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User: doodaddy

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  1. Strangely Linear Per Upgraded Component on Can a New GPU Rejuvenate a 5 Year Old Gaming PC? · · Score: 1

    About 10 years ago I tried an experiment. I had bought a new CPU and GPU. The CPU could fit in my current motherboard. (Nothing was *old* just a few years out of date.)

    My theory was that if I upgraded the GPU first, I would get most of my performance improvement and the CPU wouldn't matter. So I upgraded them one at a time to be a proper scientist. I had FutureMark ready to go.

    The GPU, first, gave me the 2x improvement I figured it could, based on the improvement in the specs. I had expected a little less because of the old CPU, but seemed to get the full performance boost.

    Then I upgraded the CPU and, surprisingly, I got another 2x just like the the CPU specs promised. I expected maybe 20% or so since the GPU should have been most of the bottleneck.

    I was so intrigued that I found a memory upgrade that also fit the board. Again the 40% or so I expected, based on specs, happened.

    I'm surprised to this day.

    While it has been a long time, the best I can guess/remember was that it was an AMD 3000+ CPU (1.9Ghz). And an NVidia GPU, I think GT6600 or something? The memory went from whatever to DDR, if I recall.

  2. Photoshop economy what? on Why Valve Wants To Port Games To Linux: Because Windows 8 Is a Catastrophe · · Score: 1

    I couldn't make sense of that article. Did you see the part about photoshop being a virtual economy?

    Is it the article writer's skills or is Gabe Newell batshit crazy? The text itself seems psychotic.

    Hmmm.

  3. "redrum" voice on 'Vocal Fry' Creeping Into US Speech · · Score: 1

    Haha. My wife does this! I didn't know it was a trend. I call it the "redrum" voice which is only a slight exaggeration.

    She does it when she's trying to sound like her words are parenthetical to the conversation.

  4. Formic Acid? on Spider Spins Ant-Repellent Silk · · Score: 1

    'This study is among the first to show animals incorporating a chemical defence as a response to the threat of predation'

    But the ants themselves have an acid defense. Yay! An episode of Bear Grylls finally comes in handy!

  5. NOT WANT Live Syncing! on Ask Slashdot: Network Backup Solution Out of the Box? · · Score: 1

    What I've learned this year, about on-line backup is that I DO NOT WANT live syncing of my data with the backup. I tried SugarSync and ran away.

    * I do not want the increased complexity of figuring out versions of my stuff. (I will version when I want.)
    * I do not want it syncing mistakes that I made. In my case, a faulty software RAID driver (thanks AMD and Gigabyte) was corrupting sectors until my stuff was useless. Not the kind of thing I want to reverse engineer from "versioned" live backups.
    * I do not want to discuss with my non-tech friends how a service like this is understandable for them, because it is not.
    * I do not want it to create "briefcases."
    * I do not want it to try to understand the Mac image folder versus the PC image library or any other "virtual" folder. Double bad points for trying to convert between the two OSs.

    Please understand that I felt like I did want all this until I tried it. All of the above have gone wrong spectacularly in the first three months of use. For instance, I put my households shared pictures in the Win7 "Public" images library. Sugarsync made copies of these pictures and put them into my private user library. Now what? What happens on a live backup when I delete these copies? Will I confuse the backup software even more?

    So what I want in on-line backup, simply, is a virtual metaphor of burning a DVD of my stuff. It should be easier and bigger. If it were easy, I'd do it once a week or month and be happy. I would also force my parents to use it for their business. Not until then.

  6. Crotch Shots Anyone? on OK Go Goes HTML5 · · Score: 1

    Man, I thought the cyclists around here wore *their* clothes too tight! That's more crotch (male and female) than I had hoped to see. Art, I guess.

  7. Can't Find Blockbusters Price! on Blockbuster Trying To Woo Disgruntled Netflix Customers · · Score: 2

    I considered Blockbuster and went to check their prices. When I reached their site, they had a big block teasing Netflix and inviting me to join. I spent 20 minutes trying to find how much it would cost to use Blockbuster. I couldn't do it.

