Slashdot Mirror


User: LordVader717

LordVader717's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
2,138
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 2,138

  1. Re:MMORPG on World of Warcraft Loses 1.3 Million Players in First Quarter of 2013 · · Score: 1

    It's not payed-for entertainment, but the contractually binding drip-fed variety. I like to consume entertainment in my own time and go for whatever's most appealing to me at the time.
    With MMORPGs you haven an incentive to "get the most" for your money, even if it isn't particularly very good. The only way choice comes into it is if you choose to actively quit. And even then Blizzard punish you by deleting all your characters.

    Also consider that someone who started WoW back when it came out will probably have payed anywhere upward of $1200 in fees, just for a single game. Asking them to pay full price for an expansion every two years or so on top of that just seems rude to me.

  2. Re:Playing the race card again on Florida Teen Expelled and Arrested For Science Experiment · · Score: 1

    It's only worth questioning if you can question it in a meaningful and constructive way. And that's when you realize that there was no attempt to compare the two cases, just a line or two of handwaving which is used to insinuate that the judge is racist.
    Prejudice works in both ways you know.

  3. Re:Kind of innevitable and entirely reasonable on Canada Revenue Agency To Tax BitCoin Transactions · · Score: 1

    The only way it wouldn't take place is if they wouldn't have it done at all for $333 (supposing 25% tax takes it to $250 for the company). In the real world however needs and demands are pretty flexible.
    BTW, it's also an instance of the broken window fallacy to say that it is an inherently wrong decision not to have someone mow the lawn.

    Having the sysadmin do it OTOH is more efficient, assuming that he could do it in his hours and that he can still fulfill his obligations as a sysadmin. If he can't then the manager made the wrong decision and jeopardized the company's system support, which will mean he'll either have to hire more people or will have downtime which impacts other employees, both of which costs money.
    In order to get your fallacy to work you've had to assume the sysadmin does it for free. But that's just the manager being an asshole rather than a sound economic decision.
    Understandably this sort of behavior is illegal in most countries. That's not to say it doesn't happen but they'd have practically the same incentive to pressure him even without the tax.

    Finally, hiring professionals can easily be very inefficient. You have to negotiate, do quality control and administrate. The people you're hiring also have travel costs and might not necessarily be very efficient in the first place. In the end you might find you're better off doing it yourself which is what many small businesses do.

  4. Re:Kind of innevitable and entirely reasonable on Canada Revenue Agency To Tax BitCoin Transactions · · Score: 1

    What you describe just doesn't hold. Normally all economic activity is taxed and private chores aren't. You can't compare them.

    Say a company needs their office lawn mowing and rather than pay a gardening company they do it in-house. They will need an new employee as no-one else has any spare time, but say they have a lot of lawn and from a purely material view it works out as efficient as having the gardening company do it. Tax benefit? Not really. They may save a small amount of money but the amount they save will go towards their before-tax profits and they will end up having to pay the same amount of taxes as if they outsourced. By the end of it the only way to save money is if they can do it more efficiently than the other company.

  5. Re:Except most R&D IS done by companies on Canada Revenue Agency To Tax BitCoin Transactions · · Score: 1

    Private companies are good at developing new products in established fields and using existing engineering and research practices (so long as they promise returns, which is another matter). They're usually the one who create the most recognizable products. But they simply don't do much in terms of fundamental research.

    It's interesting that you mention Bell Labs. Their heyday was back when AT&T had a (government-granted) monopoly. They were able to focus on stuff which didn't belong to their core products of the day. Things have changed since then.

    Alcatel-Lucent, the parent company of Bell Labs, is pulling out of basic science, material physics and semiconductor research and will instead be focusing on more immediately marketable areas such as networking, high-speed electronics, wireless, nanotechnology and software.

  6. Re:Cyprus Would Disagree on Steve Forbes: Bitcoin Not Money · · Score: 1

    You don't devalue a floating currency. The bankruptcies would just induce everyone to sell and you have a debt crisis just as before, only that common people's savings are heavily devalued.
    I don't see how this would have helped Cyprus anymore than the fall of the Krona helped Iceland.

  7. Re:Fiat Currency on Steve Forbes: Bitcoin Not Money · · Score: 1

    You basically just described the business cycle, and it's a part of any reasonably useful currency. With fractional reserve banking it's easy to see how the same would happen with a gold standard. Except that it's got another parameter complicating everything, potentially making it more erratic.

