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Comment Re:Comparisons like this don't mean squat... (Score 1, Interesting) 702

Heh, nothing against you personally, but when I read comments about "how installing {insert Linux distro here} on Granny's machine meant problems dropped by 90%", I wonder if Granny simply stopped using her computer quite so much or whether she simply doesn't ask for advice anymore...

"Goddammit Marv, I asked our son to speed up our computer and now we can't use it anymore! I'll be jiggered if I'm going back to him for advice..."

Comment Re:It's society's fault! (Score 3, Insightful) 520

Yeah, but that's bobbins though, isn't it? There's a reason airplane cockpits are designed the way they are. There's a reason nuclear power station control surfaces are designed the way they are. In fact there's a very good reason why anything that could really go bang has input devices that are designed to diminish the possibility of user error.

Just saying "pay attention" isn't enough. No-one, not you, certainly not me, can attend exactly to what they're doing for every second of every minute of every day.

Comment Re:For Science! (Score 1) 793

Well, I know posting on Slashdot is neither the time nor the place to be pedantic but the poll question is "When I die, I want my body to be..." rather than the more dramatic "How I want to die is...".

I put it to you, sir, that should my body be irradiated after I die, I shall neither notice, nor care, that it would be either post- or pre-apocalyptic.

Comment Re:Perfect code may not be perfect.. (Score 2, Interesting) 596

Even further than that, this article in the New York Times argues that it was only because of the FBW system in the A320 that the miracle on the Hudson was even possible. The author argues it wasn't just human intervention but computer assisted human intervention that allowed all those people to escape.

Submission + - Industry Leaders Warn on Peak Oil (guardian.co.uk) 1

Oxygen99 writes: In a break with tradition, not to mention with the public statements of the largest oil suppliers in the world, British industry leaders, such as Richard Branson, are warning governments that urgent action is required if the world is not to face imminent economic collapse in the face of falling oil production. This follows allegations by insiders at the International Energy Agency that the organisation had deliberately underplayed the threat of so-called "peak oil" to avoid panic on the stock markets.

Who will win when big business goes up against big oil? Place your bets now!

Comment Re:Still? (Score 1) 347

I take your point, but the Large Hadron Collider is the pre-eminent technological achievement of our civilisation. It knocks the complexity of the moon landings into a cocked hat and operates at energy frequencies intended to rip the very fabric of space apart. It's the most complicated and wondrous machine ever built by our, and possibly by any species, and we're doing all this to understand the processes that govern life, the universe and everything.

That, my friend, is what gods do.

I think a little "are we there yet?" journalism is forgiveable in that context.
The Almighty Buck

EA Flip-Flops On Battlefield: Heroes Pricing, Fans Angry 221

An anonymous reader writes "Ben Kuchera from Ars Technica is reporting that EA/DICE has substantially changed the game model of Battlefield: Heroes, increasing the cost of weapons in Valor Points (the in-game currency that you earn by playing) to levels that even hardcore players cannot afford, and making them available in BattleFunds (the in-game currency that you buy with real money). Other consumables in the game, such as bandages to heal the players, suffered the same fate, turning the game into a subscription or pay-to-play model if players want to remain competitive. This goes against the creators' earlier stated objectives of not providing combat advantage to paying customers. Ben Cousins, from EA/DICE, argued, 'We also frankly wanted to make buying Battlefunds more appealing. We have wages to pay here in the Heroes team and in order to keep a team large enough to make new free content like maps and other game features we need to increase the amount of BF that people buy. Battlefield Heroes is a business at the end of the day and for a company like EA who recently laid off 16% of their workforce, we need to keep an eye on the accounts and make sure we are doing our bit for the company.' The official forums discussion thread is full of angry responses from upset users, who feel this change is a betrayal of the original stated objectives of the game."
Microsoft

Microsoft Game Software Preps Soldiers For Battle 44

coondoggie writes "Soldiers may go into battle better prepared to handle equipment and with a greater knowledge of their surroundings after an intellectual property licensing deal Monday between Microsoft and Lockheed Martin that will deepen the defense giant's access to visual simulation technology. The intellectual property agreement between the two focuses on Microsoft ESP, a games-based visual simulation software platform for the PC."