    So while I hope Blockbuster will turn a new leaf, I'm guessing that it wasn't an accident that prices were obscured. Come on Vice Presidents of Big Companies, the rules have changed!

  8. BlindType Anyone? on IBM's Morphing Touchscreen Keyboard Interface · · Score: 1

    I didn't RTFA, so how is this different from BlindType, a company who made a keyboard that rotated and scaled to account for the user being off. I remember they had patented it and Google bought them in Oct 2010.

  9. Not just the latte arrogance! on Netflix Deflects Rage Over Price Increase · · Score: 1

    "Let them drink Latte... My god! The stunning arrogance of the McMansion aristocracy."

    Exactly what I picked up on. Also notice the wording of the email one receives about the cost increase:

    We are separating unlimited DVDs by mail and unlimited streaming into two separate plans to better reflect the costs of each. Now our members have a choice: a streaming only plan, a DVD only plan, or both.

    I detected a little bit of "consumers are sheep" in there. I have a choice? This is good marketing copywrite? It gets my ire up when it needn't. Of course I have less choices now, because the one I had, I liked... and it is gone.

    The email goes on to tell me everything except how my current bill is broken down. So I can't easily compare the new "option."

    I used to get a bundle and now I don't have a choice. Streaming doesn't have the same options as DVD so both were part of their two-pronged strategy. I use to pay less and now I can't. I have to have both to get the same service.

    Look, well played Netflix. You can increase the price. You are the best game in town. We are only talking low $20 for meeting almost all of my movie and tv interest. That's way lower than Comcast. And you know I don't have a very good option and you know you have limited my options so that I must buy two things now. Again, well played. Perfect chess. ... But to phrase it like I'm a child who will find it in my best interest has pissed me off enough that I'm willing to look for lesser services and work harder to work around Netflix. Do they not realize why America gave a big "f* you" to Blockbuster and seated Netflix as the new king? Well I'll tell them here. It isn't just because Blockbuster drained every nick and dime they could in nefarious ways. It's because they gloated about it and told us to drink less lattes. There's no reason Blockbusters shipping and new plans shouldn't have killed Netflix. Well, except that consumers aren't actually children after all.

    I'll probably keep Netflix for the convenience of the service and the price, but now, unnecessarily, they are on watch with me! And this latte crap didn't help at all. As soon as I see any reasonable option, I'll be more than happy to read up and take a chance.

    Why didn't they whine about their

  10. Anectdotally True on Windows Phones Getting Buried At Carriers' Stores · · Score: 1

    My wife and I stopped by the Microsoft store in Bellevue (near Redmond) and checked out WP7. The Samsung phone was extremely light and the screen was bright. It was almost magical! I felt there was some trick, but apparently not. While I plan to get an Android next, my wife wants a Windows phone now. She likes the active tiles and the Samsung phone.

    However, when we went to the AT&T in the same mall, the sales rep told us "Windows is no good" as soon as we looked at them. She was actively trying to talk us out of them. The phones were even in the front slot in the store! She was off-putting in her aggressive push to an HTC android near the middle of the store.

    Just thought it was unusual.

    P.S. Yes, I know I made up the word "anectdotally."

  11. Just Make Facebook/Twitter Add-Ons? on Firefox 5 Details: Sharing, Home Tab, PDF Viewer · · Score: 1

    I'm all for new *light* features. But before Firefox copies every Chrome feature, please keep in mind that Chrome is supposed to be an OS and so it has some heavy stuff in there.

    Maybe certain "signature add-ons" could be added with a check during installation. This could include the new Facebook and Twitter integration.

    An add-on I'd love by the way, is popover blocking. I hate those things.

  12. Global Warming Research on How Common Is Scientific Misconduct? · · Score: 1

    What? No reference to global warming research here? Is this thing on?

