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Comment Re:Good for balls and strikes (Score 3, Interesting) 141

The problems with the TV Networks "pitch zone" is that they are 2 dimensional, do not change for each batter, and the TV viewer has trouble seeing the true motion of the pitch. The strike zone covers all of home plate, including depth. Many pitchers use "back door" breaking balls/sliders to try and hit the very back side of the strike zone. In the "pitch zone" these would look like a ball, when in fact it crossed the plate in the zone. Also, the strike zone changes height for each batter as defined in the rules as the batter waits for the pitch. These "pitch zone" displays never do. Lastly, pitch movement is hard to pick up on television, especially when depth is involved. Pitches can curve around the strike zone and appear to be strikes as well as curve into the back of the strike zone. It is hard to tell from a single camera.

Comment 3 or more copies & migrate... (Score 1) 499

Mozy & Carbonite offer unlimited backups for about $60 per year. If your parents are willing to pick up the tab, go for it.

Personally, I do this:
- mirrored data drive stores pictures and video. Happens automatically.
- 2 external HDs gets copies of data drive. Manually cold mirror via SyncToy a few times a month.
- burn 3 copies of DVDs of new files, keep one, send other two to parents and in-laws. I may do this once or twice a year. It is manual and does consume some time, but for the cost of a few DVD RWs, envelopes, and two postage stamps I get off-site backups. Oh, and they'll likely load them on their PC, so that's another backup copy.

It probably costs me more than $60 per year, but I prefer to do things like this myself.

Comment Counter Point (Score 1) 583

While I too have also not read it, however I can easily understand how any differing view of events can look like it came from a "Propoganda Department". There is always more than one side to any story. Self Defense from one view may appear to be Murder from another.

Going all the way back to the Music of the Ainur, Melkor had just as much right as any of the Valar as to what was to become of Middle-Earth and the peoples within it. Manwë and the others formed a clique about what the Vision of Ilúvatar should be like and left Melkor out. Basically, Melkor was the geek outcast to the popular Valar. Melkor was the smartest of the bunch, "the nerd". The popular crowd even sent their "jock", Tulkas, to go beat up Melkor and stuff him in a locker. Go read The Silmarillion for yourself. It's all there.

The whole War of Wrath, and everything else, was probably started when Melkor made some really creative thing and the others were jealous and then ruined it. Why? Because they didn't approve. Who are they? Nobody special. They were all essentially equal with no one really having a real claim over another. But they chose to gang up on him because he was different. Melkor's idea of beauty didn't fit in with theirs, so they went about ridiculing and undermining all that he tried to do. Push came to shove, and next thing you know the Valar ganged up on Melkor. Melkor sees that he'll never get his own way with anything as long as the popular Valar gang is keeping him down. So he decided to wreck what they are trying to do. It's not "evil", it's JUSTICE! Melkor's responding in kind. And he's very good at it 'cause he's smarter than all of them. Melkor is the geek. Along the way he starts to gather his own clique of outcasts from the Valar gang, one of which is Sauron. Obviously, the Valar gang stepped on a lot of toes with their "Holier than Thou" attitude. They even started using derogatory nick-names to reference him, like Morgoth. See that? He's geeky AND goth and they make fun of him 'cause he's different.

But, you can't fight the popular clique. Principal Ilúvatar is always going to side with them. Eventually the Valar brats gets Melkor expelled from Middle-Earth High. Sure, Melkor probably went too far here and there, but if the Valar brats did to you what they did to Melkor...you'd be fighting right along side him. All because the Valar brats thinks that technology and industry, and the Vo-Tech kids in general, are stupid and ugly. Melkor's best friend, Sauron, swears that he'll do what he can to make them pay for it, but it is to no avail. They get him expelled too.

