Slashdot Mirror


User: MasterOfCeremonies

MasterOfCeremonies's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
55
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 55

  1. Re:But... on Nissan Gives Electric Cars Blade Runner Audio Effect · · Score: 1

    I vote that instead we make blind people wear red flashing lights on their heads so electric car drivers will be able to spot them more easily as they nonchalantly amble into the road.

  2. Re:Target a standard on Site Compatibility and IE8 · · Score: 1

    Woosh! (Or should that be Flash?)

  3. Re:You can't win if you don't play on Linked In Or Out? · · Score: 1

    By default your profile is visible to your friends only. There is an option to extend this to "friends of friends" but there is no "show to everyone" privacy option. This is why I don't understand this claim that recruiters can check out your Facebook page, unless they happen to be on your friends list, in which case they probably know you anyway, so won't be needing this info in the first place.

    If you're not friends [of friends] with someone, then all you can see is their profile picture, their name and their list of friends. So unless your profile pic is particularly embarassing / unprofessional then you have little to worry about with respect to what you're making available to random people, such as recruiters.

  4. Re:You can't win if you don't play on Linked In Or Out? · · Score: 1

    How were you able to see a potential employee's Facebook profile without already being friends with them?

  5. Re:Facebook must be peaking on Facebook's New Terms of Service · · Score: 1

    I agree with you in pricipal, but in practise you are overlooking one thing - Facebook does what it does so much better than any site before it. Compare it to MySpace and it is not difficult to see why it is now the defacto site as MySpace slides into its inevitable decline.

    While it is possible that another site could implement these same features, or more, and perhaps even better, the traction that Facebook now has with its (well deserved) incumbency means that IMO the likelihood of its demise is small.

  6. Re:Read the bills! on Net Neutrality Still Lives · · Score: 1

    It's a sad state of affairs that an act such as the Read the Bills act is even necessary.

  7. Re:First they came... on India Sleepwalks Into a Surveillance Society · · Score: 1

    But when they came for the porn, the people cried out with one voice united?

  8. Facebook on 10 Percent of Colleges Check Applicants' Social Profiles · · Score: 1

    On Facebook you control who can view your profile by (in theory) allowing only people you trust to have access. By default, the most you can see about someone you are not friends with is their main profile picure, their network, and their list of friends (though this can also be disabled through your provacy options of you so wish).

    Furthermore, every time someone tags a photo of you, you receive a notification telling you so, and you are free to (permanently) remove this tag if you so wish.

    So as far as I see it, a college should have very little chance of obtaining information on you through your Facebook profile unless you specifically grant them this privilege.

  9. Re:Steve Ballmer's favourite word on Steve Ballmer on MS Server, Linux, Yahoo & More · · Score: 1

    ...innovative testing and furniture distribution innovation.

    So that's how he explains the chair throwing incident?

  10. Re:Is healthcare a right? on Researchers Discover Gene That Blocks HIV · · Score: 1

    Now I don't have a problem with the concept of this "filet mignon welfare"... except that I cannot personally afford it... and neither can you.

    Millions of Brits, Canadians and Cubans would disagree with you.

  11. Re:Poll: What will the RIAA do now? on Judge Rejects RIAA 'Making Available' Theory · · Score: 1

    (e) Hire CowboyNeil as their next attorney.

  12. Re:Heh. on UK Commissioner Seeks To Ban Ultrasonic Anti-Teen Device · · Score: 1

    > Beside I know heeps of kids that have high frequency ring tones so that their teachers cannot hear their mobiles ringing in class

    Er.. vibrating alert anyone?

  13. Re:i dont understand why... on University Bows to RIAAs Demands for Student Names · · Score: 1

    > The reason that universities don't do this is that they want logs for their own purposes, for example to track down infected machines, or people posting rude messages about the vice-chancellor.

    Or that crusty old dean!

  14. Re:Also on Suppresed Video of Japanese Reactor Sodium Leak · · Score: 1

    I am one of these web "masters" of which you speak and am genuinely interested in (but unfortunately ignorant of) what you say. Would you have the good grace to explain to someone who knows a lot about programming (web and otherwise), but is still yet to grasp the intricacies of encryption, why MySQL / SSL is inappropriate for distributing large popular files?

