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Comment Re:Spinning Space stations (Score 1) 113

That's also the conceit Star Trek uses, although the entire ship doesn't spin, just a plate within it. Like many space travel issues, we know how to do it, or at least have a reasonable idea of how it can be done, but it's difficult because even if we had the funding, the only ways in which things are possible would have the side effect of turning us into mush/killing us in the process. It's force fields that are the ingredient we really need to make a lot of this stuff work around our fragile human bodies.

Comment Re: crazy (Score 1) 126

It's how it is with so many things. Grains of truth may be there, but those who protest the loudest always have to go too far and come off with ridiculous crap like this so people like you and I just end up being disillusioned to the entire movement. It's like the "Woman in the Refridgerator" comic book stuff - sure, could women be better represented in comics? Of course. But when every little thing is brought forth and used as de facto evidence of something, it just makes you shake your head and walk away (for example, you cannot complain that too many female villains are too pretty and then complain when the "ugly" one is evil).

The folks that perpetrate this type of rhetoric think they are serving the greater good (think: Al Gore) but in the end they make even open minded people turn off totally because they think they have to overstate and inflate things to get our attention. According to Al Gore's statements a decade or so ago we are only what, five or six years from Manhattan being under the ocean? Please.

It has reached these religious levels where you cannot even have a rational discussion about it. It's also hypocritical - not to beat on Al Gore again, but how many private plane flights has that guy taken? I don't see him using a bicycle to get everywhere and he's probably one of the folks that drives an electric car and doesn't realize the environmental impact of the limited-lifespan batteries in them are no better for the overall environment than burning fossil fuels (the pounds of nickel in the batteries is devastating, dangerous, and rare to mine, usually by child labor).

Comment Re: I admire their spunk, but... (Score 1) 275

Right there with you. Wasting such resources on on computations explicitly designed to tax equipment for what amounts to a hardware pissing contest, burning actual finite resources to do so (metals, coal for electricity, etc.).

As to the posting, it was only a matter of time before disruptive forces like this began to pop up. One way or another, in order for BitCoin to become what it wants to become (a legitimate currency) it's has to succumb to the very thing it was trying not to be (at the mercy of "big business"/corporatiszation and government regulated like the new IRS rules regarding it).

Comment Re:Did you--and the other DVD lovers--read TFA? (Score 1) 490

Yes, I read it - as painful as it was since it was written so poorly and scattered to begin with - and I'm a Blu-ray lover, thank you. :)

Other folks have addressed some of his other fallacies in terms of "allowing", rights issues, etc. - as I said, I didn't want to take the time to write a complex post refuting what he said because he said so many idiotic things and made so many baseless assumptions it would have taken a post as long as his to correct it all.

For example, he is totally ignorant of the fact that in many cases, they don't have the legal rights to stream everything they can put on DVD/Blu-ray to begin with - it's a legal issue, depending on when the film was made in particular, as to what kind of contract was signed. Sure, in 2014 if you sign a film contract they include every right under the sun, uninvented technologies, perpetual use, etc. - but it's only been a few decades since folks had "home video/media" as standard in contracts, let alone digital rights. The law is increasingly saying that digital rights are not included, so unless a studio owns something outright and produced the film in-house (not always as common as you think, just because a studio has rights to distribute a film doesn't mean they own it - like the Star Wars situation before Disney bought up Lucasfilm), they may well not be able to.

And that's just one - there are several other complete misunderstandings about the system to pick from in the "article".

I was challenging one of his false base assumptions that we would actually all want that to happen, specifically that "Surely the streaming option is more convenient for almost everybody," while ignoring the fact that "convenient" is not always "most desirable" - which was the point of the microwave analogy. Sure, you can cook just about anything more quickly in a microwave, and it sure is convenient to throw something on a plate, shove it in the device, and pull it out a minute later - eating it off of the same plate you cooked it on.

But as most folks will tell you, rarely is microwaved food actually the preferred way to cook food because of it's taste, texture, consistency, heat distribution, and how quickly it cools off. That's why a microwave is very much like streaming - it's there, sometimes you just feel like being super-lazy/something easy, or have limited options - it works. But it's not the way most people would choose to cook their food primarily and certainly isn't the best quality.

Comment Re:We are now all ##AA-Stooges (Score 1) 490

That depends on who you know and where you live. And what you mean by "dying", and if you are talking about DVD specifically or physical disc media (DVD and Blu-ray).

