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User: DdJ

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  1. Re:I wonder on Emacs 24.1 Released · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you need to change one line in /etc/puppet/modules/apache/files/http.conf or whatever, its silly to light up emacs and make sure you had originally SSH'ed into the puppetmaster with -X for X forwarding blah blah blah.

    Heh, I almost always launch emacs with the "-nw" switch, and when I'm installing it on my own machines, I install the "-nox" flavor of the packages. I've been using Emacs since version 18 back in the 1980s, and we didn't need no fancy GUI back then, and I don't want it today neither.

    You kids get off my lawn.

    (Still, I do fire up vi for very small very simple editing tasks. And sometimes I try to drive both sides of the flamewar crazy by running Emacs in vi-emulation mode.)

  2. Re:Netflix on Mono Abandons Open Source Silverlight · · Score: 2

    ...if it can be done for android, why not PC?

    Is that a rhetorical question? I'm not quite sure. I'll play along and assume it's not.

    The answer is: DRM. The reason various set-top boxes and iOS and Android devices can do Netflix without Silverlight is because those platforms are locked down enough that they don't need Silverlight's DRM to discourage copying.

    Sure, they could make their own dedicated "app" for Windows, and implement DRM in there. I bet under Windows 8, they will.

  3. Re:A third of them should be fired. on Mobile Workers Work Longer Hours · · Score: 1

    Why should they be fired, unless they're billing by the hour?

    A third of them might be taking longer to do the same work because they're taking more breaks, cleaning up after a kid, answering the door, whatever -- dealing with more interruptions. But if they're doing the same amount of work and being paid the same amount, why should anyone care?

    (If they're paid by the hour and billing more hours, then okay.)

  4. Re:Imagine on Apple Auto-Disables Old Flash Players In Mac OS X 10.7.4 · · Score: 1

    When I read the headline and started the summary my reaction was along the lines of "whaaaaaat!". Then I saw that they were only disabling "older" versions of Flash, not Flash entirely, and thought about what it would be like for the end user.

    Right. Disabling Flash entirely is what Microsoft is doing, in the "Metro" flavor of "Windows 8" (where no browser plugins work at all).

    (Though if you flip back into "Desktop" mode, you can still get them. The "Desktop" flavor of the web browser is dumbed down over current IE, but not nearly as much as the "Metro" flavor is.)

  5. Re:Uninformed on Why You Don't Want a $99 Xbox 360 · · Score: 1

    I didn't include the extra year's warrantee, very intentionally.

    See, every single XBox hardware failure I know about personally (RROD specifically) got fixed by free by Microsoft even if the console was out of its warrantee period. They did this for PR reasons.

    So, in practice, I'm not so sure it's correct to value it at $50 like you're doing. In theory, it results in additional coverage. In reality, I'm not so sure that it does.

  6. Impact of room size/shape? on Microsoft Creates Kinect-Like System Using Laptop Speaker & Microphone · · Score: 1

    So, we got a Kinect, and the biggest downside we noticed is the sheer amount of space it requires to function properly.

    I do not have a small house, but it's a bit tight in our living room. I can't imagine how badly it works in a typical dorm room.

    Does this sound-based mechanism work better with smaller spaces? Has it been tested in dorm rooms and cube farms?

  7. Re:Why are we still using passwords? on Microsoft Says Two Basic Security Steps Might Have Stopped Conficker · · Score: 1

    You consider "passphrase" to actually be different from "password"? I just consider it "training people to be less stupid about passwords" -- it's not a fundamentally different method.

  8. Re:Why are we still using passwords? on Microsoft Says Two Basic Security Steps Might Have Stopped Conficker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We have better authentication methods...

    Would you kindly name three?

    (Please be specific. Then, we can explain how for a given set of reality-based situations, they're not in fact actually "better".)

  9. Re:The most important question on Google Drive Goes Live · · Score: 1

    Heh, in a sense, the MobileMe iDisk supports Linux as well -- since the network protocol is simply WebDAV. Any WebDAV client can access the data and do whatever it wants with it.

    (For a couple of months, anyhow. The switch from MobileMe to iCloud kills that feature.)

  10. Re:Mixed bag compared to Dropbox on Google Drive Goes Live · · Score: 2

    I did. It's not.

    (Unless you're using Google Chrome and have offline access to Google Docs set up, and had connected to it before syncing the file you want to look at, that is. Because in that case, it was already syncing down without the Google Docs sync client. But only read-only, not for editing.)

