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User: Phrogman

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  1. Re:Don't follow the Canadian example on Royal Canadian Air Force Sees More Sims In the Future of Fighter Pilot Training · · Score: 1

    They were members of the Canadian Airborne Regiment, and I think mostly because of this event, the CAB was disbanded thereafter.
    I knew a fair number of guys in the Airborne and while they were admittedly gungho, they were only usually bad when in large groups. Individually they were nice guys for the most part. In groups their morale and intensity got them a little riled up shall we say.
    There is no excuse for what happened in Somalia mind you. Every army and every unit has its bad eggs, and the Airborne attracted quite a few of them I suppose.
    I suspect a lot of the best members of the Airborne - those who were not just returned to their units of origin - ended up in JTF2.

  2. There are Traffic Control enthusiasts out there too, whole log in solely to give directions to the Flight enthusiasts. Its a very strange hobby in my opinion but I can see how it might be fun :P

  3. Re:Who knows, I'm not a lawyer... on Piriform Asks BleachBit To Remove Winapp2.ini Importer · · Score: 5, Funny

    Basement dwelling tips, thats probably safe. Best Pizza outfits, also a good bet.

  4. Re:It ought to be illegal on AT&T: Don't Want a Data Plan for That Smartphone? Too Bad. · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Corporations have no honour, and never will. Their sole purpose is to make more money for those who own them, or their shareholders. They know no morality if that will limit profits.

    The phone companies have us all by the short and curlies and can do whatever the fuck they want. Up here in Canada they are all essentially the same - they charge too much, for too little and they have a monopoly effectively, with zero real competition. Like the cable companies I am sure they collaborate to keep the prices artificially high.

  5. Re:Lots of Money on Can Any Smartphone Platform Overcome the Android/iOS Duopoly? · · Score: 1

    And for the new Blackberry OS? 79 million subscribers, and the app cupboard is pretty much bare. Write a decent app that performs better than the existing ones (and that seems to be a very low bar from my perusing of their app store on my Playbook) and you could end up with a very successful product in a market that hasn't been tapped.

    The weakness of the playbook is its lack of significant apps IMHO. Otherwise it is a *brilliant* little piece of kit.

  6. Re:Did he do it at work or at home? on Man Fired For His Online Customer Service Game · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I did a few years of tech support for a Real Estate software company. They claimed they had 700,000 US Real Estate agents as customers.
    * The software was written in Visual Basic 5, and used an Access Database.
    * We suggested that customers limit their list of potential customers to 20,000 so that the database would not have issues as often (it was Access based so it was guaranteed to have at least some issues some of the time). One of the people I talked to wanted to load 1 million names into his database, and tried to do so before calling. He had no forethought to back things up first. It did not go well.
    * Real Estate agents as a whole do not understand computers, and seem generally to have little patience for any problem - whether or not they caused it. The conversations got rather heated - a lot. I remember one guy who worked in Beverly Hills, screaming at the top of his lungs that he was losing 100k a hour while he was on the phone with us. My coworker in the cubicle took the call but I could hear it clear as day over top of the call I was taking at the time.
    * We had over 60 tech support people crammed into their cubicles. I must say the quality of the Staff and the Tech Support leaders was actually quite high.
    * We had a script we were required to follow and which was almost never relevant. This was a major problem since usually we could identify the problem quite quickly, but had to trudge through the routine first until that failed to solve the problem and we could carry on with actually solving the problem.
    * A lot of the problem was of course the Sales staff who would lie through their teeth to get a Sale, knowing that Tech Support or Development would have to solve the problem, not them. In general, I hate Sales people as a result of those at this company.
    * Our in house tools were written by the company too, and since what they knew was Visual Basic, thats what they wrote them in. Since the database they knew was Access, thats what we used. Every day at noon, for 1 hour, we had to revert to pen and paper because the Access Database for *our* customer base had to be repaired. Then we would madly enter call details in, in between other calls until we got caught up.

