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User: GreyyGuy

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Comments · 256

  1. Re:Printing Guns on The World's First 3D-Printed Gun · · Score: 1

    Except he didn't say "kill 50"- he said "stab 50." Which would still be less than what the recent shooter did with wounded.

    And you even make his point if you stay with deaths. Shooting sprees seem to be in the dozen-ish range for deaths. Your googling maxes out at 8 for stabbings.

  2. Re:Uhm, so we're at war now with Iran? on Obama Order Sped Up Wave of Cyberattacks Against Iran · · Score: 1

    So only Obama, Biden, and Panetta knew about this? What about Bush and Cheney? Or the group in the defense department that presented the idea? Or the group that developed it, and is continuing to update it? Or the equivalent of the groups above in Israel?

    It may not be "official" in that it has been oval office seal on it, but there are far more than three people that could give the reporter all the details.

  3. Why the camera cuts? on 11-lb Robot Can Jump 30 Feet Into the Air · · Score: 1

    It looks really cool, but there is a cut between every time the device is posed to jump and it jumps. A camera change at 0:09. A really weird one at 0:18 where the camera doesn't move but light changes so you know there was a cut. The jump at 0:35 doesn't look like it has a cut but it is a smaller jump too. The next jump has one at 0:51. So 4 jumps with three cuts between the preparing to jump and the jump. Not saying it is a fake, but it has many attributes that a faked video would have.

  4. Re:Babysitters/firefighters on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Deal With Priorities Inflation In IT Projects? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ye flipping gods- another one.

    No. Just No.

    Sarbanes-Oxley did NOT make it illegal to change production software in public companies. What it DID do was make it a requirement that the management of a company was legally responsible for the financial reporting of the company. So even if the financial reporting software had a problem, they are still on the hook for it. All the IT auditing firms got together and agreed that meant the FINANCIAL software needed to have all the changes be approved by the proper applications owners and that there needed to be an approval process, documentation, and all the other stuff that makes auditors (and no one else) happy.

    Those same auditors have pushed that in order to avoid risk, EVERY software application should go through that same process even if it has nothing to do with finance. Risk-adverse management agreed. So now most public companies force Sarbanes-Oxley compliant processes on every bit of development, costing huge amounts of wasted time and money.

    Skipping it doesn't mean it is illegal. It means that if your company is audited and a set of software is found to be the cause then it is possible the management might get fined. To the best of my knowledge, this has NEVER happened. And I feel comfortable saying it is unlikely to ever happen.

  5. Livescribe Pen on Ask Slashdot: What's a Good Tablet/App Combination For Note-Taking? · · Score: 4, Informative

    A Livescribe pen would let her take notes like normal and record the lecture. Plus Livescribe will also let you take notes for all your classes in one notebook, and then you can sort the notes into individual classes ion the computer. So only one notebook to carry around at a time. AND the notes can then be put into PDF or loaded into Evernote so you can read them on whatever device you want. Easy and familiar to use to record information and easy to sort it and use the notes later. I love mine for notes in meetings and my own projects!

  6. Just wait.... on Reviews of Kindle Fire Are a Mixed Bag · · Score: 2

    The difference will be the price point and ease of use. Sure- the iPad can do it all better, but for 2.5 times the cash. Other devices might be better ebook readers. But getting all of it for under $200? Technology history is full of better devices and technologies losing to "good enough". And the reviews seem to be saying it isn't stellar, but also seem to be saying it will do the job. And how many non-techie people read through all the comparison reviews? I doubt the typical Slashdot reader is Amazon's main intended demographic.

    I wouldn't count it out yet.

  7. Re:The real headline is on New Book Reports Soviets Behind Roswell UFO Scare · · Score: 1

    If it is true, then it worked didn't it? And it is certainly less crazy than a number of other well documented spy/war/cold war evens.

  8. Re:Absolutely not on Is Science Just a Matter of Faith? · · Score: 1

    I do mean it like that. While religious upbringing can be passed on, faith cannot. I know too many ex-Catholics to believe otherwise.

