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User: Gruturo

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Comments · 178

  1. Re:Bodyly fluids on Feds Say It's Time To Cut Back On Fluoride In Drinking Water · · Score: 2

    I salute you and your superior timing, General.

    Purity
    Of
    Essence

    Peace
    On
    Earth

  2. Re:Hitler and the NAZIs were so stupid. on Vast Nazi Facility Uncovered In Austria; Purported A-Bomb Development Site · · Score: 1

    Oh you mean This?

    sorry for the crappy source but that document is quite real.

  3. Guilty as charged on Ask Slashdot: Do You Run a Copy-Cat Installation At Home? · · Score: 1

    I rebuilt the whole damn Kerberos/LDAP infrastructure at home, including multimaster replication, and integrated Mac, Solaris, Linux, BSD and Windows boxes into it.

  4. Understatement of the year on BlackBerry CEO: Tablet Market Is Dying · · Score: 1

    the PlayBook, which was released to quite a bit of fanfare in early 2011 but failed to earn iPad-caliber sales

    Or, rather, it tanked horribly, the huge unsold inventory they tried to shove through "the channel" (retailers and distribution chains), but which users never bought, was so bad that it became a logistic problem of its own.

  5. Re:Was he ousted? Maybe sour grapes? on RIM Co-Founder Drops His Stock · · Score: 1

    I may be recalling this incorrectly, but I think Steve Jobs did something like sell all his shares when he got kicked out of Apple...

    Minus one. So he'd keep receiving quarterly reports and balances.

    And with that money he rescued/acquired Pixar and founded NeXT, not bad.

  6. Re:Why is Slashdot to Hostile to Raspberry Pi? on Entries Open For First Ever 24-Hour Raspberry Pi Hackathon · · Score: 1

    I understand why they did it, but that doesn't change the fact that the process is not really Open, to the detriment of customers.

    It's _not_ Open. They're not claiming it is. That's not their purpose. They wanted to make an extremely affordable development platform to promote computer education esp. in schools, and that's exactly what they did.
    They are releasing as much info/code/APIs as they can, so at a first glance it *looks* like it's an open source project... it's not. They'll be the first ones to point out that there is a shitton of NDA stuff they're not at liberty to share with the rest of the world. They're Broadcom employees using their own free time to work on an architecture they're familiar with due to their day job. They share what they can and if you don't like it you'll have to talk Broadcom into releasing stuff - or just choose another platform.

  7. Re:wow on Microsoft Releases Kinect For Windows · · Score: 3, Funny

    you could reboot Windows without using a mouse.

    Now that's something!

    Windows-Up-Right-Right-Right-Up-Enter. Hadouken...erm, reboot.
    Might change slighly if you changed your power settings. Ctrl-Esc if you don't have a Windows key.

    Ugh, I just confessed to knowing some MS stuff on /. /me braces for the incoming downvotes :)

  8. Re:Shocked. on Do You Really Need a Smart Phone? · · Score: 1

    There isn't really an alternative in the US. Pay as you go will cost you more in the long run since the major providers have very limited options. There's no real competition (read: it's difficult to switch carriers and keep your phone) because of network technologies. And the only pay-as-you carriers with decent rates operate in relatively small markets, or only in urban areas (most of the US population lives in suburban areas with poorer coverage). Finally, even if you can find an unlocked, unsubsidized phone to buy in the US, the monthly plans are the same cost, and still require a 2 year contract.

    I'm not implying there's a viable alternative and people are dumb for not choosing it. I'm just surprised there isn't an angry bloodthirsty mob wrecking every major US telco's headquarters. They are screwing people so bad and getting away with it because of a de facto cartel.

  9. Re:Shocked. on Do You Really Need a Smart Phone? · · Score: 2

    Having a smart phone != having an expensive plan. I am on a simple pay as you go plan, and have a Nexus S. It's capabilities are far and above being just a phone.

    This, a hundred times.
    I see these mentions of $50/mo, $80/mo and I'm just baffled at how so many people let the carriers royally screw them with barely a protest.
    $80/mo per 24 months is $1920. Plus the $199 you paid upfront for most smartphones, it's $2.119. That's outright nuts.

    I paid around EUR629 for my current iPhone (fanboi yada yada) and a 5GB/mo flat costs me 15/mo. I'll probably also do about EUR 5 of phone calls during an average month. Over 24 months, phone included, that's EUR 1109, aka $1441. And I could spend 240 less by going for only 500MB/month, since I rarely go over 1GB and never even try to moderate my use in any way. Without any overage fees: I break the 500MB/5GB barrier? It keeps working at no extra cost, I'm just slowed down to 56kbps. Skype, Viber, Mail and SSH keep working just fine. Of course I can *always* tether at no additional cost. And that's with one of the most expensive smartphones in existence, some android/WP7.5 phones cost way less: a Galaxy Nexus is 538, a Nokia Lumia 800 retails for 430.
    My 24month total cost could *easily* be EUR 750 ($980), still with a recent, top-of-the-line, smartphone, still doing the same voice and data traffic. You guys on the other side of the pond should revolt.

