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User: archont

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  1. Apparently on Microsoft, Facebook Declare European Kids Clueless About Coding, Too · · Score: 1

    I resent that comment.

    I started programming at 8 in QBASIC, I earn 6.25$ an hour and still consider myself competent. Doing Python, Actionscript, C++, C#, PHP, lua, java, little bit of assembly to crack the software that the company won't buy but I still need, arduinos, format conversion utilities, all sorts of stuff. I'm not great, hell, maybe even not good, writing an algorithm for arranging variably-sized images into a tiling mosaic took me the better part of a week. But competent? Sure.

    Not sure if I want to post my employer's website or not.

  2. Re:Define personal computer on Figuring Out the iPad's Place · · Score: 1

    Nobody cares about openness. A lot of people care about having control over their phone. People have been busy removing simlocks since before the iPhone was on the drawing board. Today we have android xposed, ad-blocking plugins..

    Android casually does what iOS is deliberately restricted from doing. This is why openness matters, not because you can get a look into the sources.

  3. Re:A couple things about TFA on Hearing Shows How 'Military-Style' Raid On Calif. Power Station Spooks U.S. · · Score: 1

    It already is unprofitable, which is why instead of an open warzone like Syria you're seeing only the sporadic rocket or suicide attack. The Palestinian territories are stricken by poverty and being absorbed into Israel, fighting which would mean serious expense for any nation and risking US intervention.

    For a solution now, I don't have one, I think it's too late for one at this point. As mentioned, the process of absorbing palestinian soil has begun a while ago - without any hints of cultural integration, it's all raze and pave. By trying to reestablish official borders you'd have to contend with levelling Jewish neighbourhoods.

  4. Re:A couple things about TFA on Hearing Shows How 'Military-Style' Raid On Calif. Power Station Spooks U.S. · · Score: 1

    Slavery didn't disappear just because of stigmatization, but mostly because machines replaced slave labor while creating skilled worker jobs. In countries where human life is still valued below the costs machinery you do see slavery. In fact, you see still sexual slavery in first world countries, where the price is deemed acceptable.

    So you have to think of ways of making violence unprofitable and making it the the suboptimal solution to problems. Increased transparency, accountability and stronger international agreements against aggression, as well as their effective enforcement would be the general direction. Either way, this is a problem that needs to be tacked systemically, operating on incentives and disincentives rather than any moral prerogative.

  5. Re:A couple things about TFA on Hearing Shows How 'Military-Style' Raid On Calif. Power Station Spooks U.S. · · Score: 1

    It takes a change of attitudes and expectations in the middle east, I think, before a far fringe organization like Al-Qaeda can no longer exist on their own. For now they support not only violence but deal in slavery and opium. Convincing them violence isn't the best way to achieve their goals won't work as it's one of their signature tools.

    Then again nation-states, even first world ones, do use capital punishment and start wars of aggression - the soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the subsequent US war by proxy created and defined the modus operandi of this very organization.

    Ultimately Al-Qaeda gets way more attention than it deserves compared to it's actual impact. Rather than focus on this particular boogeyman I'd rather see violence be stigmatized as a tool of politics in the same way open slavery is.

  6. Was this a highly skilled attack meant to disable infrastructure?
    No, obviously not.

    Was this a probe attack?
    Unlikely.

    But for reasons obvious, the mere chance of this being the case is extremely worrying for the government. Infrastructure sabotage is IMO an extremely effective form of asymmetric warfare in the US. Go blow up a pressure cooker and everybody will want to kill you while rallying behind the government. For a government whose legitimacy is based in large part on the ability to provide convenience and a sense of protection, those types of attacks serve to undermine faith in the government's reach and promises, are expensive to defend against, cheap to execute and create a much less negative public reaction towards the attackers, channeling some of that sentiment towards a government that is made to appear incompetent and weak.

    It is, in short, a much more effective form of terrorism than casualty oriented indiscriminate violence.

  7. Re:A couple things about TFA on Hearing Shows How 'Military-Style' Raid On Calif. Power Station Spooks U.S. · · Score: 1

    "I" don't have to. Remember the news story a week ago about Al-Qaeda apologizing for accidentally assaulting a hospital and mosque when their intended target was the ministry of defence of Yemen?

    The ministry of defense would be a textbook legitimate target for any nation-state or organization aspiring to fulfil the role of such.

    A hospital and mosque on the other hand is something a nation-state would not want to target because of PR fallout. Which is exactly what happened, hence the apology.

    No need to persuade Ossama, him being dead and all. Turns out the new leadership does understand that the rules of the game have changed since the days of the soviet union and indiscriminate violence has it's price.

