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User: cp.tar

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Comments · 2,346

  1. Re:The power of privacy on Do You Like Online Privacy? You May Be a Terrorist · · Score: 1

    My posts on Facebook are limited to the things I would not mind anyone to know. Things I could talk about in public.
    Pretty much, if you check my Facebook account, you’ll see a bunch of posts related to my political and religious beliefs (or lack thereof), some funny pics I shared from whomever, and a friend list full of bullshit. Good luck getting anything useful.

  2. Re:Running through my head... on Pirate Party Releases Book of Pirate Politics · · Score: 1

    If they did that, they’d get hit with the very same rules they’re forcing on us. It would be more than hilarious.

  3. Re:Running through my head... on Pirate Party Releases Book of Pirate Politics · · Score: 1

    Well, the Pirate Party published a pamphlet on pirate politics precisely to prevent people from possibly pirating it by putting it up for purchase-less download.

  4. Re:I trust my life to Boeing every time I fly on Lawyer Demands Pacemaker Vendor Supply Source Code · · Score: 1

    No, I know that part is checked by someone else. In this case, apparently, nobody really checks the source code, so I do think the request is quite appropriate.

  5. Re:I trust my life to Boeing every time I fly on Lawyer Demands Pacemaker Vendor Supply Source Code · · Score: 1

    Well, in fact I do ask about details concerning certain dishes, especially whether milk is involved in preparation. I admit to not asking the whole source code, but I am asking about an aspect which deeply and, should I ingest it, violently concerns me.

    And that’s just about something that passes through my body.

  6. Re:This won't work on New Cable Designed To Deter Copper Thieves · · Score: 2

    You may also include the signs regardless of whether the cable is really copper-clad steel.

  7. Re:And you say Chinese can't innovate on Inside the Great Firewall of China's Tor Blocking · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Despite the error in your numbers, your post reminded me of Focus in Vernor Vinge’s A Deepness in the Sky.
    Spooky.

  8. Re:Wow on HIV Vaccine Approval For Human Trials · · Score: 5, Informative

    Anything that happens to you during a trial gets noted as a possible side-effect.
    Note that diarrhea and constipation are noted right next to each other, for instance. Ditto for hair loss and increased hairiness.

    It is highly likely most of those are completely unrelated to the vaccine, and that you’ll experience no such effects, but at this point, it’s really hard to tell. It pays to be cautious, or even paranoid, when conducting trials.

  9. Re:Firefox - Too little, too late on Firefox 9 Released, JavaScript Performance Greatly Improved · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is why I love Tree Style Tabs. You get the tab bar on the left (or wherever else you like it), tabs structured hierarchically, collapsible trees and all that fancy stuff, including vertical screen estate.

  10. Re:Citation needed on Researchers Teach Subliminally; Matrix Learning One Step Closer · · Score: 1

    Well, apparently I’d remembered it wrongly. It seems the memories are not deleted, but their reconsolidation is blocked, which I’d then remembered as “deleted”. Using propranolol can retain the memory, but diminish or eliminate its emotional impact.

    And no, it is not ridiculous to suggest it, though I was mistaken.
    Every retelling modifies a memory slightly, which goes to show that something is done. I recall reading about the above procedure here on Slashdot, but not when.

  11. Re:Does anyone even remember The Matrix anymore? on Researchers Teach Subliminally; Matrix Learning One Step Closer · · Score: 1

    We’ve already got memes.

  12. Re:Citation needed on Researchers Teach Subliminally; Matrix Learning One Step Closer · · Score: 4, Informative

    Getting rid of memories is something that’s already being done, primarily with trauma victims, especially veterans.
    It is actually really simple: since the act of recollection pulls the memory from long-term storage and then processes it back through short- and mid-term storage, patients are given drugs that inhibit passing from short-term to mid-term storage. (My mother was also given those after waking up from a coma; even though she was conscious, she remembers almost nothing. Which is good, given that just being plugged in to all those machines is very painful and causes a tormenting feeling of thirst even though you are properly hydrated. A week of those memories would leave serious consequences.)
    Anyway, people come to a psychiatrist, drink a pill, and talk about their traumatic experiences, which are then slowly erased from their memories.
    It is not always the preferred method; after all, we learn from bad experiences, and it wouldn’t do to erase them all. We’d only make the same mistakes again.

