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User: kbahey

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  1. Oh, I get it ... on Blackberry Gives India Access To Servers · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh, I get it now ...

    If it is Saudi Arabia and the UAE, it is all about censorship ...

    But if it is India, it is a move against the terrorists ...

    It is all about spin ...

  2. Ironic ... on First GNOME Census Results · · Score: 2

    I find it ironic that Redhat are the ones complaining about Ubuntu, while it was Redhat who exited the desktop market years ago, focusing on the server side of things. This void that was created was filled by Ubuntu, and it has become successful. Fedora is not quite the same, since it is bleeding edge, with not stable releases.

    Ubuntu's success is well deserved. They fill a much needed part in the Linux arena.

    Counting patches from before Canonical existed is inaccurate and biased. And patches are not the only measure. There is packages, polish, community building and marketing.

  3. Re:Two plans changed on Rogers Shrinks Download Limits As Netflix Arrives · · Score: 1

    We all know what Scandinavian countries have in terms of broadband.

    Yes, we are jealous :-)

    But such is life ...

  4. Two plans changed on Rogers Shrinks Download Limits As Netflix Arrives · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am a Rogers customer. I like the speed and latency (Express plan), but hate the bandwidth cap. Normally, I don't go over it, but occasionally do so.

    Here is a matrix of their plans.

    Two plans changed for new clients signing up after July 21: Lite and Extreme. Lite is what the summary describes. Extreme was 95GB for $60 a month, now it is 80GB.

    They want to make money in two ways: via their own video service, and by charging extra for bandwidth that people will use for Netflix.

  5. Waterloo, Ontario (correct link) on 5.5 Earthquake Hits Canada; Felt in US Midwest, New England · · Score: 1

    Ack!

    Correct link here.

    The coordinates are: 4328N 8031W

  6. Waterloo, Ontario on 5.5 Earthquake Hits Canada; Felt in US Midwest, New England · · Score: 2, Informative

    They have revised it down to 5.0 per the USGS.

    I did feel it. Was on a recliner sofa working on my laptop, and felt the sofa rock back and forth. Did not think it was a quake at the time. See
    http://baheyeldin.com/places/canada/earthquake-2010-june-23-1341-quebecontario.html">here.

  7. Can already kill Flash in 3.6.3 on Firefox 3.6.4 Released With Out-of-Process Plugins · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I confused, since I am on Kubuntu 10.04 64-bit version, and use the Firefox version that comes with that release (3.6.3).

    For the longest time, I am able to kill npviewer.bin without Firefox crashing. I just get a grey box when I do that where Flash used to be.

    Flash already runs as a separate process for me.

    Here are the processes:

    me 4177 1746 0 12:43 ? 00:00:00 /bin/sh /usr/lib/firefox-3.6.3/firefox
    me 4182 4177 0 12:43 ? 00:00:00 /bin/sh /usr/lib/firefox-3.6.3/run-mozilla.sh /usr/lib/firefox-3.6.3/firefox-bin
    me 4186 4182 9 12:43 ? 01:03:08 /usr/lib/firefox-3.6.3/firefox-bin
    me 4353 4186 2 12:45 ? 00:16:37 /usr/lib/nspluginwrapper/i386/linux/npviewer.bin --plugin /usr/lib/flashplugin-installer/libflashplayer.so --connection /org/wrapper/NSPlugins/libflashplayer.so/4186-1

    So, what is happening here?

  8. Good intention, but useless ... on Bill Proposes Canadian Cellphone Unlocking Rights · · Score: 2, Informative

    This bill is good intentioned, but practically useless, given the state of affairs of the cell phone market reality in North America (yes, USians, you too!)

    In Europe, Africa and most of Asia, everyone standardized on GSM. You ask the network for a phone number, and they give you a SIM card, you go to any shop and buy any phone and it is guaranteed to work with any network you choose. Not only that, but phones work everywhere from Hong Kong to Dubai to Spain to Johannesburg. Nothing special, other than getting a SIM card if roaming is too expensive.

    In the USA and Canada, we the consumers, have accepted things that are never acceptable elsewhere. For example, we had CDMA, which is used only in the USA, Canada, Japan and perhaps another one or two smaller countries. CDMA does not have a SIM card. The phone is made by the manufacturer and locked to a certain network that sells you the phone.

    Even when GSM came to North America, it was done in bands that were not the standard ones used elsewhere in the world, which was circumvented when quad band phones were put on the market. Meaning they work in Europe and Canada/USA, but they have a higher price and have more silicon inside to handle this fragmentation.

