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User: dskoll

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  1. Re:Religions codify survival info ... on Science Cannot Prove the Existence of God · · Score: 1

    miss the fact that it doesn't take religion to convince people to kill and otherwise mistreat one another

    That is true. But religion provides a very powerful organizing principle for sociopaths to justify their actions and to convince others that they're right. In this way, religion is similar to other theoretically-fine but practically-disgusting ideologies such as communism.

  2. Science cannot prove anything on Science Cannot Prove the Existence of God · · Score: 1

    Science can prove nothing. The scientific process is all about coming up with a theory of how things work and then looking for evidence that disproves it. If such evidence is found, then the theory is refined to take it into account. In that way, ideally, scientific theories converge on the truth... but there's no way to prove they're true.

    Linking science with god is ridiculous. It's like saying we can prove mathematically the existence of invisible pink unicorns. The sentence may be syntactically correct, but it has no meaning.

  3. Re:Why not include the original IBM design? on Know Your Type: Five Mechanical Keyboards Compared · · Score: 1

    I'm not much of a gamer, but the Unicomp keyboards are excellent for typing. They are, however, quite noisy, so may not be appropriate for a crowded office.

    If you have games that require abuse of the keyboard, I would not use an expensive mechanical keyboard... let the games kill the cheapie membrane ones.

  4. Re:There is only one.... Model M on Know Your Type: Five Mechanical Keyboards Compared · · Score: 1

    I don't have any Model Ms, but I do own a bunch of Unicomp keyboards that use the same technology. Anyway, my kids were definitely not brought up on those keyboards, but after trying them they absolutely fell in love with them. I haven't tried any of the other mechanical keyboards in the original article, but I think the Unicomp keyboards are miles ahead of membrane or laptop keyboards.

  5. Releasing the inner reactionary... on Putting Time Out In Time Out: The Science of Discipline · · Score: 1

    I'm basically a fairly liberal person, but when I read about "progressive" scientists wanting to "construct new strategies for parenting", my inner reactionary boils over.

    I have three kids ranging in age from 12 to 20. I agree that spanking is a bad strategy; I never used it. I also agree that timeouts are useless, especially for very young kids. For very young kids, a stern reprimand delivered immediately after the undesired behaviour usually works. For older kids, removing a privilege is quite effective provided you don't make empty threats. Don't threaten anything you're not prepared to carry through; kids can smell a bluff a mile away.

    But letting a kid cry it out until they sleep through the night? That's a godsend. My first daughter was not sleeping through the night even at 11 months. Finally one night I said "That's it, I don't care how hard she screams, we are NOT going in there."

    It was a couple of hours of hell. And then 19 years of bliss.

    All you really need to be a decent parent is to love your children and to have common sense. Unfortunately, the latter is sometimes in short supply, especially among people "on a mission to change parenting." That itself is a cringeworthy label.

  6. Black Bodies? on Virtual Reality Experiment Wants To Put White People In Black Bodies · · Score: 2

    Won't that cause lots of radiation?

  7. The current wire payment system is... on Small Bank In Kansas Creates the Bank Account of the Future · · Score: 2

    ... I apologize for my somewhat undiplomatic language, but the current wire payment system is a cluster-fuck of fail.

    My company is based in Canada and accepts wire payments from Canada, the US, Europe, Australia, South Africa and the Middle East. Half the time, we see mysterious deposits appearing in our account without any useful identification. We ask our customers to specify invoice numbers when they make a payment. Sometimes that comes through. Mostly it does not. Sometimes we don't even get any indication as to who the money is from.

    So then we need to phone our bank and they take days to track down who just paid us. It's a total nightmare.

    I'd welcome wholeheartedly anything that can improve the situation.

  8. Re:Don't worry guys... on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 1

    Bush was spinning; it was all PR to avoid fanning the flames. But he was wrong. Islam is not peace; it is war by definition, since Muslims are commanded to convert non-Muslims by force.

  9. Re:Don't worry guys... on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 1

    the majority who peacefully practice that same religion

    You cannot peacefully practice Islam. It is simply not possible. Islam divides the world into Muslims (dar al Islam) and non-Muslims (dar al harb, literally house of war) and Muslims are commanded to convert non-Muslims by force. This is a fundamental tenet of Islam.

    Those millions of peacful Muslims we all hear about are simply choosing to ignore or rationalize away the parts of Islam they choose not to practice.

  10. Re:Don't worry guys... on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 1

    That is precisely the danger of Islam. The vile aspects of it appeal to the mentally ill and unstable and turn them into jihadis.

    I'm not sure if BarbaraHudson is herself "t" in LGBTt, but perhaps she should study Islamic response to homosexuality and transgenderism before defending Islam.

  11. Re:Check your math. on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 0

    What I find terrifying is how quickly supposedly intelligent people descend into clumping massive groups of people together and scream terrorist.

    Look, Islam itself is quite objectively disgusting. There are so many horrible things in the religion that I don't really want to enumerate them here for you; just do a Google search.

    The only reason most Muslims are not violent is that most Muslims reject or rationalize away the disgusting parts of Islam. However, the underlying vile philosophy persists and periodically infects the minds of vulnerable losers, turning them into jihadis. At some point, the Western world has to ask itself it can tolerate this dangerous ideology to spread within our societies or if we need to take proactive action ourselves to monitor what's being taught and expel those who preach extermism.

  12. Re:Check your math. on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 1

    Most Muslims are peaceful, but Islam itself is a noxious brew of racism, hatred and barbarity. The only reason most Muslims are peaceful is that they're human enough to reject the horrible parts of their religion.

