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User: higuita

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  1. Re:Slow news day? on A Few Improvements for Firefox's Android UI · · Score: 1

    Just because you don't use it, doesn't mean no one use it.
    Firefox is a good browser, have features that other android browser don't have (or are in two or more different browsers), comes from a trusted company (security and privacy point of view).

    Not all people uses the same phones, mini-tablets, tablets... each type of device and usage makes one app better than others.

    finally, competition is good, we all win with it!

  2. Re:If SSd is nearly full? on Taking a Hard Look At SSD Write Endurance · · Score: 1

    Enterprise SSD usually do that, you buy a 512GB SSD that have inside the double of that

    Cheap consumer SSD, all that people care is the price and how many GB, even if it is worst quality or even just trash.

    what would you buy, a SSD disk with 256GB for +-100 €/$/£ or a 512GB for the same price?!

  3. Re:If SSd is nearly full? on Taking a Hard Look At SSD Write Endurance · · Score: 4, Interesting

    SSD should work at maximum of 75% of their capacity... 50% or less is recommended

    some chips try to move blocks to rotate the writes, have a lot of spare zones, so it can remap/use other sectors on write... but that is a problem, working in a full SSD will shorten its live

  4. Re:Will this run from a Ubuntu on a USB stick on Valve Officially Launches Steam For Linux · · Score: 1

    Its possible, but remember that the read and specially the write speed on USB sticks isnt usually very high (dont know about USB3 pens) and have the write limit (as a SSD). So remember to backup your configs/saved games so you can recover then later if the pen brakes down.

  5. Re:Hey AMD Nice Job on AMD Publishes Open-Source Radeon HD 8000 Series Driver · · Score: 2

    The problem here isnt the old card, its the shared memory design of that card.

    All graphic cards with shared memory suck and gave problems. they are cheaper, but they are a mess. ATI ones never got any love, even from their engineering, so that shared memory graphic cards are just plain hacks to reduce cost.

    ATI shared memory cards always gave several problems in all OS, had a bad performance and had unresolved bugs. No ones want to try to solve the problems of a obsolete and troublesome card. So instead of running buggy accelerated drivers (that can crash your machine), its better to use vesa, unaccelerated but stable drivers. the performance difference between the two isn't that great either.

    If you want to use accelerated drivers on share memory graphic cards, try to fix it your self, or finding someone who might want to work on it.

  6. Re:Hey AMD Nice Job on AMD Publishes Open-Source Radeon HD 8000 Series Driver · · Score: 1

    a stupid question... is the problem with the fglrx or wine? does the game run well on wine with a nvidia card (on the same distro+cpu). have you tried to contact wine with the problem, if its really just a fglrx, its might be a bug in wine, calling a nvidia only extension.

    Also, what is talked here is the open source drivers (radeon), not the close source ones (fglrx), so dont mix the two.

  7. So steam is right... on Microsoft Phases Out XNA and DirectX? · · Score: 1

    windows/xbox gaming is going to a dead end monopoly, controlled by Microsoft.

    they are probably releasing new (expensive) tools, full of MS controls and checks (DRM) with their apps store, so all new games must use their store... and paying MS more and more.

    As a side "feature", it will probably also break the wine compatibility for new games during the next several months/few years

  8. Re:Need for speed! on Mozilla To Enable Click-To-Play For All Firefox Plugins By Default · · Score: 1

    If you want control check noscript + requestpolicy.
    You have total control what you load on the browser.

  9. Re:Need for speed! on Mozilla To Enable Click-To-Play For All Firefox Plugins By Default · · Score: 1

    If the GC didnt work, then you have some extension eating the memory, not FF.

    Start FF in safe-mode and test it... better yet, in a clean profile

  10. Re:WinSwitch on Ask Slashdot: Open Source Remote Application Access? · · Score: 1

    Agree, winswitch/xpra is a good solution and now with a new active development.
    x2go is also a very good option, its the freeNX with better support apps and before the nomachine closed freenx4

  11. Re:Bad trade on Silicon Nanoparticles Could Lead To On-Demand Hydrogen Generation · · Score: 2

    you don't understand that H2 is very hard to contain, its the smallest of the gases and if it escapes, together with Oxygen produces a very explosive/inflammable mixture.

    you need very well constructed (and heavy) containers and very good transfer methods (fool proof).
    Also, hydrogen is also corrosive and suffer from migration on metals and other crystalline structures (check wikipedia for more info.)

