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Comment Old men fighting (Score 1, Flamebait) 129

Has anyone else noticed how irrelevant Microsoft, Internet Explorer and (sadly) Firefox are in 2012?

If this were 2001, I would agree that this is a big story.

Let Microsoft fight over the dredges of the desktop market. That's a declining market.

No one will take your Firefox away from you Linux desktop, so untwist your knickers.

Comment ESR? What nostaglia! (Score 2) 410

You kids and your love of stuff we did in the 90s -- it's ADORABLE!

Listening to ESR is like logging into myspace, friendster or orkut for new messages.

I may agree with quite a few of his basic arguments, but he flipped the bozo bit a long, long time ago.

You'll excuse me. I have an Old School Roleplaying game to DM...

Comment Garth Brooks running game companies? (Score 2) 908

Used media has always been a legitimate business as has used software. If there is really only one user with one installed copy, the gaming companies need to have a big mug of STFU. Games are crazy expensive anyway. It's a wonder that they sell any copies at the original MSRP.

Here's link to Garth Brooks and his anti-used CD crusade:

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/304702/GARTH-BROOKS-HASNT-THROWN-IN-THE-HAT-ON-USED-CD-CONTROVERSY.html

 

Comment A connecting principle of BS (Score 2) 244

Whether or not the US is adequately prepared for "cyberwar" is certainly an open question.

However, this article is riddled with neologism ("cyber-space-time" really?) and magical
thinking (e.g. I Ching, synchronicity).

If the Internet really isn't a hardware-software system, what is it? Why not claim it has a soul too
and that we should sing to it?

The real issue is that the Internet infrastructure is public resource controlled by private interests.
That's what makes the DoD's job of defending it difficult. Defense cannot simply issue edicts like
"upgrade all your router firmware right now."

I do not propose we retreat back to a paper-based information system. I propose we go back to clay tablets.

Comment Is no one here a UFOlogist? (Score 1) 481

The "Roswell Incident" (AKA the Crash at Corona) is a well-picked over story that goes something like this:

  1) June 14, 1947, New Mexico rancher Brazel reports unexpected mechanical debris on his property.
          He tells a UFO story to the local paper and police.

  2) The cops call the Army, which sends over Major Marcel to collect the "alien artifacts."

  3) The Army issues a press release about the "UFO."

  4) Later, after more careful inspection, the debris is relabeled "as being a weather balloon and its "kite,""

The memo in question is from an FBI investigator Guy Hottel, written several years after this event. As wikipedia notes,
it isn't clear that this memo even refers to the "Roswell incident" at all.

Also, enjoy the retro-scifi techno-jargon contained in the memo:

"It is believed the [Army's radar located on the New Mexico base] interferes with the controlling mechanism of
the saucers."

At best, this memo is a report on hearsay. It is not direct evidence of a cover-up or even of recovered alien craft.
It is, in the neologisms of today, some government dude's blog post.

Don't thank me, Internet. I'm just doing my job.

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