    When 3G came by, more fragmentation occurred. The governments started selling "spectrum", and companies like Google and Cricket grabbed certain bands (WINDMobile, Mobilicity and Public Mobile in Canada did the same). AWS was invented.

    This means that a phone from Rogers will not work with WINDMobile and vice versa.

    So what use will the bill be if they are operating at different frequencies?

    Not only that, we see industry lobbyists asking for "more spectrum". The excuse is that spectrum is too crowded, but the real reason is more fragmentation and balkanization so they can lock in customers more and more. Why does Europe which is more densely populated, or Egypt have more carriers, yet all handsets work on all networks?

    See this article I wrote earlier: Mobile phone carriers lobby for more balkanization by asking for more spectrum as well.

  9. Oh, an ex-NCR guy from the AT&T merger days! on Novell Rejects "Inadequate" $2B Takeover Bid · · Score: 1

    Oh, an ex-NCR guy from the AT&T merger days in the early 90s.

    So, like me you remember Chuck Exley's rants about AT&T's takeover as being "grossly inadequate"?

    It has been downhill ever since for NCR, even post spinoff ...

  10. Insensitive clod ... on TiVo Time Warp Judgment Affirmed · · Score: 1

    That is the original reference for it.

    But for long time slashdotters, this has been one of the recurring jokes from the Slashdot subculture.

    Here are a few others.

    So, let me ask, "you are new here"?

  11. Not the same: Data vs. Code on MySQL's Influence On the GPL · · Score: 1

    You are mixing up things, causing confusion, most probably unintentionally.

    As unfortunate the CDDB/Gracenotes was, it is very different from MySQL.

    First, MySQL is code, not data. The GPL is a good license for free software, but should not be used to non-code stuff. It was not meant to be used for things that are not code.

    Second MySQL is GPL, the CDDB data is, well, there is a dispute about it. The GPL protects a given version that it will remain free forever. The copyright holder, if they so chose, can license newer versions under something else, but the old version will remain GPL.

    So, Oracle can choose to not license future versions of MySQL under the GPL, but the existing versions will remain GPL. If enough people care for it, and rally behind it, it can be a viable fork of the product by a community team and/or sponsored by other companies. MySQL is being used by large companies and web sites all over the place. This includes Google, Yahoo, Facebook, Digg, Slashdot, ...etc. It is too widespread to be just killed off ...

  12. Kubuntu 9.10 is really good on Ask Matt Asay About Ubuntu and Canonical · · Score: 1

    I had the same pain with Kubuntu 9.04: very buggy, many things broken, it was a real struggle. The most annoying thing was notifications were broken: a message would get "stuck". Many widgets did not work (weather for example) either.

    Luckily, Kubuntu 9.10 solve all of these issues, and now I have a stable desktop again.

    I normally stick with LTS releases, but the KDE 4.x vs 3.5 issue made Kubuntu 8.04 a non-LTS release. Once an LTS is released, I will stay with that.

  13. Re:Kopete does not work on Facebook Now Supports Jabber/XMPP · · Score: 1

    Found a partial solution. It is not XMPP based, but rather uses JSON to interface directly to Facebook.

    It is in the Ubuntu repository as kopete-facebook. Install that package and you are good to go.

  14. Re:Kopete does not work on Facebook Now Supports Jabber/XMPP · · Score: 1

    I have used Pidgin in the past, but since I am using KDE, I'd rather have a KDE application that integrates better with the desktop.

  15. Kopete does not work on Facebook Now Supports Jabber/XMPP · · Score: 1

    This would instantly allow me to use my usual desktop chat client to connect to non-tech people who I am friends with.

    But, Kopete on Kubuntu 9.10 does not work. I get this error message:

    "There was a negotiation error. Unsupported protocol version. XMPP 1.0 is required."

    Is there a solution to this?

  16. Historical decline of Science in Muslim lands ... on Did the US Take the Back Seat In Science In 2009? · · Score: 1

    As much as the claim "a bunch of Imams got together and basically stated that Math and Science were of the devil" plays into contemporary stereotypes, it is a very superficial and incomplete assessment.

    What happened was a period of scientific breakthroughs and constant progress in conjunction with the expanding empires of Islam from Andalusian Spain, to Kashgar in Western China.

    Then, several events started the slow but steady decline. The first was the Mongol invasion from the east, which destroyed Baghdad as a seat of science (and government) for the Muslim east. Great libraries were lost in the event. The Silk Road trade was eliminated, and with it all the hinterland that produced luminaries such as Al-Farabi, Al-Biruni and many more for many centuries.

    The second was the Reconquista in Spain which took several centuries. Again, untold amounts of books were burned or lost.

