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User: Bacon+Bits

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Comments · 1,388

  1. Re:I dont see the difference on SCOTUS Says DNA Collection Permissible After Arrest · · Score: 1

    And now we know the cause of cancer....

  2. Re:Physical Access on Researchers Infect iOS Devices With Malware Via Malicious Charger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't know about you, but I can only use the USB port to charge my Android phone. Also, when I connect my Android phone to my computer I generally get access to the data contents of the phone (documents, music, pictures, etc.). It seems pretty trivial to devise a "charger" that steals or destroys data on any phone that connects to it.

    Data is the real treasure and thus is also the real threat of damage, but AFAIK you can also use the Android Debug Bridge to install programs to connected phones.

  3. Navajo, eh? on Star Wars Episode 4 To Be Dubbed In Navajo · · Score: 1

    I think I'll wait for the subbed version. Subtitles are always better.

  4. Re:Make metal ilegal too... on Australian Police Move To Make 3D Printed Guns Illegal · · Score: 1

    “My greater concern is that someone would do this, make one, and then suffer the consequences and kill themselves [after a catastrophic failure]. They don’t want to shoot someone, they’re just fascinated [by 3D printing]. If we didn’t alert someone to what happened to us, we would be considered negligent.

    "Alerting" someone by making the dissemination of information illegal as TFS suggests -- that is to say, censorship de jure -- is idiocy. Nobody is harmed merely by the transmission of gun plans.

  5. Re:Fuck you, MS on Xbox One Used Game Policy Leaks: Publishers Get a Cut of Sale · · Score: 1

    Personally I expect Sony to wait for the really bad PR storm to settle down, and then they're going to essentially say "yeah, we're going to be doing that, too".

  6. Re:They saw this coming for ages... on Main US Weather Satellite Fails As Hurricane Season Looms · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, Lotus Notes is worse.

  7. Re:Physics. on Ask Slashdot: How To Determine If a Video Has Been Faked? · · Score: 1

    TLDR: Zoom and enhance.

  8. Everything is an iPhone! on Xbox One: No Always-Online Requirement, But Needs To Phone Home · · Score: 1

    I seriously think the people running Microsoft have completely lost their mind. Every one of their core consumer software products -- other than MS Office -- has turned into a lame iOS clone. Exactly why do they they people buy a smartphone, a laptop, a desktop, a tablet or a gaming console? Do they seriously think people want the same capabilities everywhere? I understand the idea, and in theory is quite elegant. But it's just not reality. It's like a cafeteria that serves up salisbury steak, corn, fruit medley, and chocolate pudding with RC Cola to drink every day for all three meals. Allergic to corn? Too bad. Vegetarian? Too bad. Want diet soda? Too bad. Want breakfast? Too bad. This is what our product does, and it does it exactly this way, and you have no choice and no options. It does everything our marketing team says you want, so if you want something else you must be doing something wrong. Honestly that would work just fine for most people I know that didn't grow up playing on computers and with video games. It seems unbelievably dense to try that now as first gen computer kids are in their 40s.

    I think the final nail for the XBox One is the BS for playing used games, since this also means that you can't borrow games from your friends (unless, get this, *you* sign in on your friend's console and play under *your* profile). Couple that with the fact that it seriously damages the secondary market -- who doesn't know someone who recycles games they're done with into credit for the next game -- and there's very little incentive to choose the XBox One over the PS4.

  9. Re:I look forward to hearing about why this will f on Microsoft Unveils Xbox One · · Score: 3, Funny

    I've been an Xbox owner since the Xbox 1.

    [Emphasis mine]

    Oh this generation is going to be fun.

  10. FYI on House Bill Would Mandate Smart Gun Tech By U.S. Manufacturers · · Score: 0

    I don't know if you realize this, but the subject line is where you enter a brief summary of the topic. It's not where you start typing the message.

  11. Re:The original /. on Goodbye, Lotus 1-2-3 · · Score: 1

    For me it brings back memories of the cartridge-based Lotus 1-2-3 on the PCjr.

