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User: bean123456789

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  1. Re:revolutionary? no, but still noteworthy on Intel Launches Power-Efficient Penryn Processors · · Score: 1

    or perhaps you could buy the better chip so that AMD will get their act together and innovate again, that's how a consumer driven market works people.

  2. Re:Really? on Dvorak Says gPhone is Doomed · · Score: 4, Funny

    This phone is right up your alley

  3. Re:a bad employee... on 1300 Unopened Fry's Rebate Forms Found In Dumpster · · Score: 1

    He was incognito, 1 per smoke break.

  4. Re:I guess they were scared of copyright issues... on Ubuntu Hardy Heron Announced · · Score: 1

    I read the version as Ubuntu Hardly Heron, quite a difference in meaning... I thought shuttleworth was feeling inadequate.

  5. Re:It's not that hard... on Breaking a Car's Cipher · · Score: 1

    They spend the extra cash on fine leather seats and steering wheel covers but use Yugo quality locks to protect it?

    Does it really matter how good the locks are? Any dipshit can break a window. A slightly smarter animal can use a slim-jim just as fast. Locks only keep the honest people out. If you really think a highly cryptographically secure key (physical or otherwise) is going to keep people out of a car, you are missing the bigger picture.

  6. Re:So? on Breaking a Car's Cipher · · Score: 1

    Or you could interrogate the window with a rock...

  7. Re:Watching movies is not physics homework... on Bad Movie Physics Hurt Scientific Understanding · · Score: 1

    Most kids (including me, when I was one, and still to this day) couldn't care less what Shakespeare wrote -- and what he wrote is frankly irrelevant to anybody who does something useful for a living (scientists, engineers, doctors), though still useful for people who "play" for a living

    Just because a subject matter doesn't involve hard science doesn't make it any less important to the human race. Literature is in fact a great source of knowledge about humans. Perhaps you should be more introspective, not all people want to live your life or in fact learn the things you know. Calling certain literature irrelevant, while an opinion, is pretty fucking naive (in mine). And what about the useful blue collar grunts, this just makes you sound like an elitist asshole.

  8. Re:Imagine drowning if you couldn't hold your brea on Surviving in Space Without a Spacesuit · · Score: 1

    Their bodies literally did explode, killing them instantly.

    I'm not a doctor, but that's pretty much the effect I would expect... what with the exploding and all.

  9. Re:SG-1 had a similar scene on Surviving in Space Without a Spacesuit · · Score: 1

    Event Horizon did this as well, as I remember he was pretty messed up (of course in that movie that is a pretty relative term)

  10. Re:if only they were INTERESTING stories on Homeland Security Commissions LED-Based Puke-Saber · · Score: 1

    This really begs the question that if handcuffs are used for sexual purposes, will the puke ray be used for fettish as well? "Oh yeah baby, I love it when you make me puke..."

  11. Re:Oh wow what a worthless site on Microsoft FUD Watch · · Score: 1

    Obvious mascot for MS watch: Elmer FUD

  12. Re:Battery Life on First iPhone 3rd Party GUI App Compiles · · Score: 1

    Including my Dell laptop, my Panasonic cordless phone, my Canon digital camera, my old HTC handhelds, and so on... none of which came from Apple.

    But I would be willing to bet that on all of those devices you can REMOVE and REPLACE the battery yourself. This is something that Apple (for whatever reason) doesn't let you do. They don't seem to like consumer freedom. Everybody knows that rechargeable batteries will eventually die, that's why in the design of the product pretty much all manufacturers will make the battery easily replaceable, this also allows you to purchase a back-up battery (more revenue!) and swap when one is dead. I wouldn't expect Apple to license to battery out (so other's can make them) but just to have to ability to replace with another charged battery is so ingrained in the market that to not have the ability seems idiotic.

  13. Re:No Blunder Or Missed Chance, Just A Bitter Geek on First iPhone 3rd Party GUI App Compiles · · Score: 1

    When you purchase the iPhone, you take it home, connect it to your computer and iTunes pops up to take you thru the activation process. Its EXTREMELY simple

    I beg to differ... Most phones you can just pop the SIM card in, power it on and start talking. I think connecting the phone to the computer and going through an activation is Unnecessarily complicated. This is just Apple wanting to control every aspect, not making it any easier to use as you claim is Apple's DNA.

