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Comment Re:How much competion does AMC have? (Score 1) 285

Which won't work anyway and I bet other movie theater chains see the writing on the wall. Theaters are done, they will never be the things we loved in the 90's and before. The internet had always threatened to make theaters unnecessary for the most part but arguments about "quality" and "movie theater experience" seemed to hold some sway. Now a catalytic event has forced change on us and suddenly many of us are realizing how wrong they were about needing to be inside a movie theater to actually enjoy a movie. Studios are also taking notice and I bet the revenue from streaming new movies will be on parity with theaters revenue if not better.

So good for AMC, I am happy they are doing what they are doing. It wont hurt Universal Studios or movie watchers, it will only further accelerate our move to streaming at home and every theater chain that follows is another nail in their own coffin. The studios want money and streaming is a giant cash cow that has suddenly come good in this current lockdown.

Here's hoping in 20 years the myriad movie theaters will become more like Blockbuster video locations, few and far between because we have something better. Goodbye AMC movie theaters, and good riddance!

Comment They did for a time (Score 1) 3

There was a brief period of time when many android phones did come with infrared transmitters but I suspect they never received enough use to justify the component price and valuable space inside the phone chassis. I personally owned the Galaxy S4 and was sad to see the feature go away in future device iterations. I would gladly give up the svelte lines of curved glass on my S8 for being able to remote control my stuff. Its the only reason I still keep my old S4 around anymore.

Currently your main options for modern infrared-capable phones in the android space are from Xiaomi and Huawei. https://www.androidauthority.c...

Comment Re:I want Bezels (Score 1) 125

This so much. My Galaxy S8 is nowwhere near as bezelless as the recent releases but with a phone case on I have the hardest time swiping the top menu down. Even worse is if I want to move something to a different home screen. Its nearly impossible to get your finder all the way to the edge with the case on.

Submission + - What is really behind Linus retirement and the CoC? (google.com) 1

An anonymous reader writes: Tiago Sousa does an interesting analysis on what might be the reasons behind the news of Linus temporary retirement and the CoC:
I've been watching the reactions to Linus Torvalds' "struggle session" and reflected about why could have caused such a 180 degrees turn regarding his usual stance. The most likely scenario is an ultimatum, of the kind "take it or beat it". At the beginning of the post we have a likely fuse, in which he describes his bad reaction to scheduling problems regarding the kernel summit and, in particular, states that:
my "maybe you can just do it without me there" got overruled (emphasis mine)

It's easy to imagine (yes i'm just speculating) that he said something that pissed off one too many people internally. Maybe it wasn't a serious issue in itself but more like the last straw. Let's not forget Linus is highly paid, far more than everyone else at Linux Foundation, ($1.6M in 2016 — https://twitter.com/bcantrill/...), and this is financed mostly by big corporations. He seems eager to do anything it takes to stay at the helm, as he implies near the end:
I'm not feeling like I don't want to continue maintaining Linux. Quite the reverse. I very much do want to continue to do this project that I've been working on for almost three decades. (emphasis mine)

A totally different perspective is that of one of his daughters, Patricia Torvalds, and activist of "Guerilla Feminism", (really, she runs a local chapter), defender of the (in)famous "safe spaces", and a meritocracy critic in favor of diversity (a recurring theme). With this background, it's not uncommon that she supports the
"Post-Meritocracy Manifesto" (https://postmeritocracy.org/) created by SJW extraordinaire Coraline Ada Ehmke (ex-Corey Dale Ehmke btw):
https://www.reddit.com/r/linux...
It's easy to imagine (again, pure speculation) family discussions over this topic, with such a famous, and persecuted, father.

Which takes us to the other half of the equation, the Code of Conduct (CoC) which was approved with the same stroke:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm...
This CoC is based on the Contributor Covenant and is a creation of the aforementioned Coraline Ada:
https://www.contributor-covena...
She's immensely proud of the thousands of projects that have adopted it, some high-profile indeed, and in most cases "hip" projects of the grand new world of modern web development (), but that's a topic for another day.

