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User: UnixUnix

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Comments · 206

  1. Re:Amazed it works on Five Technologies Iran Is Using To Censor the Net · · Score: 1

    Those liberally/scientifically educated chaps just might be under the spell of the Mullahs' moolah.

  2. Fecoventilatory incident on Main Toilet On ISS Craps Out · · Score: 1

    Thomas Pynchon envisioned shit hitting the fan, but never in such a globally spectacular manner. (With international repercussions no less)

  3. So rash on ImageShack Hacked, Security Groups Threatened · · Score: 2, Funny

    They didn't even bother to Ask Slashdot :(

  4. A popular explanation on IBM Claims Breakthrough In Analysis of Encrypted Data · · Score: 1

    A popular explanation of how it was done can be found here: http://www.mail-archive.com/cryptography@metzdowd.com/msg10571.html

  5. Let us help! on The State of Iran's Ongoing Netwar · · Score: 1

    It is up to every individual to assess the situation and decide, but I for one when I hear people living under a theocratic appointed-for-life dictator protest that they are being denied even a modest voice in running their country, and ask for my help, I am inclined to give it.

    Net access will help clarify facts, for starters. I have just heard an oral report that the number of dead is not 1, as the regime claims, but more like 30 or 40. I have no way of verifying this as it is, but if we provide communication channels to the Iranian people we might obtain videos and testimony. Piercing the veil of secrecy and fear that supports oligarchs.

  6. JPL then... and now on 9th Circuit Says Feds' Security Checks At JPL Go Too Far · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I worked at JPL for a few years (pre 9/11). It was a congenial environment. I got my badge with no hassles; I certainly sympathize with the present plight of my former colleagues and wish them good luck, and may they win if the case goes to the US Supreme Court.

    I certainly hope the Obama administration will scale back Bush-era excesses. They have harmed us much more than terrorism ever could.

    Incidentally, back then I was tickled to find out that the code we were writing for NASA spacecrafts was in the public domain -- anybody could request a copy. May I assume it is no longer so?! :)

  7. Re:it flies in the face of common sense on RIAA Wants To Bar Jammie From Making Objections · · Score: 1

    Well, there IS a difference. When you appeal from a decision you may be limited as to what issues you may raise, and indeed there are rules, with good reason, about matters not brought up at trial level. This, however, is not an appeal, it is a new trial, and it seems standard trial procedure ought to apply. I did not see any support for the RIAA position in their motion document, the only authority they quote is a... request for judicial notice, which even to me (not an expert like NYCL) seems kinda laughable.

  8. Re:OT: Which browser is slashdot supposed to work on FTC Shuts Down Calif. ISP For Botnets, Child Porn · · Score: 1

    > knowing that things will simmer down in October

    Ah. October 1, 1993 never comes :(

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

  9. Brainstorm me this on Open Government Brainstorm Defies Wisdom of Crowds · · Score: 1

    Cowboy Neal for Internet czar!

  10. Defense to offenses on The Hidden Secrets of Online Quizzes · · Score: 1

    Remarkably, all those miraculous Tibetan tea ads aiming to cleanse my toxins or make my sex drive soar never quite make it out of the throw-away email account I used when responding to Real Age. As for my Facebook account -- whoever guesses the ONE item about me therein contained that is NOT false wins, well... an ampule of essence of a rare African forest flower guaranteed to enliven your ear lobes.

  11. It's natural on Most Distant Object Yet Detected, Bagged By Galileo Scope · · Score: 5, Funny

    After the Big Bang... comes the Big Cigarette.

  12. Isn't it obvious? on UK Government To Back Broadband-For-All · · Score: 1

    Broadband-for-all... in order to Spy-on-all.

  13. Rounding off the argument on Reflections On the Less-Cool Effects of Filesharing · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let me add some personal insights to the (admittedly well-thought-out) OP account and try to point out a few complementary facts.

    It so happens I have never used TPB, but I have been employing torrents to some extent, and P2P much more so (the "clean" kind: soulseek). The RIAA need not worry [smile]: out of my 10000+ tracks hardly any appear in their Top lists (and, may I add, the majority of what I have downloaded I already own, on CDs and LPs, so it was mainly a matter of convenience). I do, however, have quite a bit of material from new, indie bands and performers, that I met and I happened to like. Some of them I encountered through MySpace, last.fm, vampirefreaks and related sites. And yes, when I find something I like I do buy it, to support the artist and do my bit to ensure more future releases. I prefer models of support where my money goes to the artist and not to the advertisement/distribution network of a large corporation.

