Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Mr Sham was signing the documents (Score 2) 117

I take it your only dictionary is the 4chan dictionary? How do you morons spell "Idiot"?

Yes, I'm pissed about the mod bombing, even though you 4chan morons can't hurt me. All you can do is annoy me, and then only when I'm drunk and don't have any weed.

I was going to post another chapter but since I'm drunk I'm posting an anti-4chan JE. REAL slashdotters, help me out here. How can we rid slashtot of the 4chan trolls? They got mod points today. What pisses me off is I haven't had any in a year, but the uneducated idiots have plenty.

Comment Re:Mr Sham was signing the documents (Score 1) 117

Mod me down some more, stupid 4channers. God damned mod bombing sons of bitches, you idiots can't hurt my karma. Mod away, imbeciles. And when you fail, GET THE FUCK OFF SLASHDOT AND GO BACK TO YOUR GARBAGE DUMP (the one under your bridge). Dickweeds.

Yes, I'm drunk and pissed off at you fucking retards. Flamebait? Troll? Fuck off. 4channers suck, I hate all you asshole 4channers.

Yes, this comment is flamebait. Well, no, your modding a good comment down baited my flames. Slashdot editors, please stop giving mod points to 4chan idiots. They do not belong at slashdot. Those assholes ran me off from kuro5hin, look where it is now. Please don't let those assholes ruin my slashdot like they did K5!

Comment Re:Drug Culture. (Score 1) 7

Well, his experience as bus driver and babysitter didn't prepare him for sociopathic whores. I'm not sure if I'll go into what made the CEO take notice except he saved the corporation money (actually I don't know myself). But maybe I should... thanks, that may be a pivotal point.

I do have some surprises in store, don't want to spoil it. It's about 1/5th away from novel length and I want this one to be a little bigger than Nobots. But I'm mostly "flying by the seat of my pants" like the last book.

I wonder if I can get those ISBNs without using my credit card, I'm trying not to use it too much. Trying to get my shitty credit score higher. I can thank whores and my own stupidity for the credit rating. Live and learn!

I was going to post another chapter tonight; it's written but I'm a little drunk tonight, that happens when I can't find any weed. If I post it I'll surely screw it up. Like Dirty Harry says, "a man's got to know his limitations." And I'm at mine right now... I can barely type coherently.

As to the robots, if he had a crew it would be too easy for him to overcome what's coming. Whores ain't usually nice people,the ones I've met are thieving sociopaths... just like the ones John is dealing with. Only his whores are worse than the ones I've known (there was one at Felbers tonight that wanted... well, I know better these days).

Comment Re:Piracy rationalizations in 3... 2... 1... (Score 2) 348

And no one is entitled to someone else's work.

I take it you've never read the constuitution to see why there's such a thing as copyright in the US in the first place? The whole purpose is to encourage artists and writers to produce things so they will go into the public domain. Originally it was only 14 years.

I also take it that you've never read any Asimov.

<snip>

Weill waved it gently away. "If you want to quit, Sherman, it's all right. But do an old man a favor and let me explain something to you."

"I'm not going to change my mind," said Hillary.

"I'm not going to try to make you. I just want to explain something. I'm an old man and even before you were born I was in this business so I like to talk about it. Humor me, Sherman? Please?"

Hillary sat down. His teeth clamped down on his lower lip and he stared sullenly at his fingernails.

Weill said, "Do you know what a dreamer is, Sherman? Do you know

what he means to ordinary people? Do you know what it is to be like me, like Frank Belanger, like your wife, Sarah? To have crippled minds that can't imagine, that can't build up thoughts? People like myself, ordinary people, would like to escape just once in a while this life of ours. We can't. We need help.

"In olden times it was books, plays, radio, movies, television. They gave us make-believe, but that wasn't important. What was important was that for a little while our own imaginations were stimulated. We could think of handsome lovers and beautiful princesses. We could be beautiful, witty, strong, capable, everything we weren't.

"But, always, the passing of the dream from dreamer to absorber was not perfect. It had to be translated into words in one way or another. The best dreamer in the world might not be able to get any of it into words. And the best writer in the world could put only the smallest part of his dreams into words. You understand?

