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User: damaki

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Comments · 263

  1. No Catan, please on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Best Games To Have In Your Collection? · · Score: 1

    If you want to go for fun tabletop games, forget this smoking pile of s*** that is Catan. It was nice 15y ago, now it's just clunky, random and too complicated at the same time.
    So, if you want all fun and no brain, Munchkin, Dobble or Smash Up. If you got time on your hands (2 or 3 hours), Talisman is still pretty intense. If you want something brainier, but still fun, 7 Wonders is a quick learn and fun. Rab and his cardboard children features on RPS would be a good pointer for other cool tabletop games.
    For console party games, Mario Kart, Rayman Raving Rabbids, good ole Super Bomberman 4 or 5, or even Street Fighter IV will do the trick.

  2. Re:Took the USB organization close to 20 years... on Reversible Type-C USB Connector Ready For Production · · Score: 1

    I had a look at his, and 100W is only possible when the 20V mode is activated. So yes, there will be a power delivery negotiation.
    Still, I am quite skeptical towards this standard and the ability of cheap chinese devices (understand ubiquitously rebranded devices) to conform to it securely..

  3. Re:Took the USB organization close to 20 years... on Reversible Type-C USB Connector Ready For Production · · Score: 1

    100W is technically a good idea, but is 100W with 5V, it's madness. How will I be able to buy a proper 100W cable and not a cheap chinese knockoff if I'm no electrical engineer? Let's picture it: cheap cable + 20A => lots of fun.

  4. Re:Driverless cars... on The Coming IT Nightmare of Unpatchable Systems · · Score: 1

    Human drivers are known to be bulletproof secure, rational, law-abiding and deterministic, of course.

  5. Re:Mental stack overflow of the driver is more lik on Stack Overflow Could Explain Toyota Vehicles' Unintended Acceleration · · Score: 1

    Sorry to affect your american centrism, but it happened in France, too, and the case is quite documented (pardon my french). The police -which were contacted by the driver- had to make room for the car on the motorway, and to find a solution to slow the car down gracefully. In the end, nobody was hurt, but Toyota...
    While I do agree that in the litigation-driven country that became the USA, most of these drivers must be full shit, and surfing on the "it's not me, it's the machine" wave, it looks like there is a real software defect.

  6. Re:Never use any software. on Stack Overflow Could Explain Toyota Vehicles' Unintended Acceleration · · Score: 1

    Cheap india outsourced embedded software specialists beg to differs.
    Welcome to the marvelous world of Minimal Cost Driven Development (MCDD).

  7. Re:The chemistry works out... on Researchers Try To "Close the Nutrient Cycle" Through Better Waste Recycling · · Score: 2

    That is funny, because it is already known to be a problem for reprocessed water.
    Let's do the same for what we eat, and let's make the humanity sterile, those endocrine thingies only affect pussies.

  8. Re:Thank you, slashdot on CSI Style Zoom Sees Faces Reflected In Subjects' Eyes · · Score: 1

    39 usable megapixels will always be expensive. High end lenses are damn expensive, and if your lenses do not have the required resolution, you're better off using 16 megapixels. For $1000, glass included, you won't get more than 16 real megapixels. And if you do not believe me, have a look at http://www.dxomark.com/ .

  9. Thank you, slashdot on CSI Style Zoom Sees Faces Reflected In Subjects' Eyes · · Score: 2

    Thank you for bringing up such quality content. You know, 39 megapixel pictures are only usable if you have high end glass on your camera, which only rich camera enthusiasts can afford. That excludes forever smartphone cameras (yeah, even those whatever megapixels Nokias), security cameras, small digital cameras, which would actually render useless 99% of all cameras on earth for that usage. So you only need to have one of these rich guys take a picture of a crime scene, yeah, only that...

  10. Re:Pastebin mirror of code on OpenSSH Has a New Cipher — Chacha20-poly1305 — from D.J. Bernstein · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wow it's less 100 lines (excluding chacha_ivsetup, chacha_encrypt_bytes AND poly1305_auth). So I guess it's not 100 lines...

  11. Sleeping in a drawer on Raspberry Pi Hits the 2 Million Mark · · Score: 1, Informative

    I bought this to use it as a lightweight server, found it highly underpowered, CPU and memory wise, and discovered that some software I needed was x86 only. So I left it gathering dust in a drawer. I have been tried finding a use for this thingy but could not. End of the story.
    I end up using the t-shirt more than the pi itself.

  12. Re:Now try it in urban neighborhood on 802.11ac 'Gigabit Wi-Fi' Starts To Show Potential, Limits · · Score: 1

    Radio signal shaping is used to overcome range limitations. As seen in the Canard PC Hardware french magazine, 5 Ghz in *pinpoin*t mode performs mostly better than raw 2.6, even with walls on the way. Though if you're totally out of 5GHz range, you'll use the 2.4GHz range.

  13. Security on Software Rendering Engine GPU-Accelerated By WebCL · · Score: 2

    Great. I'd sure like my GPU, with its mad low level optimizations and surely ugly code to be used by unsigned code from random sources.
    Java applets are far too secure, let's get to the lowest level!