The Rings of Power. That was Sauron's last ditch effort to show the rest of Middle-Earth how the wool was pulled over their eyes by the Valar. The Rings of Power didn't brainwash anyone. Sauron just showed them the kind of life they could be living if not for the Valar keeping them down. There were all kinds of technological cool stuff that they could be using to improve their lives. The Rings alone gave them superpowers. IMMORTALITY! Sauron basically said to The Nine, "look at all this cool technology you could you could be using. The Valar have been keeping it from you only because they are technophobes. Isn't that stupid?!" And The Nine were like "This stuff is AWESOME! You're totally freakin' right! How have I been living without these things?? Sign me up." (it was probably similar to when you got your first smart-phone) I'm sure Sauron was proably workin' on some steampunk tech too before the end. Just take a look at Grond.

You see, it's not that Melkor was Right or Wrong. He was DIFFERENT. That's all. But the Valar didn't like that, not one bit. So they went about humiliating him and destroying him and all his friends. Does that sound "Right" to you?

Comment What He is Likely Guilty Of... (Score 2, Interesting) 973

IANAL, However it seems that a good portion of Title 18 Chapter 37 ESPIONAGE AND CENSORSHIP pertain to him.

# 793. Gathering, transmitting or losing defense information (Gathering, yes. Transmitting, maybe)
# 794. Gathering or delivering defense information to aid foreign government (maybe)
# 795. Photographing and sketching defense installations (maybe)
# 796. Use of aircraft for photographing defense installations (probably not)
# 797. Publication and sale of photographs of defense installations (maybe)
# 798. Disclosure of classified information (Yes. "or publishing")

For more info, try here:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/uscode18/usc_sup_01_18_10_I_20_37.html

Remember, they don't have to be content with what was just leaked recently. The DoJ can go back in time and drag out everything that they can prove was _EVER_ leaked on his site and use it to convict him of ESPIONAGE. If he's extradited, he's screwed.

Comment Re:A shame I won't be playing it. (Score 1) 187

Regular DII player here. The one patch also allowed you to go CD free by copying some files from the original and expansion discs.

However, I do not believe you get a respec until you complete the Den of Evil quest on Hell difficulty. There is apparently some charm or cube recipe or some such that allows you to get another respec chance if you wish.

DII was, and still is, a great game.

Comment Re:Among the findings (Score 1) 427

I was thinking the same myself.

Additionally, as someone that must remember crazy long passwords, I can offer some hope. The human brain is totally capable of memorizing multiple long random character strings. Yes at first it was hard, but after a week or so they were as easy to remember as any other. They just took longer to type and were more prone to typos. Also, I knew a guy that memorized a license key number, something towards 128 characters. The brain is an amazing tool.

Some advice for the password-challenged _HOME_ user:
- Keep a password list, but not on your computer. Write them down on paper and put it somewhere safe from damage and misplacement. This allows you to use stronger passwords and acts as a backup if your computer dies. Only write down enough information as needed so that if someone were to see it they still didn't have enough info to abuse it. More on this later.
- Increase complexity for anything banking or credit related. It's OK to have short ones for Facebook and Twitter. But your money should be guarded as best as you can.
- When creating answers for those "Security Questions" either pick questions for which only you would know the answer to OR give false answers to common questions and write them down. I hate that most answers to those questions can be found in a few quick searches on that person and some educated guessing.
- Many programs and websites accept spaces, " ", as special characters. This allows a transition from difficult passwords to easily remembered pass phrases or sentences.

A few words on complex password creation and storage:
1) If you want a challenge, make them all random and unique. There are several on-line random generators out there. Generate a hundred or so and pick one for each. In time, you won't even need the list. Yes, you can do it.

2a) If you just want something that works, try this:
- go to a generator and get a hundred or so that are 10 characters long, then pick the first one that looks like you could remember it. This will be your core. Over time this will be memorized since you will be using it everywhere.
- Create a method to generate a prefix and/or suffix that is site dependent. They could be initials for the site, a few characters for incrementing at sites that force changes, an easily remembers old password, etc... use your imagination and make them easy to re-figure-out if needed. From that, you can now have separate and secure passwords for all your sites, where your passwords would look something like (prefix)(core)(suffix) and be anywhere from 12 to 20+ characters long with little memorization. The memorization being the core and the method used to create the prefix or suffix.

