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User: aicrules

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Comments · 1,148

  1. Re:play with your kids app on Ask Slashdot: Android Apps For Kids Under 12 Months? · · Score: 1

    So are there any android apps that are fun to play with parent involved? Even those simple piano apps are a lot of fun for very young children and parent to play together. I sure as heck wouldn't have left a tablet in the 100% are of my infant, but playing simple games with them with me in control? Absolutely. Tablet provides audio and visual stimulation that is an important part of a child's development and assimilation into the society they will become part of later in life. Tablet doesn't provide a good tactile stimulation, so those crinkly sounding stuffed animals/toys with high contrast coloring and different surface types to chew are still very much a good thing. Think about it that way, which you KNOW was what the person was asking about anyway but you and all these other outspoken "defenders of the children" here pretend not to have understood. So think about times where you interacted with your child using a stuffed animal. Similar use case for android tablet app question. A tablet by itself is a horrible toy to play with an infant, but as a slick way to have a POTENTIAL multitude of visual and audio interactions to augment parent-child interaction it is a great toy. Now if only there were a group of tech minded people that could be asked to discuss what android apps are available that may qualify....

  2. Re:you're crazy to do that to an infant! on Ask Slashdot: Android Apps For Kids Under 12 Months? · · Score: 1

    Did a TRS-80 touch you when you were young?

  3. Re:Give the best app on Ask Slashdot: Android Apps For Kids Under 12 Months? · · Score: 1

    Because those who responded in that way (high percentage of respondents that I've browsed through) don't have any experience with the subject, so they default to berating the question asker as a way to participate in the discussion. Advanced karma whoring for dummies.

  4. Re:Give the best app on Ask Slashdot: Android Apps For Kids Under 12 Months? · · Score: 1

    But every parent on slashdot carries their child around 100% of the time, especially during such activities as cooking with boiling oil, fighting fires, weeding, installing new drywall in the ceiling, replacing an engine in a 68 vette...etc... oh and lighting fireworks on 4th of july...gotta have the kid on your hip then too.

  5. Re:Give the best app on Ask Slashdot: Android Apps For Kids Under 12 Months? · · Score: 1

    The problem is people come to slashdot for tech advice that happens to connect to their children and INSTEAD they get 99% "parenting" advice as responses that almost entirely are telling you how stupid a parent you are to even ask the question. Slashdot is a great haven for an amazing number of expert parents. Alas, asking if there are any Android apps that make a tablet more than just a plastic brick for a toddler to chew on and throw around is treated as felony child abuse here.

  6. This may have been a good joke if you'd just given it a few more minutes of thinking.

  7. Re:If you haven't got anything to hide... on Zero Day Hole In Samsung Smart TVs Could Have TV Watching You · · Score: 1

    Well that still applies here too. But many people do have something they want to hide when they're in their own home. Because walking around naked, getting it on with your sig other, picking your nose and eating it, are all activities you can freely do in your own home because you're not exposing those activities to others. People do things in their home that they wouldn't do if other people were watching them. Not because it's a crime though...

  8. Re:Unauthorized bandwidth usage lawsuits on IE Flaw Lets Sites Track Your Mouse Cursor, Even When You Aren't Browsing · · Score: 2

    No, you would likely have your legs removed for filing such a lawsuit.

  9. Re:$3,000 not that impressive on Degree Hack: Cobbling Together Credit Hours For Cheap · · Score: 1

    The idea that at least portions of an otherwise potentially more expensive college degree could commonly be accomplished with less expensive "outside" courses is an interesting one. One that most universities aren't going to be all that interested in beyond their existing credit transfer policies. And that won't change until people do like this guy and show a demand for it in enough numbers that cause competition to push it that way.

    And I actually replied to you because you hail from the city I was born and I don't generally expect to run across someone else from there on any given visit to the slashdot forums.

