All right, tell you what, I'll meet you in the middle. Neither should be a scheduled substance (except with respect to regulation to prevent minors from getting at it, etc.).
My point was informed primarily by the overall harm of each drug. While I'm sure you may enjoy a glass of something now and then and are at little risk for falling into alcoholism and letting it control your life, not everyone can. Nobody's ever beaten their wife to death while stoned.
I'm not an alcohol drinker myself, aside from the very occasional treat. My grandfather was a not-well-controlled alcoholic, however, and that affected my father greatly, and that's informed, to a degree, my own attitudes on it. I've also personally seen a lot of stupid and harmful shit done under the influence of alcohol. But I'm not about to take it away from responsible users.
But let me grow a plant in my own private property if I want to.
I came here to say this, so good on you, AC.
Alcohol should be a schedule 1 (or 2 if you're in Canada) drug, and cannabis should be regulated like cigarettes. ID laws, taxes, etc.
Tell you what, Adobe. I'll pay for security patches to your near-ubiquitous software products if you accept criminal liability for any damages incurred if I get keylogged and my bank accounts emptied/credit cards stolen/identity stolen/network compromised as a result of an Adobe software flaw that led to me being exploited.
As a Canadian who had his default bandwidth setting turned down to the lowest of the three options Netflix offers when Netflix did this, I can assert that you are correct, and you can still change the setting now. They sent everyone an email notifying of the change and instructions on where to change it.
Now if only we could get some sort of queue function (without the DVD by mail service, there are no queue options, so if you want to watch a movie later, you have to remember it).
Either your credibility in this post just went out the window with a loud woosh, or I've been paying for am imposter video streaming subscription claiming to be Netflix for over a year now. Pretty convincing branding and credit card processing for a fake.
You don't get anything done on a public imageboard, unless that thing you're trying to do is posting porn/shock and gore/kittens/stupid image macros. Any serious organization is done in IRC or elsewhere. I took part in the RL protests against Scientology, but I'm not particularly interested in joining along in DDOSing large organizations with lots of lawyers.
Direct contact with intelligent extraterrestrial live does seem to have a significant impact on society. In the world of Star Trek, sometime between the 20th century and the 'now' of the 24th century, and likely after first contact, society finally decided that there were better things to do than pushing spreadsheet columns around to make a profit for investors and making cheap, useless, overpriced gadgets imported from third-world sweatshops.
The Earth of Star Trek is also a post-economy society. Money no longer exists, and the entire society is built around socialism if not communism. This seems to evade a lot of people. Eliminate poverty and economic disparity and you free up an unimaginable amount of mental cycles that the global population was previously devoted to keeping up with the Joneses/acquiring wealth. Now, humanity lives (by and large, according to the show) to explore the universe and improve the world. The technology is just set dressing.
He's sticking to the technical, narrowly-focused truth, but using words that to someone not looking for pedantic technicalities would interpret broadly (and falsely).
VA: Here is my source code for the program I've written, "EMAIL." I'm registering copyright on it. News: VA, inventor of "EMAIL," blah blah today blah blah. John Q. Public: Huh, this guy invented email. I thought [AOL|Hotmail|their ISP|Google|Microsoft Outlook] invented email." Slashdot crowd:WHARRRRRRGAAARRBBLL
I actually invented the Blu-Ray disc before I was born, but I decided to let Sony claim credit for it because the PS3 would've been an even more miserable flop for its first three years otherwise.
Ubuntu has had the Ubuntu Software Center for quite a while now, in Internet years, and it's a front-end to apt-get, basically, but it's entirely graphical and laid out in a logical and straightforward fashion. I didn't say it was the best implementation of a repository-style app market environment, but it sets out what it accomplishes to do fairly well for users unfamiliar or uncomfortable with package management (which sounds scary if you're unfamiliar with the terminology).
As much as I hate the closed nature of Apple's App Store and the sometimes-ridiculous approval process, I'm not a fan of the Android Market for this reason. Before I installed DroidWall on my rooted HTC Magic (aka the MyTouch 3G, the second Android device released in the US), I only installed apps that were recommended by a moderately reliable source, such as Lifehacker (not much of a fan of the rest of the Gawker network, but LH is okay) or ones where it looked particularly good and the permissions were sane. I'm a little more fearless with DroidWall when it comes to checking out an app that seems even a little sketchy, because DW's default is to block wifi/3G connections, so it only gets net access after I check it out and see if it's obviously crap or not. At any rate, if the market system worked like a collection of repositories and users were freely available (though the carriers would probably attempt to lock that down) to add trusted third-party repos to their market. Maybe not with Google Checkout payment support, perhaps, but it could be done. If Android Device X shipped without a wifi tethering app/option and the carrier's subset of the official Google Market doesn't list wifi tethering apps and yanks new ones as they're added, I'm sure someone would happily host and write if necessary a tethering app for free and slap it on a repository with a very good community reputation in next to no time, simply to fix that fascist omission.