If you mean DVD vs. Blu-ray, it's been a slow death and shows no signs of ending anytime in the immediate future. Blu-ray sales are up, particularly for new releases, but DVD is still well entrenched and the choice of middle-American consumers.

If you mean physical media period, I can see how many in the /. community may think that, but it's now how it is with the general public. DVD sales are actually not in free-fall. DVD sales dropped 8% in 2013, even though Blu-ray was up. That's a drop - but there are countless other factors, from the quality of films released that year, etc. It is shrinking, but again - it's still the lion share of the home media viewing market.

Most of the growth, though, was in streaming - not ownership. The amount of folks purchasing digital content (vs. renting or streaming it) went up about 5% - which isn't anything near what streaming went up (30+%). So not everyone is "switching" over - some (an increasing amount) just aren't "purchasing" at all, at the moment. Streaming is cheap as dirt, comparatively (you can pay for a month of Netflix and Hulu for the price of purchasing one new release DVD or Blu-ray).

Thing is, once Internet caps arrive in the US (which we know is only a matter of time) streaming will loose steam, instantly (semi-pun intended). Then will be more of a test of if people really want to move over to purchasing digital media, much of which lives behind walled gardens, or if they still like grabbing a DVD or two when they are at Wal-mart doing their shopping.

Comment Re:Thanks for peptuating (Score 1, Insightful) 164

Yeah, I knew there would be offended folks right away when I clicked on comments - and look, it was the first one. Great reply, though.

Don't apologize for the "rant" - you actually explained it perfectly. It's exactly what Molyneux was trying to express - you cannot take away the downs without also affecting the "ups".

For some people, like those that cannot function properly in life because of the "lows", it's worth it or is beneficial even in some cases to limit the "ups" as well. For others, who may feel that dynamic emotions are an important part of life, it may not be worth it.

I think there is also the "over-diagnosed" factor which is what makes some people so dismissive of it in general that other folks get highly defensive over it - just like ADHD, etc. There really is nothing offensive or inaccurate about his comment. Of course there are people who have these things, and severe enough that medication is beneficial. There also comes a point when so many people are being medicated for something that it's hard to argue that we may be not properly judging what is "balanced" when it turns out almost as many folks are diagnosed as "unbalanced" as we deem "balanced" - as in, when we start medicating for the "norm" versus the "exceptional".

But that's another topic, really - the point is, the guy made an analogy and it filled the point of an analogy - it gave me an instantly clear understanding of exactly what idea he was trying to express.

Comment Re:We are now all ##AA-Stooges (Score 1) 490

Apple's single digit percentage take of the laptop market isn't an indicator of anything.

The reason Apple devices don't come with drives anymore, period, is that they would need to be Blu-ray players at this point, and Apple refuses to put them in Mac's because they don't want to be in bed with Sony, coupled their incessant need to make a device as thin as possible (because most of us walk around with our laptop all day, apparently, or folks like you that must have some sort of medical disorder that a few extra ounces makes something "too heavy").

DVDs still sell incredibly well, it's one reason Blu-ray has taken so long to take hold.

It's all well and good if you basically use your computer as an Internet machine, and want to live off of WiFi, but discs are portable and put the user in control, not the walled garden and it's decision to allow you access to what you "own" or not (it's already happened that "rights issues" have come up and people have lost access to digital content they "owned"). Not to mention, you aren't married to a single service forever.

As to the "sensible" pricing - yup, you can buy a film for $5 at Wal-mart on DVD and then Apple wants $15-20 if you buy it on iTunes. Gee, wonder why that is. Oh yeah, you probably might want to start with the fact that Apple thinks they deserve 30% off the top of work someone else has done just for hosting a file.

Music is different, it is inherently consumed "on the go" - in vehicles, headphones as people go about their day, etc. It makes somewhat more sense in that case (at least now that Apple has dropped DRM on it). But films are a far different beast, and what applies to music does not automatically apply there, despite the best efforts of Apple to make you want to dump your cash into the walled garden so they have you by the balls.

Comment This "article" must have fallen off the short-bus (Score 5, Insightful) 490

This is the single stupidest, most presumptuous, idiotic thing I have ever read on /. that wasn't in the comments section - and it still vies for the top spot, even including them.

I started to write a complex response, but then realized that it would be asinine to give this drivel that much of my time when I can sum it up very easily:

Asking this idiotic question and not realizing the dozens of factors from quality (1080p streaming does not = 1080p Blu-ray, unless you are watching all your content on a tiny laptop screen), to the fact this AYCE streaming-world is mostly unique to the US and won't be sustainable here once Internet caps are in place for most folks (which anyone who follows such things knows is coming), and everything in between, is akin to someone posting an article saying, "Why doesn't everyone just cook with a microwave since it's the simplest, most convenient way to cook food?"

