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Comment My link "cheats" (Score 1) 142

I recently subscribed to SaskTel's MaxTV IPTV services. While my download speeds remain unchanged and in line with what's promised, my upload speeds have seen a near 30% boost. But that's because in order to enable the IPTV, the link was actually upgraded to 25 megabits from 6, and the IPTV doesn't use the upload bandwidth, leaving it available for me.

This is actually an ideal situation for me, because upload speeds for me to ship code are far more important to me than download speeds. I've had far more download bandwidth than I actually need ever since I upgraded to the 5 megabit package from the "basic" 1.5 megabit. 1.5 was enough for streaming video; 5 lets me stream and download at the same time.

And to think it's all because I didn't want to take a chance on missing Season 3 of "Orphan Black". :D

Comment Re:Circa 1995 (Score 2, Insightful) 199

Yeah, but you're not allowed to complain about Google on anything other than "privacy" issues. 'Cause, like, "do no evil" and all that.

See, if you give away your attempt to dominate the world, you're automatically a "good" guy because you're not using it for profit (pay no attention to the ad push on every single thing you do, nor the tracking of your every action.)

Comment Wrong problem (Score 1) 365

The article is dealing with the wrong problem. The question is not how you achieve the highly mechanized and wasteful civilization we have now, but how you define "civilized." Personally, I feel that many earlier non-mechanized societies were at least if not more civilized than we are now.

Closely tied to the land and limited to steam powered transport that could be fueled by wood and biomass if need be, this entire continent of North America had it's kickstart. Granted, we didn't have iThingies and ship oranges from the other side of the continent, but it was a "civilized" society.

Comment Trolling vs. Different Viewpoint (Score 3, Interesting) 279

Unfortunately, many people think that if you express a different viewpoint or opinion than the masses that you're trying to start an argument or a fight. Why is society so hell-bent on crushing dissenting opinions? And not merely silencing them, but villifying them?

I've often been tagged as "trolling" because I don't agree with the crowd. If you knew me personally, you'd know very well that I'm not trying to start a fight, just expressing my opinion. Just because it is not the popular viewpoint doesn't mean my views aren't valid.

Here on Slashdot, I often see people flagged as being trolls just because they don't follow the masses. You'd think a site full of outcasts and oddballs like programmers and technologists would be more accepting of alternative views, but the exact opposite seems to be the case.

Comment Party Animals (Score 1) 291

In other news, party animals who spent their time on drugs, cannabis, or alcohol instead of studying were more likely to fail their courses.

The prohibitionists touted the study as a great victory for prohibition. The legalizers touted the study as proof that responsible use was necessary.

And the parents raged that their stupid kids were wasting all their time on parties instead of doing some actual work.

Comment What a shock (Score 1) 141

A TV star has more followers than a tech grunt. What a shock.

Next thing you know, someone will purport surprise that a music or movie star is more popular than someone who works for a living.

*LOL*

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