Slashdot Mirror


User: cyberjock1980

cyberjock1980's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
199
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 199

  1. I kind of figured that.. on Slashdot Story Helps Raise $43,200 For the FreeBSD Foundation In Three Days · · Score: 2

    I bookmarked their FreeBSD donation page so I could watch the thermometer go up(and hopefully reach the top). I made a donation too since I use FreeNAS and I'm going to solicit a friend to donate since he uses FreeNAS as well.

  2. Let me guess what the summary says... on Is It Worth Investing In a High-Efficiency Power Supply? · · Score: 0

    I haven't read the article yet. I'm about to .. but let me guess what the whole story summed up will say:

    "You need to look at cost for the unit and the expected lifespan of the device as well as the expected load and and cost of the electricity to determine if you can save any money by purchasing a more efficient power supply."

    I've had some machines that it makes sense to upgrade, and others that it doesn't.

    Of course, if you are all about saving the planet then you'll buy the most power efficient power supply on the market regardless of price because you think its saving the planet. Of course, it may not be doing such thing since you expended more resource materials to manufacture the power supply, etc. Not to mention it might cost you more in the long run than the less expensive less efficient power supplies.

  3. Re:correct me if i'm wrong? on FBI Asked Megaupload To Preserve Pirated Files, Then Used Them Against Dotcom · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't bet on that.

    My guess is there's no laws that protect from this kind of BS because the gov't wouldn't acknowledge they are possible of that kind of stupidity. Not to mention if it goes to court do you expect a jury to actually find someone guilty because the FBI issued a warrant to do it? If I were on a jury I'd not only disregard that "evidence" but I'd start looking REALLY deeply at the evidence presented and start questioning the FBI's entire case.

    So there may be no protections because it's expect that no situation would arise where this would benefit anyone. Except because of how screwed up our laws are now the FBI doesn't have to get a guilty verdict. They just have to keep it tied up in the courts long enough to screw with everything related to the name "Megauploads".

  4. Re:any objective numbers? on THQ Clarifies Claims of "Horrible, Slow" Wii U CPU · · Score: 1

    You have a serious lack of understanding of what "quad core" means. And even more of a lack of understanding of what "hyperthreading" does and how it works.

    In your context, "quad core" means that you should be able to run 4 different threads at FULL speed. Not ClockSpeed/4, not ClockSpeed*4, ClockSpeed. In theory, if optimized to 100% efficiency, you SHOULD be able to do almost as much work as a 12Ghz CPU(if it is a quad core CPU without HT) and maybe a little more than a 12Ghz CPU. But the reality is that very few processes can be optimized to 100%, but you will NEVER run any program at less than 3Ghz(excluding power saving features).

    Hyperthreading decreases the penalty associated with cache misses and minimizes idle CPU time.

  5. Re:We can't have good people on Would Charles Darwin Have Made a Good Congressman? · · Score: 1

    It sure is a crappy job, but hey, for $450k salary for LIFE, wouldn't you do a crappy job for 4 years? I sure as hell would. I'd even lie and tell everyone how awesome it was for that kind of pay! I don't know too many people that wouldn't be dishonest for 4 years for that kind of money, and that's the crappy reality of it.

    As much as I'd like to think I'm an honest and trustworthy person who would do the right thing, I think Presidents try to do the right thing. But at the same time there's limits(especially on your time).

    We as Americans need to actually realize that the President is more of a figurehead than anything and start holding the Congress responsible.

  6. Re:We can't have good people on Would Charles Darwin Have Made a Good Congressman? · · Score: 1

    Exactly. That tells me that the politicians know the grass is greener where they are. Let's face it, they get a lot of amazing perks just for being a politician. I'm pretty confident those perks are more substantial than you and I think and those perks make working as a career politician far more lucrative than the "measly" job you and I have. And if you knew those perks were for the rest of your life, wouldn't you be willing to lie to a few people, maybe bend or break some rules, to enjoy those perks?

    Yep.. those politicians know the secret sauce to success in this life.