  8. Re:no, they're complaining about the ads on Washington AG Slams T-Mobile Over Deceptive 'No-Contract' Ads · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The advertising just says there is no annual service contract, and that you can use your existing phone. If they were advertising a new phone for free with no future payments there might be a problem, but they didn't do that.

  9. Re:Car analogy on Washington AG Slams T-Mobile Over Deceptive 'No-Contract' Ads · · Score: 1

    Legally every purchase you make is a contract. But in this context it's pretty clear what they mean by "no-contract": You can use the service without committing yourself to recurring payments.
    From their website it seems like they're separating the concepts of financing a new phone and using the service as much as they should need to and they let you pay up front if you want to do that. If you want a phone you have to pay for it. Anyone who thinks this is unfair is clearly delusional from years of absurd marketing strategies by the telcos.

  10. Re:Shhh! on Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin's Volatility · · Score: 1

    That is precisely why there is no need for a separate law. Intent is already considered. And it doesn't matter if you were looking at the stereo or looking at the cellphone, if you were too distracted to drive, then one law can cover that. And it doesn't matter if you were violent because you were drunk or violent because you're just violent all the time — that issue is covered by differing sentencing guidelines for repeat offenders. One law, covering multiple situations.

    Well, that's not really how it works. Violence is a crime that requires intent and there is little room for interpretation. Being distracted isn't a crime by default and there are perfectly legitimate reasons why you might find yourself distracted. But there are some things that are so distractive and risky that it's simply best to outlaw them alltogether like cellphones and drink-driving.

    I know people who can drive and talk on the cellphone at the same time successfully. I know people who can't drive worth a shit, period.

    That's just an (unconvincing) anecdote. Almost every credible study out there shows that all people have much worse control when using a cellphone, which is hardly surprising.
    FWIW here's my personal experience: I know people who drive while on the phone and people who drive shit. There seems to be a strong correlation between "driving like shit" and "driving while on the phone". It's most likely an Illusory superiority that leads to both.

    The only law of that sort which might make sense would be to have a driving test which tests your ability to drive while talking on the phone, but we're not even close to that.

    That's like testing a jet pilot by by having them take off and land once, or judging a bodyguard by looking beefed-up and walking behind someone. The situations where it really matters are so far out of the ordinary that you can't reasonably exclude that someone won't be a risk.

  11. Upgrade necessary? on Some Windows XP Users Can't Afford To Upgrade · · Score: 1

    1) If the software isn't strictly limited to software but interfaces with some medical hardware or fancy shit't you don't want to mess around. Go directly to 3)
    2) Virtualize. Chances are it will work out of the box. Then you can enjoy the benefits of new hardware and a new OS and still use your old software.
    3) Maybe you don't actually need an upgrade. There's no benefit of running your old software on a new OS, the only benefits will be peripheral. Just have a seperate machine running whatever new stuff you like and keep the legacy hardware for your mission-critical legacy software.
    4) If you still want an upgrade it's more of an issue of wanting to upgrade you specialty software and hardware, which of course can be expensive. In this case you need medical consulting rather than just plain IT consulting. Maybe there's a cheaper solution available.

  12. Re:In the other corner ... on Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin's Volatility · · Score: 1

    There certainly was inflation under the gold standard.

  13. Re:Shhh! on Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin's Volatility · · Score: 1

    A thousand times no. There is no need for different laws for violence committed under the influence and violence committed while sober and only under the influence of whatever chemicals your brain is making that day, just as there is no need for a law against driving like an asshole when you're using your cellphone when there's already a law against driving like an asshole.

    There is actually. And that's because our legal systems put a lot of weight on intent and negligence. People aren't punished for unforeseeable or purely random accidents. But they are punished if the accident came about while being negligent, such as drink driving or driving with a phone in their hand. While they may not have been intentionally "driving like an asshole" their behavior makes it much more likely for an accident to happen.

  14. Re:It's to bad on Changing the Ratio of Women In Tech: How Etsy Did It · · Score: 1

    You'd need to elaborate a little more, but this may have been a historical remnant.

    In the days of human computers a lot of them were female math students. But the work was pretty menial for someone with such a high education.

  15. Re:Anti sexist policies are almost always sexist on Changing the Ratio of Women In Tech: How Etsy Did It · · Score: 1

    The systemic bias you speak would be that most people hired would be men. That isn't unfair or discriminatory. You can introduce a different bias to unfairly favour women and get a more equal distribution of gender in your employees. But you've only gained something if you perceive it to be a problem when there is a large proportion of a particular gender in a certain working environment. To me that in itself seems like a sexist attitude.

