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User: KritonK

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Comments · 86

  1. Re:Duh! on Linux Sucks (Video) · · Score: 1

    It is far simpler to just tell them to install [your favorite distribution] with [your favorite desktop]. Skip the "tell them to" bit, if you are talking to friends and relatives, in which case, change "install" to "install and support".

    If, later on, they figure out that there are other distributions and desktop environments, and want to try them out, then more power to them.

  2. Re:You cancel service? on Dyn.com Ends Free Dynamic DNS · · Score: 1

    This happened to me once, too. I wrote to them, explaining what had happened, and they promptly restored my account, no questions asked.

  3. Re:If you don't know how to brush teeth properly.. on Smart Toothbrush Aims For Better Brushing Habits · · Score: 1

    Quite right. My mistake. I floss before brushing, too.

  4. Re:If you don't know how to brush teeth properly.. on Smart Toothbrush Aims For Better Brushing Habits · · Score: 1

    If you are an adult and you don't know how to brush your teeth, ask your dentist: brushing your teeth properly is simple but not obvious; it's not just a matter of putting toothpaste on the toothbrush and giving your teeth a quick scrub. As for when to do it, it's pretty simple: after every meal. Floss afterwards; again ask your dentist about the correct way to do it. (Yes, this means having a toothbrush and dental floss at work. So what?)

  5. RHEL 5 & 6 come with python 2.6 or earlier on Why Do Projects Continue To Support Old Python Releases? · · Score: 1

    Red Hat Enterprise Linux (and, therefore, CentOS, Scientific Linux, etc.) 6, which is the current version of the OS, comes with python 2.6. Version 5 of the OS, which is still supported, comes with python 2.4 and an optional python26 package, which installs python 2.6 in parallel with the default version. I assume that similar things are true for other long term support distributions.

    In these distributions, using python 2.7 would require building it yourself and install it in parallel with the system-supplied version. This would add to the porting problems, that others have mentioned, the cost of maintaining python yourself. Thus, until these distributions update python to version 2.7, it is good that project maintainers provide support for these older versions.

  6. I read that paper ages ago... on Searching the Internet For Evidence of Time Travelers · · Score: 1

    ...in subjective time and used it as a guide for things not to do, if I want to remain undetected when I went back to the past. So far it seems to have worked.

  7. Re:The size of a euro coin? on Billion Star Surveyor 'Gaia' Lifts Off · · Score: 1

    In Metric, it is 23.25 mm.

    In American, it is 0.95836768342951360263 times the diameter of a quarter. Or, in more standard units, 0.00021188757655293088 football fields. Approximately.

  8. Re:Why those vegetables? on Desert Farming Experiment Yields Good Initial Results · · Score: 1

    Probably because with these vegetables they will be in Mediterranean diet heaven. All they need is olive oil, but olive trees take time to grow. Olive trees would probably thrive in the hot climate, so they, too, could be included in the project in the long term.

    According to the TFA they also produced barley (Greek salad with barley rusks—yum!) and salad rocket (for those who prefer their salad green instead of Greek).

  9. Bounties, not bribes on Bribe Devs To Improve Open Source Software · · Score: 1

    In the Amiga community there is the similar notion of bounties, where people collect money, to be given to whoever implements some required functionality, usually a port of something useful.

    I'm not sure one would want someone to think that one is bounty hunter, but at least it's better than giving the impression that they accept bribes.

  10. Re:Serious question. on Team of Dentists Create "The Six-Second Toothbrush" · · Score: 1

    Not really. Brushing works mainly by mechanical action. The "chemicals" are mostly there for flavor.

    In this sense, 6 seconds seems just about right. My dentist recommends 7-10 passes with the toothbrush per tooth (or group of teeth, given that you can brush more than one tooth at the same time). Grinding your teeth for six seconds would make at least this number of passes.

    If you ask your dentist how to brush your teeth properly, you'll learn that proper brushing also involves massaging your gums, which is something that I doubt this new-fangled contraption does. And good luck replacing flossing. If there's food stuck between your teeth, not only is the new toothbrush not going to remove it, but its functionality is going to be impaired, as well.

  11. Re:Answer: 42 Question: ? on Quantum Computers Check Each Other's Work · · Score: 1

    Exactly. A quantum computer's eventual destiny is to design a computer whose merest operational parameters it is not worthy to calculate.

  12. Re:Patch is already dead on As AOL Prepares To Downsize Patch, CEO Fires Employee During Meeting · · Score: 1

    Speaking of Monty Python, the article reminded me of this particular sketch.

