Slashdot Mirror


User: freepay

freepay's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
11
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 11

  1. Re:Patent trolls on Wi-Fi Patent Victory Earns CSIRO $200 Million · · Score: 1

    They're NOT patent trolls at all. $200 million isn't much, and CSIRO can make good use of it.

    But there is a problem when major industry standards like 802.11 a,g and n can somehow end up patented, after years of work and negotiation by many different companies and individuals, who now have to pay to use their own collective, public work. Whether the problem in this case is carelessness by the companies, or corruption of the U.S. patent system, or both, I don't know.

    In any case we do have a problem, and it could bite much worse in the future.

  2. Hazardous-duty pay for computer security work? on 3 of 4 Charges Against Terry Childs Dropped · · Score: 1

    Clearly Terry Childs does not belong in jail. Maybe what happened is that San Francisco's mismanagement finally realized that having only one person with access to so critical a network was intolerable. But then, instead of discussing a way forward, it began with a secret investigation, as if Childs was a criminal, and the situation escalated from there, with both sides handling it badly. There are enough cases like this, of sysadmins and security experts charged with hacking for doing their jobs after a dispute with management, that professional education should include a section on how to stay out of trouble. Either that, or add hazardous-duty pay if jail is an unavoidable risk of this work.

  3. Clothing could be designed to block the signal on English DJ Claims Wi-Fi Allergy · · Score: 1

    If it is real, then long underwear with fine wire mesh built in could block most of the signal. A cap or other reasonable head gear could also be designed. Maybe fabric could be woven with some of the fibers conducting.

    The problem does seem easy to test. And if anyone can reliably feel when a wi-fi signal is on, in a shielded laboratory, then it would be easy to research the problem, starting by changing the frequency. Perhaps a biological mechanism could be discovered.

    But there's some systemic issue that makes it hard for people with industry-related illness complaints to be treated with respect. I saw this when our office moved into a new space with strong a strong formaldehyde odor. Two people complained of illness; the boss couldn't take it seriously, and a lawsuit resulted. I don't know the outcome, but such cases often get thrown out, because the judge assumes the complaint is a crock.

  4. Re:Yes but it is a valid concern on Rosetta Stone Sues Google For Trademark Violation · · Score: 1

    One personal experience on the other side: I was looking for OpenDNS, and thanks to a Google ad found a competitor I'm glad to know about -- since it advertises strength worldwide, maybe useful in future travels. In the end I stayed with the free Open DNS service. It's been great for improving WiFi reception -- especially at college coffeehouses, where DNS usually seems to be the critical bottleneck. So I'm not jumping the line on anyone else, but probably improving their WiFi connection as well.

  5. Forced-anonymous, moderated comments? on In Defense of the Anonymous Commenter · · Score: 1
    See Attacked from Within, http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2009/3/12/33338/3000, a longish but rewarding essay on how to do online forums.

    Can forced-anonymous commenting focus writers' attention on substance and quality, instead of flame wars or other personal one-upsmanship?

  6. Why local theater required assigned seats? on Audio Watermarks Could Pinpoint Film Pirates By Seat · · Score: 1

    Maybe that's why years ago a new Philadelphia movie complex started selling assigned seats for the movies. It was awful; a staffer actually made me move back to a noisy crowd of patrons, when the theater was more than 80% empty. I haven't been back, so don't know if they are still doing it.

  7. IE removal will not affect MS monopoly on Windows 7 Lets You Uninstall IE8 · · Score: 1

    How many users will bother to uninstall IE? Microsoft will safely keep its corporate monopoly by having IE show up automatically on new systems. Corporate IT policies will do the rest. It's just easier to keep what's already there -- and safer to standardize and not let anyone install anything else on their own. MS need only sweeten its deals with Dell, etc. -- or end up with an IE-less system that's even less reliable than Windows is already.

  8. Re:How to stop companies selling pictures of home on Spy Chief Hints At Limits On Satellite Photos · · Score: 1

    Put child porn on your roof, and then it will be a crime for anyone to possess the image.

  9. Re:Special situation because it's at a university on MIT Dean of Admissions Resigns in Lying Scandal · · Score: 1

    Let's retire the "integrity" word and note the real issue here -- greed. Academia has long been given a lock on most well-paying jobs in the middle and upper-middle class. It's business model is selling diplomas, not learning; most students don't pay exorbitant tuitions and fees for love of knowledge, but for love of money. That's why faking the credential is unforgivable.

    This system has failed -- no surprise since it throws away so much talent. Thirty years ago the disastrous war policy in Vietnam had been designed and implemented almost entirely by people with college degrees. They never learned, and now that tragedy has repeated itself as farce.

  10. Re:bellsouth/AT&T screw you and your 25 cent 4 on 1-800-Google Launches · · Score: 1

    Goog411 has been useful already - to locate coffeehouses in Philadelphia that I had not known about.

  11. DRM Workaround - Sponsors Buy Bulk, Prepaid Access on Music Companies Mull Ditching DRM · · Score: 1

    Instead of making every end user pay, sell bulk, prepaid free downloads to SPONSORS -- who might buy, say, 50 prepaid downloads of a $1 song, video, or whatever, and pay $50 (or maybe $35 with quantity discount). Give the sponsor a "smart URL" that's charged up with those 50 or whatever copies; sponsors can email or otherwise distribute that URL as they want, and the first 50 people to click it can download free. Also, anyone who gets the URL can recharge it if they wish, with as many copies as they want to buy -- meaning that multiple copies of the URL can circulate indefinitely as long as there is interest in the art, generating more income for the artist. Sponsors can also provide a message to anyone who downloads a URL they paid for -- reaching a highly targeted audience through social networks of the sponsor's choice, one of many incentives for sponsors to pay for downloads that others will use.

    This way almost all end users will download free -- instantly paying the artist by the act of free downloading itself. The end users just click; they never need to sign up, register, log in, have any account, or have any money. Sponsors will pay by credit card, etc. as with any other ecommerce. Sponsors and end users can be anywhere in the world, and can speak many different languages.

    This business model and more comes from the realization that online financial accounts could REPRODUCE "children" accounts -- which could reproduce in turn, for any number of generations. These accounts can INHERIT any number of services and options. Since owners' changes will be inherited like mutations, accounts will EVOLVE in grassroots community use. This seems too good to be true, but I've looked for some time and haven't found a problem; if you find one, let me know. I've worked out the details and published this design rights-free at
    http://www.smart-accounts.org/