At first sight there shouldn't be any problem with a "statute" that informs participants to behave with civility (as if that weren't obvious). The problem is that it goes way beyond that, it's a vehicle to cement the interests of groups that I can only describe as SJW. The dictatorship of the politically correct, in which personal opinions in private life are used to remove a person from a project or to smear the project. Some examples:
https://github.com/opal/opal/i...
https://www.drupal.org/associa...
https://blog.mozilla.org/blog/...
https://twitter.com/nodevember...
https://twitter.com/brennx0r/s...
https://developers.slashdot.or...
https://voxday.blogspot.com/20...
Bonus points:
https://github.com/ayojs/ayo (LOL @ "Humans before technology" + archived)

But the most ridiculous aspect comes straight from the source. Coraline has a special interest in ruby and in rails, communities in which it has participated for several years. Not by chance, rails, ruby-gems and similar projects have adopted her CoC. Just a little holdout remains: ruby itself. Unfortunately for her, it was created by a japanese known as matz which imposed from the start the motto "be nice". Only this is not nearly enough for a real SJW. Thus Coraline tried her CoC to be adopted, something matz refused:
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/iss...
Instead, what was accepted is something far simpler and more straightforward:
https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/c...
The main difference from this do Coraline's CoC is the omission of the connection between private life and the project. This is unacceptable for a SJW, to whom everything and everywhere is a battlefield to uphold their particular vision of "justice" and there's no possible compromise, much less for "mere" technical motives.

Since then, her attacks to matz have been relentless (how about "subtly" pulling the rug from under him? https://twitter.com/CoralineAd...) and reached a peak in an unbeliavable tirade on twitter by Coraline herself (the link opens in one of the better ones but read the whole thing, it's priceless):
https://twitter.com/coralinead...
I've never seen something like this coming from Linus, and even his insults are always in technical contexts directed at top developers who should have known better (not poor minorities, unlike the propaganda they spin). This person sits on her morality high horse but behaves worse that anybody.

To prove this isn't just theory, behold, already someone is in the CoC crosshairs by none other than Sage/Sarah Sharp (why the hell are so many name-changing people attached to these dramas?!), the first SJW that tried to take down Linus back in 2013. The target this time is Ted Ts'o, "just" one of the top kernel developers, ext2/3/4 lead among other things and member of the Technical Advisory Board (TAB):
https://twitter.com/_sagesharp...
The goal is clear, remove TAB members and inject more SJW puppets.

So, 2018 is coming along nicely. Another open source project, for me personally the most important one, succumbing to politics. It's plain to see that this is the method of choice of Big Business to control large open source projects that have technically spotless and charismatic leaders. Of course, nothing mentioned in this post appears anywhere in the following triumphant article by one of the main creators of official narratives, that feels more like a stamping of an arranged smear campaign, like an obituary just waiting for the target's demise to be released, given how ridiculously biased it is:
https://www.newyorker.com/scie...

It should be noted that Sage claims, in the twitter thread above, that this story was the reason for Linus' extraordinary actions. However, that's highly doubtful, as even fellow SJW Valerie Aurora admits:
https://blog.valerieaurora.org...
Everything in that piece is common knowledge. There's no new "dirt" on him whatsoever. It doesn't add up. Of course, in the end, Valerie has it backwards: it's not LF that's protecting Linus, it's Linus giving in to LF's demands, which in reality would prefer him to leave. Do I have to remind the number of anti-opensource entities are platinum members of LF? Do you really believe Microsoft, Oracle or Cisco pay $500k/year for nothing? Those are just the more extreme examples, as even Google is far from benevolent these days, and certainly enforces SJW policy, just ask James Damore.

To me, one of the largest organizational problems in Linux since forever is the lack of abstraction for drivers, as anyone that has depended on out-of-tree drivers knows. If only Linus had accepted stable in-kernel APIs to isolate and standardize drivers out of mainline, it would be easier to fork the (real) kernel should the need arise. In other words, his efforts to maintain lordship over Linux have been used against him. Like they say in a certain movie, Vanity, definitely my favorite sin.

(translated and slightly revised from the portuguese original in https://plus.google.com/u/0/+T...)

#linux #linustorvalds #coc #coralineada #sjw #politics #censorship #diversity #meritocracy

Submission + - Source of Tesla Buyout Funding Revealed: It's Saudi Arabia 2

Rei writes: As we know from recent news, on August 7th, it was revealed that Saudi Arabia had been quietly accumulating nearly 5% of Tesla stock, causing the stock price to spike. Then later in the day, Musk tweeted about his desire to take the company private, stating "funding secured", but repeatedly stressing that no decision nor deal had yet been made. This invited accusations and even a lawsuit from a short seller arguing that Musk was lying to manipulate the stock. Meanwhile, mixed messages came out as to whether Saudi Arabia was involved.

Today in a Tesla blog post, the details have now been made public. Saudi Arabia has been trying to purchase Tesla for several years, as a hedge against oil. After making their recent stock purchase, they reached out for another meeting; this occurred on July 31, where the managing director of the sovereign wealth fund again expressed interest in purchasing Tesla. Musk approached the board with this information on August 2nd. On August 7th, after the news of the Saudi stock purchase broke, Musk made public that there had been a purchase offer in order to be able to begin negotiations with current investors. Further meetings have been held with Saudi Arabia since then. The expectation is about 2/3rds of existing stakeholders would remain with the company while 1/3rd would be bought out ($20-25B). The buyout would not involve debt financing.