    Then following the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks, 1492 saw two events: the final fall of Muslim Spain, and Columbus' discovery of America. With the wealth of the Americas, Europe now had access to new trade and riches, and developed many technologies for sailing, trade, military, ...etc. No longer were they constrained by the Muslim Orient being a barrier between them and trade limited to India and China.

    Then came the rejection of modern technology: the most stark example is the printing press. While Europe started the Renaissance, and printed books started an intellectual revolution, the printing press was rejected in Muslim lands. I am not sure why, but perhaps the Ottoman authorities feared it as a means of insubordination. Regardless, the end result was 3 centuries of relying on manuscripts only, causing poor dissemination of knowledge.

    You can see the effect even in religious disciplines, for example, jurisprudence: the later commentators were just compilers/editors/summarizers of earlier texts. Even they declared that the "door to ijtihad has been closed", and all that has been said has been said, nothing new was to come about. This decline happened under late Mameluke and Ottoman rule.

    This was soon followed by the colonialism period from Mughal India (1700s by the British East India Company), North Africa (France 1830s), Egypt (Britian 1882), Palestinian mandate, and the rest of it.

    Following World War II, military dictators came to power (Nasser, Sukarno, Assad, Saddam, Qaddafi, ...etc.)

    At least the Arab countries have not yet recovered from those last 2 stages.

    For more on Science under Islam, watch this awesome BBC documentary: Science and Islam - Episode 1.

    The three episodes are described here:

    Also articles, books and talks by Dr. George Saliba (Columbia University) are highly recommended in this regard. He is interviewed in the above documentary.

  17. Re:What about rich kids becoming terrorists? on Why Do So Many Terrorists Have Engineering Degrees · · Score: 1

    Poor people at the bottom of the social ladder seldom rise on their own against injustice. When it happens it is often mob violence not organized resistance, or activism. More often the leaders of resistance/activism are middle class or from the wealthy.

    Was the historical Buddha a poor person? No he was royalty. He did sympathize with the poor and sick that he became one.

    Did you know that Nelson Mandela, for example, comes from local royal lineage?

    Bin Laden was rich initially, by inheritance, until he went to Afghanistan for fighting the Soviets. He spend a lot of his money there. His wealth dwindled after he criticized the king of Saudi Arabia and his citizenship was dropped and forced into exile (first to Sudan). After he was exiled, his wife and kids in Saudi Arabia were supported by his brothers: they were never given cash lest they would send it to Bin Laden, but the school bills and grocery were all settled on his brothers' credit. He never sent a penny, nor did he receive any from his family.

    Another example of rich people going astray: Patty Hearst was initially kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army, but then joined them, wielded a weapon in robbery for them. She was partially coerced, but she could have also ran away. She was from a rich background too being an heiress of publishing empire.

    The Nigerian guy has changed over the years. He was lonely, cut ties with his rich family too. See here for more.

  18. Re:It's a cultural thing on Why Do So Many Terrorists Have Engineering Degrees · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You are on to something but then totally miss it: titles are big in Egyptian Arabic, not the profession itself.

    Speaking as someone born and raised in Egypt, Arabic being my mother tongue, the society there is very large on titles. If you are writing a letter to an official in the USA, you address it to "Dear Sir/Madam" or to "Mr. John Doe/Ms. Jane Doe". In Egypt, you are asked to address the official with all the titles that he/she got. For example "Al Sayed Al Ostaz Al Doctor Al Kimya'ee John Doe" (Mr ? Dr Chemist John Doe, meaning he has a Ph.D and a Chemical Engineer).

    Unlike a few other places in the Arab world, you never call someone with their first name, unless they are a close friend or relative of the same age as you. Anyone else has to get a title, even menial labor. For relatives there is "uncle" for older male. "Father and mother" for parents. "Abeh" for male older cousins (From Turkish Agabey), "Ablah" for older female cousins ...etc. So, this is where Ostaz comes in (derives from Farsi Ustad, meaning "Master", but used for anyone you don't know the qualifications for). Then comes Bash Muhandes (Bash is Turkish meaning "Head", so this means Head of Engineers), which applies to the man who fixes your car who has no degree at all, the untrained plumbers ...etc. Then comes Doctor, which applies for physicians, pharmacists, dentists and vets too. And so on and on and on ... In some cases calling someone by the wrong title annoys them, for example calling someone a mere Ostaz, while he is actually a doctor!

    In other parts of the Arab world (Levant, Gulf), the kunya is used (hence the names, "Abu-something"), so the titles are used less.

    It has gotten annoying that you find email addresses and Facebook profiles with the title in the name "Dr Ashraf Something" or drsomething@gmail.com.

