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User: Phics

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  1. Re:The caps are electrolytic on Intel's New Desktop SSD Is an Overclocked Server Drive · · Score: 1

    His point was that the general capacitor quality these days is a bit dubious. Of course there are premium brands in all electronic components.

    Well, I don't know.... his point sounded more like, "Oh, remember those awful Firestone tires from 2000? I'm never using tires again - they all just blow out. Tank treads all the way for me."

    Nothing wrong with solid caps, but the premise for the argument is a little weak.

  2. Re:Lego building != Architect on Code.org Resurrects 'Flappy Bird' As Programming Lesson · · Score: 1

    So.. you're teaching people to code by not teaching people to code?

    Absolutely! Anyone remember Rocky's Boots? Similar concept here - learn all about program execution, logic, conditional operators, and functions which are fundamental to any programming language.

  3. Re:Uh? on Short Notice: LogMeIn To Discontinue Free Access · · Score: 1

    My company has dozens of free logmein systems our techs administer locally. Sure, one or two computers is just a tiny $100, ($50 on promo), but dozens of systems is a game changer. I'm not WAHing, but I think a lot of people were taken off guard. And yes, we do have paid accounts as well.

  4. Re:I'm waiting for the on First Images of a Heart Injected With Liquid Metal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They have a term in medicine called "contraindication". Basically, when there are contraindications, (downsides), the risks and benefits of a treatment are weighed, and if the benefits outweigh the potential complications, it might be worth trying regardless. Test subjects sign on for trials because they feel the risks are acceptable. The AC may not fall into this category, but that doesn't mean (s)he's wrong if they don't choose to 'sign up' to have this done unnecessarily. I wonder if you'd have had a similar reaction if someone suggested injecting a fungus into the bloodstream... sounds horrifying, but how many lives has penicillin saved?

  5. Re:Brilliant? on Snowden Spoofed Top Officials' Identity To Mine NSA Secrets · · Score: 5, Informative

    Perhaps if the right people make Snowden seem like a mad brilliant genius, the public will brush aside questions of how secure processes at the NSA are?

  6. Re:Everyone is in Luck on Network Solutions Hit With DDoS · · Score: 1

    Heh.... looks like not everyone made it out of June... I've had months like that.

  7. Re:Everyone is in Luck on Network Solutions Hit With DDoS · · Score: 1

    Sunday? June 21st was a Friday!

  8. Re:Disney says... on LucasArts Employees Hold Wake & Eulogy; Vader Still Roams · · Score: 5, Funny

    Which is the broadside of a spherical space station?

  9. Re:But I just want to know ... on Study Finds Universe Is 100 Million Years Older Than Previously Thought · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Great Green Arkleseizure sneezed.

  10. The early web... on What Early Software Was Influential Enough To Deserve Acclaim? · · Score: 1

    What about NCSA Mosaic? I still remember the first time I accessed the Internet without telnet or FTP... The 'web' may not have been just a piece of software, and this certainly wasn't the first web browser, but it is really the browser that introduced the world wide web to the masses... and one can trace it's lineage straight through to Firefox.

  11. I was browsing the web and I found... on Patent Troll Targeting Users of Scanners; Wants $1000/Employee · · Score: 5, Informative
  12. Re:Windows 7 compatibility mode on Ask Slashdot: Best 32-Bit Windows System In 2012? · · Score: 1

    Hey you car has a flat tire you are going to go invent a new wheel.

    Hey, don't be so quick to discard that line of thinking. That is -exactly- what led to innovations like this one.

    I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just saying your example could be refined.

  13. Re:And that will also mark on GNOME 3.8 To Scrap Fallback Mode · · Score: 1

    Eh... good question. I think I spend less time putzing about with an interface if I feel comfortable with it. I've learned to use Gnome in a manner that lets me focus on the work I'm doing instead of the actual interface itself.

    Now, how to measure any differences in productivity in a quantitative way? No idea. Perhaps I just regurgitated that term with no real evidence to present other than how I feel about it while I am working.

  14. Re:And that will also mark on GNOME 3.8 To Scrap Fallback Mode · · Score: 1

    That doesn't work so well for locating apps by description or name. On my system: windows key + 'ca' + tab (Libre Calc is the second result at this point), + enter. Done. Or, launch the term, type 'loff', then tab, then '--calc'. The command line offers auto-completion, and no mistake, this is useful - in fact there are situations where I use this quite often, but for launching some piece of software when I don't need a shell, why should I bother?

