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  1. Re:Debugger on Visual Studio vs. Eclipse: a Programmer's Comparison · · Score: 1

    Not really, and the article neatly avoids this issue by not even mentioning the word "debug" once.

  2. Re:Yes they can on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    Microsoft can make cheap consumer mice if that's what it takes to survive.

    And what, hope to compete with Logitech? Even the Xbox is pretty far down on the revenue list.

    Though I suppose there are levels of survival [Microsoft] are prepared to accept if it ever came down to it.

  3. Re:I want to love BSD on NetBSD 6.1 Has Shipped · · Score: 1

    If you need a certain package and it doesn't exist or isn't well supported with a certain OS then that OS is dead to you regardless of all its other virtues.

    If you don't have access to source, all major BSD's have support for running linux binaries. Can be a bit of work to setup but I've used it successfully for a few things.

  4. Re:Always on = !on on Xbox 720 Could Require Always-On Connection, Lock Out Used Games · · Score: 1

    Once again with the false assumption that every game on steam is only using steam's DRM system.

  5. Re:Good for them. on Apple Angers Mac Users With Silent Shutdown of Java 7 · · Score: 1

    I only realize a computer doesn't have Java installed when I try to start Minecraft.

  6. Re:It's the same for Blizzard. on Feedback On Simcity Gets User Banned From EA Forums · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Steam will play in offline mode.

    The degree of "play" will depend on the exact title you are using on Steam. For example, some Ubisoft games you'd be out of luck with for offline.

    It would be nice if Steam started to play hard with those companies and mandate Steam's DRM only if the game was to be offered on Steam.

  7. Re:Pirates have other countermeasures too. on How Proxied Torrents Could End ISP Subpoenas · · Score: 1

    The interesting thing about that is the quality has not really dropped by much, not enough to really complain about. I suppose it's due to more use of VBR and multi-pass encoding. I tried to set that stuff up once, it's a pain and (at the time) had a lot more bugs. I suppose it's finally getting a bit more usable.

  8. Re:Good move. on Cisco Rumored To Be Selling Linksys · · Score: 1

    May depend on the model, I had a WRT54G

    I'm talking about BEFS... generation hardware, pre-WRT. I think by the time WRT rolled around they finally started to fix some of their garbage.

  9. Re:Good move. on Cisco Rumored To Be Selling Linksys · · Score: 2

    Linksys pre-acquisition made perfectly serviceable home user grade hardware.

    This was demonstrably false in earlier Linksys "router" hardware. The first "router" I used from Linksys required bi-weekly reboots to function at all. None of the firmware updates improved this, and some releases even made it worse.

    Perhaps the quality has improved in later models, I wasn't willing to give it a second chance.

  10. Re:If you don't yet have one ... on AMD Radeon Performance Preview On Linux 3.8 · · Score: 1

    Maybe it is the PNY brand? Who knows.

    I'll throw in my one minor data point on this, my current video card is a PNY GTX 680 and I've had no issues with this card so far. Doesn't say anything about their production as a whole, but they are capable of making at least 1 functional card. My first few NVidia cards were BFG, which I did have some minor issues with, then I moved on to ASUS before this recent PNY upgrade and those ASUS were pretty good as well.

  11. Re:Gamepad not Playstation Controller on Playstation Controller Runs Syrian Rebel Tank · · Score: 1

    Unless you happen to be playing Gradius 3, where the code causes the ship to blow up. Based on the design here, that also seems the most likely.

    (Note : The code will work using the top flapper L/R buttons on the game, giving near max power-ups)

  12. Re:There was a Crysis 2? on But Can It Run Crysis 3? · · Score: 5, Informative

    PC gaming should be using ray-tracing by now, all these 1000 core GPU's and multi-card [solutions] should be able to process ray tracing calculations, yet there are no ray traced games out showing that there has been little innovation in PC gaming for the last 10 years.

    No, wrong, Carmack has explained the issues involved with ray-tracing at least a dozen times. But clearly since you've worked out a better solution, maybe you should sell it and get rich?

  13. Re:Even if this was true... on Is Intel Planning To Kill Enthusiast PCs? · · Score: 1

    Enthusiasts have bloody hands from all the little solder points cutting into the skin.

    I've had a couple computer cases which I would get cuts from every time I did any serious work on. The cases were OK overall, as long as you didn't open them, just too many sharp spots in too many places. Fortunately my newest cases are a bit better, I don't think I've got bloody from any recent selections.

    They think about matching memory chips

    This is basically how anyone buys RAM these days.

    Maybe a pair of video cards with multiple monitors.

    I have given up on SLI, just not worth it. One high end card and basically everything runs at max settings anyway (maybe 1 notch down on AA, whatever) with far less trouble.

  14. Re:Nothing new here on Windows 8 PCs Still Throttled By Crapware · · Score: 1

    You say you hate crapware and yet you're running Vista?

    Out of date Microsoft hate. A fully updated Vista install with current drivers is roughly equivalent to Windows 7 these days.

  15. Re:Let's hope Steam on Linux gathers... steam on Microsoft Makes Direct X 11.1 a Windows 8 Exclusive · · Score: 1

    Well, for one you don't get the MFC libraries in the express versions. That's probably one of the most significant ones if you are dealing with anything that uses it.

