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Comment Re:Seat belts (Score 1) 832

Oh, it's a lot worse than you imagine.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture made those very modifications. Kirk got a seat-retention system that consisted of arm rests that folded down over his thighs to hold him in his seat. Really cool upgrade.

Then you notice that a lot of the people on the bridge are standing up! WTF?

I still like the movie though, and I remain a bigger Trek fan than a Star Wars fan.

Comment Re:I don't know, but... (Score 1) 494

i helped my uncle jack off a horse

In English this has a double meaning due to the word "jack".

What he probably means is: I helped my uncle Jack get off of a horse.

What most deviants, such as myself, will see is: I helped my uncle jack-off a horse. This is very funny if you know that "jack-off" is a term for masturbation. In this particular instance it means he helped his uncle by pulling on the horse's dick. :)

I don't know what you call a penis in Argentina, but here in the united states we use "cock", "dick", "wang", "johnson", and many other variations.

Comment Re:Physical media is dying (Score 1) 685

2. Bandwidth is getting cheaper while high-speed internet is becoming more accessible.

Read the below this morning on ComputerWorld.

Computerworld - DreamWorks Animation SKG is releasing all of its films in stereoscopic 3D, more than doubling the amount of data storage capacity required to store its movies.

The move to 3D animation also requires the company's IT shop to migrate away from tape-based storage systems to disk systems in order to keep archived films online for animators to use as references for future sequels, which is the company's mainstay.

DreamWorks recently released its first 3D animated moviem Monsters vs. Aliens, which packed its newly installed disk array from Hewlett-Packard Co. with 93TB worth of images. The company plans to release five feature films every two years. In the past, each animated film averaged less than 25TB, according to Derek Chan, head of digital operations for DreamWorks Animation.

The creation of three-dimensional movies means for every film frame there will be two images instead of one: one image for the left eye and one for the right eye of a viewer. Those cheap plastic or cardboard bi-colored glasses handed out at the theater polarize the images on the screen and combine in order to give the perception of depth.

DreamWorks' philosophy on feature-length animated films is to build franchises. There are three Shrek movies, for example, Madagascar has two and Kung Fu Panda will also have a sequel, Chan said.

In order to compete with bootleggers, high-definition television, the internet, cell-phones, and a host of new threats to their profits movie studios will HAVE to embrace 3-D and make it work this time. This will push streaming video out of the reach of most US customers for a LOOOOONG time.

Yes, I know, the above storage requirements are for the studio not for streaming the movie. Regardless, the bandwidth requirements will need a significant increase.

Comment Re:Let's get this straight: (Score 1) 685

Conclusion, most average comcast consumers don't get to experience HD on a regular basis.

Not just Comcast customers. I have U-Verse and I experience it as well. In fact a lot of times I will record a movie on my DVR from an "HD" channel, where I assume everything is "HD" only to discover that it was not in "HD". What is there is always better than standard definition, but it is not "HD", so I think you are safe in assuming most people don't know what "HD" really looks like.

Conclusion: there is not enough "HD" content available for the "HD" channels to provide it 24/7, so people don't know when they are getting it or what it really looks like.

Comment Re:No Surprise (Score 1) 685

Stupidly, the movie studios are trying to slow that down by putting additional copy protection on DVDs, but that's not much of an obstacle either, so far.

I disagree. I don't remember the last (legal) DVD I bought because I have grown tired of their antics*.

I am a great fan of DVDs and bought many between 2001 and 2007 until I got tired of the many barriers between me watching MY DVD. This also stopped me from buying a PS3, which I would have done otherwise.

*I have to buy X-Men: Origins because I have the bootleg. If I buy the bootleg I take it upon myself to buy the studio disk even if I don't like the movie, which I did not. The only good thing about buying the studio release is that I can compare the two. Wish I had bought the bootleg of Attack Of The Clones so I would have a record of the way Jango Fett actually died. :)

Comment Re:I always maintained blue ray was moot (Score 0, Offtopic) 685

Why was this moderated as a "Troll"? This is a genuine comment from someone explaining their perception of a movie in a format relevant to the discussion. If the moderator does not agree with the sentiment, too bad. Read something else.

Don't waste mod-points this way! Somebody please meta-moderate this appropriately.

Comment Re:Understatement (Score 1) 403

Thank you. That looks interesting. I'll read that in more detail tomorrow morning. I really don't have time today to download one small page at a time right now.

This is one of the reasons I stopped reading anandtech. The small amount of info you get on each page surrounded by ads. I know they have to make a living, don't we all, but I rarely have that much spare time at work (where I do all my research). But since I am planning on building two new boxes this Summer and considering the use of SSDs in them this is a gold mine. Thanks again.

Comment Re:Understatement (Score 2, Informative) 403

Check out the May 08, 2009 ComputerWorld article "Analysis: SSD performance -- is a slowdown inevitable?" written by Lucas Mearian.* Intel's speed is not permanent.

The recent revelation that Intel Corp.'s consumer-class solid-state disk (SSD) drives suffer from fragmentation that can cause a significant performance degradation raises the question: Do all SSDs slow down with use over time?

The answer is yes - and every drive manufacturer knows it.

This is a very interesting article if you are considering SSDs versus HDs for your next computer.

*I copied this from a print-out. No I don't have a link. I am at work and I don't have the time to provide it.

Comment Re:Interesting but inherently flawed! (Score 1) 472

1. Why as an investor would I pay a 30% premium to purchase physical gold?

Because in this instance you are buying small lots of gold. If you were to buy gold in larger quantities then you could pay the spot price.

2. Assuming I would I then have to worry about keeping the gold physically secure once I take possession of it.

When was the last time your house was broken into? Would you tell ANYONE that you kept gold in your house? If not, you probably have little to worry about.

Also, you probably have one or more guns in your home loaded and ready. As the old sign says: Forget about the dog. Beware of owner!

3. I run into issues when trying to sell the gold after I've taken possession because how can anyone be sure that I haven't tampered with the gold? How do they know that 1oz is still 1oz? What if I drilled and filled it?

EUREKA!

Comment Re:It's not the eye color screening that bugs me (Score 1) 847

You are assuming I have made that assumption. Just read what I have written elsewhere in this thread. I recognize that not everyone who uses IVF is genetically deficient. But if they are I would stop them, if I could. But I can't, so I won't.

Make no mistake, though. I am against it.

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