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User: v1z

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  1. Re:Anonymity makes sense for special cases. on Pseudonyms Now Allowed On Google+ · · Score: 1

    I whish I had modpoints, so I could mod you +1 ironic, mr Snufu.

  2. Re:Not GPL, and suitable for JIT on FreeBSD Throws the Clang/LLVM Switch: Future Releases Use LLVM · · Score: 1

    While a developer can be a user, not all users are developers. Availability of the code means squat to someone who does not know how to write code.

    That's ridiculous. If you have the code, you can *hire* someone to fix the thing, ten years after the original supplier went bankrupt or whatever.

    I need the plans for my house, even if I'm not licensed to fix the bathroom -- I need them in case I hire someone to do improvements here.

    Most every place I've been paid to work with software, the ones with budgetary responsibility have *not* been able to code themselves out of a wet paper bag. They've been readily able to get something fixed, if the source is available -- if needed by hiring someone to do it.

  3. Machine readable serial numbers? on QR Codes As Anti-Forgery On Currency Could Infect Banks · · Score: 1

    I don't see how this is going to be a big change wrt the current system. You already have to pick a serial number that will either be invalid or a duplicate when forging a bill. Nothing stops a forger from doing the same with a qr-code.

    I'm pretty sure banks are already able to machine read sequence numbers -- and embedded metal thread are presumably harder to fake -- I don't see how qr codes would be a big improvement.

  4. Re:Just buy insurance...it's honestly that simple. on Ask Slashdot: IT Contractors, How's Your Health Insurance? · · Score: 1

    > My wife doesn't have insurance (pre-existing condition, minor but enough to get her disqualified).

    Wow, and I almost thought, hm, 300/month for a family, that's not that bad. Of course when that only covers the people in the family that *doesn't need medical help* -- it *is* pretty bad.

    As for the original question: I live in Norway. The only thing we have to pay for (after turning 18) is dental and opticians (ie: glasses/contacts).

    We do of course pay taxes, but depending on who you ask, not much more than elsewhere. I know one engineer in offshore that has a UK citizenship, and (via agreements between UK and Norway) has to pay extra tax to the UK because taxes he pays to Norway doesn't cover what he should pay according to UK law.

    Granted, I'm guessing he makes well over 100k USD/year.

  5. Still not charged with a crime... on Julian Assange Served With Extradition Notice By British Police · · Score: 1

    As far as I've been able to gather from Swedish media, Assange still isn't considered a suspect of any crime, nor has he been charged with a crime.

    He is still just wanted for questioning, and Swedish police have refused an earlier offer to take a statement in Britain -- for no good reason as far as I can tell.

    Additionally, there doesn't seem to be any law requiring (or even allowing) extradition for something as trivial as "we'd like to ask you some questions" -- neither in UK law, or in Swedish law.

    I've yet to find any recent articles that actually explore this -- it's all about the accusations, and about the extradition -- but nothing about the legal basis for the extradition order.

  6. Google cache link... on Bev Harris of Black Box Voting Releases Accenture's Voting Software · · Score: 1
  7. before you start, consider on Ask Slashdot: Transitioning From Developer To Executive? · · Score: 1
  8. Re:Hello on Palantir, the War On Terror's Secret Weapon · · Score: 1

    Here's the problem with all these liberty-vs-security debates. Before we get into the argument about just how much personal liberty we're willing to give up for security, let's first establish that the proposed measures would actually make us safer. Does any of this security theatre actually work? If torture isn't an effective interrogation technique- and all of the available evidence strongly suggests that it is not- we don't need to have a debate about whether it's moral to torture someone to save lives. If torture doesn't work, then the left, right, and centre should all be able to agree that we shouldn't torture.

    It's about counter insurgency, not counter intelligence.

    Breaking hearts and shattering minds.

    We take your dad/husband/friend/son away in the middle of the night, ship him half across the world, torture him for 4 years for no reason then drop him right back, and pretend it didn' t happen. Why? So you know we're really fucking scary people and you shouldn't try do topple our puppet regime in the name of "democracy" or some other counter-consumerist nonsense.