    That aside, I'm well aware other desktop environments offer some sort of search functionality. I was merely pointing out that since Gnome has no immediate plans to reverse course, Gnome 3.x is probably not the DE you're looking for. Like I said, lots of other options.

    Perhaps my previous post was viewed as inflammatory by a lot of sensitive people who feel betrayed - but I'm not the one who is complaining, and I'm certainly not the one who is betraying. I just happen to like the new Gnome interface, and I suspect, in spite of the hostile nature of this thread, that I'm not the only one.

  15. Re:And that will also mark on GNOME 3.8 To Scrap Fallback Mode · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Man, there are a lot of bitter people on /. If you don't like Gnome, you'll be using XFCE or KDE or Mate or Cinnamon or something - we already know. Quit complaining about something you don't even use anymore. Every time 'Gnome' is in a post topic, we get all the same people rambling on about the same stuff, and Gnome users like myself barely bother reading anymore.

    Linux has a lot of choice for a reason. Just grab the desktop you like and roll with it. If you don't like it anymore, grab a different one.

    I actually like the 3.x interface and I've never used it on a touch device. Yes, it is a bold departure, but I find it makes me more productive all in all. I dislike nested menus - always have. I can't think of a bigger waste of time than browsing a nested menu system looking for an app, and if you're using the 'Applications' view in Gnome 3.x, you're definitely doing things the hard way. Hitting the 'Windows' key, typing the first few characters of my target software, and then the 'Enter' key to launch apps makes a lot of sense. The quick gesture of ramming my mouse into the corner to arrange work-spaces works great.

  16. Re:Wow on Curiosity Spies Unidentified, Metallic Object On Mars · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the entire planet was made of solid gold, it would make it an economic disaster to go there.

  17. Re:Nope. on Ask Slashdot: Personal Tape Drive NAS? · · Score: 1

    Whoever wrote this and whoever approved it apparently doesn't know what a tape is.

    Or... it was approved by someone who knew exactly what a tape is, and the frenzy of yelling and yapping the topic would produce.

  18. Re:Someone doesn't understand what a pandoras box on Android 4.0 Upgrade For Sony Xperia Smartphones Opens a Pandora Box · · Score: 1

    If English isn't your native language, it suggests that unlike much of the English speaking populace, you may have actually studied it at some point.

  19. Re:Oh great... on Buttons That Morph Out of Your Touchscreen · · Score: 1

    Maybe the accelerometer could "auto-inflate" the screen like an airbag when the phone sensed that it was being dropped. Hard disks in laptops already park drive heads using the same technique.

  20. Re:Fresh Water submarines? on Remembering America's Fresh Water Submarines · · Score: 2

    Yeah, go on... attack. You may take out our two rowboat destroyers and our battle canoe.

    But we have a tank...
    ...and we're not telling you where it is.

  21. All the legal issues aside... on High School Students Sue Federal Gov't Over Global Warming · · Score: 1

    I think the neat thing here is this - usually adults tend to spout the argument that we're making the world a crappy place for our children. Maybe it's because they don't have our agendas or vices, but it just -feels- completely different when our children step onto adult sized soapboxes and raise their voices.

  22. Re:It'd sell on MacBook Pro Fragrance Created · · Score: 1

    Well, since unboxing your Mac is typically the last time most people will ever be that much in lust with the thing, occasionally spritzing the air with that "new Mac" smell might just prolong that loving feeling...

  23. Re:Titanic is sinking on RIM Firing (Nearly) Everybody · · Score: 1

    The only way to actually get fired in this type of job is if you smoke while on duty.

    If the entire company is smoking while on duty, you'd be surprised how persuasive angry shareholders can be...

  24. Re:Charlie Brookers Black Mirror on Microsoft Patent Monetizes Your TV Remote · · Score: 1

    They've stolen this idea from episode two of Black Mirror.

    From the patent - Filing date: Mar 19, 2004. Black Mirror originally aired in December 2011. Clearly Microsoft didn't steal this idea from Black Mirror, however, that makes it all the more chilling, does it not?

  25. Re:huh? on James Whittaker: Focus on Ads and 'Social' Destroying Google · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In my youth, I moved back to a company I had left for a couple years. For me, it was simply a comfort thing - I was familiar with the policies, people, and surroundings. I'm not saying those aspects of the company were any good, and it turned out to be a terrible move; I was much happier elsewhere in the end. I'm also not saying that is why Mr. Whittaker returned, but humans tend to find some solace in familiarity - especially if the pay is good.