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User: History's+Coming+To

History's+Coming+To's activity in the archive.

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  1. Re:Surprise Surprise on New Java 0-Day Vulnerability Being Exploited In the Wild · · Score: 1

    These days it's about using as many different languages as possible, ideally in the wrong place. Big desktop application? JavaScript hosted on a remote server sounds ideal! Website to display a list of your mobile phone apps? Show off your 1337 Java skillz by making the whole thing a plugin! A quick script to verify the format of an email address? To the Assembler!

  2. Re:Sometimes open source loses ... on Blender 2.66 Released · · Score: 1

    The two software products address the same audience and the same tasks.

    People who have $3k to spend on a 3D package != people who don't have $3k to spend on a 3D package.

  3. Re:Sweet! on Blender 2.66 Released · · Score: 2

    Depends on what you mean by "professional" - if you're a 3D modelling/animation specialist then yes, agreed, you're better off with one of the proprietary packages, but that's not the only people who use 3D packages these days. 99% of my work is PHP/HTML/CSS work, but I also use Blender to produce 2D and 3D graphics and animations to include in websites. For the amount I use it Blender has everything I need and saves me an absolute fortune in software costs. Horses for courses, to mix your metaphor.

  4. Re:Ad revenue must be low on Google Looking for "Creative Individuals" For Glass Developer Program · · Score: 1

    Sort of - I'm fine with being tracked where the return is good enough. Signing up for extra tracking simply to contact them however, is a step too far for me. Plus they don't have my real name, which I would have to supply if I was using G+.

  5. Re:Ad revenue must be low on Google Looking for "Creative Individuals" For Glass Developer Program · · Score: 1

    I've got a google account, I use a great many of their services and use their APIs on web, mobile and desktop. None of this requires a G+ account (or other social network account), so why should I have to have one to simply contact them.

    Any other devs who refuse to have a personal social network account as a direct result of programming on those networks and seeing the reams of personal info available by default/design?

  6. Re:Ad revenue must be low on Google Looking for "Creative Individuals" For Glass Developer Program · · Score: 1

    "Follow" - I'm assuming they mean on some social network or other? No thanks - give me a way to contact you that doesn't involve my every move being data mined and I'd consider it...I don't know, email or something? Google must have email, surely?

  7. Re:That's funny.... on Are Plastic Bag Bans Making People Sick? · · Score: 1

    Nope, no trolling, honest belief. No, they don't release or assist in methane capture, that's an entirely different issue. My point was that they do nothing - they don't leak carbon into the atmosphere, they just sit there.

    With regard to your second point, you've hit the nail on the head - recycling and reusing plastics happens (in part) because the raw material is worth more as liquid fuel, which is far more harmful to the environment. In an ideal world we'd invest heavily in nuclear fission/fusion and electric/hydrogen vehicles, then pump polymerising agents into all of the remaining oil fields to prevent the oil being burned. Oil burning is far more harmful to the environment than plastic bags are - plastics are the green use for oil in the long run and we should be using as much as possible as that's the only way to prevent oil being burned.

    That's not technically correct of course - leaving the oil in the ground in the first place is the ideal environmental solution, but that's never going to happen in a world where money is more important than any other consideration. Plasticising oil comes second though.

  8. Re:That's funny.... on Are Plastic Bag Bans Making People Sick? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or we could just get over the nonsense of the plastic bag bans. There are two problems with plastic bags, the first is simply littering (which is relatively easy to solve), but the main problem is that "they're made from oil and don't biodegrade". This is a GOOD THING. What do we do with oil? Either leave it in the ground (unlikely, seeing as there's money to be made), burn it (very bad for the environment, as we know) or turn it into plastics. Plastics do not pump carbon into the atmosphere in anything like the way burning oil does, and the failure to biodegrade is a bonus, it means that our discarded plastics, if disposed of correctly will simply sit there in managed landfill doing precisely nothing. Good for the atmosphere, and a future source of plastics when the oil runs out.

    I really don't see the origin of the plastic bag demonisation, other than newspapers and politicians enjoying an easy bandwagon that makes it look like they're being proactive without actually having to change anything or annoy the oil lobby.

  9. Re:blurb answers its own question on Why Hasn't 3D Taken Off For the Web? · · Score: 2

    More likely, it hasn't taken off because people haven't found the right way to use it. 3D file browsers have been around since the early 90s at least (Jurassic Park anyone? "It's UNIX! I know this!"), and while they're kind of cool they're just not as fast and intuitive as the standard 2D systems.

  10. Re:And over washington on Residents Report Bright Streak Over Bay Area Friday Evening · · Score: 1

    Yup, certainly sounds like a fireball. Most shooting stars are the size and density of the ash flicked off a cigarette, so you get a bright but very "thin" trail. A bigger and/or denser object, an actual rock for example, will look very different. I saw one back in the 80s which appeared to be the size and colour of a sodium street lamp from about 50m away, I suspect it was actually about the size of a basketball. Most of the glow you see isn't the object, it's plasma and superheated air from the compressive wave in front of the object.

  11. Re:Russian dashcams on Residents Report Bright Streak Over Bay Area Friday Evening · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yup. In the UK some insurance companies will offer a discount if you carry an (insurance company installed) dash cam and/or black box recording accelerations etc. In many cases people don't do this because of privacy concerns, but fit their own so they can collect their own evidence in the case of a crash - many insurance claims result in a knock-for-knock judgement where each company pays the other driver's claim because fault can't be determined, resulting in higher premiums/loss of NCD for both parties, but installing your own dash cam can provide enough evidence to save you hundreds or thousands of pounds in the long run.