    Compared with the propane gas, its a lot harder to work with and, specially, long term maintenance.

    Water, you just need some "bucket" or simple container and that's it, no safety problems (other of people trying to drink it maybe!).
    Rust is only a problem with some materials and have currently many easy solutions (other material, coatings, alloys). Unless you are using sea water, its not different from your water supply at home. Even it there is a leak, there is usually no big problem.

  12. Re:Come on, Alan ;( on Alan Cox: Fedora 18 "The Worst Red Hat Distro," Switches To Ubuntu · · Score: 1

    Yes!

  13. Re:Interesting post from Red Hat employee at Phoro on Alan Cox: Fedora 18 "The Worst Red Hat Distro," Switches To Ubuntu · · Score: 1

    Agree, some distros just want to release (to keep release schedule, to keep cools names, to look updated, to show up in news, etc) and yet keep releasing known broken software. They are destroying the trust users have on those distros every time one user have a working system, see a new release announcement and try to update to that latest release, only to find that its system doesn't work any more.

    the excuse that users must read the release notes is really a bad excuse, many time they don't really warn about the problems user will find, but instead talk about the "cool new features" and how good it will be. So instead of showing that things will not work, they almost hide it, after all, a release is a checkpoint of a working system.

    If its broken, call it BETA, ALPHA, whatever, not a RELEASE!

    Slackware and Debian are great examples how things should work. Both try to release on schedule ( about twice a year on slackware, one a year to debian), but there is no release is there are known problems (unless its a very limited problem).. So slackware took 1 and half years to jump from 13.37 to 14 (the latest release) and debian took the same time to just freeze wheezy (the next release) and 6 month later it still isnt released.
    Both distros are looked as very stable, they just work!

    If anyone wants a more bleeding edge on those distros, they run the -current (slackware) or sid (debian) and fix things when its broken... but releases are always stable!!

  14. Re:Crap on Swiss Federal Lab Claims New World Record For Solar Cell Efficiency · · Score: 1

    You are still thinking in a big and central power generation system. you need weaker ones, but close to those how need it.

    As for "enough power", hydraulic have enough power in many countries (who have big rivers), but those without rivers and mountains might be hard... ... but wind have enough power output is most places... Portugal and Spain already went above 50% wind generation of all power produced, using big and improved wind mills (check this and this ). Most places in the world have windy spots that can be "farmed"
    If you have dams "near" you can use the excess wind to pump upstream water, that will be used later when there is a need for more power of the wind is weaker.

    yes, its possible that there is no win, but its also possible that the clouds break the solar power output. Nuclear and biofuel/biomass can be used on that time

    finally, the current batteries arent the future. Unless there is a big change, biofuel and Hydrogen/ ("manufactured") Metane will be the future for cars. Batteries right now are very expensive, heavy and die too fast. they are good enough for a hybrid car, but not so much for a 100% electric car

  15. Re:How about 64 bit time on 32 bit systems? on LTSI Linux Kernel 3.4 Released · · Score: 1

    you are the one that don't know the difference between kernel calls and the glibc and other libs calls. (that can change many times, depending of the lib upgrade policy)

    yes, there exists some ABI broken in some kernels, but they are VERY rare and were required to fix bigger problems (like security problems)

  16. Re:My experience on ubuntu 12.04 on Valve Starts Promoting Steam For Linux To Windows Users · · Score: 1

    Try to download it and then click on the file.

    Its falling because firefox isnt running as root, so starting up the installer directly via firefox will not ask for "superuser" powers

    If you save it and click it, a popup should appear asking the password...
    basically, its just like in windows, you need admin rigths and can't run directly from the browser.

  17. Re:Crap on Swiss Federal Lab Claims New World Record For Solar Cell Efficiency · · Score: 1

    You solve that with diversification...

    solar, wind, tides, hydraulic , geotermal, biofuel/biomass, etc
    If really needed, some nuclear, but only as last in line.