  10. Re:Sounds like it's worth it on Degree Hack: Cobbling Together Credit Hours For Cheap · · Score: 1

    When McDonald's starts rejecting midnight drive-through shiftworkers because they don't have PhD, then I'll be concerned :)

  11. Re:I'd hire him on Degree Hack: Cobbling Together Credit Hours For Cheap · · Score: 2

    Yeah he proved he can used a technicality to appear to have accomplished a goal. So if you don't tell him in exquisite detail what you need him to do, he'll spend a bunch of time figuring out the cheapest way to have "done" what you asked for, but possibly not actually accomplish what you wanted.

  12. Re:Wow, such a minor quibble too. on SEC Investigates Netflix CEO Reed Hastings Over Facebook Posting · · Score: 1

    So you're saying you don't like DRM because it makes it harder to break the law...clever? That's a pretty weak argument for DRM-free streaming movies.

  13. Re:Better idea. on Cambridge University To Open "Terminator Center" To Study Threat From AI · · Score: 1

    A minor, localized rash treatable with over the counter ointment.

  14. Re:If you don't like it... on You Can't Say That On the Internet · · Score: 1

    That assumes the original request was constructive. Wanting to know how to win a lawsuit against a company that censors potentially offensive content following their terms of service? Not constructive.

  15. Re:This is exactly what was predicted on Brazil and Peru Dispute .Amazon TLD · · Score: 1

    I do not find your link trollish. Just a mild "i told you so"

  16. Re:$350 million so far? on Brazil and Peru Dispute .Amazon TLD · · Score: 1

    hookers and blow...

    Temporary Relationship Consultants and Pharmaceutical Consultants you mean?

  17. Re:Stand-By! on Brazil and Peru Dispute .Amazon TLD · · Score: 1

    You can assume the country will outlast the company, but it may not. I can tell you if I am typing amazon and expecting a website in response, I am expected Amazon.com. However, I also wouldn't be that lazy :)

  18. Re:Cap and Trade solves everything! on Report Says Climate Change Already Evident, Emissions Gap Growing · · Score: 1

    wow, brilliant rebuttal...

  19. Re:Well... on With Pot Legal, Scientists Study Detection of Impaired Drivers · · Score: 1

    At least you haven't had any accidents or tickets that you can remember...

  20. Re:Easy on With Pot Legal, Scientists Study Detection of Impaired Drivers · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not entire US. Washington state and Colorado. The vote was part of the natoinal election 11/6/2012. It will take a while for it to meaningfully take effect, and with Federal government still classifying it as an illegal drug, we may get to see a nice states' rights case soon eough. I look forward to that as I always like to see the Federal government put in its place.

  21. Re:If you don't like it... on You Can't Say That On the Internet · · Score: 1

    No guarantee you can successfully sue a company for allowing your child to see nipples either. But, if enough people filed lawsuits against a company for having an "offensive censorship policy" that company might actually change their policy. Just way more likely that someone would sue them the other way around, and so they hedge their legal bets.

  22. Re:If you don't like it... on You Can't Say That On the Internet · · Score: 1

    File a lawsuit. It'll get thrown out and you'll probably get to pay the other party's legal fees and court costs, but you can file a lawsuit.

  23. Re:If you don't like it... on You Can't Say That On the Internet · · Score: 1

    If saying "I take offense at this content" was the extent of a person's offense to some content, then they probably wouldn't be as concerned with doing it. However, since in many cases that offense tends to be taken to extremes such as lawsuits, and certain content being "allowed" to exist on a company's site actually has basis for legal action, then that leads to companies having to create policies that often have zero tolerance.

  24. Re:If you don't like it... on You Can't Say That On the Internet · · Score: 1

    Random "oops i took that number as binary because it only has 1 and 0 in it" joke...

  25. Re:Chick-fil-A is pro-censorship? Since when? on You Can't Say That On the Internet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Summary writer is clearly a progressive bomb thrower. Maybe not actually a progressive him/herself, but the whole summary is meant to be pot shot after pot shot at conservative ideals while trying lamely to appear as a real discussion on the topic. The use of the term kerfuffle sealed this assessment for me. Tries to sound like a terminally serious issue that evil people like Chik-Fil-A are on the wrong side of and then uses the term kerfuffle which, RIGHTLY, puts the topic back in the "no one really gives a shit about this because it's not actually an issue" category.