    Thanks.

  15. Re:That may be a good thing on Collapsed UK Bank Attempts to Censor Wikileaks · · Score: 1

    >> And the government has bailed them out with over £1,000 for each man, woman and child in the whole United Kingdom - an utterly colossal sum of money. Is that good value for your taxes? It certainly doesn't look like good value for money for mine.

    > That depends on whether there's a good chance of getting it back, doesn't it?

    > Certainly the government takes a lot of my money and does things I don't approve of with it. But in this case, if it really is effectively just a loan and it avoids a financial melt-down, it's probably a loan I'd rather make.

    And where do you suppose this money came from? Does the UK government have billions of pounds lying around spare like this? I certainly hope not, or we're paying (even) more taxes than we should. This bail out loan is most likely itself a loan from the Bank of England, which it would have created out of nothing (which is a whole different controversy). This means there are now more pounds in the economy with the same amount of goods, which can only lead to inflation. So not only is the taxpayer underwriting this loan, we will be paying for it twice through the devaluation of the currency that it, and the inevitable future bailouts, will create.

    At some point in an economic model built on nothing (or "trust" as you like to call it), something has to give, and tax payer bail outs are only a short term solution.

  16. But... on Microsoft Will Stream Ads To Grocery Carts · · Score: 1

    ...isn't the real story here that you will be able to construct your shopping list at home and, through the power of the pipes, have it appear on your shopping trolley? The fact it's going to have ads is pretty much a given as it is a free service. What's all the fuss about? If you don't like it then don't use it FFS.

  17. What would I do? on What Would You Do As President? · · Score: 1

    I'd do Ron Paul!

  18. Re:Criminals aren't concerned on More Details Emerge On Domestic Spying Programs · · Score: 1

    > Yes, it sounds like NWO-Alex-Jones mumbo-jumbo Your entire post is spot on until this. If Alex Jones simply reports on what Bush Senior / Kissinger / David Rokerfeller and other influential characters have continually espoused, it automatically becomes conspiracy mumbo jumbo? Do some research FFS.

  19. Re:I know Prince is a scary guy, but this .... on Mom Sues Music Company Over Baby Video Removal · · Score: 1

    > Doesn't the guy have better things to do with his time
    > than to send takedown notices for 29-second video clips?

    Smells to me like it's the record label doing this to MAKE PRINCE LOOK BAD. He pissed a lot of people in the industry off when he released his last album for free in a UK newspaper.

  20. Re:Tag goodforher ! on Mom Sues Music Company Over Baby Video Removal · · Score: 1

    > And see, that is the thing... youtube makes money off the site,
    > because of the videos people put up to draw traffic to it.

    A solution would be for YouTube to not show ads with videos such as this.

  21. Re:No, no, no! That's not how you do it! on US Democrats Accidentally Publish Whistleblowers' Email Addresses · · Score: 1

    > You meant: US Democrats "Accidentally" Publish Whistleblowers' Email
    > Addresses (Note the scare quotes) Now *that*'s a Slashdot headline.

    No, that's a BBC News headline.

  22. Re:Woohoo! on Mozilla Tests Integrated Desktop Browser · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up, he's the only poster so far that actually seems to get it.

  23. Re:Fool me once..... on Driver Update Can Cause Vista Deactivation · · Score: 1

    > Windows NT, Windows 98 with better networking abilities

    Wrong. Windows NT/2000/XP/Vista is a completely different OS from the DOS/3.x/95/98/ME family.

    > Windows XP - While easily the best OS they've released so far, that's not really saying much.

    You missed out Windows 2000, which many agree is their "best" OS so far. It's XP without a lot of the crap, and therefore less security holes.

  24. Re:Will not compete? on Google Hopes to Disaggregate Carriers with gPhone · · Score: 1

    I'm sure they'll keep this in mind when designing the new combination giPhone... now where should one put that? ;)
    Iraq?

    Up his sleavies.

  25. Re:Stupid lawsuit again...? on Apple Sued Over iPhone Bricking · · Score: 1

    While i agree that Apple should be forced to sell unlocked phones
    Er... Apple should be allowed to sell whatever they like as long as it isn't dangerous. If you don't like their product, then it's your choice not to buy it.