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Recent Posts

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9276
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 08:23 PM »
Strange humor v2 - Your move  :D

That should have been: Yourmove.creep

It does seem a reasonably safe assertion that they would all quickly jump in line for that too...

Or possibly:

This was a sensible thread until f0dder came along, probably because of the liberal amount of nudity and sex on Scandinavian TV.........I wish I lived there.

Hahahah~!

I thought it was more a case of


9277
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 07:20 PM »
Or [email protected] - with a redirect to a web store featuring brightly colored plastic spit cups.

Strange humor v2 - Your move  :D

I believe the fanboy reaction would be:


9278
Living Room / Re: I'm thinking about learning how to program.
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 09:12 AM »
so whats a good book for learning C# then?

Pretty much any O'Reiley or Wrox or Apress.

I'd say get the Wrox Beginning C# and the O'Reiley C# Cookbook and the O'Reiley C# Pocket Reference. Those 3 will have you blazing forward faster than just about anything.

Oh, or the "C# Essentials" is very good too. If you're already familiar with some other languages, that's a cheap and fast way to get up to speed.
9279
Living Room / Re: Google sues the U.S. government
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 02:56 AM »
If Google was in the aluminum cookware business, their complaints would probably look something like this:

Government: We have 88,000 microwave ovens and we need some cookware. The cookware must be microwave safe.

Google: Oh, that's unfair. You need to drop that "microwave safe" requirement so we can have a chance at selling you some cookware too. That "microwave safe" requirement is anti-competitive to us aluminum cookware makers.

Hahhaahah~! I love that analogy! Made me laugh! :D
9280
Living Room / South Park TOWER DEFENSE!
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 01:23 AM »


Yes way!



The developer blog is here:

http://www.southpark...dp/developer-diaries

But it's Xbox only! :'(

Sigh...

It's almost enough reason to buy an Xbox. (Maybe with the Kinetic stuff... Nah... I can't convince myself.)
9281
Living Room / Re: Maybe I Should Build Airplanes Too!
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 12:48 AM »
just to reassure you, QANTAS used to contract some of their maintenance to Singapore airlines, but have since brought it back onshore after a number of disturbing incidents of seriously substandard work...

OH GOD! Engines falling off is a step up from Singapore Air? Time to write my will...
9282
Living Room / Maybe I Should Build Airplanes Too!
« Last post by Renegade on November 04, 2010, 12:06 AM »
If you remember my Qantas air ticket reservation system, please have a look here too:

http://news.ninemsn....y-after-air-incident

A Qantas A380 passenger jet has landed safely in Singapore after a "mechanical issue" caused part of the engine to fall to the ground.

Perhaps I should get into building airplanes as well. Hey, if I can replicate Qantas booking systems in 5 minutes, I should be able to build them some planes in 10~! :P

Glad I'm flying with Singapore Air~! :D
9283
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 11:21 PM »
renegade.stfu

:P

Hahahaha~!

Well, I don't think I'd buy that domain. Maybe theresnowayinhellillever.stfu though. :P
9284
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 10:59 PM »
Actually, I can see a flood of requests for family names. I certainly wouldn't mind having ryan.smyth. The super common names like .lee, .park, .smith, .jones should be fairly easy to turn into profitable businesses.
9285
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 09:49 PM »
Imagine all the cool stuff you could do like:

thunderstruck.acdc.onbagpipes.rocks



:D
9286
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 09:44 PM »
Oh oh oh!!!

.rocks would be fun!

acdc.rocks

So would .sucks.

obama.sucks

The fun you could have! :P
9287
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 09:40 PM »
Oh, here's a business plan... Open up .free... Err... maybe not...
9288
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 08:25 PM »
"The decision should soon bring to fruition our six-year effort to create a specific Web address for online adult entertainment, and comes on the heels of an independent review that declared that ICANN's previous decision to deny dot-xxx was wrong," he said.

That's what I thought. Haven't heard anything since before that article.

.sex would be a fantastic TLD for health related information and relationship stuff. If it ever came around to it, I doubt it would get used that way though.
9289
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 08:18 PM »
.xxx was just approved I thought back in June.

Could be. I remember some controversy, and the last I heard they were leaning towards denying it.
9290
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 07:39 PM »
Well, at 185000 USD just for the application alone, one has to imagine there won't be far too much abuse of the tld system ;-)

True. They've allowed rampant abuse so far. Now with this abuse will only be open to the rich and powerful, instead of the poor and slimy. ;)

How long do you think it will take someone to snap up .sex, .xxx, and similar TLDs?

I must say that Canon has been good here. They've been pressing for .canon for a while.
9291
Living Room / Re: Google sues the U.S. government
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 07:09 PM »
+1 Josh

This is one of the primary reasons that I often go for commercial software over free software. When I need something for part of my business that I'm going to rely on heavily, I need that assurance that there is support there if something goes wrong.
9292
Living Room / Re: ICANN set to open the TLD flood gates
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 07:05 PM »
Wow! What a surprise! ICANN going for another cash grab! I'm shocked~! :P :D
9293
Living Room / Re: Google sues the U.S. government
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 05:10 PM »
Actually this is a bidding procedure issue. The department bought Microsoft licenses without giving anyone else a chance to bid on the software. For me, government shouldn't be paying any corporation -- Google included -- for proprietary software. It's a waste of taxpayer money in this age.

No, it looks like they gave opportunities for bids- they just wanted it to fit with their current MS infrastructure, which I think is a valid point.


Zaine, you've got a very valid point. There's no sense in throwing money away if you don't have to. I do think that the larger issue is one of having software that is open and free as in freedom though.

