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  1. Re:It takes HIPAA or similar regulation on Survey: Most IT Staff Don't Communicate Security Risks · · Score: 1

    HIPAA hasn't gotten MSWind off of Doctors computers, or off of the Medical Insurance company computers.

    If a law that won't be enforced is passed, it's just another thing that the powerful can use against their political enemies.

  2. Re:Fail on Nokia Insider On Why It Failed and Why Apple Could Be Next · · Score: 1

    While that's true, at that point Noika had been sabotaging themselves for quite awhile.

    Yes, Elop was a MS mole...but probably with the concurrence of the BOD. It wasn't difficult to see, even from the outside, and MS has a long history of such actions, so even someone totally ignorant of the situation would immediately suspect what was in the wind.

    Do I think that it's technically possible that Noika could have built a successful business if they had opted for Android? Yes. Or for Maemo. They might well not have emerged as a dominant player, but the company would have survived. I suspect the BOD members of breaching fidicuary trust, though I doubt it could be proven. (Might be interesting if some prosecutor tried.)

  3. Re:Suggestions and comments on Computer-Designed Proteins Recognize and Bind Small Molecules · · Score: 1

    Fiction isn't a good response. Particularly when there are so many good examples just lying around. Bridges that fall down. Nuclear reactors that fail. And everything in between.

    OTOH, it's too early in the state of the art to move it off planet. We aren't talking about reproducing organisms (including viruses) here. Admittely, that kind of thing IS one of their goals, but it's still a ways off. Prions aren't that infectious. You generally need to either eat them or inject them. And bacteria usually find them delicious. And prions seem to be the level they're aiming at now.

    P.S.: Prions are NECESSARY for mamalian life. Probably for chordate life, and possibly for multicellular life, but those I'm not sure of. The ones we notice are the ones that are infectiously "misfolded", but that's a VERY small minority.

  4. Re:I'm not falling for that! on What Marketers Think They Know About You and What They Really Do · · Score: 1

    It would probably be better to just usually deny. Say 999 times out of 1,000. If you don't randomly mix a bit of truth with the fiction, you are providing actual information. (Admittedly, it's a bit hard to recover.)

  5. Re:Computer "forensics" should never be admissible on Court Orders Retrial In Google Maps-Related Murder Case · · Score: 1

    Actually, AFAIK, NSA is usually relatively indifferent to minor things like murder. That's only interesting if someone involved is already "of interest" to the federal government. So their involvement would not increase the probability of malicious prosecution, only the probability that there would be unconstitutional attempts to keep the source of the evidence secret.

    That said, NSA probably wouldn't know WHO conducted the search. Not unless he was already "of interest".

  6. Re:Ignoring your users is the new mantra on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    A killfile is a local action. That would be reasonable input to a local Bayesian filter. For a distributed usenet, I was envisioning each newsgroup maintaining its own filter system. When recipients largely vote no on an item, it is used the train the groups Bayesian filter.

    P.S.: I only said Bayesian filter because that's the current best technology. If a better answer comes along, grab it.

  7. Re:No surprise on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    That's very near to the truth...unless you are really fond of eye candy. It's true enough that I have refused to allow flash to be installed on my system.

    OTOH, some designs actually DO work better than others. It's nice to have a table of contents at the side of the page, e,g,, ... unless the page needs to be so wide that you don't have room for it on the screen on your system. Fortunately, having a site that provides versions both with and without frames solves that problem. There actually ARE so real uses for JavaScript, even though I'm not real pleased with AJAX. Most uses of AJAX would be better avoided. (Let people reload the page if they want changes, e.g.) I'm pretty much a fan of HTML 1.0, with relatively few extensions.

    OTOH, that's just MY use case. Other people have other priorities. But if I've decided to use a service, I REALLY object to later having new requirements added. Having them as an option is fine, but not as a requirement.

  8. Re:Ignoring your users is the new mantra on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    While you have a point, it's still going to cost them. The tablet inteface rather demands a different kind of interface than does the desktop or laptop (which, though different, are similar enough that the difference can be reasonably handled).

    When you get rid to the text interface (as opposed to providing the GUI one) you strongly limit the niche that your system will work in. Even Gnome is better than some of the things I've seen when used in the desktop context.

    Unifying the interface between device segments guarantees that some areas are poorly served. Yes, it eases development, but not enough that it is justifiable. The reason that it's justifiable is probably ignorance rather than arrogance, but making a decision because you didn't understand the problem isn't a smart move.

    As for Yahoo... I neither use the current Yahoo Groups, nor have I used the past versions. I couldn't just what had changed even were I to look. This may be either a reasonable move or a stupid one. I suspect, from the "No, you can't use the old interface" part of the report that it's both stupid and arrogant, but there's no way I could be sure. There is, however, a strong resemblence to the way that Gnome3 was foisted onto people. But people will put up with a lot from a free service that's supplying a desired service. Especially if they aren't aware of any alternatives.

