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User: Tordre

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  1. Re:Whoa. on Kinect Self-Awareness Hack · · Score: 0

    This is not in idle, it is in games, if it was in idle i would understand... tolerate... filter it out.

  2. Re:Demand for FLAC on Why We Should Buy Music In FLAC · · Score: 1

    WMA 9 has a lossless option which is supported by windows, its not flac but it is lossless. also you can get a flac directshow codec for windows media player, or you could use a 3rd party media player like winamp, or vlc.

  3. Retarded summery for old new on Microsoft To Work With Windows Phone 7 Jailbreakers · · Score: 0

    I cannot seem to find it in back posts but this is the 3rd time slash dot has "reported" on the same event.

    Granted, this summery "article" is more retarded than the last 2, as this one suggests having a switch to get in developer mode, and also voiding the warranty for flicking said switch. If there is a switch to get into said mode i don't know of any legal system would accept that flicking said switch is terms for voiding of a contract. Also have you heard of a computer manufacturer voiding one's warranty for INSTALLING programs.

    But i will say this, excluding this dumb-ass sacrificing our rights to a hardware protection, I do respect Microsoft stance for this, they essentially asked the hackers to take down their tool and in exchange Microsoft is gonna make a system to do what they want without having they Dev keys posted all over the web essentially making piracy a trivial matter for their phone, which in turn will alienate developers who want to sell products. If this method pans out everyone wins, we get home-brew, we get paid content, and they get a market that is still considered profitable.

  4. Re:Every single smart phone has same problem on iPhone Attack Reveals Passwords In Six Minutes · · Score: 1

    assuming a non-encrypted laptop and the default password saver it is trivial to get ones saved password from Firefox, Chome, or IE. in Firefox, is as much as saying show me my stored passwords.

  5. Re:Quite well on Is Samsung Blocking Updates To Froyo? · · Score: 1

    +1 don't have anything to add other than you stole my line, haha thanks

  6. Re:Soon, no more call centers on Jeopardy-Playing Supercomputer Beats Humans · · Score: 1

    One more thing it should also try to answer questions it does not know with jokes, that is the best part of the human contestants.

  7. Re:Quite well on Is Samsung Blocking Updates To Froyo? · · Score: 1

    I assume the parent was talking about jail-breaking on iOS. From what i can gather you can't do all the things you listed on iOS.

  8. More Information on Apple Patent Hints at Net-Booting Cloud Strategy · · Score: 2

    http://www.google.com/patents/about?id=I8V6AAAAEBAJ

    The article is wrong with the dates as you can see in the patent described in the article it was filed in 1999 and granted in 2006 but the article stated it was filed in 2006, and granted recently. This gave the author reason to believe that this has something to do with what apple is doing next which seems unlikely since they have had the idea for over 10 years and have done nothing with it.

    Also from the article it sounded much like a Net-boot Linux distribution with a NFS shared holding the file system to be used. Something like my school has set up for student computers. This gave me an impression of patent trolling/prior art as it has been in place since 1997 at least. But it does make some alteration to what i have seen in practice, for one there are 2 places where a user can make changes to the OS, first is a network stored diff file system which tracks the changes from the end users system and settings files. So that a user can make changes to the programs installed and OS files (not that they have good reason to do so) this is then compared with a master OS image, this i would assume allow a user to have the same programs and settings across any computer. There is also a Local Shadow Volume which stores larger files which cannot be stored on the server due to quota restraints, caching of regularly used files and server write queues. Possibly also can be used to a disconnected client although they don't appear to state how much of the master FS is transfered to the client to make it usable if the network is disconnected.

    That being said it can be seen as similar to what Google is doing in Chrome OS but chrome only boots from the server to restore the OS and not to boot every time. Also Chrome OS uses the local copy as the primary and the network copy as a backup but apples patent seems to imply the opposite.

    Given the age of the patent this article appears to be someone trying to make up news during a slow week more than anything else.

  9. Re:A Better Question: on 45 Years Later, Does Moore's Law Still Hold True? · · Score: 1

    Apologies for the spelling errors, my eyes did not see them in the preview.

  10. Re:A Better Question: on 45 Years Later, Does Moore's Law Still Hold True? · · Score: 1

    It a way it could be seen as such as opposed to sending a lot of money developing a chip with 10x the components in 2 years you could instead break that into a six/seven year cycle with 2x every 2 years, each chip iteration has an cost but it should also have a profit which will fund the next iteration.

    It would be better to follow Moores Law from a economic stand point. The Guy in your example does not give the cost it would take to get his 10x chip production ready which is where you example may fail.