    It's a really old doctrine, formed mostly by the British in India/Afghanistan in the good old days, refined by the SAS and CIA for Latin-America: http://www.soaw.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=98

    If you want reliable intelligence, torture doesn't work. Isolation and sleep deprivation and repetitive questioning does.

  9. Re:Libraries at their core.... on Are Maker Spaces the Future of Public Libraries? · · Score: 1

    Well, if they've already got a Nebula or Hugo nomination (or award) they generally make it to my reading list eventually. Of those you mentioned, I was only really aware of Mieville (which appears to be the youngest, incidentally?). And Stephenson, obviously.

    I suppose it comes down to taste, but holding up Neal Stephenson of an example of someone that's not an "overrated old guy" strikes me as odd. Granted "the Diamond Age" is great, and "Snowcrash" is great fun -- but after he got so famous editors didn't dare cut back on length (It what it *looks* like happened, more likely he's a voluntary victim of modern publishings idea that many words must be better than the needed amount of words) the novels go kind of down hill.

    I recently re-read the foundation trilogy and was pleasantly surprised at how well the characters had stuck with me over the years -- but I suppose some will feel his style is too simple.

    On a side note, the sci-fi book I generally recommend people to read first is "the Stars My Destination" -- but I must admit part of what makes it stand out to me is how early it was written.

    For any *actual* library 54 books is a little light to represent sci-fi as a genre -- and I'd hope they both fit in Lem, Strugatsky (btw, see http://rusf.ru/abs/english/ for free downloads) Bradbury, Gibson, Sterling, LeGuin, Kress, Vinge as well as newer authors... but I'm hard pressed to list anyone a generation younger than Sterling off the top of my head.

  10. Re:Libraries at their core.... on Are Maker Spaces the Future of Public Libraries? · · Score: 1

    Well, I'd still like to see your list of 54 great young sci-fi authors.

  11. Re:Libraries at their core.... on Are Maker Spaces the Future of Public Libraries? · · Score: 1

    Really? "A great sci-fi collection" ? "Overrated guys" ? I don't think I know of any "great" young sci-fi authors. Elizabeth Moon has at least one good book (speed of dark), I don't think she's got anything I'd call "great sci-fi". Ursulua LeGuin has a lot of *great* stuff, but she's also "old" (and overrated? I hardly think so). There's Samuel DeLaney, black and gay -- but also old. So, which young female author has written something as new, important and good as "Foundation" ? I'd really like to know, great books are really hard to find while their authors are still young - as they haven't been reviewed and recommended as much as older books.

  12. Or a lot more than... on The Weight of an e-Book · · Score: 1

    say - the weight of a single fingerprint? No need to read TFA - the idea that the weight of the reader would predictably change based on the difference beteween a random pattern of bits compared to the almost-random pattern of a compressed binary file... come on!

  13. Missing reference: Blue Thunder on Domestic Use of Aerial Drones By Law Enforcement · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seriously, no ones mentioned Blue Thunder in this thread yet?

    Ok, so it wasn't unmanned, but definitely relevant...

    The imdb summary http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085255/ even states:

        "The cop test pilot for an experimental police helicopter learns the sinister implications of the new vehicle."

    1983 wants its privacy concerns back.

  14. Re:Why does linux get this? on Adobe Releases New 64-Bit Flash Plugin For Linux · · Score: 1

    It is indeed, trying to be humble. I assume you made an error -- but it works better that way.

