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User: kthejoker

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  1. Re:Transportation promising, Tax option too politi on Google Project 10^100 Reaches Voting Phase · · Score: 1

    Um what, indeed.

    http://www.seattlepi.com/local/103213_taxstudy08.shtml

    Sales taxes are regressive because there is a minimum amount of consumption everyone must do to live, and it affects a higher percentage of a poor person's income than a rich person's.

    Consider: a person making $1000 a month who pays $100 in sales tax on groceries, clothes, and other living necessities versus a person making $8000 a month buying the same groceries and clothes.

  2. Re:Problem on According to Linus, Linux Is "Bloated" · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, that may be true, but the difference comes in the next sentence.

    "If a proprietary project is not dealt with appropriately, the 'proprietors' will hold the managers accountable."

    No such guarantee for open-source. Open source requires initiative, because it's all carrot, no stick.

  3. Re:Heaven forbid... on Lawyer Demands Jury Stops Googling · · Score: 1

    Here in Texas, Jury duty (and even appearing as a witness) has to be treated as paid leave by employers. And they can't fire or demote you for your absence, either. It's the same in a lot of other states.

  4. Re:Weighting of ensembles on Collaborative Filtering and the Rise of Ensembles · · Score: 1

    Serious question: do you guys have a software routine you use to account for fat-fingered typos? So do you weight the positional changes by how close a letter is to another on the keyboard?

    So for example,

    Leyboard

    would be a closer to match to "keyboard" than

    Reyboard

    because L is geospatially closer to K on the keyboard than R is?

    That would be an interesting program to see, anyway.

  5. Re:Open source governance on Collaborative Filtering and the Rise of Ensembles · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Fitness" doesn't always have to be related to the output; it can be related to the quality of a guessed input.

    Consider the corollary of a poll test: a model in which "trusted" voters receive extra votes while everyone else still gets on vote. You can determine "trustworthiness" (or "karma", if you will) the same way Slashdot does - through moderation and meta-moderation, or you can use a more objective "de minimis research" criteria (like a poll test but without the punishment for failure.)

    So someone voting on a school board bond election who can correctly answer questions about the stated usage of that bond, or the school district's financial bond rating, or who attends a school board meeting discussing the bond, could get 2 votes for the price of one.

    This would a) allow "passionate" (albeit informed) voters to have more of a say than someone who is indifferent, and b) encourage people to do research and get involved in politics.

    In a way, it's anti-democratic, but if you are going to insert any sort of elitism into the system, it might as well be a meritocracy.

  6. Re:Depends on Texting Toddlers, How Young is Too Young? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the swankier part of town, I saw some kid (16 tops) drive into the Target parking lot yesterday in a Z3. That car is as good as wrecked, my friends, because there is no way that kid treats that car with the same respect that some single mom does her 1993 Taurus that is her only means of transportation and thus survival.

    Lord knows if I had enough income/cash to buy a Z3 my 16 year old kid would still be getting the beater with his own job money.

  7. Re:already the case on Is "Good Enough" the Future of Technology? · · Score: 1

    For most Texas state government RFPs, the lowest bidder within 10% of the average of the middle 75th percentile (so, throw out the lowest 1/8th and highest 1/8th bids) is accepted. And if they are more than 5% below there's actually a discretionary fund we use to pay them more (up to 5% below that 75% average) if they run into unforeseen shortages, as a reward for their generous bid.

    Naturally, it's in everyone's interest to bid 9.99% below the middle 75% ... hard to do, but some companies are amazingly good at value determination.

    Also naturally, some companies got in a lot of trouble back in the day for creating dummy corps to bid at the high end of the 75% percentile to drive up the average and thus the rake.

  8. Re:Eek. on How an Online-Only TV Series Stays Successful · · Score: 1

    This was marked Insightful?

    God, Slashdot could use more women.

  9. Re:To be more specific on Fear of Porn URL Exposure Discourages Firefox 3 Upgrade · · Score: 0

    Dear Penthouse,

    My wife and I are 41 and 43. That "old fart" stigma is not related to age but to how far a stick is up their rectum.

    Naked bodies are not "dirty" sex is not "dirty" Those that believe it is have a serious emotional problem or physiological disorder. and yes I know this goes against the grain of the Puritanical popular stance that has overtaken the United states.

    Who cares, My wife and I have sex with the windows open in the summer when it's a nice night out, and she is one hell of a screamer.

    FTFY.

  10. What's wrong with an 8 Track? on Thanks For the ... Eight-Track, Uncle Alex · · Score: 1

    If, when I was one year old (1983), my uncle had put an 8 track in a time capsule that I could open in 1999 ....

    I could have easily played it, since my dad still had his 8 track player. If he hadn't, I could have easily bought one at a flea market, or on that fledgling eBay service, or through a hobbyist magazine - maybe even at a secondhand music store.

    I can't think of a single digital format from the past 20 years that is truly in every sense of the word "obsolete" and therefore unretrievable. They may be archaic, you may have to hunt a bit more with some technologies than others to get a working reader, call up some universities, some digital museums, libraries, hobbyist friends, but it can be done.

    Even if it can't be done, the schematics for building a reader are out there somewhere. Things are still just made out of elements, aren't they?

    16 years is a while, it's not THAT long.

  11. Re:Geek pretentiousness on Thanks For the ... Eight-Track, Uncle Alex · · Score: 1

    The better question is: just because something is an arcane relic, does that mean there will be no way to read it? He's not asking to have it published in the most popular standard, he just wants something that can be read in 17 years. You can still get a reader for every format you listed there via eBay or Craigslist or a flea market.

