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User: parlancex

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  1. Re:What can I do? on Waterboarding Whistleblower Indicted Under Espionage Act · · Score: 1

    That's starting to sound an awful lot like terrorist talk. Please remember do your civic duty and vote for one of our 2 Political Parties at the next scheduled Democratic Election.

  2. Patience on Ask Slashdot: Why Aren't Schools Connected? · · Score: 3, Informative

    I work in K-12 education as a systems analyst and at least in Alberta where I am situated the change is coming. It isn't as easy as flipping a switch though, there are a lot of barriers in the way of this kind of progress; privacy and security concerns, limited funding for information technology in school jurisdictions, limited funding for professional development for staff to take advantage of this kind of technology, the Old Guard, etc.

    Believe me when I tell you for the most part we are with you, but it takes money that nobody wants to pony up, and time that nobody seems to have.

  3. Re:what's in a name? on Book Review: Microsoft Manual of Style · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Say what you will about the quality of the actual products, but Microsoft's technical documentation is actually pretty amazing compared to other vendors (I'm looking at you Cisco). Microsoft's documentation is generally well organized, comprehensive, and the writing style is simple and concise; basically everything you'd want technical writing to be.

  4. Re:Who uses RDP without a VPN? on RDP Proof-of-Concept Exploit Triggers Blue Screen of Death · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Then you don't have much exposure to the MANY SMB's that are setup like this. I even know of some otherwise competent consultants that do this. Stating that the traffic is secure.

    I've closed this hole many times at new clients.

    Ah yes, another incompetent *nix admin with his head in the sand. Since this was posted as AC I know you're probably trolling but I'll bite. Since the RDP changes starting with Windows Vista and Server 2008 (pre-R2, even) the RDP connection handshake resembles that of TLS, SSH, and other VPN protocols, utilizing RSA, certificate based identity verification, and AES (with keys transmitted during the RSA encrypted during setup).

    If modern RDP is insecure, I have really bad news for SSH, e-commerce and the entire fucking world that uses TLS.

  5. Re:Who uses RDP without a VPN? on RDP Proof-of-Concept Exploit Triggers Blue Screen of Death · · Score: 1, Funny

    Who uses a VPN without a VPN? If you connect to a VPN without first tunneling it through a secure VPN, you're just asking for issues regardless of any exploit.

  6. Re:Bad logic on Canadian Charges Against US Manga Reader Dropped · · Score: 1

    The even better counterpoint is that there are billions of easy obtainable and perfectly legal depictions of fictional murder / violence. If fictional pornography can incite people to commit sex acts I'd be more worried about the millions of movies and video games with people getting their heads blown off.

  7. Re:Not a bad number on White House CIO Describes His 'Worst Day' Ever · · Score: 1

    My kingdom for a mod point.

  8. Not really a speech jammer on Speech-Jamming Gun Silences From 30 Meters · · Score: 4, Informative

    According TFA all the "jammer" does is play back a copy of your speech delayed by 0.2 seconds, akin to being annoyed by loud echo on a VoIP phone or Skype conversation. While echo can sometimes be annoying when it interrupts yourself, it is fairly easy to adjust if you've done it before and talk over yourself. Because the gun features both a directional microphone and directional speaker, if you can comfortably talk over yourself everyone else will hear you just fine, sans echo.

  9. Re:No one see's a problem with this? on US Military Working On 'Optionally-Manned' Bomber · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's more dangerous than that. An attacker wouldn't necessarily need to hack and gain control access to the bomber, they would only need to disrupt it's sensors / communications channel such that the drone is unable to navigate (or indeed, even basic functioning like maintaining airspeed would be impaired). The stakes are much higher than in Iran when your drone is now armed with nuclear cargo.

  10. Re:Hoping to Clarify ... on YouTube Identifies Birdsong As Copyrighted Music · · Score: 1

    Oh thank you merciful representative of corporate copyright holdings, you are truly a benevolent god.

