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User: Peeteriz

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Comments · 617

  1. Re:Cel phone jammers! on Using Technology To Enforce Good Behavior · · Score: 1

    Well, if the cell-phone-talker loud enough to bother you then you probably can hear if he's talking about a medical emergency or cousin's shoe shopping habits before you turn on the jammer.

  2. Re:Reasons Why This Might Be a Bad Move on Goldman Invests $450m In Facebook · · Score: 1

    The rest of the market has a very vague idea about Facebook financial numbers, as they are not public - however, you'd bet that Goldman's lawyers and financial analysts have now spent much time looking at their numbers, and they are betting with their bonuses that some 10% of Facebook will be worth $450 million.

  3. Re:Try your brick and motar travel agent on Battle Escalates Between Airlines and Online Agents · · Score: 1

    Well, it's his loss, isn't it ? The only question after that is if you just thank him and leave or publicly laugh at his failure in negotiations.

  4. Re:Use a real alarm clock on iPhone Alarms Hit By New Year's Bug · · Score: 1

    You can't say that for the mobile computing device that Apple is selling - normal phones crap out as rarely as normal alarm clocks, i.e., never unless you hit them with a hammer repeatedly.

  5. Re:Use a real alarm clock on iPhone Alarms Hit By New Year's Bug · · Score: 1

    As I said, using my mobile phone (not iPhone, I've usually had Nokia devices) as alarm has worked for me for 11 years now - I have no Plan B other than waking up sometime later myself; simply the Plan A needs to be actually reliable as consumers would naturally expect.

  6. Re:Use a real alarm clock on iPhone Alarms Hit By New Year's Bug · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why shouldn't I use a phone as an alarm clock? I have been using my phone as my 'watch' and as my alarm clock since getting my first mobile back in 1999.
    It has multiple advantages:
    1) It allows me to set the required waking time during the day when I'm at work and find out what will be my schedule tomorrow, do I have a 8:00 meeting that I need a bit of preparation, etc.
    2) Alarm clocks usually have a single alarm time and don't work well for multiple people - I want to keep napping if my wife's alarm rings first and vice versa;
    3) The phone is always with me - it ensures that I can stay with my clock habits when on a hotel on business trip or when I'm staying over at a friends place - no need to bother with different options;
    4) On decent mobiles, alarm clock function works even when the phone is turned off due to low battery - the screen and calls are off, but the alarm still ran;
    5) It's more accurate than an alarm clock - since it must sync time with the operator anyway for proper functioning, it's always accurate, I never have to adjust it (as for a watch), and it handles daylight savings time automagically.

    Frankly, the only issue is how deeply faulty your testing process has to be to ship with such bugs in core functions such as clock and making calls? It's not a frigging computer you're shipping, it's a consumer device for which these functions are not 'additionally included applets', but main features of the product...

  7. Just like truck drivers? on Do Sleepy Surgeons Have a Right To Operate? · · Score: 1

    I don't know how it's there in US, but here in Europe professions such as long-haul truck and tourist bus drivers are regulated so that they are not allowed to drive for, say, 36 hours w/o sleep, and it's enforced by monitoring their shift schedules.

    Patient 'consent' wouldn't be a solution, but hospitals definitely could enforce rules that no surgeon can get a shift for more than x consecutive hours without having a break in between that would allow for proper full night sleep.

  8. Re:Under what power? on EU Wants Power To Block China's Tech Buying · · Score: 1

    It does take at least a generation to get mental acceptance of the population for a move from nation-governments to a federal one. It took quite long for USA, and it's still state rights often become an issue; and it will take still quite some time in Europe.

  9. Re:My brother is on the list... on One Tip Enough To Put Name On Terrorist Watch List · · Score: 3

    Too bad the TSA checks have never caught anybody. Would you like to lose 4 hours of your life so that some politico can pat himself on the back and smile at the cameras for implementing this security imitation theatre?

  10. Re:I love where I live on VoIP Now Technically Illegal In China · · Score: 1

    In actions, the political representatives of American Right practice extension of government, strengthening the government, avoiding and overturning constitutional limitations, and having a strong symbiosis between the state and related industry conglomerates with none of that 'arms-length' liberal stuff.

    In words, maybe they are as you say, and maybe their voters do think as you say - but it's irrelevant if they are acting like fascists.

  11. Re:Bring back 8 track on Kodachrome Takes Its Final Bow Today · · Score: 1

    No physical media has any notion of permanence at all - they will degrade over some time inevitably, the only question is when. However, bits are bits are bits no matter how many times you copy them, and if you have them they will be in the same quality even after a billion years in a different galaxy.

    Words like '50 years', 'often', 'just as good' don't mean permanence - can you rephrase your sentence with 'forever', 'always', 'exactly as good' ?

  12. Re:Alternative ways to develop? on Kodachrome Takes Its Final Bow Today · · Score: 1

    Yer, the only way to develop the film is chemical in nature.
    The information is there in the form of chemical proportions on each color layer of the film - roughly speaking, from 0% to 100% of the volatile chemicals have reacted depending on how much light exposure they got. There are spectrum bands that would be non-destructive and could be used for attempted scanning, but generally the film would have no optical content before the developing chemicals, you'd just scan a blank picture; and even if there were measurable optical differences then you couldn't distinguish between the three color layers (since you'd be scanning in a single narrow spectrum light and get a monochrome scan).