    What's really needed is an Islamic reformation that purges the Qu'ran and other Islamic religious texts of all the disgusting passages. But that, alas, is blasphemy and will never happen. Instead, Islam will continue infecting vulnerable people and turning them into killers, just like some sort of infectious mental illnes.

  13. Re:I hate electronics consumer culture on Apple's iPod Classic Refuses To Die · · Score: 1

    I think a similar "market peak" will eventually occur with phones in the near future

    I'm not sure about that. Apple is extremely good at driving people to buy new things as a fashion statement, even if the underlying technology is more-or-less the same. That's the problem: Consumer electronic goods are becoming fashion items and that's extremely bad for the environment.

    As for another poster who wrote Shitty firmware and an abandoned or poorly supported product is a perfectly good reason to throw something out, well maybe. But I was talking about old, perfectly functional devices.

  14. I hate electronics consumer culture on Apple's iPod Classic Refuses To Die · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yes, it's very trendy to get a new phone every year. And yes, it's fun to laugh at those neanderthals and troglodytes who have *gasp* last generation's iPod.

    Now trace all those discarded electronics to their end-of-life graves and see how we're poisoning the environment with arsenic, plastics, cadmium and other toxic chemicals, all just to satisfy our craving for shiny things.

    I would be proud to own a 12-year-old piece of electronic gear that still functions and does what I need. I have a five-year-old phone (Nokia N900) and bought my daughter's iPod third-hand for $30; it plays my music just fine. No plans to replace the phone or the iPod any time soon.

  15. Re:No on Should IT Professionals Be Exempt From Overtime Regulations? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, that whole model is flawed. SV may be making lots of money, but it's ruining people's lives if it expects insane work hours.

    I work in the tech field (actually, I own a 10-person tech company) in Canada and I have never made my employees work overtime. Ever.

    Unfortunately, given free reign, businesses will exploit employees and the labour laws in the US offer hardly any protection to workers.

  16. Re:Snowden revenge? on Celebrated Russian Hacker Now In Exile · · Score: 1

    No, I don't think Snowden gave the Russians much... that's why I said they've already got all they can. And the PR value diminishes daily; no-one cares about old news.

  17. Re:Snowden revenge? on Celebrated Russian Hacker Now In Exile · · Score: 1

    I expect Russia has already got everything out of Snowden that it ever will.

  18. Re:Snowden revenge? on Celebrated Russian Hacker Now In Exile · · Score: 1

    Actually, I do not rely on stories from the media, but on talking to Russian friends who have left Russia. Say what you like, but people vote with their feet... hence the huge flow of "enslaved" Americans into "free" Russia... yeah, that's it.

  19. Re:Snowden revenge? on Celebrated Russian Hacker Now In Exile · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When all is said and done, the US is still a helluva lot freer than Russia. But I was being facetious; the last place he should go is the USA or we'd see a Snowden - Durov swap in the blink of an eye.

  20. Snowden revenge? on Celebrated Russian Hacker Now In Exile · · Score: 5, Funny

    With Putin giving the US a black eye by harbouring Edward Snowden, maybe this guy will find sanctuary in the US? :)

  21. Ask these questions first on Ask Slashdot: Best Practices For Starting and Running a Software Shop? · · Score: 1

    Before you think about how to run your shop, ask these questions:

    Do you have a product?

    Is there a market for that product? How do you know?

    Do you have a business plan including a marketing plan?

    Once you get past those questions, the rest is easy. Outsource anything that doesn't make sense (HR, accounting, payroll) and keep your core expertise in-house. Don't obsess about coding standards, etc. until you have cash flow. It's far more important to do your utmost to get the business making money thatn to worry about programming minutiae.

    I did start a software product business back in 2000 and it's going strong. The very first person I hired was our VP of Sales and Marketing. I didn't hire another technical person until employee #5, so didn't have to worry about imposing coding standards on others. :)

  22. If the shoe fits... on Canadian Police Recommend Ending Anonymity On the Internet · · Score: 2

    I wonder how the OPP would react if they were required by law to stream video of all their officers' activities in real-time. Suddenly they'd like a little privacy and anonymity, thank you very much!

  23. DMARC and Mail User Agents conspire to FAIL on Ask Slashdot: How Useful Are DMARC and DKIM? · · Score: 1

    I was involved in some quite heated discussions on the DMARC list about one problem. DMARC is supposed to prevent someone from forging the From: header sender (and to a lesser extent if used with SPF, the envelope sender.)

    The problem is that most MUAs (mail clients) do not show the full email address of the sender. They only show the full name. For example, a header that looks like this:

    From: American Express Fraud Dept <bozo@example.com>

    will be displayed in a typical mail client as just American Express Fraud Dept with not a single complaint from DMARC.

    Even worse, a scammer can use a header like this:

    From: "American Express Fraud Dept - fraud@aexp.com" <bozo@example.com>

    and the mail client will display the fake fraud@aexp.com address with nary a DMARC complaint.

    Mail sucks. User-interfaces suck. People suck. Bah.

  24. We use DKIM and SPF on Ask Slashdot: How Useful Are DMARC and DKIM? · · Score: 1

    My company (Roaring Penguin) uses SPF for outbound mail and we DKIM-sign our mail too. Our antispam software also supports SPF and DKIM. We don't yet support DMARC, but probably will at some point. The problem with fully supporting DMARC is the reporting component. It's a real bear to send DMARC reports, but obeying DMARC policies is much easier. We'll start by doing DMARC-policy-obeying first and then think about reporting.

  25. Finally! on Pope Francis Declares Evolution and Big Bang Theory Are Right · · Score: 1

    He's (big) bang on! No more aping the creationists; Francis is a dinosaur no more.