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User: Loosifur

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  1. Re:Firefox - Too little, too late on Firefox 9 Released, JavaScript Performance Greatly Improved · · Score: 1

    Most people *who*. Sorry; copy editor.

    I disagree. I think where you're going with this is that most people just sort of install what's easiest or whatever has the ad campaign that speaks loudest to them, but in my admittedly anecdotal, personal experience I have found that even "casual" users are pretty savvy when it comes to web browsers. In my experience, people tend to gravitate towards browsers that emphasize aspects of web use that are most relevant to them, and not always functional aspects.

    I know several highly non-technical users who love Firefox because it feels like the least commercial browser. I know many people who use IE *because* of the anti-Microsoft sentiment, as a sort of statement of rebellion. On the other hand, I know a lot of web devs who grudgingly use IE because they have to develop to it, and since it plays fast and loose with standards they have to use it to test.

    I personally use Chrome because I don't really bother with Facebook, don't really use extensions for anything, and like the launch speed. Same reason I use IE fairly often. I don't know if it loads pages faster than Firefox (I think it does, but that might be what they call "butt-dyno"), but I know it launches faster. Since I almost never leave a browser open when I'm not using it, that's a major selling point to me. Firefox is neat, and I have it installed, but the lengthy startup time is a killer. And the app tabs (which I found useful, but clunky) don't outweigh the startup speed.

  2. Re:Keep moaning and looking for brains SCO on SCO Zombie Creaks Into Motion Again · · Score: 1

    Are you talking about the smartphone that I have to pull the battery out of every day or so because it hung while getting a text message and email at the same time? And the Windows PC that I'm currently playing Battlefield 3 on, that I haven't had to restart in a week? 'Cause if that's the comparison, you just sold me against Linux. Which is weird, because I dual boot.

  3. Anecdotal evidence on Hardware Running Android Fails More Than iPhone, BlackBerry Hardware · · Score: 1

    I owned my Droid for a year before the digitizer gave up the ghost. Actually, it's most likely the ribbon that connects the digitizer to the main board, but I haven't had the time or tools handy to get in and fix it. Supposedly it's a very common flaw. Mind you, my wife and I have the same model and both of our volume buttons no longer respond, and the mini USB port on both phones is very particular about cable placement. As far as I can tell, the metal has deformed to the point that it no longer holds the plug in contact with the...contacts. This is after pretty careful use of both phones, and no physical damage.

    On the other hand, I've heard good things about HTC, and used one as a backup successfully for a while. Felt much more solid than the Motorolas. No one I know has ever had a problem with an iPhone, and I never had a problem with my Blackberry Curve.

  4. Re:No it doesn't. on Siri Gives Apple Two Year Advantage Over Android · · Score: 2

    Now, wait a minute. I think Lumpy makes an excellent point. Voice control is most useful in situations where it's dangerous or impractical to look at the phone, e.g. while driving. What benefit do I get from being able to "ask" a phone for information if I have to look at the screen to interpret the response?

  5. Sounds like you've got bigger problems on Ask Slashdot: How To Securely Share Passwords? · · Score: 1

    Frankly, if you can't trust your siblings to not impersonate you while you're alive, what makes you think you'll be able to rely on them when you're dead? The tasks you're describing following your farm purchase are typically handled by whoever you name as your executor. Failing that, it's your spouse, your closest relative, or, as a last resort, a disinterested third party referred to as an "administrator of the estate". That person then has the legal authority to demand access to your accounts. It takes time, and doubtless numerous faxes, but that's how it goes.

    All you need to name someone an executor is a piece of paper stating same and witnessed by a notary. In some cases, if your spouse is your executor, you can give them power of attorney (limited to a given account) by just faxing a signed piece of paper, no witness necessary. It depends on the company, but I know that Bank of America only requires a signed statement, not a notarized document.

    Your other option is to pick someone that you trust, and tell them your passwords (or reset information). If you don't trust anyone to the extent that you'd give them that information, why are you worried about leaving them with bills and so forth? F 'em.

  6. Re:Woooooooooow on Microsoft Patenting Celebrity-Shaped Bing'ing · · Score: 2

    ...and was brought back on CBS last year. Damn, man, couldn't get cable under that rock, huh?