Comment Re:Bypassing login password by booting a different (Score 1) 150

Here's a fun piece of information! On Windows 10, if you boot from a live linux distro and rename sethc.exe to sethc.exe.bak and copy cmd.exe to sethc.exe. Now when you reboot, at the Windows 10 login screen you can get an administrator-level command prompt by hitting the shift key 5 times. \o/

Security at its finest.

Comment Re:But it's perfectly OK if Apple does it. (Score 1) 280

Exactly this. Doesn't Apple bundle Safari with every single phone they sell? As far as I understand it (I don't own an Apple device) you not only can't remove Safari but you also cannot set any other browser as the default browser. You can still install chrome but iOS will refuse to use it for anything unless you manually open it and type in URLs. How is this not anticompetitive? How is this any different from what Google is doing? Does apple get away with it because they can claim their entire phone would stop working completely without their pre-bundled apps? This just seems unfair to me.

Comment Re:Machine learning (Score 3, Interesting) 59

In a lot of ways you have hit at the crux of the AI problem. Another prominent example of this issue is with Automotive AI. We humans bring so much more information to the table besides the basics of how to drive a car and what a road/signs are. We have an ingrained knowledge of what another human being is going to do. We pick up subtle cues from the "body language" of other driver's and use that to inform decisions. That decision making process was created and honed in us as children when we had to understand the intent of our fellow humans. This array of knowledge informs everything we do in life and is, to use your own terms, a kind of "generic AI' that we all share. Its an interesting problem and begs the question: Is this kind of generic AI possible to create without also creating what is essentially a basic consiousness? After all, it is this basic knowledge and understanding that makes us thinking, aware creatures. Its quite a fantastic time to be alive, I can't wait to see what happens next.

Submission + - Is it time to hold police officers accountable for constitutional violations? (washingtonpost.com)

schwit1 writes: Recently the Supreme Court issued a summary opinion in the White v. Pauly case.A police officer was sued for killing a man during an armed standoff during which the officers allegedly never identified themselves as police. The Supreme Court, however, concluded that the officer had “qualified immunity.” That is, he was immune from a suit for damages, because his conduct — while possibly unconstitutional — was not obviously unconstitutional.

The doctrine of qualified immunity operates as an unwritten defense to civil rights lawsuits brought under 42 U.S.C. 1983. It prevents plaintiffs from recovering damages for violations of their constitutional rights unless the government official violated “clearly established law,” usually requiring a specific precedent on point. This article argues that the doctrine is unlawful and inconsistent with conventional principles of statutory interpretation.

Members of the Supreme Court have offered three different justifications for imposing such an unwritten defense on the text of Section 1983. One is that it derives from a common law “good faith” defense; another is that it compensates for an earlier putative mistake in broadening the statute; the third is that it provides “fair warning” to government officials, akin to the rule of lenity.

But on closer examination, each of these justifications falls apart, for a mix of historical, conceptual, and doctrinal reasons. There was no such defense; there was no such mistake; lenity ought not apply. And even if these things were otherwise, the doctrine of qualified immunity would not be the best response.

The unlawfulness of qualified immunity is of particular importance now. Despite the shoddy foundations, the Supreme Court has been reinforcing the doctrine of immunity in both formal and informal ways. In particular, the Court has given qualified immunity a privileged place on its agenda reserved for few other legal doctrines besides habeas deference. Rather than doubling down, the Court ought to be beating a retreat.

Government officials, especially those with the power that Law Enforcement officers have, should be held to a higher standard, not a lower one.

Submission + - Comapny disables software of buyer who posted "bad" review

Brymouse writes: Ham Radio Deluxe, a $99 radio control and logging program popular in the amateur radio community, disabled the software of a user after he posted a potentially bad review (was 3/5 stars, now 1/5). Further this user was directed to install the update which disabled the application by HRD's own support.

The original thread was then deleted from "news" site QRZ.com as HRD is a major advertiser and complained about copyright violations from the user posting a PDF of his support ticket. Reddit picked it up here and more research was done showing a pattern of blacklisting bad reviews.

This was picked up by Jason Scott, of the internet archive, on twitter and Ham Radio Deluxe threatened him with libel for posting it.

As of yesterday HRD says an offical statement will be "coming soon". The Strieisand Effect continues with QRZ.com undeleting the threads and HRD still trying to claim copyright on their customers support ticket.

Submission + - Vendor disables user's software for negative review, demands retraction

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