topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Monday November 24, 2025, 7:13 am
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 [14] 15 16 17 18 19 ... 131next
326
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by zridling on June 29, 2011, 07:43 PM »
my profile has Atheist status. Facebook uses tag feature for location/religion/hobbies, so you can insert any custom <religion><random word> on profile fields. I guess you never filled your profile on facebook.

Yes I have, but that's just it -- it's not an option, you have to fill it in. FB recognizes various sects of god-believers, but not atheism in and of itself. You have to write that in. No big deal to me, but not all of us are religious. I'm proud of my atheism; why isn't FB?
327
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by zridling on June 29, 2011, 06:07 AM »
Will that be enough for it to gain traction?

Yes, no, yes. Facebook loves to censor content, and like MySpace, for the kiddies, it's showing its age (they like NEW things just for their newness, remember?). That said, even if Google+ were to fantastically carve 30% of FB's users, the next new thing would come along by then and the cycle would likely repeat itself. Don't know people who are loyal to FB as they are brands like Microsoft and Apple.
328
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by zridling on June 29, 2011, 06:03 AM »
Chrome already has extensions to share FB and Twitter content with Google+. And meanwhile, after a night with it, almost everyone on my twitter feed is impressed, including Anil Dash: Big picture take-away: Google has built an attractive, intuitive, intelligent service that's fun to use and speaks to a deep human need for contextual integrity of communication. There is not just public/private, life is more complex than that. This need, unmet by almost any other social network today, is where Google is aiming to win the hearts of users. The app the company built towards that aim is smooth and pleasing to use.

googleplus.png
http://www.readwrite...his_is_very_cool.php
329
Living Room / Re: NSFW! -- IBM's Watson Topless
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 11:59 PM »
Is it a he or a she?

I'm pretty sure it's bi (as in binary).
330
Living Room / Re: I Finally Bought a Kindle Book...
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 11:57 PM »
I didn't buy a Kindle device. I only downloaded the Windows reader. I'm still not anywhere near buying into that level of control yet...

I did read that, but I didn't remember it when I was writing -- Alzheimer's is hitting early. But that's the same thing I still can't trust with Google books -- although I've purchased a few (<10), I won't be buying anymore until I can download and save the .ePUB files of those same books.
331
Living Room / Re: We need some good tech news sites - Where are they?
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 11:50 PM »
Several that 40hz mentioned, esp. ARStechnica, and I use a lot of writers' personal twitter accounts to follow the latest. There's also:

Linux News Here
It culls news from 14 different Linux news sites

TechSpot
Good news site, somewhat like Beta/FileForum, only I think better on the news side.
332
I entered my wife's name and a bunch of pictures came up of the same woman--a woman who is not my wife and doesn't even share a similar name as my wife.

Deozaan, duh -- that's your other wife in the multiverse. Go back and look again. Oh crap, I haven't laughed this hard in ten minutes on the NSFW searches.
333
General Software Discussion / Re: Anyone here using TMUX over GNU Screen?
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 11:38 PM »
Nice to know, ewemoa. And thanks for the link!
334
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 11:35 PM »
Although I'm more hermit than social guy, the only time Facebook makes the news is when it gets people into trouble (much like Twitter). And without the filters and categories that Google+ project is introducing here, Facebook is too often used against you. For example, divorce lawyers mine your Facebook page to use it against you -- "You friended Becky, you bastard!" Or employers use it to find out that you're not a god-believer... oh wait, Facebook has NO option for telling the world you're an atheist! But if you're a tongue-speaking snake handler, you're covered.

With this Google+ project, you could conceivably let only those you want know what you want them to know or see. Much safer.
335
@Josh:

1236518305350a.png
336
Living Room / Re: NSFW! -- IBM's Watson Topless
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 04:22 AM »
When they can put a Watson in a tablet, then I'll relax. Until then, moar!!!
337
Rolled out quietly this morning. It's even better for searching big topics, such as "opera," "wormholes," or "climate change." It's essentially a range of Google products on one page.

wdyl-01.jpg
http://www.wdyl.com/#
338
Living Room / Re: I Finally Bought a Kindle Book...
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 01:11 AM »
I really, really, really want a tablet, but I spent my money on a lawnmower this year. I'm happy you're happy.

Just how much of my pissing and moaning about DRM is practical? Yeah, it ticks me off. Yeah, I'm philosophically opposed to it. There's no way any opposition to DRM would/could ever stem the tide. It's here whether we like it or not, and it's not going away.