  7. A fifth of all surveys are worded poorly on A Fifth of Telecommuters Work Less Than An Hour Per Day · · Score: 2

    Obviously this depends on what you do for a living, but working less than an hour a day doesn't mean that you're not productive, or, more to the point, that you're not delivering a product to your employer that's worth what you're paid. I telecommute, and depending on what deadlines are approaching, or how much work across the entire project there is to be done, I might work anywhere from 1 to 10 hours in a day. I'm salaried; I'm paid to put forth a certain quantity of deliverables, and to a lesser extent, simply to be available. If I worked in customer service, for example, I could understand being worried about putting in X number of hours, but I've always felt that most of the point of telecommuting was the ability to make your own schedule, more or less.

  8. Re:Moody children on Don't Study the Video Game, Study the Gamer · · Score: 1

    "No reasonable person would argue that "kid can't get a gun" implies "kid can't hurt or kill anyone". There's a big difference between that (flawed) argument and the argument that "kid can't get a gun" means "kid more likely to be caught before he hurts or kills someone" and "kid able to kill or hurt fewer people than if he had a gun"."

    While I agree with you as far as that goes, you still have to make a distinction between a kid that's "troubled", and a kid that's homicidal on the level of mass murder. The latter is going to be dangerous in any environment, and will be motivated enough to find a way to kill people, guns or no. Obviously some societies get around that by making possession of any firearm illegal, or highly regulated, but that's a whole other can of worms, I think.

  9. Re:Recall... on Anonymous Kills Websites, Cartels Kill Bloggers · · Score: 1

    My guess? Getting shot. That's a fairly direct kinetic repercussion.

  10. Dear Mexico on Anonymous Kills Websites, Cartels Kill Bloggers · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sorry that my country is strangely concerned about the idea of people smoking weed. All I can say is that, if marijuana was grown in Scotland, made in small batches, and aged for several years prior to sale, maybe things would change. Unfortunately, marijuana is associated with brown people in a way that is unacceptable to the WASPS in Congress. Also, making strange things illegal and arresting people for having, using, or asking for them is a job creator, and things are a little tight over here right now.

    Sorry about the disembowelings, beheadings, and assassinations. Oh, and all the guns we keep selling your bloodthirsty cartel hitmen. Our bad.

    Love,
    America

    PS. Thanks for keeping Cancun safe. It'd be really tough for us to have spring breaks and honeymoons if we all had to go to the Jersey Shore.

  11. Re:Moody children on Don't Study the Video Game, Study the Gamer · · Score: 2

    I know this may come as a surprise given the stereotype, but Americans don't actually hand AK-47s to children just before they get on the schoolbus.

    Also, shotguns are guns too, you know. The first time I met my friend's Welsh husband, he made a remark about Americans and handguns. Then, not two minutes later, mentioned something about his grandmother shooting rabbits in her front yard with a shotgun. She did not live in the country. He was not making a joke. I don't know where you're from, but if I walked outside with a BB gun right now and started popping off at squirrels, police would be called, and I would be hauled off for a serious talking-to.

    My father was a deputy sheriff and a gun nut, and from the South, and so I grew up surrounded by guns. Loaded guns, in fact, because an unloaded gun isn't much use if someone's breaking into your house. I first shot a gun when I was 12, but knew about guns from about six. The first thing I learned about guns was that they are incredibly dangerous, and are not toys. Practically from the time I could walk I was taught to respect guns, to never point a gun at someone (even a toy gun) unless I was going to shoot them, to assume all guns are loaded, and knew where every gun in the house was, hidden or not. I also listened to death metal, industrial, was goth, and watched horror movies all the time. I did drugs, was dumped by girlfriends, and had problems with authority. To date, I have never shot anyone.

    Parenting makes the difference. Taking guns out of the equation just means that Junior Sociopath will start googling "fertilizer explosive".

  12. Re:Wow. on RIM Helping UK Police Track Down Rioters · · Score: 1

    Hey, I don't know. If you give somebody a free beagle maybe they'll be so distracted with puppy-cuddlin' they'll stop rioting. Shoot, I might go throw a can at a cop if they'd give me a pug or something for it.

  13. Java? on Where Is Firefox OS? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I remember back in the day, when I actually wanted to major in CS, Java came out. Yes, that long ago. And the big thing about Java was that you would be able to write code that was platform-independent, and just rely on a Java interpreter that would be released on any necessary platforms. Which is why everything is written in Java now...

