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User: Kabuthunk

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Comments · 297

  1. Re:Stupid on Rackspace Shuts Down Quran-Burning Church's Sites · · Score: 1

    Meh, personally I don't think the church will burn anything, probably never would have with or without the criticism from like... everywhere. I think they're more leaning towards the "any publicity is good publicity", and on the last day or so before the burning will be all like "oh, we've see the error in our ways" or "I saw a vision and it told me to be tolerant of everything"... but with more verbal jabs at islam.

    I'd relate a church burning a Quran to the release of Duke Nukem... but since that's actually theoretically going to happen now, I'll have to go to the standby of "when pigs fly".

  2. Re:I can see some advantages to this on Some LA Coffee Shops Are Taking Wi-Fi Off the Menu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If my boss tried to ask me why I didn't do the work he emailed to me while I was on lunch, I'd reply "Because I was on fucking lunch!"

  3. Enough with the Apple stories for a bit on How To Get Rejected From the App Store · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Could we PLEASE try to go even a single day without some apple-based story? My god, there's more to the world of science and technology than a single company!

    Canada attempting to pass a bill to put filesharing along the same lines as in the USA?
    Info on the oil leak?
    Hewlett-Packard cutting 9000 jobs?

    To hell with all of that, someone somewhere posted something about Apple!

  4. Re:Easy solution on Doctor Slams Hospital's "Please" Policy · · Score: 1

    Personally, I'd rather the doctor concentrate more on KEEPING ME ALIVE than being delayed because he didn't say 'pretty please, with sugar on top' in order to get some results needed to make me not die.

    I mean, there's attempting to make them more coerteous, and then there's "oh, let the patient die... the doctor didn't say please".

  5. Re:Yea. its bad exercise to sit in front of a scre on Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but we're adults, so the natural inclination of corporations is to use us like the expendable batteries that we are. Force every hint of productivity out of us, then discard us when we're broken and no longer of use.

  6. Re:Some camps are more intense on Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp · · Score: 1

    That's because north america puts such a brutally large importance on competitive sports that many kids are sadly taught that if they don't become a professional athlete, they've failed their parents. After all, every parent wants to retire once their kid scores that 4-million-a-year contract. The system is horribly broken.

    Personally, I say athletes should have their salaries capped (after bonuses or any other possible way to get the money) at 150k a year. And that's for the highest-end athletes.

    Imagine how much better the country would be to have those millions upon millions of dollars spent ELSEWHERE, instead of some baseball or football player? Higher pay could be going to everyone (although the higher-ups at companies wouldn't allow that), it could be funneled into infrastructure, or god forbid put towards research and development!

  7. Re:So what's the alternative? on Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp · · Score: 1

    Hey, I'm 30... perhaps if some adults started taking the initiative, it wouldn't be uncommon. See you next camp opening! :P

  8. Re:Would they complain .. on Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp · · Score: 1

    This is, of course, despite the fact that if it was a "reading" camp or "robotics" camp where you sit at a desk and work on circuits/what have you all day, this camp would have been declared the greatest thing since sliced bread? Yeah, thought so.

    Some games actually DO require a lot of thinking and problem solving. Of course, the people complaining about the camp won't see that... they'll see "video games = bad! It's for kids and not for growing children who should be active!!!!"

  9. Re:Why always sports? on Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp · · Score: 1

    So true. North America puts WAY too much emphasis on "being good at sports". News flash: It's not every kid's dream to become a professional sports athlete! Some of us... AC above me and myself... dislike sports. Hell, I DESPISE playing sports. Should I be seen as a pariah, shut out from the rest of society? Or maybe, just maybe, I see sports as a waste of time, and would rather spend time with my friends doing something OTHER than throwing a ball back and forth in my spare time.

  10. Re:THREE WHOLE HOURS! on Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp · · Score: 1

    My kingdom for some mod points! That was unbelievably insightful. They're there, quite likely because they wouldn't WANT to go to any other camp.

  11. Re:Yet another legal solution to a technical probl on US House Passes Ban On Caller ID Spoofing · · Score: 1

    To hell with THAT theory, I know for a FACT that this ban will be useful.

    I work as a Customs broker, and thus receive calls from many trucking companies... their dispatchers and drivers.