  15. Version control, wiki on What 'IT' Stuff Should We Teach Ninth-Graders? · · Score: 1

    Well, of things that is essential, rather easy, and probably overlooked -- I'd suggest:

      * VCS eg mercurial/git
      * Learning to use a wiki (MoinMoin/Mediawiki)
      * LaTeX (I would suggest Abiword rather than OO -- because OO is an awful, stale reimplementation of MS Word (which, ofcourse isn't original in itself)

    Some info on typesetting, and either with LaTeX or html+css learning to use an editor to write text, and a proper tool to layout text -- either with markup, or using a proper dtp-program. Teach them the difference between structuring text, and displaying text. The old idea that you can format text once -- is outdated and wrong. Today at least three layouts are needed: small screen hypertext, big screen hypertext, print.

    But the single most important concept to teach, would be using version control systems. The second most important thing would be teaching them to cooperate meaningfully -- and for that a versioned wiki might make a good starting point. Or simply use VCS for that as well.

  16. Non-issue - simply decide if you *want* to filter. on Schools, Filtering Companies Blocking Google SSL · · Score: 1

    This is a non-issue, mostly.

    If you want to filter traffic, and maintain any level of control, first block all internet traffic from computers. Then set up filtering proxys on the application level, for the protocols you want to grant access to. Yes, that means that when a 10 year old hacks your squid-guard machine, she'll be able to steal teachers credit card numbers. But then 8 year olds already had them, because they'd installed hardware keyloggers on a few select pcs...

    The fact that it's possible to block/manipulate plaintext protocols is just a bug -- not a feature. Just look at all the sites that still use plain http for login.

    You'd still need to monitor for unauthorized wireless lans, student cellphones etc. Most schools I know of don't allow students to use cellphones in class, I see no reason why SSL-traffic shouldn't be limited/filtered in order to provide fewer distractions during class.

    Have the firewalls open up all traffic during breaks/lunch hour and/or the application proxies enable xmmp during those times -- or have a simple front end for each vlan/subnet (ie: classrom) where the teacher can select between no-filtering/blacklists+content filter/whitelists.

    For good arguments about *why* a school might want to filter/restrict traffic see: http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1693516&cid=32649110

  17. Re:Powershell on For Automated Testing, Better Alternatives To DOS Batch Files? · · Score: 1

    No, the modern way of doing scripting in Windows is install Bash, Perl or Python. Powershell is to modern as cat is to dog.

    Umm, no. Powershell is to modern as more is to less?

  18. Re:Open Source on Trojan Kill Switches In Military Technology · · Score: 1

    Well, you could start with a "hello world!" operating system:

        http://www.vpri.org/fonc_wiki/index.php/XO_Hacking

    Seriously, it's a lot easier to build a bomb that can kill a few thousand civilians (air burst fuel-air explosives anyone?), than a rocket that can take out a stealth UAV before it's able to take you out.

    On the other hand, if the "bad guys" had access to real weapons, maybe they'd kill some politicians, generals and CEOs rather than infantry and civilians (on "both" sides) ...

  19. This could actually be the new wave client... on Mozilla Messaging Unveils Raindrop · · Score: 1

    Now, this looks very interesting. It's got nothing do to with wave -- except -- it might be nice to implement wave support for Raindrop ? Before looking at the raindrop source, it's hard to tell -- but from the videos it appears Raindrop handles i/o along several protocol streams, along with a seperate ui.

    Stands to reason it should be feasable to implement a wave-backend -- the question then would be if the best way to handle that was encourage widespread wave-server-federation (every couchdb/raindrop-instance it's very own wave server) -- or connect the raindrop-backend to standalone wave-server(s) (more like how email is presumably handled by raindrop).

  20. Re:Cautiously Optimistic on Google Wave Backstage · · Score: 1

    http://code.google.com/p/wave-protocol/wiki/Installation ?

    I like the idea of wave to a certain extent -- but I'm sceptical about the architecture. For IM/collaobration sure -- but as a *replacement* for email/news ? Email is pretty much bulletproof, with failover, handling of temporarily downed servers etc straight out of the box.

    Wave (as a protocol) seems far less scalable.