  11. Re:Market pressures. on Hard Drive Shortage Relief Coming In Q1 2012 · · Score: 3, Informative

    We had to provision 2 new 16 disk storage arrays for network backups, and ended up paying about 3x what it should've cost for the storage. Needless to say our department's budget isn't looking as good as it could.

  12. Re:Hello, I am a Nigerian Prince and you're a mark on Nigerian Scam Artists Taken For $33,000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We aren't talking about some bum in New York City living off the government. We are talking about people in poor countries where them providing something economically useful nets them about $1 a day. A successful scam is enterprising and clever. Its the dishonest and illegal parts people disagree with.

    This is a pet peeve of mine so I'm going to point it out, because they made the mistake in the article and you're making the same mistake in your comment. I'm sure that many Nigerians live in poverty, but those numbers don't exist in a vacuum; the average income of a person given in our currency without any other figures is completely meaningless. The cost of living in Nigeria is obviously also drastically less, otherwise I guess half of the 150 million people who live there are going to die in the next few weeks from starvation.

  13. Re:Sweet Jesus on Carrier Ethernet 2 Aims For Global Connectivity · · Score: 1

    If I want QoS and I need to prioritize traffic I could do it on my own router if there was no "overselling" (I think you mean oversubscribing). Different types of traffic have different priorities to different customers.

  14. Re:Stay Classy Microsoft on Microsoft's Anti-Google Video Campaign · · Score: 1

    For what it's worth, Sharepoint / Office 2010 offers... some... simultaneous document editing. It's pretty limited and isn't nearly as responsive as Google Docs, but it looks like MS has at least been trying.

  15. Re:Customer Contact on FCC Chair Calls On ISPs To Adopt New Security Measures · · Score: 2

    ... when I call support I get a guy that actually has enable to the routers. It costs about $15/month more but I'm willing to pay for the service I get.

    I would gladly pay more than $15 extra for that level of support.

    My ISP has had a problem with what I suspect is a fibre media converter that is causing high packet loss with packet sizes 1350 to 1500 bytes. My friends and I who live in town all set our MTU manually to about 1300 to avoid the problem, but everyone else in town using this ISP is stuck with websites that time out randomly for no reason, web pages that fail to load randomly, etc.

    I tried to explain to support that they need to run a ping size sweep on their router so they can see the packet loss but they guy seriously fired up a windows command prompt from his support machine and ran ping with the default arguments to my home IP address, said all 5 packets were okay, and that nothing was wrong.

  16. Re:Torrents on FCC Chair Calls On ISPs To Adopt New Security Measures · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, there are probably a lot of malware authors giddy at the thought of a legitimate malware notification service. There have already have already been large phone campaigns by botnet creators with the phony premise that the callee's computer is infected, with phony instructions to remove the infection (install new malware, obviously). Once there actually IS a legitimate service doing this it will be even harder for less tech savvy people to tell the difference.

  17. Re:Deathbed on Adobe Makes Flash on GNU/Linux Chrome-Only · · Score: 1

    When I was talking about standards based video telephony endpoints I was referring to SIP/H.323 video conferencing suites and hardphones that are video enabled, such as the Cisco 9000 series handsets, and Polycom VSX VC codecs, as well as VC MCUs such as the Polycom RMX series, or the Tandberg (now Cisco acquired) MCUs.Those devices are all hardware devices in which the codecs have been embedded and they are very common in traditional video telephony infrastructures. None of those are going to support VP8.

  18. Re:Deathbed on Adobe Makes Flash on GNU/Linux Chrome-Only · · Score: 1

    I can tell you don't have much experience with VoIP or larger enterprise communications / telephony networks, and that's fine, but server infrastructure in a VoIP network provides call authorization control (who can call who, can Bob make long distance calls, can he do it after business hours?), routing (Bob's IP telephone is located on a private network in office A, Carol's IP telephone roams on the Internet, and Judy doesn't have an IP phone and needs to be reached through a PSTN trunk located in office B, etc), PSTN interoperability (bridging calls to conventional POTS networks, which PSTN gateway is used to route a call, many larger businesses may have multiple multi-channel PRIs or standalone POTs lines in different locations with various implications for the DIDs associated with those lines, etc).

