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User: Orleron

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  1. You can TRY to patent anything on Did A US Navy Scientist Just Invent A Room-Temperature Superconductor? (phys.org) · · Score: 1
  2. Not going to matter one way or another on India, the World's Second Largest Internet Market, Is Turning Its Back on Silicon Valley (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I definitely don't think this is going to matter one way or another. I actually have a fair bit of experience doing business in India, and it amounts to this: whatever someone will pay you in the US or EU, take a tenth of that and that's the MOST you will get from Indian users. I used to sell medical device coatings that would cost $20-$75/per coating per device. That's more than most people in India pay for the WHOLE device in most cases, depending. I sell courses online for $200/pc on my personal site. Indians offer about $20 for them, and still ask for discounts. I teach courses for a company that charges roughly $3,000 per person to have me teach them for three days, and we never go to India because there's no one in the whole country that would pay that. They keep trying to get us to go there for like 20 bucks a person. Not gonna happen. The reason for this is money is on a completely different scale there. A white collar professional makes about $600 to $1,000/month. That's considered good money. I tried to break a 1000 rupee note at a hotel concierge once (roughly equivalent to a 20-dollar bill), and they didn't have enough money in their entire cash register to do it. You can't make real money in India. If you do anything there at all, you do it because you want to help.

  3. I give it about 5 seconds on Facebook Launches a Petition Feature (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 3, Funny

    Get your popcorn, folks. This is going to be a sh*tshow of epic proportions.

  4. I'm glad for the experiment. However, I cannot see how Universal Basic Income would not simply lower the nominal value of money. Once everyone has X, that X is no longer worth anything. If you get $2,000 per month for nothing, and you rent an apartment from me, guess how much I'm going to charge you for it? More than $2,000.

  5. Ugh... my face is pink from all the facepalms in that paragraph.

  6. Just what we need... on How Amazon Could Drive Blended Reality Into The Living Room · · Score: 1

    ....another walled garden set-top box derivative that won't interact with anything else except hardware from the same OEM. Pass.

  7. Re:Long View on Seattle CEO Cuts $1 Million Salary To $70K, Raises Employee Salaries · · Score: 1

    Either way, we're all going to learn something from whatever happens here. :)

  8. Yes but... on Xeroxed Gene May Have Paved the Way For Large Human Brain · · Score: 1

    Can these enhancements enable the rat to learn the art of Ninjutsu?

  9. Re:Many people have had this idea before on Player-Run MMORPG By Former Ultima Online Devs Finding Kickstarter Success · · Score: 2
    Pieces of this exist already, and have for years. The "create your own server" model works great in NWN, but that game is ancient now, and few others have been able to mimic its versatility. Some have tried. The "make and sell your own objects" is pretty vibrant on FPS games like Team Fortress 2 and in sandbox games like Second Life, obviously. As you said, the execution is what matters.

    However, when it comes to execution, I don't even think the game needs to be the latest and greatest as far as graphics go. An indie studio will never match the multi-tens of millions spent by studios on graphical assets, voiceovers, etc. By contrast, people still play MUD's even today, and those are just text. Why? Because some of them are executed well. I don't think good execution relies too heavily on eye-popping graphics. As long as the UI is good, the toolset is good, and the EULA is workable, it will be great.

    Bioware's NWN really shot itself in the foot with its EULA which forbade making money from a player-made server, btw.

  10. A Neverwinter clone isn't such a bad thing if it's more customizable, expandable, and with a better UI.

  11. Re:Probably the future of online RPGs on Player-Run MMORPG By Former Ultima Online Devs Finding Kickstarter Success · · Score: 1
    I agree, and more than just for financial reasons.

    Commercially-run servers by the big game houses need to make money to stay around.... lots of it, enough to please stock holders. Consequently, that precipitates a certain kind of atmosphere in the game: one of level treadmills and content micropayments. For the most part, these aspects are contrary to roleplaying and immersion, IMHO.

    Do not get me wrong. I play DDO currently as my game of choice and I love nothing more sometimes than to jump in and kill shit so I can get XP. The fact is probably a huge majority of gamers are the same in that regard. However, there is a smaller subset that likes the character development and roleplaying aspects of a server. These are likely the evolutionary descendants of MUSH players from the 90's, and they are still around. The problem is they can never find a home online with a commercial game server. When we made the Avlis PW over a decade ago, this was our target demographic, and arguably it was and still is one of the most successful NWN PW's ever.

    I think that Shards will be good for this niche as well. Obviously people will make mostly hack'n slay servers running Monty Hall scenarios, but there will be rich platform material for folks like us that want to create a real live functional fantasy world. Definitely looking out for this.