"But now, with dream recording, any man can dream. You, Sherman, and a handful of men like you, supply those dreams directly and exactly. It's straight from your head into ours, full strength. You dream for a hundred million people every time you dream. You dream a hundred million dreams at once. This is a great thing, my boy. You give all those people a glimpse of something they could not have by themselves."

Hillary mumbled, "I've done my share." He rose desperately to his feet. "I'm through. I don't care what you say. And if you want to sue me for breaking our contract, go ahead and sue. I don't care."

Weill stood up, too. "Would I sue you? . . . Ruth," he spoke into the intercom, "bring in our copy of Mr. Hillary's contract."

He waited. So did Hillary and so did Belanger. Weill smiled faintly and his yellowed fingers drummed softly on his desk.

His secretary brought in the contract. Weill took it, showed its face to Hillary and said, "Sherman, my boy, unless you want to be with me, it's not right you should stay."

Then, before Belanger could make more than the beginning of a horrified gesture to stop him, he tore the contract into four pieces and tossed them down the waste chute. "That's all."

Hillary's hand shot out to seize Weill's. "Thanks, Mr. Weill," he said earnestly, his voice husky. "You've always treated me very well, and I'm grateful. I'm sorry it had to be like this."

"It's all right, my boy. It's all right."

Half in tears, still muttering thanks, Sherman Hillary left.

"For the love of Pete, boss, why did you let him go?" demanded Belanger distractedly. "Don't you see the game? He'll be going straight to Luster-Think. They've bought him off."

Weill raised his hand. "You're wrong. You're quite wrong. I know the boy

and this would not be his style. Besides," he added dryly, "Ruth is a good secretary and she knows what to bring me when I ask for a dreamer's contract. What I had was a fake. The real contract is still in the safe, believe me.

"Meanwhile, a fine day I've had. I had to argue with a father to give me a chance at new talent, with a government man to avoid censorship, with you to keep from adopting fatal policies and now with my best dreamer to keep him from leaving. The father I probably won out over. The government man and you, I don't know. Maybe yes, maybe no. But about Sherman Hillary, at least, there is no question. The dreamer will be back."

"How do you know?"

Weill smiled at Belanger and crinkled his cheeks into a network of fine lines. "Frank, my boy, you know how to edit dreamies so you think you know all the tools and machines of the trade. But let me tell you something. The most important tool in the dreamie business is the dreamer himself. He is the one you have to understand most of all, and I understand them.

"Listen. When I was a youngster-there were no dreamies then-I knew a fellow who wrote television scripts. He would complain to me bitterly that when someone met him for the first time and found out who he was, they would say: Where do you get those crazy ideas?

"They honestly didn't know. To them it was an impossibility to even think of one of them. So what could my friend say? He used to talk to me about it and tell me: Could I say, I don't know? When I go to bed, I can't sleep for ideas dancing in my head. When I shave, I cut myself; when I talk, I lose track of what I'm saying; when I drive, I take my life in my hands. And always because ideas, situations, dialogues are spinning and twisting in my mind. I can't tell you where I get my ideas. Can you tell me, maybe, your trick of not getting ideas, so I, too, can have a little peace.

"You see, Frank, how it is. You can stop work here anytime. So can I. This is our job, not our life. But not Sherman Hillary. Wherever he goes, whatever he does, he'll dream. While he lives, he must think; while he thinks, he must dream. We don't hold him prisoner, our contract isn't an iron wall for him. His own skull is his prisoner, Frank. So he'll be back. What can he do?" Belanger shrugged. "If what you say is right, I'm sort of sorry for the guy-"

Weill nodded sadly. "I'm sorry for all of them. Through the years, I've found out one thing. It's their business; making people happy. Other people."

Comment Re:It's not just an Asia thing (Score 2) 110

What they want is zero loss and the way to achieve this is to use high amounts of pesticides that kill any bug that dares to get near produce and feed antibiotics to animals to keep them alive long enough to slaughter them.