    I suppose if you're looking at it from the extremely simplified "mom and dad want to talk to each other" standpoint then it's easy to miss things like this, but that wasn't what I was talking about in my original post. End to end proprietary technologies such as Skype and Google Talk already exist for those kinds of users. Businesses generally base their communications on network standard protocols and technology that use infrastructure that they own, for security and control, and in some cases peformance. The word "network" to you might just mean Internet, but many businesses may use a VPN to connect multiple IP telephony that doesn't necessarily run over the Internet.

  19. Re:Deathbed on Adobe Makes Flash on GNU/Linux Chrome-Only · · Score: 1

    I did some reading on it and it sounds good but VP8 for video? Seriously? Forget about the billions of dollars invested in existing video telephony infrastructure which made use of standards based codecs like H.261, H.263, H.264 which would now all be incompatible? Doesn't sound like a very promising solution; the only thing it would work with is other WebRTC endpoints, and a ragtag handful of open source VoIP endpoints which also support VP8.

  20. Re:Deathbed on Adobe Makes Flash on GNU/Linux Chrome-Only · · Score: 1

    I'm not making the point that you can't write X in javascript; it's a turing complete language, you can obviously write anything in it.

    What I'm questioning is whether the performance and bindings are going to be sufficient: You're not going to be able to write an actual video codec in javascript with any reasonable level of performance. You're not going to be able actually send and receive UDP packets from your web page just because you can write an IP stack in javascript, it needs to be supported by the runtime and therefore the browser.

    Embracing HTML5 is in some ways like trading one master for another; with Flash we are the mercy of Adobe for security and feature updates, with HTML5 you're at the mercy of the browser. At least Flash is the same in every browser, whereas the streaming protocols / codecs supported for the video tag in HTML5 will vary from browser to browser.

  21. Re:Deathbed on Adobe Makes Flash on GNU/Linux Chrome-Only · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think people are maybe too quick to predict the demise of Flash.

    What I is the demise of flash being used for the wrong things, which is just as good. Flash will no longer be a requirement for video or richer interaction / graphics / animations as HTML5 takes hold, which is a good thing. People are quick to forget in all the HTML5 excitement though there are still plenty of legitimate applications that HTML5 can't do, or at least, won't do very well.

    As an example, how about a SIP video softphone accessible from a browser? In Flash you would implement this through an applet that connects to a server application using RTMP (with RTMP over UDP for media) and you have access to a variety of codecs, where the server application performs the actual bridging to SIP destinations and any media transcoding. Is it possible with HTML5? Perhaps, if WebSockets was a mature enough technology and the streaming video / audio codecs were sophisticated enough, but they certainly aren't in the current state of the standard, though I would love to be proven wrong.

  22. Re:change of heart? on FCC Cracks Down on Robocalls · · Score: 1

    What's even better is when your number was either given out as a random fake number by someone with a real debt or you've taken on the number from someone who had real debt. You can tell the collection agency to stop calling and that "Art Vandelay" no longer owns the number but they're all trained to assume you're lying.

  23. Re:Sounds legit on SSD Latency, Error Rates May Spell Bleak Future · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, to start with you can make an SSD as big as you want by taking smaller SSD's and chaining them together with an intelligent front-end.

    I could do the same thing with a bunch of 80 GB hard disks, but I'd rather just buy a 2 TB one and run that instead.

    Did you know that your hard disk is actually already made out of multiple platters with smaller capacities that make up the whole transparently? Your RAM is made up of dozens of individual smaller chips that make up the total capacity, and so are existing SSDs and USB flash memory sticks.

    Kids these days.

  24. Re:Fund raising for a game? on Double Fine Raises $700,000 In 24 Hours With Crowdfunding · · Score: 1

    Spoken like a true 16 year old.

  25. Re:Coffee shop? on Ask Slashdot: Choosing Anonymous Proxies? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just make sure if you buy anything it's cash only. :)