    So: you try it, with your default browser set to anything other than Chrome. Or: quit Chrome, go to another computer, create a new Google Docs file, let the sync client pull it over, kill your internet connection, and then double-click on the synced file.

    Go ahead, try it. If your results differ from mine, we can try to figure out why.

  11. Re:Mixed bag compared to Dropbox on Google Drive Goes Live · · Score: 1

    There is offline access to Google Docs stuff, not tried that yet.

    No, there isn't. Not really. They make it look like there is, but there isn't.

    What syncs down for these files is just a wrapper containing a URL and some metadata. Double-click on one and you're in the web interface, editing the file online.

    Want to prove it to yourself? Then use command-line tools ("cat" on MacOS or "type" on Windows) to dump the contents of the file.

    I'm very disappointed.

  12. Re:What did you expect? on FBI Seizes Server Providing Anonymous Remailer Service · · Score: 1

    If they were a private business, they could.

    As a university, they cannot, especialy after Virginia Tech. Go read what Schneier recently wrote on the topic.

  13. Re:Can You Say False Flag Opp? on FBI Seizes Server Providing Anonymous Remailer Service · · Score: 1

    If you're a conspiracy-minded crackpot who uses "follow the money" reasoning, then another obvious possibility is Verizon or AT&T.

    Why?

    Every time one of these bomb-threat incidents happens -- and they've been happening multiple times a day every day for quite a while now -- Pitt uses their emergency notification infrastructure to coordinate communication about them. And that means text messages to thousands of students.

    (Because of the whole "in loco parentis" thing Universities have to deal with, and because of the aftermath of Virginia Tech, and for all sorts of other reasons some of which Bruce Schneier recently articulated talking about this very topic, Pitt does not have the realistic option of scaling back their response. The minute they react less seriously, they're potentially open to massive lawsuits -- and that's if nothing happens. If the jackasses are waiting for a weaker response before doing something real, well, Pitt might not survive the aftermath.)

    Reports indicate that multiple students who didn't previously have unlimited texting plans have now been forced to upgrade to unlimited plans. Follow the money...

    Of course, that theory for what's going on is absurd to the point of being laughable. Can't be disproven, no, but come on...

    It's almost certainly the case that some drunk undergrad asshat thought it would be funny to make a bomb threat anonymously, figured out how to push the buttons on the anonymous remailer while sitting in a public library, and did it. (Well, once the "scrawled on the walls of a men's room" vector had been shut down, which is how it all actually started.)

    Let it spread to the level of a minor in-joke meme among even a small number of such folks, and you'd observe something an awful lot like what we're actually seeing now. Much more likely than government conspiracy, anti-occupy conspiracy, or mobile operator conspiracy (though of course we can't disprove any of those).

    Until the masses of American citizens, especially and particularly the "helicopter parents" of current undergrads, are willing to accept a security environment that involves cost/benefit analysis and the acceptance of some actual threat, what can be done? And it doesn't look like they're ready to accept that any time soon. "Think of the children!"

  14. Re:What did you expect? on FBI Seizes Server Providing Anonymous Remailer Service · · Score: 5, Interesting

    FYI, we're not dealing with "the occasional bomb threat" here.

    The University of Pittsburgh (which is down the street from where I work) has gotten multiple bomb threats per day every day for weeks now.

    Many students have been driven out of their dorms, to live off campus, because the evacuations were too disruptive. The campus police are no doubt way over budget. Classes are disrupted to the point where folks on academic probation were told this semester "doesn't count".

    At this moment, as I type this, two buildings have evacuation notices. Earlier today, eleven buildings had to be evacuated.

    And today was not exceptional.

    If you want to follow this yourselves, evacuation notices go out over the @PittTweet twitter account.

    Now, I'm not trying to say "knocking every anonymous remailer off the internet is justified". Please don't assume I think that. I'm just pointing out that this very much isn't a case of "the occasional bomb threat". It's basically a full-on ongoing multi-day denial-of-service attack on the Pitt police, Pittsburgh police, and a bunch of the university, happening in meatspace.

  15. Re:Another on Posting Photos of Olympics Could Land You In Court · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Yeup. The last time I willingly watched the olympics, the year was 1976. I don't see that changing this time around.

  16. Re:Uhm, no... on iTunes' Windows Problem · · Score: 1

    ...and your "that way" is no longer the "that way" I was talking about, which didn't include iTunes.