    Over the years I have met a lot of people in such music scenes -- from all walks of life (and from 4 of the 5 continents). Not all do as I do, of course -- but consider: There are quite a few among them who have just about enough for life's basic necessities. They wouldn't go out and buy CDs one way or another. The day may come, though, when their fortunes improve, and they do start buying... especially if they can do so at a reasonable cost, and not one inflated by hype, pomp and circumstance. Some bands already provide this approach.

    It seems to me the large music companies will find the erosion of their stranglehold increasing, and inevitably so. Recording used to need a studio; nowadays a PC is enough. Distribution and advertisement used to require an elaborate (and expensive) edifice; nowadays the realities of the Internet dictate otherwise. Said companies find themselves progressively denuded, more and more so left holding an emptying bag. It reminds me of Eco's comment in a different setting: stat rosa pristina nomine, nomina nuda tenemus.

  14. Re:Unfortunately I'm a Bit Skeptical on Quantum Theory May Explain Wishful Thinking · · Score: 1

    Your observation re inappropriate use of Quantum Mechanics is of course correct (witness BTW the ubiquitous use of "quantum leap" whereas in most cases just "leap" is appropriate.) I do hope though that the authors are not necessarily claiming that QM is at work here -- but only that the mathematical model of QM is, or may be, useful in describing what is going on. After all the idea of superimposing amplitudes rather than adding probabilities is just a bit of mathematics. And so is a certain property of the Fourier transform... which has achieved unending notoriety once it was cast in a quantum setting and given the name "Heisenberg Uncertainty Relation".

  15. I saw one on display, there was a sign on it: on DIY Multi-Touch Tabletop "Surface PC" · · Score: 5, Funny

    "DO NOT TOUCH"

  16. "Take us to Warp 2, Seven Of Nine" -- ooops on Quantum Setback For Warp Drives · · Score: 1

    Never mind, Seven. You can get dressed now.

  17. T-Mobile BlackBerry tethering on Google Bans Tethering App From Android Market · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have been using my T-Mobile BlackBerry as a tethered modem for years. Not only is it allowed, there is no extra charge for it -- tethering is included in the $20 per month I pay for regular Internet access by the device.

  18. Re:The Huffington Post? on Investigative Journalism Being Reborn Through the Web? · · Score: 1

    Huh... go look in Europe now. Many of the newspapers are organs of political parties.

  19. End of Encarta, or: Ballmer's legs and Bill's face on Huge German Donation Marks Wikipedia's Evolution · · Score: 1

    The first step of the eventual demise of Microsoft, as given by an ancient prophecy:

    I met a traveller from an antique land

    Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone

    Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,

    Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown

    And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command

    Tell that its sculptor well those passions read

    Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,

    The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed.

    And on the pedestal these words appear:

    `My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:

    Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!'

    Nothing beside remains. Round the decay

    Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,

    The lone and level sands stretch far away.

    [Percy Bysshe Shelley, 1818]

  20. Re:Exactly, women love cute and adoreable. on How Do I Make My Netbook More Manly? · · Score: 1

    Nah... she can just about set up an Apache server

    ( And she knows she'll be checking processes when I tell her to get on top )

  21. The DA strikes me as... on Is That "Sexting" Pic Illegal? A Scientific Test · · Score: 1

    ...a nitwit nonentity aching for celebrity.

  22. Re:Whoa! 40 years old!? on 10 OSes We Left Behind · · Score: 1

    Unix will die just like FORTRAN died

    PS. My nick says it all

  23. Re:Could have been a lot worse on RIAA Backs Down In Texas Case · · Score: 1

    Seeing that 4chan's Rule 34 has not made it into the Federal Rules, I believe the issue is moot.

    (Hey... it's the PUN that is the lowest form of humor, not homonymy)

  24. Re:You have the date. What's the next instruction? on Researchers Ponder Conficker's April Fool's Activation Date · · Score: 1

    Never mind about forcing Downadup to run remove_downadup.exe ... how about informing the PC owners involved to run it?! For that matter, why not tell everybody to run it, for good measure?

    Of course, all things considered, it might be preferable to rename remove_downadup.exe into get_free_porn.exe

  25. Re:Corporate culture on Shell Ditches Wind, Solar, and Hydro · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Back when XEROX had the personal computer technology when nobody else did, their top brass decided not to go for it because it was outside their corporate culture. "We are a xerographic company"... The rest is history :(