  14. Re:And Windows users buy PCs more often on Vista Use Grows as Mac OS X Stays Flat · · Score: 1

    You may have a point that they are FINALLY comparable in price tit-for-tat. But the fact of the matter is I can buy a $300 PC, and be productive with that computer for probably just as long as the more expensive models. Apple doesn't sell commodity hardware, and probably never will. I don't know why people keep re-hashing this tired argument. Macs will always have a few models at set price points. The only difference is that now they models at those price points may be competitive with other types of computers with similar configurations.

  15. Re:And Windows users buy PCs more often on Vista Use Grows as Mac OS X Stays Flat · · Score: 1

    The argument that macs will somehow magically run longer than other pc's and give you a better ROI is just bullshit. I have a homebuilt PC that has been running strong for 6+ years and it isn't top of the line equipment. My server is probably close to 10. I also have no short term plans for replacing either. Most computers will last quite a while if treated properly. The operating system installed has no determination of the life of the computer. The reason apple has less sales (ergo less marketshare), is because they sell LESS. No other reason. Now their business model is setup so that they have a healthy margin on each computer sold and they have a successful and profitable business, fine. I still don't want one.

  16. Re:worm in apple? on Worm Claimed For Apple OS X · · Score: 1

    envious, hardly.

    Content can be created on any platform, it is up to the creative powers of the user. Having a mac makes you no more productive or creative. I'm not drinking your kool-aid.

  17. Re:Emphasis on the light, please. on Vertical Farming · · Score: 1

    Anyone who's worked in even the most windowed office building knows that only the spaces next to the windows get the light.

    Mirrors, now used for more than just vanity!

  18. Re:It's a good thing, then... on MySpace Gets False Positive In Sex Offender Search · · Score: 1

    in the future, denying her a job, a clearance, a loan...raise her insurance rates...all those nice things that bad data can do to you these days.

    Every state has a sex offender registry that the offender MUST register with on penalty of imprisonment. That is the only source to check, not myspace, and it is public information. I'm pretty sure that no company will use myspace or any other social networking website to determine if someone is a sex offender.

  19. Re:It's the package selection process on A Windows-Based Packaging Mechanism · · Score: 1

    but I think we should be aware of the fact that porting a great application to Windows does lessen the incentive for Windows users to make the switch.

    That's not necessarily true, in a way it facilitates the switch. If a user is used to using openoffice, firefox, gaim, etc. The switch becomes much easier because they already know how to use their core applications. They can then learn the new system as they go instead of all in one shot and still be productive.

    On the other hand, why does it matter if they switch? Just as long as they see the merit in open software. If you think about it, other *nix based system are proprietary and nobody is trying to get them to switch. I know they are not created equal but this sounds more like linux rabble-rousing than any sort of open source evangelism.

  20. Re:who thought this was a good idea? on Cell Phones Disable Keys for High-End Cars · · Score: 1

    why can't we just use a bit of properly carved metal to start the vehicle without throwing in a bunch of junk?

    Because they are easy for anybody to replicate or indeed bypass altogether.

  21. Re:Only high-end cars? on Cell Phones Disable Keys for High-End Cars · · Score: 1

    owners of existing cars will have to pay a small fortune to replace the keys because it's not a safety recall issue

    Not true, as an owner of one of these vehicles, I can tell you they are replacing them for free, and they solicited me first.

  22. Re:That's a crying shame... on Cell Phones Disable Keys for High-End Cars · · Score: 2, Informative

    I can attest to this (I have an altima as well), Nissan sent me a letter a couple of weeks ago with total disclosure about the issue and said they would be sending replacement fobs soon. I have yet to get my replacements, but I think them taking responsibility like this is pretty cool for a car company.

  23. Re:Let me correct that headline for you. on Apple Sues Over iGasm Ads · · Score: 1

    amplifier! Bass notes!

  24. Re:I don't know about you on Apple Sues Over iGasm Ads · · Score: 1

    perhaps they should use the chewbacca defense instead?

  25. Re:Why? on Study Reveals What Women Want From IT Jobs · · Score: 1

    Some sort of trap baited with manolo blahniks or coach bags...