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Comment Re:Where did he pass away to? (Score 1) 57

Currently modded down to -1. Sigh.

It's a valid point. Death is a great, scary taboo. So we avert our eyes and say he "passed away", or even "passed".

Fred Pohl has died. Mincing words does not help. My sadness at this is not helped by such euphemisms. In fact, like the AC OP, I, personally, find "passed away" slightly offensive---and "passed" more so.

So, let's accept that Fred has died. Let's rejoice in the life he led, the books he wrote, the pleasure he gave to so many. Let's celebrate him living a ling life, and being productive to the very end.

I read his latest blog post, and then, the next day. saw he'd died. Way to go!

Comment Re:Accountability (Score 1) 524

That doesn't sound like Gandhi to me, not the man who said:

I believe that all life is one. Thoughts take definite forms. Tigers and snakes have kinship with us. They are a warning to us to avoid harbouring evil, wicked, lustful thoughts. If I want to rid the earth of venomous beasts and reptiles, I must rid myself of all venomous thoughts. I shall not do so if, in my impatient ignorance and in my desire to prolong the existence of the body, I seek to kill the so-called venomous beasts and reptiles. If in not seeking to defend myself against such noxious animals I die, I should rise again a better and fuller man. With that faith in me, how should I seek to kill a fellow-being in a snake?

As for civil disobedience against the Nazis:

In a post-war interview in 1946, he said, "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs... It would have aroused the world and the people of Germany... As it is they succumbed anyway in their millions."

Comment Re:Not So (Score 2) 107

On top of that, Hamlet is stolen from the old Danish story of Amleth. Which is a lot more violent :)

There's always Titus Andronicus if that's what you like.

A scottish schoolmaster called Adam McNaughtan took on the challenge of summarizing the whole play in one song. If you need a translation from Scots to English, then you might prefer Martin Carthy's version.

I love the bit towards the end. "Fortinbras, knee-deep in Danes, lived happily ever after."

Comment Re:radical new technology (Score 1) 153

there was never enough data to confirm or deny the theory

I remember watching a documentary about about B&W striped wet suits where the guy got a whole lot of reef sharks into a feeding frenzy and then just jumped in with them, sure enough the sharks scattered out of sight. However they were common reef sharks that are pretty much harmless, I've yet to see it tested with great whites.

Do I detect a new game show here? "Survivor: Great White".

Comment Re:So what is it? (Score 4, Informative) 166

Never used it either. It sucked However 99% of all "RSS apps" for mobile phones, including the few that are worth anyone's time, use it for infrastructure.

This.

I never used Google Reader. However, I do use an RSS reader. And to keep in sync across the devices, my reader uses Google Reader infrastructure---as do most readers. That is, I keep my reading history "in the cloud", this being one of the things the cloud is good at.

So, Google did the RSS sync thing well, so well that everyone else used the infrastructure. Google Reader itself though was, at best, meh. Everyone else used the Google Reader infrastructure invisibly, so there was no contribution to Google's coffers.

Google could have competed with a better RSS client, but they didn't. Instead, they have killed their poor client and also their pretty good infrastructure. As far as I can tell, that's the reason people are upset. They don't care about Google Reader, but the loss of the syncing infrastructure is a problem.

Comment Re:Where are the games? (Score 1) 782

everyone knows its going to let you shoot and kill people and monsters with lots of blood and gore in HD

the TV part is going to sell it to the wife and the ESPN features are the knife in sony's back

Is it going to be quiet, or sound like an unmuffled hovercraft like the original XBOX 360?

If you have the volume turned up to 11 for FPS then the loudness of the console is not so much of an issue, but as an STB replacement, it needs to be silent.

Submission + - 3D-Printable Gun Downloaded 100k Times In Two Days (Thanks To Kim Dotcom) (forbes.com)

Sparrowvsrevolution writes: The promise of a fully 3D-printable gun is that it can spread via the Internet and entirely circumvent gun control laws. Two days after that digital weapon's blueprint first appeared online, it seems to be fulfilling that promise. Files for the printable gun known as that "Liberator" have been downloaded more than 100,000 times in two days, according to Defense Distributed, the group that created it. Those downloads were facilitated by Kim Dotcom's startup Mega, which Defense Distributed is using to host the Liberator's CAD files. And it's also been uploaded to the Pirate Bay, where it's one of the most popular files in the filesharing site's uncensorable 3D printing category.

Submission + - Tool reveals iPad and iPhone user locations (scmagazine.com.au)

mask.of.sanity writes: A researcher has found that Apple user locations can be potentially determined by tapping into Apple Maps and he has created a Python tool to make the process easier.

iSniff GPS accesses Apple's database of wireless access points, which is collected by iPhones and iPads that have GPS and wifi location services enabled.

Apple uses this 'crowd-sourced' data to run its location services, however the location database is not meant to be public.

You can download the tool via Giuthub.

Submission + - New Zealand set to prohibit software patents (iitp.org.nz)

Drishmung writes: The New Zealand Commerce Minister Craig Foss today (9 May 2013) announced a significant change to the Patents Bill currently before parliament, replacing the earlier amendment with far clearer law and re-affirming that software really will be unpatentable in New Zealand.

An article on the Institute of IT Professionals web site by IT Lawyer Guy Burgess looks at the the bill and what it means, with reference to the law in other parts of the world such as the USA, Europe and Britain (which is slightly different from the EU situation).

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