meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: You Can't Keep Your Money Because It Belongs To The Government
meatpopsicle's comments
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Did Blowing Into The NES Cartridge Really Work?
The contacts were never the issue. the CIC lockout chip is the culprit everyone's ignoring.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Did Blowing Into The NES Cartridge Really Work?
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Did Blowing Into The NES Cartridge Really Work?
Therefore, they were addressing whether or not ignoring the CIC lockout chip fixed or alleviated a problem. clearly, it does not.
Perhaps you can explain how ignoring the cause of the entire problem, blaming the cartridge slot, and then working from a false presumption mean that they're not wrong?
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Slashdot and SourceForge sold to Dice Holdings
go there now.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Did Blowing Into The NES Cartridge Really Work?
The reason people resorted to blowing in the cartridges is because of the CIC chip. The so-called "Lock-Out" chip on the NES is responsible for the Blinking power button and games not working.
"Sometimes," I hear some of you say, "You'd take the game out, put it back in, and it'd sometimes work. Why?" Well, imaginary question-asker, because the a faulty CIC will work sporadically. if the code passes the CIC check, it continues without issue. if the CIC fails halfway through your game, your game doesn't stop working. If you power cycled the system, then you'd notice the CIC failure. Blowing on the cartridge worked for the same reason doing 200 pushups will make water boil.
Nesdev.org has a decent amount of information about this chip on their wiki, if anyone's interested.
TL;DR - clip two pins on the CIC chip, never blow in a NES cartridge again.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Best registrar/TLD beyond US control
both out of Iceland. Both accept Prepaid Visa. Both register .com, .net, and .org. Orange accepts Bitcoin as well. Neither ask for much in the way of user information when registering the domain.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Moving to Linux full time
Congratulations, you now have a nicer desktop than MacOS X Mountain Lion.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Slashdot and SourceForge sold to Dice Holdings
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: The D.A.R.E. Website is stuck in 1998, and needs your help.
All in all, a fantastic troll. Good work, sir.
On a semi-related note, I'd like to make the bold statement that half of the programs on your computer are the direct result of Cocaine, Amphetamines, and Cannabis. If you're a Linux user, this number is probably much higher. Most software developers, especially those working more-than-40-hour work weeks, are using some sort of amphetamine, usually Adderall, to keep focused and productive. The Californians here probably know at least one software developer with a Cannabis License. Drug use at EA and Adobe is legendary amongst former employees.
Am I wrong in my thinking?
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Gittip: Open Source Financing
Kudos to the owner for dogfooding it.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Steve Mann's unanswered letter to McDonalds' Head of Customer Services
Once your lien is established, You file a complaint in court (whether County, or CQB if .uk/.au/.nz/.ca), issue a seizure order for the judge to rubber-stamp, and direct the Sheriff to go seize property for you. I've personally witnessed it working in 3 canadian provinces (BC, AB, SK), and 2 states (California and Arizona). I'm hesitant to name names, though; if you're curious, and you can find a public court registry (most canadian provinces have them online), start looking up the names of the current or former chiefs of police, wardens (Maricopa County, AZ is great for this). you'll see lots of proper process and liens.
This is outside of registering your lien with Equifax/Experian/TransUnion (which is also very effective), should you want to affect their overall credit history.
Personally, as I enjoy banking/finance waaay too much, I like to sell my liens to foreign banks. One law enforcement officer I encountered had all his assets seized (including his house/credit cards), but it only satisfied approximately half the debt owed. Once a wage garnishment order was in place, the rest of the debt was sold to a fairly large corporate bank in New Delhi. Now the officer (who currently has a desk job) pays all but $200/month of his wages to this bank until the lien is paid.
TL;DR: don't worry whether or not they'll be honorable. Get the courts to force them to pay.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Windows 8 productivity: Who moved my cheese? Oh, there it is.
Just wait, in 6 months, we'll see that Mr. Hanselman was paid for this pro-Metro blog post. By then, the positive spin will have made us all forget the past two months of anti-Metro postings.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Windows 8 productivity: Who moved my cheese? Oh, there it is.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Steve Mann's unanswered letter to McDonalds' Head of Customer Services
This dumbass just took his proper private process they've just acquiesced to (silence == acceptance), and made it public in such a way that obliterates his remedy. I would have just slapped a $50k pricetag on my private correspondence, gotten their agreement (with another step for due process on their part) that they owed that money to me, then filed a lien with the US Secretary of State's office. once the lien is perfected, you file a lien against the CFO of McDonald's, and you can use the county sheriffs to seize assets on your behalf. This will work even if you're in France, and you're dealing with an American Corporation (UNCITRAL Convention is your guideline).
If you can script a mod for Neverwinter Nights, you can learn Contract Law. It astounds me how many people refuse to learn it, but allow their lives to be ruined by their ignorance in the subject.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: The tax haven in the heart of Britain
b) Read up on the Schiff, Warburg, Oppenheimer, and Rothschild families.
c) there is no proposal on how to restrict them. patches welcome.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Lying on your resume
Perhaps we should discuss the fact that we have made a game (really, a LARP) out of human survival.
meatpopsicle | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Getting Paid.
Contracts are never set in stone; all you need to do is make a new offer to this employer. Do this by sending them (CEO/CFO/Manager) a Notice. Call it "Notice of Private International Remedy Demand." (this is patio11's step 0.) Tell him that they owe you $NUM for services rendered (triple damages are not uncommon), and that they have 10 days from receipt of the notice to pay you, or swear in an affidavit (under penalty of perjury) that they don't owe you that money. Tell them that if they don't respond, a default judgement will be rendered, and a commercial lien may be filed with the Secretary of State's office (in whatever state they're registered).
if they don't respond in 10 days. send a second notice, keep everything but the date and the title (NOTICE OF FAULT IN DISHONOR - OPPORTUNITY TO CURE).
if they don't respond again in 10 days, file a UCC-1 Financing Statement, listing the CFO/CEO/Manager as lien debtors, and a copy of all paperwork you sent to them, with the Secretary of State's office. This lien is now considered an Asset.
Then contact a bank in your area, and let them know that you have a lien filed against these parties, and would like to sell the lien to their bank, so they can collect on it for you.
Hope this helps.
meatpopsicle | 14 years ago | on: Coffee and Caffeine Help Prevent Alzheimer's
meatpopsicle | 14 years ago | on: Bitcoinica lost customer database, has no up to date record of trading balances
Perhaps I'm the only one that feels this way (I almost hope I am), but this news is making me want to put all of my money in bitcoin. it's a good time to get in on the action.
Here's the Act showing how to do it in Canada: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-20/FullText.html
Here's the act showing how to use the form: http://laws.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-85-846/FullTex...