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User: thatkid_2002

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  1. Re:Still having misery with Firefox. on Firefox 32 Arrives With New HTTP Cache, Public Key Pinning Support · · Score: 1

    I have similar browsing habbits and none of these problems. I'm on Linux though.

  2. Re:First impressions on Firefox 32 Arrives With New HTTP Cache, Public Key Pinning Support · · Score: 2

    It's been as fast a Chrome for years. It's only Google fanbois on Slashdot who really say otherwise... Though I get the impression that maybe it is slightly different under Windows so maybe that's why some think it's slow. Most of the badness was quickly eliminated after FF4, and the UI changes are really just a storm in a teacup (they haven't changed the way I use FF at all).

  3. Linux Conference Australia on Ask Slashdot: Good Technology Conferences To Attend? · · Score: 1

    Or any other community run/focused conference. LCA is great bang for the buck, and despite the name is mostly about F/OSS in general - not just Linux.

  4. Running Fedora - why not FreeIPA? on Ask Slashdot: Linux Login and Resource Management In a Computer Lab? · · Score: 1

    I think FreeIPA can address most of your needs and if you are already running Fedora then adding it to your network should be fairly trivial. FreeIPA is kind-of like an Active Directory type dealie (and it can synchronise against AD) that offers a lot of integration and control.

  5. Refurbished is great! on Buying New Commercial IT Hardware Isn't Always Worthwhile (Video) · · Score: 2

    When you have SMB type customers then refurbished hardware is great value. They're usually not willing to fork out for a new server. When there is refurbished hardware for a fraction of the price -- still new enough to be reasonably efficient and to add a HP Care Pack or whatever -- why not? Having hardware that is up to scratch is both good for you and good for your customer. Out of dozens of customers of this nature we've never been bitten (and yes, the customer knows the server is refurb + Care Pack).

    It's really great when you get a strong business relationship going with your local refurb business. Getting the pick of the litter really gets your geek juices flowing!

    We did have a reasonably strong virtualization setup too, and that helps as the article suggests.

    The laptop I am typing this on right now is a refurb model that I got for an excellent price a year and a half ago. It's probably the best laptop I've ever had including brand new ones.

  6. Researchers mostly aren't good lecturers on High School Students Not Waiting For Schools To Go Online · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Kahn Academy was a God-send for me. I didn't even have a high-school level of maths before I managed to find my way into an Engineering degree. I learned all of High-school maths and a lot of university level maths in the space of a few months thanks almost totally to the excellent instruction available through Kahn Academy.

    Many universities make researchers/professors teach. Some of them do an excellent job because they give a damn, or are passionate about sharing (as opposed to selfish and arrogant which many scientists are). Many of these lecturers are in academia because that's what they personally are good at - and so they don't understand how to teach people who aren't as naturally suited to the subject they are teaching as they were. They don't know what *normal* people find difficult or else they assume they know but completely miss the mark.

    Nearly every single mathematical person I have met utterly fails at communication, as I have only found two: a really gifted guy who breezed through university maths and is currently working on his PhD and Salman Kahn of Kahn Academy who is the best communicator of mathematical concepts I have ever found - hands down. He seems to know what normal people find hard and even pre-emptively answers your questions right as they pop into your head.

    This only reinforces how outdated the model of university education is and how poor value the university education itself generally is. Normal people can find higher quality resources online and consume them quickly and efficiently and apply them the next day. Instead of spending tens of thousands of dollars and 2+ years getting a fairly poor imitation of a "T-shaped" education I think the real solution is to set up strong learning resources (online and meatspace workshops) and allow people to cheaply sit certification tests (and portfolio checks) on university-level subjects. People can build their core education as narrow and tight as needed and expand the "arms" of their education out as far as needed in a dynamic fashion which suits this ever-changing world. Hey, if a person completes a whole degree in this fashion they can sell good-ole' degree certificates too!

  7. Re:Standalone? on The Future of Wearables: Standalone, Unobtrusive, and Everywhere · · Score: 1

    So it does neither watch nor phone well. Great. Where can I buy one?

  8. Standalone? on The Future of Wearables: Standalone, Unobtrusive, and Everywhere · · Score: 1

    I thought we didn't have the battery technology to really make this idea fly yet... I thought the reason why the leading smart watch (Pebble) is so successful is because it is *not* standalone, and as such as excellent integration with your phone and very good battery life.
    What do I know, I guess I'm just not in a sufficiently mindless consumer mindset. I'll never understand this idiocy.

  9. Freecode/Freshmeat replacement? Simple? on Freecode Freezeup · · Score: 1

    We all used it as a way to learn about what had just come out, and discover new useful projects by watching/browsing interesting looking items on the feed. All it really was is an aggregator of update feeds... So lets build a new (RSS) aggregator/planet and reach out to the old Freshmeat projects/users to get them to move over?

