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User: SpzToid

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Comments · 769

  1. Re:No matter, GNOME, no thank you on Official Wayland Support Postponed From GNOME 3.12 · · Score: 1

    I like it a lot too. On both my netbook, notebook, and large double-monitor rig. The first thing I do after I install Ubuntu is install Gnome 3. Also when I do this for other people I turn on to Ubuntu for the first time, it has been a hit with everyone so far.

    Your anecdote may vary from mine. But this is mine. I tried it compared to everything else and I like it.

  2. Re:Screw with the bull and you get the horns. on Lawrence Lessig Wins Fair Use Case · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are two ways to learn anything.

    One way is if you are fortunate to learn from Someone Who Knows Already and is patient and gracious enough to try to explain and share with you what they have already learned. Or perhaps you can learn from simply observing and paying attention of those Wise Folks Who Have Already Learned. (Or you could apply science, but let's not digress)

    The other way to learn stuff which works really very well, perhaps even better than the first method, especially if forgetfulness is a variable we should also take into consideration is the method I like to call, 'pain and suffering', is somewhat self-explanatory, and really works well also.

    And by all means try to go with the first option if at all available to you when you try to learn stuff, because it is most-preferable for sure. This much I have learned for myself the hard way too many times.

  3. Re:Cool, but possibly not mass market on Project Ara: Inside Google's Modular Smartphones · · Score: 1

    Jolla announced something similar quite awhile back called 'the other half', but haven't delivered anything substantial yet. Still, I'd argue they are a player in this space too, have been doing it for awhile also, and most of those folks are former Nokians, so they know hardware and also how to integrate it at the OS level.

    http://www.jollatides.com/2014...

    While I said Jolla hasn't delivered anything substantial yet, that is actually a very arguable judgement call I'd rather not get into. Still, I would like to point out that Jolla has articulated a developer strategy with the developer's SDK, made it available already, and have released some hardware modules for purchase already, (which is substantial really, relative to today's news of GOOG's projected plans for the future, as GOOG does their typical skillful technology marketing hype, this time of their recent hiring of some former DARPA folks).

    OK, it is eye-candy, but if you care to look at some of the current demos of the Jolla 'other half' working in-sync with their OS Sailfish, you can see how pairing one with the other can influence of the current OS color scheme, for example. Sure Jolla also is also speaking of the future with their technology in their promos just like GOOG, but at least they actually offer something today you can buy.

    http://jolla.com/the-other-hal...

  4. Re:They called it what now? on Scientists Demonstrate Virus That Spreads Across Wi-Fi Access Points · · Score: 1

    That whoosh generated a sonic boom or something.

  5. Re: Lame on Sochi Drones Are Shooting the Olympics, Not Terrorists · · Score: 1

    Anonymous Coward, was a citation really necessary to make the point? And if it was, then you could have provided one yourself?

  6. Re:Just a shotgun? on Reporting From the Web's Underbelly · · Score: 2

    Here's one example of it having happened:
    http://articles.chicagotribune...

  7. Re:Just a shotgun? on Reporting From the Web's Underbelly · · Score: 2

    Actually I recall reading in the news a few years ago of a father who shot and killed his teenage daughter as she was sneaking back into their house via a window late at night. She'd been out fooling around with a boy and didn't want to get caught, which is why she was trying to sneak in without her father knowing. It is hard to forgot news like that when you hear about it really happening. Normally I try to cite stuff, but this is too vague now and too painful to bother making the effort myself. I'm pretty sure the guy used a shotgun to kill his daughter too, I remember that also.

  8. The web has an underbelly? on Reporting From the Web's Underbelly · · Score: 4, Funny

    No kidding? To-date it seems to have only been reported to be a series of interconnected tubes. Who knew? Has anyone done a study of this? One can only wonder where this all leads to. There can be no good outcome.

  9. Re:blackberry on Swedish Police Use WhatsApp For Surveillance Ops, Share Intel With Civilians · · Score: 1

    Hey folks, you won't believe this but I just shot that entire well-lit video sequence using my Nokia N9, and it looks great! I'd share it with you, except I'm in one of those countries, and you are probably in one of the other ones.

  10. Re:Of course there's a catch. on North Korean Business Park Getting Internet Access · · Score: 1

    How is this any different than programming in FORTRAN? At least that's how I learned FORTRAN; has anything changed?

    Now would you kindly please step aside so I can water that last patch of the lawn?

  11. Re:RIP on Mozilla To Show Sponsored Links To First-Time Firefox Users · · Score: 3, Insightful

    FireFox has done a really good job of keeping itself relevant, along with Chrome. Specifically I am referring to the developer tools. I use FireFox myself, although Adobe mobile developers also have a cool tool to render mobile devices inside the Chrome browser, where they can work using Chrome dev tools. But I still like the new FireFox dev tools better, along with the older FireBug and a few of its odd plugins.

  12. Re:The strangest place? on What Are the Weirdest Places You've Spotted Linux? · · Score: 1

    Somehow, somewhere, they must have had 'connections' so they were not really what you claim to be as a 'normal user'. There is no marketing campaign, because no budget exists to market free software, so how else would you explain your sighting? No way was this some random oddity.

  13. Re:The slashcott begins at midnight local time on LinkedIn Ditches Feature That Was a 'Dream For Attackers' · · Score: 2

    I tried to visit eternal-september.org, and it is not loading. OpenDNS didn't display the error-code, but there's no server.

    Maybe /. could setup an alternate channel for folks to vent, so those of us that would just to take a break from working or whatnot can read some nerdy news once in a while?

