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User: linhux

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  1. Re:btrfs needed the work on Linux 3.4 Released · · Score: 2

    This doesn't sound right. OS crashes should be very uncommon and thus you shouldn't design your software around them. Much more common is that Firefox itself crashes, or X11, in which case the data will be there even if the process didn't sync. If your computer crashes, you usually have bigger problems than a bit of lost browser history (not that I've ever seen *hours* of uncommitted data being lost due to a computer crash).

  2. Re:Consumers need to do some research too ... on Apple Gives In, Drops iPad '4G' Tag To Avoid Lawsuits · · Score: 1

    The article you link say:

    "Since the above mentioned first-release versions of Mobile WiMAX and LTE support much less than 1 Gbit/s peak bit rate, they are not fully IMT-Advanced compliant, but are often branded 4G by service providers. On December 6, 2010, ITU-R recognized that these two technologies, as well as other beyond-3G technologies that do not fulfill the IMT-Advanced requirements, could nevertheless be considered "4G", provided they represent forerunners to IMT-Advanced compliant versions and "a substantial level of improvement in performance and capabilities with respect to the initial third generation systems now deployed"

    I get 20 Mbps actual sustained download speed with the 3rd gen iPad (on a non-LTE network), which is substantially faster than what I've had with any previous "3G" devices I've used. It's almost as if it would fit the ITU definition of "substantial level of improvement" mentioned

  3. Re:So three monitors and ninety-seven hard drives? on Expect Hundreds of Thunderbolt Devices, Says Intel · · Score: 1

    I guess one point is that most people hooking up monitors to their Macs are in fact hooking up Dell monitors using DVI and a dongle, thus terminating the chain. Nothing that can't be fixed, of course, but that's how it stands at the moment.

  4. Re:Also in Finland on Swedish Teleco Firms Looking Into Block VoIP Claiming Losses In Earnings · · Score: 1

    The funny thing is that it's only TeliaSonera contemplating on doing this, all the others are more than fine with the situation as it is, and are even actively promoting unrestricted mobile broadbands.

    In Finland, perhaps, but in Sweden basically all the operators have been considering blocking VoIP for quite a long time (article in Swedish, apologies).

  5. Re:Cards & Multitasking on The webOS Features Other OSes Should Steal · · Score: 1

    Check out Nokia N9, it wins this game hands down.

  6. Re:Who Cares? on Apple Announces Most Profitable Quarter in History · · Score: 1

    Don't forget that Apple got their OS for free too (most of it, anyhow).. since its primarily based on BSD

    Can you define "primarily based"? The BSD subsystem may be an important part of Mac OS X but it is relatively small in terms of all code that makes up the operating system. It is just over 50% of the xnu 1699.24.8 kernel source code (25 MB out of 47 MB), but what a normal Mac program sees is mainly the Cocoa runtime, which is quite far removed from BSD and is many times the BSD subsystem in size. Kernel drivers and low-level software interfaces with IOKit and the Mach subsystem rather than the BSD parts.

  7. Re:For what on The Pirate Bay To Stop Serving Torrent Files · · Score: 1

    No, magnet links (not ".magnet") eliminates the need to host a .torrent file, they don't eliminate the need for a tracker. Other technologies may do that, but magnet links only replaces the .torrent download with a P2P discovery and download mechanism that downloads the same .torrent file from the P2P network instead of (for example) TPB's web server. Once you have the .torrent file, downloaded using a magnet link, things work just like before, including using the trackers listed in the .torrent.

  8. Re:Typical Twitter on Sweden Experiments With Public Twitter Takeover · · Score: 1

    Apart from your strange definition of "douchey", you obviously didn't look very far. The whole point is that there are many different kinds of twitterers, and if you don't like this week's twitterer, maybe the first one will be more to your liking. Example tweet: Wasting a day on pizza and BF3 is like masturbating: feels great while you’re at it, but later you’re like “what am I doing with my life?”.

  9. Re:What about Google driverless car? on Software Bug Caused Qantas Airbus A330 To Nose-Dive · · Score: 1

    I don't think anyone's out to force you to use a driverless car.

  10. Re:Well this is disturbing. on Hard Drive Makers Slash Warranties · · Score: 1

    (24" iMac though was a very expensive and notable exception)

    How did you manage that? I mean, if the HDD in an iMac breaks within a year it's covered by the computer's warranty. Your nearest Apple shop should just fix it.

  11. Re:120 gbps on Inside the World's Largest LAN Party · · Score: 1

    You didn't specify what you were referring to, and I think that when people discuss the "size" of a party they generally refer to how many votes or parliament seats they have received. I believe membership is largely irrelevant when it comes to the political importance of parties, at least in Sweden (for example, some unions automatically joins their member to their peer political party (typically the Social Democrats), while most people don't care to join a party even if they're very loyal voters). It is of course impressive that the Pirate Party has gathered so many members, but it doesn't say much about their political clout or their influence on society - it just tells us that they have a high number of members in relation to their voters.

