Slashdot Mirror


User: bjb_admin

bjb_admin's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
48
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 48

  1. Re:I remember the old days on Vinyl and Cassette Sales Continued To Grow Last Year (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    I also found that the portable players rarely ever had Dolby B (or even better C) which would really help with hiss. I managed to find a Dolby B, Chrome tape compatible unit back in the 80s which I used until it was stolen.

  2. After reading the title I was trying to figure out if they were attempting to raise the state of Florida to increase its height above sea level.....

  3. Add it in later/again on Kaspersky Lab To Open Software To Review, Says Nothing To Hide (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    The problem with this is that with any antivirus software you have to keep the virus database and AV engine up to date for it to be effective.

    So that means at any point in the future "backdoor.c" can be added and deployed automatically, and the users would be no wiser.

    Also does this actually prove that the compiled binary blob is without a backdoor????

  4. Apple Pixie Dust on "Maybe It's a Piece of Dust" (theoutline.com) · · Score: 1

    He meant to say Apple Pixie Dust!

  5. Re:But why? The quality MUST suck... on Stream-ripping Is 'Fastest Growing' Music Piracy (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Or, do people just not care (or even know about) sound fidelity anymore...?

    I believe this is the reason... Bluetooth audio is also really bad and people still pay big $$$ for bluetooth
    headphones.

    Back in the day it was recording off FM onto cassette tape!!

  6. Re:wow... just that? on Utilities Vote To Close Largest Coal Plant In Western US (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    All we need is 1.21 Jigawatts, any more is unnecessary.

  7. Fun on Ask Slashdot: Is Computing As Cool and Fun As It Once Was? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have thought the same thing.

    Of course there are a few fundamental differences between then and now from my point of view:

    1. I was a young teen and had tons of time (and energy) on my hands to play with these things.
    2. Everything you learned you figured out on your own or as a group share with close friends, supplemented with a few manuals and magazines.
    3. The hardware was finite enough you could basically learn everything from the low level access to the hardware to all the software features (basic or machine language). You could literally learn what every location in IO or memory did (53281 anyone??).
    4. With a few days or at most weeks time with even modest skill levels you could put together something that could "wow" your friends and perhaps even non-computer family members.
    5. Atari / TI / Commodore computer overnight parties where a bunch of us get together to compete to show off the best games etc. in an attempt to prove we had the best platform.

    Today we have a lot more learning resources out there, and the hardware is much more powerful but in my mind it just isn't as fun. There is certainly no way to whip up something that would "wow" anyone. It's more a tool now than a fun hobby.

  8. Re:Escalation? on Apple Rumored To Remove Old-School USB Ports On Next MacBook Pro (vice.com) · · Score: 2

    No the next step is the keyboard, since it takes up a ton of space!

  9. Re:Same goes for car stereos on TVs Are Still Too Complicated, and It's Not Your Fault (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah what is with that?

  10. Re: Should list those NOT recalled on More Than 500,000 Hoverboards Recalled Because of Fire Hazards (go.com) · · Score: 1

    I have seen those things, which are supposed to be used to heat up bath water. It isn't even a heating element, it is
    just two plates connected to each terminal of the AC.

    You might as well just throw a toaster in the bath instead.

  11. I have been there and can confirm, even if it is a well known issue. My wife is now terrified of all GM vehicles.

  12. Re:Well, what do you expect? on IRS Computer Problems Shut Down Tax Return E-file System (foxnews.com) · · Score: 1

    Spinrite to the rescue!

  13. Re:Well, what do you expect? on IRS Computer Problems Shut Down Tax Return E-file System (foxnews.com) · · Score: 1

    Didn't they upgrade to RLL a few years ago?

  14. Almost sounds to me like they have switched to multiple pass encoding, rather than a fixed quality/bandwidth setting.

    "The new system will encode from the raw source material more intelligently, considering whether or not the material itself can really benefit from higher bit-rates, or whether identical quality can be maintained with less space and bandwidth."

  15. Re:What's Unusual? on High Level Coding Language Used To Create New POS Malware (isightpartners.com) · · Score: 1

    I have a name for them, Google search programmers.

  16. Re:Solution on Webmail Services Struggling Against DDoS Attacks (fastmail.com) · · Score: 1

    When you are talking these large DDOSs that generate 60Gb of data, you are talking millions of hosts. You need to get them blocked upstream from yourself, otherwise you are still getting the flood and things will crawl on all of your services irregardless. However upstream blocking is generally not source address based, just destination -- sure we will blackhole all packets destined to _YOUR_ server. Therefore you are still down. Yes, you can move the target but the DDOS will just follow.

    If you deal with that problem and they are also generating traffic on your HTTPS port to tie up your services, how do you differentiate DDOS traffic from the normal user who is trying to connect? Sure, you can examine the activity of each connection but there is no time for that when you have thousands and thousands coming in per second.

    It's like playing whack-a-mole but blindfolded and your wife has her head in there so you better watch out!

    The only way to deal with this is to use raw processing and huge network pipes against it, which is what the protection services provide.

  17. The colours are way better on those cables!

    I also run a green marker around the edge of all my CD/DVDs and they work much better.

  18. Re:Fermi and probabilities on Only 8% of the Universe's Habitable Worlds Have Formed So Far (sciencemag.org) · · Score: 1

    As long as the aliens are running Java on their super advanced space stations and fighters we should have them licked!

  19. Re:Woo hoo!! on Breakthrough In LED Construction Increases Efficiency By 57 Percent · · Score: 1

    Now if they would just add a capacitor to eliminate the flicker that most LED Christmas tree lights produce I would be happy.

  20. Probiotic and Gluten free on Four Weeks Without Soap Or Shampoo · · Score: 1

    Want it to sell like pancakes? Just advertise it as a "gluten free probiotic cleansing spray"

  21. Blue screen of Death on Autonomous Car Ethics: If a Crash Is Unavoidable, What Does It Hit? · · Score: 1

    Makes a new meaning to the Blue screen of Death...

  22. Re:Possible Objects on Enormous Tunneling Machine 'Bertha' Blocked By 'The Object' · · Score: 1

    6) A stargate

  23. Re:Should be legal, with caveat on Why Scott Adams Wished Death On His Dad · · Score: 1

    Probably better to simply use small cylinders of Nitrogen. Safer for everyone else too.

  24. Re:WTF is a 'becquerels?' on Fukishima Springs Water Leak · · Score: 1

    Easy explanation.

    How many banana equivalent doeses is this?

    5 trillion bananas (8 Bq per banana)

    Ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_equivalent_dose

  25. Re:Misleading crap on IQ Test Pegs ConceptNet 4 AI About As Smart As a 4-Year-Old · · Score: 1

    Wait a few more years and she may be scripting LUA in Roblox! My 10 year old son has been doing this for the last year with no help from me!