Though, it should have been obvious the writer was a tool from the first sentence - if you are idiotic enough to buy a laptop from Best Buy of all places, you don't have much sense to begin with.

Comment Re: Ponzi scheme (Score 1) 357

Intended or not, it is what it has become. Take a reality check here.

Money Markets are an off-shoot of legit currency. But I don't need to care about the money market when I go to the store to buy groceries with my dollars.

With BitCoin, the entire thing is dependent upon them, because without them, the BitCoin is worthless. Why do the (very few) businesses that accept them accept them? As a marketing ploy, and because they can exchange them for legit currency to pay their bills, buy wares to sell in their stores, etc.

Without exchanges, BitCoins can do nothing and are nothing. The "every other currency" fallacy is just that. You are talking about academic theory, not reality. The dollar would still work if money markets didn't exist. If BitCoin exchanges didn't exist, no one would purchase the virtual rights to a virtual coin to begin with.

Comment Re: Ponzi scheme (Score 1) 357

Oh, I forgot to mention the other "talking point" in my post - the "it's just like every other currency" fallacy. It's like you guys think if you say that enough times it somehow becomes true.

Forget about the academics behind currency and look at the reality. The dollar, for instance, is beyond "faith" at this point in practical use. I don't have to have faith that every store in the United States will take my legal currency and give me goods in exchange for it. They just do. And the chances of that suddenly not being true are extremely remote.

BitBelievers are so wrapped up in theory that they cannot see the practical realities of BitCoin - it is not a "currency". Although I found it rather crass, a really good example was made by another poster. Why can't he make his shit a "currency" - it's in limited supply, it's unique to him, no one else can make his shit, and someday, his supply of shit will be depleted and no longer available. That makes it a valuable currency, right? The only thing missing is the digital component - he'd have to actually ship it around. Other than that, it fits the definition of what folks say makes BitCoin a currency to a T.

Comment Re: Ponzi scheme (Score 1) 357

The fact that you "believe" in it is why people are beginning to equate it as a cult-based money-making scheme. It takes a religion-like belief. The tired "it's just like every other currency" talking point is just that - a talking point, which folks believe if you say enough somehow becomes truth. It's not. Sure, at it's base level, conceptually, all currency is based on faith, yadda, yadda, but since I can take my dollars and walk into any store in the country and purchase their products without question, I don't need to have "faith" - it's reality.

And as another reply someone made pointed out, you missed my Apple comparison - a stock owned in Apple is a portion of ownership of the company, which produces items which people desire/buy. So even if you cannot resell your share, you still own something. With BitCoin, you don't "own" anything but a virtual number. It's like an augmented reality MMO currency. (Though at least MMO currency can buy you gameplay fun.)

Comment Re: Ponzi scheme (Score 1) 357

Well, in spite of a few "overrated" and "troll" ratings, my post is still strongly sitting there with a +5, so yeah, a few people seem to care what I am saying.

And I do apologize that it turned bold, typing on a tablet sometimes it changes the p tags to b tags.

Regardless, now that we have that out of the way, Anonymous Coward, you didn't read properly so it's probably good you didn't use your actual account to post.

A blind, deaf, armless, monkey toddler would have "timed it right" if they weren't so enthralled with the BitCult. I said, the second MtGox fell, if I didn't lose BitCoin with them totally, I would have pulled out because it clearly was the first domino to fall, not an isolated incident. It doesn't take a "special snowflake" to see what was happening.

The only thing that has propped it up so far is that the BitBelievers keep dumping in more of their legit currency into BitCoin as folks are fleeing, thinking they are getting in on some fire sale. No one new is coming into BitCoin at this point, and once those folks who are so into the BitCult run out of real currency to keep dumping in, it's just a matter of time before the entire bottom falls out.

I freely admitted that sure, I wish I'd bought a bunch when it was $20, but to think I'm venting "rage" by pointing out how delusional folks are who think it's going to continue, that folks who now pay $700 for one will ever make any profit on it, is laughable. I'm not raging, I'm simply gobsmacked that there are still folks who are so enamored with BitCoin they simply cannot see reality. There is a reason you see folks repeatedly referring to it as a cult now, because the folks who are still BitBelievers exhibit all the signs that one is a member of one.

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