  13. Re:Really? on Swiss Gov't: Downloading Movies and Music Will Stay Legal · · Score: 1

    The place called China can indeed reproduce pretty much anything. And cheaper, too, especially when they loosen up on the good ole QC.

    Then again, China struggles on the innovation plane. It is easy for them to reproduce stuff, but not at all to actually invent something new.
    So yeah, I’ve heard of China. Yet people still buy Apple’s iPhones instead of much cheaper Chinese knockoffs. I do wonder why, when it’s so dire as you make it to be.

  14. Re:And still... on Chrome Becoming World's Second Most Popular Web Browser · · Score: 2

    Well, it does work nicely, albeit a) more slowly than Chrome and b) it tends to crash for stupid reasons (most often while typing up a comment on Facebook; then again, maybe the universe is trying to tell me something).

    I do wish Firefox would implement Chrome’s method of auto-updating in the background (thus eliminating the wait at startup) and finally stop one tab or extension from crashing the whole browser.

  15. Re:Wrong summary!!! on Bill Gates Takes the Stand In WordPerfect Trial · · Score: 1

    Actually, a beta should be feature-complete.

  16. Re:end of the driver, end of the auto industry on Toyota To Let People Ride In Self-Driving Prius · · Score: 1

    For some people, driving is indeed fun. However, commuting is most definitely not fun. So I expect it to take off quite well, though at first the adoption will be fairly slow. I also expect it to move cars a bit more towards public transportation and leave cab drivers out of job.

  17. Re:I would buy one on Toyota To Let People Ride In Self-Driving Prius · · Score: 1

    Hell, people even organize and bet on snail races.

  18. Re:end of the driver, end of the auto industry on Toyota To Let People Ride In Self-Driving Prius · · Score: 1

    Interesting idea. I wonder how much demand would drop. Technically we could all be renting time on Amazon servers instead of owning our own machines, but instead the thin client never worked and we buy millions of computers.

    If we didn’t use our computers as gaming machines, thin clients might have had a fighting chance.

  19. Re:Good. Why be limited by outdated media? on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS Won't Fit On a CD · · Score: 1

    Well, my grandfather’s machine (which runs Kubuntu, BTW) does have a DVD drive. In fact, it has a DVD/CDRW combo drive, which can therefore read a DVD, but not burn one.
    Low-end machines of that age often can’t burn DVDs.

    Still, if I were to put Linux on an old machine these days, I’d probably go with Bodhi Linux.

  20. Re:What's the magic in these terminal text editors on Vim Turns 20 · · Score: 1

    Both vim and emacs are editors for people who do a lot of editing and writing code. Lots and lots and lots of it. Metric fucktons of it, in fact.
    They are sophisticated tools that require a fairly great deal of practice to use properly, but once you master them, you can do wonders with them.

    Graphical environments are easier on the memory; things are shown to you so you don’t have to memorize them. If you don’t need such things often, it is more efficient to search for them when you need them; if you do need them often, it is much more efficient and convenient to have them at your fingertips.

    If I were a driver, I’d give you a car analogy now.

  21. Re:Go cat, go... on Vim Turns 20 · · Score: 1

    I am (partially) colorblind. And I prefer colored output.
    When you open a quote and vim colors everything after it bright pink or whatever, it is really really easy to notice you haven’t closed it.

  22. Re:Go cat, go... on Vim Turns 20 · · Score: 1

    Since many text files, not least XML ones, are pretty much toilet-worthy, I would prefer a toilet scourer than a rock star that died on a toilet.

  23. Re:New taxes.... on Galileo To Be Europe's Answer To US GPS · · Score: 1

    Well, in all fairness, not even vehicle ownership guarantees that as your car can be stolen at any time.

  24. Re:New taxes.... on Galileo To Be Europe's Answer To US GPS · · Score: 1

    People often have no clue as for what they want. For instance, you keep listing things that are nothing to worry about because you can’t wrap your head around a different concept.

    Besides, Apple made a fortune by giving people not what they wanted, but what they needed from a product. And then made them want it.
    What people want largely depends on what’s offered to them.

  25. Re:New taxes.... on Galileo To Be Europe's Answer To US GPS · · Score: 1

    If you can get a vehicle whenever you need it or want it, do you still need to own it?