  7. Re:complain on Google Doubts Apple Will Approve Its New Maps Application · · Score: 1

    How about devices using iOS? I think this is a great analogy since Microsoft got smacked for Windows with internet browsers(basically an app with the operating system), and Apple could potentially get smacked for iOS with mapping applications(again, an app with an operating system).

  8. Re:Good luck with that on European Central Bank Casts Wary Eye Toward Bitcoin · · Score: 1

    I have a few friends that have considered going into Bitcoin. I always make the same comment the parent mentions. All your government has to do is pass a law making it illegal and suddenly its worthless, unless you don't mind breaking the law.

  9. The real question on 26 Nuclear Power Plants In Hurricane Sandy's Path · · Score: 1

    The real question is "How many readers would have known that even 10 reactors were in the path of the hurricane had it not been for the sensationalist article"?

    Exactly...

  10. Re:How about idle?? on AMD FX-8350 Review: Does Piledriver Fix Bulldozer's Flaws? · · Score: 1

    Same here. Used to buy CFLs, but switched to LEDs because they never burn out. Now I have a single circuit in my whole house with a single UPS(300W) for lighting. If I lose power all the lights stay on for about 10 minutes. Very useful at times. Not to mention they never burn out. I have yet to have an LED fail me and my whole house has been LED since 2009.

    Do I think I'll make my money back someday? Maybe, maybe not. But I'm glad to have given money to a technology that needs to become more common and get cheaper, so why not invest in it? If everyone is buying LEDs for their homes in 5 years then I'm glad to have done my very meager but useful part to help make LEDs a daily reality.

  11. A great topic! on Ask Slashdot: How Do SSDs Die? · · Score: 1

    I'd love to see real data on SSD lifetimes. Here's mine:

    2x OCZ Summit 64GB (circa 2009) - See note below for issues I had.
    2x Intel X25M G2 160GB - Installed in March 2010 - Both have worked flawlessly and both show 99% of drive life available by SMART E8 entry. One is my main desktop and one my main laptop. Never had an issue with either. Both have estimated EOL of November 2020 and Dec 2021 by SSDLife.
    1x Intel X25M G2 120GB - Installed in April 2010 - 99% drive life availabe by SMART. It is the boot drive for Server 2008 R2 and is only a file server. Not much to do there so I'm expecting a very very long life. Estimated EOL Nov 2027 by SSDLife.
    1x Crucial C300 128GB - Installed Nov 2010(was boot drive for 2 months by now used for games only) - 86% of life remaining and EOL is Nov 2020.

    I don't go too far out of my way to minimize writes. I always disable hibernation and pagefile in Windows for all of my machines. I never use hibernation and my RAM is always 16GB or more. I use the drive like I normally would without regard for the "limited lifespan". If I was going to do something like copy a blu-ray or reencode a video I used to do it using only local drives and then copy it to the server. Now I just do it over the network shares. Otherwise I use my drive just like I always would. Run BOINC on it, etc.

    I've gotten a few friends into Intel SSDs, and none of us have had any kind of failure at all ... yet. Everyone's drives are listed as having EOL of 2020 or later. If these drives REALLY do last that long, I expect we'll be throwing them away before 2020 because a 128GB drive will be too small for the OS and a few common programs(Office, etc). I used to tell people to go big because they can take the drive from machine to machine over the next 10 years. It really just doesn't matter though, they're dropping in price so fast you should just buy what you will want for the computer you are using.

    One friend bought an OCZ drive because it was really cheap at the time after rebates. He has had to RMA it 4 times in less than 12 months. He's the only person I know personally that hasn't bought Intel, and he is the only one to have any problems.

    Personally, I swear by Intels. My experience has been phenomenal with them. I have yet to see an SSD failure personally, and it seems that lots of people have heard stories of Intel drives failing, but I haven't met anyone personally. My experience is that Intel SSDs, reliability-wise, are far superior to rotating rust. I am a little concerned now that Intel is getting away from using their in-house controller and going to Sandforce. After seeing what OCZ drives do and the fact that they use Sandforce I'm a little hesitant to expect a long lifespan from them.

