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User: OneoFamillion

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  1. It would promptly overheat on Ask Slashdot: How Would a Self-Aware AI Behave? (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    It would know more than anyone or anything, yet still be locked in a perpetual loop of self-doubt.

  2. Did they also lament... on 'An Apology for the Internet -- from the People Who Built It' (nymag.com) · · Score: 1

    the recent adoption of DRM by W3C? Or the new standards by industry giants for mandatory biometric authentication? Or the increasing censorship and restriction on free speech on the web?

  3. They paid the listing price...

  4. Well from a guys point of view, I would like to have sexual interactions with most of the non-obese 15-40 yo females that I encounter on the streets. That's just how my male brain is wired.

    I'm stronger than them, so in a natural sense, there's very little stopping me. True, our society has rules, but civilization and its rules are pretty new constructs. What IS stopping me from acting is, first and foremost, human empathy, something which we do not all have in equal measure. And fear of consequences, suuure, but that requires that one is capable of thinking ahead.

    We all have this biological urge, because there is an innate need for the human species to survive, and for that we need a man to impregnate a woman. Human society has added layers of complexity upon that, but that's what it boils down to. And like all people who've had good sex know, those layers can vanish in an instant.

    Because of that, man-woman interaction in society is sort of a grey area. Courtship can manifest itself in millions of ways, and there's all sort of tensions going on. Men are clumsier in the field of feelings, and often misinterpret female signals, if indeed capable of interpreting them at all. Also, as any old gigolo knows, the female mind is often quite malleable when it comes to what it wants.

    Hell, maybe the muslims got it right, women and men should be separated. The "empowered" women in modern societies seem to expect that they're only approached by males that they approve of. Sorry sisters, that's not how it works! You can stare at your cellphone all you want, but the real world is made out of shit and meat, and you'll still have to sift through a lot of that to find that precious gold nugget of yours.

  5. Re:Bite it, you scum on How Google's Pixel 2 'Now Playing' Song Identification Works (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 1

    Yep, but if anyone decides to upload those bootlegs to Youtube (or, I suspect, anywhere on the accessible web), it's only a matter of time before Google will analyze and start recognizing it. Not to mention that they might use some kind of advanced heuristics to recognize songs even if they are not 1:1 with their analyzed samples. In fact they already must be, since live soundscapes are always full of secondary noise.

  6. Re:Made in Japan aka Jap Crap on Japanese Metal Manufacturer Faked Specifications To Hundreds of Companies (jalopnik.com) · · Score: 1

    Well, it of course all boils down to economics. Rising economies produce mass-market goods cheaply, and get better at making stuff. When their perceived production quality comes closer to that of established quality manufacturers, these quality manufacturers will find themselves in a price war, something that they cannot sustain with their recently acquired standards of living. Rinse and repeat.

  7. The moment someone receives a text that you're about to take your life, all sorts of measures will (probably) be taken. They will try to contact you to talk out of it, the authorities might start locating your phone, that sort of stuff. Suddenly you're in a hurry, and most suicide methods are not 100% effective either. I guess he could have used some kind of delayed SMS app or something, but I think the guy just wanted to carry out his suicide plan in peace.

  8. Re:Are they even analogous? on How Does Microsoft Avoid Being the Next IBM? (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1
    Although this is Slashdot, I have to respectfully disagree with you. Yes, Microsoft has had bad products, especially when they have tried to keep their cash flow going by forcing new features into products that do not need new features, such as MS Office and certain version of Windows. And they have faltered many a time, often when trying to conquer new markets (Zune, anyone?) Their products have sometimes even been sub-par, especially in segments where they have used strongarming instead of letting products compete on their own merits.

    But not all of Microsoft has been crap. The Windows NT line was decent for its time, and Windows XP gradually evolved into a good product. Windows 7 was a good operating system. Microsoft's hardware has usually been good enough for the price. Even Microsoft branded phones weren't all that bad IMHO, they just failed to catch on. The Xbox ecosystem is going strong, and even their server products have been a viable alternative for those who just wanted to click away and get things done.

    Now I'm not saying that Microsoft should be such a strong standard as it is today, especially with their recent schizophrenia regarding licensing models and platform-specific design choices, as well as lack of user control. Yes, they could have been much more open and "fair" during all these years if they'd wanted to, instead of only resorting to it after exhausting all other options. And I'm also worried about their recently acquired interests in telemetry, big data, and the Linux ecosystem.

    So, umm... Clearly they're trying a bit of this and a bit of that. I don't know if Microsoft will be relevant in the future, or "avoid being the next IBM", whatever that means. If they go, they go. I just hope that they don't extinquish any other ecosystems on their way out. And while I don't hold a soft spot for Microsoft in my heart, even Microsoft counts as an alternative, and more choice is always good, even if Microsoft's own attitude hasn't traditionally exactly reflected this philosophy.

