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Comment Re:Saturation isn't the problem (Score 1) 245

I mentioned a bunch of great characters and even acknowledged that I wouldn't mind under represented characters if it was done well. But they don't do this... they seem to think a fish slap to the face is the best way to get their agenda across. Defending this by saying I don't know what makes a great movie and that I'm just all focused on wokeism is just blaming the consumer instead of the producer. Be subtle, we'll get the message. Be bold and we'll tune out.

Comment Saturation isn't the problem (Score 2, Insightful) 245

There are those who know exactly what the problem is and then there are those that go nah couldn't be that... it must be over saturation. Wandavision, Falcon, Loki, What If?, Hawkeye and Moon Knight were all great. The problems started when wokeism was inserted into their movies and stories. They really need to learn how to develop great characters who just happen to be whatever the victim of the day is and focus on their greatness. People don't like being slapped in the face with it and have other choices on what to watch.

Comment Re:Corrected version (Score 4, Informative) 42

Thanks to the SOAP paper link, we can see that she wasn't using octal or hex, just plane old decimal. The instructions went up to 99 and 0-9 can seen in the data fields. Interesting there were some constants defined that sure look like binary to me. So she actually died at age 100. Sure would be interesting to see what she thought of that last 40 years or so.

Comment Why? (Score 1) 67

This is cool but I have to ask why? The point of a sprite was to be a movable object block. You could cycle through them and move them making it look like a character walking as an example. In the case of pong it could be the ball. 24x21 where each pixel was transparent or a color say white. Now you simply update the X and Y and you having a moving ball. If you wanted 3 colors (plus transparent makes 4) you lost half the horizontal resolution. On the upside, sprites is what made me learn binary when I was a wee little lad.

Comment Tinker Time (Score 1) 98

I was a C64 kid back so I don't know this specific program. But I do recall learning lot's of BASIC 2.0 and 6810 assembler. Much by reading manuals and much by typing in programs like this and saving them to tape. I'm pretty sure I would have fixed the bug myself as that was part of the fun of the whole exercise. Find your own typos and understand the authors techniques.

Comment Re:Voltaire (Score 1) 628

Isn't the capitalistic way that any company can choose their customers? By the way Amazon is not preventing anyone from hosting Parler. They are just not doing it. That's like saying you can what ever you want; I do not have to let you do it from my front lawn.

If a baker can't choose who to make a cake for, why can a tech company choose who they can provide services too? My biggest problem with this Amazon example is that in a PaaS/IaaS type situation they are just providing infrastructure. It's not obvious to most users what infrastructure a website/app is running on and there is little to no harm to the Amazon brand.

Comment Re:Net Neutrality (Score 1) 79

I've had plenty of complaints about the bells over the years but these days I pay $55/mo + tax unbundled for ATT Uverse gigabit fttp with no data caps. They even throw HBO Max in for free with this. With COVID work from home and school from home, we burn through over a 1TB of usage every month. What exactly is the problem? Now I could get a true pass through out of their gateway or just ditch it so I guess I'll at least complain about that.

Comment Evolution (Score 5, Insightful) 244

I've spent a career automating processes. My first such innovation came in my first year and I remember having these feelings when I realized the consequences of my proposal. I spoke to my manager and she said it was our duty to make things more efficient for our customer and that if we didn't someone else would. There is always someone paying the bill whether it's customers, shareholders, private investors or tax payers or maybe in a more abstract way the environment. We always have an obligation to use those resources wisely. In the end these people will retrain and do something else as evidenced by our current unemployment rate.

Comment Re:Scuba Divers know (Score 5, Informative) 646

Inert gas narcosis on air/nitrox doesn't become a significant concern until past 4ata / 100fsw. For air that's a PPN2 of 3.12. Breathing 100% N2 at 1 ata wouldn't even remotely induce any type of narcosis. This is different the breathing in fresh N2 with each breath. Breathing is controlled by CO2 levels and this method tricks the body into thinking everything is fine by keeping CO2 levels low in the body. Very effective... you never know what hit you. Now why are we trying to "solve old problems"? That's purely a political problem not a technical problem.
Earth

Reid Hoffman, Bill Gates, Others Ante Up Another $30 Million To Change.org the World (fortune.com) 60

theodp writes: Fortune reports that LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman is "leading a $30 million funding round in Change.org, a for-profit petition and fundraising website focused on social and political change." Joining Hoffman in this round, as well as an earlier $25 million round in 2014, is Bill Gates. Change.org, Hoffman explained in a Friday LinkedIn post, "helps enable a world where you don't need to hire a lobbyist to have real impact on the issues and policies that matter to you." He added, "In its decade of existence, Change.org petitions have resulted in more than 21,000 victories, i.e., instances in which a government agency, corporation, or other entity has changed a regulation or a policy in the face of a Change.org petition urging it to do so." Last year, Hoffman joined Gates and some of the biggest names in tech and corporate America who threw their weight behind a Change.org petition that tried to get Congress to fund K-12 Computer Science education. The Change.org petition fell short of its 150,000-signature goal despite claims of support from 90% of the parents of the nation's 58 million K-12 schoolchildren (based on a Google-funded survey of 1,685 parents), widespread press coverage (including a full-page ad in petition signer Jeff Bezos's Washington Post), lobbying efforts by the tech coalition that organized the petition (which counts LinkedIn and Microsoft among its members), and even some free PR from Change.org.

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