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User: dgriff

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Comments · 83

  1. Re:Could you gush a little more? on Slashdot Asks: What Are Your Favorite Java 8 Features? (infoworld.com) · · Score: 1

    What do people use as an alternative to Slashdot to get their tech news then? (Or should I say news plus comments because the comments plus the ability to filter them based on rating is the most interesting thing).

  2. Re:OK, I'll bite on How Can NASA's Road To Mars Be Made More Affordable? · · Score: 1

    Slightly undermined by the fact that you're offering an emotional rather than rational justification!

  3. Re:Define "Crappy" on Ask Slashdot: When and How Did Europe Leapfrog the US For Internet Access? · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but to my mind any definition of "crappy" must include the freedom to access any website, which many other first world nations (like the UK) do not enjoy.

    Please post a link to a (non-child-porn) website that we in the UK can't access.

  4. Re:One every 8.5 days, actually on Toyota and Tesla May Work Together Again · · Score: 1

    Fair enough, I've just started reading Slashdot again and skimming recent stories they seem to keep popping up. And this is the only place I ever see them.

  5. Tesla stories on Slashdot on Toyota and Tesla May Work Together Again · · Score: 1

    How come there are Tesla stories nearly every day on Slashdot?

  6. Re:Definitely good, but there are two sides on EU Court of Justice Paves Way For "Right To Be Forgotten" Online · · Score: 1

    Wow, don't read slashdot much these days and came here looking for some sanity but only see three comments rated 5 of which yours is one. Maybe because it's a European story. But anyway, I think you are being incredibly naive about this. What is a newspaper but a repository of stories about other people. This gives those people the ability to make such stories disappear. This is a law that the rich and powerful are going to love. Remember when the Tory party removed all David Cameron's old speeches from their website because (presumably) it might get embarrassing having their promises quoted back at them? Well you ain't seen nothing yet. This kind of thing makes China look liberal. Madness.

  7. Roy Trubshaw on Gaming Roots: MUD and the Birth of MMOs · · Score: 1

    Not much about Roy Trubshaw the original inventor of MUD but then again I used to work with Roy and had no idea he'd done such a thing in his student days. Lovely guy but not exactly a self publicist!

    ADVENT was a great game, am pondering porting David Platt's A-Code to our rules engine...

  8. Re:Warning ! on Raspberry Pi $25 Linux Computer Now In Production (Video) · · Score: 2

    And if you keep reading that thread you will find a post from the real Andrew Lamb which is so utterly different in tone that it is clear that the AC post is a troll by some sad bastard.

  9. Hurrah! on Eclipse Launches New Programming Language · · Score: 1

    Hurrah - it's been weeks since the last new programming language!

  10. Skipping rope on The Physics of Jump Rope · · Score: 1

    Love the way Americans call it a jump rope so as not to sound too girly :)

  11. Java on z/OS already has segmented stacks on Neal Gafter On Java Under Oracle · · Score: 1

    Segmented stacks is an implementation issue. Java on z/OS has had segmented stacks from the very beginning because it runs on LE (the z/OS Unix layer) and that's what LE does. You still have a problem with thousands of threads though because you have to choose an initial stack segment size. Too big and you still consume loads of memory, too small and there is an overhead associated with crossing the segment boundary (e.g. page fault).

  12. Re:The judge is an idiot on UK Men Get 4 Years For Trying to Incite Riots Via Facebook · · Score: 1

    First of all, research has shown again and again that harsh penalties simply do not work as a deterrent to other offenders.

    Citation please and without it, why has this been modded up to 5? The sentence has created huge publicity here in the UK and that if nothing else should make the looter cretins think twice before posting similar incitements to riot.

    And yes, it's quite possible that another riot is around the corner. NOBODY expected what happened last Monday and who's to say it won't happen again.

  13. Re:Timeless BS on The Post-Idea World · · Score: 1

    Likewise this is typical smart-ass Slashdot BS along the usual lines of "nothing to see here, move along please". By not even bothering to read or think about the article (no time, so many feeds to keep up with!) you're kind of making his point for him.

  14. Why not have the matching engine on the front-end? on How Linux Mastered Wall Street · · Score: 1

    Don't quite understand this. The implication is that the time spent processing the message in the TCP/IP stack (and not the network latency itself) is a significant percentage of the overall transaction time. Which seems unlikely. Also they have (say) 1000 front-ends connecting to 100 matching engines. So why not simply add extra cores to the front-ends and do the matching there? Just cut out the network latency altogether. I know they say the traders can't connect directly to the matching engines but that's just semantics - there's no difference between having the separation physically and within the same machine.

