Slashdot Mirror


User: Dogbertius

Dogbertius's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
173
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 173

  1. Re:You're a douche on Ask Slashdot: Where Are the Open Source Jobs? · · Score: 1

    That's a fair analogy, I must admit.

    I know this comes across as a tirade, and it is a little bit, but no matter how comfortable I've been in a past job, I've always focused on learning new things. In a primarily Windows-based IT job, I was teaching myself Unix sysadmin materials in my spare time while also studying engineering, and it saved my arse a few times. I don't think that avoiding learning new things is an acceptable course of action, save for the possible exception of a company replacing an industry standard tool with some esoteric proprietary POS and requiring staff to pay for there own training. Fortunately that would also count as constructive dismissal in some cases.

  2. Re:You're a douche on Ask Slashdot: Where Are the Open Source Jobs? · · Score: 1

    If only I mod points left. Insightful.

    As for TFA: Oh no, my company changed products - I miss my old Thunderbird e-mail client, and Outlook is just too much to endure, so I'm switching jobs. If you have a family and kids that depend on you, I'd say your significant other has every reason to call you a completely unreliable moron. People change jobs due to poor working conditions, unethical company practices, or simply a desire for better pay. Changing products? Seriously?

  3. Not to nitpick (but I will)... on Selling Used MP3s Found Legal In America · · Score: 1

    Don't you mean RAID 0 in this case (ie: striping; performance boost at the cost of increased probability of data loss assuming drive failure rate P is independent from drive to drive)?

    Or, are you referring to a faulty RAID 1 (mirroring) configuration where two disks are cloned (for the most part, say, 99.999%), but there is somehow a file on one of the two disks that is not on the other? That must be a pretty shoddy RAID controller if that is the case. I've only ever seen such an outcome with the cheap Dell NAS units that did RAID 0, 1, 1+0, 5, and X-RAID. They don't do real hardware RAID, just Linux LVM partitioning to accomplish software RAID. When I found this out, I was kind of choked considering how expensive they were, but I figured so long as I have redundant data, who cares about performance for a device that isn't used much.

    Then it loses information on the LVM partition setup and I have to manually recover over the course of two days with a Slackware Linux machine built for tech tasks. What a nightmare. Although this is not the same error you encountered, I can sympathize with someone who has had to deal with cut-rate RAID controllers.

  4. Not true on Honeywell Vs Nest: When the Establishment Sues Silicon Valley · · Score: 1

    Compulsory licensing agreements exist in the United States in a number of industries. Just a few include "West Publishing citations to court opinions", "U.S. v. 3D Systems", "US v. Miller Industries", "Dell Corporation VL Bus patents".

    These compulsory licenses were put in place to prevent extremely anti-competitive behavior. Just like Motorola's latest suit against Apple, demanding 2.25% of all iPad sales. Motorola can't just demand a billion dollars per patent infringement case and clean out Apple by setting absurdly high values. In the US, it is very much possible for anti-trust lawyers to step in and force a deal for a "reasonable" patent pricing deal.

    If a submarine patent were written that would effectively block every single phone manufacturer from producing phones unless they pay exorbitant fees, the average consumer would suffer considerably. These compulsory licensing deals are put in place to prevent established companies from being forced out of the market due to a single patent.

  5. Re:Why not stainless steel? on 83-Year-Old Woman Gets New 3D-Printed Titanium Jaw · · Score: 5, Informative

    Although it is useful in medical instruments (eg: scalpels, handles, etc), and is also used in artificial heart values, the nickel components of certain types of medical/surgical stainless steel are quite reactive within the body.

    Some people also naturally have considerable sensitivity to nickel outside the body too. Some people get terrible hives, rashes, and even permanent burns when wearing cheap jewelry (ie: silver plated jewelry which is made of nickel/rhodium alloys). Given such a damaging reaction when exposed to damp skin, having this inside the body could be dangerous.

    Good question. Cheers! :)

  6. NEOShield, can just send the on International Organization To Assess Earth Defense From Space Dangers · · Score: 3, Funny

    New Avengers, assemble!!!

    Failing that, we still have Bruce Willis, Steve Buscemi, and Aerosmith.

  7. But what about the IFFT? on Faster-Than-Fast Fourier Transform · · Score: 1

    But what about the inverse FFT? So I can FFT something quicker, but what about when I want to go the other way? ;)

  8. Re:Pretty late for this, don't you think? on US Bans Loud Commercials · · Score: 2, Informative

    The bigger problem is working around the requirement by (ab)using the principles of the psycho-acoustic modelling of sound, like with A-weighting and equal-loudness contours.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal-loudness_contours

    Essentially, the human ear's perceived intensity at different volumes is frequency dependent. One trick is using an auto-tuner to "shift" audio to nearby frequencies so that the overall loudness (as measured by an ideal microphone) is within the acceptable limits in the proposal, but the human ear "hears" them as if they are louder than they really are.

