Slashback: Taplight, Handheld, Samba
Click on through for some impressive graphs ... . bramcohen writes "Since RedHat 9 got /.'ed last week there have been over ten thousand complete downloads using BitTorrent. Initial traffic got very high, transferring over a gibibit a second. All throughout the BitTorrent servers, run by volunteers using stock tools, held up just fine. Meanwhile downloads from RedHat Network, only available to subscribers, transferred at a crawl. The third Animatrix also got quite a few downloads. Thanks to everyone who left their downloaders running, and David Stutz and Eike Frost for setting things up."
If you exaggerate enough the first time, subsequent revisions sound like concessions. Russell McOrmond writes "An article in ITBusiness.ca includes references to the methodology of the BSA studies, and how it confuses Free/Libre and Open Source Software with piracy. There are some related articles talking about CAAST/BSA on my work weblog from the past."
Tap, Tap, Tap. feagle814 writes "Recently, I saw a question on Ask Slashdot that intrigued me. The person was asking for ideas relating to building your own glowing and color-changing ball. Being the kind of person to take such a general request for comments and turn it into a personal reason for living, I quickly skimmed the description on ThinkGeek and came up with these requirements for my project:
- It must meet the generic description of the Ambient Orb,
- It must cost less than $50 to make,
- It must be wireless, with at least a 30-foot range, and
- It must be controllable by home computer.
After much deliberation, I came up with the following solution. I've included pictures and instructions, as well as a recounting of my experiences."
Not just a simulation. Olmy's Jart writes "This is a followup to yesterday's article on "Samba Exploit Discovered, Fixed". Digital Defense has posted an apology to the Samba Team for posting a complete live working exploit (not even a mere "proof of concept", but a zero day rooter) on their site for this vulnerability. The exploit has been taken down, for what that's worth now. This is being reported in an article on ZDNet AU. Digital Defense now claims that this was done without the approval of their management."
Funny, CompUSA is finally selling duplicators, too. Unominous Coward writes "According to this article, the man who planned to install CD copying machines around Australia has withdrawn from the idea. Not surprisingly, this was after a lawsuit by the music industry."
Anyone who would like to buy me one is free to do so. prostoalex writes "Sharp Zaurus deal is back at Home Shopping Network. Sharp Zaurus SL-5500 is $199, but a coupon code HSN4897 knocks the price down by 15%. With standard shipping the order comes to around $173."
We need both more Korean food and more Korean electronics. Jo "directhex" Shields writes "HEXUS.net has completed its extensive messing around with GamePark's GP32 Handheld, which recieved a mention a couple of days ago on Slashdot (and recieved the usual thrashing from members too busy to read the article but not too busy to post trashy ill-informed comments about it).
It should help to clear up a few myths about what the unit is, what it tries to do, and what it succeeds at doing. Read the review, and pass mighty Slashdot Judgement."
hopefully this will never spread to america, even for debate.
This post was brought to you by the number 584811 and the characters / and .
FYI, You can get the Zaurus over at TigerDirect for $199. It is recertified and Tiger has kind of a dubious image although I have bought from them a few times with no problem.
Help fight continental drift.
Yeah, I am the one who submitted that link and did it on late Saturday night. Now if only the approval/rejection process was a little bit faster, the link would have been relevant.
It did occur to me that they may be able to arrange for a kickback whenever they post a product link.
/. community.
If the company offers a coupon code, then they're likely to get slashdotted pretty quick, at least for geek-cool products. A sort of purchased sales spike.
It would be really neat if they offered coupon codes specifically for Slashdot references.
However, if the editors don't exercise a great deal of caution in which products they post, they're going to alienate users. It would have to be limited to products lusted after by the
What's this Submit thingy do?
Never mind the fact that the tinkerer's version is more flexible. The Ambient Orb version supports 125 unique color combinations(5^3), while the tinkerer's version supports 729 (9^3).
Quite a neat way he did it, too. He pulses the LEDs instead of setting a constant current. That way, he doesn't need a DAC to get widely variable levels of brightness.
What's this Submit thingy do?
Back-lit GP32 Back-lit GP32 in action.
The lack of buttons sucks (especially for SNES emulation - the GBA gets around this though), but other than that this is a neat unit, especially considering all the dev tools available for it. Fast processor (much faster than GBA anyhow), beautiful large screen, more memory, better sound, USB port, re-writeable content storage, wireless option, and now backlit... At the price, I'm not sure what there's not to like :-)
paulb
Paul Bettner
Game Developer et al
what there's not to like
It's relatively cheaply built? Seriously, I handled one at the local import shop and, well, you get what you pay for.