Comment Re:The problem (Score 5, Insightful) 515

Christ on a bike. See. This is the problem with you people. Frankly, if someone appears on my borders having travelled thousands of miles, with little money and no knowledge of the native language yet can pick up local customs and prejudices well enough to game a complicated system that intelligent people put in place precisely to stop them then who cares whether they're "genuine refugees"? That level of motivation and energy is welcome in any society I'm part of because it's precisely those qualities that create the milk and honey you're so fond of! Don't you understand? Geographic and social mobility is good! Stasis is bad! Change is good! How is that difficult? Gah! And double Gah! I'm sick of being exposed to this puerile nonsense day after day after day. Maybe you're right. Maybe we should be more draconian. I just hope that if we are, the powers-that-be make it as hard to leave as it'll become to enter. That way you can live in the economic, social and demographic backwater you create. It's a shame most people are shrieking fools nowadays as otherwise we might be able to construct a meaningful dialogue regarding the best way to manage immigration. That way English classes for migrants wouldn't be first on the altar of economic sacrifice, limiting their ability to integrate and compounding the us-and-them mentality that strangles any debate at birth. Immigration does raise complex question but it is beneficial and if people would just drop their belief in their god-given right to do whatever the fuck they want to poor people in other countries without the burden of consequences ever dropping in their lap then perhaps we could step out of the handbasket and head upwards rather than downwards for once.
Earth

Bacteria Could Help Stop Desertification 218

Bridgette Steffen writes "In attempt to slow down desertification, a student at London's Architectural Association has proposed a 6000 km sandstone wall that will not only act as a break across the Sahara Desert, but also serve as refugee shelter. Last fall it won first prize in the Holcim Foundation's Awards for Sustainable Construction, and will use bacteria to solidify the sandstone."

Comment Re:What the fucking fuck? (Score 1) 1870

I made a joke on here a few days ago using a line from an Alanis Morrisette song. I'll probably be next up for a stint in the big house

That's what Fair Use is all about, and it's why you'd never get in trouble for it.

Yeah. Well. I made a facetious throwaway comment. I'm sure no-one ever got hassled for using copyrighted material in ways that weren't intended by their creator.

I'm not sure I see the distinction you're trying to make. One is a link to copyrighted material one isn't. They're chalk and cheese and I have no problem with either, but you're making the mistake of thinking that everyone who uses bittorrent is a freeloading scumbag whose raison d'etre is to rip off creators the world over. They're not. I use bittorrent to help me find new material. I'm not in the slightest bit embarrassed by that. Why should I be? I don't give a flying one what other people use it for but I suspect more use it in a similar manner to me than the record companies would ever admit to. I consider that a responsible usage of file sharing technology and if you don't agree, perhaps you can explain to me at what point it isn't.

The IFPI and their hateful, hateful ilk have not lost a single unit sale because I've used unauthorised sources. In fact, if it wasn't for those unauthorised sources, I'd never have made a lot of my purchases in the first place. Up until today, I'd recommend bands to people and burn them CDs of things I liked. I'd big up bands that I'd come across and be a cheerleader to anyone I knew for their material. As of today, that ceases. The IFPI lose out because the people I know buy fewer records. The artists lose out because the people I know may not want to go to their shows. I lose out because I love music. And why? Because the music companies want to enforce stone age business practices on a 21st century technology. Well. As I said in my original post. Fuck them. If you want to be their apologist, then fine, but by doing so you bear more responsibility for killing music than the pirates do.

Comment What the fucking fuck? (Score 3, Insightful) 1870

The people who run the Pirate Bay have been jailed for "assisting making available copyrighted content", meaning that they linked to copyrighted material? Fuck. That's the very basis of the internet. How can this judgement stand? If this is upheld, none of us are safe. Not Youtube, not Google, not anyone. Regardless of the rights or wrongs of file sharing, how can people be jailed for just linking to material? This is about the worst decision the courts could have made. Fuck you Sweden. Fuck you IFPI and fuck you all the recording artists that are signed to the companies who belong to you. I hope you all rot. It hurts but I'll never give you another unit of my hard earned currency again. I had no issue with paying for music I liked as long as you didn't make me pay for music I didn't. The internet allowed me to do that with greater freedom than ever before and now you jail people who facilitate my search for good music. You've already shut down the OLGA resource, denying thousands of would be guitarists a valuable resource for learning, you've already ripped thousands of music videos from youtube, and now you do this. Well thankyou. A better illustration of the way corporate whores set the legal policy of elected governments I could not find. Not that you'll care because you've brainwashed an entire generation into thinking your reality is the only reality. A generation who grow up believing sharing is wrong. Well. Good luck with that. Eventually you and all your kind will bleed yourself dry and when that happens, I'll make a point of playing poor quality MP3s of popular chart music over your graves and laugh at the irony of the damage you've wrought to the internet in order to protect the artistic integrity of Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera.

Jesus. I made a joke on here a few days ago using a line from an Alanis Morrisette song. I'll probably be next up for a stint in the big house.
Math

Quantum Theory May Explain Wishful Thinking 415

explosivejared writes "Humans don't always make the most rational decisions. As studies have shown, even when logic and reasoning point in one direction, sometimes we chose the opposite route, motivated by personal bias or simply 'wishful thinking.' This paradoxical human behavior has resisted explanation by classical decision theory for over a decade. But now, scientists have shown that a quantum probability model can provide a simple explanation for human decision-making — and may eventually help explain the success of human cognition overall."

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