    It was an "educational" experience, but not one I care to repeat if I can avoid it :P

  7. Re:Should be interesting ... on RIM's BB10 Campaign Requires Some Serious Work · · Score: 1

    to be fair they had very cheap pricing for a lot of the models. I liked it so I ended up buying the 64gb variety. Its a *very* sleek piece of kit, the OS is very smooth and I have had essentially zero problems with it.
    Except, the apps that are available suck goat balls. Thats what they need to focus on improving. The hardware you buy enables you to use the software that you want to run, but if the software is horrid, limited, or not all that well written, who cares?
    I hope that when this machine gets upgraded I start to see a lot of software comparable to that my wife has on her IPad, if that happens then I will be overjoyed. In the meantime its mostly a great way to watch movies that is portable :P

  8. Re:Both songs suck. on Jonathan Coulton Offers Some Gleeful Turnabout · · Score: 1

    Oh I agree, there is NO good disco - and that includes the modern "dance mix" stuff that is really just disco masquerading as something else :P

  9. Re:Both songs suck. on Jonathan Coulton Offers Some Gleeful Turnabout · · Score: 1

    While I can't say I liked either the Coulton version OR the Glee version, I also think the original version is crap too, so to each their own.

    I can only think of maybe 1 Hip Hop/Rap song that I actually enjoyed, maybe 2, so its definitely not my thing at all :P

  10. Re:I think he's got a case on Jonathan Coulton Song Used By Glee Without Permission · · Score: 1

    I can't say I understand your 2nd to last point. Coulton got permission to use the lyrics from the copyright owner.
    He then WROTE ENTIRELY UNIQUE MUSIC to accompany those lyrics. The music he wrote and recorded is entirely his creation and owes nothing to the original recording made by Sir Mix-a-lot. Its Coulton's musical creation, performed and arranged by him and using the original lyrics with permission, with the addition of a minor change in the lyrics as well.
    The folks at Glee, took his music and performed it without permission. They appear to have in fact taken his actual recording and removed his voice, substituting their own performers voices, BUT INCLUDING THE CHANGES HE MADE TO THE LYRICS.
    Surely, that is them clearly making 2 violations of his copyright - first to his music, and then to the portion of the lyrics he changed - both without his permission. I don't understand how it can be interpreted differently.

    He should immediately file a DMCA takedown notice (although it will do little real good I am sure since FOX has deeper pocketbooks) to at least indicate that he is pursuing his own rights in the matter actively. Then he should find a good lawyer and sue their ass off. If copyright works when a corporation is concerned at their financial loss, then it has to work when an artist is concerned at their financial loss or the law is not functioning fairly at all.

    All that said though, FOX will most likely win, they have more money and money is what buys justice in the modern day.

  11. Re:Funny how nobody remembers The Mummy.... on Lego Accused of Racism With Star Wars Set · · Score: 1

    Yes there was plenty of Westerners exhibiting massive ignorance, but humanities "bacon" was saved mostly by the characters Rick and Evelyn, and to a lesser degree Jonathan her brother, all of whom are Western.
    Sure, there were the mysterious desert warriors led by Ardeth Bey who swoop in to save the day like the proverbial cavalry, but they are not key characters in comparison to Rick or Evelyn. Its still the White folks showing the brown folks how to do things in large part. This was/is very common in a lot of Hollywood movies - which are made apparently with the white audience in mind.

  12. Re:Funny how nobody remembers The Mummy.... on Lego Accused of Racism With Star Wars Set · · Score: 1

    In general most Americans will not watch a movie that does not have an American in it. As well of course, most Westerners will not watch or accept a movie plot where we are not seen as superior to the foreigners (who are usually some shade of brown or black). Its stupid, its racist but its also the way things are.

    In the Mummy it takes the clever and heroic Westerners to save the bacon of the ignorant middle easterners.

    With regards to Start Wars: Lucas obviously borrowed heavily from different cultures to create his Star Wars cultures. I am surprised it took anyone this long to notice it anywhere in the world.