  14. Re:Natural selection on First Cases of Flesh-Eating Drug Emerge In the United States · · Score: 1

    You know, drugs are not about being smart, these are about having a shot at it, feeling good, then getting addicted.
    But well, with an average 3 year life expectancy for Krokodil users, it's not going to be a problem for long...

  15. Innovation, modability on Valve Announces Steam Controller · · Score: 1

    It's all about mods and accessories. Imagine the think with multi touch, 4 point on each touchpad. Then you could stick a direction cross over it, or regular buttons, or a plain stick, or whatever you want.
    Every single gamepad these years is just plain and unimaginative or has barely usable gimmicks. Even the wiimotes are quite disappointing (laggish, unprecise). Analog buttons (not triggers these are fine) were the worst idea ever. Sixaxis motion detection is totally useless (no I wont tilt it left to turn left, I'd rather keep my wrist in good state). Wii U screen is basically a DS/3D with only one screen?
    This, gentlemen, is innovation.

  16. Re:Steambox on New Console Always-Online Requirements and You · · Score: 1

    I suppose you can now workaround this bug. If you launch steam in online mode while you're actually offline it asks you if you want to use the offline mode. I can't really figure how a restart after a crash could be any different.
    But well, I cannot attest of this as steam has never crashed on any of my computers.

  17. Re:Steambox on New Console Always-Online Requirements and You · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Err, no. This is not needed anymore. Test it: disable your connection, you can then switch to offline mode.

  18. Over engineering in Slashdot too on Stop Standardizing HTML · · Score: 1

    Let's stop standardizing stories to get better stories on Slashdot.
    First, we'll stop using tags and titles, it's a clear case of over categorizing
    Then, let's stop using english as a standard. Letters were meant to be used freely, not rigidly as used in english.
    Finally, we should remove links in stories, so that people can freely search these in the web.

  19. Re:Why desktop Linux has not been a hit on the mar on Debian 7.0 ('Wheezy') Release Planned For 1st Weekend in May · · Score: 1

    True. Debian is mostly about rock solid reliability and reasonably long support, not about end users. Though debian testing is a pretty neat bleeding edge distro.

  20. Let java applets DIE on Java 8 Delayed To Fix Security · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Now that javascript is fast, that HTML5 is everywhere, that games can even run on Flash, please Oracle, kill the damn java browser plugin. Sure, Unity uses it. Do J2EE developpers around the world care about it? No, we do not care!
    Kill the damn thing. It's slow to start and it will always be slow even with the Jigsaw vaporware. I don't wan't Java in my browser. We are in 2013, ActiveX was crap, Flash is crap, java applets were, are and will always be crap.

    Disclaimer, I am a java/J2EE developper and I am totally tired of the reputation that java is getting because of this damn browser plugin.

  21. Re:Pro Exploitation CEO on US CEO Says French Workers Have Three-Hour Work Day · · Score: 1

    Quite amazing, 'cause where I work in France, I do around 42 hours (strict) a week, the lunch break is one hour, sure, but we get off work one hour later. In the daily work hour, we have a legal 15min break in the morning and 15 min in the afternoon. The lunch break must be at least 30 minutes, work laws say, but it's not counted as worktime.
    Employers often try in France to suggest unpaid overtime, but I do only 3 hours a week as I want to keep a healthy life/personal life.
    As a developper, I had positions in several industrial companies, and I have never seen those interesting stereotypes you saw. I do not say these do not exist, but just don't overgeneralize.

  22. Re:Kalman Filter on Ask Slashdot: Why Is It So Hard To Make An Accurate Progress Bar? · · Score: 1

    Man, you assume that if you implement that, you won't get people bitching about your inaccurate ETA. Keep dreaming. And this gaussian distribution of errors, for estimation bars? That's total bullshit. Why? Cause people will come complaining at you each single time your smartass algorithm just failed as utterly as linear prediction at predicting what will happen... the only deterministic change that this thing brings is that it will increase your product cost, even if only by a fraction and that your manager and team members will remember you created a not working solution.
    People do not remember when a progress bar works properly. They only remembers the times it fails. If an installed fails predicting how much time it would take, it has always failed and people will complain and amplify they complains.I mean I can still remember my explosive laughter when a file copy progress bar just went back in time, in Windows 2000. I almost fell of my chair. It was 6 or 7 years ago.
    Just leave the damn linear progress bar alone and do not put any silver bullet in it. It's simple, it's fine, it mostly works, as it already is.

  23. Re:Dosbox or freedos on Life After MS-DOS: FreeDOS Keeps On Kicking · · Score: 1

    DOSbox evolved much. And it's now used by all DOS based games on gog.com, with a nice windowed configuration tool.

  24. Re:Mititant metric user on Standard Kilogram Gains Weight · · Score: 2

    I am French and, well, we should. This sounds amazing and definitely mouth-watering.
    And BTW, ham, cheese and "bechamel" croissant is really tasty. One could easily replace the ham with crispy bacon.

  25. Re:It's the same as the older SDK agreements on The Android SDK Is No Longer Free Software · · Score: 2

    The entire story feels like free fsf FUD. Or maybe the Replicant people trying to get more people on their project.