    It's probably the only software for the PCjr I have that still works (other than the BASIC cartridge).

  12. Re:They're just getting a head start on Obamacare. on Medical Firm Sues IRS For 4th Amendment Violation In Records Seizure · · Score: 1

    That doesn't mean the IRS has the authority to storm in on an unrelated search warrant and demand the information or summarily shut the healthcare facility down.

    "We have can access to this information" is not the same as "we have a right to take it at any time we want in any manner we choose at any time we chose".

  13. Re:All but Nemesis are watchable... on Review: Star Trek: Into Darkness · · Score: 4, Funny

    Nemesis is just... bad.
    So bad in fact that after that they stopped making Star Trek movies.

    Nemesis was not really a Star Trek movie. It was just a movie with Star Trek actors in a Sci-Fi setting.

    I like to think Nemesis was a holodeck malfunction: Shortly after the credits finish there should've been a scene where Data, Geordi (visored), Dr. Pulaski, and Wharf and a security team (dressed circa season 2) force open the doors of a deactivated and visually damaged holodeck to find a dead Tom Hardy dressed in standard issue command uniform. Dr. Pulaski checks him over, and looks a Wharf and shakes her head. Data taps his comm badge and says "Data to Picard. I'm sorry, sir. We were too late to save Lt. Shinzon."

  14. Re:Citations? They need to be sued heavily on Florida DOT Cuts Yellow Light Delay Ignoring Federal Guidelines, Citations Soar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    (I recently worked for years in the highway safety sector, and one of my colleagues, a former cop, did a research paper on this subject. He started the research with a high opinion of red light cameras, but found that red light cameras had no significant effect on fatalities while significantly increasing non-fatal collisions.)

    I'll ask you since I'd like to know: I've heard that one of the most positive innovations for traffic lights is the inclusion of a "timer bar". A bar light along side the normal traffic signals indicates how long the single has until it changes. I've heard that the places it was tested vastly reduced the number of collisions and injuries. Is there any truth to that?

    The "reason they haven't been implemented" is supposedly because they vastly reduce people running red lights while being significantly more expensive, and so vastly reduce red light camera revenue while raising operating costs. Having worked in a government office, I'm willing to believe that the "more expensive" portion alone was enough to make municipalities avoid them. I'm just curious if there's any truth to it.

  15. Re:sorry on Cosmos Remake Coming To Fox In 2014 · · Score: 1

    Captain Hindsight says:
    If you wanted Pluto to remain a planet you shouldn't have insisted we explore the solar system to find out why it behaves so weird.

  16. Re:Not a good case on Supreme Court Rules For Monsanto In Patent Case · · Score: 1

    Though true, it's also a pretty good implication that seeds are patentable as IP, because patent ineligibility would be something the Supreme Court could raise sua sponte (deciding an issue on their own initiative, as opposed to merely deciding issues addressed by the lower court).

    I don't see why the court would ever do that in this case. The court doesn't give a rats ass why the executive branch has deemed Monsanto's plants patentable under the laws passed by the legislature (i.e., the Patent Office issued a patent in accordance with the law) and it's the legislative branch's job to change the law if the executive branch is doing something the people don't like. Since the legislature has done little more than add to the list of patentable plants (U.S. Plant Patent Act of 1930, U.S. Plant Variety Protection Act of 1970, amended in 1980 and 1994 to further restrict farmer and breeder rights) the court can't really argue that these type of patents are weak, untested, or even unusual. The laws in the US are not even significantly different than those in Europe, as most of the amendments above were made to bring US law in line with European under UPOV.

    So, why is it the judicial branch's job to curb the patent office when the executive and legislative branches are ostensibly OK with the patent and laws (as is the international community) and there are no constitutional issues surrounding the case? The question before the court was "Does a patent right for self-replicating technology expire after an authorized sale?" and the answer was "No." If the answer were "yes" then you essentially couldn't patent plants, and given the body of law that explicitly says you can it seems unreasonable to think that the laws were made to be so pointless.

