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User: adpe

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Comments · 34

  1. Fun? on EA Editor Criticizes Command & Conquer 4 DRM · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    >The story is fun, the gameplay is interesting

    Wat? Even without that fucking DRM abomination, I couldn't take more than 30 minutes of that boring piece of shit.

  2. James Randi on If ET Calls, Who Speaks For Humanity? · · Score: 1

    I vote James Randi.

  3. Re:Executable code, here we come on Microsoft Wants To Participate In SVG Development · · Score: 1

    Thank you. A lot of people know about the "E&E&E" punchline, but very few actually actually understand how it works. I was thinking exactly the same, but you posted it first. Mod parent up. Well, if he wasn't at +5 already.

  4. Re:Yeah yeah! Oh, yeah! on VLC Team Announces Video Editor In the Works · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not OP and I'm love and use linux exclusively, but I have to agree with him. I've used about every video editor there is and (compared to other OSes standards) even kdenlive is a piece of shit. It has most basic features, and even some advanced ones, but at least on my three machines, its crashing left and right.

    I personally think it's because of the sad state that linux multimedia subsystems are in (oss/alsa/pulseaudio/whatever kde comes with up next), but whatever it is, linux video editing is nowhere near windows or mac counterparts.

  5. Re:Okay, that's enough. on Obama Wants Computer Privacy Ruling Overturned · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well yes, I did bother to read why. It's just completely wrong. Every other country competing with China has signed it, only the US thinks it would put them in some kind of disadvantage. In fact, if the US set some CO2 goals, the entire international pressure would be on china, forcing them to act. But still, this is more or less a matter of opinions. I can see why people think a CO2 reduction promise would be a huge mistake, but I don't agree.

    The healtcare bill that is now underway (well, somewhat at least) isn't even *close* to what was promised. It's a watered-down bill, just good enough that republicans can say they stopped the worst and Obama can say he passed a bill.

    The rest of the issues I mention you seem to agree with me. I know it's partisanship that's stopping the gitmo closing, but still, he didn't deliver, even with all kinds of majorities in all kinds of houses. Not a word about landmines from you, you agree on thr PATRIOT Act and the computer privacy thing. And you still accuse me of complaining all the time and being ignorant. You might want to check what you're getting so worked up about. We agree on most things, have minor differences on healthcare and some different opinions on CO2, that's really not that bad.

  6. Re:Okay, that's enough. on Obama Wants Computer Privacy Ruling Overturned · · Score: 1

    I want the people in Gitmo to have a fair trial, that's all. I don't really care *where* they are. They could be sitting in a hut in India for all I care, as long as they're treated as a human beings and get a fair trial. Right now, America is not holding up its very own ideals of being a free country with equality for all, even terrorists.

    Next, health care. I don't understand what you mean by "unproven". The basic idea is that everyone pais some money, so that everyone can go to a doctor withouth being broke after that. You're right, universial health care is another tax, and this certaily doesn't increase personal freedom. Still, I think it's worth it. There are a lot of poor people out there, who simply can't afford the current system. I think it's very reasonable to expect the rich people benefiting from the system to pay a little more, so that the poor people can visit a doctor. We're talking about the health and lifes of human beings here, the most basic thing a man can ask for. I think it's okay to break the rules of a free market fot that.

    FOX News is just a scapegoat here. I do think they spread lies and misinformation, but that was just an example of the excuses for Obama. In his defense, FOX and the conservaties went *nuts* battling health care, but it's not that they actually have any legislative power.

    And for the PATRIOT Act, yes I did think that Obama would reverse some of the horrible things the Bush administration introduced. I might have been naive and stupid, but I believed he had some set of ideals and honor. This has nothing to do with him being a democrat by the way, I just thought he was basically a good person.

  7. Re:Okay, that's enough. on Obama Wants Computer Privacy Ruling Overturned · · Score: 1

    Yeah right, as if I'm going to discuss these things in detail with you. The point is that Obama promised these things (well, not sure about the CO2 thing) and failed.

  8. Okay, that's enough. on Obama Wants Computer Privacy Ruling Overturned · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I liked him when he ran for president. Then he failed closing gitmo, didn't manage to push healthcare through, and I kinda attribted that to "circumstances", like FOX "News". But now he doesn't sign this landmine treaty thingie, he doesn't promise any kind of CO2 reduction goals, he extends the PATRIOT Act and now this. I'm utterly disappointed.

  9. Re:Creationists response: on Observing Evolution Over 40,000 Generations · · Score: 1

    Well, no. That's exactly the difference between us. We don't draw illogical conclusions. We conclude that evolution is true, that's it. There's no mention of god anywhere. Theists see god everywhere and immideately consider it proof.

  10. Creationists response: on Observing Evolution Over 40,000 Generations · · Score: 4, Funny

    653 mutations? 1305 missing gaps! Proof of god! Hallelulja!

  11. Re:German results on Pirate Party Wins At Least One European Parliament Seat · · Score: 1

    I know about the reasoning for this rule, but let's face it, extremist parties have never had a chance in post-WW2 germany. Well, other than in some of the eastern states, where even the 5% rule didn't stop them. It's an outdated thing, which had its place when we were stuggling with ourselves. Now it's just a burden to smaller parties.