    Faith cannot be pushed on someone. A person might be taught something even to the point of brainwashing, but they are still able to learn new facts. If you put two people through the same process, you cannot say with certainty they will come out with the same faith. Opposed to a scientific process, where two separate people can perform the same experiment and obtain the same results.

  9. Re:Absolutely not on Is Science Just a Matter of Faith? · · Score: 1

    It has been theorized that different universes might have different laws. Once universe creation can be done in a controlled, repeatable fashion, I would be glad to have this conversation ;)

    Though I never said only the repeatable things can be true. I said that only repeatable processes can be considered science. It is true that I loved my childhood pet, but it would be impossible to recreate that relationship, making my emotions for the pet not a valid subject to scientific proof.

  10. Re:Absolutely not on Is Science Just a Matter of Faith? · · Score: 1

    Coward, you are a troll and an idiot, but I'll still answer.

    If you cannot verify it, then no- religion cannot be considered science. Let's look at some examples of falsehoods. In science, we have the Piltdown man. It was taken as a great discovery, but subsequent studies demonstrated that it was a fake. In religion, someone claims god told them something, how can you verify that? No number of religious experts can say it did or didn't happen. For every claim of achieving cold fusion, subsequent peer review has shown it to be false. Can you recreate or study Jesus rising from the grave? That is peer review. Religion has no sort of peer review.

    I don't think you have to do every experiment to believe it. But if you have faith in the PEOPLE telling you what the science is, then you don't have to. That is the difference. You have faith in the repeatable, scientific, peer-reviewed process. As opposed to religion, which puts faith in millennia old writings that have been edited and translated repeatedly.

  11. Absolutely not on Is Science Just a Matter of Faith? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Science is fundamentally different from faith in that science is reproducible. Faith is not.

    What this question asks is if you are too lazy to learn the details yourself then you have to have faith in the person telling you about it. Which is exactly the same as most people who can't be bothered to learn the details of their own religion and its history, and instead just take on faith that the person telling them what god wants them to do is actually the truth of it. But that similarity is that people not wanting to learn themselves are putting faith in a person of trust.

  12. Re:bah! on Congressman Wants YouTube Video Covered Up · · Score: 1

    If we had quality talent at the top level, I would be willing to pay for it. Instead we get culture-pushing, fear-mongering, holier-then-thou sorts.

    I know a lot of people on assembly lines that are far more trust-worthy than a lot of the politicians I read about. Or than a number of CEO's I've met or read about.

    Maybe instead of thinking that it is the "high-but-not-high-enough pay" that encourages dishonesty, maybe it is the fact that these people are power-hungry, I-know-better sorts that are glad to take outside money and influence if it will let them win the next election to show that they were right all along.

    And for your information, the average TV star doesn't make a huge amount. Not unless they are at the very top and score a $1M+ per episode deal, and that is usually only after years on a show. But I'm sure Charlie Sheen is showing just how respectable and worth it he is. After all, he is(was) getting paid well, so under your theory, he must be above all other influences, right?

  13. Re:New poverty line statistic from GOP? on Congressman Wants YouTube Video Covered Up · · Score: 1

    You do realize he claims to sleep in his office to avoid that? And that he has a far-from-necessary vacation home?

  14. Re:republicans on Congressman Wants YouTube Video Covered Up · · Score: 1

    So explain how many businesses are getting huge profits, such as GE (which paid no taxes), and still laying off people?

  15. Re:I have a much more ambitious vision on The Continued Censorship of Huckleberry Finn · · Score: 1

    Excellent idea! Let's start off with all of us agreeing that the Holocaust never happened. We can move up to Greedo having always shot first after that settles.

  16. Re:Ignore the Troll on The Push For Colbert's "Restoring Truthiness" Rally · · Score: 1, Troll

    That is because Republicans are out doing things. Mainly crazy things that can be made fun of. Democrats are not doing much of anything. Sure they don't get made fun of- but they also aren't doing anything to run the country.

  17. Re:AUGH on Connecticut AG To Grill Amazon, Apple Over E-Book Price Fixing · · Score: 1

    Incorrect.