    Of course, that still leaves them with violence as a tool, just more directed. But it would be silly to hold an international terrorist organization and synonym of "bad guy" to higher standards than the "good guys".

  8. Re:What's a linebacker on Researchers Dare AI Experts To Crack New GOTCHA Password Scheme · · Score: 1

    I'm not american, but I think it's a job you do, as part of your training, before you join the riot police.

  9. Re:Graphics are the LEAST of BF3's problems on Under the Hood With Battlefield 4 · · Score: 1

    You're saying you can't manage squads bigger than 4 to 6 people?

    That's odd. I'm not much of a BF3/4 player, though I did enjoy 2142, and I'm playing Planetside 2 a lot. Squad size is 12, though that's often not enough people to make a difference in big facilities, so to make an impact I lead platoons - 4 squads, total being 48 people. Sometimes that's not enough manpower in bigger fights, so several platoon leaders have to coordinate attacks to defeat entrenched opponents who know what they're doing. For example two squads approach from the front with tanks and shell the entrance, one squad "parachutes" into the back of the facility to destroy shield generators while the fourth squad os charged with hacking a base behind enemy lines and deploys mobile spawnpoints preparing for a pincer.

    I have few problems commanding 48 people and coordinating my actions with other platoons. When things get hectic I delegate squadleaders to do specific tasks with their 12-man squads. It's challenging, but very possible. Squad cohesion is high, the occasional lone-wolf oddball who doesn't listen gets booted and there's always fresh blood waiting to fill the gap.

    If 4-6 is the limit for you then maybe you're just bad at leadership - or maybe the players in general are just bad.

  10. Re:Lost forever? on DOJ Hasn't Actually Found Silk Road Founder's Bitcoin Yet · · Score: 1

    I can walk into a store with a plastic bag full of stocks, swaps, derivatives, bonds and futures. Chances are I couldn't buy a bubble gum.

    Those particular financial instruments are abstractions of abstractions to the n-th layer - in fact, much further away from "money" than bitcoins. And by money I understand a token of value - because it's scarce, like gold or bitcoins, or because people have decided to use it as currency - like fiat money or bitcoins.

  11. Re: Lol on Australian State Bans IBM From All Contracts After Payroll Bungle · · Score: 1

    The construction crew is not paid until plumbing is done or until a bailiff gives it to them?

  12. Re: Lol on Australian State Bans IBM From All Contracts After Payroll Bungle · · Score: 1

    So on one hand you have the local judge who is employed by the system that you, as the judge surmises, screwed over. Assuming this was a big project, chances are half of the people who decided about the funds allocation and the judge go out for whores and drinking together.

    On the other side there's a foreign company with no knowledge of who's who, offering ever increasing amounts of money to various legal teams, based further and further away from the city where the process is to take place, until you're finally met with something else than a polite refusal, preceded by a day or two of deliberation.

    Based on my own, admittedly limited personal experience, I wouldn't give IBM much of a chance.

  13. Re:WTF? on Australian State Bans IBM From All Contracts After Payroll Bungle · · Score: 1

    This is ludicrous indeed. I simply cannot comprehend how such a situation is at all possible. I write code, I read the tech specs, go do some business-y stuff when needed.

    Project goes over budget? The client doesn't ever mind that, 'cause the amount was already agreed upon. If the budget was 10 million, that's what you're getting, minus tax and handling plus any possible interest for delayed payment on the client's part.

    Project went over budget? Start coming up with a good way of telling your employees they'll be working unpaid overtime. Project over budget? Suck it up, the client will NOT PAY A DIME MORE. If you underestimated the scope of the project (by an order of magnitude) it may be prudent to cancel the contract and pay the agreed upon contract termination fee - usually a few times the payment upon completion.

    Project goes over time though? Well lop off, say, 10% of the agreed upon sum with each month of delay, up to a neat 200% loss, after which it automatically terminates.

    Of course, you may attempt to go to court - on one side is the local judge, an employee of the system you, as the judge surmises, tried to screw over, and at the opposite end is your company. The worst case scenario for the government is when they slap on some ludicrous fine and the company does some legalese sorcery, changes the name and the office - but I'm pretty sure IBM is too big for that.

    So based on my experience it's very rare for the government to end up with the short end of the stick. How is this even possible? Did some secretary in Queensland just sign a contract that an IBM guy gave to her?

  14. Re:My goodness on U.S. District Judge: Forced Decryption of Hard Drives Violates Fifth Amendment · · Score: 2

    Bah, that's old stuff. A polygraph is just bells and whistles, a theatre meant to scare the perp. But I've got good news, soon justice will prevail, we have a new toy on the horizon!