  9. Re:Ignoring your users is the new mantra on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    UseNet was ruined by trolls. But a similar system with a distributed moderation might work. It would certainly be more difficult to implement, and would have more feedback relationship than UseNet did/does, but...

    Think of it this way. If you can cancel your posts, then the basic structure is in place to allow you to vote on messages that you receive.

  10. Re:MyYahoo on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    Yahoo was always a joke. Yahoo is the company that started around the idea of having people index the web.

  11. Re:Lesson not learned on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 1

    OK. So (to get back to the thread) your recommendation is that non-technical users should run Apache with a custom configuration? This seems a bit silly to me.

    Also, he already stated that there were technical solutions to the problem. But clearly this was just the final straw that caused him to decide that it wasn't worth running his own web site.

    FWIW, I, also, don't find it worthwhile to run my own web site. I'm sure I could, but I don't want to bother. I can't even maintain enough interest to maintain a web site hosted for free on someone else's server. For every level of comitment, there's a reasonable choice. For me, it to avoid the bother. For him, it's to let someone else handle the hosting.

    P.S.: I have, a few years ago, set up a website on an Apache install on my local system. So I'm pretty sure that the only thing keeping me away from running my own site is lack of interest. I could be wrong, as it wasn't an externally facing site...but I'm not interested enough to find out. But asking my wife to do even that much would be an exercise in futility. She's got a lot more interest than I do, but not enough to keep a blog running. (Well, she kept one running for 6 months or so a few years ago, but...)

  12. Re:Lesson not learned on Users Revolt Over Yahoo Groups Update · · Score: 3, Informative

    Didn't you understand his point? It *is* better for him for them to copy his images than to link to them. It doesn't cost him as much.

    If he were running a high volume site, and this were done by a low volume site, this wouldn't have much effect. As he's running a low volume site, it can significantly raise his expenses.

  13. Re:this makes no sense at all on The Golden Gate Barrage: New Ideas To Counter Sea Level Rise · · Score: 2

    Sorry, but 1 foot isn't the worst case scenario. It's the "Probably not more than" scenario. The worst case is actually measured in meters, but is probably unlikely. (It requires massive releases of methane from submerged methyl cathlates.)

    (Actually, even that isn't the worst case. A real worst case would be a dinosaur killer size asteroid impacting near Antarctica. That would lead to a tsunami perhaps a thousand feet high, and .... well, the rest wouldn't really matter. But all of Antarctica would melt. Steam might not reach the Arctic. Land strikes are much more survivable)

  14. Re:Why not just move? on The Golden Gate Barrage: New Ideas To Counter Sea Level Rise · · Score: 1

    Well, the real problem is that if the water rises enough to submerge much of SF., it will also submerge, in salt, or brackish, water, much of the San Jouquin Valley. This is a lot of prime agricultural land.

    I'm still not convinced that this is a good answer. I suppose it doesn't hurt to look at it as an option, but I think a better place to place the barrier is at the Carquinez Straits. Urban areas can be rebuilt on pilings, but that doesn't work very well for farm land.
    N.B.: A dam at the Carquines Straits would also cause tremendous flooding in the San Joquin valley, but it would be flooding with fresh water (Sacramento River). There are lots of crops that would do nicely in that kind of situation. Rice, e.g., and Mangos, though they don't mind salt so much. Sugar cane. Cotton would probably need to move elsewhere, but that's not a real problem. Olives and almonds would still be good choices on the higher ground. Etc. Perhaps some aquaculture.

  15. Re:So... on The Golden Gate Barrage: New Ideas To Counter Sea Level Rise · · Score: 1

    FWIW, we are probably already committed to considerable sea level rise from things that have already happened. The oceans are warmer. The albedo of the Arctic has decreased. etc. It's not at all clear that it's still possible to avert massive Arctic melt. Antarctica seems a bit more stable, but even there parts of it are already showing the effects of warming.

    It is my suspicion that we are already committed to a thorough melting of Greenland during summers. I hope that the melting of the permafrost won't release enough methane that we're committed to further than that. Remember, these effects are slow, and there are lots of time lags built into the cycles. And there are complex feedback cycles. None of the models include all the effects. It's seriously impossible, Even if we knew enough, as it would be compuationally intractable, and what use is a prediction, if you don't finish the calculation until after the event has happened? So all the models are simplifications, even where we have the data to be more accurate.

  16. Re:That's all very nice on Obama Admin Says It Won't Fight Looser Marijuana Laws, With Conditions · · Score: 1

    I've supported candidates before. Some of them got in. I was uniformly disappointed. Perhaps some of the ones that didn't get in wouldn't have disappointed me. But I have speculations (based on observations which are hardly proof) that a part of the reason that some of them didn't get in was because they intended to keep their promises.

