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User: XnR'rn

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Comments · 103

  1. Re:More Likely... on PS3 Root Key Found · · Score: 1

    A flight of B-17s bombarding Redmond with air-dropped lawyers.

    Hmm, Paratrooper remake with lawyers? :>
    Do they serve you C&D when there are four?

  2. Re:Exoskeleton on Growing A House From Meat · · Score: 1

    Now, this is more obescure then all those Farscape, Soy Green and B5 references, but what you describe sounds like one of the ways they 'built' houses in the Future of Kir Bulychev books.

  3. Be careful with wishes like that. on Chinese Company Seeks US Workers With 125 IQ · · Score: 1

    Many a PHB was made that way.

    Also, it is one of the reasons that USSR crumbled [citation needed?]. ;->

  4. Re:New MMO's on Fallout Online Website Arises Amid Legal Battle · · Score: 1

    For me great MMO was Underlight. :-P But that was more people based.
    For me also a great MMO was Discworld MUD. :>

  5. Wider implications? on Blizzard vs. Glider Battle Resumes Next Week · · Score: 1

    Does this case have much wider implications (as summary hints at) for the software licensing at large?
    I haven't read the article yet, but it seems so.

  6. Re:Some Helpful Advise on Microsoft Talks Back To Google's Security Claims · · Score: 1

    Oh, right. On Linux, you just recompile your soft against security enhanced libraries et al. You have the source for most apps, and large percentage of it has patches that allow it to run in locked down environment.
    Still, for some things you'll have to write your own patches, I guess quite a bit of FOSS also won't run 'off the shelf' for such an environment (but does it have to? Such environments are more common in *nix, and most anything that is supposed to run on very secure boxes does).
    Still, if you do have something that noone else to execute in such an environment, you have much easier time doing that. In contrast on windows, you have to contact the developers of the software in question and hope the patches it will be in next release (yeah, right).

  7. Re:Just $2.2 Billion? on Japan Plans Moon Base Built By Robots For Robots · · Score: 1

    Thats Japanese we're talking about. There was a joke about ships around WW2 (and earlier) era. Where American ship has extra lavatory, Russian has an extra gun. Japanese? Two guns.

  8. Go go Grendizer! on Japan Plans Moon Base Built By Robots For Robots · · Score: 2, Funny

    They were culturally indoctrinated for years for stuff like this (random link to random giant robot anime ommited). I am not surprised.

  9. Re:Mobile Phone Cameras on H.264 and VP8 Compared · · Score: 1

    I use a really cheap Philips phone (~$30 equivalent), because I need my phone just to have conversations, and sometimes write an odd sms. And it has a huge battery life.
    No camera on this one. There is an FM radio (that I haven't used for about a year).

    I don't know what the people there are thinking, if there are no mobile PHONES, and not Camera+MP3player+blah-blah-blah-blah-blah+'oh, it also allows you to make phonecalls!' monstrocities.

    Speak about bloatware. :>

  10. Re:"It's that simple" on New iConji Language For the Symbol-Minded Texter · · Score: 1

    They need some user interface insight into sorting those symbols then.

    It would improve the situation, but I have to point out that Chinese and Japanese use IME for their systems of iconographic characters. :>

  11. Re:In other words on A Contrarian Stance On Facebook and Privacy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In my experience end users always end up as guinea pigs in real world testing, one way or ther other...

    While it is bad, it is mostly inevitable.

  12. Re:And why? on When Rewriting an App Actually Makes Sense · · Score: 3, Informative

    I am about half way through the article in the second link, and it is really interesting, and informative. :>
    Maybe not news, but it is worth your time (or at least mine).

  13. Sounds to be nice location on Opera Plans Containerized Data Center In Iceland · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Good for them. Renewable energy. Lower cooling bills.

    I wonder how large the datacenter needs to be to have a significant ecological impact?