    Oh, best thing? No termination fees. No 24month wait to change phone (of course, I paid it in full!). No SIM lock.
    If I'm unhappy with my provider I can ditch it *now*, fork 15 eurobucks and get a SIM card from any other operator, with includes 10 of credit. I could port my number over for some cost (around 30 I'm told).
    Also nice: If I travel to some other place (Spain, Greece, Italy being frequent destinations) I buy a local SIM card for pretty much the same amount and am good to go. No insane roaming fees. This means my phone number wont work for voice calls/SMS while abroad, though - but most people just IM or VoIP call me and it just keeps working transparently.

  10. Re:Verizon cannot install FiOS without blackberry on BlackBerry Outage Spreads To North America · · Score: 1

    you sound like you would be happier with an iphone, it does not have confusing "options"

    I *have* an iPhone. It's my personal phone.
    It has this feature called "proper user interface" in which irrelevant crap isn't in the way and options are there when you're looking for them.

    But I'd also settle for a WP7 or an Android - a Nexus, though, not some carrier branded crap in which they mutilate the phone, chop off functions for no reason (or sheer greed), ruin it with some crap branding which slows down the UI and delay updates by half a year, or prevent them altogether. At least the iPhone's "closed" nature prevents carriers from messing with it. They're king Midas in reverse, anything they touch turns into shit.

  11. Re:Verizon cannot install FiOS without blackberry on BlackBerry Outage Spreads To North America · · Score: 2

    I just had my Verizon FiOS installed today and normally the technician activated the modem using a blackberry. But today he had to call-in and wait about an hour on hold for them to activate the modem remotely. People are comparing Blackberries to iPhones, but Apple iPhones aren't relying on a dedicated network and I don't think there are many businesses that rely on them.

    Not quite sure why you bring up the need of a dedicated network as a plus. Since it's just layered on top of the existing cellular/WiFi connection, you just added an extra point of failure as these last 3 days of outage are reminding lot of people. What does this "dedicated" network give you? the impression of improved security because your confidential, corporate email is now going through RIM's servers? The belief that other smartphones can't offer equivalent security? 2005 called, it wants its status quo back.

    Besides - the UI on BB phones (I admittedly haven't seen BB7 in person yet - speaking only up to 6 here) is mind boggingly crude and awkward. The browser is disgustingly broken and unusable. Even the damn email client, this pony's one and only trick, sucks big time. Synchronizing additional folders requires a ridiculous amount of submenus, hidden options and absolutely unintuitive labeled functions on my Curve 9300. When on WiFi, it somehow "loses" the connection to my company BES every other day and can't reestablish it. It only resumes working if I delete and recreate the WiFi profile. The amount of crap cluttering the menus is unbelievable. Until a recent software upgrade it couldn't vibrate and ring at the same time. Even configuring a simple sound is an exercise in frustration, wading through a sea of confusing options (I have sound options for "Email", "Level 1", PIN", "Text Messages", BBM Alerts, BBM Groups, BBM New Messages. I challenge any new Blackberry user to figure out what the hell PIN does there and why you can assign a sound to it). The almighty and much boasted physical keyboard is not only wasting half the front of the phone, causing the screen to be stupidly small, but it's also dinky and cramped, and the damn number keys are a bloody hassle to operate. But who the hell needs number keys on a telephone, right?

    The whole damn thing seems to have been design by a committee chaired by Ming the Merciless, it's a textbook COUNTERexample of usability principles. They can't die soon enough. Die. Die. Die. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE.

    My company didn't allow me to use a different phone even if I paid for by myself - but they acknowledged that a LOT of employees are unhappy with these relics and recently announced they are going to change this policy at the beginning of next year. Can't wait. RIM, you lose 5000 more customers.

  12. Re:Uhhh on Do You Want Best Buy Opening Your New Laptop? · · Score: 2

    This article is from 2009. Why is this now hitting the front page?

    It was in Taco's backlog. Now that he left, someone's going thru it, finally. And they're at 2009 already, we'll soon start seeing current news!

    (Jokes apart, Thanks for so many years Rob!)

  13. Re:Interesting fact on Zuckerberg Quits Google+ Over Privacy Concerns · · Score: 1

    . Facebook no longer has any idea where I live, have lived, what high school I went to, what college I went to, hell I'm not even sure it knows what year I was born. I had to get rid of all of that a long time ago (although in retrospect, I'm think I would have anyway and am glad I did).

    It's funny cause you think taking the information off your profile deletes it from FB servers. Odds are, they still know where you live and how often you poop.