In the case of the tithe calculator app, it required no permissions whatsoever, and this was early on in the Market's lifespan, before too many malware incidents had happened (though there had been at least one). My phone is now rooted with DroidWall installed, so nothing gets 3G or wifi access unless I let it through the firewall, and if it's obviously fishy, Deal & Be Billionaire! anyone, I'm not even going to let it touch my system anyways.
Yes, had the tithe calculator asked for any sort of permissions except maybe turning the vibration on for some zany reason, I would've just kept on my way.
This is what I came here to say. If you think that those apps are legitimate or at least only a positive, you are either very desperate, underage, or a moron of the highest order. In the case of the first, I'm sorry you don't have the brains to find actual free porn/cheesecake pics, in the case of the second you're not clever enough to ascend to the next level of porn, and in the case of the third your phone is too smart for you, please take it back.
On a slightly different topic, since I might as well go all out in insulting average non-computer-savvy people for the crime of not spending their life like pasty-faced Anonymous Cowards in front of the cool glow of a monitor in their basement, I remember an early app in the Android market that was literally a tithe calculator. I'm GUESSING this was someone's first app or otherwise a test app by someone learning to program, because I actually downloaded it a second time after an update and the interface became slightly more refined (with a background picture instead of a flat colour and so on), and I'm not particularly here to mock the author of the app so much as any target audience members that might exist.
The app had a prompt for you to enter how much your annual income was, and then a 'go' button that returned (income/10) as the amount you needed to tithe. In the event that you belong to a church that receives tithes to support it, I'm very afraid if you need a smartphone and a custom app in order to divide a number by ten. The app did exactly what it said on the can, but by FSM I hope nobody was browsing through the Android Market and went "Oh! That's exactly what I need!"
Re:Part of a money conflict within the King family
on
A Copyright Nightmare
·
· Score: 1
It's also worth noting that "8 cups of water" is probably a bit too much (if we take it to be the default value, given that it IS an approximation), because we also take in water from the food we eat. Chronically high water intake puts pressure on your body because you're giving it too much to process (but we're talking over a gallon daily over long periods).
And, of course, if you have way way too much water, it's called drowning.
Full disclosure: I use McMyAdmin for the server I run for friends, but I have no other connection to PhonicUK.
Consider McMyAdmin? It's got a freeware mode with the only limitations being that you have a max of eight players and it announces itself globally every half-hour or so, and a pro license without the player limit and global chat spam is reasonably-priced. It gives you a web front-end so you can remotely administer it, and it supports both vanilla Minecraft server and the rather popular custom server, CraftBukkit. CraftBukkit allows access to the library of Bukkit plugins (bukkit.org) which go a long way towards enhancing a multiplayer server (and for both creative and survival modes). McMyAdmin can automate backups, and these can be downloaded from the web UI as well as SCP/SFTP/etc. off the file system.
If you're conservative about updating until all the wobbles have settled out between Notch making a point update, and then two or three bugfix releases to patch the problems that don't require a significant codebase rewrite, and then CraftBukkit to update to accomodate the new content and code changes, and then plugin authors to patch any incompatibilities out of their plugins, you should do rather well. I have not had any massive problems with my own server that couldn't be blamed on the hardware. There've been minor glitches, like a bug in CraftBukkit build #1000 (since patched) where signs would just randomly decide to go blank. And then some things are just Notch's unfortunate early design choices coming back to bite him for pushing the envelope too much with new code. In general, once you're aware of the little problems, you can just accomodate for them. The server is pretty self-sufficient, so I felt I had to mention it, since I haven't had any of the headaches you guys up there have had.
Additionally, the evidence is easy to capture.
"Hey, asshole with Glass! I'm gonna beat the shit out of you!"
"Glass, record a video!"
Go ahead and assault someone wearing a head-mounted cloud-synced camera.
Brace yourself, Duke Nukem Forever finally came out. And it didn't do so well.
This reminds me of the shit on Facebook where people like pages marked, basically, "I have never read a book in my life and I'm proud of it."