    Miss you all, the vocal bunch you are. Best of luck. Let me know how things work out, but please don't abuse the news or comments on the news.

  14. Re: Seriously - GTFO on Leonard Nimoy: Smoking Is Illogical · · Score: 1

    You mean the device was engineered to meet written functional requirements?

    There's a difference.

  15. Re:Middle Initial on Snowden Used Software Scraper, Say NSA Officials · · Score: 2

    Huh. Just like Homer J. Simpson. Coincidence? I'll bet all my mod points on it!

    Maybe this is in reference to Jay Ward?

    Could this possibly be a conspiracy, brought to you by the same evil mind that gave us Rocky, Bullwinkle, Natasha, and Boris? Stay tuned for the next adventures of...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

  16. Re:Wow... on Snowden Used Software Scraper, Say NSA Officials · · Score: 1

    Please consider the bureaucracy, of the NSA. They obviously have both technical talent with which to operate and that other thing.

    Also, don't forget about weekends. People wants weekends, and their downtime.

    Peoples' downtime is like a cancer in any 24/7 bureaucracy as well.

  17. Re:At least it wasn't an Aztek on Slashdot PT Cruiser Spotted In the Wild · · Score: 2

    Babe Magnet Deluxe if ever I saw one!

  18. Re:*Not* news. on Edward Snowden Says NSA Engages In Industrial Espionage · · Score: 1

    'All the professional bicycle racers in the Tour de France cheat.'

          -Lance Armstrong (after he said a *million* times he didn't cheat, and after he got caught)

    Enjoy your legacy Lance for the rest of your life and then some.

  19. Re:civiCRM on Ask Slashdot: Events Calendar Software For Local Community? · · Score: 4, Informative

    CiviCRM is extremely good at what it does, and works with Drupal, as well as Joomla.

    I like Drupal a lot. Drupal is like LEGO bricks you can build anything out of, and if you install CiviCRM on top of Drupal, that's like building the Millennium Falcon Star Wars Edition LEGO along with a spaceport for it. If that interests you, then also add OpenAtrium to your short list of things to check out too. In fact you can combine them if you want and they'll give you complimentary functions, however you might also find OpenAtrium is good enough for your CRM needs. Or you might swap out CiviCRM from your OpenAtrium platform as described, and use RedHen CRM instead.

    Whatever direction you choose for CRM, I hope you'll give OpenAtrium consideration towards your requirements, (that is what the White House uses for its workgroup collaboration too). It's a good Space Dock Platform to hold your calendaring, notifications, public/private docs, etc.

    http://openatrium.com/
    http://redhencrm.com/
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog...

    Pro-Tip: In a lot of places where I have introduced OpenAtrium, when I get around to installing the sheetnode module, and everyone gets collaborative spreadsheets, I often hit a home run. The spreadsheet usefulness and ajax is extremely good.

    https://drupal.org/project/she...

  20. Re:Branding / Covering Your Job on Lenovo To Buy IBM's Server Business For $2.3 Billion · · Score: 1

    Some people even run OSX in VMware. Me? I like VMs as useful containers of stuff, and as a dev, I appreciate how well snapshots work. Ubuntu 64bit LTS/ Gnome 3 is my preferred host OS and works really well for that purpose. YMMV, just a thought.

  21. Re:Branding / Covering Your Job on Lenovo To Buy IBM's Server Business For $2.3 Billion · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but I should made my concern for fan noise more clear in my text. The HP & Dell reviews I've read for workstation-type notebooks said they suffered from fan noise which seems like a poor design implementation.

    The last notebook I bought was an HP Prosumer piece of junk, and the fan noise was terrible and impossible for me to overlook. I sold the notebook at a loss because it wasn't useful to me at all and would only become less valuable as time passed. If I pay $2000 for a W540 I want it quiet and Ubuntu Certified, along with all the published specs to be true.

    My concern in my original comment simply had to do with quality. I just want to buy a quality notebook to spec which is silent to my ears, and easy on the eyes.

  22. Re:Branding / Covering Your Job on Lenovo To Buy IBM's Server Business For $2.3 Billion · · Score: 2

    Say it ain't so. I have had my eyes on a top o' line Lenovo W540 notebook because it specs very well, is Ubuntu Certified, and HP's alternative was rated as 'noisy' in the few reviews available for me to read so far.

    That notebook stuck out for those reasons, while I found no other alternatives; mainly because linux support is such a crap-shoot.

    http://blog.laptopmag.com/leno...

  23. Re:Nice CSS/Javascript on your reddit clone on CmdrTaco Launches Trove, a Curated News Startup · · Score: 1

    Posting to un-do a mod. I modded a negative troll post as funny and it went to 3 Informative. Huh? Obviously this was not my intention.

  24. Re:WW2 machiny and WW2 units of measurement on How To Make 96,000lbs of WWII Machinery Into High-Tech Research Platform · · Score: 2

    Assuming the rest of the world has access to something like Google, one might do a simple conversion with a search term as follows:

    96,000 lbs = kilos

    Here's a working example:

    http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=96%2C000+lbs+%3D+kilos

    I know this isn't a perfect solution, but I'm used to converting foreign texts in a similar fashion. This works for me in edge cases like this, however YMMV.

  25. Re:I'll bet... on How To Make 96,000lbs of WWII Machinery Into High-Tech Research Platform · · Score: 2

    Now that's sarcasm. Speaking on behalf of the internet, this time I think we've nailed it.