  21. Re:Absolutely on AU Government To Build "Unhackable" Netbooks · · Score: 1

    (Also, there are attacks against Bitlocker in TPM-only mode which include reading the RAM of the machine - they're even more difficult to do, and wouldn't be something a 12 year old could pull of)

    Hm, don't be so sure. At least the exploit vector that leaped out at me was booting the machine, pulling
    the sims, cooling them off with some dry ice, while reading them in another machine... not sure if anyone tried that for attacking bitlocker -- but it sounds like a great science project to try to find
    the encryption keys for the hd.

    Failing that, are these systems vulnerable to attack via firewire?

  22. Re:You're asking the wrong question on Open Source Textbook For Computer Literacy? · · Score: 1

    Physical books don't have source code

    Ofcourse they do. It's a lot easier to work with the (in almost all cases) original electronic text than the printed form. It's why word processors are so popular. Personally I'd prefer Vim and (La)TeX -- but the fact remains that most written works from the 90s onwards has something that could very well be described as source text (I agree, it's not really code, not even if it's in plan TeX).

    I haven't seen a book published under any kind of open license available in print.

    How about: http://diveintopython.org/ ? And depending on your definition of "available in print": http://www.lulu.com/browse/search.php?fKeywords=gnu (along with pretty much any book available in ps/pdf/tex that you can print for yourself at lulu, licence permitting...).

    Also found this which is available as a gratis download, and might be of help to the original poster:

    http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/intro-to-computers/2230846

  23. Forth? on Getting a Classic PC Working After 25 Years? · · Score: 1

    I'm sure you could find a version of http://www.forth.org/ to work on this machine. I recently (re)discovered this nice little language/environment and one of my summer projects is to learn more... Forth traditionally lives on a floppy, merging code and data in a way similar to Smalltalk images.

    It's an efficient language, and pretty fast -- sometimes faster than C. It's essentially a "different" way to write structured assembly from what C is...

    You might even be able to port openfirmware to you platform, and, with a bit of work, run forth directly from BIOS!

    As others have suggested, being able to load code from the serial or parallel port might be the way to go... or you might be able to get an old harddrive to work?

    See also: http://www.classiccmp.org/dunfield/img/index.htm

    Good luck!

  24. Re:Just like a closed company... on Toward the Open Company · · Score: 2, Informative

    Erm, from tfa:

    "3rd step: Compensating Participants

    All income in the company (minus operating expenses), will be passed through the trust metric and distributed to participants."

    So, no ... not "without the paycheck". Without the job security, the pension plan, the medical coverage -- true. But in theory if operating costs are low enough the average worker should be able to make more than in any other reward-model.

    Making the (not insignificant) assumption that the company is actually profitable.

  25. Re:hibernate instead of shutting down... on Fastbooting Linux For Dummies? · · Score: 1

    I recently installed Debian on an old Laptop for a friend. The machine has 64Mb of ram and a 600Mhz cpu. It boots in about a minute to the Enlightenment Desktop I set up as autologin via GDM.

    That was with parallell boot and a few trick -- but I don't think that made much difference.

    However, restoring from hibernate-disk (ie from power completely off) was insanely fast, maybe as much as 10 seconds to destkop -- and ofcourse if you leave the browser up, then you're truly ready to go.

    Due to the low ram, I installed epiphany rather than firefox.

    Btw, this is also with encrypted disk, and the time to enter the password is factored in.

    I see little reason to run ubuntu rather than Debian -- but then I've been running Debian since potato a while back. I've been using Ubuntu since the first LTS release -- and I'm sorry to say I personally find Debian's Stable/Testing/Unstable-trinity much better than the rushed feeling, and short support for Ubuntu releases.

    Debian ofcourse benefits from Ubuntu's resources and testing -- so I'm glad it exists -- I just prefer Debian. Debian also seems to scale down much better than Ubuntu.

    I now run the 64bit version of Debian/Lenny on my desktop with 2cores and 8Gb of ram -- the same version that worked flawlessly on the ageing laptop (but in 32bit for obvious reasons).

    The laptop had a whopping 6GB of disk, btw, less than my worstation's RAM...