    And even if you never told them in the first place, with a large enough network of relations they can most likely infer it.

  14. 53 comments, noone mentioned Rule 34 yet on Google Builds Biometric Models of Celebrity Faces · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised.

  15. Re:Sources of page load delay on Google Cuts Chrome Page Load Times In Half w/ SPDY · · Score: 1

    To curb the social features plague, I heartily recommend Disconnect and WidgetBlock if you're using Chrome. Can't remember their Firefox equivalents but they exist IIRC.

    Also, on the client side, blocking ads clearly works (tens of avoided requests, some of which prevent rendering the page until they're complete), but some people object to that (I block by default and whitelist some sites).

    On the server side, the webmaster should load the page in Chrome, then rightclick and choose "Inspect Element". Go to the Audits tab, select "Reload Page and Audit on Load", click Run, read all the advice. Also, after that, switch to the Network tab and be amazed. It's not the only tool in the world for the job, but it's already in the browser many people are already using.

  16. Re:Have no page load problems on Google Cuts Chrome Page Load Times In Half w/ SPDY · · Score: 1

    As far as I know, they are. Are you using a web proxy? Because if so, unless you are also using a proxy autoconfig ("PAC") javascript file, you are implicitly delegating DNS lookups to that proxy.

    Oddly enough, this is not the case with Firefox unless you explicitly tell it to. Which is done by setting network.proxy.socks_remote_dns to true in about:config.

  17. Re:real easy innit on Apple AirPlay Private Key Exposed · · Score: 1

    Not if you freeze them with dry ice and hit them with a hammer...

    We're not still discussing girlfriends, right?

  18. Re:Seems clear to me on Apple Wins a Round In Patent Battle With Nokia · · Score: 2

    but everything else I said was 100% wikipedia accurate.

    Or it will be in about 5 minutes, hold on...

  19. No on Does Syfy Really Love Sci-Fi? · · Score: 1

    The name change and their actions make this so blatantly obvious I'm surprised we're even debating this.

  20. Re:Newsworthy? on London Stock Exchange Tackles System Problem · · Score: 1

    $delay won't solve squat as you point out, but rounding everything down to the nearest second might alleviate some issues. "All orders between 08:13:35.000 and 08:13:35.999 are considered simultaneous and will all be recorded as 08:13:35".

    With 1 second "tick" even a human player might have a chance vs computers! Cue Watson jokes.

  21. Re:Newsworthy? on London Stock Exchange Tackles System Problem · · Score: 1

    Why is this news? None of the several hour long outage calls I've been involved with were ever on the news.

    Cause it's about Linux, it's News for nerds, stuff that matters (to us, at least).

  22. Re:Alternatives are good on Open-source Challenge To Exchange Gains Steam · · Score: 1

    How about a Donkey Kong icon?
    I mean, Ballmer's at the helm now. He throws chairs, not barrels, but everything else's pretty much spot on.

  23. Re:encryption on Polynomial Time Code For 3-SAT Released, P==NP · · Score: 1

    If someone with a supercomputer is trying to break your encryption, I would think you have bigger problems to worry about.

    Yeah, like the energy bill for that supercomputer. Don't even get me started on the carbon credits you'll need to purchase...

    no problem!

  24. Re:"a small (low single-digit) percentage" on Microsoft Explains Windows Phone 7 'Phantom Data' · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually that number comes with a big caveat since it started circulating a few weeks earlier, that even that mashable article, or the MS link it references, are carefully avoiding to shed light on. Those reported are 1.5 million handset sold "to carriers", or "by manufacturers" (which mostly sell to carriers, gosh).

    For all we know, 90% of those 1.5 million might be still be unsold, sitting on shelves and warehouses and NOT in the hands of a customer. And that kind of carefully treading around the ambiguity is a giant, glowing, blinking warning sign..

  25. Re:Pretty soon... on Google To Drop Support For H.264 In Chrome · · Score: 1

    Derailing this a little, but, speaking of JPEG: Given that the 2nd stage (Huffman coding) is not really the best the world has to offer, even with optimized tables, how come a simple alternative, simply plugging a better compressor (bzip2, lzma, you name it) hasn't surfaced ? we're talking double digit % improvement which can even be applied to preexisting JPEGs with no generation loss. Is the very idea of a different 2nd stage patented by the Stuffit people or what? (only thing a quick google found)

    It'd be dead simple to implement (just combine existing pieces, pretty much) in cameras, browsers, viewers, servers (transparently serving this to those who declare in HTTP headers they understand it) and it'd yield a relevant saving in both storage and bandwidth (which isn't necessarily free / cheap when you consider cell links).

    P.S.
    In case someone reads this and decides to implement it, let me know, and make it F/OSS or Karma's gonna be a bitch.