Still, if it costs more to train people with other software, then you're still worse off. If your maintenance costs are higher, again, worse off. I think it depends a lot on what software it is. But if you can get away with free, then hey, all the better.

When it comes to MS Office, it's hard to get around it. It's used across every industry and everyone needs to interoperate with it. If other office suites had better support for MS Office documents, there would be more realistic options. Last I checked though, that support wasn't there to the degree needed.

It's still kind of a bad situation.

The government makes a lot of the problems for itself though. The runaway insanity in the patent office is a large part of the problem. With a lot of FOSS you don't get any kind of indemnification, so if there's a patent violation, you're an open target. This is a large part of the problem for a lot of companies. The government has fostered an environment of fear of litigation. :(

I remember licensing some software to IBM, and they needed additional clauses in the license agreement because of that.

I don't know how those problems can be solved. There's really no practical reason for not adopting a lot of FOSS software or freeware.
9294
Living Room / Re: Limewire shutdown, permanently
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 04:34 PM »
Holy crap! I'm with Robertson on his perspective. WTF? We used to be able to buy Vinyl, audio cassettes, or CD hard copies and were thus able to convert them as we saw fit (vinyl to cassette, cd to mp3, etc.)... Of course, from a strictly (and ultra-) capitalist perspective, what the copyright/intellectual property owners are doing makes perfect sense - protecting and ensuring a revenue stream.

I suppose we have to consider as well that the copying technology that is readily available to Joe Q public has improved exponentially, along with the ease of sharing media. To make a good copy of, say, a book even 15 years ago took A LOT of effort and, to do it right, VERY expensive equipment that few mortals had access to... Today unless the media is DRM protected endless, perfect, copies of media are possible, along with the ability for individuals to share them.

Waffling... I'll stop now  :-[

Yeah. It's a hard call.

If I buy a pair of sunglasses, I can pretty much do whatever I want and store them wherever I want. If I buy software, I always have the right to store a backup copy of it. Why shouldn't I be able to store music in a cloud service so that I can always be assured that I have it safe in case of a disaster? There's a strong consumer case there.

On the other hand, well, that seems pretty obvious. Don't steal.

Then again, if you come over to my house, you don't need to pay for music I play. But if you come to a private website of mine by invitation (and I do mean a private site in the literal sense), then how is it different? Again, there are cases both ways there.
9295
Living Room / Re: Cute Parody Ad
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 04:25 PM »
I currently use T-Mobile and the cell service is fine. It doesn't have coverage in some of the "out in the boonies" places I visit, but here in the "city" it's fine.

I think the irony Renegade referred to is that T-Mobile is using the Mac vs PC theme to show T-Mobile as better than the iPhone.

Yes. It works for me.

I never liked the Pepsi challenge commercials or the old 80's Burger King commercials that compared themselves to Coke or McDonalds. It always seemed dirty to me, in part because there was nothing intelligent about them; it was just some freak screaming "I'm better than him!"

But this was just funny. It picks up on how douchy the Apple ad is and flips the tables on them and AT&T all at the same time. It's the irony there that just cracks me up. The commercial is well done to that end.
9296
Living Room / Re: Desktop Linux: The dream is dead
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 04:19 PM »
It's the free VMware Player stupid! :D

Given how powerful computers are now, it's pretty easy to run a Linux distro in VMware. That's where I'm running Ubuntu at the moment. Saves on electricity as well. (I've already got 4 computers running in the house.)
9297
Living Room / Re: Limewire shutdown, permanently
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 03:55 AM »
Interesting -- EMI is suing MP3tunes.com:

http://news.cnet.com..._3-20021501-261.html

"If I prevail, consumers will never have to worry about a format change ever again," Robertson said. "If they win, your media will be locked up and you're going to be forced to re-buy it and re-buy it. Once your media is in the cloud, you take it with you forever. I'm of the mind it's your content. It should work everywhere."
9298
Living Room / Cute Parody Ad
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 02:57 AM »
I thought this was cute:



The irony is awesome.
9299
Living Room / Violence in Video Games & the Law
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 02:54 AM »
From:

http://news.cnet.com...html?tag=topStories1

The California law slaps anyone who sells or rents a "violent video game" to a minor with a $1,000 fine. That's defined as a game in which the player has the option of "killing, maiming, dismembering, or sexually assaulting an image of a human being" in offensive ways. Parents or guardians are still permitted to buy those games for minors.

...


The pro-regulation states also cite Postal 2, saying that the game encourages players to "burn people alive with gasoline or napalm," "decapitate people with shovels and have dogs fetch their severed heads," and "kill bald, unshaven men wearing pink dresses."

California attorney general and gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown, a Democrat, has said the state should be able to place "reasonable restrictions on the distribution of extremely violent material to children."

...

Which is why groups as diverse as the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund and the Future of Music Coalition are siding with the video game industry. The coalition warns that if the California law is upheld, it "would lead inexorably to the enactment of new statutes prohibiting violent depictions or descriptions in other artistic media" as well.

...

And it was Justice Sonia Sotomayor who seemed to be the most conversant with video games, asking whether a video game showing a Vulcan "being maimed and tortured" would be covered by the act (answer: no) and whether an "android computer simulated person" would be covered by the act (answer: no). Justice Antonin Scalia was sharply critical of the law, but on more traditional grounds: saying that "it has never been understood that the freedom of speech did not include portrayals of violence."


No matter how you look at it, this is a real political mess. There's no winning here.

Still, it will be interesting... whether or not it's a bloodbath~! :D

9300
Living Room / Re: Awesome photos
« Last post by Renegade on November 03, 2010, 12:46 AM »
Wow, Picture #61.  When was toothpaste invented?

Apparently well before facial soap. :D
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