  15. Re:Choice is good on Is Google+ a Cathedral Or a Bazaar? · · Score: 1

    Linkedin is the only other "social media" account I have and I will never have a Facebook account and shunned MySpace when it was introduced. For me, the lack of any social decency that stems from anonymity is simply not worth it.

    Unless you have some very strange friends you should give Facebook a try. Everyone I know (and as far as I can tell everyone that they know) uses their own real name.

  16. Re:Is there any hope? on Debt Deal Reached · · Score: 1

    The perfect storm is coming, Wall Street CEOs have been dumping their own stock holdings at unheard of ratios, they know what is going to be happening.

    Citation please. When I tried googling for evidence it appears to be a recurring story over the past few years.

  17. Re:That's not Facebook's problem on Facebook Trapped In MySQL a 'Fate Worse Than Death' · · Score: 1

    Internally, the user-facing side of Facebook is in PHP. But the front end machines don't talk directly to the databases. They use an RPC system to talk to other machines that do the "business logic" parts of the system. Building a Facebook reply page may involve a hundred machines. There's heavy caching all over the system, of course, so the databases aren't hit for most read requests.

    The RPC system isn't HTML, JSON, or SOAP. It's a binary system that doesn't require text parsing. Otherwise, RPC would be the bottleneck.

    Um, if a single reply page involves a hundred machines, I don't think the RPC mechanism is the root cause of their problem.

  18. Similar article in Mail on Sunday yesterday on Old Media Says Google Will Destroy Film & Music · · Score: 1

    There was a similar article yesterday.

  19. Re:In the news: Angular momentum conserved! on Japan Earthquake May Have Shifted Earth's Axis · · Score: 1

    Changes in major air currents year over year (things like El Nino, for instance) can change the length of the day by close to a millisecond: hundreds of times more than this little earthquake.

    Or when a couple of little buildings get knocked over by planes.

  20. Re:problem on Ski Lifts Can Could Help Get Cargo Traffic Off the Road · · Score: 1

    If not, you need to *first* load it on one mode of transport (typically some kind of car) -then- drive to the nearest "station" where the goods are repackaged, then near the destination, repeat.

    This is pretty much what happens with the postal service. Large lorries are used for the large distances, depot to depot, and small vans take the parcels from depot to final destination. All we are suggesting is replacing the depot to depot part.

  21. Use underground pipes on Ski Lifts Can Could Help Get Cargo Traffic Off the Road · · Score: 1

    I've often wondered why we don't create a national infrastructure of underground pipes for the transportation of the reasonably small stuff that constitutes the majority of cargo. No wind resistance, no eyesore. Googled and found this brochure for it!

  22. Re:Importance, prioritising on How Do You Store Your Personal Photos? · · Score: 1

    When I think to my childhood I actually remember large parts of it, especially extremely good or bad events. This is independent of whether pictures exist from that event. Where pictures exist, they tend to colour my memory, and in many cases change it (events which I KNOW weren't fully positive, but the single picture from the event shows something enjoyable happening and everyone smiling). Pictures LIE, and they change how you remember. Taking them also changes how you experience life. Live a little.

    Yeah man. My Mum died recently, my Dad died a long time ago. I have hardly any photos of us as a family when I was a kid. No video at all. And my memory has always been poor. I would love to see more old photos of when we were kids.

  23. Small living rooms on Microsoft CEO Says Kinect To Support PCs Eventually · · Score: 1

    Never mind PCs, how about adding some support for small living rooms? Here in the UK a lot of us just don't have the space required, something I wish I'd researched before buying it.

  24. Apple on How Do You Prove Software Testing Saves Money? · · Score: 1

    Hey, even Apple don't bother testing their iPhone alarm software so good luck convincing your owner!

  25. Cause and effect on Can Movies Inspire Kids To Be Future Scientists? · · Score: 1

    Kids have the science gene first, that causes the emotional response to such films. Science is about thinking about how stuff works, it doesn't need any external catalysts to kick it off. (Preaching to the converted here I know bit hey).

    Mind you, hoping the cricket highlights tomorrow morning will inspire my little boy :)