    It is a characteristic of the "plurality wins" electoral system that it will settle down into a quasi-stable state with two parties. Majority wins (e.g. Condorcet or Instant Runoff Voting) do not have this characteristic. In those voting systems what the populace actually wants has a larger effect on which candidate will get elected. (We found that recently in a city election, where we were using IRV. The candidate actually elected was not the person who got a plurality during the first round, but was someone much more acceptable to the populace at large. Granted, city elections don't have a large presence of party politics, but analogs are present.

  17. Re:Out of jobs? on Technologies Like Google's Self-Driving Car: Destroying Jobs? · · Score: 1

    Managers are the ones who decide which jobs will be automated. So they will be the last to go. This is not an argument that they are the hardest jobs to automate, rather it's an argument analogous to "Because they decide how much each job is worth, they get the highest salaries."

  18. Re:That's all very nice on Obama Admin Says It Won't Fight Looser Marijuana Laws, With Conditions · · Score: 1

    How can you vote for smaller government, when the party that SAYS they stand for smaller government increase the size of the government faster than their opposition?

    If there were a viable alternative, then you might have a point. If candidates were compelled to keep their campaign promises, then you might have a point. But as long as we have plurality wins voting, we're going to get one of two power mad psychotics. Just pray whoever we end up with isn't also a scociopath.

  19. Re:Weasel words on Obama Admin Says It Won't Fight Looser Marijuana Laws, With Conditions · · Score: 1

    IIRC, it was the feds that first decided to make certain drugs illegal. (Well, certain communities had ordinances, but that's not the same thing.)

  20. Re:Weasel words on Obama Admin Says It Won't Fight Looser Marijuana Laws, With Conditions · · Score: 1

    I think you don't understand how the drug laws were imposed in the first place. Often against tremendous public opinion. Just not active enough opinion that they would do anything about it. (Alcohol prohibition was a separate case. It's a part of the war of the sexes. When a large portion of the male population would off fighting a war, prohibition got voted in. Getting rid of it was a real problem, and we are still suffering from the after effects that it caused, e.g. a major increase in organized crime.)

    P.S.: Organized crime isn't interested in a drug that doesn't carry significant penalties (or hefty import duties). Doesn't matter for this subject whether or not it's addictive, though naturally it prefers more addictive drugs. Watch out if tobacco is ever made illegal.

  21. Re:The emperor has no clothes on Obama Admin Says It Won't Fight Looser Marijuana Laws, With Conditions · · Score: 1

    I would argue that if there are so many laws the average citizen can't know what's legal and what isn't, then either ignorance of the law SHOULD be an excuse, or there needs to be a reduction in the number (and complexity) of the laws.

  22. Re:Discouraging underage use? on Obama Admin Says It Won't Fight Looser Marijuana Laws, With Conditions · · Score: 1

    I'm quite willing to believe that there are biased studies, but that doesn't make them all wrong. IIRC there was one that studied the effects on certain classes of neurons, or possibly certain brain structures, that don't usually finish development until the late teen-age years. If found that marijuana, interfered with the proper development of those structures. They were involved in finer aspects of judgement and motivation.

    I've no reason to believe that study was biased. I can't remember the instrumentation that they used, whether it was MRI or something else, but it was a highly significant, and not judgment-based, conclusion. Of course, I didn't read the original report, so this could be reporting error. You're not only getting a third-hand report, but also one that can't offer you a citation. Do, however, notice that this isn't the same study that was reported above. And I know (remember) nothing about the sample size, or even if it was in the report I read.

    Still, that's a plausible report. And the people I have known that started smoking pot before they were in college were a bit ... flakey. So the conclusion is also plausible.

  23. Re:This is a good thing. on Technologies Like Google's Self-Driving Car: Destroying Jobs? · · Score: 1

    You don't need to side either for or against the humans to realize that this will eliminate whole categories of jobs. It will create a few new ones, but not nearly comparable in number. And those new jobs will create additional opportunities for automation.

    This is the patten that's been working since the industrial revolution. It's what lead to "the consumer society". And it shows no sign of slowing down.

  24. Re:Out of jobs? on Technologies Like Google's Self-Driving Car: Destroying Jobs? · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but you argument would say you should have chosen management or research. And there's a lot more managers. OTOH, I don't suppose middle management is particularly safe either. Around 30-40 years ago I wrote an essay on the subject called "Be a garbageman", but I'm not really sure that's actually a good choice now. A lot can be done by redesigning the jobs.

  25. Re:Name game on Elop Favored By Gamblers As Microsoft's Next Chief Executive · · Score: 1

    No. Making a stable profit is a niche that should be encouraged. Nothing has the ability to grow forever.

    If the company is stagnating, it becomes quite important to identify the reason. If it's because of market saturation, then KEEP DOING IT RIGHT. Return profits to the share-holders, if you're a corporation. But be sure to keep your eyes open for a better way of doing whatever it is that is your specialty. But be very careful that in doing so you don't stop DOING IT RIGHT.

    Change for the sake of change is foolish.