Don't sell yourself short on whether you can make a difference. The capitulation you're feeling is exactly what they want you to feel! The reason you oppose DRM is (for me) quite simple: Why does a corporation need DRM? You got my money -- I'm clearly not a thief -- now give me my purchase without further conditions. If I pay you and then you claim the good I bought is still not mine, then I don't want it. I won't redistribute it, I won't resell it, but I don't want a corporation to tell me where and how I will read my books. I want them when and where I want them, which is everywhere! Moreover, I don't want to be forced -- as you were -- to buy a corporation's specific device to read a corporation's specific format.

You wouldn't buy a car that could only be driven on interstate highways, so why do we effectively do the same thing for smaller tech purchases?

In the meantime, don't fret. Enjoy it. Life is short.
339
Living Room / NSFW! -- IBM's Watson Topless
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2011, 12:59 AM »
watson-topless.jpg

Hide the children!  ;D
340
Josh, you're right on every count. However, I'm much more fickle. I actually left the site years ago when then changed the page design and colored FileForum orange. It was so "GeoCities" on my eyes that I gave up. I was also switching to Linux at the time, and it didn't help that they when viewing the latest 100 updated apps, you're thrown into a confusing screen full of boxes -- WTF! Like so many news sites, the intent seemed to get visitors to click-thru several screens to get where they wanted.

And BetaNews, whoa! I just looked at today's page for the first time in years, too. Virtually every headline is an opinion rather than a description. They're doing it wrong!
341
Google reminds me of one of those Gordon Ramsey episodes where the chef got creative and threw everything on the menu, thinking that would bring in business. And while customers (users?) are looking for coherence, Google's giving them little upon which to set their future. At least with Apple, the brand loyalty sees them through mistakes (Final Cut Pro X, ouch!).
342
Speaking of Google, here's a good NYTimes piece on combating adsense spam from content farms, the very trash that is hitting Kindles via Amazon:
http://opinionator.b...les-war-on-nonsense/
343
@fenix:
Ha! Google just dumped their Health Records and PowerMeter Services.
344
Yun Xie interviews Vikram Savkar on digital, interactive science texts:

A_highres-xie.jpg

The main problem is that textbooks are not research-oriented, nor are they up-to-date. Most are already behind the times by the time you buy them.... Textbooks are also falling behind when it comes to technology, as any interactive content has to be provided via separate media. Thus, it was exciting to see the implementation of what's being claimed as the “first interactive textbook” called Principles of Biology.

...These textbooks are not free, but they are affordable. We think it’ll be possible to be affordable. The price will be around $49 per student, and it’s a lifetime access. A person will always have access to the book. Our editorial team will also keep the textbook current. Twenty years from now, you can still read it and get updated on the world of biology. It’s a living edition, not something stagnant.


http://arstechnica.c...l-and-accessible.ars
345
[via Jean-Louis Gassée]

Google periodic table.jpg
http://code.google.com/more/table/

Would love to see DC do something like this! I like the table more than the article, and while Jean-Louis Gassée makes some valid points based on the history of big, fat software megaliths, Gassée's premise is based on "could" and the fact that he thinks 13 tabs in Gmail settings are overwhelming (really?). He does strike at the heart of Google's weaknesses -- underestimating Facebook, missing Twitter altogether, and the bigger Google gets, the bigger target (as in threat) they are of governments around the globe.
346
Living Room / Re: The law is for YOUR protection. Honest!
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2011, 04:23 AM »
What would happen if such legislation removed "money" from the patent equation? When Apple is racing to patent gestures -- GESTURES!! -- you might as well file a patent on the process of filing a patent. This vague legislation contains wording that seems to address the concerns of some, but which in practice gives MEGA-CORPORATIONS exactly what the want: the same old way. One step forward, two steps back: "We solved it, run along now!"
347
Living Room / Re: When Piracy is Harmful
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2011, 04:10 AM »
With regard to desktop programs (wow, "desktop" is limiting, isn't it?), I've always held that if you have to steal the software you like -- traditionally Windows, MS Office, Photoshop, and other big ol' baddies -- then just use open source alternatives (LibreOffice, Gimp, etc.). If you don't like them, then that will give you incentive to get the money to pay for them. However, there will probably never be large scale open source and free gaming. And with every person who steals the game or access to it, then it leads those developers to always be looking for a way out of programming. And that is a real shame.
348
Living Room / Re: Geocities Returns!
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2011, 04:03 AM »
My eyes, the goggles do nothing!

