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  1. Re:Skype on Linux on Skype Is Working To Defeat the Reverse Engineering · · Score: 0

    I agree. I've been using Skype on Linux for about 5 years now and as the client features for Windows and Mac continue to get better and better, the client for Linux has been completely stagnant. Skype 5.3 for Windows and Linux is still stuck at 2.2 (Beta). Awesome guys, thanks for the support. I guess the Linux community has finally become tired of cripple-ware and have decided to take matters into their own hands. Good on them.

  2. Re:Let's position that a bit differently. on Facebook May Make Tiny Town a Data Center Mecca · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I live in Oregon, too and I find the law very obnoxious. The gas stations (particularly in the Willamette Valley and along the Interstates) don't adequately staff their stations. So when you're in a hurry, rather than pulling up, pumping your gas, and leaving, you have to wait around for some 16 year-old to run around to the 10 other cars that he has to service before getting to you. It's a waste of time for customers, and a waste of money for the business.

  3. Re:So tell me on PayPal Co-Founder Gives Out $100,000 To Not Go To College · · Score: 0

    I agree with you that it's entirely possible for some people to study some fields from textbooks and without much instruction. But the reason that those textbooks exist is because there is institutional backing for professors, giving them the time and resources to be able to pursue research and write the textbooks.

  4. Re:Trees on Global Deforestation Demoed In Google Earth · · Score: 0

    I don't know whether your numbers are correct. However, even assuming that they are, turns out that the "number of trees" is a terribly poor metric for describing the value of the ecosystem services provided by a forest or a landscape. Larges trees are more valuable than small trees. Dead trees, snags and fallen logs remaining in the forest (which rarely exist in post-logging landscapes) are often structurally more important to the forest than half of the living trees remaining there.

    Just saying...

  5. Re:What always astounds me about govt corruption on $2,000 Bribe Bought Password To DC P.O. System · · Score: 0

    As a resident in DC and an employee of the federal government, the type of government corruption demonstrated by this incident is not surprising at all. DC has a higher mean per capital income than any of the fifty states, and yet the infrastructure of DC--public transportation, roads, _city_ facilities (not counting federal facilities), library system, bike trails, etc, etc.--are pathetically meager. Three years of living here and I'm wondering where the heck my tax dollars are going?

  6. Volunarily running multi webservers can be useful on First Botnet of Linux Web Servers Discovered · · Score: 0

    they've also been hacked to run a second webserver known as nginx

    That's actually how my webserver is set up... serve the static content with nginx (fast and lightweight!) and serve the more complicated dynamic content with apache only when necessary. Silly me though, I left out the malware.

    Sinegubko speculates they belong to careless administrators who allowed their root passwords to be sniffed.

    Wow, who uses their root password over unencrypted FTP?! Seriously, who does that?

  7. Re:Theora on Working With Ogg Theora and the Video Tag · · Score: 0

    but Joe user really doesn't care if a codec is free or not

    Likewise, Joe/Jane user doesn't care if his/her car emits sulfur dioxide, whether the fish that s/he caught was from a sustainable population, or whether the loan that his bank awarded was properly secured. Fortunately, there are people with vision and understanding who take it upon themselves to address the larger issues and create a broader structure to support those issues (through either legislation, rigid social mores, public humiliation, whatever).

    I respectfully feel that it is a red herring to speak about whether "Joe user" cares about something. Joe users adopts applications not technologies. While Joe users does't care about the codecs, Joe user also doesn't care about HTML, HTTP, or TCP, all of which he is still using to access his video entertainment on YouTube.

    What the Theora folks seem to be doing is making sure that all of the technical problems are adequately solved first, and then they can really begin addressing openness at a higher level (i.e. making sure that it is supported by the major online video sites, major web browsers, etc.).

    The technical problems are often far easier to solve than the the social ones. And if you try and do it in the wrong order, then you're not going to get very far. I wish them the best of as well!