    That may be half the fun of getting something in a time capsule like this. "Hmm, a USB 2.0 drive? How do I download this to my neural cyberdeck?"

  12. Re:16 years on Thanks For the ... Eight-Track, Uncle Alex · · Score: 1

    Your point is well taken but overstated. 16 years old doesn't equal "Very old hardware." It's still very easy to find VCRs, LP players, 8 track and cassette players, Zip and floppy drive readers - even proprietary, esoteric standards such as ViewMaster disc-reading toys, player piano roll readers, and BetaMax players are still available.

    I will bet you or anyone else $500 that 16 years from today, we will still have an easily affordable way to read CDs and DVDs from today.

    It will most likely be akin to buying a floppy drive reader now - it won't come standard, but it can be bought in USB form for under $50 retail.

    Even if that doesn't come to fruition, a working PC from the era before optical drives became obsolete (my guess? at least another 5 years) will still be easily available via eBay or a public library or basically any other place where current DVDs will still have interest.

  13. Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't... on Wikipedia To Require Editing Approval · · Score: 1

    Straw man. I and many others like me have NEVER ridiculed Wikipedia's notion that anyone can edit it. That is its single greatest strength, it is in its very credo ("everyone", no qualifier necessary), and is the sole reason it is what it is today.

    Someone will come and take their place now, swipe all their content, and open it up again to all and surpass them rather quickly in terms of usefulness. 5, 10 years tops.

  14. Re:Put a fork in it... on Wikipedia To Require Editing Approval · · Score: 1

    Elitist much?

  15. Re:"Everyone can edit", but "no one can contribute on Wikipedia To Require Editing Approval · · Score: 1

    How is an echo chamber an improvement over Wikipedia? Have you watched Fox News or read DailyKos lately? Back-patting has no place in an encyclopedia.

  16. Re:Repeated injuries can cause cancer on Fully Functional Bioengineered Tooth Grown In a Mouse · · Score: 3, Funny

    *reads this as he massages the inside of his cheek that he bit for the fifth time this year*

    Well shit.

  17. Re:Port of Hamburg on Robots Make the Coins Go 'Round, Down Under · · Score: 1

    I remember on The Wire when they're showing Frank Sobotka and some shipping execs how Amsterdam runs their dock with robots, and Sobotka's just looking at it in abject horror, at the thought of not having all of his buddies in the union to work the docks any more.

    Such a weird feeling, to see yourself being replaced. It will constantly move up the employment chain, too.

  18. Re:Wait, really? on US Life Expectancy May Have Peaked · · Score: 1

    As a native Texan, I agree with everything you said here, except ...

    Spending an hour and a half peeling 50 crawfish has got to be considered exercise. Plus the entire boil consists of seafood and vegetables. In fact, if everyone down South had a crawfish boil twice a week instead of eating how they do, we'd probably all be skinnier.

    Excuse me while I deep fry this Luther burger.

  19. Re:Yo Dawg on Network Adapter Keeps Talking While a PC Is Asleep · · Score: 1

    When you say "no benefit", then concede in the next point "I essentially do this now", then point out their "only benefit" (so does it have no benefits or only one benefit?), then fail to acknowledge the difference in physical footprint, cost, and potential power draw between a USB-based network adapter and an "Atom based desktop" ..

    do you even realize the things you're writing?

  20. Re:Retina reattachment, 40+ years ago on Laser Treatment Could Save the Sight of Millions · · Score: 1

    Umm ... so let's assume it's genetic. Do we have "cures" for genetic problems now that are safe, well-tested, and cheap? Let's give science a break, people are working on cures all the time, but we only discovered DNA 50 years ago, we've got a lot of learning left to do before genetic causes can be "cured".

  21. Re:Live free, die hard on If You Live By Free, You Will Die By Free · · Score: 1

    See also: AT&T, Nintendo, Daimler Benz, General Electric, Anheuser-Busch, Coca-Cola, Heinz, Procter and Gamble, Ericsson, and a ton of other companies founded in the 19th century and still kicking today.

  22. Re:I had to get my training from somewhere on On Realism and Virtual Murder · · Score: 1

    As a college admissions essay, this is pretty great.

  23. Re:My Time Isn't Free on Malcolm Gladwell Challenges the Idea of "Free" · · Score: 1

    Quit wasting my entropy, you insensitive clod!

  24. The bottom line is principles vs. practice on Wikipedia Censored To Protect Captive Reporter · · Score: 1

    Everyone commenting here on Slashdot (myself included) are only interested in the principles of the matter, not the reporter himself.

    He's already been abstracted out of this entire discussion, despite being the actual person involved in all the hubbub. So let's pat ourselves on the back for our words on private website censorship, journalistic hypocrisy, the slippery slopes of information control, etc etc. But I'd love to see all the self-congratulation here if the edits had stuck and Rohde was dead, all for the want of timeliness and freedom.

    Not every individual case conforms nicely to your information must be free worldview. This case is clearly in the GREY area; all the black-or-white claptrap on here is just that.

  25. Chicken Littles on US House May Pass "Cap & Trade" Bill · · Score: 1

    Honestly, articles like this just prove that when Slashdot's libertarian streak runs rampant, nothing of value emerges from the thread. Why am I shocked to hear "the sky is falling, the sky is falling" instead of any rational debate about the law's merits and shortcomings?