-250k miles; a 20mpg minivan will use about $50k, so I guess you can justify that Tesla if you were going to buy a gas-guzzler and didn't need the space.) Hobbyist electric cars can cost a lot less, if you want to do all the labor to retrofit a very used car with electric motors and batteries, but I don't.

    But even now that prices are coming down, the range on the lower-cost cars isn't enough for me. It's fine for going to the grocery store, but my office is 40 miles away, and so is The City, so on the days I'm not telecommuting or want to go into the city for something, I need a guaranteed range of over 100 miles so I'm not worried about having to coast home on electron vapors or stop for half an hour at a charging station if there wasn't one near my destination. Battery range declines as the batteries get older, so that means I'd probably need a 150-mile range when it's new to be sure I can get to work when it's older.

    Maybe a couple of years from now it'll make sense to buy an electric car; we'll see how long my wife's car lasts, and whether it's worth getting an electric when we need to replace it. The real cost includes adding an extra electric meter and 240v power to my garage space and the cost of storing the stuff that's currently in my garage, because Silicon Valley real estate is too expensive to actually use a garage for putting cars in...

    Unfortunately, most lower-cost electric today talk about monthly lease prices, and hide all the other costs; one of the ones that was advertised on the radio did mention something around $5K up-front and 25 cents a mile if you drive over 10,000 miles a year - the reason I'd be buying an electric car is to make my commuting cheaper, and my gasoline car currently costs about 25 cents a mile (10 cents amortizing the purchase price over 200k miles, 15 cents for gas.)

  13. Snowden deserves asylum; Assange doesn't on In Response to Open Letter, France Rejects Asylum For Julian Assange · · Score: 1, Troll

    Snowden deserves asylum - he's wanted for a political crime, he's clearly guilty of violating US laws, and the US government doesn't accept a necessity defense when they're the ones he blew the whistle on, and even if he got a jury trial they'd make sure no juror who supports him would be picked.

    Assange is a different case - the US wants him for political reasons, but Sweden wants him on trial for rape. There's a significant risk that if he goes back, gets a fair trial, and is found not guilty, the US will kidnap\\\\\\extradite him so they can try him for political crimes, and asylum would be appropriate then. But it's not appropriate now.

  14. Bet they felt stupid pretty fast on Interviews: Ask Steve Jackson About Designing Games · · Score: 1

    Yeah, the secret hacking method turned out to be "roll two 6-side dice, if you get over 10, you break in, under 6 and you're BUSTED."

    Can't tell your boss you made that dumb a mistake, so you've got to escalate the charges somehow.

  15. Illuminati rocked! on Interviews: Ask Steve Jackson About Designing Games · · Score: 1

    I've never had the original game, but I acquired various expansion cards over the years. It was sort of a Magic the Gathering with cards written in the style of Robert Anton Wilson, the X Files, and random paranoid conspiracies. Don't let them immanentize the Eschaton!

  16. Re:Poor Scalia - "Ask the nearest hippie" on Supreme Court Ruling Supports Same-Sex Marriage · · Score: 1

    Thanks to the Internet, the nearest hippie is only a few milliseconds away. What was it he wanted to ask, again?

  17. 5 GHz bands are much quieter on WiFi Offloading is Skyrocketing · · Score: 2

    Almost everybody's on 2.4 GHz, and the bands overlap with each other as well as with your microwave oven. If you can run your Wifi on 5 GHz, and don't have distance problems, it's really what you want.

    Unfortunately, while my Linksys WiFi router can use both frequencies, it can only use one at a time, and I've got a few 2.4GHz-only devices in the house, so I'm stuck with 2.4. Occasionally it gets tempting to switch it to 5 GHz and drag out its dumber predecessor to run 2.4 on. (I bought the newer one because I needed 802.11n to compete with all my neighbors' 802.11n drowning out my wimpy 802.11g system. I was also surprised to find that it didn't support IPv6 sigh.)

  18. Most phone spammers are thieves on 86.2 Million Phone Scam Calls Delivered Each Month In the US · · Score: 1

    Sorry - anybody who works for Rachel from Cardholder Services or Fake Microsoft Technical Support or Fake IRS is a scammer, and knows that their job is to rip people off. Thieves don't rate the "just doing their crappy job" excuse, unlike the people who call up trying to sell me legitimate services when they know (or should know) that I'm on the Do Not Call List so I'm not interested.

