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User: wayn3

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  1. Version 2 should say... on Linux Desktop Migration Cookbook from IBM · · Score: 1

    IBM *still* has a boatload of software that SHOULD run on Windows only. What I'd like to see in Version is words saying the following software is NATIVELY supported on Linux:
    * Lotus Notes
    * Sametime
    * SmartSuite

    If you're going to support Linux, support it completely, fer cryin' out loud!

  2. Binary Only; Souce code is even more! on SCO Wants $699 for Linux Systems · · Score: 1

    The $699 cost is only for binary releases of Linux. If you want to 'properly' license the source code (and most distributions carry the source code) then the cost is even more.

    From the IP License for Linux FAQ:

    "This license only applies to the use of SCO IP in these compiled and linked object code versions of Linux. The license does not grant any rights to SCO IP in source code form either separately or as a component of a Linux source code distribution."

  3. Re:RedHat Enterprise Application Suite on Red Hat Linux 9 Release And Interview · · Score: 0, Troll

    Is there a Dia plugin for RHEA applications called 'Dia-rhea'?

  4. Boston Globe reports 5 years left on The Future of the CD · · Score: 1
  5. Why hasn't it occurred yet? on Using PDAs for Dictation? · · Score: 1

    Why hasn't it occurred yet?

    Voice recognition has been "two to five" years away since for the past twenty years. The reason it hasn't occurred because it is too hard. The "two to five" year quote are from overzealous marketing folks.

    It won't happen for quite a while because the emphasis has been moved away from wide-scale voice recognition to having specific recognition requirements, such as, recognizing numbers, "yes" or "no," few verbs, or recognizing an individual's voice commands.

    You would have to look to academia for answers, because the funds for the research dried up in the comercial market.

  6. intertainer suing MovieLink et al. on New Movie Download Pay Service · · Score: 2

    Apparently MovieLink wasn't first to the scene. intertainer had been doing something similar but felt they were being shut out by unfair competition -- Sony, AOL-Time-Warner apparently favored MovieLink.

  7. Which Constituents? on NSA Director, Congress and Monitoring · · Score: 2

    Would the constituents be the people of the US, the businesses of the US, or both? The goals of businesses are different from people: businesses don't want individual privacy because it hinders their ability to market.

    Since Congress has to answer to both, I wonder if they are the best group to answer Director Hayden's question. Perhaps this is an executive decision.

  8. Linksys WET11 also has DOS problem on Vulnerability In Linksys Cable/DSL Router · · Score: 2

    In a related, underpublicized story, Linksys's WET11, which has been getting a lot of buzz as a cheap wireless ethernet bridge, has a firmware flaw which allows a DoS. LinkSys has been slow to come out with a fix.

  9. From O'Reilly Press on "Seamless" Integration of Mac OS X w/ Active Directory · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you tried this?

  10. Code Red on Examples of Programming Gone Wrong? · · Score: 2

    ... should be enough to write a dissertation on the thoughtless computing leading to serious problems.

  11. Wireless devices in the classroom... on Testing Technology on a Veritable Army of Children? · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ... sounds like a new way of cheating on exams.

  12. WTF on How Many Keys Have You Pressed? · · Score: 2
    A new project created by Jason Hooper involves the counting and displaying of statistical information regarding the number of keys you have pressed since sign-up to this project.

    Is this a hoax? Am I on Candid Camera?

    Now why would someone want to perpetuate this when we just heard about keyboard wiretaps? Certainly not a SlashDot reader!

  13. The Cost of a Terabyte on How the Wayback Machine Works · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You buy from EMC a terabyte for maybe $300,000. That's just the storage for 1 TB. We can buy 100 TBs with 250 CPUs to work on it, all on a high-speed switch with redundancy built in.
    Interesting quote. Mr. Kahle addresses something I've been wondering for a while -- are storage area networks really worth it? Or is he ignoring the costs of maintenance and manpower to keep these things afloat?

  14. Business vs Academic on Sun's Joshua Bloch On OOP/OOD In Java · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The trouble with these kinds of interviews is that although I appreciate and enjoy Mr. Bloch's contributions to Java and Mr. Venners' forum, they are speaking academicly and not through the world of business. This is a very narrowly focused article and should not be taken as direction for designing software.

