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User: Gideon+Fubar

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Comments · 506

  1. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 1

    Yeah, uh...

    I think your second paragraph is kind of a given. Your first paragraph is actually only ideally true anyway... i'm sure you've seen examples of corporations dictating the status quo, and sometimes that does extend to legal matters.

    for example (after a cursory goog, so i'm not all that sure about the credibility...): http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/25/jeff-olson-california-banks_n_3499177.html?1372199922&ncid=edlinkusaolp00000009

  2. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 1

    I agree with you regarding public infrastructure. You can't increase functional efficiency (that is, the pipes and wires) on a natural monopoly easily without providing an inferior service (i.e. reduced maintenance).

  3. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 1

    To be fair, those people were lawyers and politicians.

    But yes, GP... it is about as bad as the AC claims. People here appear to be encouraged to have no frame of reference.

  4. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've never understood why some people are so concerned about big government but then give monopolies to big businesses.

  5. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 1

    Wish i could mod you up.

  6. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 1

    Turns out it was both unfeasible (i mean, it was obvious even to people who weren't going to have to implement it) to monitor everything and not everyone here is a complete idiot. Lucky for us, i guess.

    http://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/House_of_Representatives_Committees?url=pjcis%2Fnsl2012%2Freport.htm

  7. Re:define "serious" on UK Police Launch Campaign To Shut Down Torrent Sites · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's about volume, right? That music is criminally loud.

    Also terrible fucking puns.

  8. Re:Subdomain on Microsoft Files Dispute Against Current Owner of XboxOne.com · · Score: 1

    Stop being logical.

    Next you'll be telling me there's a .US tld.

  9. Re:I look forward to hearing about why this will f on Microsoft Unveils Xbox One · · Score: 1

    Mmmm it'll probably be the (apparent) fact that you have to enter a code manually into the box after purchasing a game in order to have it 'verified online and linked to your Xbox Live account', coupled with the fact that your friend who wants to borrow the game will have the opition to do so... but only if they pay the full retail value of said game.

    Oh, there's also the brand new, feature packed online trading system for second hand games... which will be extremely popular with retailers (who are already totally enthused about the auth code system), as well as gamers who will be able to see that they're still paying significantly more for '2nd hand' digital content than they can get back by rescinding their rights to it.

  10. I see a lot of opinions here about the meat... on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With a Fear of Technological Change? · · Score: 2

    ...but not much about the shape of the bones, OP.

    If you use old school tech for its own sake and it's really a cultural affectation then there's no real reason not to switch.

    However, if you use them because you're interested in the raw stuff that makes the modern world work and you're not content to just accept that every new toy is a magical box controlled by Apple or Microsoft or Samsung... you should probably both stick to the old stuff and branch out into finding out how the new technologies do what they do.

  11. Re:I love it... on Adobe Creative Suite Going Subscription-Only · · Score: 1

    Designers will probably do the obvious thing: Continue to freely use fully paid up legacy versions of the software and ignore the cloud.

  12. Re:Logistics is Required Here on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    You mean like this: http://thingiverse.com/ ?

    Yes, i know it's not exhaustive. Contribute.

  13. Re:Seems pretty spot on to me on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    You have some pretty big hurdles ahead of you if you can't differentiate between 3d modelling and programming... Luckily 3d modelling in the 21st century is a bit easier than programming IF you just want to sculpt.

    As deathguppie suggested, look at blender (or zbrush). You will need to learn some skills, but probably not as much as you'd think.

    Unfortunately... the OP article is completely off the mark: The software is the easiest thing to fix. The printers themselves generally require A LOT of supervision and maintenance.

  14. Re:Logistics is Required Here on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    You mean like the reprap: http://reprap.org/wiki/Main_Page ?

    you might be late to the party.

  15. Re:Acquisition of Skills Takes Time - lots of it on What's Holding Back 3-D Printing · · Score: 1

    1000-2000 hours?

    Seriously?

    What if i told you that the high school around the corner from my work has a 3d printing group that gets kids started on Google Sketchup and has them making their own 3d models within an hour? Sure Sketchup is much much simpler than Autocad or Solidworks, but the principles are the same and the techniques are additive; once the user knows the techniques, they can be transplanted from application to application, with the widely varied interfaces between different applications being the biggest hurdle. Some of these kids have produced functional multipart models in blender after as few as 10 hours of supervised play.

    I agree that this is totally different from functional design, but engineering and 3d modelling are actually fundamentally different skills...

    Also, blender (and 3dsmax, and maya and zbrush... but blender is free & open source) has supported native .stl export for a while now.

  16. Re:The obvious solution: on Canadian Official Escorted From House For Others' Facebook Comments · · Score: 1

    Well said sir. Pity too few will understand.

  17. Re:BitTorrent on Botnet Uses Default Passwords To Conduct "Internet Census 2012" · · Score: 1

    I sense a car analogy coming on.

  18. Re:Simple Fix on When It's Time To Scale, US Manufacturing Hits a Wall · · Score: 1

    This.

    Those conservatives are so nobly sacrificing themselves for the greater efficiency. Ayn Rand would not approve of their altruism.

  19. Oh. My bad. Guess i'd better tell my pilot friend who told me about it that he's mistaken ;)

  20. I vaguely know a guy who is a flight enthusiaist, but not an actual pilot... He's clocked thousands of hours in flight sims and sometimes does trial simulations of real passenger craft routes and the like.

    I think he's crazy, but apparently actual pilots often call him for advice on landing at one specific airport in south east asia...

  21. Re:Is Scientology Really Different? on Book Review: Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief · · Score: 1

    By the way... you are aware that negating the premise of an opposing argument is not the same thing as providing a proof for your own, right?

    Please don't quote Plato at me. His stature does not prevent him from making logical errors that were not fomalized until over two thousand years after his death.

  22. I don't know what academic world you guys are in.. on How Open Source Could Benefit Academic Research · · Score: 1

    ...but writing OSS software for education and academia and distributing it to other universities around the country and world has been my job for the last few years.

  23. Re:Is Scientology Really Different? on Book Review: Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief · · Score: 1

    No sir, i'm referencing the inevitable ad absurdum that is at the end of your goalpost chain. What comes later when you can no longer blame 'Power' because the quest for power sometimes brings good things and 'Power' shouldn't be blamed for the actions of people who are after it?

    It's obvious that the argument 'religion = bad' is invalid. It is a value judgement. My objections is that undermining a value judgement with another value judgement is no more logical than banging two rocks together, and that this whole argument is meaningless on both sides.

    Please just pretend that instead of saying 'religion', i'm saying 'oranges' and try looking at the argument again.

  24. Re:Is Scientology Really Different? on Book Review: Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief · · Score: 1

    Sorry sir, it was not about my opinion. Your argument was not valid, you were affirming a disjunct, and your assumptions about what i meant shows that you missed that my concern was with the form of your argument rather than the content.

    Also, content does not affect logic. When content is involved, we call it rationalization.

    Sorry for being a logic nazi, but logic is like math: immutable but prone to abuse.

    On a personal note, i agree with you right up to the point where you approach blaming survival and instead note that the concept of blame requires a massive reduction in situational complexity and an increase in attribution to a single entity.

  25. Re:Is Scientology Really Different? on Book Review: Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief · · Score: 1

    Occam's Razor: If religion has so little influence that cannot be otherwise attributed to human behaviour generally, is it necessary?

    Also, the fact that some people who were evil were not religious has no bearing on the 'evilness' of religions, and ascribing a negative property to something is not the same thing as ascribing all possible negative properties to something.

    Or if that's not clear enough, saying that something is bad is not the same as saying that it is responsible for all the bad things.