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Comment Re:My experience with Fios was largely negative (Score 2) 201

How long ago were you using FiOS? I wonder if they were using the Freescale MSC7120 chip for the residential side, or if they still are in many places. I had the "privilege" of working on that chip, and it was a complete disaster. Most of the code written to support that chip at the driver level was there for the sole purpose of detecting when a hardware bug locked the chip up, and resetting it. A book could be written about what a management fuck-up the creation of that chip was.

I lived for a couple years recently on a duplex property; I had ComCrap and the other resident had FiOS. He was constantly having to go reset the outside box for his connection, while my cable connection almost never had problems.

Comment Re:He's baaaaaack! (Score 1) 422

I was 8 when I stood in line with my family outside of the Cine Capri to watch Star Wars. I probably watched it 50 more times in the theaters over the next few years, mostly summer matinees. Eventually I got to watch it on ONTV - my family's first PPV of any sort - and then on 3rd generation Beta tapes after that. I still have the bedsheets somewhere :)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O...

Comment Re: You see that too? (Score 1) 514

I think this might be a bit simplistic, as demographic groups are far more complex than just educational background (which you've lumped together into only 5 categories, without any regard for the field of study: someone with a "theological degree" or a degree in "metaphysics" (WTF?) is not equivalent to someone with a degree in engineering, mathematics, or liberal arts. Someone with a degree from some wacky diploma mill or a "Christian college" is not the same as someone with a degree from an Ivy League or from a well-respected state university.

There's some other big demographic factors here which are pretty important: age range, and religious affiliation (if any). Certain generations tend to vote certain ways, and religion hugely affects voting too.

Comment Re:Good news (Score 4, Insightful) 422

Exactly. And he had a lot of other help; I read somewhere that his (now ex-)wife helped edit the script for ANH to keep it from having the same shit dialog that the Prequels had. And of course ESB and RotJ had other writers and directors. Lucas had a few good ideas for an overall story, then other people came in and cleaned it all up and gave us Episodes 4-6. The Prequels are what you get when Lucas has full control of everything, and the result is crap, some nice ideas, but overall crap.

Comment Re:Yay!! (Score 5, Funny) 422

What are you talking about? Shatner never directed a Star Trek movie. Although I have sometimes wondered why the Star Trek franchise went straight from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home to Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. I guess someone at Paramount forgot how to count. But that's OK, IV and VI were both good movies.

Comment Re:Yay!! (Score 1) 422

I liked the first JJ ST movie better than the SW prequels (1 and 2, never saw 3).

I still didn't like it enough to bother watching his second ST movie. And considering I used to be a big ST fan as a teenager, that's saying something.

One shitfest being better than another shitfest just isn't enough to get me to spend time or money watching a movie.

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