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Comment Re:The Pope is right (Score 2, Interesting) 284

I was thinking the same thing. Although I was raised Catholic and received the relevant sacraments, I'm not religious and haven't even stepped foot in a church for a number of years. I've considered checking it out again for no real reason, but it feels awkward to me to just show up on Sunday (and I'm not that committed to the idea anyway).

If I were able to sort of "check it out" by reading the priest's blog or whatever, it would make my decision to show up and participate much easier. Either I'll decide that it's just not my thing, or my somewhat renewed interest leads me to actually go.

Seems like a good idea to me. And why stop at just Catholicism? There are at least 5 different churches of varying denominations within a few miles of my house and I don't really know the differences between them. I could hit up a few of the sites and see what they're all about. If nothing else, at least I'll learn something. (And to be honest, they might have a web presence right now and I never thought about it. Time for some googling...)

Comment Re:Slackware (Score 1) 496

I'm running Slackware on a laptop with a 1.8 GHz AMD processor and 512 MB of RAM and it works fine. Granted, Slackware recently made the upgrade to the latest KDE 4.x and the eye candy doesn't work without a video card, but it's not that big of a deal.

One thing to keep in mind though, you need to have a pretty good grasp of the command line to get Slackware up and running. By default it only creates a root account during the installation and boots straight to a command line, so you'll have to get everything running manually. You'll also probably need to use command line tools to get your wireless connected too.

Slackware is great on old hardware if you know what you're doing, and it's a great learning experience if you're a novice who wants to figure out how Linux really works.

Comment Re:viewers weren't stupid, they were pissed off (Score 5, Informative) 246

Read TFA. (I know, I know, slashdot). He isn't blaming users. He said that after the 9/11 attacks, no advertisers were paying because they didn't want their ads next to 9/11 stories. Salon, after rounds of layoffs before the attacks even happened, was hurting for cash. They used a paywall for some content, which brought in new cash in the short term. However, there wasn't much room for growth since nobody but the current subscribers could see the content to decide if they wanted to subscribe.

You cherry-picked the summary in your little tirade. They put up the 30 second ad "day pass" thing as a way to bring in new eyeballs, but it was so convoluted and poorly executed that users just quit coming to the site. He didn't blame the users, he blamed the paywall.

Comment Wayyyy OT but... (Score 1) 462

Learn the lesson: You can't trust the greedy to run critical infrastructure.

Kind of makes you wonder why health care isn't considered critical infrastructure.

(I know this is way OT, but that quote made me think. I never thought about health care being "critical infrastructure" before. If health care was treated like electricity or gas we wouldn't need all this goddam political drama.)

Mod away!

Comment Re:I don't mind at all (Score 1) 606

I do the exact same thing. I charge a case of beer per computer. Since it's mostly backing up files and reformatting an OS, I drink the beer while I work.

This also avoids the awkwardness of taking money from friends and family. (Not necessarily awkward, I guess, but I don't like telling my neighbor or my Uncle to give me $30 or whatever. Maybe it's just me.)

As a bonus, I tell my fellow drinkers to surprise me with a good beer I've never had before. Unfortunately, this doesn't work with non-drinkers who end up grabbing a case of Bud Light unless I say otherwise, but still.

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