    Instead of having huge electricity production center, we should use local production from multiples sources, each one could plug the holes in production of the other.

    There is no "one size fits all" and trying to do that will always create new problems

  18. Re:Price is what matters most on Swiss Federal Lab Claims New World Record For Solar Cell Efficiency · · Score: 1

    thinking like that is why the US still relies heavily on dirty energy (coal) , why the US cars eat a lot more fuel than European and Japanese cars, why the US jobs are being transferred to Asia. Lack of vision.

    For a cheap energy, dirty energy causes green house effect, that in turns cause a huge amount of problems all over the world. Paying then to repair that problems (if even possible) will cost a lot more.

    For more power and bigger cars, US cars spend more fuel, yet, fuel is more and more expensive, so in the end you will be paying a lot more than using smaller, less powerful cars.

    For cheap labour, US companies sent critical jobs to Asia, keeping the management on the US. Yet the quality of the product/service most of the times drops, jobs are lost and so the economic power to buy those products/services and most of the time, Asian workers are almost treat as slaves and factories have little or no environmental protection. In the end, those management jobs will start to be of little used (and expensive) and will also be transferred. net gain: open market, unstable economy and many environment (and possible social) problems

    As for solar panels, unless you are on a place with little sun, is a investment that will payoff. Yes, the initial investment is high, but you will not lose money and are in turns investing on the evolution of the solar technology and the environment protection.

  19. Re:Fair for the goose... on Microsoft Says Google Trying To Undermine Windows Phone · · Score: 1

    who said XP is a modern OS? it have read support, but can't write, so its out of my list.

    That is why i said that XP might be a problem... but let it die or make a write drive for it.

  20. Re:Fair for the goose... on Microsoft Says Google Trying To Undermine Windows Phone · · Score: 2

    you can use UDF, all modern OS support it, both read and write.

    the only problem is windows XP, but that is easy, windows XP users require a driver... that can be on the device, as it can read UDF, just cant write to it.

    There, problem solved, no need for FAT.

    Of course, MS could also support OTHER filesystems, as they are the blocking factor. Things like ufs and ext2 are well tested and somewhat simple to support

  21. Unitary Patent on ACTA Gets Death Certificate In Europe · · Score: 1

    Just in case you didn't see it, european patents... specially the case where the the European patent office have broad powers, poor control and a very bad historic data (ie: likes to give software patents where they are explicit forbidden)

  22. Claws and Mulberry mail on Ask Slashdot: Current State of Linux Email Clients? · · Score: 1

    I personally use claws for several years (+- 10) and i think its great. the only thing that people might miss is the lack of edit html messages (it can write text only emails), but it can read html emails without any problem. it support calendar and meeting requests, attach remover and various gpg and smime via plugins, so it covers what people need. Its fast and light enough and many keyboard shortcuts when you dont want to use the mouse.

    if you have imap, you may want to try the mulberry mail , it have the best imap support i ever used. its now open source, could use a facelift, but is very good.

  23. Re:And so it continues on How Yucca Mountain Was Killed · · Score: 1

    i dont know... something like renewable energies?!

    thermal, wind, solar, biofuel, waves, etc

    Also, make things more efficient... many of the today cars, houses, electronic, machinery could be made to use a lot less energy

    there is no "one size fits all", but all working in parallel can do it

  24. Re:That's why Nevada was the right place on How Yucca Mountain Was Killed · · Score: 1

    (designed by the nation's top scientists in the field) where it can be guarded and monitored?

    Go read this post: http://politics.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3299701&cid=42211457

    Everyone wants to get his money and really don't care about it... it's not really designed nor monitored, only guarded

  25. +1 on Firefox 17 Launches With Click-to-Play Plugin Blocks · · Score: 1

    Having used all major browser i agree.

    for browsing 2-3 pages, chrome is good, startup fast, but start to load more tabs, demand more from it and you will see the cpu and specially the ram going up.
    During the last year and half, firefox manage to rebuild its memory usage and today have the best long term memory usage of all.