    I'm just saying, using a browser as a conveyance for some sort of universal HTML-based software market just seems like a new version of an old idea that didn't pan out in the first place.

    Also, not to nitpick (well, yes to nitpick), but I think that part that says "suddenly every piece of software works..." needs a bit of filling out. Especially at the "suddenly" part.

    Also also, Mozilla would be better off not trying to be the Gobot to Google's Transformer, if you see what I mean. That niche is already being filled by Google. Mozilla should focus on making a niche for Firefox, not making it an also-ran to Chrome OS. Full disclosure, I'm not a fan of Firefox since Chrome came out, and since I put Opera on my Droid. But, there must be some area where Firefox excels, because it has a solid base of users. They should exploit and enhance that area.

  14. Re:I sort of agree on Stallman: eBooks Are Attacking Our Freedoms · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I'd call compensation via tax revenues a reasonable solution to bad actors in the DRM field.

    Here are my bona fides: I'm a writer, and I'm seriously considering self-publishing, at least for digital formats, and I like things like food and my house, so I'm definitely sympathetic to any idea where the end result is my cashing a check. Also, my cousin is a comic artist who married a Canadian (we still talk to her, though) and moved to BC, partly because that's where her husband is from, but also partly to get a piece of that good ol' Canadian subsidy money.

    Let's say you do something like a Canadian-style subsidy. It's a little tough to find the standards, but here's a copy I found via Google: http://www.ahcf.ca/images/SubsidyGuidelines.pdf

    The standards are in Appendix A. Anyway, in a Canadian model, here are the problems I see. You have to meet four out of a list of something like eight qualifications in order to be considered an artist, and it looks like it's totally possible to meet your four without ever actually selling a piece of art (or a story, or what have you). Well, you might say, that's why you need a subsidy. Yes, but sometimes people don't pay for things because they're really, really bad. There's no qualification that the subsidy only goes to good art, or art that people want to see/read/hear/whatever. Is that important, or even ethical? You bet your ass it is, if it's my tax money going to pay for it.

    Incidentally, those standards are set by the Canadian government. The government. That should turn half of /. against the idea right there.

    Interestingly enough, although it seems possible to get a subsidy without producing art that anyone else wants, it looks like there's no way to get a subsidy without being a member of a professional organization or a student at a university. So, if your "free as in speech" panties aren't bunched by the government involvement aspect, there's the fact that you'd almost certainly have to be a member of an organization which is going to set some sort of requirements on your particular bit of art, be it peer approval, professorial approval, membership fees, or tuition. Ultimately, if you take the dole, you're compromised in some way.

    Also interestingly, if you Google "Canadian art subsidy", most of the hits are complaints about it, including several saying that the net result is crappier Canadian art.

    As far as I'm concerned, my cousin's got a contract with Image, and doesn't need the cash, and I don't want to be on art welfare, unable to sell anything in a flooded market because all of a sudden being a professional writer doesn't actually require talent anymore. If you're fine with socialism, which a surprising number of slashdotters appear to be, then good on you. I'm sure the idea of state-subsidized art (which we already have in the US in the form of various grants and so forth) is appealing to you. I'm not, because I don't want to pay for crap art, or art I don't like, or art I find insulting, and I also don't want the government to decide who is and isn't an artist. Sure, getting a subsidy doesn't make you an artist any more than not getting one makes you not an artist, but it does give an unfair advantage.

    And, frankly, if someone likes my stuff enough to steal it, I'm flattered.

  15. Re:Limited number of simultaneous connections? on Tennessee Makes it Illegal To Share Your Netflix Password · · Score: 1

    I'm a Netflix customer. At my house, I've got two devices which stream Netflix out of a possible total of seven at any given time, and on a pretty regular basis I'll be downstairs watching Doctor Who while my wife is upstairs watching something dumb (love you honey!). IANAITP, but I assume that what's happening is Netflix is seeing our login coming from our cable modem's IP and just not worrying about the number of simultaneous streams. I suppose that you might be able to stream two different movies from Netflix in two separate browser windows on the same login. It's never come up, but I'd be interested to see if we could stream from different IPs at the same time...but I digress.

