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User: jasno

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  1. SlickEdit... on Visual Studio vs. Eclipse: a Programmer's Comparison · · Score: 1

    I just wish Eclipse could tag and browse code as well as Visual SlickEdit. I have to deal with huge, constantly changing codebases and I couldn't survive without it.

    I got hooked using a pirated copy years ago. Once I realized how much money in made me during my stints as a contractor(and because I was able to use it as a deduction!), I finally spent the $300 and bought a copy.

    The one thing I wish they would change is needing a license for each platform. I rarely use windows, but when I do I'd like to be able to use my favorite editor without shelling out another couple hundred $$$.

  2. Re:So long truckers on How Ubiquitous Autonomous Cars Could Affect Society (Video) · · Score: 1

    Not taxi, bus, or shuttle drivers?

  3. Re:Visual SlickEdit/ Emacs ctags help a lot. on Ask Slashdot: How To Start Reading Other's Code? · · Score: 1

    SlickEdit has saved my ass time and time again. I'm a cheap bastard and I hate paying for software, but SlickEdit is worth every penny. I can't imagine dealing with a large codebase without it. Yes, I've also tried cscope+vim and ctags, and it's fine, but SlickEdit is faster and easier to deal with.

  4. Smart phone as a universal UI... on Wi-Fi Light Bulbs Shipping Soon · · Score: 1

    I wonder how hard it would be to have bulbs like this subtley modulate their light output to broadcast their address to your smartphone? Your phone could then ID the bulb and give you control over it when your phone is pointing at the light. A scheme like this, implemented with cheap IR beacons, could be applied to other products to allow control without a physical interface. Want to change the thermostat? Point your phone at it and a HTML 5 UI pops up allowing a rich user interface. Someone has to have done this already...

  5. Re:Cry me a river... on NSA Data Center the Focus of Tax Controversy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A *small* private company maybe. I think a company like GOOG or MSFT can make sure the appropriate wheels are greased.

  6. TX indicator? on Ask Slashdot: How To Stay Ahead of Phone Tracking ? · · Score: 1

    I wonder how feasible it would be to come up with a small field-strength indicator that at least lets you know if your phone is transmitting significant amounts of data when you don't expect it to. It's not too hard to construct such a device with older, modulated-carrier type radios, but it might be more difficult with a CDMA or other wide-spectrum device. Also it would be prone to false detection of other nearby cellphone radios. However I think it's your best bet for taming a commercial cell fone.

    Then again it is easily thwarted by an app which stores compressed audio/location data on the fone and bulk uploads it whenever other traffic is occurring.

    Measuring power draw of the battery might tell you if something is running when the phone is 'off'. It won't help you if the spying app is only active under normal operation, however.

    As I'm sure many others have said, you could use pre-paid phones and recycle them every so often. Then again it may be pretty easy to identify you based solely on the people you call with that phone, along with other biometric information(voice indentification, for instance).

    I think we're all going to have to get used to being tracked, scanned, inspected, detected and infected. What we should be doing is establishing a legal framework that offers us clear protections and a method of redress when our rights are violated. I think we're entering this new era blind - most Americans and even government officials can't even comprehend what's coming or what is already here.

    We live in an age when most people don't have a clue why the bill of rights exists as it does, so the chances of success are not good.

  7. Re:How about the US-Canadian/US-Mexico border? on DHS Can Seize Your Electronics Within 100 Mi.of US Border, Says DHS · · Score: 2

    It is within 100 miles of the coast as well.

  8. Ode to reddit... on Linus Torvalds Will Answer Your Questions · · Score: 1

    Would you rather fight one horse-sized duck, or 100 duck-sized horses?

  9. Aging and low-level programming... on Linus Torvalds Will Answer Your Questions · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hi Linus! Thanks for everything!

    How has getting older and raising a family changed the way you look at kernel work and programming in general? Do you see yourself still being involved in the kernel in 20 years? Do you ever just want to take a break for a few years, or do you feel like your time working on the kernel is a rest from the real world?

  10. Re:Big whoop... on Boston Airport Replacing X-ray Body Scanners · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yeah, but some of us have rectums capable of allowing objects to exit as well as enter. So it may be possible that a terrorist has this capability as well, along with, say, a few of his friends, who could then assemble the device outside their anal cavity.

  11. Big whoop... on Boston Airport Replacing X-ray Body Scanners · · Score: 2

    As my upper-middle-class, female, New Yorker friend just found out, the problem with the sanitized images is that forgetting a dime in your pocket will cause it to trigger a general alert and you'll be whisked aside for gate-rape.

    And let's not forget that a butt-bomb, like that used by terrorists in Saudi Arabia in 2009, is still undetectable by gropers and scanners.

  12. Re:News Flash on Study Shows Marijuana Use In Teens Correlates To Decreasing IQ · · Score: 1

    If you fail to understand the difference in both size and scope between the illegal drug trade and trade in untaxed booze and cigarettes, I'm not sure any argument would sway you.