  13. Does Anyone Trust the Media? on Print News Fading, Still Source of Much News · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Whoa is the press and their loss of financial recompense. Still, the perfect storm here is that the internet is taking over at the same rate that professional news is getting useless.

    I see the newspapers, and the media in general, as shallow. They parrot news at the same level of understanding as an immature, uninformed citizen. (And they get praise from immature, uninformed citizens for doing this.) I'd like to think they are pandering, but I bet, as a whole, they've done it so long that true immaturity fills their ranks. I get talking heads presenting undue fear or bravado at every turn. I never feel I get a balanced set of facts. And frankly, I feel at times that it is malicious.

    If anybody is the keeper of language, shouldn't it be the press? I barely know what "recession" or "bail-out" (or "liberal") mean anymore.

    I expect the press to make us feel a little bit bad for attacking the wrong source of a problem or for slinging mud at persons who are making the best decisions possible. Instead, they encourage and indulge in childish behavior.

    The presidential campaign was a travesty. The economic crisis is well on its was as one. I'd like to see news outlets sued for breach of contract to inform, but they never actually had a contract! It was implied. And I think they take advantage of this.

    When they go after companies for jets, I think about the pot calling the kettle black.

    The problem with the auto industry is that no one trusts they will turn the corner because they lived with their heads in the sand for 20 years. (And BTW, how can such a long-standing, high revenue industry turn upside down in just one month?) I think the media has the same implied problem. I think they've been digging this hole for 20 years. It's not just the internet. And not everyone wants to see them survive as is. Its time for some gut-wrenching change in quality.

    Well, I ramble. You get the idea...

  14. What? DRM Fanboys? on Valve Unveils Steam Cloud · · Score: 1

    I've had nothing but trouble with Steam, both intellectually and practically, so I find it surprising that so much fan boy raving can be modded up here!

    Steam is DRM.
    It starts slow and it's ugly.
    It sits in the system tray watching you.
    I bought a used game on Ebay and can not play it. No warning. Nothing on the box to warn that you can't sell what you bought.
    My attempt to cycle through customer service for a new key was not just pointless, it was obviously set up to be.

    Not interested.

  15. Google Maps Release Worse Than Beta? on Google's Rasmussen on Google Maps · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does anyone else feel that the released Google Maps is worse than the beta? Interstate names are missing, printing via the print button doesn't work right, the list of streets to choose form is on the left which is awkward. The first page take 5 seconds to load often, which is not very Googlish. If you have half of your street info typed in and the page finally finishes loading, it erased your typing so far...

    I also have trouble using is from Mozilla 1.7.x but it may be because of adblock or flashblock. But this has been going on in the beta too.

  16. Apple Drives Bill Berzerk Already! on Has Google Peaked? · · Score: 1

    Well, at least he is jealous of Steve Jobs. Have you noticed how each new Windows release really just tries to copy the last Apple release? XP followed the Mac "Aqua" look. Pretty, see-through windows will only be the next example. Expect Windows to have a built in "dashboard" of little applets also. (They've been in Linux, but that didn't drive the Bill crazy.)

    Remember Gates and Jobs go way back and I think, despite the money that Gates has gotten, mostly coincidentally, he still feels inferior to Jobs. Steve has run more than one successful company, and, more importantly, he is loved by the public! The ipod is just icing on the cake.

  17. Re:A simple test as whether an action is justifiab on ZDNet UK Begs for Google's Forgiveness · · Score: 1

    "What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander."

    That's funny because I thought your post was going the other way! If Google allows anyone, anywhere, anytime to summon up information about anything on the net, and can through their hands up that this is an important technology, then Google's gander, er, executives may have their information summoned up by that system.

    If I get shot by a gun I made, that's irony. I might have the right to create it, and I might defend my right to make it, but it wouldn't have been here to shoot me if I didn't. Double-edged, to mix metaphors.

