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User: rlk

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  1. Interesting what's on the list and what's not on Intel Says Some CPU Models Will Never Receive Microcode Updates (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 1

    In the first generation mobile Core i processors (i7-xxx and i5-xxx), the low end ones (i7-6xx, i5-4xx, i3-3xx) are fixed, but the higher end ones (i7-7xx, i7-8xx, i7-9xx) are being stopped. Same is true with the desktop processors.

    I suspect that's a matter of what's architecturally viable to fix as opposed to *ahem* marketing considerations. Perhaps the processor in question has more aggressive speculative execution baked into the hardware that's difficult (if possible at all) to mitigate.

  2. Re:The socialism drum beats on. on The Gig Economy Keeps Growing, But Worker Benefits Aren't (technologyreview.com) · · Score: 1

    So again, the problem is what about people who are working full time, but on low-paying jobs (which is where this got started)? We still need those sales clerks, call center staffers, janitors, what have you. And there isn't enough demand for engineers, managers, skilled tradespeople, higher level sales people, and all that to ensure that there are positions available for everyone. You say you expect everyone who's able-bodied to work, but aren't then prepared to ensure that everyone who's working can live on the compensation.

    Don't say "it's about better education" or whatnot -- more supply of skilled labor doesn't ensure that the demand for it will be there. Again, are you good with telling hard working people "sucks to be you, but you're on your own, pal"?

  3. Re:The socialism drum beats on. on The Gig Economy Keeps Growing, But Worker Benefits Aren't (technologyreview.com) · · Score: 1

    It doesn't have to be that way -- we can decide as a society that everyone's basic rights do include affordable access to healthcare, for instance. Yes, that means people will have to pay taxes and such. But that doesn't make it impossible to accomplish.

  4. Re:The socialism drum beats on. on The Gig Economy Keeps Growing, But Worker Benefits Aren't (technologyreview.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We still need people to drive people around from point A to point B, answer customer complaint calls, and that. It doesn't matter how much people improve their skills and all that, somebody has to do those jobs; we still need them, and there aren't enough engineering, executive, what have you jobs to go around for everyone and there never will be.

    Are you willing to say that it's OK that some people, no matter how hard they work, have to live on the margins? Because I don't think that that's a very healthy society.

  5. Municipal power companies aren't that uncommon. They often charge lower rates and provide better service; after an early snowstorm in October 2011 in Massachusetts, the municipal utilities had their towns back in operation a lot faster than the private ones.

  6. Lenovo ThinkPad P70 on Ask Slashdot: Which Laptop Has The Best Keyboard? · · Score: 1

    This is a 17" "mobile workstation" type laptop, with an excellent keyboard as those go, although it certainly doesn't compare to the old Sun keyboards. It has some quirks, in particular that the function and control keys are swapped and the default is for the function keys to perform the special functions rather than send the keystrokes, but that can be fixed in the BIOS.

    The most annoying quirk is that the touchpad is somewhat to the left of center, although centered relative to the main keyboard, and I found my left palm inadvertently moving the mouse around. But KDE offers a setting to disable the touchpad when a mouse is plugged in, which solves that problem.

    The action is heavier than my old Dell M6500, which is also a 17" mobile workstation. I personally like that. It's also designed to be water-resistant, and they designed rain gutters -- channels through which fluids spilled on the keyboard can drain out the bottom of the laptop.

  7. This is a joke, I hope?! on AskSlashdot: How Do You See Your Life After Firefox 52 ESR? (mozilla.org) · · Score: 2

    Firefox has been increasingly defeatured over the past year or two. And to make matters worse, the FF developers consider that a feature.

    The first big one was requiring add-ons to be signed by Mozilla, putatively to protect users (because Mozilla would inspect the code). That was sort of OK-ish at first, because there was a preference that could be set to turn that off, but they did (as promised) get rid of that option in FF 52. The stated intent was that people could be hurt by rogue extensions coming with instructions about how to turn off the signature enforcement. But it turns out that there is still a saving throw; only add-ons require signature enforcement; other types of addons (such as themes) don't, and the ones that do are listed in a file. Maybe the Mozilla people did that by intent, so that someone who wants to run unsigned extensions badly enough can do so. But yes, this means that you can't run your own extensions in your own browser, unless you submit each new version to Mozilla (not necessarily make it public), or you use the developer version.

