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Comments · 193

  1. Re:ITER costs half as much as London Olympics 2012 on ITER Fusion Project Struggles To Put the Pieces Together · · Score: 2

    I love the quote and I agree with your point, but what numbers are you using? Wikipedia has the London £2012 budget at £9.3 billion, and the current ITER cost at â16 billion (£12.9 billion).

  2. Re:Sir Jonathan Ive is ABOVE Paul McCartney on Arise SIR Jonathan Ive · · Score: 1

    The whole Order of Precedence (in England and Whales) is very complicated, and to an American, a bit silly.

    It's silly to us as well.
    Regards, A Brit

  3. Re:Learn your AVC's on Most People Have Never Heard of CTRL+F · · Score: 2

    Thanks, I didn't know that one. Ctrl+Shift+V is the equivalent in OpenOffice/LibreOffice

  4. The minidisc remotes on Sony Announces End For MiniDisc Walkman · · Score: 1

    What I miss most from my old MZ-R35, is the headphone remote. By modern standards it was large, with more controls than an iPod Shuffle, but everything was usable one handed by touch alone. The rewind/seek controls were a twist cap. I had a half hearted go at adapting one, but it would take more SMD fu than I can muster.

    So long Mini-Disc

  5. Why don't digital cameras/DSLRs work as webcams? on Cisco Ditches Flip and $590 Million · · Score: 2

    This is (slightly) offtopic, but I'll take the hit. It seems strange to me that digital still cameras and DSLR cameras don't offer webcam functions, at least I haven't found any that do. Thy typical have a much better sensor, lens and optical zoom than any dedicated webcam; can record high resolution video and connect as a USB device. So why is a USB webcam mode not incorporated?

  6. Re:Yes, as I've said many times.... on Why Linux Loses Out On Hardware Acceleration In Firefox · · Score: 1

    There are multiple measures of an X driver. Nvidia's proprietary driver provides good 3D support on recent hardware, but they lack support for older hardware and RANDR. Doing multi monitor support their own way means it doesn't integrate well. Nouveau supports older hardware better but lacks 3D and power management in comparison. If Nvidia were to support the open source efforts with documentation rather than just the closed source driver, then perhaps Nouveau would progress quicker. Nvidia's support is better than zero, but it's not as great as it could be.

  7. Re:They sucked at busting it on President Obama To Appear On Mythbusters · · Score: 1

    As I recall they addressed aiming at the sails during the first revisit. They couldn't focus the beam on the fabric as it fluttered in the air, so stated it wasn't a viable approach - I'm sure there's a clip on Youtube if you car to check.

  8. Re:Spreading havoc? on Stuxnet Worm Claimed To Be Devastating In Iran · · Score: 1

    I understand that the PLCs are connected to the Wincc machine by some sort of network, presumably for monitoring and reprogramming. I'd like to ask how you think the Stuxnet worm has reached the Wincc machines - over the Internet, or by infected media/laptops being plugged in?

    I'm guessing you can't speak for Iranian ICT practises, but how isolated from the Internet are such systems? I presume nowadays sites are interlinked for remote monitoring. Are these over airgapped, dedicated lines or do they ever share infrastructure with office Intranets using for instance a VPN or encrypted tunnel?

  9. Not convinced of their maths or fact checking.. on £32k a Day For Birmingham Council Website · · Score: 1

    To reiterate my comment at TFA, that they're no doubt going to approve.

    I would like to know how you arrived at your headline - £32000/day for the Birmingham City Council website?

    Your quote "To date we've invested £48.4m ..." from http://www.capita.co.uk/about-us/Pages/Birmingham.aspx gives a figure spent by Service Birmingham (£48.4 million), and that page states SB were "established in April 2006 to provide the Council’s information and communications
    technology (ICT) services". That's 1596 days ago assuming 2006-4-30 to 2010-9-12. Dividing one by the other gives £30325/day, I presume you performed a similar division to reach £32000/day. However I cannot see how you conclude that the £48.4 million was spent entirely on the BCC website, and hence justify your headline.

    To declare my interests I worked at Service Birmingham - the Capita/Birmingham City Council joint venture - until Jan 2010. Except for about 5 days as a testing volunteer I did not work on the CMS for birmingham.gov.uk. I have no financial interest in SB or Capita, but I do pay council tax to BCC. I await your answer.

