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User: dragonturtle69

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Comments · 316

  1. Re:Got boring on Mythbusters Ending After Next Season (ew.com) · · Score: 1

    The first shows, with just Savage and Hyneman, I liked better than when they added the early millennials, LOL. Then Byron, Imahara, and Belleci became a show within the show; there were tests of related myths, and Buster took a whipping like never before. At least this show will end with a bang.

  2. Re:kinda makes you wonder on Stealthy Linux Trojan May Have Infected Victims For Years · · Score: 1

    This one appears to be a Russian Regin, looking at the Language Artifacts section of the securelist.com article.

  3. Re:Slackware on What's Been the Best Linux Distro of 2014? · · Score: 1

    You are doing it wrong. Slackware isn't for gurus, it makes them.

    Yes!

  4. Re:changing it is a good idea regardless on Seattle PD Mum On Tracking By Its New Wi-Fi Mesh Network · · Score: 1

    Yep!

  5. Re:8 is an entirely arbitrary number on Ask Slashdot: Does Your Work Schedule Make You Unproductive? · · Score: 1

    "people believe they are paying for time, and not for actual work done"

    Yep, despite being salaried, and paid to provide a service, we get worked by time.

  6. Re:Reinstall Ubuntu. on Ask Slashdot: New To Linux; Which Distro? · · Score: 2

    An accidental over-select would be my guess too. Depending upon how they are used, a file system explorer can be much more dangerous than a terminal. Always ls pattern before rm pattern is something I too learned the hard way.

  7. Re:Rather than shooting with more FPS on Why The Hobbit's 48fps Is a Good Thing · · Score: 1

    Ah yes, Bored of the Rings, a fine read it was, and a good way as a Lord of the Rings reader to learn about good parody; you can laugh at something you like being poked.

  8. Re:Huh on WW2 Carrier Pigeon and Undecoded Message Found In Chimney · · Score: 1

    From the same Wiki article:

    Although the 34 was very reliable and dominant on the battlefield, its dissemination throughout the German forces was hampered due to its precision engineering, which resulted in high production costs and a relatively slower rate of production.

    Like a lot of the German stuff, really good quality is reported, but too few were made to really matter. Tiger versus Sherman is another example.

    While there were opportunities, they common soldier ended up with the Karabiner 98 Kurz, a bolt action rifle with a five round internal magazine, through the end of the war.

    The Germans had better tech and manufacturing, sorta like they do now, only their elected leadership really sucked. Those advantages were wasted starting WW II.

    A lesson may be in here somewhere, about voting with one's mind, and not one's heart. Sorta like me and GB II in 2000.

    Back on topic, it will be interesting when the message is decoded.

  9. Re:Huh on WW2 Carrier Pigeon and Undecoded Message Found In Chimney · · Score: 1

    Name the individual carried automatic weapons, by the Wehrmacht, in 1939.

  10. Re:No TV in the bedroom on Ask Slashdot: Ideas For a Geek Remodel? · · Score: 1

    Half right. Whole house is is for fun.

  11. Re:Behold, our huge, mighty penises!! on Why Aircraft Carriers Still Rule the Oceans · · Score: 1

    Your point is true, though I think that we benefit from having both. Let the SSNs do the offense, let the SSBNs be the nuclear defense.

  12. Re:Behold, our huge, mighty penises!! on Why Aircraft Carriers Still Rule the Oceans · · Score: 1

    SBNS are insurance, two are enough to take out a third of the planet. You might kill me, but I will kill you in return, and then some of your friends too. Best case scenario for you is that we both lose.

  13. Re:Blames on The True Challenges of Desktop Linux · · Score: 1

    No blame from me, none at all.

    Business users will stay will stay with MS, the higher ups will go with Apple, the geeks go with Linux/Unix and similar. A few enlightened ones may exist, but if I want my stuff to play nicely with others, I have to expect MS or Apple. Linux in our corp. is on a few servers, little niche things that have no commercial equivalent.

    The core problem is how business works, how the economy works, and if have no idea how to get around it, short of a Star Trek future becoming reality.

  14. Re:Blames on The True Challenges of Desktop Linux · · Score: 2

    I've always thought that the "problem" with the Linux desktop was the compatibility of applications.

    We spent a few years being Linux only. Teachers expecting the kids homework in .doc, and OO not being exactly right, Flash Player for Linux being so far behind that some websites failed to display content, stuff like that is what killed it as the day-to-day OS. Then again, on the security side, Linux is excellent. Even with Win Vista or 7, most of the Windows users I know kill off UAC and use administrator accounts to browse the web. I loved having near 0 hours per month admin time for the home PCs

    OS X is the current primary OS (measured in hours used per month), with Win 7 and Linux behind. It still fails as some website use Win 7/IE only features, and commercial applications are far fewer than found for Windows, really an expensive middle ground.

