Comment: Part of it is that they've been at it for a long . (Score 4, Interesting) 76
Comment: Re:Good (Score 1) 69
Comment: It's business as usual... (Score 5, Interesting) 178
Comment: Re:Fuck you, Canada (Score 2) 297
Well you invested in some hardware to do the mining, and then got some return on investment, so what makes this different from for instance
buying a bakery, flour and various other things, and then selling bread, except of course that there is not much added work into the bitcoin mining opperation.
Why should it be tax free and other form of return on investment should be taxable ?
Now if you think that your government is not using its tax money wisely, you're free to try to elect somebody else, even try to get elected, but bitcoin mining is in no way "special".
On one hand it is "cool", but it is also trying to fix a human issue through technological means, and that does not work that well.
You are living in the same illusion as the people who claim that the internet treats censorship as a bug and routes around, it does not.
You can partially avoid censorship, more or less the same way as it was possible to avoid it 50 years ago, by taking risk, being prudent, and changing strategies very regularly.
But china is still a dictatorship, and our democratic advanced societies are rather less open to free speech than 20 years ago.
Moreover we live in a flood of data, where dissent is tolerated because it can be drowned by lolcats.
So instead of looking for ways to avoid taxes, make sure that they serve some useful purpose...
Comment: most frequent one linux version to another (Score 1) 413
But appart from this
OS360 => CP/M => BSD UNIX 4.1 => other UNIX => Linux => ain't decided yet, but needs to be open source/free software
What is remarquable in this poll, is that there are so few options left
It's kind of depressing, I miss the years when you could discuss the relative merits and innovations of
Unix/VMS/G-COS/VM-CMS/ITS/SAIL/TENEX/MULTICS/VOS/etc
vs "on now Linux is too complicated but should I upgrade to windows 8"
Comment: Re:What's the problem? (Score 1) 245
You're kidding, they are all about gay mariage ! hermaphrodites you know !!!
Comment: Re:Live video stream? (Score 1) 12
Apparently they are starting late, probably still drinking cafe....
Comment: What would make me move to Lyx - LaTeX (Score 3, Interesting) 70
I'm like many other professionalls a "lapsed" Fan of LaTeX, truth be told I started with troff -man and the various ancillary tools of the Unix environment
What I recognize is that LaTeX (and the roff familly) enables you to create content that is WAY better looking in many ways.
So why don't I ? in part because I recognized that my investment in *roff was quietly dying off.... so I had to change to something
Partly because Open Office gave me a "free option" so I "could" go to a wysiwyg solution.
And because I started to need to exchange documents with people who would write part of it, and if you are not working in academia this means that the probability of working with LaTeX friendly colleage is quite low.
So what would make me come back...
If I could have an heuristic tool that reads my
There are a couple of tools pdf/odt/word to LaTeX but they all try to convert the original document into LaTeX that looks just like the original document.
What I think would be a game changer would be to have a new document, able to leverage the embedded knowledge in the more common LaTeX templates, and create a tweakable MUCH better looking, new document.
I would then be happy to use LyX as an entry point for WysiWyg tweaking, and finallly jump into emacs to really finalize my document...
Comment: Re:Why do these phones always suck? (Score 1) 142
A friend of mine drives a Ferrari, it's an embarrassingly efficient chick magnet, the on board computer screen is crap, but you know what, nobody cares
The vertu owner is happy to have a very good looking phone and concierge service, the technology will be obsolete in any case because the economics of small run productions implies a longer sales life.
The electronics have just to be "good enough", and with android they have all the toy apps everybody has so they will not be dissed by somebody telling them my "xyz" can do this and you can't...
And for the rest explaining that your phone "is worth the cost", (letting the listener "imagine" the cost), using the concierge service to book a very expensive and hard to enter restaurant will "do the job" (you'll have also to pick up the tab of course...)
Now if you feel this is a little bit crass, you're either just jealous, or not the kind of person who gets all wet seeing an i
you could try this http://www.johnsphones.com/ it's a little bit ridiculously expensive compared to a cheap entry prices samsung dumbphone, but it looks cool, a great conversation piece, and way cheaper than a "vertu"...
Comment: Re:The standards are published in English (Score 1) 330
It's just that they remember LSE and shudder
Comment: Re:English Melonfarmer, do you speak it?! (Score 1) 330
It's not "un NullPointerException" but UNE NullPointerException, pronounced oone NullePooeintaireHexhepcion, of course...
And the Spaceship operator is called "encore un dinosaure nostalgique de Fortran IV" (refereing to IF(),, )
Comment: It's a business dude (Score 3, Interesting) 689
In practice the US benefits by being able to select the best foreign students, sells them overprices education at a tremendous cost and then it will have the opportunity to keep a good percentage of them.
And of course it would be much more dangerous for the US to reject this slice of the world population, because they would be perfectly able to build a similar teaching / research structure if they would need to...
Comment: It's actually your fault ... (Score 1) 507
He should not have the time/need to look at your code...
He should be busy writing his own code, he might bitch about your API definition, and you have then two choices:
a) tell him to suck it and that "if it aint broken don't fix it", you need the API as they are
or
b) Listen and maybe it will really make future extensions easier, so negotiate...
50K code is actually quite small so although refactoring can always "help" (in theory) but unless you are explicitly trying to win the obfuscated C award it's probably small enough to make it more valuable to add news feature than to "streamline it"...
Unless you hit some roadblock and it is now "too slow", "break randomly", etc.... then you should probably urgently look at it and fix it yourself (after all 10 years o experience with the code base should make this faster for you).
But either he refuse to deliver what you ask, then fire him, or you leave him to much time after delivering his module, and he looks at your code out of boredoom...
So the best you can do is tell him : sure our code is crufty, we just hired you so that we can ease the tension and have some time to refactor, so "write you own f**g code, and let us play around with our stuff, or do you need some API that's missing ?
Comment: Archos 101 XS or similar (Score 1) 417
My daughter who is a university student and needs to type quite a lot of stuff recently bought herself an Archos tablet.
It has a screen protection cover that doubles as a keyboard.
The "caveat" is that the various text processing software she tried are "ok" for a letter, but when she needs to really create a "professional" document she still feels the need to go back to her old linux box with libreoffice...
In practice any tablet with a decent keyboard addon can serve for almost 100% of most people needs....
You could think of it this way:
-- consumer who just use the device to access content (aka TV replacement) and access some services (mostly bank and shopping) => tablet is good enough for them
-- consumer with some brain who sometimes produce something => add a keyboard
-- person who actually write documents that might be printed by somebody and looked at =>
==> either a cheap 13.1 laptop with windows (do not forget to provide the phone number of a IT repair for pay person that lives near your "customer")
==> macbook air (personally I really like the aerodynamism and the distance they can fly when you throw them out of the window
but hipsters like them, and they fail less than windows)
==> a cheap 13.1 laptop running linux (there will be much less technical issues, but of course any issue will be "your fault" since it is not a "common choice"
so YMMV
-- person who actually is using a computer for something complicated => don't worry she'll know what she needs