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User: kelarius

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  1. I don't see a problem here... on Inside Elizabeth Holmes's Chilling Final Months at Theranos (vanityfair.com) · · Score: 2

    next you're going to tell me that sharks with frickin laser beams on their fricken heads is a bad investment.

  2. No surprise here on Is Disney's Star Wars Franchise In Trouble? (cosmicbook.news) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They've dumped hundreds of millions (billions?) into this franchise and produced 1 good movie, 2 mediocre movies, 2 mediocre TV shows, and 1 more or less bad movie, not to mention the controversy surrounding the games so far. I'm not surprised that Disney is looking to roll back their investment, it's been profitable but it wouldn't take too many more bad projects to kill off the brand. They're getting out while they're still ahead.

  3. $1370 is pretty cheap actually for a RTX 2070 equipped 15.6" laptop, I spent a little more than $1000 for a GTX 1060 laptop of similar spec about 6 months ago, and that was still considered a decent deal. As for 240hz refresh on a 15.6" display, I don't know any gamers that would be able to use such a speed that are willing to play on such a small screen, so this is pretty much a gimmick.

  4. Re:Today's Decree on The Ampex Sign Is Coming Down (fastcompany.com) · · Score: 1

    Hear ye! From this day forward, any monument or landmark unknown to Cultural Significance Minister Kalarius will have its status removed and any physical marker shall be decommissioned as soon as is logistically convenient. All current or future restoration projects are now cancelled to repair or renovate all monuments or landmarks that have been determined to look "worn and kinda crappy."

    We must never change anything lest we trample all over someone's nostalgia! In any case, your examples could be (or are being) renovated and refurbished so that future generations can enjoy them, this is a bloody sign for a business that isn't even at that location anymore, I think the vast majority of people that drive on 101 aren't going to miss it. If it's so culturally significant, why doesn't someone pay to fix it up and move it to a museum?

    Also, I kinda like the title, maybe I'll add it to my sig ;)

  5. Re:Cultural shortsightedness on The Ampex Sign Is Coming Down (fastcompany.com) · · Score: 1

    I sure as hell didn't know what Ampex is, nor had I known anything about the sign, someone seems to have forgotten to tell the rest of the world about its cultural significance. A quick googling also showed that the sign looked worn and kinda crappy now so from an outsider's perspective, good riddance

  6. Re:Might take a while on Scientists Find Way To Make Mineral Which Can Remove CO2 From Atmosphere (phys.org) · · Score: 2

    It's actually worse, 1 ton of magnesite can sequester 1/2 ton of CO2, we are releasing 1200 tons of CO2 into the atmosphere EVERY SECOND of every day. I also question how much CO2 is created in making the magnesite, considering that it's sped up formation is due to polystyrene microspheres, which are in themselves a petroleum product. I imagine that to even make a dent, we'd have to be forming millions of tons of this stuff every day, and that's just not feasible.

  7. Re:Extenal Only? on Apple Partnered With Blackmagic On An External GPU For MacBooks (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 1

    I don't know specifically about the linked eGPU but it is possible to use other eGPUs on the internal display. The trade off is that it's a pain in the ass to set up and you do lose a little bit of graphics power as you're sending video data back across the same Thunderbolt 3 link.

  8. Alternatively on Microsoft Hopes Money Will Entice More Developers (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    I can keep 100% of the revenue by distributing it myself.

  9. Re:There is surely no way this can go wrong on Scientists Accidentally Create Mutant Enzyme That Eats Plastic Bottles (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    You're thinking about The Andromeda Strain, which is what came to mind when I heard of this.

  10. I disagree that this is a negotiating tactic, Apple has indicated through inaction for several years now that they don't really care that much about the professional market, who are really the only people that are going to care about the switchover. Switching to ARM allows Apple to merge the iOS and macOS platforms, easing development costs and grab more control over their environment. They've already made it clear that this is the path they want to take with products like the iPad Pro, if they could take that and expand it into a full iMac like experience, why wouldn't they?

  11. Re:My 0.02 on Bitcoin Nears $17,000 After Climbing About $4,000 in Less Than a Day · · Score: 1

    >Bitcoin is a recipe for epic financial disaster.

    As surprisingly large as Bitcoin has become, it's still peanuts compared to anything that could affect the markets.

    The tragedy will be at the individual level as the last of the greedy fools comes to the realization that they're the LAST of the fools, and have been left holding the bag.

    Now... how long that takes, and how big the bag is when it happens... no idea. What I do know is I will have absolutely no sympathy for anyone losing their shirt when the crash comes. I will consider those people to have economically auto-Darwinated.

    This, more than anything. Bitcoin hasn't penetrated into mainstream financial markets at all, so if/when it implodes it won't affect the market at large. What worries me is that Bitcoin Futures has the power to change that, it offers an in for investment bankers and hedge fund managers to start speculating in bitcoin, which given their penchant for greed and the current wild west regulatory situation in cryptocurrencies, could create a recipe for disaster.