    So, it really is all about the applications. Once writing applications for Linux = $$$$$$$, Linux will be win the desktop war.

  15. Re:Be realistic on Ask Slashdot: Best Training To Rekindle a Long Tech Career? · · Score: 1

    First Google hit, being charged for meals has been around for over a decade too, even if found innocent you get to pay for the stay.

  16. Re:Home-calling consumer services? on Ask Slashdot: Best Training To Rekindle a Long Tech Career? · · Score: 2

    Not so sure about it being the "your own fault" notion, thought there is something to aging. I see several coworkers my age (35-45) just stop learning. What they know is "good enough", they make enough money to be satisfied and stop growing.

    On the other hand, if you eat 4000 calories a day on a 1500 calorie activity level, getting fat is your fault. Don't exercise your muscles, getting weak is your fault. Don't exercise your mind, getting stupid is your fault.

  17. Re:Alan Kay on Should Failure Be Rewarded To Spur Innovation? · · Score: 1

    So true. You learn from mistakes. The dolts that do not learn do nothing new; they are as they were when graduating from junior high 30 years ago.

  18. Re:Clackers on The Most Dangerous Toys of 2011 · · Score: 1

    They did teach coordination. :-)

  19. Re:methodically and late into the night on Ask Slashdot: Getting a Grip On an Inherited IT Mess? · · Score: 1

    One person, for three years; did you consider the management to be wise?

  20. Re:Frameworks on Have Walled Gardens Killed the Personal Computer? · · Score: 2

    ... Apple controls the entire end-to-end solution.

    And that is precisely why I will not be buying an iAppliance, that and the lack of standardized IO ports. The iPad (or any other slate), iPhone (or any other smartphone) is a device to display media. Apple's is just a bit more restricted, and hipper, and prettier.

    The period of the multimedia PC purchased as a media display device may be over, but not the PC as a workstation.

  21. Re:I am planning to move to NC on US Senator Proposes Bill To Eliminate Overtime For IT Workers · · Score: 1

    Unions help to restore the balance by consolidating the employees in order to bring it back to one-to-one.

    Agreed.

  22. Re:Plead the 27th on US Senator Proposes Bill To Eliminate Overtime For IT Workers · · Score: 1

    One exception, could be, the military/ex-military join the "revolt". In other words, nothing or civil war. I'm hoping for the "people" to do something smart, like vote, maybe even for a candidate that they agree with, regardless of popularity.

  23. Re:Reflections on Why Everyone Hates the IT Department · · Score: 1

    Your point on how to deliver the message and offer alternatives should be noted.

    If your at an MS place, Sharepoint will do the same, even send out email notifications. Yet, somehow, that just isn't the same, just isn't cool like Dropbox. Must be the ability to share with users outside the organization that gives it that extra appeal, and makes it a really bad idea.

  24. Re:Mgmt Has the Responsibility on Why Everyone Hates the IT Department · · Score: 1

    One reason might be because that's how IT staff treat everyone else.

    The Real Cause

    It is due to poor management. The managers, C?O on down, are paid their large salaries and bonuses to lead and manage. If different departments are not getting along, look to whoever is above those departments and the department leads for both the cause and the solution.

    Personal Opinion

    The lack of respect is due to a lack of understanding, cultural differences if you like. People dislike that which is different from themselves. Then contempt comes into to play. IT gets contempt from other departments because it "serves" them. The same people that talk down about low income positions (fast food, cleaning, so on) talk down about IT. Of course, some in IT create the own negativity; things like lusers, pebkac, id10t, so on.

    Then, there are situations that management just should never let exist. Like IT being responsible for remote deployment of software, and its performance, without having that same software to test locally. If IT says "No, we cannot deploy and support that which cannot be tested.", IT is seen as blocking something required for business operations. If IT goes ahead, and just makes it work after a few failures, and then something fails later, IT sucks, after all, anyone can install software. The difference between installing and installing off-the-shelf closed-source software in a remote custom environment, and it working with zero defects is somehow not understood.

    And we still haven't touched the regulatory stuff, that IT ends up enforcing.

  25. Re:What about non-coding time? on The Futility of Developer Productivity Metrics · · Score: 1

    I've not seen that, yet, but I can easily believe it.