    Also the films do have massive racist overtones IMHO. Look at the Trade Representatives in Episode I (I think it is): They look and sound very Japanese, and what do they do - they organize a massive secret attack. They are untrustworthy, bumbling, ineffective and they have massive numbers of very poor quality troops that all look the same. All they had to do was throw big round glasses on the droids to make them more like the WWII propaganda the US put out about the Japanese.

    Jar-Jar Binks brings to mind the stereotypes of blacks in the south - at least to me as a Canadian.

    Naturally the Empires officer corps look amazingly like WWII German Wehrmacht and Nazi troops in their uniforms - although I give him massive points for the white Stormtrooper armor (perhaps we were supposed to feel some sympathy for them, I always did).

    I love the SW movies but they are heavily cliche ridden and fairly biased, if not exactly racist. I think to say otherwise is foolish.

  13. Re:High-tech !? on Responding to US Gambling Law, Antigua Set To Launch "Pirate" Site · · Score: 2

    And if they did that, the US would invade Antigua on some trumped up reason and just coincidentally the server farms for that DCMA ignoring service would be hit by hellfire missiles. The US has used its military to back up corporate rights many many times in the past, particularly in the Caribbean, I don't think things have changed all that much, just the media spin required...

  14. Oh thats nothing on EFF Moves To Nix Trademark On "Gaymer" · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you want to see *really* abusive language and offensive comments concentrated into their purest form, go play an mmoRPG and try *Roleplaying*. Nothing gets the 12 yr old mentality for heaping offensive abuse on other players up more than encountering a roleplayer in a roleplaying game, believe me.
    In Dark Age of Camelot we had 3 Roleplaying/PvP servers, with a specific set of rules intended to foster RP behavior. We also had some of the best PvPing in the game going. However, there were regularly people who would create a character on one of these RP servers (there were like 17 other servers they could have chosen instead) *solely* for the purpose of standing in a populated area and heaping abuse on anyone they found. I would say I appealed at least 1 person per play session typically for this sort of behavior. I just don't get it. Its not like I logged into the non-Rp servers to insult them for not choosing to roleplay, that would just be a massive waste of my time if nothing else. I can't imagine being so bored as to have nothing better to do that insult people I will never play with.
    Now, I am not gay, but I can easily understand why those who are would group together to form their own community and avoid the abuse they probably get on a regular basis - or at least manage to avoid the typically offensive speech of the gamers around them.
    I cannot really imagine wanting to claim a term that would focus that abuse on me though. That seems *to me* to smack of wanting a reason to get outraged and complain about. Still whatever fills your boots I suppose...

    However I agree that online gamers are typically highly offensive and ignorant as a baseline behavior. Sure, some rise above that but they are the rarity, the vast, vast majority start at pig-ignorant and dig their way down from there. Admittedly this is mostly true only of RPGs that have a heavy PvP element to them. My wife plays LOTRO and it seems fairly mild, but then PvP there is a minor afterthought really.

  15. Re:Income inequality on Recession, Tech Kill Middle-Class Jobs · · Score: 2, Funny

    Trickle down - thats the rich pissing on the ever increasing poor classes.