  9. Re:There are 10 kind of people on New Study Concludes Math Gender Gap Is Cultural, Not Biological · · Score: 4, Informative

    2 != 3, so your statement is false. You should have said there are 11 kinds of people.

    You failed to understand the joke. Assuming the number X uses the lexical base of Y, with Y being represented in base "ten", then (X)_Y (ie: "X" in base "Y"), then, (X)_Y = (10)_3 = "three to the first power". Therefore, gmuslera's joke means "there are three kind of people, those that understand ternary .... ". You either thought he/she meant "binary", or you don't understand ternary. Your joke "there are 11 kinds of people" would technically be correct, if the original joke referred to binary rather than ternary.

  10. Re:bluetooth keyboards how meny can you have in th on Goodbye Textbooks, Hello iPad · · Score: 2

    Bluetooth keyboards how many can you have in the same room with out have issues with them cross talking over each other?

    There are 79 usable frequency bands, as Bluetooth uses frequency hopping techniques. So long as you are not attempting to perform the initial pairing operation for all keyboards simultaneously, you should be able to get a few dozen devices working at the same time for normal operations. It will likely wreak havoc on your wifi network though. Additionally, BlueTooth dongles can typically connect to as many as 7 devices at the same time. Hope this helps :)

  11. But wait... on Goodbye Textbooks, Hello iPad · · Score: 1

    Probably have web browsing disabled entirely, along with all apps except the book reader, and that set to only open approved school-distributed texts.

    Wouldn't Amazon be able to sue Apple for such a blatant knockoff of the Kindle?

  12. Re:Hard to believe on Are You Better At Math Than a 4th (or 10th) Grader? · · Score: 1

    Finished all ten questions correctly in under 2 minutes with no calculator while suffering from a raging hangover.

    This is disturbing, as all of these questions are on par with those one would find on a third grade math exam in Canadian elementary schools (ie: an eight year old could excel at this level).

  13. Re:I don't get it on Swiss Gov't: Downloading Movies and Music Will Stay Legal · · Score: 1

    I don't get this. Why would someone pay for something they already got for free?

    Added value. Most people are not going to download full BluRay iso from the net, but .avi's that lack extra features, extra languages, resolution, quality, etc. thus buying the movie again after having verified that it's actually worth to have will still give some things they haven't seen yet. This might of course only apply to a lesser degree to other media.

    Really? The extra stuff added to commercial products is garbage. The last few Disney movies I bought force me to sit through 12 consecutive advertisements for new movies, along with ads for re-mastered copies of 20 year old movies that they are now re-releasing. I have to wait 5-10 seconds for each one to become skippable (ie: I can't just keep mashing the "Next" button on the remote). Then I get to read an FBI warning, yadda yadda, that I cannot skip or fast-forward through. It takes 10 minutes to get the to main menu if I just let it sit unattended. This is exactly why tools like VobBlanker or DVDfab are so popular, you can remove this crap in seconds. I've already paid for my movie, why am I forced to endure countless ads every time I view it?

    What really annoys me though, is that they are advertising for the BluRay copy of something I already own on VHS and DVD. Where is my upgrade option to pay $5 for the new media without having to pay for a new license to a movie I have owned for 20+ years?

  14. Mod parent up... on RIM PlayBook Tablet Jailbroken · · Score: 1

    Every time "RIM" and "security" is in a news article, we get an overly pessimistic and misinformed sensationalist article about how their security is completely broken, when it's little more than a minor nuisance at best. Every time Apple boasts improved security, it gets praise despite being cracked like clockwork 18 hours after release.

  15. Re:Seems Reasonable on Battlefield 3 Banned In Iran · · Score: 0

    They have brains?

    Sure you don't mean the in-dash controls on their militarized Ford Explorers?

  16. Re:Seems Reasonable on Battlefield 3 Banned In Iran · · Score: 1

    Doug Stanhope has covered this so many times. I got to see it in person, and people were falling out of their chairs laughing.