  14. Re:A few caveats... on Russian Man Aims To Reinvent "Taser" Technology · · Score: 0

    From the article:
    The Russian Institute of Biophysics at the Moscow State Research Centre has been experimenting with single shocks rather than a long series. Their aim is to have an effect that is "instant or nearly so", but that incapacitates the target for a prolonged period. In tests on animals they have shown that with the right sort of electrical pulse (frequency appears to be the key), a shock lasting less than a hundredth of a second causes an electroconvulsive reaction that knocks the animal out for 20 seconds. ...
    Western researchers have not validated the safety and effectiveness of this type of shock, but there is known to be work on similar technology in the US. ...
    Nemtyshkin's next project, the Leyden Gun, will deliver a short shock with lasting effects ... with a magazine of thirty rounds. The projectiles are simple needles rather than elaborate barbed darts, as they do not stick to the target but administer a single jolt from a high-voltage capacitor. ... The lightweight darts are effective out to 30 metres ... Longer range will make it harder to guarantee a hit, so the Leyden Gun can fire a burst of three shots with each trigger pull to improve the odds.
    -----

    Oh, sounds just wonderful. 3 hits with "a single jolt from a high-voltage capacitor" that "causes an electroconvulsive reaction that knocks" you out for 20 seconds, sounds much more non lethal and less dangerous to me! [/sarcasm]

  15. Re:A few caveats... on Russian Man Aims To Reinvent "Taser" Technology · · Score: 0

    Well, even slow firing tazers aren't all that safe.

    Is it just me, or does this 'burst shock', that persists longer increase the danger involved?
    I second this it sounds 'not so non-lethal anymore' motion.

  16. Re:total disbelief on Vast Asteroid Crater Found In Timor Sea · · Score: 0

    True that, but while I don't want to imply that you must be new here, it has been used to measure almost anything, of almost any unit.
    For example, see below.

  17. Re:total disbelief on Vast Asteroid Crater Found In Timor Sea · · Score: 0

    Yeah, true that. But, don't want to imply that you must be new here, but it has been used here on Slashdot for measuring almost anything of any unit. See below.

  18. Re:Global Warming solution on Vast Asteroid Crater Found In Timor Sea · · Score: 0

    Are YOU implying that it is YOU that is causing the Global Warming? I request that you kindly stop doing it, or people might start throwing rocks on you!

  19. Re:total disbelief on Vast Asteroid Crater Found In Timor Sea · · Score: 0

    I thought it was "Libraries of Congress" as the universal slashdot omni-unit measure?

  20. Re:Toyota + Tesla on Toyota Partners With Tesla To Make Electric Cars · · Score: 0

    Yeah, but I wasn't talking about regenerative braking. AFAIK the trolleybuses (at least ones that we have here in Moscow), use active electrical braking, which is NOT regenerative. On other hand they have different movement context. They are tethered to the power lines, and they were not designed to reach speeds, that cars can reach.

  21. Re:Toyota + Tesla on Toyota Partners With Tesla To Make Electric Cars · · Score: 0

    Do electromobiles use ICE style brakes? The trolleybuses (that use electric engines and have been using them since 1882) just reverses engine revolution to stop (or somesuch). Same principle could be used in electric cars as well.

  22. Re:I can't wait. on Toyota Partners With Tesla To Make Electric Cars · · Score: 0

    If they make a flying one, I'll even look into getting myself a driverspilots license!

  23. Re:It couldn't possibly be because on Why Overheard Cell Phone Chats Are Annoying · · Score: 0

    Yeah, but you're yelling because they don't hear you on the other end, if you're not. They're on the rock concert and all that.

  24. Re:Why I am not surprised? on Russian Anti-Spam Advisor Accused of Spamming · · Score: 0

    Yeah, true.
    But let me illustrate some:
    Some income reports for 2009, for State Duma deputies (including some from the Forbes richest list).
    For comparison, the minimal monthly wage in Russia is 4330 rubles (thats around 96 Euros).
    A lot of interesting comparisons from those numbers can be done.

  25. Okay from RTFA. on Russian Anti-Spam Advisor Accused of Spamming · · Score: 1, Informative

    “We have here a merger between a criminal element and the government power which is unacceptable and inadmissible in any civilized society,” Ponomarev wrote. I don't see how it is much different from most of the rest of the system. In Russia, mostly the corruption is not just in the system. It is more like THE system. Quite a bit of Russian news coverage (mostly internal) is all about that.