  13. Already done! on Should the Next 'Doctor Who' Be a Woman? · · Score: 1

    Starring Barbara Benedetti as the Doctor. Quite good she was, too!

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xnc46g_doctor-who-the-wrath-of-eukor_shortfilms

  14. Re:Removed "Disable Javascript" check box on Firefox 23 Arrives With New Logo, Mixed Content Blocker, and Network Monitor · · Score: 1

    I also discovered this today. Fortunately, there is already an add-on to restore the old functionality.

    As far as I can tell, the only major browser that allows you to hide the tab bar, when only one tab is shown, is SeaMonkey. The latest versions of Chrome, Opera, Firefox, and IE force you to show the tab bar at all times.

  15. Re:Good on Google Removing Ad-Blockers From Play · · Score: 5, Informative

    Google's point here is to obviously make them as invisible as possible to minimize users that block ads. Most people won't go around other android stores or internet sites searching for software, they're fairly happy with google play.

    Quite right! Until today, I didn't know that there were ad blockers for Android. With today's action, not only has Google made me aware that there are, but, thanks to TFA, I know where to find them: F-Droid. Excellent!!

  16. Re:Yeah? on CAPTCHA Using Ad-Based Verification · · Score: 1

    This particular Ad-CAPTCHA had better accept "sphere" as a valid answer. Not being a USian, I 've never heard of this brand.

  17. Re:http://androvm.org on WindowsAndroid Lets You Run Android 4.0 Natively On Your PC · · Score: 1

    AndroVM runs on any platform supported by VirtualBox. This means that it runs on Linux, Windows (even XP, which WindowsAdroid does not support), Mac OS X and Solaris.

  18. Re:Preupgrade on Fedora 18 Installer: Counterintuitive and Confusing? · · Score: 1

    Indeed. Except that you have to read the release notes to find out about this program. Booting from the CD and trying to upgrade, does not work anymore. Fedup worked quite well, surprisingly, though it felt slower than updating from the network installation CD, as fedup downloaded several gigabytes of updates, before actually updating anything, while the network installation CD used to download the updates concurrently with the upgrade. One interesting detail is that fedup wasn't working for a few hours after Fedora 18 was officially released!

  19. Re:Ariel? on In UK, Apple Must Run Ad Apologizing to Samsung · · Score: 2

    It is a very small font. At 14pt, it looks like this: ______________

  20. Re:So, let the opining begin... on The Day Leo Traynor Confronted His Troll · · Score: 1

    Prison isn't there to make people better or to rehabilitate them. Its purpose is to punish people.

    Perhaps it is, in your part of the world, but there's a reason why, even there, prisons are called "correctional facilities"; punishment is only part of the reason people are sent to prison.

  21. Re:Big thanks to the developers on FFmpeg 1.0 MultiMedia Library Released · · Score: 3, Informative

    Libav is a fork of ffmpeg, even if its developers, who are former ffmpeg develeopers, claim otherwise.

    Libav proponents argue that theirs is the better fork.

    Others say the opposite.

    Trying to decide which fork to use, I read these two accounts and concluded that both(!) were saying "stick with ffmpeg". If you are interested in the issue, read these two references and decide for yourself.

  22. Read a book on Why It's Bad That Smartphones Have Banished Boredom · · Score: 1

    When you're feeling bored, don't grab your smartphone, go read a book. You can even upload books on your smartph... no, never mind.

  23. Gnome 3 is great! on GNOME 3.6 Released · · Score: 1

    I installed Cinnamon the other day, and was almost tempted to switch to it from KDE, so I fail to see what's all this fuss about Gnome 3. Isn't that what Cinnamon uses under the hood?

    (What do you mean I'm supposed to use Gnome 3 without Cinnamon?!?!?)

  24. Re:Unsafe Search, NOW! on .xxx Registrar To Launch Pr0n Search Engine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Someone has already done that. I don't remember the URL, but what they did was submit your query to Google twice, once with safe search on, and once with safe search off, and then present you with the differences.

  25. A couple of issues on Unbreakable Crypto: Store a 30-character Password In Your Subconscious Mind · · Score: 1

    Does this method scale to learning more than one password, or does one have to use the same password everywhere? What about changing one's password?

    Regarding coercion, it is often more effective to threaten someone's family than to threaten that someone. This method does not seem to offer protection against this kind of coercion.