    You were born free, you got fucked outta half of it, and you wave a flag celebrating it!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTOQhPd2Xh4

    They say if you give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but if you teach a man to fish.... then he's gotta get a fishing license, but he doesn't have any money. So he's got to get a job and get into the Social Security system and pay taxes, and now you're gonna audit the poor cocksucker, 'cause he's not really good with math. So he'll pull the IRS van up to your house, and he'll take all your shit. He'll take your black velvet Elvis and your Batman toothbrush, and your penis pump, and that all goes up for auction with the burden of proof on you because you forgot to carry the one, 'cause you were just worried about eating a fucking fish, and you couldn't even cook the fish 'cause you needed a permit for an open flame. Then the Health Department is going to start asking you a lot of questions about where are you going to dump the scales and the guts. 'This is not a sanitary environment', and ladies and gentlemen if you get sick of it all at the end of the day... not even legal to kill yourself in this country. Thanks again, John Ashcroft, you weird bible addict, can't even handle your own drug. You were born free, you got fucked out of half of it, and you wave a flag celebrating it. [audience member]: Hey, don't hold back! [Doug]: You got an argument? [a.m.] No, keep goin'! ... The only true freedom you find, is when you realize and come to terms with the fact that you are completely and unapologetically fucked, and then you are free to float around the system.

  17. Re:And so comes the market... on Restaurants Plan DNA-Certified Seafood Program · · Score: 4, Funny

    When I was visiting in Italy, we watched a parody of Fear Factor where people had to eat american fast food. A bit overdone, but still funny.

  18. Re:Its Life.Jim, but not as we know it on Restaurants Plan DNA-Certified Seafood Program · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You damn well know what he is talking about. Claiming something was raised "organically" in the popularly understood sense of the word is quite profitable to abuse due to the fact that many people will pay more for it.

    Good point sir!

    On another note though, there may be some ambiguity. Some relatives visited from Luxembourg, and I recall at one family dinner we made a big deal about the produce being pesticide free, and the meat being free of artificial hormones, etc. When we explained the term was "organic", our guests spat out their food and all reached for their wine simultaneously, as they exclaimed "you grow all your food in shit?". As it turns out, they use the term "biologique" or maybe "organic-biologique". Very amusing dinner conversation.

  19. Serious question... on Bionic Implants and Spectrum Clash · · Score: 1

    Slightly off-topic, but as this technology becomes more practical in terms of day-to-day use (ie: it actually helps a physically disabled person significantly, and is well beyond the proof-of-concept and various stages of cost analysis and FCC regulations), would it be possible that people could find these solutions being awarded in court cases?

    I've noted a number of car accidents in North America over the years as they pop up in small-time newspapers, and a few months later the defendant is lucky to get $200,000 in compensation for a drunk driver killing the victim's kid and putting the victim in a wheelchair or worse for life. But wait, $200k, isn't that a lot? Not when your friend who just died was a chemical engineer pulling in almost the same per year for his family, who now has no income.

    What if this technology can repair the physical damage to one's own body, but it costs, say $1,500,000. Is it possible for the judge to say "repair the damage you did". For loss of life, this is a very messy issue that pulls in ethics, epistemological debates, legal debates, limitations of liability, etc. But let's just consider the case of a drunk driver who can't claim the "alcoholism made me do it" defense. Would it be right, ethical, legal, or even possible to garnish their wages until they die of old age or kill themselves (and have first dibs at life insurance) so they can repair the damage done from one person being too cheap to call a cab when plastered? I think it would be very fitting.

    "The defendant claims that the stress and guilt of this incident will affect him for the rest of his/her life". Well, here's a way to be sure of it while letting them retain their personal freedom to go about their day without being behind bars. Even better if the drunk is a sociopath or just selfish and reckless.

  20. Re:I wish this was the case in the UK on Full Disk Encryption Hard For Law Enforcement To Crack · · Score: 1

    While I agree with you on the note of Linux being more secure than Windows in most scenarios, an important thing to take into consideration is that most casual Linux users possess what would be considered administrator or power-user level knowledge of using a computer, while most casual Windows users are not quite that knowledgeable.

    More to the point, there are still Linux applications that leave files sitting around in places like the swap partition, or keep copies in the local present working directory (PWD), cache credentials in the $home folder (ie: ~/), and so on. I'm guessing you're referring to certain versions of Knoppix that are designed for security in your post. Good point. There are versions that load everything into RAM, and even clobber the contents of RAM when you shut down so you don't have to worry about people leaving the machine running or deep-freezing the physical RAM chips. As for physical disk access, it only touches an encrypted drive or container, and you can even have it force a dismount and cleanup after X minutes of operation, in case someone steals your laptop and decides to keep it running. I'm not quite that paranoid... yet.