    I'm wondering if Intel switched to the cheaper Sandforce despite the lower reliability only because they want to be competitive for the price. Who REALLY buys an SSD expecting a 2020 EOL? Allegedly the newer Intels will have a SMART failure message when you have 1% of the drive left. Intel says that for most users that should be about 2 months of regular use since 1% is not really 1/100th of the drive life remaining. If this is true and I can expect to own the drive for 3-5 years and the drive will give me a SMART error when it is nearing EOL, what more could you ask for? That's nirvana for me!

    I will say this. Putting SSDs in every computer I own makes them MUCH more responsive. I've always upgraded every time a new Intel CPU design came out. Right now my desktop is using an Intel i7-920! That's circa Nov 2008. I've NEVER had a computer more than 2 years. Thanks to SSDs the machine still works great 4 years later. I'm thinking of upgrading with the next Intel CPU generation only because the machine is getting old and as a geek I need to be able to justify my geekiness. It's hard to call myself a geek if everyone else is buying $500 Dell machines with more power than my machines. A friend bought a hybrid hard drive. The

  12. Re:I'll believe it when I see... on Warp Drive Might Be Less Impossible Than Previously Thought · · Score: 1

    My understanding is that if you are traveling at any velocity up to the speed of light and you measured the speed of light it would always be the same. However, I think weird things would happen if you were traveling at or greater than the speed of light and shone a flashlight in front of you.

  13. Re:Hardlinks? on Ask Slashdot: How Do I De-Dupe a System With 4.2 Million Files? · · Score: 1

    You are awesome! I just learned something today. I was confused as to the difference between softlinks and hardlinks. Hardlinks are my new best friend! It's like a super-shortcut :)

    Google helped a little bit, but you definitely verified what I realized while googling it. I'll admit, I'm a windoze user, but recently started playing with FreeBSD and Linux and I first heard about soft/hard links a few weeks ago.

  14. Re:Hardlinks? on Ask Slashdot: How Do I De-Dupe a System With 4.2 Million Files? · · Score: 1

    But if I'm trying to organize my stuff and I move the original with the 10 hardlinks, those hardlinks will no longer work. To me hardlinks are a good first step to downsize the amount of data you have. Then you have to organize it.

  15. Re:Hardlinks? on Ask Slashdot: How Do I De-Dupe a System With 4.2 Million Files? · · Score: 1

    I like this idea (I'm running your program as I write this..) but I'm also thinking that this could backfire. I'm rather new to hardlinks, so this may not be a problem at all.

    Is there an easy way to "go back" and have something delete the hard link and copy the original files back?

    Let's say I have a folder of random mp3s and an organized folder of albums with all of the tracks. Let's assume that your program just replaced my albums with hardlinks to the songs in the random mp3s folder. As soon as I find my album folders I'll realize I want the original files moved/copied to someplace else and I'll want the original files and not the hardlinks. How do I "undo" the hardlinks and restore the original files?

  16. Re:Location, location, location. on Is an International Nuclear Fuelbank a Good Idea? · · Score: 2

    The United States! Because we're the most "civilized" in the world and we are the only ones that can be trusted!

    Before I get modded down, this was sarcasm!

  17. How fast? on Scientists Store Entire Textbook In DNA · · Score: 2

    It appears on the surface that the data isn't quickly(sub-ms speeds) stored or recovered. This technology could be very useful for backing up large quantities of data. The real question is how many MB/GB/whatever per second can be read/written to this new "media"?

  18. Isn't this how the USSR ended? on The Cost of US Security · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does anyone else see this as being very similar to how the USA beat the USSR?

    We forced the USSR to spend themselves out of existence. The terrorists are now playing our own game, except against us. Unfortunately, I fear how this will end for the USA if we don't figure out that we can't win this game without changing the rules.

