Slashdot Mirror


User: johanwanderer

johanwanderer's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
114
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 114

  1. They sell ad impressions, not products. Therefore, all they care about is that X% of ad impressions that could have been sold on their platform went elsewhere, and they want them back.

  2. That's my speedup loop, you clod! on Performance Bugs, 'the Dark Matter of Programming Bugs', Are Out There Lurking and Unseen (forwardscattering.org) · · Score: 3, Funny

    For an explanation: http://thedailywtf.com/article...

  3. Re:morbid story is morbid on Calculating the Truck-Factor of Popular Open Source Projects · · Score: 1

    I work in a small software company, and a lot of our big clients require us to have an escrow of the product's source code for the duration of the contract.

  4. Re:The problem... on Study Suggests That HUD Tech May Actually Reduce Driving Safety · · Score: 1

    If you don't mind me asking, which make/model/year is this?

  5. Re:This will be fun... on Orbiting 'Rest Stops' Could Repair Crumbling Satellites · · Score: 2

    The fuel cost of moving a satellite to the depot is non-trivial. (Orbital Maneuvers) , so I think it will take a lot of diplomatic fun before it would even be done.

  6. Re:Obviously on Fuel Free Spacecrafts Using Graphene · · Score: 2

    From the New Scientist article, they talked about the possibility that the incoming photons boil off electrons from the sponge, and most of those electrons were emitted in the opposite direction of the light beam, generating more thrusts than can be accounted by just the light pressure alone.

    They also raised the issue that, if that were actually the case, you would end up with a dangerous level of positive charge. Without being able to neutralize the charge, this would not make for a good propulsion system.

  7. Re:If the headline is posed as a question, the ans on Ask Slashdot: Best Way To Solve a Unique Networking Issue? · · Score: 1

    Besides, if you can do it in 1/16th of the time, you might find your maintenance budget get slashed to 1/16th of previous year/quarter.

    From what you described, it seems you/they allocate about a day to upgrade each station (16 units at 0.5 hour each.) Beats driving around in traffic to 16 different stations a day, too.

  8. Re:Can we use this? on Wormholes Untangle a Black Hole Paradox · · Score: 1

    Imagine you have two marbles, one red, one black. Put both of them in a bag, shake it up, and pick one out to put in your pocket. Don't look at it.

    Now send the bag with the other marble inside somewhere. Across the country, to the ISS, to Mars, next star system, where ever.

    Now pull out the marble in your pocket. If it's red, the other one must be black, and vise versa. However far they are apart.

    Replace marbles with particles, and colors with spins.

    You have been able to determine the other particle's properties instantly over vast distance, yet you have not transfer any information.

  9. Not with a bad set of requirements on Linux Getting Extensive x86 Assembly Code Refresh · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't a total re-write be the right thing to do instead?

    Yes, if you can get the proper requirements. (This does not apply to the current article, since I assume that the requirements for these syscalls, etc. are well described.)

    On most business systems, especially one that us written over the course of a few months, the requirements are just as spaghetti as the code, so rewriting the system from scratch might also rewriting the requirements from scratch, which is a monumental task if it already have customers with different configurations.

    On a more humorous note, I find it funny that this is today's article on The Daily WTF: Seven Minutes In Heaven

  10. Re:As part of the validation runs... on US Pens $200 Million Deal For Massive Nuclear Security-Focused Supercomputer · · Score: 1

    Someone should benchmark this against Mechanical Turk. It would be interesting to see how things stack up.

  11. Re:Memorizing site-unique passwords isn't possible on Generate Memorizable Passphrases That Even the NSA Can't Guess · · Score: 1

    And it is still vulnerable to the crowbar hack. Especially if you have to carry a piece of paper with you while you're trying to commit it to memory.

  12. Think of the fire hazard when insulation dust fills that server. Save yourself the headache and just get a NUC or something similar and put it on the bookshelves. If fire doesn't scare you, think of all the water pipes down there. I came home one day to find that my pressure regulation valve has broken and sprayed the whole crawl space with water. It was such a mess, and I was glad nothing valuable was down there.

  13. Re:No more downtime on Live Patching Now Available For Linux · · Score: 1

    Or, you could just have rolling updates and the clients wouldn't know that the servers were rebooted.

  14. Linux != Linux distribution on Is Modern Linux Becoming Too Complex? · · Score: 1

    Distributions, etc. will continue to change to suit their needs. Linux itself is probably not quite that extensive yet, as evident by the multitude of complains about the non-working drivers.

  15. Re:Oh look, it's the Java killer... on Microsoft Open Sources CoreCLR, the .NET Execution Engine · · Score: 1

    J#.NET ?

  16. Re:Malware on Inside Cryptowall 2.0 Ransomware · · Score: 1

    don't allow your users to be admins on their local machines,

    Ding ding ding ding ding... whenever anyone came to me for malware-related help with Windows, I make sure that they no longer have admin privileges before I let them back in. Create a separated local admin account for them if necessary, but their everyday web-surfing and mail-reading account should not need admin privileges.

  17. Possibly new approach on Quantum Physics Just Got Less Complicated · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, New Scientist reported on a new approach with leaky (non-infinite) multiverse that can explain away both of these uncertainties. It's at least an interesting read.

    Ghost universes kill Schrödinger's quantum cat

    To quote:
    "THE wave function has collapsed – permanently. A new approach to quantum mechanics eliminates some of its most famous oddities, including the concept of quantum objects being both a wave and a particle, and existing in multiple states at once."

  18. Net neutrality... on Comcast Forgets To Delete Revealing Note From Blog Post · · Score: 1

    Or, we can just have one cable, and everyone provides their own packet framing. Oh wait, I think that was what net-neutrality was all about, wasn't it?

  19. Re:Why? on New Long-Range RFID Technology Helps Robots Find Household Objects · · Score: 1

    Or the people to not move them after the robot dropped them off.

  20. Re:Does Minix have much real-time capability? on New Release of MINIX 3 For x86 and ARM Is NetBSD Compatible · · Score: 1

    VxWorks?

  21. Re:Linux, cryptography, HTML and JavaScript. on Harvard's CompSci Intro Course Boasts Record-Breaking Enrollment · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's CS50. It's not even a 100-level classes. This is their way of saying, pay us $X for 3 course credits and see if you would even like to continue down this path.

    The title should be: 1 in 8 Harvard students hopelessly undecided about Computer Science.

  22. Re:Pumped storage and transport on Power Grids: The Huge Battery Market You Never Knew Existed · · Score: 1

    I'm just curious about the "C" shaped canal idea. What is the advantage of it? And what is the use-case that you envisioned?

  23. Re:The Distant Worlds series is pretty good on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Best Games To Have In Your Collection? · · Score: 1

    Oops, posted as AC by mistake. Forum is here

  24. Why not just use FreeBSD then? on Facebook Seeks Devs To Make Linux Network Stack As Good As FreeBSD's · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It might be a silly question, but why don't they just use FreeBSD in that case?

  25. Re:DON'T PANIC on Researcher Finds Hidden Data-Dumping Services In iOS · · Score: 1

    You mean, DON'T PANIC .