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Comment Re:And we wonder why music is such crap these days (Score 2) 301

Fair point about the Biebers, Brittneys, Iggys, Kanyes, and Taylors of music these days.

But just to be a bit pedantic... You can't really properly call Nine Inch Nails a band. NiN is basically just Trent Reznor in his studio producing. When he feels like making a bit of extra cash touring he hires whatever guitarists and keyboardists are available, has them learn his songs, dresses them in black for a a few months, and still uses a drum machine to keep the beat.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 301

You're forgetting the countless incredible pieces of music which is instrumental/synthesized only.

... which are sold to the DJs who perform it, at exorbitant prices, on Beatport, or sometimes even on vinyl still. (If they're smart, those same DJs are writing those purchases off as a business expense anyway. So don't weep for the DJs' wallets.) Hell... sometimes said producers themselves do go on tour. Above & Beyond played two sold-out nights in a row at the Bill Graham auditorium here in San Francisco, for example. And Deadmaus and BT are pretty active touring producers, even though they're best known for what they do in the studio.

Comment Re:Not for me... (Score 1) 141

So, I know Walmart are a bunch of evil bastards. And I'll do a little happy dance the day the whole bloody lot of them are put out onto the street to starve in the gutter.

But what's wrong with Denny's? Aside from the low-quality and overpriced (Ever since they got rid of the $1.99 "are you out of your mind?" grand slam.) food that would make me ill in any situation other than "I've already been up half the night and put my body through worse things than what I'm eating right now.", that is. It's certainly not fine, or even fair, dining by any stretch of the imagination. But what puts them on the level of Walmart?

Comment Re: Codeword (Score 2) 479

> As an example, we recently had a password issue
> where users were required to change passwords
> every 90 days. It was a dumb idea, and I'm not
> entirely sure why I agreed to it in the first place,

In some cases, you don't have a choice. Work somewhere that takes credit card payments? Section 8.5.9 mandates that all users must be made to change their passwords every 90 days. And I'm pretty sure that HIPAA and the rest of the big standards have similar requirements. Yeah, it's a dumb policy that results in users creating dumb passwords. And yeah, it's annoying to have to enforce it, especially when users forget the dumb passwords they knocked up and complain. But, unless Visa, MasterCard, and such can someday be persuaded otherwise; anyone who wants to take payments has to do it.

Comment Re:I don't understand ad blockers (Score 2) 161

If banner ads were still static, or even animated, gif images, I wouldn't block them. But many "regular banner ads" these days come with some pretty obnoxious javascript, stupid HTML5 tricks, and sometimes even flash (still). That sort of resource-hogging, battery-draining, vulnerability-inducing, malware-spreading nastiness needs to die, whether it's in a pop up/under, an interstitial, or "just" a banner.

So yah, I block them and don't blame anyone else for doing so. I do whitelist some sites I want to support though. But any shenanigans, and back into the blackhole they go.

Comment Re:Does El Capitan Fix Major Problems? (Score 1) 415

Regardless of the opinions of anyone on "flatness"; a big motivator was a growing dislike of skeuomorphism amongst the public and Apple's developers. They couldn't get rid of it, though, because Scott Forrestal was in love with the idea and had the clout to force it on everyone. And when he bungled the Maps transition and "retired" later on, what should probably have been a more careful and gradual transition was rushed. causing some annoying peculiarities.

Comment Re:Walled Garden (Score 2) 86

They didn't remove Pandora when they launched iTunes Radio. They didn't remove the Kindle app when they launched iBooks. Netflix is still available, despite the existence of the Movie and TV sections of the iTunes store. Chrome is available as an alternative to Safari. And when Apple dumped Google maps from its default position, Google fairly quickly came up with a less embarrassingly out-of-date maps app that's in the app store right now.

Why should it be any different with Spotify?

Comment Re:Fear of guns (Score 2) 535

Well, this was Massachusetts; where light-up Mooninite signs are treated as a "terrorist threat" worthy of a city-wide alert; wearing a t-shirt with some blinkenlights on it is "justification" for threatening Course VI students with submachine guns (and then arresting them); and where police, entering with neither warrant nor invitation, accost (black) university professors in their own homes, arresting them for disturbing the peace should they get irate and raise their voice; and all of this goes unpunished.

So, expecting a reasonable and calm common-sense reaction out of the police there is Quixotic at best.

Comment Re:Ah, this is why we need H-1b VISAs. (Score 1) 220

It's true that Honda and Toyota don't have much interesting going on beyond the new Civic Type R and the FRS (Which is actually a re-badged Subaru.). There are, of course, those rumors of a new Supra, but I'll believe that when I see it. And that airbag issue is just disgraceful.

Mazda, Subaru, and Nissan however, are all putting out vehicles that are innovative, fantasic to drive, and every bit as reliable as Japan's reputation for quality would lead you to believe.

Comment Re:did they damage the car? (Score 2) 461

> stupidity on the part of a few cops doesn't mean
> we're living under ISIS.

When those cops go unpunished it means we're moving in that direction. I'm not saying that the sky is falling and it's for sure we'll get to the point where it's that bad. But we do have a serious problem with increased militancy on the part of the police and a lack of accountability for their misconduct. And it's not out of line at all to call their pattern of abuse to reigned in and to have the abusers punished.

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