    As usual, though, I encourage people to read the actual opinion of the court, which always explains things very well even if it ends up being very dense.

    I am, however, laughing about this:

    David F. Snively, Monsanto's top lawyer.

    That's a horrible name for a lawyer, especially a corporate lawyer. I immediately think he looks like Snidely Whiplash.

  17. Re:Parasites on UN Says: Why Not Eat More Insects? · · Score: 1

    There's also prions like those that cause mad cow disease. Those cannot be reasonably destroyed by cooking. Heat can denature them, but you have to heat them so high that the resulting food is inedible.

  18. Re:It is a farce. on UN Says: Why Not Eat More Insects? · · Score: 1

    I've heard this before. Apparently in Africa there's a huge amount of resentment towards the starving people in Africa because they refuse to leave land that can obviously no longer support them, and then expect the government (or foreign governments) to save them.

    Who would have thought that Sam Kinison was right?

  19. Re:That's not junk DNA on Carnivorous Plant Ejects Junk DNA · · Score: 1

    Shit that means we're the product of summaries and articles? And God is the editor? I guess that actually explains a lot....

  20. Re:Entertainment vs. Chores on World of Warcraft Loses 1.3 Million Players in First Quarter of 2013 · · Score: 1

    WoW has changed from being an entertaining game that you could play for a few hours a week and still be able to experience content, into daily / weekly chores that have to be done or else you can't do stuff.

    I felt the same way, but it was 3 months after initial release. I never felt compelled to play the game after the first few weeks. I felt obligated, and that made me feel disgusting. I had a six month initial subscription, and effectively stopped playing after the first 3 months.

    I'm so glad I figured it out quickly.

  21. Re:Well there ya go on DoD Descends On DEFCAD · · Score: 1

    And I'm sure their report will promptly be made available.

    Shortly before the turn of the century, that is.

  22. Re:Or Star Trek, Dr. Who, Terminator, or WarGames on What Modern Militaries Can Learn From Battlestar Galactica · · Score: 1

    > It could just have easily been that Cylon agents had been able to infiltrate all active starships, but they neglected to consider the BattleStar Galactica because she was decommissioned and being converted into an inactive museum ship.

    BATTLESHIP!

    Now that's a comparison that the neo-galactica fans won't like.

    Although the "infiltration" bit overlooks the problem of only having a small number of physical variations. How can you actually infiltrate like that? It's bound to get noticed.

    Thank you for providing such an accurate example of the kinds of things nerds would discuss about BattleStar Galactica.

  23. Re:A Taste of Your Own Medicine on Warner Bros. Sued By Meme Creators Over Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    Damn you, KelCo SCIPI!

    ** shakes fist in nerd rage **

  24. Re:Or Star Trek, Dr. Who, Terminator, or WarGames on What Modern Militaries Can Learn From Battlestar Galactica · · Score: 1

    I don't think the basic premise of BattleStar Galactica is particularly nerdy. Sci-Fi is full of technological over-reliance causing apocalyptic disasters when it fails. I don't think it's something nerds would talk about as a BattleStar-centric theme. I mean, Dr. Strangelove is a far better example of the theme, as is Forbidden Planet. Heck, even Frankenstein is arguably a better example of the theme, although the consequences of Dr. Frankenstein's experiments were not as destructive. Seriously, what makes Battlestar Galactica more appropriate for this idea than Mad Max, or, hell, The Dark Knight Returns comic?

    It's kind of like using the Star Wars movies in particular for how military and political forces can be manipulated into electing a dictator as leader. Yes, that happens in the movies, but it's not a particularly unique story element of the series, nor is the series a particularly good example of it. How the Cylons attack is essentially background information about the setting. It could just have easily been that Cylon agents had been able to infiltrate all active starships, but they neglected to consider the BattleStar Galactica because she was decommissioned and being converted into an inactive museum ship.

  25. Re:Interesting... on Meet Drone Shield, an Ambitious Idea For a $70 Drone Detection System · · Score: 2

    Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these!