    There are multiple trucking companies that spoof their caller ID for... I can't even begin to guess what reason. One of them shows up as "123456" on our caller ID... I can't fathom what use THAT is. There's another one that uses something random, can't recall what offhand.

    And another one... the actual trucking company of which I'll avoid mentioning... actually has "911" show up as its caller ID. I've thought that there's no WAY that can be legal, pretending to be 911 by way of caller ID. I've come to guess that the reason they do this is that there's... I dunno... a better chance of whoever they're calling not letting it go to voicemail, or perhaps just being picked up faster? No clue.

    So yes, there ARE legitimate companies that spoof their caller ID to either random digits, or outright entirely different things. And that 911 company? This isn't some small, mom-and-pop type operation either... we're talking hundreds of offices all over Canada AND the USA. If they were forced to NOT masquarade as an emergency service, it'd be REALLY nice.
    I've debated somehow reporting their caller-ID spoofing, but never came up with a good place to report to. They, as I said, have many offices, only one of which is in my city... and that's not the one that calls us to check their shipments anyway.

  12. User friendly formats on Bill Would Require Public Information To Be Online · · Score: 1

    User friendly formats... pfft, they probably have a loophole to that and will put them in .pdf format :P.

  13. Re:In all seriousness... on The Bloodhound Will Stay On the Ground At 1,000 mph · · Score: 1

    What was the point of climbing Mount Everest? What's the point of any "biggest" or "fastest" or "strongest" anything in the Guiness book of world records?

    Multiple reasons, pick one or any:
    For the thrill of doing something noone has ever done before
    To bring worldwide attention to your company/firm/etc.
    To obtain a better knowledge of the physics behind things, how to better design things to overcome problems, etc. In general, further understanding.
    To prove that you're better than "the other guys" who have attempted this but failed.
    Etc.

    Just because something doesn't have immediate profitability and instantaneous everyday use *RIGHT NOW* doesn't mean that it won't be of value to others, or in the future. More knowledge is always better.

  14. Re:It's *my* CPU you're using on Ars Technica Inveighs Against Ad Blocking · · Score: 1

    Even Slashdot blew their chance with me. The god-forsaken, shaky, animated ad of the woman bitching to the husband about the mail server being down or some shit? Sorry, too irritating for me. I COULD keep reloading the page until a different ad comes up... but that a) wastes my time, b) wastes my bandwitdth (and thus my money), c) wastes slashdot's bandwidth (every little bit from every person adds up), and d) promotes continuing to have annoying ads since from their perspective, they are getting more ad-views. AND, the ad-server takes longer to load than the entirity of the rest of the page. Not cool, man. I will wait for the site, I won't wait for the ads. If they load faster than the rest of the site as a whole, fine. But they don't.

    Thus... blocked. Don't like it, fix online advertising. As others have said, if this site goes down, several more will take its place. No skin off my back, and barely the slightest annoyance to me.

    Remember sites: you're trying to either draw me here, or KEEP me here. Drive me away, that's too damn bad. I owe you nothing since I'm already here. It's your job to find a way to make money with that fact without driving me away or causing me to block your attempts.

  15. Re:Official Site on Funeral Being Held Today For IE6 · · Score: 1

    As if you have to ask. It can be summed up in one word:
    Samzenpus.

    Oh Samzenpus, why do you keep thinking you can fanangle your submissions into a 'real' category. Keep it in idle where you belong. Of course, asking that is like asking a retarded child not to crap it's pants.

  16. Re:they STARVE genius if they don't buy the flour on Scalpers Earned $25M Gaming Online Ticket Sellers · · Score: 1

    And THERE it is... you had a good argument going, and then you completely destroyed it and made everything you said worthless in a few short words:

    unless they guy has some kind of monopoly (which is in fact illegal).

    Ticket botnet buys up all available tickets. Tickets cannot be purchased elsewhere. Monopoly.

  17. Re:children at risk on Texas Textbooks Battle Is Actually an American War · · Score: 1

    It would be like saying I can't buy a beer because some children weren't taught discipline, or because genetically they can't have beer, and haven't been trained to stay away from it.
    I'm sorry to say, but society is already teaching children that that's exactly the way it is.

    One kid in a school is allergic to peanuts? Noone in the entire grade is allowed to bring peanut butter and jam sandwitches, or anything involving peanuts to school any more. I can't say for certain, but I've been told that parents are also encouraged to avoid any kind of peanut products at home as well, in case some of the oil rubs off on someone's hands, is taken to school that way, ends up on a doorknob or whatever, and the allergic child touches it.