  18. Re:$5k houses? on A Look Back At Ten Dot-Com Flops · · Score: 1

    "Damn, I'd buy a frickin' five thousand dollar house. That'd be sweet."

    Imagine your neightbors-to-be first. ;^)

  19. Re:I got caught two ways on A Look Back At Ten Dot-Com Flops · · Score: 1

    "Just ask people in Texas who bought houses during the oil boom and then lost their shirt."

    So don't buy houses in areas with boom markets?! While I agree it can happen, I think the psychology of the situation is that people will sit on a depreciating asset rather than sell it. This doesn't make a house more valuable, but you can't get one at "true" prices, if they won't sell.

  20. id Got What It Wished For on Doomed: How id Lost Its Crown · · Score: 1

    Back in the beginning, id had Carmack making engines, Sandy Peterson writing levels, and Romero designing games (say what you will about Romero). For whatever reasons, all of these left the company except Carmack, and then some more left.

    After Doom 2 (and Romero leaving), Carmack was in an interview about the Alien total conversion and he said they all loved it. It was the game they wanted to make. I remember thinking "Wha?" Doom was all about fast action shooting and strafing in a mortal dance with the hell spawn, big guns, and crazy power-ups!

    Then Quake came out and it was relatively slow and dark. So why didn't id leave the Doom legacy alone and make Quake 4 instead? I dunno, but they seem to have a hard-on for ruining the Doom legacy and making it something it wasn't. I guess they just don't see what made it successful. I guess they hated the Romero days so badly that they will never be able to get over it subconsciously.

    I saw another interview not too long ago and those two artist dudes were awfully smug about Doom 3, so I'm guessing they were in a coup with Carmack to take over and make unfun, "scary" games.

    As has been pointed out here several time, the flashlight mistake is unforgivable. I say it that strongly because any designer worth a damn would have insisted on more light. You can just imagine the testers wanting a flashlight and being overridden by the current staff that just don't get it.

  21. Re:Give me a rational reason why this is a problem on Intel in Antitrust Trouble in Japan · · Score: 1

    AMD can not make enough chips to supply Dell exclusively. AMD will never be able to afford the plants to make those chips without contracts from places like Dell.

    But Dell can not buy 15% of its chips from AMD because Intel is threatening them. This puts AMD *and Dell* in an impossible chicken-and-egg situation.

    You see, it's not all about rebates from Intel. Imagine if Intel can't get around to finding enough chips for Dell! I'm sure the threat is more along this line.

  22. Re:Machiavelli on Gates Pledges $750M to Vaccinate Children · · Score: 1

    Thanks for making my point about getting the peons to fight it out. Moron.

  23. I thank Ted Turner on Gates Pledges $750M to Vaccinate Children · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else happen to notice that the Gates Foundation came along less than a year after Turner donated one billion to the U.N.?

    That might sound like a fragile connection, but the reading I've done on Gates seems to point out that he does most things to one-up someone else.

    Oh well, I'm thankful the money goes to a good cause.

  24. Machiavelli on Gates Pledges $750M to Vaccinate Children · · Score: 1

    While I'm grateful that this money is going to a good cause, I believe Machiavelli mentioned that a tyrant should open a few hospitals and schools to confuse the masses. You give up 10% of your wealth, keep the other 90% ill-gotten gains, and let the peons fight it out.

    I was watching a special on, I believe, Noriega. It's been a while. Anyway, once the government came down on his billion-dollar cocaine empire, he started building hospitals and kissing babies. When it didn't work, he had many govt officials shot in the bloodiest street crimes possible.

  25. Square Forgotten So Soon? on Nintendo Eyeing the Big Screen · · Score: 1

    Yes, why shouldn't they follow in the footsteps of Square? That company was raking in the cash for the Final Fantasy franchise, but they decided to blow it all on a movie... er, you know the rest.

    Strangely, Square and Nintendo used to be very tight partners.