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Comment Hopefully with UI improvements to come (Score 5, Informative) 106

I'd love to see the UX design team go start working on Android. WebOS is still hands-down the best mobile OS I've used day-to-day. The functional UI + ease of rooting were huge advantages for WebOS. Too bad it got saddled by Palm's historically bad record of actually like, selling phones, to people... Android feels so hacky, and IOS, while pleasant enough, is too much of a limiting walled garden for me. I like being able to use VNC over an SSH tunnel, for instance, or get a terminal on my phone.

Comment Re:And Amanda Palmer, And Steve Albini (Score 1) 567

I'm "people", I'm "people" with a couple of thousand CDs. I'm "people" who go to 20-40 shows a year.

Do I think anyone "deserves" to achieve Ozzy wealth, or Mick Jagger wealth arbitrarily because they're musicians? Shit no. Do I understand the economics behind /why/ it costs $1MM to produce a record and stage a short tour? Absolutely. Lots of "small" bands live very close to the edge and I think it's good to support them. For this reason I don't go to movies very often, because A:) they don't interest me particularly, and B:) I don't want to support an ecosystem that gives Brad Pitt $10MM to crap out Oceans Twelve.

People make choices, I choose to spend money on music. Other people choose to spend money on video games, or comics, or movies, or expensive cars. I think the Amanda Palmer Kickstarter is up around $850k now, so it looks like some number of people get enough value from what she does to contribute.

Comment And Amanda Palmer, And Steve Albini (Score 4, Informative) 567

Amanda Palmer just posted a very long and informative blog about where all the money goes when people donate to her Kickstarter effort to finance her upcoming tour/album. In that post, she references Steve Albini's classic rant against an industry churning through young talent and keeping all the candy for themselves (well, one of his rants on the topic, anyway).

I'm glad to see these issues starting to get major traction and hopefully change can come from without, since it will never come from within.

Comment I will refuse (Score 1) 80

This is one of the least ethical things I could think of to do as a gamer. If you wish to help you government, help them feed poor people. If I found out that a game I was playing actually helped my government kill other humans more efficiently, I don't even know how I would take that information.

Comment Re:Yes we can (Score 1) 388

Well, in my mind, the article is saying "can't help peeking at" to mean exposing yourself to it needlessly. We can agree that being exposed to credit information, medical records and the like is a daily part of life at a Sr. level. The issue is people who can't help themselves from looking at private crap that they don't need to see. Admins reading exec emails, poking through HR shared folders, and looking at Medical or Credit data in databases, just to look.

I mean, we have to have this power to do our jobs, we don't have to abuse that power just to satisfy our boredom or curiosity.

Comment Re:I brought the orange one, and the orange one (Score 1) 319

Yeah, I kind of do to. Those chairs suck. I think the problem is that all the really good designs are patented forever, so we can't just start having the Chinese stamp out stackable Eames chairs by the millions. Perhaps my sarcasm has turned into another fine reason for patent reform?

Another reason for it is that until later in high school I was way taller than most kids in my class, and the chairs are for average height. I'm sure short people had similar problems.

Comment I brought the orange one, and the orange one (Score 1) 319

Why do people really need to worry about this? Kids play, they get hurt, they get better, and stronger, and hopefully smarter. I propose we buy little Aerons for all schoolkids because those plastic stackable chairs suck and will hurt their backs. Many kids aren't athletic, and that's fine, but many/most kids like playing throw/hit the ball games, and they should be allowed to.

/'bout the biggest pair you've ever seen, dingleberry!

Comment Re:Advantages vs a bike - none/few? (Score 1) 93

Well, I don't think Blackwell built his unicycle to be better than a bike, he built it because it was a neat experiment and because he could. He didn't even know how to ride a unicycle before building it, he learned to ride a unicycle just to try to build a powered unicycle. I don't think he'd ever suggest you like, buy one, or anything. He even gives full hardware specs and all the software he wrote to control his devices for free.

Comment Homebrew from several years ago (Score 1) 93

Trevor Blackwell built both a couple of two-wheeled versions, but also built a unicycle about half a decade ago. He just figured "If Dean builds it with two wheels, and I can build one with two wheels, I'm gonna build one with one wheel":
Two wheeled original version
Unicycle version

Check out the video link on the Unicycle page, it's pretty amusing to watch him try and stop.

Comment Re:My question about Convergence (Score 1) 127

Yeah, I'm interested to see how this plays out, it's clear the current CA system is pretty badly broken/breaking, Moxie's BlackHat talk was a pretty interesting take. Once lots more notaries come online it will be easier to see how to mitigate problems like I mentioned without giving up some of that agility and being forced to check with something that isn't going to be fooled.

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