  12. Re:120 gbps on Inside the World's Largest LAN Party · · Score: 2, Informative

    I remind you that the Pirate Party is the third-largest party in Sweden

    I'm sorry to tell you that you're very misinformed. The Swedish parliament is made up of 8 parties, and none of them is the Pirate Party. They received 0.65% of the votes in 2006 and 0.63% in 2010, and 4% is required to get a seat in the parliament, making them very far away from that. (check this: http://www.val.se/)

    They did however do much better in the 2009 elections for the EU parliament, where they received over 7% of the Swedish votes (making them the fifth largest party). I would speculate that this is largely due to the much lower participation (~45% in the EU election versus ~85% in the national), making the EU parliamentary elections much more prone to small parties getting an disproportionate amount of votes compared to the national parliament elections. (And I'm very happy for that, I think the Pirate Party provides some clue in areas that other parties are completely clueless about - however, in the big EU issues they anyway tend to side with the green parties, who usually also have a similar stance when it comes to tech-related politics.)

  13. Re:pc authority, no mac authority on Will Apple's Lion Roar For Business? · · Score: 1

    What's more, you can just copy the Lion application bundle after downloading it through App Sture (before installing it), and install it on any number of computers, distributing it using whatever tools you like. The installer has no key code or Apple ID requirements. Of course, anyone can find that out by going to Apple's web site.

  14. Re:Underwhelming achievement on Watson Wins Jeopardy Contest · · Score: 1

    Easy doesn't mean little labour. Just because it's easy to build a brick wall doesn't mean doesn't take a significant amount of time and resources to do it. It still only makes sense to build one if it adds something of value proportional to the amount of work required.

  15. Re:Diagnostics, system configuration, etc on Swedes Show Intel Sandy Bridge Running BIOS-Successor UEFI · · Score: 1

    The problem with having a totally inaccessible one like Apple does is that if anything goes wrong or you need to change something, well then you are fucked.

    How is the Mac EFI "inaccessible"? Just put your EFI extensions (for example rEFIt or an EFI shell) on any disk with an EFI partition or a HFS+ volume with the appropriate blessings. The disk can be CD, USB or FireWire.

    Of course, it is not often you need to do this, since it's very rare to see a Mac that doesn't boot OS X from any device. In out Mac cluster at work, we can almost always netboot the machine and diagnose from there, when the OS X install DVD won't boot.

  16. Re:f.lux on Your Computer Or iPad Could Be Disrupting Sleep · · Score: 1

    It has an easy access temporary disable feature for this reason. Also, during office hours it will be automatically disabled anyway, so try to keep your work hours sane and you'll be fine. :-)

  17. Re:Location without GPS on iPad Review · · Score: 1

    It works for me in Finland, Sweden and many other European countries I've been to. I can't recall having tried it in other parts of the world, though, but I wouldn't be surprised it worked in most urban areas.

  18. Re:hacker attack on China's Great Firewall Infects Other Countries · · Score: 1

    If they hack the DNS servers, we're talking about a massive ability to steal passwords, since https is based on domain name and not IP address.

    SSL uses domain names for verification, but it does not rely on them for authentication. If you hijack an SSL-enabled website, you would also need to steel their private key.

  19. Re:Tablet Prediction: on Jobs Finally "Happy" With Unannounced Apple Tablet · · Score: 1

    Google it before you comment.

    I tried and failed (googling iphone and sexy doesn't really give the results I want in this case). Care to hand out a link or two?

  20. Re:Idiotic on Legislator Wants Cancer Warnings For Cell Phones · · Score: 1

    Your state has invented the IRL EULA. Congratulations!

  21. Re:BSOD on Microsoft Investigates Windows 7 "Black Screen of Death" · · Score: 1

    Wow, you're angry. But it makes me curious - what troubleshooting options have you tried? Booting from installation media? Reset PRAM? Booting from an external hard disk? Putting the computer in Target Disk Mode and examining the logs from another computer?

  22. Re:Anyone else have a bad feeling about this? on Making Carriers Shoulder Smartphone Security · · Score: 1

    Mind you, they don't necessarily need access to the device internals to detect that it's running malware. There are products for ISP's that detect traffic patterns that indicate an infected computer, and then isolate the computer in question in a sandbox network where all HTTP requests go to a support page with cleanup tools and links to anti-virus vendors. I guess you can employ a similar strategy for wireless networks.

    (My employer used to have such a product, I think it's still in use in some Finnish broadband companies.)

  23. Re:please stop trying to turn Linux into OS X on Ryan Gordon Wants To Bring Universal Binaries To Linux · · Score: 1

    For the most part, Apple doesn't use installation wizards

    While this used to be true, it isn't anymore (try installing iWorks, iLife, XCode ...). For complex software (say, you want to be able to run code post install, or install several packages at once), Apple recommends using PackageMaker to create pkg or mpkg bundles that are installed using the OS X Installer application. Also, OS X has package management that keeps track of what you have installed and what files belong to which application. See man pages pkgutil(1), installer(8) and packagemaker(1) for more information. Also, read Apple's Software Delivery Guide.

  24. Re:Lucky on 1Mb Broadband Access Becomes Legal Right In Finland · · Score: 1

    I pay €55.50 per month - about $82.30 - for 100/5 Mbps, using the most common cable provider in the Helsinki metropolitan area (Welho). So while it's cheaper here, it's not by orders of magnitude. (I'm sure there are cheaper providers available, but these are the kind of prices most people are subject to.)

  25. Re:This is a bad bug, yes, but... on Major Snow Leopard Bug Said To Delete User Data · · Score: 1

    See ya, karma. :(

    I'm reading at +4 and right now there are 7 (or 9, depending on how you count) posts very critical of Apple, while 2 posts are trying to downplay the bug as not a serious issue. So you're not exactly going against the current here...

    I'd say that this community is appropriately critical in this case. No pitchforks, but lots of angry voices (and very few apologists).