  11. Re:XBox 360? MCE? on Microsoft Ready To "Take On'' Google and Apple TV · · Score: 1

    I partially agree Microsoft does have a weird problem where they have more than one product to do the same job,

    For example
    Windows Media Player, The Zune Desktop Software, Windows Media Center on the desktop all for playing content on one's desktop
    Play for sure and Zune's DRM for Digital Rights Management on Portable Players
    Windows Live Sync, Mesh and Skydrive. All provide overlapping "cloud" storage syncing that should be merged together.
    IE 6, IE 7, and IE8.. oh wait that one is a joke

    But When it comes to getting Media Center on a TV the experience is less than optimal, you have 2 options

    Media Center Extenders(including Xbox 360), I have tried on a few occasions to get my Xbox functional as one of these it works decently, but i kept running into issues because my home network is bad, and I have no control to fix the network. Essentially the issue was that each time I reconnected to my PC running WMC it would see it as a new computer and try to get me to re-register the device, which then in turn had to recreate the local cache of the desktops media library, which took too long to be convenient. Eventually I switched over to using another media streamer that worked with the Xbox that did not have to do registration and caching.

    Roll your own Windows Media Center HTPC
    Great in theory much better than using the extender.. not for the general population). The only other Media Center software,that i can think of, that can rip live TV is MythBox. Although personally if XBMC had this capability then it would be my preferred option.

    As for what this new device sounds like from this article is the second option all in a self contained box, which is great if it retained it PVR functionality and is able to stream from local network computers (it probably will use home groups but that is a small price to pay). What I hope does not happen for this is removal of user addable codec. It is windows CE based so it will be ARM based as well which means some codec will need to be ported but still better than nothing.

    If this is done right it should fill a demand that is not being met by their 2 other products which are meant to be working together.

    it would also be wise to price it close to the Boxee, Apple TV and other products of the like. I will be willing to pay more only if it has PVR capability which in theory would mean not an additional box but rather just replacing a box, and is also not being done by any other consumer device that attempts to merge the Web with TV.

  12. Re:PS2? on PS3 Root Key Found · · Score: 1

    Partially true, At the beginning there the hardware ps2 emulation, the next wave of consoles then swapped that out for software emulation, Sony then said it was too hard to keep it up to date and removed the software emulation completely.

    Not too sure about this next point, but i think they then removed the ability to access the hardware emulation on the oldest models.

    But with this it might possible to restore Sony's software ps2 emulator, but more importantly, it is possible for one to make their own and have it run on the ps3 although that won't happen over night, and speed and memory might be an issue.

  13. Re:Nonsense on When Your Company Remote-Wipes Your Personal Phone · · Score: 1

    Would you prefer to be sued over loss of company data/secrets/etc in the event that you lose your phone?

    If I ran a company and were truly worried about this, I'd have all sensitive data stored on a secure server that can be accessed remotely. Of course some care would need to go into how this is implemented but it can certainly be done.

    your comment says little, essentially exchange is your secure server, e-mails are your sensitive data and the iphone is your remote device. You cannot control what the remote device logs into its own memory so its loss will have confidential data that your server cannot protect.

    Aside from the remote wipe system how else do you propose one secure the data on remote devices that your vague system allows.

  14. Re:Same idea on Did an Apple Engineer Invent FB Messages In 2003? · · Score: 1

    but if you have a time machine you can go back before the story came out and patent it then

  15. Re:The privacy/security scale tips again. on National Opt-Out Day Against Virtual Strip Searches · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hey it doesn't have to be by race, they could also do it by lets say beards, search everyone with a facial hair covering some part of their lower face. or everyone wearing hats, there are more ways to profile for terrorists than just race.

  16. Re:To Change or Not To Change on How Often Should You Change Your Password? · · Score: 1

    But also forcing people to use more "weird" characters is just asking them to do something stupid like have the password on the screen in post it note form, where as a passphrase sure you may fail a few times but at least a normal person would be able to remember it in seconds as opposed to "23;w5f9s".

    I am also a firm believer of passphrases and have been using them on everything that does not have an upper-bounds on password length.

  17. Re:Cant ... find .. menus on Blender 3D 2.49 · · Score: 1

    Funny thing is i can recite their meaning and they are relatively obvious once you hear it once, but the problem is jumping in with no prior knowledge, there is no official I am new documentation one can look at, when i started all i had was a wikibook which is out of date now, which use screen shots from the 2.3.X builds. I imagine it will be more difficult once 2.5 gets out of beta,

    That being said jumping into any 3d software is difficult, but does it have to be that way?

