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User: H0p313ss

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Comments · 2,261

  1. Re:Complicated. on LinkedIn Agrees To Block Stalkers · · Score: 1

    What she wants them to do is stop having the alerts go through. IE - she doesn't seem to care that this guy can see her profile - she just doesn't want to know about it.

    From what you're saying, what she really needs is a filtering rule on her email. Much faster and cheaper to implement.

    Indeed flames > /dev/null has always been the best way to deal with trolls.

  2. Re:Why not just endorse him on LinkedIn Agrees To Block Stalkers · · Score: 1

    +1

  3. Re:Software on GNOME 3.10 Released · · Score: 1

    May the Almighty have mercy.

    ... And a bucket of lube...

  4. Re:Software on GNOME 3.10 Released · · Score: 0

    Just don't lose the whole byte.

    What's a couple of nibbles between friends?

  5. Re:Distributions rise and fall in popularity on Ask Slashdot: Are We Witnessing the Decline of Ubuntu? · · Score: 1

    You're trolling, but sometimes you just gotta feed the troll.

    Windows is like herpes, Linux is more like mitochondria.

  6. Re:Linux Mint anyone? on Ask Slashdot: Are We Witnessing the Decline of Ubuntu? · · Score: 1

    Ubuntu got popular because the ordinary people who cannot figure out how a command line works could use it.

    Hardly. It got popular because it was debian based and didn't require knowledge of every part of the system to get it up running acceptably - you installed it and most stuff worked without hours of research and hair-pulling.

    It's both, it was a nice compromise for neophyte, expert users, experienced linux users and old hacks like me. In 2007 it was a system that people from any of those groups could agree apon.

    Both Unity and Gnome Shell are interesting UI experiments, but not ready for the main stream. This has annoyed the neophyte and expert users alike.

  7. Re:No GTA V here... on GTA V Proves a Lot of Parents Still Don't Know or Care About ESRB Ratings · · Score: 1

    Fortunately my youngest is 21 so we're having a blast.

    However he's also into his second year of police service training so he's basically a running monologue on which bits will get you how much time.

  8. Re:Bad art.. on Horse_ebooks Is Human After All · · Score: 1

    The point is that SOME performance art is amazing.

    That seems to be a matter of opinion.

    Personally, I'd much rather stare at inanimate etchings in a gallery than see some douchebag with a stupid haircut, covered in pig's blood and reciting his latest awful, Poe-esque poetry in the city park.

    To each his artistic own, I guess.

    I would probably agree on the example given.

    Again... SOME is good, but good luck finding any.

  9. Re:Let's try to define art. Again. on Horse_ebooks Is Human After All · · Score: 2

    He's not really trolling - it's brilliant meta performance art!

    *dances across Slashdot wearing a tutu and a Firefly t-shirt smeared in peanut butter while humming a 20's era swing tune*

  10. Re:Bad art.. on Horse_ebooks Is Human After All · · Score: 1

    The problem is that 99% of art, (be it literature, poetry, music or sculpture, etc.) is crap.

    The vast majority of that crap almost nobody ever sees, in the world of books and music you have to get published to get attention that filters out something like 90% of the complete drek.

    Not everybody is a creative genius, this is also true in technical fields, something like 90% of innovation is driven by 10% of the population. This is why our society has people we pay to critique art and tell us what is worth paying attention to. (And sometimes they are horribly, horribly wrong...)

    The point is that SOME performance art is amazing.

  11. Re:I'm a little confused about GTA 5 on GTA V Proves a Lot of Parents Still Don't Know or Care About ESRB Ratings · · Score: 2

    Not sure if this is insightful or trolling, but what the hell.

    This is 2013, torture and violence is as now as American as apple pie, but biology is still taboo.

  12. Re:Conversion for the casual reader on Why Are Cells the Size They Are? Gravity May Be a Factor · · Score: 2

    That'll show him!

  13. Re:Who? What? Huh? on 'Alien Life' Story of Dubious Provenance Goes Viral · · Score: 1

    Are you serious?

    One place produced about half of Europe's steel, but that's not what comes to mindl. Instead a rather large company (the joys of bailouts and too big to fail was all the rage back then too) that is really famous for making weapons for the Nazis using slave labor sourced from concentration camps is your go to name?

    Kids these days eh?

  14. Re:Who? What? Huh? on 'Alien Life' Story of Dubious Provenance Goes Viral · · Score: 1

    For shits and giggle google "Sheffield made in China"

    The Sheffield brand-name is/was so strong that there's rumors of a small town in China called Sheffield with a steel mill.