  12. Re:Usefulness of Bitcoin? on Bitcoin Nears $17,000 After Climbing About $4,000 in Less Than a Day · · Score: 2

    You have to use an exchange like Coinbank or Bitfinex, they'll take your bitcoins and offer you whatever other currency. Thing is that these exchanges often have restrictions on when, how often, and how much you can exchange, often they have queues that you have to wait in to actually exchange your currency. If you're a new user, you can usually expect to wait a while to drop your bitcoin for some other currency, and you can usually expect to have a limit on the amount you're allowed to convert. The exchanges do this to help prevent a crash via a flash selloff, and to some extent it's successful, however eventually consumer faith in the future of the value on Bitcoin is going to drop off (I mean really, $17k?) and when that happens those same protections are going to make the crash all that much worse for people involved.

  13. Re:Large corporations are filled with idiots news@ on Is Online Advertising Worthless? (zerohedge.com) · · Score: 1

    Given that this advertising is usually targeted at the 80% or so of the population that barely know what an internets is, I wouldn't agree with you. I still come across plenty of people that install stupid shit like Honey or coupon printers, so SOME advertising works, you just need to target it in the right way.

  14. Temporary workaround on HP Users Complain About 10-Minute Login Lag During 'Win 10 Update' (theregister.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Disabling the App Readiness service (disable, not just stop) is a temporary workaround, it will start up normally. It also disables updates on reboot, if that's of any use to you :)

  15. I think there was some misunderstandings here from both of us, I thought you were panning things like the US dollar and not Bitcoin. Bitcoin is trash and a terrible store of value, but I think that has more to do with the rampant speculation than it does with the concept.

  16. And what, exactly, gives any other physical "money" value other than whatever value we assign to it? If we have a gold backed currency it is no more or less valuable than we believe it to be, same as modern currency.

  17. Re:Ham on We Could Have Had Cellphones Four Decades Earlier (reason.com) · · Score: 1

    Except that's not really true, we had things like the SCR-536 (AKA Handy Talkie) in WW2 that operated on batteries and had ranges in AM up to a mile on open ground. If we had these we could probably have set something up similar to a cell network in the 40s, and the handests would only have weighed a few pounds at most. Heavy by today's standards but certainly not out of the question.

  18. Re:The Federal Communications Commission on FCC Says It Was Victim of Cyberattack After John Oliver Show (thehill.com) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    He didn't think it was perfectly acceptable to spend two billion dollars on a website that hardly ever worked, he expected a working program. It's also exceedingly disingenuous to imply that the money was all spent on the website, that money was spent to stand up the entire damn program, from the website to inter-agency connections to the assholes answering the damn phones.

    But hey, you just keep throwing your bullshit around, maybe someone might buy it.

    Back on topic, I would like to see some proof that a DDoS occurred before everyone gets on the "OMG THE GUBMENT WAS HAXXORED" bandwagon. Let's not forget that this is EXACTLY what happened in 2014 the last time Oliver asked everyone to go leave comments, and I don't recall anyone classifying that as a DDoS.

  19. At $999, I can buy 4 (or more) chromebooks, which are more than adequate for pretty much all education needs. Way to read your market there, Microsoft...

  20. Sideloading is still a thing...

    Not that I'm advocating for this nonsense, but don't act like it's the end of the world. As long as I can run native x86 apps sideloaded it's not a huge deal.

  21. Not a big deal on Companies Start Implanting Microchips Into Workers' Bodies (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    As long as the implants are completely voluntary and offer to remove them when no longer wanted, I don't see a problem here.

  22. 5 years old, most schools were buying the 13" non-retina MBP, which is a 2012 vintage model.

  23. Re:A version of Windows more broken than Wine on First Screenshots of Microsoft's Windows 10 Cloud OS Leak Online (zdnet.com) · · Score: 1

    Not having a ton of knowledge on UWP yet beyond replacing win32, does it offer any benefits from the existing platform? I mean, if they decided not to tie UWP exclusively to the Windows Store (or at the very least made sideloading easier), I could get behind a change in forma if it provided some concrete benefit, like, say. not being beholden to x86 anylonger.

  24. Re:Valuable skills on UK's Top Police Warn That Modding Games May Turn Kids into Hackers (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah I don't really see a problem with this. Carry on modders.

  25. Quoting parent: "HERP I H8 MAC!" on Apple Should Stop Selling Four-Year-Old Computers (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    Parent's rambling nonsense

    "Baseless apple apologizing" LOL

    1. Not a fanboy, personally I've never purchased myself a mac. I've used many but I can never justify the cost.
    2. Laptop weight can easily be considered a specification. If you like carrying around a 10lb brick then by all means ignore the build however don't assume everyone is as narrow minded as you.
    3. That you're so incredibly focused on CPU/GPU upgrades shows how much you really know about what happens inside of your computer.
    4. Yes, the Broadwell builds are a couple of years old but that's pretty normal for Apple's refresh schedule. They usually update their MacBook Pro lines about every 18 months. So they're due, and there is every indication that they will be doing so this fall, probably around October.

    I suppose I should have made my first post more clear, my statement was meant to point out that TFS was flamebait, and likely the article as well. This kind of reporting in general, the kind that ignores facts and shapes the story to push an agenda, really irritates me and I do what I can to shine light on these instances when possible.