    Going forward it's probably not such a huge issue since Microsoft has been trying to transition away from it. I'm not sure what the differences are as far as the new Windows RT in express. I think they are trying to push people into making Metro apps, so the express of 2012 might be geared for just that.

  16. Re:not yet been able to verify the zero-day claims on $50,000 Zero-Day Exploit Evades Adobe's Sandbox, Say Russian Analysts · · Score: 1

    Those purchasing it (assuming that anyone actually has) are probably interested in getting some use out of it. Anyone looking to preserve value in their investment will want as few eyes looking at this as possible.

  17. Re:Going to have a hard time topping modern remake on David Braben Kickstarts an Elite Reboot · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm thinking it's generous to even label EVE Online as being a game. Needs reclassified as something like sci-fi online job simulator.

  18. Re:Full of microsoft on Software Uses Almost 1/2 the Storage On 32GB Surface Tablet · · Score: 2

    Have you seen how big the Metro Solitaire app is? When I checked app disk use it was something over 100MB! Yeah granted it does have a few different game types including freecell, but that disk consumption for just a simple app is absurd. Minesweeper was similarly huge, over 100MB again there.

    Maybe everything is statically linked or something, I just don't see where they managed to burn all that space. Raw bitmap cards maybe? You'd almost have to work to make it that bloated either way.

  19. Re:no more donuts for Gabe... on Valve: Linux Better Than Windows 8 for Gaming · · Score: 1

    and pull about 60fps on average. 63fps/57fps.. neither of those is going to make any difference

    Unless you have a 120Hz monitor, the 63fps thing literally is not going to help at all if you can keep up with a 60Hz VSYNC locked.

    WoT really isn't all that optimized of a graphics engine though, I am running GTX 680 @ 120Hz and it still only pushes like 80 fps tops anyway.

  20. Re:But eclipse is terrible at navigation on The IDE As a Bad Programming Language Enabler · · Score: 1

    but it certainly encourages the use of libraries one doesn't really understand

    Depending on how obvious and well designed the library is, just seeing the function and parameters in auto-complete might be enough to go on and could even produce workable code if you are lucky.

    Of course this will be influenced by how well assumptions about the behavior line up with actual use, hopefully if it's similar to a number of other libraries it will offer up functionality with about the same results. If not, then it could lead some obscure bug which will be difficult to find if everyone uses the same set of assumptions or until someone with intimate knowledge happens to take a look at it.

    Also, this is really what I'd like to see in a programming reference book, just a quick outline and typical use cases and then a listing of possible pitfalls in using it. The books we used in school were not really at all geared toward the quick reference style I'd like to have on hand now.

  21. "deeper Windows experience" on Ballmer Tells the BBC There's More MS Hardware On the Way · · Score: 1, Troll

    The phrase "deeper Windows experience" should probably never be used ever. Masturbating with a fist full of glass shards is all that comes to mind when I read that.

  22. Re:Clouds Need To Be Free on Does OpenStack Need a Linus Torvalds? · · Score: 1

    Well you can look at the desktop market share of BSD

    Even among the community of BSD users, my guess is many of them are not running it on their main desktop. I've tried to use all the main variants on the desktop (Open/Free/Net), and they generally work more or less OK after a fair amount of tweaking, at least if you don't want to get anything too bleeding edge on it. If for some reason I absolutely had to have it on the desktop then FreeBSD is probably the least painful one in the main group to go for.

    As a server OS, it's been absolutely awesome, and where I get my use from it. Great router / firewall and easy understandable config to set up. Lot of the standard network services simple enough to setup, dhcpd / bind / ntp / etc. My new NAS is running NetBSD and is working good now, although I did have to tweak a fair number of sysctl's to get proper gigabit network performance from it. Problem being the default tuning there seems to still be for a fairly low end system.

    So yeah, maybe some masochists run it for a desktop, I just don't see the benefit from picking it there.

  23. Re:Stupid question from across the Atlantic: What? on FTC Offers $50,000 For Best Way To Stop Robocalls · · Score: 1

    but harder to filter out (voice vs text)

    As far as content aware filtering, yes perhaps much more difficult. However, for exact matching purposes this should be somewhat straightforward. Simply record the first small portion of outgoing phone calls, and after detecting an outgoing call which is an extremely high match with some number of past calls made block that number. Thresholds could be set on counts, match %, number of calls, block duration, etc.

  24. Another Useless Option on Sony Files Patent For Temperature Feedback Move Controller · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yet another useless stupid option to turn off before playing a game. I always have to hunt around and turn the stupid vibration options off because all it does is distract my aim or whatever. Rumble pack has been nothing but pure gimmick ever since Nintendo tried it. Wherever this technology goes it's almost certainly on the immediate disable list.

  25. Re:IANAL but looking at the draft regulations... on Will EU Regulations Effectively Ban High-End Video Cards? · · Score: 1

    You need Xeon or high-end Bulldozer CPUs to qualify (cores per CPU, remember)

    Or an Intel Extreme Edition, i7-980x / i7-990x / i7-3960X, or even the i7-3930K (non extreme 6 core apparently).

    My gaming rig barely falls short as well due to the single GTX 680 bandwidth.