    (This was never implemented for the long-term support versions; these versions are intended for corporate use, and they know that corporations won't allow their code to be submitted for inspection.)

    But the really big change, as of FF57, is to get rid of all of the old extensions altogether in favor of "WebExtensions", which use an API supposedly much more like that of Chrome, to make it easier to port addons between browsers. This strikes me as a highly self-destructive act (why use fake Chrome rather than the real thing?), but that's what they want to do. The problem is, as the OP noted, that none of the classic extensions are WebExtensions, so they're basically destroying their ecosystem overnight.

  8. Re:Have you ever read Firefox's privacy policy?! on TechRepublic: Mozilla 'Is Desperately Needed to Save the Web' (techrepublic.com) · · Score: 1

    "Firefox search partner codes"

    "mobile marketing vendor"

    "marketing campaigns"

    Gaah. This ain't your father's Mozilla. And I really don't want "personalized recommendations" (read: customized ads). I want to do my own searching, with search terms I pick (which usually have nothing to do with buying anything).

    I use Firefox because I have it very heavily customized with a lot of addons (some of which I've modified myself). I suppose I'm going to have to stay on the last working version of FF forever and hope things don't get too bad, or hope that someone picks up and forks it, preserving legacy extensions.

    Trying to make Firefox more compatible with Chrome is just plain absurd. If it's going to be compatible to the point of excluding the reason why people use Firefox to begin with, what's the point of even using Firefox? People use Firefox because of the XUL and other legacy extensions that do things that other browsers don't. Period.

    (And let's not even get into "we won't let you turn off signature validation, so all your extensions are belong to us. Well, not quite, but close enough. Although they did actually leave a workaround in place.)

  9. Buy and keep on Ask Slashdot: Is Leasing a Smartphone Better Than Buying One? (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    I don't trust any capability to completely wipe a phone. So I wouldn't lease it and then have to return it. But that also means I wouldn't sell my phone or hand it down to someone.

    I follow the same principle with disk drives: once I put real data on them, I don't return them (even for warranty) unless everything has been encrypted.

  10. Re:Firefox 57 on Inside Mozilla's Fight To Make Firefox Relevant Again (cnet.com) · · Score: 2

    Indeed.

    Wrecking legacy plugins needs a really, really strong justification. "Compatibility with other browsers' APIs" is not it. I'm not looking to run Chrome extensions; I'm not running Chrome. I want my _existing_ legacy plugins to work.

    Mozilla (Firefox in particular) has become increasingly paternalistic over the years; the thing about mandating signed extensions most notably (although there is actually a viable workaround (at least for now). But the plugin API thing does not appear likely to have any kind of workaround.

  11. Re:Problem: FF getting locked down on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that helps me temporarily (but makes a mess of my distro's packaging -- there are a lot of things that depend on firefox). But only until FF56.

  12. Re:what would anyone do with 1691 tabs? on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    All Tabs extension works nicely.

  13. Re:Problem: FF getting locked down on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    Because:

    1) I have a bunch of older extensions, some of which aren't signed.

    2) Sometimes I modify extensions (fix bugs, get rid of annoying behaviors).

    3) I don't want to have to "apply" to someone else for the right to run something on my own computer.

  14. Re:The Tab Groups feature was removed on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    If it works, it isn't "fundamentally flawed".

    I don't care for these "workspace" solutions, because it means a heavyweight switch between sessions rather than just jumping to a different tab.

  15. Re:what would anyone do with 1691 tabs? on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    It sounds like that means switching between sessions constantly, if you operate the way I do -- jumping around rather than working on one thing for a while. What do you do if you're in the middle of something and "I just want to check the weather radar?"

  16. Re:what would anyone do with 1691 tabs? on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    I don't want to decide "this is something I want to bookmark". Just pop another tab and done with.