  21. Re:I wish this was the case in the UK on Full Disk Encryption Hard For Law Enforcement To Crack · · Score: 1

    If it is broadcasting or in discoverable BT mode, no point; it will be found with simple sniffer tools.

    I would agree though, that if the physical medium were secured, it would be a good strategy. Until they start punching holes in the wall, when they notice a WIFI accessible NAS device, though.

    When one crosses the border to the USA from Canada, the US has a policy in place where they can tear the car to shreds on suspicion of drugs, and leave it that way. They don't even have to fix it or put it back together either, and one has no legal recourse. No wonder I haven't visited the country (despite some of my favorite bars being there) since the 90's. If they can go that far, it wouldn't be a stretch to imagine the authorities ripping holes in the wall and tearing apart beds, couches, the ceiling, etc.

  22. Re:I wish this was the case in the UK on Full Disk Encryption Hard For Law Enforcement To Crack · · Score: 1

    You make a very good point.

    With respect to your question, no; one cannot use two virtual OSes on a single drive concurrently.

    Not to be critical, but I think people should avoid the "I'm not doing anything illegal" statement, because there are plenty of legitimate reasons for encrypting personal data. Maybe the RIAA/MPAA serve their "John Doe" lawsuit papers to force a settlement because they have enough money to drown me in legal fees because someone on my subnet was downloading torrents, and the MPAA/RIAA lacks the ability to distinguish users since we share a common gateway. I don't download MP3's illegally, yet the RIAA/MPAA is legally (yet unjustly) allowed to bully me into paying them, despite my not having done anything at all wrong or illegal. Maybe I have some intimate pictures of my girlfriend on the hard drive they demand. Nothing wrong with that (please, to all cynical readers, leave your baggage and immoral, deontological excuse for ethics, at the door), but I fail to see why they should be privy to that information.

    This is a serious, legit, real-world example.

  23. A serious, honest question... on France To Tax the Internet To Pay For Music · · Score: 1

    After all, you've paid for it via your ISP, right?

    Since Canadians pay a levy on all CDs and DVDs to compensate for the piracy of music and videos, does this mean the average citizen cannot be fined $200/song since we are already being taxed on piracy? The wiki articles is unclear on this. Thanks!

  24. Take some comfort... on Full Disk Encryption Hard For Law Enforcement To Crack · · Score: 1

    It government-backed policing agencies cannot bypass this, at least it shows (to some degree) that AES-256 doesn't have some fundamental flaw or "back-door" in its algorithm that was intentionally left undisclosed. Take some comfort in knowing that everyone who attempts to crack the archive (excluding the use of jail, torture, installing keyloggers, fining you millions in taxes that you never owed, etc) still has to take the brute-force/dictionary-based attacks. Here's an good example:

    http://howsecureismypassword.net/

  25. Re:I wish this was the case in the UK on Full Disk Encryption Hard For Law Enforcement To Crack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sadly, the notion of "plausible deniability" works both ways. If they (ie: the authorities) are aware it is a TrueCrypt volume, they can just demand you hand over the passwords for the inner and outer volumes. If you provide just one key (ie: the password for the outer volume that contains junk you don't care about), and you are in a country that demonstrates little to no respect for civil rights, they could very well jail you, even if you aren't using a hidden volume.

    Secondly, the authorities demanding you hand over the key (strangely enough) isn't covered under fifth amendment rights, so again, they can demand you hand over the keys, or you could be jailed almost indefinitely.

    Finally, there are some interesting articles by Bruce Schneier on alternate means of incrimination. www.schneier.com/paper-truecrypt-dfs.pdf

    In short, there are many ways to give a judge the idea that the use of a hidden volume is likely (ie: check path histories for previously opened files, check temp folders, etc). Not only would these indicate the possibility of a hidden volume, but some files that were meant to be encrypted may be 100% available (eg: Microsoft Word makes temporary backups of files in your %APPDATA% folders in case it crashes and you want to recover your work; as one example). Unless one is very diligent and knows what he/she is doing with respect to encrypting data, it would seem the only safe method is to encrypt the entire disk and boot off of it exclusively, all while keeping the machine itself disconnected from the internet to avoid hacking attempts, and locked in massive safe so the authorities don't install a keylogger (application or physical device) or start taking snapshots of your disk daily to aid in cracking the password.

    You may be able to secure your data, but with multiple means of data accidentally being leaked due to the OS or various applications used in day-to-day life, along with unscrupulous policing agencies allowed to overrule fundamental civil rights, it is likely that one will ultimately lose their data and/or freedom either way.