    It's fMRI, which detects which areas of your brain are active in realtime. This means when the interrogation specialist shows you a picture of a woman, you don't even have to answer whether you recognize her - if you do, the specific regions of your brain light up. If you're asked a question and you're lying, you are using different parts of the brain to compose the answer than those used to recall visual data. It's not binary, it does vary slightly from person to person, but no matter how good of an actor you are, you're not going to rewire your brain.

    Hell, with a little bit of resolution it will be entirely possible to pluck the password out of the communist's/terrorist's/pedophile's brain, letter by letter. Is the first letter of the password A? Is the first letter of the password B?

    Best thing, you won't even have to answer anything for it to work! No talk of self-incrimination other than completely voluntarily brain activity.

  15. Re:This thought crosses my mind a lot. on Rice Professor Predicts Humans Out of Work In 30 Years · · Score: 1

    People aren't held in bondage to one specific factory, they are however compelled to take up low-paying jobs because they need to pay their bills. The job market of today isn't very healthy - developed nations like the US are faking employment via public sector jobs, like the TSA or private prison industry , which contribute nothing to anything, but keep the money moving.

    The main reason for the lack of low-skill jobs isn't only automatization, it's mostly globalization. Robots and AI are taking mostly the skilled worker jobs - accountants, welders, ect.

  16. Re:You probably don't do much Java, then on Leap Second Bug Causes Crashes · · Score: 3, Informative

    What is this, 1990? All modern CPUs have protection against overheating and disabling that protection requires, at the very least, some crafty soldering or flashing a 3rd party BIOS. If you're capable enough to do that you're probably running some sci-fi prototype rig from the future using pressurized mercury phase transition cooling or something.

    So no, I don't see how any properly set-up rig can make the CPU cook itself.

  17. Re:Next up on Slashdot on Has the Command Line Outstayed Its Welcome? · · Score: 1

    Like a week ago I had to resolder my headphones because the plug broke - again. About 10 days ago I had to resolder the fast-port connector on my 5-year old Sony Ericsson C702 because the shitty Pb-less solder keeps breaking under stress. Before that, about a month ago, I had to solder in new capacitors on my CRT monitor because the flyback transformer high-pitched squeal on my monitor was driving me crazy.

    Last time I used the command line on a phone was about 15 days ago when I did the odd job of installing cyanogenmod and supercharger on one of those fancy smartphones, for like 9 bucks. I don't even own one of those.

    I had to do all of those because I'm a poor codemonkey in an eastern-european cesspool who can't afford the new stuff. For me it's crucial that a device is properly designed - being repairable is a CRITICAL aspect of proper design. That's why I laugh at iFad users - even the techs don't repair the stuff, just give a new one on warranty. And frankly disassembling devices to learn how they work and find out what's broken, then getting it repaired is FUN!

  18. Re:But Flash is dead, right? on The Death of an HTML5 Game Breeds an Open Source Project · · Score: 1, Troll

    Flash is dead, yes. It didn't run on all devices like HTML does and frankly for a web standard that is unacceptable. Good riddance.

    Fortunately now we've replaced Flash with the Apple AppStore and it's apps. Using apps ensures literally 100% compatibility with the target device and a much smoother experience than Flash could ever provide.

  19. Re:A recent conversation on Skype To Feature Giant Ads · · Score: 1

    It's a shame the low-end segment customers are getting bad impressions of Android based on the inexpensive no-brand phones they were able to afford at the time. I've got one lying around for compatibility testing and I can feel your pain.

    The no-brand stuff is a scam aimed at poor, gullible customers who then have an experience as bad as yours. Then they sell or give away the no-name phone and get a used 2nd gen apple - which they don't use fully, apps and content all costing money on that platform, but it's a much better experience even gutted as it is.

  20. Re:Apple's extortive prices on Time Inc. Signs Magazine Deal With Apple · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a 1-month to 2-month project, 6000 polish zloty (about 1700 USD) and it's done.

  21. Re:Wrist watch is for style, not gadget on Ask Slashdot: Wrist Watch For the Tech Minded · · Score: 1

    How can a watch represent my outfit and the way I act?

    Sure, you can make an awful lot of assumptions about a person based on all sorts of random tidbits - favourite colour, handwriting, choice of sock material or watch model. However all that information is only relevant when the choice is uninfluenced by the "what will people think" - at that point I could alter what could be my default choice to create a false image of myself. Normally I'd go with a Casio Protrek - if I was aiming to scam someone I'd choose a Patek knock-off.

