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User: MightyMartian

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Comments · 19,559

  1. Re:Lacking developers. on BlackBerry Launches Square-Screened Passport Phone · · Score: 1

    In units sold you're right. In revenue you're not. Apple has demonstrated with the iPhone 6 that, despite all the claims that it was over the hill, that it still commands significant brand loyalty and dominates the high end smart phone market. All Blackberry and Microsoft have been able to demonstrate is the number of people who actually give a damn about their phones is so small as to be deemed insignificant. Neither Google or Apple are losing much sleep over Windows or Blackberry phones.

  2. Re:Lacking developers. on BlackBerry Launches Square-Screened Passport Phone · · Score: 1

    I'd argue that if they don't start selling product soon, they're dead. Blackberry will be cannibalized.

    Let's be clear here. BB is living on loans and a dwindling cash reserve. It has few customers to speak of. The Passport is not Blackberry Rising, it's a hail mary pass.

  3. Re:Lacking developers. on BlackBerry Launches Square-Screened Passport Phone · · Score: 1

    By "not very far behind iOS", you mean with actual sales (and no, shipping from factory to warehouse or outlet is not a sale), that are all but insignificant compared to iOS.

    Does anyone seriously believe that Windows Phone has any market share of any kind?

  4. Re:Lacking developers. on BlackBerry Launches Square-Screened Passport Phone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If Microsoft, with all its vast resources, cannot make a dent in the iOS-Android duopoly, I fail to see how a company that has basically been swirling around the drain for six or seven years is going to even carve out enough of a niche to stay alive.

  5. Re:Because that makes sense on Russia Pledges To Go To the Moon · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Isn't it amazing? An economy fueled by little more than energy exports, a population still in decline, an economic war with a bloc of nations whose GDP in a bad year dwarfs its own by almost an order of a magnitude... and yup, it's going to enter the moon race.

  6. Re:Most rational people never believe in AGW on Study Links Pacific Coastal Warming To Changing Winds · · Score: 0

    Good thing climatologists aren't members of a religious faith.

    But I do enjoy how you've cribbed Creationist thinking that "any day now we'll discover evolution is a lie" and neatly changed some words. Are you proud to be at the same intellectual level as your garden variety YEC?

  7. Re:"Belief" is not part of the scientific method on Study Links Pacific Coastal Warming To Changing Winds · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Except, of course, what you just wrote has nothing to do with AGW models or theories.

    Par for the course for science deniers of all kinds; create strawmen of theories they're too emotionally retarded to accept, strike down strawmen and declare victory.

    Imagine being so infantile you cannot deal with reality.

  8. Re:Yes, just like that. on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 1

    Have you looked at Powershell and its scriptlet libraries? It's easier to administer Windows than it was a decade ago, but it's still quite complex. "Better than it once was" is not the same as "better than the alternatives".

    And Linux, even with the Redhat ecosystem, can still be lean and mean. Maybe the problem with the AC's IT department is the IT department. I run a whole host of Linux servers, admittedly under Debian (though I've toyed with CentOS), and they're all pretty lean and mean. I'll wager a baremetal Debian or Fedora install is going to be a lot less of a hog than the sparest of CLI-based Server 2012 installs. Nobody seriously moves to Windows Server because of resource issues.

  9. Re:This has been discussed for so long... on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 1

    I have six or seven Debian servers, none of which have GUIs, let alone music players. Now it is true that a few servers do have audio capabilities on the motherboards, so an audio driver is being loaded. If I want so squeeze a bit more RAM out of the machines, I could disable those modules, but other than that they are very minimal installs. Basic userland, Samba, maybe LAMP and a few other useful tools and that's about it. I don't know how much smaller you can get without moving to embedded variants like DD-WRT, which have only a subset of a typical *nix user land. Far less useful as servers, mind you.

  10. Re:MAD on US Revamping Its Nuclear Arsenal · · Score: 1

    MAD prevented WWIII. I don't care whether the people who build them or the people who authorize their construction are corrupt, or worship a giant statue of a sexually aroused Beelzebub, the fact is that we are kept largely secure from would be Napoleons, Hitlers and Stalins by the mere fact that these weapons exist.

  11. Re:Yes, just like that. on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who said anything about open source? Even the old direct Unix server variants all ran Bourne shell or c shell and their descendants. For chrissakes, a CLI-based server OS running a scriptable shell is decades old, predating Windows and FOSS by decades. This idea that Server 2012 is doing anything unique boggles the mind of anyone with even a basic understanding of operating system development and administration for the last half century. Maybe the Microsoft-funded diploma mills churn out admins who actually believe that Server 2012 is some revolutionary step, but for those of us who have been in the industry for oh, over seven or eight years, seeing somebody claim "we tossed out *nix and put in Server 2012 'cause it wuns with just a CLI" is liking seeing some fuckwit claim "I just invented the toothbrush!"

    If you threw out *nix servers because you like the modern Windows toolset, then great! No prob. I have a network that runs a Server 2012 AD domain and a couple of Hyper-V servers, so it's not like I'm allergic to Windows. But fuck man, reading the parent's post (I dunno, maybe it's your post, I can understand why you would go AC to write such an incredible retarded post), with the underlying notion that Server 2012 is doing something revolutionary, and yeah, I start seeing red. Server 2012 is merely Microsoft, after twenty fucking years, getting the fucking hint.