    I'd like to hear someone write about how to make the trade-offs architects really face:
    • being forced to use lesser software products and tools due to cost or partnership arrangements;
    • having time-to-market be a larger issue than software reuse
    • attempting design and development when the skill set is diverse

    These topics would be of greater value to the development community than articles which presume hypothetical arrangements.
  15. Not Good Enough on Borland Backs Down · · Score: 3, Informative

    Think about it: an independent developer would HAVE to employ a lawyer to deal with licensing schemes like Borland's Enterprise license.

    This is not industry standard boilerplate, but lazyness: they're avoid working with customers to figure out better licensing terms.

  16. Competition works in MA on Broadband Obstacles · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I live outside Boston, MA where AT&T Cablevision and RCN compete for broadband and cable services. RCN, being #2, has been very competitive and they've provided me with great service.

    Your town may not be able to have two cable wire systems running throughout, but there is an alternative: have your town own the wiring, and force your cable company to lease them on a yearly basis. This has worked for some MA communities.

  17. Check with your lawyers on Borland Kylix/JBuilder License Reviewed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't use JBuilder on the job, but if I was considering it, I'd check with my corporate lawyers to see if this license agreement could be honored. Seeing how (anal) compulsive the lawyers were in past projects, I bet they would say "choose another vendor."

    Bad license agreements are bad business.

  18. Wireless DIsplay on Wireless Peripherals? · · Score: 1

    You're in luck -- soon you'll be able to get a wireless monitor.

  19. Re:You may think your boss is a friend..... on Handling Discrimination in the IT Workplace? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My feelings exactly. Your boss should be the one handling this, perhaps with Personnel.

    If your boss won't support you, then try to get a letter of recommendation from him and work on getting another job. As the poster of the parent note implies, once a Director has a mind to do things, like canning someone, they usually find a way to do it.

    Good luck in your next job (and there will always be a next job).

  20. Re:Happened here too... on Some Companies Don't Care about Web Defacement · · Score: 1

    Remember the names of the CEO, COO and CFO, and never work for them again. They do not deserve to be in business for being that casual about their customer's information.

    Customer info, including credit card info, should be treated like gold.

  21. Re:Cost Justification on Some Companies Don't Care about Web Defacement · · Score: 1

    Good question. The answer is that the company has to think about these things BEFORE the hacks occur. If these policies are not spelled out, then it may cost them more money (in terms of lost business) than the money they save by scrimping on security.

    As an example, my company has a long, but readable security policy which insists they will prosecute inappropriate uses of the network (and it's spelled out what 'inappropriate' that means). There is a shorter version of this on the website, too, so that hackers can be warned, if they choose to read it.

  22. Cost Justification on Some Companies Don't Care about Web Defacement · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Odd as it may seem, some companies cannot afford to pursue prosecution. They would have to pay several thousands of dollars of lawyer time and system administrator/security administrator time to preserve the evidence and litigate.


    What I can recommend to each SlashDot reader is to ask for your company's policy towards hacks and intrusions. It should be concise, clear, and objective. This way there will be no suprises, and the System Admins will know what to expect and not be punished for misunderstanding the policy.

  23. Another Java style guide on Recommended C++ and Java Coding Standards? · · Score: 1

    Here's another Java style guide

  24. Don't confuse the Internet with the Real World. on Free Speech, Porn And Internet Controls · · Score: 1

    Don't confuse the Internet with the real world. The Internet is born of anarchy and the real world is having a tough time understanding that.

    Everyone else in the real world has to use real age verification systems (be is visual "hmm, he looks like a 11 year old" or "ID please") when it comes to things that can be deemed "harmful" to minors, so why shouldn't online systems?

    Yes, but what else on the Internet is real age verification used? Online pharmacies? Not really -- they seek a (forgable) doctor's RX.

    Gambling? No. You just need a credit card for that.

    So what precedent is there for "real age verification" on the Internet?

  25. OmniRemote/ on In Search of the Best Programmable Universal Remote? · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those with a Palm Pilot, OmniRemote is an excellent universal remote application. It makes Palm IIs with the 2MB upgrade card useful again.