  17. Re:iCloud not the main thing. on iTunes' Windows Problem · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's also important for getting content from sources other than the store on there.

    An iPad on its own cannot add music from Amazon's MP3 store, or the Google Play music store, or from an actual physical audio CD, to its music library. You get that stuff in there by loading it into iTunes on a computer and doing a sync (or by loading it into iTunes on a computer and subscribing to "iTunes Match").

    And an iPad on its own has terrible podcast support, made considerably more useful via iTunes. Which is sad. There's no reason the device itself couldn't do better (automatically fetching new episodes). But today, it doesn't.

  18. Re:Uhm, no... on iTunes' Windows Problem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It used to be split, though -- on MacOS. All sorts of different device sync functionality was covered by different software.

    Apple knows how to split it. They just don't know how to split it on Windows. They're simply not good at Windows development.

    (I do think the answer will be an evolution of iCloud. If you've got the iCloud control panel installed on a Windows box, that gives you a nicer route to sync the address book on your iPad with the one in Outlook, for example, plus photo stream, bookmark sync with IE, all sorts of stuff. But there's no great support for music, movie/tv, or podcast content that way.)

  19. WebDAV access? on Google Drive Launching Next Week With 5GB Free Space · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We'll have to see. If the new "GDrive" can be securely accessed via the open, standard WebDAV protocol, I'll think it's interesting and I'll be an enthusiastic adopter. If not, then it's just another cloud file locker that uses proprietary client software (or a web UI, no good for integration work), which is considerably less interesting.

  20. Decisions, decisions... on Facebook To Buy Instagram For $1 Billion · · Score: 2

    Delete the Instagram account, or just tombstone it?

  21. Note to self... on Blind Man Test Drives Google's Autonomous Car · · Score: 1

    ...Steve Mahan != Steve Mann.

    (Note to Google: a similar test with Steve Mann has the potential to be really, really interesting.)

  22. Re:Partner with YouTube or Vimeo, or do HTML5 plea on Ladies and Gentlemen, Welcome to SlashdotTV! (Video) · · Score: 1

    Thanks for verifying this for me. You inspired me to conduct another experiment.

    Big established video platforms are often motivated to make their stuff work on iOS devices. So I brought up "tv.slashdot.org" directly on my iPad.

    I went to ooyala's own site and was able to play some bits of video that were backed by flash on the desktop version.

    But when I went to "tv.slashdot.org", it looked like it was supposed to work, with the conventional "press this thing to start the embedded video going" controls and all, but it always simply failed.

    So, it appears to be Ooyala, but broken and less functional here.

    Ah, well. They must care more about advertising revenue and viewing metrics than about ensuing that their "news for nerds" is seen by, you know, nerds (who are generally the ones disabling flash or turning off its local storage).

  23. Partner with YouTube or Vimeo, or do HTML5 please. on Ladies and Gentlemen, Welcome to SlashdotTV! (Video) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hate watching videos on a conventional computer. I prefer to watch them on a tablet or real TV.

    If you were to partner with either YouTube or Vimeo, I could use existing integrations for set-top boxes or the app on my iPad to view the stuff.

    If you were to just to HTML5 video, I could at least bring the video up on my iPhone and "AirPlay" it to my TV.

    As it is, I can't even watch it in Google Chrome. I've removed the generic Flash player from my computer, but I do allow Chrome to maintain and use its own internal copy. But even that copy can't play your videos. I am guessing that this is because I've got paranoid security settings, forbidding Flash from ever using any local storage at all (because I don't trust advertisers).

    So, in short, I certainly can't see the videos in my preferred way, and when I try to view them the way I'm "supposed to", I get a blank screen with no warnings or errors or anything.

    Do Not Want.

  24. Re:The end of disability? on MIT Prof Predicts the End of Disabilities In Next 50 Years · · Score: 1

    I got a steroid-induced cataract in my left eye, and its lens was replaced with a CrystaLens, which sits on struts and can actually focus. After wearing thick glasses all my life I now need no corrective lenses at all, not even reading glasses -- and I'm 60.

    I say as someone whose presbyopia is still just getting started: thank you for helping beta test this for me.

  25. Got the video without Flash? on HDTV Expert Alfred Poor Tells You What to Buy and What Not to Buy (Video) · · Score: 1

    I'd like to watch it on my HDTV, and none of the HD sources I've got can play Flash content.

    Anyone got a link to the raw video or a YouTube or Vimeo video or an HTML5 page or something?