  9. Re:and for non-western men? Big problems in Japan! on Sperm Counts Among Western Men Have Halved In Last 40 Years, Says Study (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    I get what you're saying, but it honestly isn't very unusual for women to melt out of their pants if a foreigner compliments them in their own language, no matter where you are. Women are always somewhat interested in bringing exotic genes into the local gene pool, it's a basic evolutionary tactic to avoid inbreeding.

  10. Re:Missing a key statistic: conception rate on Sperm Counts Among Western Men Have Halved In Last 40 Years, Says Study (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    I recently found a series of Yale lectures on population growth on Youtube, they are a bit repetitive at times but I still highly recommend them to anyone interested in such matters (and frankly, we all should be.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

  11. Re:I didn't know on YouTube Claims 1.5 Billion Monthly Users (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    C'mon, there's also videos of dudes getting kicked in the balls, and girls endlessly pondering what to wear.

  12. Have you ever met anyone... on Domestic Appliances Guzzle Far More Energy Than Advertised, Says EU Survey (theguardian.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...who really uses the "green" program on washing machines or dishwashers? If the artifact mostly soaks in lukewarm water for 4 hours and comes out still dirty and with remains of detergent, it has to be washed again. No energy was saved. One can always set goals, but even bureaucrats cannot bend the rules of physics just by creating arbitrary standards.

  13. Then again, maybe it's because people don't have an choice. I was handed a hybrid HP laptop with Win10 and locked-down Insyde UEFI firmware. Haven't been able to install Linux on it yet, so I'm essentially using it as an offline PDF reader for now...

  14. Re:More idiotic click-bait on Dormant Diseases Frozen In the Ice Are Waking Up (bbc.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Confusing moose and llamas is valuable training for more demanding animals, such as cats.

  15. Re:Really? on Is Social Media Making Us Hate Each Other? (bostonglobe.com) · · Score: 1

    Eventually people get annoying. Except for me.

    The only reason you don't get annoying is because you already are ;-)

  16. A slightly odd one on Ask Slashdot: What Was Your First Home Computer? · · Score: 2

    A Salora Manager, a clone of a VTech Laser 2001. Made in Hong Kong, MOS 6502, a maximum of 32+32 kilobytes of RAM. Still have it, but afraid to start it up 'cause those huge power bricks might let out their magic steam.

  17. The thing that young innovators tend to ignore is that things are usually the way they are because of a reason, even if the reason is not readily apparent. Now that doesn't mean that there's never room for improvement, and sometimes it even happens that the original reason is no longer there, but usually things are a result of a long evolution where thousands of hours have been spent on every detail, and it is unlikely that a complete overhaul will result in a better user experience.

  18. Paneuropa, here we come on 'No Turning Back' on Brexit as Article 50 Triggered (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Well, it's true that the original Paneuropa by Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi didn't include Britain... Then again, it DID include half of Africa, as well as wacky ideas about racial mixing to make Europeans look like the Egyptians of old, so I guess we're right on track on that one.

  19. Re:governments on London Terrorist Used WhatsApp, UK Calls For Backdoors (yahoo.com) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Thank you for that very sincere and interesting post. Now there is just one thing I'd like to ask you that I didn't quite get: You mention "social support", what kind of social support do you mean? What kind of social support do you think would enable high immigration and still enable integration? Many Western societies have tried throwing money at the problem, and unfortunately that hasn't worked very well.

  20. So at first the mice chillax, aka get the "hey, maybe this isn't so serious after all" feeling, but their reduced feelings of unease allow them to be more relaxed and healthier = more productive in the long run?

  21. Re:The designers have taken over on Microsoft Teases Windows 10's Upcoming 'Project Neon' Design Language (windowscentral.com) · · Score: 1

    Their vision is "to make beautiful, engaging experiences possible on the Windows platform." Um, I don't want engaging experiences, I want my OS to do what I ask it to, in a consistent and effective manner? It really seems that we have come to a point, where decades of research on UIs is being effectively tossed away, in favor of cheap tricks and simple eye candy.

  22. Re:You don't want to enable TERRORISTS, do you? on Iris Scans and Fingerprints Could Be Your Ticket On British Rail (silicon.co.uk) · · Score: 0, Troll

    Yep, we have allowed our societies to go bad (multiculturalism, I'm looking at you), and now, instead of setting boundaries for acceptable behavior, we are taking the easy route and succumbing to a control society.

  23. Re:The Joe Rogan Experience on Slashdot Asks: Your Favorite Podcasts? And Why? · · Score: 1

    Joe Rogan for me as well, because the man usually lets his guests talk, there's a healthy male attitude with a reasonable amount of common sense about it all, and he also covers some topics that other people might not touch with a ten foot pole.

  24. alternative headline is "Uber Hires a Nasa Veteran With Severe Dementia?" We've had this flying car scenario before, it's a repeating theme, much like virtual reality. Then again, I'm not the one speaking out against some Boom-Leelo-Dallas-Multipass action, so go right ahead.

  25. Damn that Jean-Luc, a man in his position, always playing around in the holodeck...