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Comment This is amazing (Score 1) 549

Find myself disagreeing on virtually all points.

Bottom line in the real world saying no to correct horse battery staple and yes to FcD($*#)@2zJ7&Cd!23 is worse because your asking something unreasonable of your users when a more reasonable solution is available. This doesn't serve to help anyone or make anything more secure.

Wishing everyone use password managers won't make it so nor is it necessarily an ideal solution. Password managers and use of passphrases vs passwords are separate issues and should be treated as such.

Comment Re:Biased summary (Score 2) 282

Repeat after me: "it's against the law to drive people around for money without the proper credentials".

No society based on consent can *enforce* laws a significant portion of the public disagrees without commensurate erosion of state legitimacy or otherwise moving of needle from "consent" toward "force".

Either stepped up enforcement actions bring about increased pressure to change the law or otherwise resolve disagreements by amicable compromises such as reduction in licensing burdens or the industry goes underground where state looses visibility and ability to regulate while wasting resources and good will on enforcement actions the public is offended by.

Comment Re:Hoax (Score 1) 986

Most people have the same reasoning has you do.

Most innovations come from people who think differently than the mass.

Most people have a resistance to change and that slows down progress. What is the hurry to call it an hoax?

I would say wait until it is proven to be a fraud before declaring the would be inventor guilty.

Blah blah blah, you might want to look into the history of both Rossi and the evolution of his claims and antics over the years before playing the wacky inventor card.

Comment Re:Any suffiently advanced tech... (Score 1) 986

The experiment was set up and run in a different country by a group independent of Rossi

Except Authors have been linked to Rossi from the beginning.

The fuel was measured in six different laboratories before and after the test. There is no mention of Copper in the output.

If you set out to debunk a paper, shouldn't you actually read it first.

Shame on you, not Slashdot.

Why would anyone set out to debunk this paper in the first place? What would be the point? Who has that kind of time to take the blabber of every mentally unstable fool and scam artist seriously?

Comment Who cares? (Score 1) 345

With doublespeak like "You agree to the use of your data in accordance with Googleâ(TM)s privacy policies" ChromeOS is so far removed from rational expectations of acceptable behavior it is foolish to attempt to pass judgment.

Caring about the format of external storage is like building a house out of cardboard, paper and duct tape then attempting to evaluate its compliance with building codes.

Comment Re:yes, they people who follow the law/ rules (Score 1) 580

You can say it's 99 cents, but this year alone I've probably downloaded about 1500 songs from a private music torrent site. The majority of them, maybe 60-70%, I delete after listening, because it was listening on a trial basis and I just wasn't into whatever I was checking out.

One good song is priceless to me. Once discovered 99 cents on Amazon for a DRM free no strings attached song is a price I happily pay. What more do we want/expect? Seems extraordinarily fair to me.

While there are plenty of verticals in the content space with fucked up markets music isn't one of them anymore.

And the only thing different is that today's Madonna's and Metallica's no longer get $100 million record deals; they just make their $100 million touring. I'm okay with that too.

While my touring experience is limited to rockband I strongly suspect 100 mil tours only work for a select few.

Comment Dousers and psychic detectives unite (Score 1) 580

That continued use of polygraph testing continues to be tolerated without these agencies is beyond amazing. Is this the 21st century or the 11th?

Shameful employment at FBI is limited to those lacking principals enough to allow themselves to submit to whims of mysticism and voodoo.

Comment Love CSS (Score 3, Interesting) 180

While I have a laundry list of complaints I like the underlying idea more than I dislike it. Amazing how simple html content ends up being and how flexible changes become once you have made a reasonable attempt to declare content and decouple style.

This said I'm very much less certain what my sentiment of CSS actually translates to in the real world.

The underlying problem while technology wants data presentation to work across maximal number of display sizes and capabilities such things too often appear as intolerable annoyances to designers. The world is teaming with fixed width websites and crap like zen garden is a joke. Without assumptions of fixed content tailored specifically for the garden those layouts would fall apart.

It often takes different skill sets to design something that both looks cool and is able to survive with coolness intact across a number of different and perhaps unknowable parameter changes.

This in my opinion is responsible for about half of the great tables v CSS layout arguments. What designers really want is for each page to have a known width and a known height without all of the compatibility bullshit or having to think about unknowns... what they actually want looks a heck of a lot more like PDF than it does HTML/CSS.

Without significant design / technology change to bring competing interests into better alignment I wouldn't bet on CSS lasting 50 years.

Comment Is this a trick? (Score 1) 179

Ok I'm really scared now there must be something wrong with me when I find myself rooting for the US to continue spying on everyone...

"The simplest outcome is that we're going to end up breaking the Internet," said Eric Schmidt, Google's executive chairman. A splintering of the Internet would have costs in terms of science, knowledge, jobs and other areas, he said.

The Internet was designed to work without borders and can't reach its full potential with barriers between countries, said Colin Stretch, Facebook's general counsel. The result of data localization for most consumers would be a slower Internet experience and less personalized services, because Internet companies couldn't take advantage of economies of scale.

Rumor has it Eric Schmidt in the very same breath went on to say less is more, left is right, up is down, dark is light and...dramatic pause.... evil is good.

Comment Useless article with no information content (Score 3, Insightful) 547

There is no useful or objective information anywhere in the article it is all childish name calling and appealing to what the cool kids are doing.

TFA is what I hate about this industry too many people have their heads in what's cool and getting suckered by marketeers rather than thinking about what they are doing and investing necessary effort to research and arrive based on objective criteria the best tool to get the job done.

Comment The industry needs to stop this (Score 1) 191

Can't wait to see what happens years from now should Microsoft's NLA site become unreachable to one or more address families as the world swashes between IPv6 and IPv4 connectivity as a result of failed NLA probes.

There is no need or benefit for this garbage certainly not by default and certainly no excuse to failure in this manner. Heartbeat is code for more excuses for vendors to be in the loop and collect data when they have no legitimate business doing so.

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