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In the (non-gaming) News
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Thu, 02 Sep 2010 23:15:01
I've always liked Reddit.  I think because the content seems more erratic.  The Digg guys have always seemed a little pompous.

With all the weird links though it kind of shoots a massive hole in my security practice of only visiting familiar sites.

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Fri, 03 Sep 2010 00:09:18
Cisco Planning Bid on Skype

Likely not good news if they were to acquire them.  The focus would most definitely not be on individual consumers, but instead on businesses.

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Fri, 03 Sep 2010 00:18:07

Yodariquo said:
Cisco Planning Bid on Skype

Likely not good news if they were to acquire them.  The focus would most definitely not be on individual consumers, but instead on businesses.

 Yeah, but remember also Cisco bought Linksys to expand their consumer exposure -- that's actually worked out pretty okay.  Cisco already has well established VOIP solutions for business, so maybe they are looking to broaden their market.

I'm uncomfortable with any changes at Skype though.

Google Voice (the voip through chat) seems to have the consumer skype market in it's sights anyway -- I just got my invite this week and it works great.

Edited: Fri, 03 Sep 2010 00:20:10

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Sat, 04 Sep 2010 22:26:23

I'm guessing the guy who called 911 is a gamer LOL

BALTIMORE — A security guard who called 911 after a gunman entered Discovery Channel's headquarters calmly told the operator: "You're probably going to need a sniper."

The call, released Friday, was one of several placed minutes after a gunman entered the lobby and took three hostages. Other callers described the propane tanks strapped to the gunman's body, and a blinking device in his left hand.

After hours of negotiating with James Lee, 43, police shot him to death as the hostages were preparing to make a break for it, police said.

Even in the first minutes after the siege began, Discovery security had an idea of who they were dealing with. A security employee told a 911 operator that they believed the man was in the lobby was Lee. He told the operator Lee appeared disoriented, had propane tanks strapped to his chest and at least one person on the ground.

"It looks like he's got an IED. He looks like he's setting up an explosive device in the lobby, you're probably going to need a sniper," he tells the operator. "You gotta move fast."

In police radio transmissions, an officer described the suspect as an "Asian male following the do-not-admit sign Discovery has."

Lee, who was periodically homeless, was charged with disorderly conduct in February 2008 after he staged a "Save the Planet" protest outside the Discovery building. He threw fistfuls of cash in the air and paid homeless people to carry signs condemning the network. Police found him with a duffel bag stuffed with more than $20,000, according to court records.

He was convicted and served two weeks in jail and was ordered to stay 500 feet away from Discovery headquarters as part of his probation, which ended two weeks ago.

Radio transmissions detail the urgent attempts to evacuate the building and clear traffic and people from the streets around the Silver Spring building in the heart of the bustling downtown during lunchtime. One officer describes Lee setting up a bullhorn with a remote microphone.

Later, one of the police snipers described the explosive device Lee had strapped to his body as coffee cans and propane canisters. The officer said Lee had a microphone and was "protesting verbally."

One Discovery employee told an operator that she was hiding in the kitchen of the building's cafeteria with other employees. She said the man came in the lobby.

"When I walked by him, he said 'Nobody move!' and he shot in the air and I ran," the employee said.

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Thu, 09 Sep 2010 04:55:21

Ever had the suspicion that stereotypes aren't just kind of true, but in fact built with laser precision?  Prepare to be dignified:

http://blog.okcupid.com/index.php/the-real-stuff-white-people-like/

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Wed, 15 Sep 2010 18:43:16

I've given up trying to care about the US's political implosion.  Now it's just completely hilarious.  BTW, he won the nomination.

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Wed, 15 Sep 2010 18:50:15
Yodariquo said:

I've given up trying to care about the US's political implosion.  Now it's just completely hilarious.  BTW, he won the nomination.

This is the year the Repbulicans strike back... with whatever they can find. If a dog ran as a republican it would win.

660896.png
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Wed, 15 Sep 2010 18:52:08
Dvader said:

This is the year the Repbulicans strike back... with whatever they can find. If a dog ran as a republican it would win.

These are the nominations, i.e. Republicans vs. Republicans, to see who gets to run as the representative for the party in the actual election.  This is the guy voters chose for the Republican nominee.

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Wed, 15 Sep 2010 19:00:59
Yodariquo said:

These are the nominations, i.e. Republicans vs. Republicans, to see who gets to run as the representative for the party in the actual election.  This is the guy voters chose for the Republican nominee.

That is true. LOL Ok then whoever is the most anti-Obama wins, he could be brain dead he just needs to say key phrases that rally the party.

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Wed, 15 Sep 2010 19:05:05

Not a Republican, but this is ridiculous. This is a real commercial that aired on our TV sets...





I had to rewind my tivo a few times just to make sure I didn't dream that up. LOL (he didn't win, second place out of a ton though)

Edited: Wed, 15 Sep 2010 19:09:39
660896.png
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Thu, 16 Sep 2010 00:28:12

^ Wow ahahahaha

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Thu, 16 Sep 2010 04:24:42

"(he didn't win, second place out of a ton though)"


More proof that democracy doesn't work.