Western society is in a death spiral, and Idiocracy is coming far faster than predicted.
All right, tell you what, I'll meet you in the middle. Neither should be a scheduled substance (except with respect to regulation to prevent minors from getting at it, etc.).
My point was informed primarily by the overall harm of each drug. While I'm sure you may enjoy a glass of something now and then and are at little risk for falling into alcoholism and letting it control your life, not everyone can. Nobody's ever beaten their wife to death while stoned.
I'm not an alcohol drinker myself, aside from the very occasional treat. My grandfather was a not-well-controlled alcoholic, however, and that affected my father greatly, and that's informed, to a degree, my own attitudes on it. I've also personally seen a lot of stupid and harmful shit done under the influence of alcohol. But I'm not about to take it away from responsible users.
But let me grow a plant in my own private property if I want to.
I came here to say this, so good on you, AC. Alcohol should be a schedule 1 (or 2 if you're in Canada) drug, and cannabis should be regulated like cigarettes. ID laws, taxes, etc.
Neither Chomsky or Ayyadurai seem to have heard of RFCs.
Tell you what, Adobe. I'll pay for security patches to your near-ubiquitous software products if you accept criminal liability for any damages incurred if I get keylogged and my bank accounts emptied/credit cards stolen/identity stolen/network compromised as a result of an Adobe software flaw that led to me being exploited.
Deal?
As a Canadian who had his default bandwidth setting turned down to the lowest of the three options Netflix offers when Netflix did this, I can assert that you are correct, and you can still change the setting now. They sent everyone an email notifying of the change and instructions on where to change it.
Now if only we could get some sort of queue function (without the DVD by mail service, there are no queue options, so if you want to watch a movie later, you have to remember it).
Netflix and Hulu are US only
I'm in Canada
Either your credibility in this post just went out the window with a loud woosh, or I've been paying for am imposter video streaming subscription claiming to be Netflix for over a year now. Pretty convincing branding and credit card processing for a fake.
This is /. and not /b/, you know.
You don't get anything done on a public imageboard, unless that thing you're trying to do is posting porn/shock and gore/kittens/stupid image macros. Any serious organization is done in IRC or elsewhere. I took part in the RL protests against Scientology, but I'm not particularly interested in joining along in DDOSing large organizations with lots of lawyers.
Direct contact with intelligent extraterrestrial live does seem to have a significant impact on society. In the world of Star Trek, sometime between the 20th century and the 'now' of the 24th century, and likely after first contact, society finally decided that there were better things to do than pushing spreadsheet columns around to make a profit for investors and making cheap, useless, overpriced gadgets imported from third-world sweatshops.
The Earth of Star Trek is also a post-economy society. Money no longer exists, and the entire society is built around socialism if not communism. This seems to evade a lot of people. Eliminate poverty and economic disparity and you free up an unimaginable amount of mental cycles that the global population was previously devoted to keeping up with the Joneses/acquiring wealth. Now, humanity lives (by and large, according to the show) to explore the universe and improve the world. The technology is just set dressing.
I believe you mean 662. Ray Bradbury didn't have the Internet; we do.
He's sticking to the technical, narrowly-focused truth, but using words that to someone not looking for pedantic technicalities would interpret broadly (and falsely).
VA: Here is my source code for the program I've written, "EMAIL." I'm registering copyright on it.
News: VA, inventor of "EMAIL," blah blah today blah blah.
John Q. Public: Huh, this guy invented email. I thought [AOL|Hotmail|their ISP|Google|Microsoft Outlook] invented email."
Slashdot crowd: WHARRRRRRGAAARRBBLL
I actually invented the Blu-Ray disc before I was born, but I decided to let Sony claim credit for it because the PS3 would've been an even more miserable flop for its first three years otherwise.
You got to drive a ZAMBONI?! AC, you lucky bastard!
I came here to say this. This assclown is as easily disproved by simply examining the RFCs.
Did you fall into a coma while Clinton was president and you just recently woke up?
Ubuntu has had the Ubuntu Software Center for quite a while now, in Internet years, and it's a front-end to apt-get, basically, but it's entirely graphical and laid out in a logical and straightforward fashion. I didn't say it was the best implementation of a repository-style app market environment, but it sets out what it accomplishes to do fairly well for users unfamiliar or uncomfortable with package management (which sounds scary if you're unfamiliar with the terminology).
