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User: SecondHand

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Comments · 41

  1. Re:Only Power Users will notice on Linux Kernel Suffering Power Management Regression? · · Score: 1

    > I'll probably get flamed for daring to say this, but what the hell

    Good thing you added this disclaimer!

    I've been working on Linux/laptop for the past eight years. No complaints. In contrary.
    When I receive a new laptop, I install Linux before Windows even has a change to boot.
    I know, it's your opinion against my opinion. But I'd just wanted you to know that some people do like Linux on laptops.
    Your mileage clearly varies.

  2. Summary for real nerds: on Inventors of Unix Win Japan Prize · · Score: 1

    "Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie win Japan Prize."

    Skip useless introductions.

  3. I'm happy to know ... on Nuclear Bunker Houses World's Toughest Server Farm · · Score: 1

    ... that when the world is nuked, the survivors can retrieve a copy of Phil Collins' and Tina Turner's CDs.

  4. Re:NOT mandatory, but people will install it anywa on Tech Specs Leaked For French Spyware · · Score: 1

    How do you prove you were running the software?

  5. Re:For a day? on Local Newspapers Use F/OSS For a Day · · Score: 1

    Funny how economical and driving culture are opposites:

    - US economics: liberal; US driving: egalitarian.
    - European economics: egalitarian; European driving: liberal.

    Seems cultures that are against rules in some field overcompensate by introducing rules in another field. "The Rules" for dating, for example, come to mind as another one of those subjects where the US is ridiculuous in that way.

  6. Re:Yay for common sense on Zoho Don't Need No Stinking Ph.D. Programmers · · Score: 1
    Here's some brain food for you: The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger, by R. Wilkinson and K. Pickett:

    What they find is that, in states and countries where there is a big gap between the incomes of rich and poor, mental illness, drug and alcohol abuse, obesity and teenage pregnancy are more common, the homicide rate is higher, life expectancy is shorter, and children’s educational performance and literacy scores are worse . . . [Wilkinson and Pickett] emphasise that it is not only the poor who suffer from the effects of inequality, but the majority of the population.

  7. Re:Rectifying interference with more interference? on Gulf Oil Spill Disaster — Spawn of the Living Dead · · Score: 1

    Yes, species have disappeared in the past, too. Only, this time, the pace of extinction is a 1000x faster. Don't know what that will lead to.

  8. Maybe some books fare better? on Why Are Video Game Movies So Awful? · · Score: 1

    Like Tim Etchells' The Broken World

  9. Re:The French would disagree on Ursula Le Guin's Petition Against Google Books · · Score: 1

    French "droit patrimonial" gives an exclusive right that runs until 70 years after the death of the author. If wikipedia is correct, it says that in the US it's: 70 years after the death, or 95 years after publication, or 120 years after creation.

    You see, the French are not that bad. They certainly do not lobby for infinity. And they have changed the limit only twice in over 200 years.

    (Sorry for the links to the French pages, but I found them clearer.)

  10. Re:Air quality is for socialists. on Lower Air Pollution Means Longer Life · · Score: 1

    This "small" area is called the US.

  11. Re:Customer information sharing on Blu-ray Update Sent To User Via Credit Card Records · · Score: 1

    Oh common! A lot of people here have a grandfather!

  12. Re:Bad economics on $30B IT Stimulus Will Create Almost 1 Million Jobs · · Score: 1

    Thanks to the billions invested by the US government to develop computers in the 50's (cfr. the SAGE project), the US has had the upperhand in computer hardware and software until now. The US have been able to develop fantastic new technologies that stimulated economic growth and boosted productivity. Slashdot is a fine example of these new technologies. If the US invests heavily in smart grids, within 10 years we will be able to slashdot distributed nuclear battery networks.

  13. Previous work on A Computer Composing and Playing Jazz · · Score: 1

    See also here for previous work on this idea: http://www.csl.sony.fr/items/2001/musaicing/

  14. Re:Overdrive on Watching Tonight's Presidential Debate Online · · Score: 1

    Amen!