    Welcome to a world where the absolute lowest, smallest denominator creates the rules for the remainder.

  18. Re:Reactive only on Researchers Claim "Effectively Perfect" Spam Blocking Discovery · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but after say... 10 or 20 or however many samples of template number 2, it too will be recognized and blocked. The spammers will have to keep changing the template.

    Now, if many people use this, the template database will very, very quickly have enough emails to recognize a template. Going off of the 'pulled straight out of my rectum' numbers of 10 or 20 emails, that means that of those who subscribe to blocking emails recognized in this database, a ridiculously large percentage of them won't even see a single spam email, since it'll be recognized and blocked by the first handful of people to ever receive it.

    Hell, even if the database needs a few hundred or even a few thousand emails to recognize the template, the vast majority of people will STILL not receive a single spam message.

    Sign me up!

  19. Re:$400,000 for what - one letter? on Universal, Pay Those EFFing Lawyers · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nah, I see it coming to a different conclusion.

    1. Universal argues excessive fees - wins
    2. RIAA sues college kid for more money than he could make in 200 years.
    3. EFF argues fees are excessive, is shot down.
    4. Current standards of "law and common sense only apply to the poor - the wealthy are above the law" are upheld.
    5. Everyone not a giant corporation or in personal possession of more money than most small countries loses.

  20. Re:This isn't helpful on Obama DOJ Sides With RIAA Again In Tenenbaum · · Score: 1

    I'm sure you know a thousand times better than me, but I unfortunately remain pessimistic. Despite the last 700 years of legal precedent, the last 5 years have shown me that terms such as "just" or "innocent until proven guilty" or "due process" are meaningless in the face of money.

  21. Re:Duh. on Airport Scanners Can Store and Transmit Images · · Score: 1

    Oh, like ISP's aren't supposed to permenantly keep information about you?

    Face it, those images are permenantly saved, tied to your name/facial scan/however else it can be personally identifiable, and can/will be used against you whenever needed.

    Oh, and naturally, all of said data will in due time be lost and thusly leaked online.

  22. Re:Cue the pissing contest on Antarctic's First Plane, Found In Ice · · Score: -1, Troll

    I don't think so. Generally, if anyone wants to be seen as 'better' than the USA, all we'd need to do is point out that "they're americans"

    At which point of course, once the laughter dies down, victory is defaulted to anyone not from the USA.

    PSST! In case you haven't noticed guys, the USA is the laughing stock of the world... kinda like the big, retarded kid that things everyone is laughing WITH him. We're not.

  23. Re:Of COURSE it's a good idea on Call To "Open Source" AIG Investigation · · Score: 1

    And history has taught us that option 2 will never occur :(

  24. Re:I'm surprised nobody has said this yet, but.. on French Branch of Scientology Is Convicted of Fraud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think the reasoning the OP said only retards join scientology is because it's difficult to imagine a smart, well-informed person believing it. I mean... came to earth on a jet, aliens inside our bodies, blown up around a volcano... what part of that should make me think "Yeah, that sounds pretty reasonable, and fits in with the history of the planet"?

    In all honesty, I would LOVE to have a good, thorough talk with a fully-believing, intelligent scientologist. No flaming, no yelling, hell, I won't even insult him or his beliefs. I would just like to see if I can understand WHY he follows that religion as opposed to others.

  25. Re:No joke, it's hard on Dutch Gov't Has No Idea How To Delete Tapped Calls · · Score: 1

    Zuh? Why in the world would you go to the effort of copying all files from a tape drive except what you want deleted to somewhere else, and then destroy the physical tape the 'to be deleted' file is on?

    I mean, I'm not a programmer by profession (although I have dabbled in it for years), but I can't imagine it would be that hard to make a program that writes over the data of X file with zeroes. *BAM*, problem solved, no wasted time or items.

    Isn't there even a contest of some sort in which a hard drive is overwritten using a *nix command for overwriting it with zeroes that noone has ever recovered data from? Ever?

    Hell, at the bare minimum, go with your original theory of copying the 'good' files elsewhere, and then use that 'overwrite' command on the tape! There, reuseable!