  13. Re:News Flash on Study Shows Marijuana Use In Teens Correlates To Decreasing IQ · · Score: 4, Informative

    A telephone survey? Really?

  14. Re: why does /. still have a subject field? on Thomas Drake: You're Automatically Suspicious Until Proven Otherwise · · Score: 1

    "Domestically, they're pulling together all the data about virtually every U.S. citizen in the country and assembling that information, building communities that you have relationships with, and knowledge about you; what your activities are; what you're doing. "

    So how do you fight that? You need a way to pollute their dataset, like an app that calls random people during each other's free-minutes period.

    Hiding won't help. Not having a facebook page won't help. Pollute their data.

  15. Bullshit. on Study Finds Alcohol, Not Marijuana, Is the Biggest Gateway Drug For Teens · · Score: 1, Informative

    Lack of proper parenting, poor social skills, hopelessness, and bad luck are the real gateway drugs.

    The substances are the symptom in most cases.

    In my own personal experience, MJ was the *last* drug I tried.

  16. Re:Ok... on The 300 km/h Superbus · · Score: 1

    I know, right? Trickle-down never works... which is why my in-laws who live below the poverty line had access to free, advanced medical care and drive a second-hand prius... oh and HDTVs... cell phones... all the food they can eat... yeah.. never works.

  17. Re:Ok... on The 300 km/h Superbus · · Score: 2

    Yeah but that requirement is obviously driven by the presence of human-piloted vehicles on the roadways.

    In 25 years, do you think you'll be able to drive your own car anymore? I doubt it. Autonomous vehicles are coming, and I suspect that in a quarter century we'll be regulating human-operated vehicles off public roads.

  18. Re:Ok... on The 300 km/h Superbus · · Score: 1

    Well polyurethane 'tweels' are in development which should improve the rolling resistance(cuts it 'by half' in one article from 2005).

    The infrastructure, and more importantly land rights, for roads already exist, vs the tremendous cost and hassle of laying new rail lines.

    Buses can adapt to changing transportation needs quickly, unlike rail lines which take years(or decades).

    Natural gas is cheap and plentiful. Is electricity the only option? I don't think so. I'd bet that future battery technology along with the efficiency improvements given by autonomous vehicles will lessen the benefits of rail over self-powered vehicles.

  19. Ok... on The 300 km/h Superbus · · Score: 2

    Ok, so it's not really designed for mass public transportation, but it looks like it shows some concepts which could be easily applied to mass-transit, long-distance buses.

    Does anyone else think that self-driving, high-speed buses like that would eliminate the need for high-speed rail? With billions about to be spent on technology from the 1800's, it seems like there are other options which are much better suited to fulfilling America's transportation needs.

  20. Re:We don't need to "kill" anything on Asus Joins High Density Display Club With New Transformer Tablet · · Score: 1

    As high as I can get. I regularly read stuff close to my face and I like not seeing pixelization. I mentioned retina displays because I figure that, sooner or later, those displays are going to end up in other products. It won't be called a Retina Display... who gives a shit?

  21. Re:We don't need to "kill" anything on Asus Joins High Density Display Club With New Transformer Tablet · · Score: 1

    As soon as someone comes out with a tablet that runs android and has a >7" retina screen I'm buying one. Why? PDFs. I read a fair amount of datasheets and it would be nice to have a second display I can carry with me for that. Why not e-ink? Too slow. It's too hard to zip from one section to another or to skim the material.

    Second excuse - my wrists hurt, and it would be nice to browse reddit on something other than a PC/laptop.

  22. Re:Axis of Awsome already figured out the formula. on Chords To 1300 Songs Analyzed Statistically For Patterns · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, this whole thing sounds like something a computer programmer came up with after learning 2 hours of music theory. If he would have spent a few more hours on music theory he would have realized how obvious his conclusions were.

    I'd be more interested in hearing why those chord changes are popular - i.e. an explanation of their psychological effect.

  23. Re:How cold do you think it needs to be ? on Astronomers See the Glow of a Boiling Planet · · Score: 2

    Norfair?

  24. Re:AppleScript on Ask Slashdot: What's a Good Tool To Detect Corrupted Files? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Here's what I did when I realized my mp3 collection on my Mac was slowly dying:

    find -print -exec cat {} > /dev/null

    it takes a while, but for files with ioerrors you'll see a warning printed after the file name. Put the output in a file and you can use grep(the 'B' option comes to mind) to get a list of the bad files.

    The sad thing is that Time Machine didn't seem to notice that the files were bad, so now the files are gone forever. Disk Utility didn't help.

    Shouldn't there be a way to find bad blocks on OS X? I looked around and all I could find were commercial products.

  25. Or, you know, Putin is doing Obama a solid by making blustery threats so Obama can appear tough by standing firm in the face of Russian aggression.

    Based on Obama's accidentally overheard comment, I suspect we won't be duking it out with the Russians anytime soon.