  15. Re:Simple reason on The Blending of Music and Games · · Score: 1

    What was your scientific method for this research? Did you use two distinct groups of chicks, the "Guitar Hero chicks" vs "rusty guitar chicks". Were both groups randomly picked from the subject group? How big was the subject group, anyway? What exactly did you measure? Did you postulate a hypothesis for why they prefer the rusty guitar over the plastic toy? Please clarify urgently. I want to go buy a guitar but I'm not sure which one to choose.

  16. Re:Can't wait to see... on NASA Developing Small Nuclear Reactor For the Moon · · Score: 4, Funny

    just use a big slingshot (or whatever) to hurl it off in the general direction of the sun

    if only the sun would stop moving...

  17. Emergent Languages on Cutting-Edge AI Projects? · · Score: 1


    One of the principle objectives of this research is to identify the cognitive capabilities that artificial agents must posses to enable, in a population of such agents, the emergence and evolution of a language that exhibits characteristic features identified in natural languages.

    http://www.emergent-languages.org/

  18. Re:The best DRM on Microchips With Multiple "Selves" · · Score: 1

    Thanks for that. I just filed the patent application. I wanted to patent "inhumane torture" too but it's in Public Domain.

  19. Re:Seems rather futile.. on Using Distributed Computing To Thwart Ransomware · · Score: 1

    You make backup on my computer. I make you a good deal. Very cheap. OK?

  20. Script kidding on To Whom Should I Donate? · · Score: 1

    touch donate.txt

    for ((n=0; n<17280; n++));
    do
        ps x -o pcpu= -o comm=  | sort -k 2 | uniq -s 5 > ps.out

        cat ps.out | while read cpu app; do
        cpu_accum=`cat donate.txt | grep -e "$app\$" | cut -f 1 -d " "`;
        if [ "x$cpu_accum" = "x" ]; then
            echo $cpu $app;
        fi;
        done > ps.new

        cat ps.out | while read cpu app; do
        cpu_accum=`cat donate.txt | grep -e "$app\$" | cut -f 1 -d " "`;
        if [ "x$cpu_accum" != "x" ]; then
            new_cpu=`echo $cpu_accum + $cpu | bc -l`
            echo $new_cpu $app;
        fi;
        done > ps.accum

        cat donate.txt | while read cpu app; do
        line=`cat ps.out | grep -e "$app\$"`;
        if [ "x$line" = "x" ]; then
            echo $cpu $app;
        fi;
        done > ps.old

        mv donate.txt donate.txt.old
        cat ps.accum ps.old ps.new > donate.txt
        rm ps.accum ps.old ps.new ps.out
        sleep 5
    done

  21. Re:fine I'll say it on Smarter Electric Grid Could Save Power · · Score: 1

    The utility plants are not so scalable. They are designed for peak demand which occurs between 9 and 11 am. Nuclear plants, for example, have a big inertia and can't change their production very rapidly. They are also designed for a nominal energy production and they suffer if they produce more or less.

  22. Re:fine I'll say it on Smarter Electric Grid Could Save Power · · Score: 2, Informative

    I believe the Swiss buy cheap electricity from the French at night to pump the water back up the mountain so they can use it during the day when the electricity is more expensive.

  23. Re:Kudos to them, I guess on Sun to Fully Open Source Java · · Score: 1

    I would imagine even Windows can run 32 bit applications batter

    I guess you meant: I would imagine even Windows batters 32 bit applications.

  24. Re:Better late than early on Sun to Fully Open Source Java · · Score: 1

    This article doesn't really tell us anything we didn't know already.

    Who cares about the article. Don't you just love to discuss it all again?

  25. Marshall University Challenges RIAA on Marshall University Challenges RIAA · · Score: 1

    ... and RIAA's lawyers howl "Meat! Meat!".