  15. Re:Who? What? Huh? on 'Alien Life' Story of Dubious Provenance Goes Viral · · Score: 1

    huh? anywhere outside of 100km radius around sheffield it's just taught that england made lots of products industrially and among them steel.

    For fine steel products just prior to WWII.. no, sheffield is not the place that comes to mind, not for the century prior to it either. Krupp comes to mind. Of course I suppose that inside UK they wouldn't want to mention that industrial revolution didn't happen just inside UK.

    But.. more importantly, why would I read a newspaper that would publish stupid stuff like this? they're trying to say that since they supposedly found pieces of algae in 25km they must have come from space...

    Go find your grandparents kitchen knives. Even in north america there's a better than 50% chance that any good quality knife that's over 50 years gold was made in Sheffield.

  16. Re:Who? What? Huh? on 'Alien Life' Story of Dubious Provenance Goes Viral · · Score: 2

    "By now you have likely read about the 'alien life forms' discovered in the upper atmosphere over Yorkshire, via the mass media reprinting a press release from the University of Sheffield.

    The what from the who now? Shitty writing. "Oh, by now I'm sure you've heard about the $TRIVIAL_EVENT that occurred 4,000 miles from where I reside 99.999% of my life.

    Kind of sad given the key role that Sheffield played in the industrial revolution. For the century prior to WWII Sheffield was producing the finest steel in the world.

    Have they stopped teaching history?

  17. Re:XKCD is relevant... on New Operating System Seeks To Replace Linux In the Cloud · · Score: 1

    "Those who don't understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly." – Henry Spencer

  18. Re:Off the pig! Time to get rid of OSs on VMs. on New Operating System Seeks To Replace Linux In the Cloud · · Score: 1

    But it's "in the cloud"!

    "I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened."

  19. Re:The bacterial excretions on Tooth Cavities May Protect Against Cancer · · Score: 1

    The problem with the US medical system is that it's profit based.

    There is little motivation for a unethical doctor to actually cure you, but there's lots of motivation to proscribe you meds out the ying-yang if your insurance covers it.

    Caveats:
          - Not every doctor plays into this
          - Even in countries where there are well run socialized medical systems there are still bad doctors.

  20. Re:Assumptions Seem Dubious on DoD Declassifies Flu Pandemic Plan Containing Sobering Assumptions · · Score: 1

    The Sealand Conjecture: anytime "move to Sealand" seems like a wise and/or appropriate response, you're already completely fucked.

    That's what I was hinting at.

  21. Re:Assumptions Seem Dubious on DoD Declassifies Flu Pandemic Plan Containing Sobering Assumptions · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know you're in trouble when Sealand is the answer to a question.

  22. Re:Yes it is on Ask Slashdot: Attracting Developers To Abandonware? · · Score: 1

    feel free to show me a version of Android that does not require Linux though.

    I know right?

    Android is a thin layer on top of Linux that requires kernel driver support for phone hardware. This is one of the most bullshit conversations I've ever had.

  23. Re:The bacterial excretions on Tooth Cavities May Protect Against Cancer · · Score: 2

    "You know what we call alternative medicine that's been proven to work? Medicine" -- Tim Minchin

  24. Re:Yes it is on Ask Slashdot: Attracting Developers To Abandonware? · · Score: 1

    Linux is the kernel. Other stuff is other stuff.

    The point is that in desktop/server/embedded Linux environment the developers sees the kernel API. Under Android they do not. Android is a Java environment not a *nix environment.

    Bollocks, if I write a desktop app in Java (Eclipse for example...) all I see is Java API, but that doesn't mean Eclipse is not running on Linux.

    The Java app is not running on Linux, it is running on a Java virtual machine. That is one of the benefits of Java, it isolates you from the host operating system so that your app is portable. What that Java virtual machine is running on is irrelevant to your app. Would you claim that a Windows app is Linux based because MS Windows is running on a virtual machine hosted on a Linux box?

    I give up, you really are quite mad.

  25. Re:Yes it is on Ask Slashdot: Attracting Developers To Abandonware? · · Score: 1

    Linux is the kernel. Other stuff is other stuff.

    The point is that in desktop/server/embedded Linux environment the developers sees the kernel API. Under Android they do not. Android is a Java environment not a *nix environment.

    Bollocks, if I write a desktop app in Java (Eclipse for example...) all I see is Java API, but that doesn't mean Eclipse is not running on Linux.