  12. Re:This has been discussed for so long... on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 1

    Can you be specific here? What on a basic net install of Debian or CentOS does not fit your criteria? Christ, the base install of Debian doesn't even come with Samba.

  13. Re:Yes, just like that. on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Windows sysadmins amaze. For fifteen years I listened to them rattle on about how the GUI in Windows NT and its descendants was absolutely necessary, that it opened up servers to people who couldn't or wouldn't learn how to work from a CLI. So a few server distros put the head on their installs, worked like mad dogs to build GUI and web-based management systems like Webmin, and now suddenly all those Windows sysadmin flunkies are declaring Server 2012 is the bestest ever because you can run in headless with a CLI.

    Listen you fucking asshole. *nix has been running CLI longer than most people posting here have been alive. It had mature toolsets and script libraries when Windows was a 16-bit cooperative multitasking layer on top of fucking MS-fucking-DOS. Generations of system administrators have lived and fucking died while Windows was forcing a clunky GUI toolset that you couldn't fucking script properly, and that you ended up having to go to REGEDIT and a bazillion GPO entries to fine tune.

    Oh no, but Windows is so fucking cutting edge because in the last seven or eight years has developed a fucking shell that you can properly fucking script (even if the scripting language in question is a verbose and unbelievably slow executing piece of shit that is in almost every way the exact opposite of the elegance of *nix).

    Well congrat-u-fuck-ulations Mr. "We paid a bazillion dollars to Redmond in licensing fees so we could have a scriptable CLI-based OS in our data center". I bet you even think you did an amazing thing.

    Fucking Windows admins. Arrogance, stupidity and a total lack of knowledge of their own fucking operating systems incredibly dubious history as a Server OS.

    Meanwhile, in the time it takes you to type out the name of a Powershell scriptlet and its arguments to import a CSV and puke it out as a SQL script, I can do write the code in awk or Perl in a bash wrapper. But hey, I must be stupid and you must the be the super fucking genius.

  14. Re:min install on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 2

    If you want a real thin install, pick something like Gentoo and Slackware. You can build minimal installs from the kernel up. In ye olden days when I was working on pretty minimal hardware (low RAM, slow CPUs, small drives), I used to install minimum base on top of a very small kernel (only the hardware found on the machine, plus a few generic IDE drivers just in case I had to move the HD and fire it up on another computer). It's a pain in the rear, and with even low-end hardware having huge amounts of RAM and storage space, I don't bother.

    The whole point of the net install version of Debian is that it installs a very base version of Linux; and then you build on top of it. If you really need some sort of unique kernel variant, most fine tuning can be done in /boot or /proc.

    I'll be blunt, if you claim to be a sysadmin who works with Linux, and you don't know how to build an optimized small footprint server, then you're talking bullshit, and whoever has hired or contracted you should give you the boot really fast.

  15. Re:min install on Outlining Thin Linux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As have I. I have several Debian based routers and KVM servers that are out pure CLI. I have no idea what the writer is taking air. And neither does the writer, methinks.

  16. Re:Dust? tsarkon reports on "Big Bang Signal" Could All Be Dust · · Score: 1

    A creature once known as a netkook, but now just a moderate level crank.

  17. Re:A few hundred extrasolar planets on Astrophysicists Identify the Habitable Regions of the Entire Universe · · Score: 1

    I see, so you're dislike of a theory somehow should be fed into whether that theory is legitimate or not.

    Every piece of evidence gathered over the last century shows the universe is expanding, and that it was once much hotter and denser. The evidence for Big Bang cosmology and inflation are overwhelming, whether that pleases you or not.

  18. Re:A few hundred extrasolar planets on Astrophysicists Identify the Habitable Regions of the Entire Universe · · Score: 1

    Since the universe, in every direction we look, behaves by the same physical laws, it isn't an unreasonable extrapolation at all. I'm not actually sure what you're complaining about.

    Oh, I get it, you probably don't like science. All those really smart men and women, so much more accomplished than some blowhard on /.

    Well, your lack of credibility and accomplishment is not science's problem.

  19. Re:Theoretical Considerations and Limitations on Intel Putting 3D Scanners In Consumer Tablets Next Year, Phones To Follow · · Score: 1

    Imagine targeted penis enlargement ads!

  20. Reading this post made me feel dirty.

  21. Re:Why does this always happen? on TrueCrypt Gets a New Life, New Name · · Score: 1

    It's better than EncryptoBarn or KeyHaul.

  22. Re:Embracing the bird on A Beginner's Guide To Programming With Swift · · Score: 4, Funny

    If you start with PHP, even Brainfuck looks fun and refreshing. Jesus pal, talk about damning a language with faint praise.

  23. Re:Just what we needed... on A Beginner's Guide To Programming With Swift · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Another attempt by a vendor to try to lock in software development and make cross platform development incredibly difficult by introducing a new language.

    Fuck, I do tire of the sociopathic tendencies of corporations.

  24. Re:what is this even talking about? on An Open Source Pitfall? Mozilla Labs Closed, Quietly · · Score: 1

    Indeed. And quite often even dead FOSS projects can be cannibalized. The difference between dead open source and dead closed source projects is that the bones of one sit in an open pit that anyone can pick at, and the other sits in a concrete bunker twenty miles underground.

  25. Re:The next major city project on Chinese City Sets Up "No Cell Phone" Pedestrian Lanes · · Score: 1

    Replyng to undo faulty moderation