  13. Re:Ship Source? on Most Android Tablets Fail At GPL Compliance · · Score: 1

    They have to include an offer on how exactly the user can get the source code, and they are liable for fulfilling it - they can rely on a third party such as Open Handset Alliance, but they must include an offer stating that OHA will do it, and are liable if OHA doesn't do it for some reason (say, not having the exact version that matches the code on the shipped device)

  14. Re:What I'd like to know on PC Gamers Crush Console Brethren · · Score: 1

    They were counting the hours spent, each of the consoles had almost twice as many hours logged as PC. So the console gamers are progressing twice slower despite putting in almost twice as much time - so maybe they don't care about this goal and are ignoring it en masse, or something like that.

  15. Re:Consider on Auditors Question TSA's Tech Spending, Security Solutions · · Score: 1

    I'm sure that there would be 'private security' mercenary companies which would improve the efficiency infinitely by offering to murder potential terrorists at the low, low price of 1.000.000/head. That'd be 14.000 terrorists, here they are, please sign here on the delivery form and the check.

  16. Re:There's more to electricity than lighting. on African Villages Glow With Renewable Energy · · Score: 1

    They are useful amounts of powers. Lighting and communications (i.e., power for mobile or radio) are the most useful things that need electricity.

  17. Re:Are you guys really loosing it in the U.S? on Is Reading Spouse's E-Mail a Crime? · · Score: 1

    If I broke the lock on your diary or the password on your email to read it, it would definitely be a crime.
    If I broke the lock on my ex-wifes diary or the password on her email to read it, it would definitely be a crime.
    The only question is wether their current problematic-but-still-legal marriage changes that or not.

  18. Re:We borrow money from China to fund corn... on Once-Darling Ethanol Losing Friends In High Places · · Score: 1

    Complete offtopic - have you read the other comments in the thread?

    1) US federal minimum wage is 7.25$/hour, which is far above $300/month if you work reasonable hours;
    2) The thread is about proposal for 'basic guaranteed income' which would mostly cover the rent/heat/food for everyone regardless of what they're doing.

  19. Re:We borrow money from China to fund corn... on Once-Darling Ethanol Losing Friends In High Places · · Score: 1

    I already have some stuff, and it doesn't take much at all - rent+food is the major expense, you can skip shampoo and get a cheap backpack for that money :) You can get a decent used guitar for a couple hundred bucks, and it would serve you for dozens of years - the world is full with dirt cheap hobbies that only need lots of time. And I sure could work a bit for something, I've got no problem with that, but it be an order of magnitude less work, nowhere near full time - work two weeks, get the guitar you want, and go away...

    The 55-year old janitor would probably retire early if he had basic income. Single moms wouldn't work two jobs away from their children if they had basic income - they would be with the family. 'Aspiring actresses' in LA wouldn't wait tables to pay the rent, they'd practice acting. Wannabe singer-songwriters wouldn't flip burgers, they would try to make some songs. Who would serve your burgers then?

  20. Re:Don't Waste Your Time on Spammers Finally Under the Legal Gun? · · Score: 1

    Addressing economic issues behind spam can be done by ensuring that companies that use spam in their advertising pay more in fines than they could earn by the sales of their products.

    A large part of the spammers are actually in the US - see any statistics on spam origins. Most of the spam wants to get your money, so they sell and deliver stuff in US, so they are quite vulnerable to US jurisdiction, as the court verdicts would apply to their money and stuff passed through US. Dan's methods won't work against internet fraud, phishing and "Nigerian" scams, that's what criminal law is for, but Dan's approach would work just fine against commercial spam, which seems to dominate if I look at my gmail's spam folder.

  21. Re:We borrow money from China to fund corn... on Once-Darling Ethanol Losing Friends In High Places · · Score: 1

    Most people want more in life, but the current 'standard' lifestyle of being a daily office drone followed by sitting at a large screen TV is less, not more.

    If I had guaranteed 'basic income', I'd fill my life with great fun stuff for me such as playing my (shitty) music, backpacking, and studying psychology. It wouldn't really include much, if any stuff on that I currently spend most of my effing life by being productive for others.

  22. Why? on IBM Projects Holographic Phones, Air-Driven Batteries · · Score: 1

    If the current cheap phones had perfect support for 3d-holos of the caller for free already today, I still wouldn't really use it...

  23. Re:Publicity worked for Humble Bundle on Pay What You Want — a Sustainable Business Model? · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, for virtual goods with near-zero marginal cost, if some user pays $5 for the bundle then it often is $5 more profit than with the normal prices.

  24. Re:Creationism on Scientists Decipher 3-Billion-Year-Old Genomic Fossils · · Score: 1

    By the way, does any noticeable percentage outside of US believe in creationism, or it is just a local issue there?

    My impression seems that there is no mass debate about creationism in other countries even the most religiously conservative ones such as Poland, and even Vatican and the popes have repeatedly claimed that there is no contradiction between their faith and evolution theory or big bang theory...

  25. Re:Duh... on Nigerian Email Scam Victim Sues Bank, Loses Appeal · · Score: 1

    IIRC, the UK has a semi-recent law limiting 'final clearing' of cheques to 6 days, but in USA it still is allowed to treat it as 'semi-cleared' and possibly invalidate it for as long as the bank wants, which may be months for international cheques.