  12. Re:German results on Pirate Party Wins At Least One European Parliament Seat · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sadly, we germans somehow think it's a good idea to only allow parties who get >=5% of the votes into our (or the european) parliaments. Might be because of our history, but we (the german pirate party, I'm a member), need to gain significant support to actually be allowed to say anything.

  13. I'm a physicist myself on Hawking Expecting To Make Full Recovery · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... but I admire his skill when it comes to explaing the complicated stuff to the masses. Go Stephen!

  14. Sun + Oracle = Yay on What If Oracle Bought Sun Microsystems? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Let me tell you a story. I work in a professional environment in a 10k+ Person Organization. We decided we want to implement Identity Management. We chose the (Open Source) Sun Identity Manager, one of their enterprise products, based on J2EE.

    The documentation is horrible, but that's not what it's about. Our development machines run on a JBoss AS with a Mysql Repository. The performance is horrible, and I mean it. It's beyond bad, MySql gobbles up the whole server. It takes 95% CPU time and 2 gb ram for our (rather complex) queries.

    On our staging machine (running Oracle as a repository), the same tasks take 10% CPU and we hardly notice it happening.

    Needles to say, SUN thought it might be a good idea (for political reason obv) to include Mysql in their documentation as "supported", although no sane person would actually use it.

    I kinda forgot what my post has to do with this story. I just read "Oracle + Sun" and it clicked. I'm conditioned to think it's a perfect combination.

  15. Speech? on Why the CAPTCHA Approach Is Doomed · · Score: 1

    I'm not an expert in this field, but what I've learned in all those years studying CS, speech recognition is much harder than image pattern recognition. Mainly because our human brain can easily parse accents and sloppy speaking, computers hardly can.

    Now that flash is installed on nearly every machine (and I don't say I approve), would it be too much of a problem to install a "play" button as a captcha, which just speaks a word? Granted, computer generated voice is probably easily crackable too, but lets say google or someone lets 100 people read 10 books each. And they choose a random word from the whole database. That would work I think.

  16. This is awesome on Princeton Student Finds Bug In LHC Experiment · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This story makes me fall in love with science even more. Smart people think of ways to understand the world better, other smart people review it, find errors and discuss their finding with other scientists.
    They have a discussion like adults, they look at the math, one side is correct and they correct their experiment and thank them for the contribution.
    This is what the world is supposed to be like. Not like these fucking religois nutjobs, screaming at each other, arguning who has the cooler imaginary friend, without having even a halfway decent argument. They're just like "You're stupid!". "No, you are!". "No you!"
    Science for the fucking win!

  17. VMware rocks on VMware Demos Two Operating Systems On Mobile Phone · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Gotta admit. I have to use virtualization in a professional environment. As much as I like OSS (I don't use any closed source product except the linux nvidia driver), VMware kicks VBox's ass (and all the QEmu etc. alternatives I've tried). I hate it, but VMware products are the most advanced and I'll continue to use them as long as there's no equivalent OSS alternative.

  18. Re:Ummm on Bittorrent To Cause Internet Meltdown · · Score: 1

    It's-a me..!

  19. Good timing on The State of Scripting Languages · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Python has been my language for years. The pure beauty of the language together with the huge library did it for me. Plus, it's very easy to program python. Seriously. Just today, I've implemented an algorithm with a long, long loop and a lot of arithmetic operations. Python took 5:30 where Java took 10 secs. I'm serious, Python is SLOW, and last time I've checked, Ruby is even worse. (Interesting sidenote: C++ took 11 secs). I seriously love scipting languages, but the speed it horrifying. I'll stick to Java for a while.

  20. Re:Now that they have the money.. on Settlement Reached in Verizon GPL Violation Suit · · Score: 3, Informative

    The difference is that these people actually put a lot of time and thought into *creating* something. They deserve all kinds of protection by law. A patent troll merely patents some obvious idea and sits there, but never creates anything.

    Huge difference.

  21. Re:Depression not natural? on Antidepressants Work No Better Than a Placebo · · Score: 1

    Well, I can't argue with that. I happen not to be depressed myself (as in the medical condition), so I can't say anything about the treatments. To me it seems natural that you fight the causes for bad behavious (the depression itself) rather than living with the depression and trying to behave normally, but again, I don't really know first hand. All I was trying to say was, "real" depression is bad and must be treated in some way.

  22. Re:Depression not natural? on Antidepressants Work No Better Than a Placebo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you're confusing depression as in "Man, I'm pissed off today" and depression as in the medical condition. "Real" depression is a horrible thing and needs treatment. It's as if you're saying cancer neends no treatment, since the cells grow very naturally.

  23. I quote Glenn Quagmire on Visual Basic on GNU/Linux · · Score: 1

    Eeeeeeewwww

  24. Re:Electronic voting for a better democracy on Florida to Scrap Touch Screen Voting? · · Score: 1

    Do you really hold your fellow countrymn in such low regard? Yes, absolutely. Face it, people are dumb (myself included). There is a very limited set of things they care about. And because you'd have to explain the issues they don't care about to them, you have to dumb things down to the level where you could just aswell stay completely ignorant. You'd basically have to trust the person who dumbed it down, because you don't have enough qualified information to make up your own mind. Sounds like the current politics/media/corporations complex to me.

  25. Re:A lot more than oil on Newest Energy Source — Pond Scum · · Score: 2

    Awesome, thanks for putting some numbers into this. Since about the only things which I trust are bare numbers, this helps me a lot developing my opinion. Thanks.