2b)If you want easy and the site accepts spaces, just come up with a pass phrase and sentence. Example: "You can't handle the truth!1!" or "1 of these days, Bang! Zoom!"

3) Write it down, but leave out the things you have memorized. This way, even if stolen this list won't do them any good.
- For example, don't name the website, just what it is you do there. Instead of Facebook, write chat with Jenny.
- If you know your your prefix and your core, just write down the suffix. Instead of FooBar001, where you know the prefix Foo and the core Bar, just write down 001. Your password list will say "Chat with Jenny 001" and you'll know what it means, but no one else will.

Comment Hybrid Aircars (Score 1) 606

My guess is: Hybrid Aircars in about 15-20 years.
Think: Winnebago's of the sky. (No, not like in Spaceballs)
Basically, a cross between an airship and airplane. It's almost lighter than air. There are several designs out there already. Short take off and landing, possible vertical take-off and landing depending on design. Helium or Hydrogen does the bulk of the lifting. Only a small thruster or airfoil is required to make it fly. Engine failure results in a glide back to the ground. Designs with full body aerodynamic lift can accommodate several rooms and a control room. I saw one that had a kitchen.

The downside is that they are big, relatively slow, and fair weather only.

Comment poorly implemented... (Score 4, Insightful) 112

The RFID systems I have seen in the field are poorly implemented. Most were thick, think 9v battery, tags that were either attached via zip ties or velcro. Even if it was securely attached, most were attached to removable face plates, while others were attached to the rear and would actually prevent you from pulling out the server and/or damage the cabling if you did, as it tended to hang down and catch on stuff. (snap off fibers, pull out power cords, etc.) They offered no assurance that that piece of equipment was in the room since they could easily be separated from the tag. Even with this system, you'll still need people to visually verify it anyway.

How often do you actually lose a piece of hardware? This is a solution to a problem that does not exist.

Barcode or your own SN sticker followed up by visual inspections is cheaper, safer, and more reliable compared to the RFID solutions I have seen out there.

Comment Hidden (Score 1) 300

De-friending seems harsh for only a constant barrage of drivel. Just use the Hide feature and most of the drivel is gone. Especially the Game related as you can choose to hide the game messages or the person. Just pick the game and you still get the real messages and keep your friend.

Only De-friended someone once when a friend got divorced and I did not care to hear their ex's bs.

Comment Re:Peter jackson... (Score 1) 222

What is _NOT_ explained anywhere in tolkien literature or letters is the exact origin of the Hobbits. They just appeared out of nowhere in the Third Age. It is my belief that Hobbits were created as a counter to Sauron's, and earlier Melkor's, evil. The quiet, simple melody Ilúvatar introduced to take back control of the great song of the ainur from Melkor. They simply had a natural resistance to the power of the ring as designed by Ilúvatar.

Comment Re:Peter jackson... (Score 4, Interesting) 222

Bad Theory. Frodo gave the ring to Bombadil to look at and Bombadil showed that he had power over the ring, something the Witch King would not have, so Bombadil is not the Witch King. If he was then he would have taken it immediately back to his master, Sauron, but he didn't, he gave it back to Frodo, something the Witch King would never have done. Elrond's refusal to let Bombadil keep the ring is more out of his understanding that Bombadil, though powerful, could not be trusted as he would just as easily misplace it as keep it safe. (An alternative no better than throwing it in the deep ocean hoping it lost forever. Elrond wanted the ring destroyed and guided the council to that purpose.)

Bombadil is an enigma that Tolkien purposefully never wanted explained. The theory I prefer is that he and Goldberry are one of the Aniur that was appointed to do a task, probably by Manwë, in that area of Middle Earth in the Third Age.

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