The D-pad and buttons are at once stiff and cheap-feeling, you constantly feel like they're going to fall off in your hand. They're also inaccurate and unresponsive. It's not nearly as well designed as, well, any other handheld I've used. It's not 'fun' to play. It's like replacing your fancy dual-shock 2 PS2 controller for one of the $5 aftermarket pieces of crap.
And a faster processor has to be MUCH MUCH faster (not a few mhz faster) and have a richer command set if it plans to emulate other systems well.
GB/NES goes about 50%, and it's been around a while, and these emulators are quite mature source-wise. I don't forsee some breakthrough coding trick to make them 100%. Still, I guess it's good enough for RPGs like pokemon or final fantasy.
SNES/Genesis/TG16/PS2/Xbox whatever, all a pipe dream so far as this device is concerned. If you want a good handheld emu platform you'd be better off looking at the pocketpcs in the $1000 range.
It's worth noting that emulators for the GBA are much farther along than for this device. If you had the cheese, a GBA flash-link and 256mbit cart might be a better toy.
As it is, it's a neat gizmo, but it's not a GBA killer. The Neo Geo Pocket came much closer to being a GBA killer IMO (I love that thing).
IMO it's a really cheap and crappy PDA, not a really good gaming platform.
I wouldnt buy one to play games on, but I would just to hack around and write pornographic little apps and then go show my friends "the new pokemon game", etc, etc..
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
Every once in a while, I'm really motivated by a Slashdot post, and explore the problem further with some quick and light research and writing. By the time I've finished, most readers and moderators have long since left the post for fresher news and I'm left with a relatively small audience. In the spirit of Slashback I thought I could reincarnate those old posts for a second viewing.
While risking my Karma for something that could be seen as off topic, I do think it adds value to Slashdot and really doesn't fit anywhere else.
Ecosystem and Economy: In response to the standard environmentalist-versus-economist arguments that were flying about in a previous Slashdot post in reference to a Daily Telegraph article, I sought out a fresh viewpoint based on reductionism and the conservation of energy.
Social Network Theory: A Slashdot post led to a Register article, which was steeped in an unusual amount conspiracy theory. Suggesting that Google was gamed by a group of A-list bloggers, perhaps it is all simply just a result of social networks. This is a new topic to me, so if you know anything about social network theory, I'd love it if someone could take me to school.
First-Generation TiVo: In a discussion concerning second-generation TiVos I thought I'd whip up a quick script that would allow people to see what I'm currently watching as proof that my house wields the mighty sword of TiVo modding.
Mystery Treasure: I also put a not-so-well hidden page on my site to see if anyone would gravitate towards it, but it as of yet remains undiscovered. Hint: MSIE users will not get far. Consider it pay back for not doing PNG transparency.
Michael.
Linux : Mac
I've yet to see an actual answer to these questions:
1) Let's say I have a 500 MB file that gets slashdotted, and 10,000 people want to download it. Normally, that would be 500*10,000 MB or 5,000,000 MB (which is a !!@# of alot of bandwidth) of network capacity. Given an "ideal" scene, what would an expected bandwidth usage be if I ran a BitTorrent tracker and a see file? Could this conceivably be done on a T1, since the clients are (in theory) providing most of the upload bandwidth?
2) How much overhead does Bit Torrent add to connections that aren't all that busy? If 1 guy downloads that 500 MB file, how much more bandwidth would he use because of the BitTorrent protocol stuff?
I've yet to find a decent answer to these two questions anywhere.
-Ben
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
The link to the /. article about the third Animatrix short is a 404.
I tried to use BitTorrent for RH9 ... I never saw more than 20K and usually was stuck down around 5K. I gave up ... I'd have happily left it running to serve back up, but it wasn't worth waiting. Someone on my company's VPN mirrored it so I slurped from there.
... much easier than logging into my router to check stats.
Is there a way to tell BitTorrent to serve existing files? I'm still willing to serve it up for awhile.
As for the colored ball that is getting so popular, I think I'll build one to monitor my ever fluctuating network connection (my ISP is wireless) just for giggles
It is more productive to voice thoughtful opinions (reply) than to judge (moderate) others.