  19. Spammers with Broken Robots and Bad VOIP on 86.2 Million Phone Scam Calls Delivered Each Month In the US · · Score: 1

    Look, it's one thing for spammers to call up and waste my time. But more than half of them these days call up and don't ever play a message or put their agent on the phone so I can waste their time. I don't know if they're just badly understaffed (at least they could play a recording), or their equipment is broken, or their call center is checking my number against the Do Not Call List after I answer instead of before (presumably because of how they charge each other for various services.) And lately I've been getting people with bad VOIP systems calling up and playing crackly versions of the "Rachel from Cardholder Services" tape - at least they could use a higher bit rate.

    I work from home most days, and my wife usually get up a couple hours after I do, so I answer the phone on first ring to avoid having it wake her up if I let the answering machine get it. Real calls at that time are usually the pharmacy's robot saying there's something ready, or the gas company robot saying they're still going to be digging up the street; other calls are usually spam robots.

  20. IRS Scammers on 86.2 Million Phone Scam Calls Delivered Each Month In the US · · Score: 1

    I've had some interesting conversations with them, when they called my cellphone instead of my home phone. One of them was telling me how stupid Americans are, we only speak one language while he speaks lots (I asked him in French, German, and Spanish if he spoke any of those languages, but he was on a rant.) Eventually he decided to just start insulting me, thinking that telling me I was a "black n-----" would be a useful insult. Since I was in the lobby at work, I didn't go into a long rant about how racist that was and how he probably didn't get along with the various colors of people in his country, but hung up on him. The other guy was mainly bragging about how I'd never be able to trace his call, and he was using Magic Jack for VOIP, and how he could break into my mobile phone (which he demonstrated to me by calling with his caller-ID set to my number), and was at least more amusing to talk to, for a shameless thief.

  21. Re:Best "nice try" was the guy in India... on 86.2 Million Phone Scam Calls Delivered Each Month In the US · · Score: 1

    My mom was amused by those scammers. She's used Macintoshes for nearly 30 years, and her Mac is only on the internet when she tells the modem to dial up her ISP. (Her vision's not good enough to use the web, and modem's plenty for email, much to the frustration of my siblings who don't like using sub-broadband speeds when visiting her.) So the "Your Windows machine is sending out viruses!" got a very quick hang up.

    I've kept some of them on line for over an hour, when I've had time; eventually the caller's boss came on and yelled at me for wasting his employee's time. Other times I've told them I didn't have time for their lying bullshit right now, and got aggressively cursed at.

  22. HTC Aria on AT&T also on Samsung Cellphone Keyboard Software Vulnerable To Attack · · Score: 1

    Apparently there was a period of a couple of weeks when I could have gotten the upgrade from 2.1 to 2.2, but the carrier didn't actually push it, just made it available if you noticed and asked it to download, and soon after that, when Google Play came out, my Locked-To-Android-Market phone could no longer do any updates. I couldn't find a smartphone that small to replace it (sorry, but smallness is a feature for something you carry in your pocket), and eventually replaced the phone when apps I wanted were only running on 4.x anyway. I suppose I should go back and Cyanogenize it.

  23. Re:But we know that USA is the *GOOD GUY* on Glen Greenwald: Don't Trust Anonymous Anti-Snowden Claims · · Score: 1

    If you love America so much, buy goods made there instead of China. Oh, wait, you're not doing that? Pretty lame for a jingo troll!

  24. How we know they didn't crack Snowden doc cache on Glen Greenwald: Don't Trust Anonymous Anti-Snowden Claims · · Score: 1

    If the Commies (more likely Russians than Chinese, for economic reasons) had cracked Snowden's document cache, they'd be able to throw lots of people at reading them all quickly and correlating them, and they'd need a month or so to recall any spies that were outed, or give them good false information to spread, and bust any US and other countries' spies they can (or give them even more disinformation.) But after that, they'd be free to start releasing documents embarrassing to the Obama and Bush Administrations and the permanent NSA/CIA/DIA/FBI/DEA/TLA/etc. agencies, totally tanking most of their composition here and throwing the US into chaos, along with GCHQ, UK Parliament, and probably some Canadians or the Deutsche Bundesfoo..

    They haven't. This either means they haven't cracked the document cache, or that they're a really devious conspiracy, blackmailing US/UK politicians or waiting until after the election or something. (Maybe they want the Tories to trash the UK, for instance.)

  25. Can/Should I Upgrade to iOS 9, or not? on WWDC 2015 Roundup · · Score: 1

    iPhone 5S - Does it have the resources to upgrade to IOS9? Will it run faster or slower? Will the batteries last longer for somebody who mainly does phone calls and texts?