    You are right that books are cheap to make (~10% of the cover), and distribute (another ~10%) but the writer only gets around 15%. The retailer gets ~40% of the cover price, and the rest goes to the publisher.

    In other words, the business around writing gets more than the writers do.

  18. Re:Good! on Top Authors Make eBook Deal, Bypassing Publishers · · Score: 3, Informative

    Coward, most of the time (unless it is a big name writer) the person doing the marketing is the author themselves.

  19. Re:Solar power in deepspace on Japan To Launch Solar Sail Spacecraft "Ikaros" · · Score: 1

    I think it is mistaken on some of the details. A solar sail works by being pushed by photons, just as a regular sail works by being pushed by the wind. A solar panel collects light and turns it into electricity. And solar panels are much thicker than a human hair. I don't doubt that it does have some solar panels but doubt it is as much as the article seems to imply since the panels are still much weightier than a solar sail needs to be.

  20. Re:Jury of Peers on Terry Childs Found Guilty · · Score: 1

    I know CSI is just a TV show, but why can't real life be more like that, where they actually find real physical evidence to convict people?

    The answer is in the question. CSI is a TV show with an only passing relationship to reality. Or do you really think every digital camera image can be magnified 100 times to reveal detailed information? Or that DNA is always 100% accurate and can be obtained in nearly every situation? Or that an entire crime scene can have every bit of evidence collected and sorted in a few hours?

    CSI and other similar shows are making it harder to get convictions because juries think that it is realistic to get perfect and exact data all the time. The reality is that life is rarely that clean and precise.

  21. Re:Do an Ars on Website Mass-Bans Users Who Mention AdBlock · · Score: 1

    >Someone who is banned for recommending AdBlock is presuambly running AdBlock, so how do they contribute to ad revenue?

    Network effect. They are still using the site and contributing to the forums, which in turn draws more people to read and reply to comments in the discussions. They personally might not make money for the site since they block ads, but by contributing content to the site, they give other people not blocking ads content to read and return for.

  22. Re:Good Luck with That on Website Mass-Bans Users Who Mention AdBlock · · Score: 1

    Funny- I thought it was the grandparent poster who jumped ship based on a single issue. The parent poster just highlighted that the other popular political parties are not blameless in the financial crisis.

    It isn't that the political beliefs are beneath him- it is that his understanding of policies and their consequences is.

  23. Why? on Nielsen Ratings To Count Online TV Viewing · · Score: 1

    Why should Hulu add more commercials? If they are viable as it is, wht do they care for Neilson? Neilson is there to help sell ads by giving a value to TV shows. If Hulu doesn't need that many ads why should they annoy their viewers to help an unrelated service?

  24. Not News on Gravatars Can Leak Users' Email Addresses · · Score: 1

    The important part of the trick is that you have to assume the email address is the same as the username and then compare the hashes of that name @yahoo.com, @hotmail.com, @gmail.com, and other popular email services. Because people that use those webmail addresses have never received spam before.

    If any spammer did try this, I would expect them to be very pissed off to discover that after all that work they already had 99% or more of those addresses to begin with.

  25. Re:To the extent that they lightened the DRM load: on EA Releases DRM License Deactivation Tool · · Score: 1

    If your response is going to be "fuck you, I won't release at all" then just stop now because that is the wrong attitude. No one- let me repeat that, NO ONE has ever- let me repeat that part too- EVER made something that could not be copied if someone wanted to. There are people that pirate the design of entire fucking CARS to make money. If you make something good, it will be pirated. It happens to software, books, car designs, artwork, sculpture, music, movies, TV shows, and just about everything else made by people smarter than you and I squared.

    If you want a guarantee that it won't be pirated by some asshole then never release anything. That will show 'em, won't it. Give the world one less thing to pirate.

    Or if you want to do something that is not based on fear, make a good product and release it. Maybe it will make you money, maybe it won't. Deciding to do nothing definitely won't. The question is will you act based on what you think you can do, or what you are afraid someone you've never met will do?