  16. Re:Latency and bandwidth? on Researchers Achieve Storage Density of 2.2 Petabytes Per Gram of DNA · · Score: 1

    Until someone mistakes it for a snack and pops it into the microwave :P

  17. Re:Heh... Radical...Islamists...redundant... on Islamist Hackers Shut Down Egyptology Research Journal · · Score: 1

    On becoming a True Scotsman:
    * I would suggest a Utilikilt yes, unless you have some Scottish blood in you, in which case you might adopt a standard kilt using the appropriate tartan - keep in mind there are also national tartans, city tartans, and tartans for various professions you might utilize. Also keep in mind that historically speaking the concept of a particular tartan pattern belonging to a particular clan is of course a later invention (probably of British origins). At most I believe we can say that certain tartans came from certain areas of Scotland at best.
    The utilikilt seems like a fairly practical garment generally. I have been tempted to buy one.
    * Learn Gaelic - its a tough language to learn (particularly the inconsistent spelling, but then if you have learned English already it should be like old home week). Its a very mellifluous language. Make sure you are learning Scottish Gaelic mind you, not Irish. BBC Scotland has entire broadcasts in Scot's Gaelic if you wish to acquire the sounds of it while trying to learn the vocabulary and grammar.
    * Buy a practice chanter and start learning how to play the bagpipes. Now, by no means does every Scot know how to play the pipes - or even like them necessarily - but for most people there are a few key things that are associated with a true Scot and playing the pipes is one of them.
    * Drink Whiskey - Single malts only, avoid blends.
    * Pick an accent and acquire it - I particularly like Billy Connolly's accent myself (Glasgow I believe), but the Highland accents from somewhere like the Isle of Skye or the Hebrides, are very attractive.
    * Learn to love football (i.e. Soccer) like your life depends on it.

  18. Re:And in other completely unrelated news on Canadian Court Rejects US Demand For Full Access To Megaupload Servers · · Score: 1

    Well read this then, and other articles like it:

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2012/10/18/pol-navigable-waters-protection-budget-bill.html

    or:
    http://o.canada.com/2012/10/29/after-federal-changes-to-waterways-rules-89-per-cent-of-protected-lakes-lap-on-conservative-shores/

    The changes to the Navigable Waters Protection act (which is almost as old as Canada) have been changed in bill C-45, so that a huge majority of Canadian lakes and Rivers will no longer have environmental protection. Perhaps coincidently, 89% of those lakes and rivers that will STILL have protection under the new changes, are in Conservative Ridings.

    "Bill C-45 would mean tens of thousands of lakes and rivers will no longer be covered by the NWPA, leaving protection for just 97 lakes, 62 rivers and the three oceans." http://www.lethbridgeherald.com/letters-to-the-editor/bill-c-45-will-do-away-with-protection-for-waterways-11313.html

    Now who is spreading disinformation? Is it you for denying that anything is wrong?

  19. Re:News Flash on Scientist Seeks 'Adventurous Human Woman' For Neanderthal Baby · · Score: 1

    Writing, no, but they did have the Quipu which apparently may have served much the same purpose in some ways:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quipu

  20. Re:Let us celebrate.. on Australian Scientists Discover Potential Aids Cure · · Score: 1

    "One Treatment" might mean removing stem cells from the patient, cultivating them in a lab to introduce this new protein, then surgically implanting them in the patient's bone marrow if I heard what the researcher said correctly. It would only need to be done once, but its not gonna be a single pill or injection either.
    Although at this stage who knows. It does mark a major breakthrough if it works. Hopefully no one gets a patent on it :P

  21. Re:And in other completely unrelated news on Canadian Court Rejects US Demand For Full Access To Megaupload Servers · · Score: 1

    Oh we are leading the way in political apathy with regards to the environment as well! Prime Minister Harper doesn't believe in environmentalism and is doing his best to eradicate all environmental groups in Canada, pass laws that remove environmental protection from 95% of Canada's waterways, and push through massive pipeline projects despite citizen's concerns or the objections of the indigenous peoples who live on the lands those pipes will cross.
    If there is a way to fuck up the world's environment, sell ownership of Canada's natural resources to foreign companies, or screw over the public in favour of large corporations, private interests or to curry favour with the US - Steven Harper is your man.

  22. Wrong Area on Canadian Court Rejects US Demand For Full Access To Megaupload Servers · · Score: 1

    You're just n the wrong part of Canada:
    http://www.theweathernetwork.com/weather/cabc0313
    4 Deg Celsius and Partly Cloudy. It will likely rain later tonight, whatever the forecast says.

  23. Re:Maybe it was a bad idea in the first place on Security Expert Says Java Vulnerability Could Take Years To Fix, Despite Patch · · Score: 2

    Well I agree with you. I use the web to read stuff, sometimes to view stuff, and to post information back. I use applications for pretty much any other use of the web.

    I don't need a lot of the "functionality" that seems to important to web developers these days. A lot of that stuff could be done on the back end, or at least with a much more secure system than relying on Javascript to implement it.