    Two professions are at the apex of social respect: they are doctors and engineers (architects, civil engineers, ...etc.) because the universities ask for the highest marks to admit students. Doctors being more respected I would say.

    So, being an engineer is not something everyone just craves. There are other social status professions that are perhaps more appealing. But the main point is that the overuse of titles is rampant, and means little in practice.

  19. Re:No he doesn't. on Does Santa Hate Linux? · · Score: 1

    Thanks for that. Made me smile ... touche ...

  20. No he doesn't. on Does Santa Hate Linux? · · Score: 3, Funny
    No he doesn't hate Linux. In fact, he uses Linux himself!

    $ wget -S -O /dev/null http://santa.org/
    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Date: Fri, 25 Dec 2009 03:25:26 GMT
    Server: Apache/2.2.3 (Red Hat)
    X-Powered-By: PHP/5.2.11
    Set-Cookie: h=6bcc6f5aa7ec4549c0e5a837dd8cedb0; path=/
    ...
    Cache-Control: no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate, post-check=0, pre-check=0
    Expires: Mon, 31 Dec 2001 7:32:00 GMT
    Vary: Accept-Encoding,User-Agent
    P3P: CP="CAO PSA OUR"
    Pragma: no-cache
    Connection: close
    Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8

  21. Chromium on Google Upgrades Chrome To Beta For OS X, Linux · · Score: 1

    If you want apt functionality, and a free version of Chrome, and you are running Ubuntu, then you can use the PPA Chromium daily builds.

    I have been running it on Kubuntu 9.10 64bits and it has been stable and very fast.

    To do that, just add the repository:

    # sudo add-apt-repository ppa:chromium-daily
    # sudo aptitude update
    # sudo aptitude install chromium-browser

    If you are running older versions of Ubuntu, then go to the Chromium PPA page for instructions.

  22. Re:That's pretty evil. on Scientology Charged With Slavery, Human Trafficking · · Score: 1

    As far as slavery and forced labor goes, the long-running genocide in Darfur is essentially Muslim controlled militias attacking indigenous tribes-people, people that have been a source of slaves for Muslim slavers for hundreds of years.

    The rallying cry for some of the Janjaweed (means "devil on horseback") militia forces has been "Kill the slaves, kill the slaves!"

    But then again, the region where the Janjaweed are killing defenseless, unarmed villagers also happens to center around a government-held oil pipeline that sends 80% of the regions oil to China.

    Some missing data points here:

    1. Both sides in Darfur are Muslim. This is not a bad Muslim vs. infidel thing.

    2. Each side belong to a different linguistic group (African/Arab).

    3. Each side have a different lifestyle (nomadic tribes vs. settled agriculturalists).

    4. Desertification has caused resource issues and helped one group encroach into the others. Previously each group had enough.

    I am not saying that other factors (e.g. oil, China, Khartum ...etc.) are not relevant, but there are other relevant factors that are ignored by most news outlets.

  23. Age old quest: COBOL and SQL on Dumbing Down Programming? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is an age old quest. There has been attempts at making programming English like for many decades ...

    First there was COBOL: COmmon Business Oriented Language. Its syntax is very similar to English. It was sold as a way to make Managers able to write programs without the need of having a developer involved.

    ADD 1 TO IDX.
    SUBTRACT 1 FROM IDX.
    MOVE X TO Y.

    What happened instead is that a generation of developers learned COBOL and specialized in it, and managers were still managing.

    Next, there was SQL: Structured Query Language. Despite the mathematical model behind relational databases, SQL was again sold as a way for managers to execute queries and get reports for themselves. That may have worked until the manager who ran a query on seven tables without any joins. That made everyone go again to "leave it to the programmers" mode again ...

  24. Yes, it is less now ... on WHO Says Swine Flu May Have Peaked In the US · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here in Canada, my doctor said yesterday that he is seeing a drop in people coming in with flu symptoms. It used to be more in the past few weeks.

    Also, Google Flu Trends shows a marked drop. In the USA, there is a drop too.

    I have also observed less absence at my little kid's school as well.

  25. Thank you ... on KDE Founder Receives Highest German Honor · · Score: 2

    Mattias

    Thank you and the entire KDE team for a nice desktop environment. Your vision and dedication deserves this award.

    My desktop has been KDE for a several years, and I always like it. The early KDE4 in Kubuntu 9.04 was fragile and broken in many ways. I almost gave up on it, but decided to give it a shot in the one week old Kubuntu 9.10 (karmic) which has KDE 4.3.2. I can say it is usable again, and I am exploring the new features and liking them.