  8. Re:Apple Just Admitted To It - Now You Look Foolis on Why AT&T Killed iPhone Google Voice · · Score: 0

    Aw, cut me some slack. I'm on a shitty VSAT connection in the middle of the ocean that keeps dropping my connection whenever the ship turns to a certain azimuth. I didn't think that it posted the first time, and obviously one can't delete even one's own comments.

  9. There they go... on China Jails Four For Microsoft XP Piracy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ... exporting poisonous toys again.

  10. Re:Apple Just Admitted To It - Now You Look Foolis on Why AT&T Killed iPhone Google Voice · · Score: 1

    Additionally, AT&T has (unsurprisingly) claimed that they had no role in the blocking. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aqdGSASBXcgc

  11. Re:Apple Just Admitted To It - Now You Look Foolis on Why AT&T Killed iPhone Google Voice · · Score: 1

    Additionally, AT&T claims that they played no role (big surprise). http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aqdGSASBXcgc

  12. Science is cool! on New Species of Worms Found To Release "Bombs" · · Score: 1

    As a scientist currently working on a NOAA research ship, my first reaction to this article was essentially: wow that is neat, we find so much cool stuff when we actually look for it! Our ship uses high resolution bathymetric SONAR, and we make discoveries every day on the sea floor that no one ever knew existed. And we regularly find things that help to explain other phenomena of the oceans, bays, and estuaries. The sad part is that science (speaking from an American perspective here) is relatively poorly funded or even understood by the vast majority of American citizens. I hope that in the near future, institutes like Scripps and agencies like NOAA will received better funding so that we can continue making great discoveries like these worms and show people that science is cool! There is lots and lots of exploring to do in the ocean.

  13. Re:why would you ... on The Decline of the Landline · · Score: 1

    I can't believe I'm the only person who finds this to be so.

    You're not the only one. I whole-heartedly agree with you (for that reason and all of the others mentioned above... quality, etc.).

  14. Good timing on A Hypothesis On Segway Hate · · Score: 1

    This is funny timing... just yesterday I told a group of segway wielding people touring the US Capitol building that they looked like toolbags. And their only response was a set of very smug smiles.

  15. Re:Nice on Licensing Dispute Threatens Future of Skype · · Score: 1

    Not only is Linux Skype buggy as hell, but they have not bothered to release the updated versions of the software since the 2.0.0.x release (Windows is on 4.1.x). There are still a wide range of features that which Skype claims, but are completely unavailable to Linux users.

  16. Re:ban the man on P2P Network Exposes Obama's Safehouse Location · · Score: 1

    I work for Department of Commerce and P2P applications are already banned by policy within our department. While agree with the above post in that I would never think of using bittorrent to download music/movies/TV shows while at work (duh, I work while at work), there are a number of legitimate business purposes for using P2P. For example: downloading the most recent Ubuntu distro. I can get it a lot faster using bittorrent than over http, especially with as much downstream bandwidth that we have here at the office.

    The government is terrible for banning things in the name of "security" without really understanding them; and I guarantee you that most of the people in my office---including the IT staff---don't understand the basics of P2P and bittorrent.

  17. Re:This just in.. on As Christmas Bonus, Google Hands Out "Dogfood" · · Score: 1

    other companies that I have worked for have given out the following

    I work for the federal government so we get no bonuses and our holiday party is a lame lunch potluck in the middle of the work day (with a bunch of scientists who can't cook).

  18. Re:I'm amazed on Ted Stevens Loses Senate Re-Election Bid · · Score: 1

    Actually, Stevens became a Senator in 1968, whereas Alaska became a state in 1958.

    That's true that he didn't become a Senator (by appointment) until '68. However, Stevens was one of the most influential figures in carrying Alaska to statehood. When he started working for the US Department of the Interior in '56, his primary responsibility was Alaska statehood.

    And you can't have Senators that have any weight until you're a state (just ask DC, who has nearly as many residents as the state of Alaska, but is only granted a "shadow senator").