    Its perhaps time for a new client-side coding mechanism that starts with security first and foremost, and adds enough client-server interaction to be useful without exposing the user to as many possible exploits?

  24. Re:Acceptable on BioWare Launches "Gay Planet" For the Old Republic · · Score: 1

    My first thought was why can't a player designate the sexual orientation of their character via a pulldown, and then let the combination of pulldown settings determine what emotes etc are available? Why segregate the population. What about the RP types who want to play a gender they aren't?
    In this day and age with a growing acceptance of the fact that not all people are straight, I would have thought they would be leaping on the opportunity to "go with the flow" on this.
    I tried SWTOR mind you, and although I didn't get all that far, the game seemed rather limited and repetitive, so I haven't played with the emote system etc.

    I prefer playing the original SW MMORPG: www.swgemu.com :P

  25. Re:I don't recall noticing this... on Why You Shouldn't Design Games Through Analytics · · Score: 1

    I have watched this cycle with every MMORPG I have played so far. The people who scream the most about the game endlessly on the forums are NOT the ones to listen to. The average gameplayer is not qualified to do game design, even though they think they are. Almost every one of those raging complaints I have read is about 1 aspect of a game design and is often far too personal and coming from far too narrow a perspective.
    Now there are people that analyze the game, do endless math, and seriously try to quantify problems, and are making a serious effort to make a contribution and they should be considered, but not the final arbiters.

    All too often the developers listen to the feedback from the players and make changes that the players claim they want - but in the end it only helps ruin the game. I far prefer a developer who has the balls to listen to the public, then go back to their design and make changes that are consistent with the game's original design - or even not change things because change is not necessarily a good thing. Sometimes a game element is fine the way it is but the player base hasn't taken the time to really look at it.

    Even worse is letting the beancounter's dictate design of course. Just because some other game is popular, does not inherently mean that trying to clone it will guarantee the same success.

    Dark Age of Camelot - a *fantastic* original design. Probably the best MMORPG ever designed. It had a great mix of PvE/PvP gameplay and appealed to each camp. It had Roleplaying servers - it had PvP Roleplaying servers even and the RP rules were more or less enforced to boot. The first expansion (Shrouded Isles) totally ruined the original culturally based design even while it expanded the PVE side of the game. It could have been better executed and designed. Further expansions and improvements only made things progressively worse. The developers failed to see what the appeal of the original game design was, and thoroughly overengineered it in the name of putting out multiple expansions.

    Star Wars Galaxies - the other contender for best MMORPG in my opinion, despite its many flaws (PvP was at best rather mediocre and generally there was more dueling than actual PvP). An amazing Sandbox design that had a very dedicated community. An innovative game with many features and elements not found in any other titles - before or since. WOW was emerging at the same time though, and so the developers felt the need to make the game more like WOW to capture the millions they saw flowing elsewhere. They failed completely in every regard. The first revamp - the "Combat Upgrade" simply ruined a few elements of the game but was succeeded by the New Game Enhancement (NGE) which was shoved down the players throats without any previous warning (well, they announced it was happening 2 weeks before it happened). This took the game from a Sandbox design with 32 mixable professions and great flexibility to a design where there were only 9 possible character specs. If you were a commando, you were absolutely identical to every other commando in the game in every regard. The game lost probably 85% of its playerbase.

    City of Heroes/City of Villains - a great game, although weak in PvP, fantastic loyalty from its fans, but they failed to live up to the expectations of the players who wanted the superhero genre. That said it was a great game right up until the beancounters pulled the plug with no explanation, despite a loyal fanbase, and apparently turning a profit.

    Warhammer Online - built by the same folks that ruined Dark Age of Camelot, this game attempted to recreate the same intense gameplay but was so thoroughly over-engineered that it lost those people who had enjoyed the original title so immensely. They tried to recreate the mechanics of the original game, but ignored the PvE side of things (always the largest portion of any MMO playerbase) in favour of really boring PvP which lacked the fun you want in PvP completely - at least for me and my dozen or so friends who had played