And yet with Facebook, so many are allowing a corporation to filter and censor their internet experience.
349
Living Room / Re: Anyone Using Bitcoins Yet?
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2011, 06:03 PM »
I see a Mad Max world soon for those of us in the lower 99%! Note that all austerity policies around the globe only affect those "without the gold" (the richest folks), so I apologize for the digression.

mckinleysm.jpg

Is It Better to Forgive Than to Receive?
Repudiation of the Gold Indexation Clause in Long-Term Debt During the Great Depression
by Randall S. Kroszner, 1998.
http://faculty.chica...rs/repudiation11.pdf

Here's a blockquote short version:
This paper examines the consequences of large-scale debt relief during the Great Depression in order to examine theories of debt overhang and the costs of bankruptcy. When the U.S. went off the gold standard and devalued the dollar with respect to gold, the government declared that the courts would no longer enforce gold indexation clauses which appeared in virtually all long-term private and public debts up to that time. If the gold clauses had been enforced, the debt burden of borrowers would have increased by the extent of the devaluation, which was 69 percent. I examine asset price responses to the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold this effective debt jubilee. Equity prices rise, but more surprisingly, the debt relief also led to higher prices for corporate bonds (all of which contained gold clauses). In contrast, government bonds with gold clauses fall in value. These responses suggest that the benefits of eliminating debt overhang and avoiding bankruptcy for private firms more than offset the loss to creditors of some chance of trying to recover the additional 69 percent. Consistent with large costs of debt overhang and bankruptcy, in the cross section, stock and bond prices of firms closer to bankruptcy rose more than other firms. The results suggest that in these circumstances it is indeed better to forgive than to receive.
_____________________________
  • Following the inflation during the Civil War, almost all long-term financial contracts in the U.S. came to include a “gold clause” which effectively indexed to gold the value of the payments to creditors. This clause protected creditors against devaluation of the dollar since they could demand payment in gold or the equivalent value of gold in nominal dollars if the price of gold were to rise during the life of the contract. On June 5, 1933, Congress passed a Joint Resolution nullifying gold clauses in both private and public debt contracts. One legal authority has remarked of this Resolution: “In legal history there is probably no other statute of a purely private-law character which has engendered such enormous financial changes…”
  • The abrogation of gold clauses was a key part of Roosevelt’s “first hundred days,” providing the foundation for much of the New Deal policies directed at reflating the economy including the departure of the U.S. from the gold standard. Although the Supreme Court struck down most of Roosevelt’s early New Deal programs, the Court upheld the government’s ability to alter financial contracts by refusing to enforce gold clauses. Given that the price of gold rose from $20.67 per ounce to $35 per ounce when the U.S. officially devalued in 1934, the abrogation of these clauses was tantamount to a debt jubilee….
  • Justice McReynolds, in a strident and emotional dissent, decried that “the Constitution is gone” and compared the actions of the government in these cases to those of “Nero in his worst form.” The minority expressed “shame and humiliation” at the majority’s decision and found the consequences of the decision upholding repudiation “abhorrent.” With the sanctity of private contracts now eliminated and the government effectively repudiating its obligations, the dislocation of the domestic economy could be much greater in the long run than any possible short run disruptions due to gold clause enforcement….
  • High Bankruptcy Costs and Debt-Deflation Hypothesis: If the costs of bankruptcy and distortions of investment incentives of debt overhang are sufficiently large, then enforcement of the gold clause could have reduced the expected payments to corporate bond holders. This occurs when the anticipated benefit of enforcement of the gold clause, which would raise nominal payments to bond holders by 69 percent times the expectation of a decision upholding enforceability, must be more than offset by the expected reduction of payments to bond holders due to bankruptcy and distorted investment incentives….
  • In addition to the bankruptcy costs that affect individual firms, there could have been an external effect of massive bankruptcies and underinvestment incentives induced by a decision adverse to the government (e.g., Fisher 1933, Myers 1977, and Lamont 1995). The two-year long recovery of the economy might have been stopped and a severe crisis could have arisen as individual firm bankruptcies led to further waves of failures of financial intermediaries and to broad financial and economic collapse…
  • VII. Conclusions
  • The evidence presented above is consistent with the “high bankruptcy costs and debt deflation” hypothesis. The debt repudiation that was the practical effect of the gold clause decision increased the value of both debt and equity, and firms with greater likelihood of experiencing financial distress had the greatest increase in the value of their securities. These preliminary results suggest that models emphasizing debt overhang and the costs of financial distress may have empirical relevance for evaluating policies of debt relief for both firms and nations.

It really shows what a total bad ass Franklin Roosevelt was back in the day compared to our leaders today.
350
Living Room / Re: Sean Connery ain't Apple's bitch!
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2011, 01:37 AM »
@Stephen66515:
Exactly, I can't help it either. My second link was the same as yours.
Pages: prev1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 [14] 15 16 17 18 19 ... 131next