sbayless's comments

sbayless | 12 years ago | on: Why Canada Has No Big Tech Companies

>> 300,000 Canadians in the Bay Area... This represents nearly 10% of the entire population of Canada.

Canada's population is ~33 million, so that would be about 1%, not 10%. Still a surprisingly big number, though.

sbayless | 14 years ago | on: RFC: Blanking all Wikipedia as SOPA protest

Thats a good point. What if, instead of shutting down completely, wikipedia shuts down for just one day every week (say, each Monday). That way, people will continue using the site most of the time, instead of adapting by switching to some other source (like a website of replicated content), and hence the periodic loss of access will continue to be noticed. Moreover, in the event that the bill passes, wikipedia can comfortably continue protesting, without permanently shutting down.

sbayless | 14 years ago | on: "What May Happen in the Next Hundred Years", from c.1900

Whenever I read these types of speculative predictions from the past, I always get the urge to chuckle at the things they inevitably missed, or the sillier predictions - but tempered by the ways we have failed to live up to their dreams.

(As an aside: 'strawberries as large as apples' - but how would they taste?)

sbayless | 14 years ago | on: Ubuntu 11.10, Introduce new top-level directory /run

Do you think you could you link to that bug? I just upgraded to 11.10, I don't have a /run directory, and I did have some boot problems that I worked around. (A google search didn't turn anything up.)

Edit: My mistake, after rebooting, this folder popped right up :)

sbayless | 14 years ago | on: GitHub Secrets

And Google news, docs, calendar. Not the Google search pages though, since key presses are intercepted by the search bar.

sbayless | 14 years ago | on: The Best Science Fiction Books (According to Reddit)

I second Diaspora; his vivid description of artificial intelligence is worth the read by itself.

Egan's stuff divides evenly into near-future and distant future science fiction; the distant future stuff tends to be very abstract. His latest novel, Zendegi, is a very near-future setting, and coincidentally is a more accessible read than most of his other stuff. I'd recommend it to start with.

sbayless | 14 years ago | on: I just got meta-copied

I don't think the claim was that the 'ripoff' icon was literally copied from the original, just that the concept for the site - right down to the concept for the favicon - were copied.

But I salute your sleuthing, none-the-less.

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