    Clutter. Yeah. But why is that a bad thing?

  17. Problem: FF getting locked down on The New Firefox and Ridiculous Numbers of Tabs (metafluff.com) · · Score: 1

    I'm running FF52 (LTS) because the "consumer" grade Firefoxen don't allow unsigned extensions, with no saving throw (the LTS ones do).

    The next LTS version (57 IIRC) is going to lose real extensions, with only the stripped down WebExtensions.

    So what is a user to do?

  18. So, other suggestions for a spam blocker? on User Expresses Privacy Concerns After Software Update Replaces Default Phone App (martinruenz.de) · · Score: 2

    I receive a lot of phone spam. I don't want to have to be interrupted each time I receive a call to answer it and figure out what it is. Without crowdsourcing, how is any of this going to work?

  19. Back to the future on How Would You Generate C Code Using Common Lisp Macros? (github.com) · · Score: 1

    We had a genuine Lisp->C transpiler (we just called it a converter) way, way back when (in the late 1980's, probably before a lot of you were born and maybe even in some cases before your parents were born) at Thinking Machines Corp. The system software for the Connection Machine CM-1/CM-2 (which was effectively a gigantic coprocessor) was originally written in Lisp for the Lisp Machine (Symbolics 36xx IIRC), but eventually we figured out that we needed it on *ahem* more conventional platforms. Rather than rewriting all the code, someone hacked together a Lisp->C converter.

  20. Re:PLEASE...make a sports car again!! on Tesla 'Easter Egg' Makes the World's Fastest Car Even Faster (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    To what end? It gives you sports car performance (and then some) while still being able to carry people and schtuff like a family sedan.

    Pull up at a light next to a Lambo...

  21. Re:Clickbait troll much? on AAPS Doctors Run Survey On Hillary Clinton's Health (prnewswire.com) · · Score: 1
  22. Association of American Physicians and Surgeons on AAPS Doctors Run Survey On Hillary Clinton's Health (prnewswire.com) · · Score: 2

    This organization is hardly impartial. It's a conservative organization that was originally formed in the 1940's to fight "socialized medicine". It takes a number of decidedly off-beat positions, including that HIV doesn't cause AIDS, that human activity doesn't contribute to climate change (what this has to do with medicine is beyond me), and so forth. See their Wikipedia entry.

    Now, having an opinion isn't grounds for not voicing one, but under the circumstances I think this is relevant information about this group.

  23. Cheaper to use 2.5" hard disks on Ask Slashdot: Do You Still Use Optical Media? · · Score: 1

    4TB 2.5" external hard disks go for about $120, and I bought one for about $100. That's $25-30/TB. Amazon sell 15x25GB archival-grade Blu-Ray disks for $67.50, which is $180/TB.

    And not even that much more expensive to use SSD's (if you're worried about stiction) than archival-grade Blu-Ray disks. I'm seeing internal SSD's in the $240 range; USB3 enclosures are cheap. If you want it packaged, it's going to set you back a bit more, but still less than double the price of archival Blu-Rays.

  24. All foam and no beer on Comcast Says There's 6 Million Unhappy DSL Users Left To Target (dslreports.com) · · Score: 1

    We're one of three houses on our street (in Brookline, MA) that Comcast won't serve because we're too far from a utility pole. They don't seem too interested in doing anything about it; we've called repeatedly. So we're stuck with damnfool 1500/368 (kbit) DSL. Feh.

  25. Three showstoppers:

    1) I have a bunch of old extensions that are not signed. Things like FLST, OpenNewWindowFromHere, and others. I'm not much interested in losing that functionality.

    2) I sometimes like to edit extensions with, you know, emacs or something. Things like FLST, where I like the tab flip behavior but not the focus last selected tab itself, which the developer didn't provide a way to turn off while keeping tab flipping.

    3) Some extensions have code that can't be given to Mozilla for verification because the code is proprietary.

    I'm fine with signing to be enabled by default. I'm not fine with not having a workaround for that. I want to decide for myself what gates I want closed.