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User: Shaman

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Comments · 317

  1. Re: Halloween Documents on Microsoft's Olivier Bloch Explains Microsoft Open Source (Video) · · Score: 1

    Why was this modded down? It's insightful.

  2. Re:It's turtles all the way down on How Deep Does the Multiverse Go? · · Score: 2

    MIND. BLOWN.

  3. Re:what should be off the table on New Microsoft CEO Vows To Shake Up Corporate Culture · · Score: 1

    This. Exactly this. Everytime I hear someone apologize for Microsoft, I can't help but stare at them blankly. It's like Dumbledore and Harry Potter (this is news for NERDS still, right?) .. are you sure you ever really knew them at all?

  4. Re:not a hero, not a villain on Snowden A Hero? Gates Says No, Woz Says Yes · · Score: 1

    Exactly this.

  5. A lot of this saw it coming on Microsoft Dumping License Fees For Windows Phone? · · Score: 1

    Honestly, Microsoft... why not just build some really nice Android apps and call it a day? NIH is a sickness.

  6. Re:The real truth? on Whatever Happened To the IPv4 Address Crisis? · · Score: 1

    And you got better. You're clearly uninformed, and I can't change fanboyism.

    -
    "hardware doesn't support ipv6" - Sure, and it's all being steadily replaced
    -

    It's *not available* in some cases, certainly fixed wireless equipment. I made that point twice, FFS.

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    big ISPs don't seem to have any trouble with it
    -

    Actually, they do. Many large ISPs don't support IPv6 or are in the stages of moving over parts of their network right now. They're having huge issues. They're just not sharing them with YOU. For an example, Bell Canada still has no IPv6 support on their network, even at the business-classed fiber/ethernet level.

    -
    You mean like Aruba [arubanetworks.com] and Cisco [cisco.com]?
    -

    Those are not ISP-level equipment. Those are WiFi. Again, you fail at comprehension.

    -
    when the support guys realized that widespread v6 support would essentially eliminate all their "how do I forward a port" support calls, I bet they had to change their pants
    -

    Wrong. Now they have people calling them up asking how they get static IPs on their Samsung TV. And why their home security system doesn't seem to be working when it supports only IPv4. They want more outbound bandwidth for their fleet of home cameras and an IP for each of them, and they want it for free, including technical support when something goes wrong. IPv6 means you go from people trying to force you to support their shitty, poorly configured wireless network at home to trying to force you to support 50 devices that they want available on the Internet at all times with their own IP addresses. You clearly don't think outside your little consumer box AT ALL.

    -
    Maybe you get a jolly from shitting on v6. That's fine, go nuts. We'll all be over here using it happily, spinning up v6-only services in a few years, and leaving you in the dust.
    -

    Could you be any more fanboy butthurt?

  7. Re:The real truth? on Whatever Happened To the IPv4 Address Crisis? · · Score: 1

    Again, not paying attention: in the wireless industry THERE IS NONE WITH IPv6.

    Wireless equipment (not Linksys, ffs) is almost universally IPv4 only - right now.

  8. Re:The real truth? on Whatever Happened To the IPv4 Address Crisis? · · Score: 1

    Yep. You're so smart. So smart that you ran right over "hardware doesn't support ipv6", "virtually all wireless network hardware sold today" and "cost the ISPs time and money and aggravation to support" and went straight to "bullshit."

    Have a cookie. Clearly you've got intelligent discourse down pat.

  9. The real truth? on Whatever Happened To the IPv4 Address Crisis? · · Score: 0

    Supporting IPv6 is a giant, ugly, expensive, network-rocking hairball for ISPs that virtually no amount of throat-clearing will dislodge. It's ugly to work with in many ways, people make demands of it that cost the ISPs time and money and aggravation to support. It requires forklift upgrades of virtually all the really expensive hardware that ISPs have in their data centers and elsewhere. Much hardware currently in use still doesn't support IPv6 (think virtually all wireless network hardware sold today) and everything needs to if you're going to make a smooth conversion - which is impossible anyway.

    IPv6 from an ISP standpoint is the boogey man.

  10. Re:A medal. on Ask Slashdot: What Does Edward Snowden Deserve? · · Score: 1

    At the time, it did not have legal authority. The subject of whether it's legal so far is two against and one for. I'm fairly certain that over time, it will be judged to be unconstitutional.

  11. Re:The Intelligence community are the traitors on Ask Slashdot: What Does Edward Snowden Deserve? · · Score: 1

    This. All of it.

  12. A medal. on Ask Slashdot: What Does Edward Snowden Deserve? · · Score: 1

    Fuckings to those of you who think that he's done a bad thing. Either everyone follows the law, including the government, or it's invalid. The governments haven't been following the law.

  13. Re:Rumers..demise..exaggerated. on Microsoft Reports Record Revenue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > I'm a .NET developer so I'm a Fanboy because nothing else comes close for enterprise development.

    Wow. That's a real head-shaker.

  14. Re:Outstanding on FreeBSD 10.0 Released · · Score: 1

    ZFS has been dangerous for me on many occassions. FYI

  15. Re:Best example in a long time on Media Player Nightingale Reaches 1.12.1; First Release Since Songbird · · Score: 1

    Also that brings to mind the biggest problem with Window$.

    VIRUSES, MALWARE and TROJANS hiding in a .exe file which requires Administrator access to install.

  16. Re:Best example in a long time on Media Player Nightingale Reaches 1.12.1; First Release Since Songbird · · Score: 2

    Uhm...................... why is it bad? You could get nightingale directly from your dist, or a PPA.

    I agree there should be an easy way to add PPA's, though.

  17. Re:Grasping at Straws on Sun Not a Significant Driver of Climate Change · · Score: 1

    Uh... doublethink?

  18. *shakes head* on Sun Not a Significant Driver of Climate Change · · Score: 0

    ................. what?

    Really? The seasons don't have to do with our earth orbiting the sun in an oval pattern? Evening isn't relevant?

  19. Re:Obama forgot he works for the Americans ! on Tech Leaders Push Back Against Obama's Efforts To Divert Discussion From NSA · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    All of this.

  20. Re:Deluxe life on Why You Shouldn't Buy a UHD 4K TV This Year · · Score: 1

    Another way to say it, yes.

  21. Surprised you didn't mention on Why You Shouldn't Buy a UHD 4K TV This Year · · Score: 2

    That I can't even tell the difference between 720P and 1080P. Once you get into the high colour and high resolution systems, the eye starts to lose the ability to see any flaws at all. Maybe there is a difference for uses other than recorded video. however.

  22. CLIMATE CHANGE!!!!!!!!!!!!

    How could it possibly be anything else?

  23. Re:Citizens don't trust cops ... on Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS · · Score: 1

    > The majority of cops are good or try to do good.

    No. On average, they're more violent, more criminal and more likely to act on these things.

    > They fail because they won't say anything when they do see something wrong being done by other cops.

    So they do not even try to do good. This alone would do a tremendous amount of good to society and the reputation of the police.

    The blue shield is a very real and very dangerous thing.

  24. Re:An officer on duty has no expectation of privac on Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS · · Score: 1

    > its citizens who the cops are primarily in charge of protecting

    If you have watched the news at all over the last few years, you will hear police and their leadership repeatedly say that they are not in the business of protecting the public. They are there to enforce laws. Period.

    Seriously. Even a casual search should yield lots of results.

  25. Re:Who watches the Watchers? on Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS · · Score: 1

    > Their commanders? If cops can't trust other cops, why should the public trust cops?

    Cops know cops. Therefore, they really don't trust each other.