  16. Re:Anti sexist policies are almost always sexist on Changing the Ratio of Women In Tech: How Etsy Did It · · Score: 1

    The majority of job seekers in tech are male. So if you use an unequally distributed attribute as a selection criterium then it's bias and therefore unfair.

  17. Re:Speculation on Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin's Volatility · · Score: 1

    Just as it increased about four-fold in value in recent years it could fall back to a quarter of it's current value. I wouldn't call 25% a "huge portion".

    It's a bit disingenuous to list industrial uses as these tend to use trace amounts compared to current gold reserves. But I think Gold does have an intrinsic value: Golden jewellery has been sought after since at least the bronze-age.
    The only problem is that demand is pretty inflexible and gold as an investment now makes up a big enough portion of reserves to completely crush an genuine and growing demand for the material.

  18. Re:Speculation on Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin's Volatility · · Score: 1

    You're being ridiculously ambiguous by saying "the history of humanity". For most our evolutionary history we were simply animals. Then we were tribes. Beginning with civilizations of antiquity we have documented examples of government welfare. In medieval Europe welfare was widespread, with varying levels of quality of course.

  19. Re:How relevant is the PC, still? on Windows: Not Doomed Yet · · Score: 1

    Actually, inventory control absolutely *loves* tablets and smartphones. There's probably a lot of savings to be had using relatively cheap mass-market gadgets vs. dedicated devices. Factories are also experimenting with uses in the manufacturing environment. I can't see why they shouldn't replace the embedded Windows devices. I think these industries much more innovative than they're given credit.

  20. Re:Your kid, spending your money . . . on UK Gov To Investigate 'Aggressive' In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    Well, you can look at stuff like user ratings and reviews, but I prefer a hands-on approach. Often times you'll find something well worth playing that hasn't grabbed any media attention. If you only download something once a fortnight chances are you're not going to find these apps by your own.

  21. Re:Your kid, spending your money . . . on UK Gov To Investigate 'Aggressive' In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    To each his own, but it does mean you miss out on an awful lot of stuff and aren't very knowledgeable of the market.
    I can certainly appreciate games with depth, it's just that they tend not to be on iOS. I could certainly kill time with scrabble, it's just not that enaging or rewarding to me when I know there's better stuff out there, even on iOS. Life's too short for boring games.

  22. Re:Your kid, spending your money . . . on UK Gov To Investigate 'Aggressive' In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    Most of the stuff on iOS is only good for five minutes. Occaisonly you'll find a gem worth playing much longer. That's kind of the beauty of it, exploring what's out there and finding new stuff. I can certainly spend hours on a game that's only marginally enjoyable, but why should I if there's so much else out there to discover?

  23. Re:Your kid, spending your money . . . on UK Gov To Investigate 'Aggressive' In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    I used to watch movies a dozen times back in the day cause VHS tapes were so fucking expensive. I would have thought that kids these days might have moved on as technology progressed.

    Scrabble sure offers hours of "play"-ability. But as a kid I'd have found the 3D action and racing games more engaging. And I still do. Maybe your kids aren't having the fun they could have.

  24. Re:Your kid, spending your money . . . on UK Gov To Investigate 'Aggressive' In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    I'd say it's more to do with Windows' evolution towards a multi-user OS. On a more technical note stuff like file system access control has improved security against viruses and remote hacking.
    I don't consider myself "administrator" to anyone else's PC. I have my own computers and accounts which I of course keep to myself. In a corporate environment you need a different policy of course.

    About iOS: Adding and removing Apps is just about the only thing this "OS" lets you do. In that context I suppose you can say you need a password for everything. I don't play a lot of games on phones or tablets, but I did spend a while messing round with it when I first got an iPhone. I found that 90% of the stuff scarcely entertained for more than five minutes, but it was fun to download and try out new stuff all the time, just like online flash games. So yeah, I would very easily pass the "password every five minutes" mark. I can't imagine there'd be much fun left with an overprotective parent saying "no, two games a day is enough. You can't be installing everything in the world"

  25. Re:Good riddance on Margaret Thatcher Dies At 87 · · Score: 1

    Because Roller Coaster rides don't buy jack shit on the world market. So you probably need a lot of people making money making something else in order to have a viable customer base. Unless of course you attract a lot of foreign visitors from outside the UK, aka inbound tourism. These jobs tend to be low-pay BTW. But the UK also has a tourism-based deficit. You can't compensate for a deficit with more deficit.

    Economies are still very much manufacturing-based, which makes the disappearance of important export industries hard to bear.