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User: transporter_ii

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  1. Re:Join the slashdot farewell: on Customer: Dell Denies Speaker Repair Under Warranty, Blames VLC · · Score: 2

    I have been reading slashdot since about 1999-2000.

    I've been a user since 1996-1997. Fuck Beta. The most obvious thing is they don't seem to give a shit about our feelings. I'm sorry you are getting annoyed, but it won't be long before we won't have to worry about anything in the comments, because there won't be any comments any more. It's like sitting with a dying relative. You see death coming, but there really isn't anything that is going to stop it. Sucks, but Fuck Beta.

  2. Re:Fuck Beta on Big Pharma Presses US To Quash Cheap Drug Production In India · · Score: 0

    Fuck you.

  3. Re:Jai Hind! on Big Pharma Presses US To Quash Cheap Drug Production In India · · Score: 1

    let the rest of us get back to discussing real issues?

    Enjoy it while you can, because when Beta goes mandatory, there will not be any more comments.

  4. Because it is classic on Ask Slashdot: Why Are We Still Writing Text-Based Code? · · Score: 4, Funny

    And why should you change if what you had worked great. I'm not against change, just as long as it is change for the better. If they came out with some new snazzy looking way to write code, but everyone said it sucks...but the old way worked just fine...then freaking stick with the old way. Unless you just don't care about actually making writing code better. Now who in their right mind would want to change something just to make it worse?

  5. Re:Classic Desktop on Ask Slashdot: Are Linux Desktop Users More Pragmatic Now Or Is It Inertia? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Posting this from Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, and I consider pre-Unity as a "classic desktop," and it is Gnome.

    Seriously, I have nothing against change, but I think there should be a cross-distro standard desktop that JUST FREAKING STAYS THE SAME. There should also be bleeding-edge environments for more adventurous people. Why shouldn't people have a choice? But it would be nice to install most any popular version of Linux and get a standard desktop.

  6. A free market solution on Powering Phones, PCs Using Sugar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So the free market will do what New York couldn't with taxes...drive the price of junk food up! Sweet.

  7. OS/2 Warp on 95% of ATMs Worldwide Are Still Using Windows XP · · Score: 3, Informative

    [O]verall, OS/2 failed to catch on in the mass market and is little used outside certain niches where IBM traditionally had a stronghold. For example, many bank installations, especially Automated Teller Machines, run OS/2 with a customized user interface.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OS/2

  8. Re:Obvious on Mathematical Model Helps Estimate Optimal Timing of Cyber Attack · · Score: 1

    Yes, this. Someone had some taxpayer money to spend to come up with this crap. When the law and the NSA are playing S.H.I.E.L.D, this will look really cool on the monitors. And then they will time it for a holiday or other important day and release the DDoS.

  9. re: Sonic brushes on Smart Toothbrush Aims For Better Brushing Habits · · Score: 1

    I used to brush every day, but not always two - three times a day. Always had cavities and inflamed gums. Lost a few back teeth that couldn't be saved (but at least they were in the back). I got a Sonicare for Christmas a few years back. I haven't had a cavity since. Got a check-up yesterday and he said my gums looked great. In fact, cleanings used to be very, very painful. Not so much anymore.

    True story. My second cleaning after getting the Sonicare, the person cleaning my teeth said she was going to get one. She had receding gum lines herself, and she was so impressed with my improvement that she was getting one. Her exact words were, "you may have just saved my teeth."

  10. Re: freedom on Counterpoint: Why Edward Snowden May Not Deserve Clemency · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And suppose he tried that, he ended up in jail, and the government was somehow able to spin damage control and minimize his efforts? You make some good points, but he took the most realistic path of options to make sure he didn't go down in vain. I must admit, when this all started, I thought it would blow over fairly quickly. Most events like this have. In the end, the only thing that America responds to is money. That Snowden is costing corporations money here is the best thing to happen to America since apple pie. The Constitution is gone and our Rights are a joke, but cost corporations some money, and maybe we will see baby steps taken in the right direction.

  11. Re: freedom on Counterpoint: Why Edward Snowden May Not Deserve Clemency · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Soldiers fight for our freedom? As if fighting in some third-world crap hole has anything to do with our freedom here in the United States. I think Snowden is a true hero. He didn't give his life for oil or empire, he gave his life for something that intimately has to do with *our* freedom.

  12. Lots of things work for Norway, and lots of other countries, that doesn't work for us. We are abnormal when it comes to the rest of the world. Now that may not always be a bad thing...but normal we are not.

  13. What might scare MS on PC Makers Plan Rebellion Against Microsoft At CES · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A dual boot Windows 8.1 and Steam OS machine. I'm not really feeling the need for Android on a PC. Anyone else?

  14. I'd have been happy if it would just sync files on Owncloud 6 Brings Collaborative Open Document Format Editing to the Web · · Score: 2

    I setup an older version at work to sync important files between laptops. Version wasn't that far behind. We had nothing but trouble with it. If clients didn't hit the network or Internet, sometimes the clients would just lose all their settings. And client setup was not trivial, so I had to be the one to do it. Also, it would sometimes create a huge number of dupe files, which were versioned in order to stop collisions.

    All in all, we ditched it for Goodsync. Not perfect, but it doesn't just one day up and lose all its settings for no apparent reason or create hundreds and hundreds of dupe files.

  15. Re:NIH on Canonical Moving Away From GNOME Control Center · · Score: 2

    From here on out, it is nipple interfaces!