    If the functionality is pared right down it shouldn't even need logins or any of that stuff. Just make RSS links clearly visible and say to people "hey if you want to follow this project specifically, here's the link for your RSS reader!".

  10. x86 Android Virtualisation: native performance! on Android Needs a Simulator, Not an Emulator · · Score: 5, Informative

    Android is available for x86 these days and you can use hardware acceleration (CPU and GPU). Just set it up and get near-native performance. Or if you have an Android phone just `adb install -r blah.apk` what more can you want?

  11. Re:'stay-at-home-dad' schlock on Parenting Rewires the Male Brain · · Score: 1

    Each to his own. It seems you "choose not to be" a father and thus the effects described don't apply or make sense to you. I have seen the changes described in this article myself and it only confirms what I have seen. I don't think the stay-at-home-dad thing is a bad thing or even being forced upon men in general - hell I hear more men arguing *for* the right to be a stay-at-home-dad than against it. I think you're seeing ideologically charged language where there is none; perhaps the mention of a same-sex couple or the mention that the effect is triggered differently in women has skewed your opinion.

    Just to be clear, I am certainly not a feminist. I'm not narrow minded enough for that. I'm an egalitarian.

    (clearly my opinion)

  12. Network not search on Ask Slashdot: Computer Science Freshman, Too Soon To Job Hunt? · · Score: 1

    Try getting into community technical groups - there's always jobs bouncing around these places for those who have natural interest and skill, and they're more likely to understand and accommodate your (student) lifestyle, rather than places that put up ads with more generic applicants in mind.
    Hit Meetup and Facebook to help you find groups.

  13. I hope they don't come too soon. on Study: Earthlings Not Ready For Alien Encounters, Yet · · Score: 2

    A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it. Fifteen hundred years ago everybody knew the Earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred years ago, everybody knew the Earth was flat, and fifteen minutes ago, you knew that humans were alone on this planet. Imagine what you'll know tomorrow. -- Agent Kay

  14. Different mindset on Ask Slashdot: Beginner To Intermediate Programming Projects? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Stop thinking in terms of difficulty levels and programming problems. Go out there and just do stuff, easy or hard, with the objective of making something meaningful happen. Have another look at Open Source - maybe you don't grok open source and the ecosystem yet, but give it a bit more time and start with the simplest bugs rather than feature development.

    Something that I have found particularly helpful is having a go at using open source tools and libraries and then when you find something hard to use (and with a lot of swearing, eventually understand it) go and write a tool or a library to make it easier. There's so many rough edges out there that you can smooth out and these problems tend to have a fairly confined complexity in my experience. You've already started this with your scripting so take it to the next level.

  15. Re: AMD Graphics on Mini Gaming PCs — Promising, But Not Ready · · Score: 1

    The drivers for AMD graphics are so shoddy that you can't reliably get full performance and quality as you can with Nvidia.
    The CPU performance really just has to be "good enough" - which is probably is.

  16. AMD Graphics on Mini Gaming PCs — Promising, But Not Ready · · Score: 0

    ...Why?

  17. Of course! Smart watches are tasteless. on Japanese and Swiss Watchmakers Scoff At Smartwatches · · Score: 1

    Smart watches (with the exception of the Pebbles, IMO) are completely ridiculous and tasteless at this stage. I don't know how smart watch companies are getting it so wrong. Also, where are the smart watches tailored for women?

  18. Good on China Censors "The Big Bang Theory" and Other Streaming Shows · · Score: 0

    Big Bang Theory is terrible, and the rest are awful at best. Good Guy Chinese Government is saving their people from shitty shows.

  19. Re:Superglue on Closing Surgical Incisions With a Paintbrush and Nanoparticles · · Score: 0

    This is Slashdot. TFA is never read.

  20. Superglue on Closing Surgical Incisions With a Paintbrush and Nanoparticles · · Score: 0

    Does the nano-particle solution happen to just be super-glue? This has been used for years for the type of thing the video shows (as I understand).

  21. Wake-up call? on The GNOME Foundation Is Running Out of Money · · Score: 1

    I wonder if this situation will make them ask themselves "what has gone wrong"?

    I'd suggest they should look into why they've pissed everybody off - I'm sure people will be forthcoming with answers. Here's a link with some basic responses.

  22. Next time your (g)mail goes down... on GM Names Names, Suspends Two Engineers Over Ignition-Switch Safety · · Score: 0

    ...blame yourself for using a service which relies on magic and good will to scale further than is sensible.

  23. Strayed from the original idea on 3D-Printed UAV Can Go From Atoms to Airborne in 24 Hours · · Score: 1

    3D printers were originally intended for creating moulds. 3D print the object and do simple sand-casting. Don't need a $400 000 3D printer.

  24. Can't trust that clock. on New US Atomic Clock Goes Live · · Score: 1

    Probably compromised by the NSA.

  25. My 2 cents. on New Australian Privacy Laws Could Have Ramifications On Google Glass · · Score: 1

    Fuck you.