  18. Where is the fun in what you want? on $2,000 Bounty For Open Source Xbox Kinect Drivers · · Score: 1

    I noticed a common theme is the comments I can't say i disagree with it, but i also can't say i totally agree with it. That is considering what it seems is generally seen here as anti-consumer, From what i can gather the only bit of security (apart from the proprietary communication protocol) they added where security screws to take it apart, The summary did mention they update the dashboard software, but that is about software for the xbox 360 system and really has nothing to do with the Kinnect in the sense of getting an open source driver.

    Another way one can put your complains "Microsoft is using a weird screw for its Kinnect they must hate consumers" come one guys it is not like the only screwdriver for it is locked away in Microsoft's secret vault you can buy one as easily as they did, do you say the same thing about nintendo and the tri-wing.

    Also isn't part of the fun of these hacking challenges the fact that you are working through the puzzle that the producers hoped no one would try to or be able to break.

    Now if in the adventure figuring out this driver we find out that if you successfully connect this to a computer the built in arm chip stores it some where and then the next time you plug it into your xbox it flags your xbox as hacked and bans you from xbox live, then we have an issue which being consumer friendly.

  19. Re:Surgery? on Real-Time Holograms Beam Closer To Reality · · Score: 1

    So not only are we outsourcing our tech support to India we are also going to outsource our health care. luckily if the robot surgeon breaks down tech support will be in the same call center.

    In all seriousness there is also a legal issue here, where must a surgeon be licensed to do surgery to if the robot is in one country and the surgeon is in the other, health care practices are different between countries.

  20. Katamari Damacy on Robotic Hands Grip Without Fingers · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now we know what the center of that Katamari is.

  21. Re:Killer robots on Robotic Hands Grip Without Fingers · · Score: 1

    No fingers no trigger pulling action... not exactly a great killer robot,

  22. Re:Farewell to Ownership on Colleges May Start Forcing Switch To eTextbooks · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You cannot sell your paper notes it is the intellectual property of your professor who made up the course material... haha according to some of the profs here at my school

  23. Re:Just a way to kill the used book market... on Colleges May Start Forcing Switch To eTextbooks · · Score: 1

    I it is not just his opinion but i think agreed upon by some committee, not too long ago i was walking down the halls of the education department of my university and don't remember the organization that produced the poster but it stated that one could photocopy up to 10 pages from a book for each of their students and it is considered fair educational use. There were other things but that is the one the stood out in my memory, also it could just be a Canadian thing.

  24. Re:Lies. on Want Flash Player On a MacBook Air? Download It Yourself · · Score: 1

    They have a sync protocol and it works, It is called the media transfer protocol. and according to the wikipedia page there are many plugins for different operating systems to make devices work.

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Transfer_Protocol

    Also why the hate on drag and drop, it is not like anyone is forcing you to use it, most of the media players you mentioned have plugins that lets their respective library's sync with devices that allow you to see the file system. Hell even windows media player makes media syncing easy with devices so you don't have to drag around your file system (it even can sync to a non-music playing thumb drive haha).

    I had a sandisk player before and it had good support for audio books it played back from where you left it.

    One last thing on your syncing thing, Microsoft's Zune uses syncing to get its media onto its device and by far i found it a more pleasant experience than i dealt with in iTunes

  25. Re:University tenure on What If We Ran Universities Like Wikipedia? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Nice history lesson, about the whole tenure thing i did not realize where it stemmed from but it is nice to know and too see how much it had changed.

    On contrast my university's core CS courses are taught by people with papers but without a clue of practical application of the things they are teaching, This year I am in 2 core courses that are about practical technologies in todays world, Web Development and Databases, both subject I have been familiar with for a long time, and the shit they are teaching and forcing us to do through assignment is bad, from telling us to deploy a database schema with inconsistent naming conventions (for example using "no", "num" and "number" to denote a number for a element in a table), using SSN numbers as employee references, where each employee is tied to a supervisor who is linked by SSN just begging for identity thief if used in the real world, and potentially worse of all using the hidden html element to store vital information for the Servlet to process.

    I would understand being out of touch with this stuff for a non-practical(more conceptual stuff) courses such as data structures and formal grammars but when they are teaching a course which will make people think they can add a resume items like "i know web development", or "i can design a mean SQL database" is just begging for a future of shitty programmers. This problem is directly created by this publish or perish problem you mentioned,

    I cannot say much about other departments i know there is one chemistry prof here that does not teach anything in class and gets away with it because she is tenure.