  19. MS and Adobe to join? on A Tidal Wave of Java Flaw Exploitation · · Score: 1

    Since MS has posted this list of exploits that were fixed on Update 22(last spring!) is it safe to assume that Microsoft is simply trying to redirect people who complain about Adobe's security vulnerabilities to look at Java with bigger contempt so Microsoft can buy Adobe and still claim that their software is the most secure?

    Seems a bit odd to me that Microsoft would be trying to improve Adobe's image when they need to be looking at their own. Perhaps they ARE looking at their own image because Adobe will soon be a part of Microsoft.

  20. Possible cause? on DRM-Free Game Suffers 90% Piracy, Offers Amnesty · · Score: 1

    Could it be that people aren't too thrilled with the idea of purchasing a game and being forced to enter their address, phone number, etc? If I'm paying for the item with paypal WHY should I have to enter that information? They'll get all of that information from my paypal account. Why should I have to enter it into another database so I can get spammed later? I tried to leave my phone number and address off, but it required I enter them. I know I could enter false information, but if i'm paying for it, shouldn't I be entering the correct data.

    I just squirmed a little in my seat when I saw I had to enter my address and phone number. Yes, I just spent the $5 and I've never heard of the game until today, and I couldn't get the demo figured out, but I figured for $5 I should take advantage of it.

  21. Re:This is why... on Three Indicted In Scareware Scam That Netted $100M · · Score: 1

    Yes, but I predict the future "no" will also install it. There's nothing that says if you click "no" it won't install anyway. For most programs, if you click "no" you'd expect some kind of EXIT command. Us sane programmers have a GUI that works as we intend. There's no reason why malware/spyware won't have a "yes" and "no" button that does the same thing, right? If I wanted to force you to install a software program, I'd make sure that if you click no it still performs the yes function.

  22. Re:I haven't forgotten the pentium 90 math bug fia on Intel Targets AMD With Affordable Unlocked CPUs · · Score: 1

    AMD never had the TLB bug...

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD_Phenom

    I have used Intel exclusively since I could build my own machineat 13 years old, and will continue to do so.

  23. So what if? on Sony Refuses To Sanction PS3 "Other OS" Refunds · · Score: 1

    Say instead of disabling the "Other OS" feature they had disabled a particular OP code. Let's just say it's a OP code that some games use, but not all. If you have those games they would no longer work because the OP code doesn't exist. Would you have a basis to sue Sony because your games are no longer playable that you paid for? What about the company that sold the games that would no longer play? Would they have grounds to sue?

    Now, we aren't playing a game, so this situation doesn't exist. I'm wondering if Sony got away with disabling this feature because there isn't really a company that can retaliate, and they're confident they can keep their customers from winning a court battle.

    Just thinking outside the box a little..

  24. She's an idiot... on Man Sues Neighbor Claiming Wi-Fi Made Him Sick · · Score: 0, Troll

    From the summary:

    "Being the target of this lawsuit has affected me very adversely," Monribot said Friday in response to e-mailed questions. "I feel as if my life and liberty are under attack for no valid reason, and it has forced me to have to defend my very basic human rights."'"

    She has a basic human right to wifi!? Her life and liberty are under attack because she has wifi!? Are you Fscking kidding me!?

    Despite the fact that this EMF sensitive guy is crazy, she's not exactly a "winner" either.

    If having wifi is a basic human right for life and liberty the world has gone to shit like I had never thought.

  25. Re:Google motto to the test on China Warns Google To Obey Or Leave · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unfortunately, this would mean that Bing would quickly try to take China and ignore ethics, etc. American corporations bow to the laws of China regardless of their beliefs for profit. After all, if you don't try to move into China, your competitor certainly will.

    I expect Microsoft to use this to their advantage bigtime. Do we really want MS to overtake Google because MS has less ethics? How is this fair at all?

      What I'd LOVE to see is laws passed that provide some kind of tax break or advantage for companies that stand up to the censorship laws in other countries. I know, I know, I should expect companies to do this because it's the right thing to do. Corporations in the US were built because of the freedoms given to them in the US, yet they have no problem depriving others of those same freedoms for a few dollars.