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Thu, 16 Sep 2010 23:26:06

So the Pope decided it would be a good idea to blame the holocaust on atheists.

"Even in our own lifetime, we can recall how Britain and her leaders stood against a Nazi tyranny that wished to eradicate God from society and denied our common humanity to many, especially the Jews, who were thought unfit to live. I also recall the regime’s attitude to Christian pastors and religious who spoke the truth in love, opposed the Nazis and paid for that opposition with their lives. As we reflect on the sobering lessons of the atheist extremism of the twentieth century, let us never forget how the exclusion of God, religion and virtue from public life leads ultimately to a truncated vision of man and of society and thus to a “reductive vision of the person and his destiny" (source)

This is commonplace for creationists, but it's a whole new level of hypocrisy from the pulpit.  Let's see

  1. Hitler was Roman Catholic
  2. The Pope was in the Hitler Youth (i.e. HE was a Nazi)
  3. "Without pledging ourselves to any particular Confession, we have restored faith to its pre-requisites because we were convinced that the people needs [sic] and requires [sic] this faith. We have therefore undertaken the fight against the atheistic movement, and that not merely with a few theoretical declarations: we have stamped it out." - Adolf Hitler
Edited: Thu, 16 Sep 2010 23:30:08

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 02:01:52

I don't believe the Pope exists.

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 03:39:53

Yeah, that's as stupid as blaming previous or current conflicts on other religions. Happy

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 03:50:16
Foolz said:

Yeah, that's as stupid as blaming previous or current conflicts on other religions. Happy

While it goes nowhere to compare body counts, I hate this equivocation fallacy.  There's a distinct difference.  You cannot get from "I do not believe X" to "I'll take action Y".  You never do anything based on something you don't believe -- your actions are based on beliefs.  So trying to get from atheism to any action is absurd.  An atheist can be good or bad, like anyone else, but that is entirely dependent on their beliefs, not non-beliefs.  For example, if an atheist bombs a church, it's because of a belief that in some way that is a good idea.  Atheism is not a belief -- it does not account for any actions, good or bad.

However, religions have explicit instructions to take actions.  For example, " ... whosoever doeth any work in the sabbath day, he shall surely be put to death." (Exodus 31:15).  Very few would ever consider taking such an action or (expressly) supporting it, so those who do act in extremist ways are not representative of the followers of a religion, it sure as hell is representative of the religion itself.  If someone takes the Bible and goes off to kill witches, he's crazy, but he's supported by the religion.

Alternatively, if you hand out a pamphlet that says "Be generous and kind to all.  Also, stab puppies."  If someone follows the former and not the latter, they're no worse the person, and anyone who follows the latter is a psychotic dangerous nut who does not in any way reflect on the character of those who don't.  But I can still criticize the pamphlet.

Edited: Fri, 17 Sep 2010 03:52:14

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 03:56:33

You can criticise it of course, but that doesn't mean in the context of the actual conflict that religion had any bearing on the actions involved without the manipulation of outer forces.

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 04:01:48
Foolz said:

You can criticise it of course, but that doesn't mean in the context of the actual conflict that religion had any bearing on the actions involved without the manipulation of outer forces.

Religion is a set of beliefs.  Beliefs inform actions.  Therefore religion informs actions.  Without arguing for any particular conflict, suggesting that religion was not a significant factor in any conflict is naïve at best.

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 04:05:32
Yodariquo said:

Religion is a set of beliefs.  Beliefs inform actions.  Therefore religion informs actions.  Without arguing for any particular conflict, suggesting that religion was not a significant factor in any conflict is naïve at best.

The conflict is irrelevent, we are discussing irrefutible logic and human nature after all aren't we? (Why the hell don't we have an eye rolling smiley?)

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Fri, 17 Sep 2010 04:30:48
Foolz said:

The conflict is irrelevent, we are discussing irrefutible logic and human nature after all aren't we? (Why the hell don't we have an eye rolling smiley?)

No.  My contention is with your equivocation that attributing an atrocity to atheism is the same as attributing an atrocity to a religion.  Attributing any action, good or bad, to atheism is invalid.  Attributing an action, good or bad, to a religion, can be valid.  So they're not equal.

But maybe I'm being too broad, so let's take an example.  Israel and Palestine.  The ongoing conflict is over a piece of land that, outside of a religious context, is completely worthless.  It's not an economic battle.  It's not a political battle.  It's founded in religion.  That is a valid statement.  Theo van Gogh was murdered because of the religious beliefs of a fanatic.  That is a valid statement.

It's the same contention as with people who equate atheists to religious fundamentalists.  How can you be a "fundamentalist" about NOT believing something?  It's asinine, and a flagrant disregard for burden of proof and the definition of atheism.  It has nothing to do with whether an atheist can be just as stupid or just as irrational, just as the issue of atrocities has nothing to do with whether or not an atheist can do something as terrible as someone religious.  You cannot attribute it to atheism, but you can attribute it to religion.  Belief versus non-belief.

Edited: Fri, 17 Sep 2010 04:36:12

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