  12. Re:Terrible Software on Residents Report Bright Streak Over Bay Area Friday Evening · · Score: 1, Funny

    Give it a week and there will be a patch that lets it run faster under Ubuntu/WINE than it does natively. Yes, I realise you're just trolling. Quis trolliet ipsos trolles eh?

  13. Re:Safe? on Facebook Employees' Laptops Compromised; User Data Believed Safe · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it all comes down to your definition of hacking, which as you point out, isn't well defined.

  14. Re:User data should never be decrypted. on Facebook Employees' Laptops Compromised; User Data Believed Safe · · Score: 1

    Exposing user data is what Facebook's business is, just in a controlled manner depending on how much info or money you give them. Clients (eg advertisers), well that's a different matter, but this was user data, not client data.

  15. Re:No user data was compromised on Facebook Employees' Laptops Compromised; User Data Believed Safe · · Score: 1

    Or, if they've got any sense, they use dummy data for dev work like everybody else in the world.

  16. Re:Wait, this increased security? on Facebook Employees' Laptops Compromised; User Data Believed Safe · · Score: 1

    True or a snarky comment about the ubiquity of "login with facebook"? I honestly can't tell any more.

  17. Re:Safe? on Facebook Employees' Laptops Compromised; User Data Believed Safe · · Score: 1

    "Owns" != "Has a right to the data". If the CEO of a major bank wanted to see every purchase his ex-wife makes he can't just call the data up, any sensible company will have need-to-know policies in place to prevent abuse and afford some deniability, regardless of how high up the request comes from. I don't doubt a bank CEO could get access to his ex-wife's data, but I'd be very surprised if any company would admit that policy is simply to hand over any data to the bloke in charge without any control or oversight.

  18. Re:Friendica on Blogging Platform Posterous To Shut Down April 30 · · Score: 2

    Big +1 from me on that. People are getting more and more confused about whether Twitter, Google, Facebook or AOL are "the internet", they just don't realise it's all just websites (admittedly some websites running pretty funky background scripts) - at the end of the day all of these things are simply computers which take a request, process it and return some text and images.

    As for your point about nobody reading it regardless of whether it's on facebook or "mylittleblog.net", spot on. I think there's probably a market for a website which allows you to blog things then gives you an ever increasing "x people like this" which starts at 6000. People aren't interested in other people reading and interacting with their thoughts, they're just interested in big numbers. Give the people what they want, you can even be honest and admit it's all a lie to start with - in fact, you could write an app which duplicates any Facebook page but multiplies all the numbers by 1,000 and it would probably be more popular than facebook until it was sued out of existence.

  19. Re:Shrinking Intelect on Blogging Platform Posterous To Shut Down April 30 · · Score: 1

    That's a very short post for what appears to be a deeply held frustration, care to elaborate? You're allowed to on here you know...

  20. Re:One year ago on Blogging Platform Posterous To Shut Down April 30 · · Score: 2

    Ever tried using Twitter's API? They make it about as easy to use/post content to and from Twitter as you can without allowing ridiculous volumes of queries to their servers. Perhaps you mean the instagram debacle? In that case it's Twitter choosing not to pull pics from instagram, nothing to do with whether you can do it on another platform. Twitter can do what they want on their own platform, but they certainly seem to be making it as easy as reasonably possible to integrate their data on a different platform.

  21. Re:Civil Disobedience on Dutch MP Fined For Ethical Hacking · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Rosa Parks did what she did knowing she would be punished, that's the whole point of civil disobedience. You do what you believe to be right and in the process force the judicial system to punish you in public, exposing a flaw in the system. If Rosa Parks hadn't kicked up the legal fuss she did then she wouldn't have had an impact that would still be discussed on internet fora decades later.

  22. Re:But there are so many fake accounts. on Facebook Can Keep Real Name Policy, German Court Rules · · Score: 0

    Exactly - I despise facebook and all they stand for, but the idea that national law can intervene on whether or not a website can allow/deny pseudonyms is even more distasteful. It's their website, they can lay down their own naming policy.

    The thing I object to is the creation of shadow accounts where they gather data on people who want nothing to do with facebook simply by extrapolating from the data of friends who are on the network. I'm not on facebook because I don't want to be on facebook, they should only be allowed to collect data on me that I have given them freely, not data third parties have given them about me.

  23. Re:Almost? on Huge Meteor Blazes Across Sky Over Russia; Hundreds Injured · · Score: 1

    Didn't stop CNN asking if this was related to climate change. I can understand people getting confused by the common root in meteorite and meteorology, but they really shouldn't be allowed to present TV news shows.

  24. Re:Almost? on Huge Meteor Blazes Across Sky Over Russia; Hundreds Injured · · Score: 2

    The problem is that anti-missile-missiles are designed to stop the missile's payload from detonating - there's still going to be a rain of hot metal shrapnel, but it's no longer going to have a functioning warhead, so shooting a missile down helps. A meteor on the other hand doesn't have a warhead, all of its destructive energy is in the form of kinetic energy, and there's virtually nothing you can do about this unless you hit it with something very big/fast like a large hypersonic object, then you simply have a bigger bang (most of the damage in this case was simply acoustic energy) and more debris raining down over a larger area.

  25. Re:Pathetic. on Elon Musk Lays Out His Evidence That NYT Tesla Test Drive Was Staged · · Score: 1

    According to most ACC deniers there's far more in the way of bribes in academia than the oil industries could ever hope to offer, that's why all the scientists still "think" that ACC is real, the stupid amount of money that academic institutions are throwing at research...