    Sincerely, Alex Willmer

  10. Re:The next Android ad on Google Introduces New Android Features · · Score: 1

    Hold on, maybe that's the new iPhone ad...

    That one is "And then of course I've got this terrible pain in all the antennas down my left side."

  11. Re:I predicted this on Large Zeus Botnet Used For Financial Fraud · · Score: 2, Informative

    You do realise this isn't the first incidence? Botnets have been installing key loggers and stealing sensitive data for years now. Credit card numbers harvested thus sell for a few dollars/thousand.

  12. Re:SI units on World's Fastest Hybrid OK'd For Production · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The standards to which the EU are trying to move are litres/100 km or kWh/km

  13. Re:WHAT app? on Android Data Stealing App Downloaded By Millions · · Score: 1
  14. A taste of the medicine on Company Claims Patent On Spam Filtering, Sues World · · Score: 1

    I really hope Blackberry get issued an injunction, then perhaps our elected overlords would get the message about obvious patents*.

    * That is, amongst the tide of crap they suddenly receive.

  15. Re:Follow the money on Dell Drops Ubuntu PCs From Its Website · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Much as I'd like to agree with you. Evidence?

  16. Re:Relevant. on Zynga Investment May Herald Google Games · · Score: 1

    Well lets make them more relevant :). What are the names of some please?

  17. Re:Well they did live there on New Batfish Species Found Under Gulf Oil Spill · · Score: 1

    Simple, they'll erase any record of them.

  18. The limit is back up to 350 on Twitter Throttling Hits Third-Party Apps · · Score: 1

    AFAICT the limit is now back up to 350/hour, and has been for a day at least. This is in the UK, in case it's turned regional.

  19. Re:Wrong Agency on FBI Failed To Break Encryption of Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    I don't believe that's correct. AES is to the best of our knowledge uncrackable by the NSA with current computing resources. The flaws that have been discovered publically are minor and inconsequential. It is possible that the NSA has a practical attack against AES, and others but that they choose not to reveal this as GHCQ did not reveal their cracking of Enigma.

    Practically this doesn't make much difference to 99.9% of us The NSA is unlikely to go after us little guys, the risk of revealing their secret would outweigh the benefit. However if you're ever holding the UN to ransom don't assume that AES, RSA et al are secure against a national government.

  20. Re:Excellent on LimeWire Likely To Shut Down Soon · · Score: 1

    No sarcasm, or piss taking, I really am curious. Why does switching to Bittorrent mean fewer trojans/infections?

  21. Re:Hmmm on What Happens When IPv4 Address Space Is Gone · · Score: 1

    Is this satire or industry analysis? I can't tell.

  22. Re:not even close to true on Facebook Retroactively Makes More User Data Public · · Score: 1

    Completely off-topic, but did your friend perhaps say "Don't inflame, inform."

  23. Re:its a step in the right direction on SEC Proposes Wall Street Transparency Via Python · · Score: 1

    IPython is an interactive interpreter that will allow you to skip the brackets in many cases, but you'll still need them in an script. Certain editors and IDEs have a mode that auto-complete/inserts the brackets.

    The benefit of having print as a function, is that one can override it:

    old_print = print

    def print(*args, **kwargs):
            # Do something custom, maybe filtering, time stamping
            old_print(*args, **kwargs)

    Using the logging module is normally a better approach than print though...

  24. Re:Oi, hippy, shut it. on Adobe Not Worried About the Future of Flash · · Score: 1

    Thank you for the examples. I fear Dos Equis counts as a bad use of Flash to my tastes, and I've found it annoying rather than stylish. It breaks use of the back/forward controls, bookmarking of pages. Text on The Most Interesting Show page is barely readable, and I cannot resize it. Admittedly it's better than , my usual example of bad Flash.

    The game looks fun enough. Not sure why it can't be a real flash game, embedded in the page, rather than being restricted to Mac or Windows.

  25. Re:Oi, hippy, shut it. on Adobe Not Worried About the Future of Flash · · Score: 1

    Flash exists because there is a gap between making disgusting prefabbed square forms, and fluid, interesting and deeply creative content; Something that tells your customers and competitors "hey, we have style!".

    I'm curious, could you point to a site that exemplifies this?

    I agree there's a gap that currently only Flash fills - namely delivering content that is a game, an animation, an audio track or a video. I've yet to see a site where I thought Flash used as a design element was an improvement, so I'm interested to see your take on it. Regards, Alex.