    With that in mind men are very conscious about which watch they use and what it says about them. The "what will people think" factor plays a significant part in the decision process. Ergo by judging a man in any way based on the watch he wears you're most likely than not buying into the fantasy he's trying to sell you. Instead you should be completely oblivious as to what watch a guy is wearing and instead try to gather intel based on less obvious things.

    And what odd world do you come from where respect comes from overpaying 10000 times for a device to tell time?

    The luxury watch business is a giant ponzi scheme and a bubble that's getting bigger and bigger. There's no substance to it, just smoke and mirrors, tasteful marketing.

  22. Re:Google's motivation on Privacy Advocates Slam Google Drive's Privacy Policies · · Score: 2

    Joke's on them. I'm a deadbeat. What kind of product or service would you want to market to someone who doesn't have the money to buy anything?

  23. Re:Ehm, I think I see the problem on Adobe Releases Last Linux Version of Flash Player · · Score: 1

    Flash is very good for stuff like google maps actually. Look here: http://www.zumi.pl/namapie.html?qt=&loc=warszawa. It didn't have as much development time obviously, being an application targetted for just one country - but that's also part of the point. JS hasn't gotten it's rails yet, object-oriented programming is a mess, there's no type checking. MVC with JS is a pain, with AS3 it just works. What I'm saying is AS3 is a more mature language more suited for bigger applications.

    As for iPads I had a request to redo an application ONCE, for an offshore client. Thanks to proper coding I just had to write new concrete I/O classes and some performance tweaks (which got merged into the main branch anyhow) - end result being the iOS APP had 90% common code with the desktop swf version. The inconvenience being the user has to download the app off the market. And when I added another compile target it turned out it works on android too.

    And frankly I LIKE this separation. Having to write a version specifically for mobile devices forces you to test the application a lot more thoroughly - beyond just throwing the swf into the wild and assuming it works with the different controls, lower CPU power and resolution.

    Flash forms and menus aren't a sane use for flash and you know it. If you're website isn't flash-based you don't want to have critical parts of it like data entry or navigation in flash. Then again the same goes with JS - unless JS is required for the core functionality, eg. maps, you want your fancy animated menu to gracefully work in noscript-ed browsers.

  24. Re:Millions of iOS users show you are wrong on Adobe Releases Last Linux Version of Flash Player · · Score: 2

    > Not at first but unless a customer absolutely demands flash, I code a requirement in HTML5 and show something that is smoother and better supported and Hey, works on the iPad. So much easier for the initial demo to just hand a tablet to show how nice the site works...

    Not sure if you're joking or not..

    javascript animations aren't smooth - they're clunky and ugly everywhere I see them. A friend recently showed me http://beetle.de/full/ - made using HTML5 and JS. The idea of scrolling the website is pretty neat actually but the performance and overall experience is pretty bad. Javascript actually reminds me of Flash 5 or 6 with the default framerate set to 20.

    And in terms of possibilities it's not far beyond that really. Despite what you're saying it isn't faster than flash either - the VM is slower, rendering is slower, canvas for 3d rendering is slower..

    If you wanted to write an application to do some serious client-side computing you go with Java or Flash. But since Flash is just so much more convenient it's the tool of choice. Since mobile devices weren't the hottest thing as they are not nobody optimized flash for low-powered devices. Hell, nobody optimized at all - there was plenty of CPU cycles to burn on desktops. You can make flash work fine for mobile devices - AIR is the practical implementation - however you need skilled developers (and only in the past 4 years or so have those risen to prominence among Flash users) and focus - actually design with those devices in mind.

    Flash is buggy, true, but so is HTML5+JS. They're buggy in different ways - with Flash development is a breeze - the application always runs the same everywhere. No need to detect different user agents and serve workarounds for broken CSS implementations, no juggling of tags that one browser supports and the other doesn't. Embedding fonts, animations, importing various assets and creating a small self-enclosed application is faster and easier than it is in JS+HTML5, which is why I'm kind of reluctant to go back to that mess called JS (my last serious HTML development days were in 2005).

      It must be said that about 80% of problems with flash stem from badly coded applications. Memory usage, lockups, crashes, low framerate, bad design ect ect. As a webdev you should know serious flash websites don't actually embed the content but load it dynamically - which means adding a text-only version for crawlers is trivial. As is deeplinking, support for back/forward buttons - but all of that came pretty late in Flash's lifecycle, unfortunately much later than it became technically possible.

    For the record I'm a flash developer in Poland. Haven't seen anyone asking about iPad compatibility.

  25. Re:OS alternative? on Adobe Releases Last Linux Version of Flash Player · · Score: 1

    Yeah and it's called HTML5.