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Comment Re:Dihydrogen Monoxide *is* a serious threat (Score 3, Insightful) 296

That's not really the point. The point is that you can either make stuff up or be very misleading and lots of people will loudly go along with it (I believe a bunch of people went out and got a lot of signatures on a petition to ban DHMO). I'm sure if you made up something entirely nonexistent or found some other very obscure but pretty safe chemical you could get the same effect, but the fact that it's water makes it all the more amusing (And makes the fact that it's not actually evil more readily apparent to the informed reader).
"Oh well, I lost my moderations but I felt like saying this anyway. And don't blame me if some 'c's are missing, my key is a bit broken." -Cill

Comment Re:It's open source (Score 1) 325

But some actual economics will tell you this is only true in a perfect competition, which the mobile market is not. Some providers /do/ do vheaper texts and do not have 100% of the market, proving this. Aalso, there is no reason texts should cost how much sending them costs + sensible markup. Disregarding profits, cell companies have X running costs and so have to get ~X money from somewhere, but not necessarily proportionately to costs. See: rich bohemoths making mad losses on something to get into the market.

Comment Re:Is this really a trojan? (Score 1) 168

In this place of the UK, the area code tells you very much where/what you're calling, be it a normal landline, mobile, premium or free number. Even the cost of the number is often specified just in the area code. And if that's not enough there's a website which does premium rate phone number lookups. (Hint: 08 and 09, apart from 0800, are generally costy)

Comment Modular! (Score 1) 763

Do you really need them all, all the time? I've gone modular with my keys - Each group gets it's own keyring and the lot goes on a mini karabiner. I have college keys (room, college key), bike keys (Two bike locks), drinking keys (Bottle opener, discount card thing), car key (Goes on its own so I can detach it and avoid driving jangles), house keys. When I'm going to head out, I grab/ditch until I have just what I need. Means if I lose them I lose less, I don't have bogloads of keys all the time, and it stops me getting sidetracked and going for random cycles when I shouldn't (It's a 3 minute walk from my bike to my room where the keys are, which is long enough to make me think out whether i really have time for it)

Comment Re:I Don't Know What You're Talking About (Score 1) 411

I have an audigy 2 ex and audigy 4 - both cards appear nearly identical, both with the external box things, giving me three line ins (two large phone (The first also usable as microphone) one double-phono), full size midi in and out, optical in and out, digital coax in and out, volume knob, microphone level knob as well as an IR receiver, 5.1 output, as good a quality as I can distinguish, an extra back-plate with RS232/joystick. Also, pretty winful linux support (not alll the trimmings but all the ins and outs work)

Comment Re:Microsoft (Score 3, Interesting) 896

Admittedly, keygens are probably among the most likely software to contain a trojan or something. However, that sort of hand-hacked code does quite often throw up false positives. I've quite often found AVG complaining about cygwin executables or scene demos (Which usually have convoluted compressed executables, probably similar to trojans)

Comment Re:What about the headphones (Score 1) 360

Funny, I get the opposite problem with my N95 - with my pretty sensitive sennheiser rippoff in ears, the minimum volume without being muted (10%) is too loud for me sometimes. I get a similar problem with my ipod (running rockbox) - the minimum volume is still pretty loud and it just mutes if I try to go lower.

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