    Tabling as resolved the proposition that the law is poorly worded, probably inspired by bad intentions, and signed off by a governor who should be impeached for incompetence (Not familiar with the contents? That's sort of your job, dickhead...), isn't this going about the problem from the wrong end? I mean, Netflix could easily solve this by disallowing multiple logins, unless their business model counts on the fact that a single person isn't going to stream video 24/7, whereas a single shared account theoretically could. So, what's really going on here?

  16. Re:Welcome to Slasshole-dot on Senior Citizens Lining Up to Tackle Fukushima · · Score: 1

    You must be new here...

  17. So wait, is this actually news? on Activision Reveals Call of Duty Subscription Plans · · Score: 1

    From TFA, it seems that the only thing that has been decided is that Activision intends to charge monthly for some feature or set of features which does not include multiplayer or whatever Elite is. If the WSJ article is "factually inaccurate", then the only thing the author has to go on is the quote from Activision, which amounts to "we're not going to charge for MP or Elite, but we're going to charge for something."

    If they were to charge monthly for something like enhanced Facebook connectivity, or some other social media gewgaw, I don't see anyone paying $5 a month, although I might be underestimating the fanaticism of CoD players. If they charge for access to particular maps, they run the risk of alienating a significant portion of the player base, or of charging for maps that turn out to be less popular due to design, or just due to a lack of players.

    I just don't see how this comes out as a net win for Activision.

  18. Re:stop -- this sounds like investment? on DARPA Building Futuristic Space Exploration Group · · Score: 1

    "BS. Just like most idealogical movements, the way to judge it is by the way its members currently conduct themselves, not the core principles its founders started with."

    Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the Democratic Party.

    Sorry, low-hanging fruit and all.

    But seriously, I wouldn't dignify what you posted by even referring to it as a comment. Never mind the pompous cynicism of considering everyone you disagree with some sort of ignorant, monolithic mass of bad intent, you're even so arrogant as to believe (or purport to believe) that you know enough about a political movement and a religion to judge both in their entirety against what you refer to as "core principles".

    I'd love for you to state categorically what the founding core principles of both Christianity and the Tea Party movement are.

    Don't worry, I'll wait.

  19. Pics, or it didn't happen. on Osama Bin Laden Reported Dead, Body In US Hands · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok, here's the problem. Let's say that there actually was a successful raid which led to the killing of bin Laden.

    First, the body was buried at sea, according to the US military, which means there's no proof he's actually dead. In other words, he's going to turn into the Elvis of Islamic terrorism. Either there is a conspiracy, and he's not dead, or conspiracy theorists will claim that he's still alive somewhere. We live in a world where (some) people believe that the President of the United States forged his own birth certificate with the collusion of the state of Hawaii; you think a 19-year-old terrorist recruit in Whatthefuckistan is gonna just take the word of the United States government that the leader of Al Qaeda was buried at sea?

    Second, I guarantee that within two days a new bin Laden tape will be released. The guy had less value as a strategist than he did as a symbol, and I'll bet that there are pre-recorded tapes yet unreleased, and that there will be audio tapes with a "voice purported to be Osama bin Laden". Probably talking up Ayman al-Zawahiri as the operational leader of AQ.

    Third, while there is potent symbolism for the West in killing bin Laden, keep in mind that he headed an organization which advocated suicide bombing as a tactic. Bin Laden's death is going to make him a martyr in the world of radical Islamic terror. While there may not be a single figure that can replace him right now, there are plenty of other affiliated groups, with plenty of other members, and a successful attack can be planned and carried out by an uncharismatic moron just as easily. For that matter, an unsuccessful attack can have a significant impact, too. Ask Richard Reed.

    Fourth, to the West, this looks like the USA is still the baddest motherfucker around, and we always get our man. To people who live in Pakistan, the Middle East, and other, non-Western places, this looks like the only superpower in the world spent ten years and billions of dollars to kill one guy who pissed it off, in a campaign culminating in the use of clandestine intelligence and spec ops, in someone else's country. How's that for international diplomacy?

    I'm not saying I'm sad the guy's dead, because I'm not. I think it's great. I just wish he'd gotten hit by a truck, or ate some bad dates or something. I have a strong feeling that this is not going to make our lives any easier.

  20. Don't compartmentalize socialization on The Importance of Lunch · · Score: 1

    I think the general idea that teams of people who get along work better is obviously sound, but it's not caused by sitting together on a bench with a box of Cheez-its. People who like each other's company are more likely to want to eat together, IF that's something they'd normally do anyway.