  12. Our NWN Persistent World, Avlis is really showing its age, but unfortunately there really hasn't been a spiritual successor to Neverwinter Nights' PW system. Once this thing is up, it will hopefully bring us into this decade.
    --Orleron

  13. Re:Carry the one on NASA Tests Microwave Space Drive · · Score: 1

    You know, you can also strap two or three dozen of these thrusters to the back of of the potato to make it go faster. Accounting for the mass of the engines and the mass of the potato would still make a faster trip.

  14. Warning: Do not waste your money on Researchers Develop DNA GPS Tool To Accurately Trace Geographical Ancestry · · Score: 1
    Taking the science for what it is, I plunked down the $42 for the super test and have received nothing yet. It has been 2 days and my screen still says "90% done". When you go onto the forums and ask about it, you see there are numerous people with the same problem. The company has replied simply saying, "This is because of some person's DNA files have exceptional features.", but noting more. Calls for support go unanswered, even though the "super" test is supposed to give you priority support.

    For the people that HAVE gotten results, all you get for the money is a point on a Google map. If you are a pure-bred ethnic whatever, that point means something. If you are the child of a parent from Fiji and an aborigonal Australian, the point on your map will be halfway between those locations: useless information. Considering that a lot of us are children of parents from quite different locations these days, the odds of you getting a point on your map that means anything are not high.

    If they don't get back to me by this coming Tuesday (2 business days), I'm charging it back via PayPal.

    What a bunch of crap.

  15. Re:Here's one of the russian strings found on Russians Suspected of Uroburos Spy Malware · · Score: 0

    I, for one, welcome our Russian hacker overlords.

  16. Going up. on Japanese Firm Proposes Microwave-Linked Solar Plant On the Moon · · Score: 1

    I'm sure they will do this as soon as a space elevator becomes available. I probably wouldn't hold my breath.

  17. Re:I agree with the guy on VC Likens Google Bus Backlash To Nazi Rampage · · Score: 1
    I'm not remarking on the industrial/economic/political aspects of the Nazis so much as their racism. Racism, hatred of people for their biological makeup, is analogous to the hatred of people solely for their financial makeup. The same kinds of generalizations are made based on a small number of stereotypical individuals, and then applied to the whole population. It's wrong, whether it's racism or discrimination against rich/poor.

    Better to rage against the system that created the imbalances in opportunity than to go after the character of those people.

  18. I agree with the guy on VC Likens Google Bus Backlash To Nazi Rampage · · Score: 1

    He does have a point if you think about it (even though he automatically loses his argument through Godwin's Law.) The media has a habit sometimes of picking on the money and the people, and not the system. It demonizes these rich folk as if making them rich automatically makes them bad people who got their money through illegal means. Most of them are guilty of nothing except success. They are just people like us. If you can't accept that thought, you are guilty of the whatever-the-term is..... It's sort of analogous to racism, in a way. Hating someone simply because their skin is a certain color, versus hating someone simply because their bank account has a certain balance. It's just as pointless. Again, the problem is the hate. If the media would focus on the problems with the system, and not the "evil rich people", they might have the moral high ground, but they don't. They could pick on the existence of lobbying, and tax breaks, and unequal opportunity.... and sometimes they do, but often they don't.

  19. Here's another thought on How Can Nintendo Recover? · · Score: 2

    Stop making the same Mario game over and over and over and over..... Make some new games.

  20. Lame on The First Phone You Can Actually Bend: LG's G Flex · · Score: 1

    Sorry but that's not flexible. If I can't fold it into quarters and stick it in my pocket, don't tell me it is.

  21. Looking at this all wrong on US Adults Score Poorly On Worldwide Test · · Score: 1

    First of all, I am not saying the data is wrong, but it looks in the wrong place. I'll explain. If the AVERAGE American takes a test and does more poorly than the AVERAGE European or the AVERAGE Zimbabwean, that is one thing. However, America is not run by its average people. The average people do the work, sure, but they are directed by the above-average, and I will tell you something about them. These people are the engineers, the scientists, the lawyers, the doctors, etc. While our average people don't stack up to the average people in other countries, our above-average people crush the above average people in pretty much every other place. Our engineers, our scientists, our doctors are light years better than the ones in most other countries. Why do you think so many come from abroad to study in our higher educational institutions? Because the education is GOOD, and among those above-average people in those schools there is an elite crop. It is they who run the country. So these silly comparisons do not bother me. Our average people can be less average than the others, so long as we continue to excel among our elite.

  22. I read it wrong.... on Colorado Town Considers Drone-Hunting Licenses · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I thought they were saying a license to hunt animals using drones. THAT would be awesome! :P *pew pew* *deer falls down*

  23. Wait... on The Canadian Government's War On Science · · Score: 0

    Who let Canada do Science??

  24. Which begs the question.... on Beer Drone Delivery Service For South African Music Festival · · Score: 2

    What is the airspeed velocity of a beer laden drone?

  25. Re:7 seasons and several movies... on Futurama Cancelled (Again) · · Score: 1

    Then again that also describes every single series launched since Buffy and Angel ended.