Incorrect. What they want is to increase profits to the maximum amounts, and pesticides and antibiotics ain't cheap.A farmer is looking for the biggest yield for the lowest price, and wasting money on pesticides that aren't needed is not a good way to increase your profits. Farmers want to use the least amount of the needed pesticide as they can. I don't know about ranching (the farm show they have here on Sunday mornings doesn't cover animals) but farmers are businessmen and don't want to spend any more than they have to. For instance, they're only going to use Roundup Ready seeds when they have a weed problem that only Roundup will do a good job on, because GM seed is more expensive. I don't think I've ever seen a Monsanto seed commercial, but you see a lot of commercials for traditional hybrids.

Comment Re:Great idea! Let's keep it going: (Score 1) 266

Think of it as evolution in action. Stupidity has to get bred out of the gene-pool.

I'm sorry, but that comment was really stupid. You're being flippant, don't understand evolution, or both. If an organism breeds before it dies, its genes live on. By the time a kid is out of high school (s)he is old enough to already have a couple of kids. Plus, posting stupid shit on facebook is rarely if ever fatal. Third, HR doesn't check a janitor's background.

Comment Re:So why is it used in Windows? (Score 1) 665

Because Ctrl-Alt-Delete is non-interruptible. This way one could be sure it was truly the login screen and not something impersonating the login screen. At least, that's how I remember it. Could be urban legend.

I coulda swore that the inventor of Ctrl-Alt-Delete said the same thing as you in an interview in the 1990s

Ctrl-Alt-Del came about with the original IBM PC in 1982. IBM PCs had no login screen at all and in fact there would have been no way to hook one up to a network.

Comment Re:Asia is out of control (Score 1) 110

Wow, I would have thought they'd have stopped that by now. When I was stationed in Thailand in 1974, the only drugs that had any kind of control were LSD, heroin, cocaine, and marijuana*; they were outlawed (US treaty). Any other drug you could get over the counter, including antibiotics, quaaludes, amphetamines, you name it.

*Heroin and marijuana was freely available in the street and incredibly powerful. E.g. in the US and Europe, heroin is 1-2% pure, in Thailand it was 98% pure. Rather than shooting it up, junkies smoked it in a tobacco cigarette.

Comment Re:Infrastructure (Score 1) 287

IINM 4 inches of snow is pretty common in at least half of the world (the northern 1/4 and the southern 1/4th). However, they say not to use cruise control in the snow but it never caused me much problem. I always use cruise on the highway, better gas mileage and a less tired right foot.

I would expect an autonomous car to do far better than a meatbag driving in the snow, most people are really stupid. As long as the programmers aren't it should be OK.

Comment Re:Drug Culture. (Score 1) 7

To tell you the truth the rest of the story is still hazy to me, but there will be some surprises. Especially pertaining to Destiny and Tammy.

I don't know if there will be fatalities, but as was mentioned, withdrawal of the drug causes violence. Mutiny is rolling around in the back of my mind... but I like happy endings (or at worst which may be the case here, semi-sweet). I'm pretty sure they'll make it to Mars, but I honestly don't know. I just start typing and let my subconscious do the work. But I want it to be something I would enjoy reading (I've probably read Nobots 100 times editing it).

It seemed to work out with Nobots OK, even though I had to do a lot of editing on the final book, which is probably twice as many words (42042) as the draft. I'm pleased with the final Nobots, getting an ISBN (already registered the copyright) in a few days and will post it at slashdot a chapter a day shortly after I release the dead tree version.

I'm glad you guys are enjoying it, that's the reason for writing it. Not much point in writing if nobody will read.

If you see weirdness or anomalies or something seems wrong, please comment! I want to write the best books I can, and you guys are a big help.

BTW, I have a new chapter ready to post. Maybe tonight, maybe tomorrow.

Comment Re:Valve/Steam (Score 1) 147

Non-nerds use their computers to email, play simple games, look stuff up on google, post lolcats on facebook, look at YouTube videos and that's about all. A tablet suffices; you only need a mouse and keyboard for content creation and PC gaming (not angry birds), and only a tiny minority do that.

Slashdot Top Deals

Your computer account is overdrawn. Please see Big Brother.

Working...