    For example, I am on the border of introversion and extroversion, according to most personality inventories. I enjoy being with people, but I also need time alone. I have never, ever, ever enjoyed eating with other people. Don't know why, it's just a weird thing of mine. I find it awkward and tense, unless I'm with very close friends or family. Social drinking, on the other hand, is something I enjoy a great deal, especially with strangers or acquaintances, since I can get to know people in a relaxed environment.

    In work environments, I talk to all of my coworkers constantly. Not to the point of distraction or annoyance, and not always about non-work topics, but if there's down time I'm not going to wait until lunch to make small talk. In my experience, it's always been a plus to develop strong social ties with coworkers, even if it never leaves the workplace, and those ties form most easily when they're allowed to do so organically, not through some sort of enforced "social hour". As a matter of fact, the thing I enjoy most about a lunch break is the time spent alone, reading news and taking walks. I would be stressed out if I was forced to spend that time sitting around a table watching coworkers eat awkwardly.

  21. Ok, hippies, enough is enough on EFF Advocates Leaving Wireless Routers Open · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just RTFA to make sure I'm getting this correct, because I normally am fully in support of "damn the man" stuff like this, but this is just ludicrous. There has never been a time in my life where I have needed to "urgently" check my email and been unable to, nor has there ever been a time where the only thing standing between me dying of thirst and reaching a nearby oasis has been my ability to access Google Maps on a laptop. In fact, I would like to go so far as to say that if you are the kind of person who ever "urgently" needs to check your email, consider: a.) purchasing a cellphone and distributing that number to whoever might need to get in touch with you, b.) purchasing a smartphone so you can check your email without a WiFi connection, and/or c.) checking your email before you leave for a four-week safari. Who is this demographic that can afford a laptop and conducts vital business via the Interwebs, but can't afford a data plan?

    I know that people around here get fussy about car analogies, so...

    This is like asking me to buy a horse, and leave the horse saddled in my front yard just in case anyone needs to use it to go somewhere. And then just trusting that no one is going to hop on the horse, rob a stagecoach, and then drop the horse back in my yard for the posse to find.

    At a certain point, personal responsibility has to enter into all of this. Of course someone shouldn't be liable for nasty things accomplished using a WiFi connection if they made an honest effort to secure it, or just didn't know that that was something one ought to do. But if they intentionally leave it open for anyone to use, they should accept some of the blame when someone uses it to do something naughty.

    And furthermore, it's WiFi, not clean drinking water. Since when is leveling your paladin a vital civil liberty? What's next, should I set up an HD projection system on the side of my house so that people outside aren't suppressed by the tyranny of Netflix requiring a subscription? Because Ironman 2 is one of those bits of information that "wants to be free"?

  22. Re:*sigh* on Why People Should Stop Being Duped By the 3D Scam · · Score: 1

    Actually, I think you have that mixed up. I believe he's saying that stupid slashdot writers are hostile to stuff.

    Frankly, and not without reservations, I tend to agree.

  23. Precisely on Microsoft Counts Down To XP Death · · Score: 3, Funny

    That's why I write my own OS, drivers and software. I also dug my own well in my backyard, bought a windmill-powered generator, built my own car, bake my own bread and only read stories that I wrote myself. Of course, with the latter, I usually have to wait about five years to forget the plot, but at least I know I'll like it.

    Actually, I do bake my own bread, weather permitting.

  24. Re:High fructose corn syrup is slow acting poison. on Is Sugar Toxic? · · Score: 1

    Of course, this has been appropriately modded as flamebait, so this is a little pointless. However, as a poli sci guy, I have to take issue with your use of the word "peasant". Do you know what that means? Or are you using it to make a point of some kind? Because it doesn't mean what you seem to think it means.

    Also, your argument fails to account for the fact that the rate of population increase amongst those of lower incomes is higher than that of the higher income demographics. And what do corporations have to do with what you said, please? You know, you can actually submit some pretty lengthy posts here, so if you wanted to actually support that argument with logic, you've got room...

  25. Re:Oh, the horror... on Amazon To Offer Ad-Supported Kindle · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up.

    I sincerely hope that all of the people who recoil in horror at the idea of ad-bearing products don't own clothes, shoes, cars, or any other products that bear their manufacturer's logo prominently.