As much as I hate the closed nature of Apple's App Store and the sometimes-ridiculous approval process, I'm not a fan of the Android Market for this reason. Before I installed DroidWall on my rooted HTC Magic (aka the MyTouch 3G, the second Android device released in the US), I only installed apps that were recommended by a moderately reliable source, such as Lifehacker (not much of a fan of the rest of the Gawker network, but LH is okay) or ones where it looked particularly good and the permissions were sane. I'm a little more fearless with DroidWall when it comes to checking out an app that seems even a little sketchy, because DW's default is to block wifi/3G connections, so it only gets net access after I check it out and see if it's obviously crap or not. At any rate, if the market system worked like a collection of repositories and users were freely available (though the carriers would probably attempt to lock that down) to add trusted third-party repos to their market. Maybe not with Google Checkout payment support, perhaps, but it could be done. If Android Device X shipped without a wifi tethering app/option and the carrier's subset of the official Google Market doesn't list wifi tethering apps and yanks new ones as they're added, I'm sure someone would happily host and write if necessary a tethering app for free and slap it on a repository with a very good community reputation in next to no time, simply to fix that fascist omission.
In the case of the tithe calculator app, it required no permissions whatsoever, and this was early on in the Market's lifespan, before too many malware incidents had happened (though there had been at least one). My phone is now rooted with DroidWall installed, so nothing gets 3G or wifi access unless I let it through the firewall, and if it's obviously fishy, Deal & Be Billionaire! anyone, I'm not even going to let it touch my system anyways.
Yes, had the tithe calculator asked for any sort of permissions except maybe turning the vibration on for some zany reason, I would've just kept on my way.
This is what I came here to say. If you think that those apps are legitimate or at least only a positive, you are either very desperate, underage, or a moron of the highest order. In the case of the first, I'm sorry you don't have the brains to find actual free porn/cheesecake pics, in the case of the second you're not clever enough to ascend to the next level of porn, and in the case of the third your phone is too smart for you, please take it back.
On a slightly different topic, since I might as well go all out in insulting average non-computer-savvy people for the crime of not spending their life like pasty-faced Anonymous Cowards in front of the cool glow of a monitor in their basement, I remember an early app in the Android market that was literally a tithe calculator. I'm GUESSING this was someone's first app or otherwise a test app by someone learning to program, because I actually downloaded it a second time after an update and the interface became slightly more refined (with a background picture instead of a flat colour and so on), and I'm not particularly here to mock the author of the app so much as any target audience members that might exist.
The app had a prompt for you to enter how much your annual income was, and then a 'go' button that returned (income/10) as the amount you needed to tithe. In the event that you belong to a church that receives tithes to support it, I'm very afraid if you need a smartphone and a custom app in order to divide a number by ten. The app did exactly what it said on the can, but by FSM I hope nobody was browsing through the Android Market and went "Oh! That's exactly what I need!"
Mod parent recursive :)
It's also worth noting that "8 cups of water" is probably a bit too much (if we take it to be the default value, given that it IS an approximation), because we also take in water from the food we eat. Chronically high water intake puts pressure on your body because you're giving it too much to process (but we're talking over a gallon daily over long periods).
And, of course, if you have way way too much water, it's called drowning.
Full disclosure: I use McMyAdmin for the server I run for friends, but I have no other connection to PhonicUK.
Consider McMyAdmin? It's got a freeware mode with the only limitations being that you have a max of eight players and it announces itself globally every half-hour or so, and a pro license without the player limit and global chat spam is reasonably-priced. It gives you a web front-end so you can remotely administer it, and it supports both vanilla Minecraft server and the rather popular custom server, CraftBukkit. CraftBukkit allows access to the library of Bukkit plugins (bukkit.org) which go a long way towards enhancing a multiplayer server (and for both creative and survival modes). McMyAdmin can automate backups, and these can be downloaded from the web UI as well as SCP/SFTP/etc. off the file system.
If you're conservative about updating until all the wobbles have settled out between Notch making a point update, and then two or three bugfix releases to patch the problems that don't require a significant codebase rewrite, and then CraftBukkit to update to accomodate the new content and code changes, and then plugin authors to patch any incompatibilities out of their plugins, you should do rather well. I have not had any massive problems with my own server that couldn't be blamed on the hardware. There've been minor glitches, like a bug in CraftBukkit build #1000 (since patched) where signs would just randomly decide to go blank. And then some things are just Notch's unfortunate early design choices coming back to bite him for pushing the envelope too much with new code. In general, once you're aware of the little problems, you can just accomodate for them. The server is pretty self-sufficient, so I felt I had to mention it, since I haven't had any of the headaches you guys up there have had.