  16. Re:Cancer cured! on Killing Cancer By Retraining the Patient's Immune System · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I get tired of the false meme that "oh, we would have cured disease X already if the results weren't being suppressed in a big conspiracy"

    This guy was on to something good. When he was farting around in the lab, he got funding. When he started to get results, the funding vanished. I love his statement in bold below:

    http://www.popularmechanics.com/blogs/science_news/4273366.html

    So how did you get it funded up to this point?

    There is some private funding and the university put some funding into it. And also, at early stages when we studied the mechanisms of these mice, we had one Mitchell Cancer Institute grant, several small grants from Cancer Research Institute. But they all stopped funding me. It was kind of a strange situation. I thought it was our common goal to come up with a new weapon to fight cancer, but the moment I announced I had a new weapon to test in real human cancer situations, everybody shied away.

  17. Re:Cancer cured! on Killing Cancer By Retraining the Patient's Immune System · · Score: 4, Interesting

    there is no one single disease, "cancer."

    Scientists are in "complete surprise" that cancers closely resemble each other across widely varying organs, according to Dr. Douglas Levine of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and the principal investigator on a new endometrial cancer study published Wednesday in the journal, Nature.

    "The problem," leading to existing drug treatments performing at an unsatisfactory 10% death rate, was in "the traditional methods for categorizing the leukemia," said Dr. Timothy Ley of Washington University in St. Louis, who co-led a study simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.

    "Cancer of the uterine lining closely resembles the worst ovarian and breast cancers... telling evidence that cancer will increasingly be seen as a disease defined primarily by its genetic fingerprint rather than just by the organ where it originated," says The New York Times' interpretation of these results.

  18. Cancer cured! on Killing Cancer By Retraining the Patient's Immune System · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cancer gets cured about once a decade, sometimes by real doctors, sometimes by "quacks." I could show stats from real doctors with similar results to this one, which never saw the light of day once it was discovered (or rediscovered).

    People don't actually like creativity, even in medicine:

    http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2013/12/creativity_is_rejected_teachers_and_bosses_don_t_value_out_of_the_box_thinking.html

    Staw says most people are risk-averse. He refers to them as satisfiers. “As much as we celebrate independence in Western cultures, there is an awful lot of pressure to conform,” he says. Satisfiers avoid stirring things up, even if it means forsaking the truth or rejecting a good idea.

    In medicine, innovative things happen all the time. When *you* go to the doctor, you get the same ol' thing that has been done since 1952.

  19. Re:Stop stopping fires on Scientists Propose Satellite Early Warning System For Forest Fires · · Score: 1

    I can see both sides of a controlled burn. Yes, it is probably the right thing to do. But the first time it got out of control and burned a bunch of houses down, the crap would hit the fan. Can you imagine the news footage of the people who's houses were burned down by a fire set intentionally by the government. Wow. I don't generally like politicians more than anyone else, but even I could understand the motivation to not be put in this position.

  20. Re:10 million? on Zuckerberg To Teach 10 Million Kids 0-Based Counting · · Score: 1

    Dude, you have to start at 0, so it is 9,999,999 kids.

  21. Re:A century ago, Progressives on Where Does America's Fear Come From? · · Score: 1

    Under President Carter, inflation was high but the deficit was at one of it's lowest points in many decades. When Reagan came in, inflation went to nothing and the deficit sky-rocketed. If you suddenly got a bunch of credit cards for you household and maxed them out, you couldn't help but increase your standard of living...at least until the bills started coming due.

    But on some level, I agree with you. We have to get the Feds where they can't spend money that we don't have. Period.

  22. Fear sells, and we are buying... on Where Does America's Fear Come From? · · Score: 1

    Fear sells. It isn't just the government that uses it. Spend an afternoon listening to Alex Jones or Talk Radio in general. Watch what people are watching on TV and the movies. Zombie and horror movies are big time right now. Look at what everyone is being told in church, "it's the End Times."

    It's all just capitalism in action. If fear makes people part with their money, then someone is going to be dishing out the fear.

    I don't know what the exact solution is, but in capitalism, when the market dries up, the sellers move on to different markets.

  23. Re:A century ago, Progressives on Where Does America's Fear Come From? · · Score: -1

    Under President Carter, inflation was high but the deficit was at one of it's lowest points in many decades. When Reagan came in, inflation went to nothing and the deficit sky-rocketed. If you suddenly got a bunch of credit cards for you household and maxed them out, you couldn't help but increase your standard of living...until the bills started coming due.

    The point being, there is other ways of screwing us than printing money. Reagan was a master at it. Not only did he screw us, but we loved him while he did so. Heck, many conservatives want someone like him back in office. We are so delusional as a nation, that if it didn't come out of *my* pocket, it is fantastic.

    Well guess what? The deficit comes out of our children's pockets. Fantastic, I know. Right?

    But on some level, I agree with you. We have to get the Feds where they can't spend money that we don't have. Period.

  24. Re:Systemic debt on Silicon Valley Could Be Heading For a New Stock Collapse. · · Score: 1

    I wonder if Snowden might not be a bubble popper? I sure would hate to have a ton of debt in cloud infrastructure here in the US right at the moment.

  25. Re:So it's not what you know... on You're Only As Hirable As Your Google+ Circles · · Score: 2

    No. It's who you know...on the ***Internet***. So now you need Facebook to get credit, and Google+ to get hired. Don't use these services because of privacy issues. That's fine, you just won't get credit or a job.

    It's like when I used to have to run credit checks on people, and they didn't want to give me their social security number. That's fine, I don't care. You just will not get this product you are wanting without forking it over. Now keep in mind that I totally agreed with the people, but like a good Nazi, I was just doing my job.