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User: PingXao

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Comments · 824

  1. Re:How they know... on Earth's Core Made In Miniature · · Score: 1

    Nope, he is correct. The word "hiatus" is used incorrectly. The "gap" in its definition does not fit in this context.

  2. Once every 4 months is OK with me on Ask Slashdot: Best Flash-Friendly Router To Replace Aging WRT54GS? · · Score: 1

    I have not yet had a really good reason to switch away from my WRT54GS routers yet. One day there will be a compelling reason to do so. When that day comes I want to hear about it on slashdot.

  3. Evil Evil Fucking Evil on ACTA To Be Signed This Weekend · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised Google isn't at the forefront of this odious pice of drek.

  4. Oriented on NASA Probe Orbiting Asteroid Vesta · · Score: 1

    It oriented its antenna, it didn't orientate it. Someone needs to documentate the English language a little bit better.

  5. No Shit Sherlock on Obama: 'We Don't Have Enough Engineers' · · Score: 1

    I had something like a 2,000 word reply for this article, but on second thought I decided better. Shorter: Hahahahahahahahaha of course not, asshole, and if you don't know why then you shouldn't be the fucking president.

    Nobody else would be any better as President IMO, and that in large part is why America is doomed.

  6. Wait a second.... on The Decreasing Impact of Death In Sci-fi · · Score: 1

    There are sci fi shows on TV that aren't reruns? Huh, coulda fooled me.

  7. Re:Open source win on Apple AirPlay Private Key Exposed · · Score: 1

    "Security through obscurity is a myth."

    It works just fine assuming you get the details right, and while it's true most implementations don't, some do, and they are wildly successful. Saying that it's a myth is a generalization that is simply wrong.

    When was the last time you heard about Firewire 1394 DTCP encryption getting cracked? Millions of people have cable STBs with firewire 1394 output. DTCP has been protecting firewire video streams for a dozen years, and no serious attack on it has ever been revealed. DTCP relies a great deal on security through obscurity. Details of the M6 cipher it uses are unknown. Selection of the ECC curve is unknown.

    You might think that maybe someone IS working on it, after all, the related (but not the same) HDCP has been cracked wide open, but there is no evidence anywhere that indicates DTCP has been cracked. If it was cracked in some underground lab somewhere you would at least expect to see HW or SW available somewhere that would take advantage of the crack.

    But there is nothing, only crickets chirping in the dark while a great example of security through obscurity continues to perform flawlessly year after year after year. And that's no myth.

  8. Re:Incompetence on Crack In Fukushima Structure May Be Leaking Radiation · · Score: 2

    You can't compare #3 with #4 because #4 was shut down for refueling. During refueling, the containment cap is lifted off and laid down off to the side, probably in the corner. For example (this is not the same facitlity), here's a pic of the containment head being lifted off http://www.nucleartourist.com/images/headlift.jpg

    And here's another pic that shows refueling underway. http://www.nucleartourist.com/images/rflg-fl2.jpg

    Notice the dome sitting on the floor in the back, out of the way. That is probably analogous to what the pictures of Fukushima Daiichi #4 building are showing. You can't assume the containment head position would be the same in the other reactor buildings.

  9. Finally a good one! on Convicted Terrorist Relied On Single-Letter Cipher · · Score: 1

    I dread coming to slashdot every year on this date. For several years it was cringe-worthy so the last couple I made it a point to not even bother. Glad I decided to have a look this morning! Always good to start the day with a LOL.

  10. I can't believe it on NASA's Orion Moon Craft Unveiled · · Score: 0, Troll

    You actually got me to click on a link that went to Fox News. Thanks, but I like being well-informed, so I think I'll wait until a real news organization reports on this. Google News, for some reason, keeps popping up links to them, too. Looks like it's finally time to block them at the firewall, just in case.

  11. Wheel Stop on A Bittersweet Finale For Discovery Space Shuttle · · Score: 1

    When a shuttle lands and rolls to a stop, does the crew call out "Wheels Stopped", or is it "Wheel Stop"? I always thought it was the latter, and it bugs me to no end that most transcripts and news stories about landings always print the former. Yeah, it's a small nitpick, but as the shuttle program winds down it's time to get all the little stuff put to bed.

    Congratulations to Discovery and all who built, flew and maintained her lo these many years. You will be missed.

  12. Re:Advertising demographics trumps genre on Does Syfy Really Love Sci-Fi? · · Score: 1

    Every comment except this one should just be deleted. It's a race to the bottom and nobody cares anymore. What I find surprising is the huge amount of people that simply don't "get it", and "it" is: TV, Cable and Radio programming exists not for you, the viewer (/listener/consumer). It exists for the broadcasters to sell the viewers (listeners) to the advertisers. The advertisers are the networks' customers, not you, the cable subscriber/radio listener. Once you understand that everything else makes sense.

  13. Need the login box back on Slashdot Launches Re-Design · · Score: 1

    There are only so many times I am going to login by manually typing my userid and password.

    I'd like a page or form that Firefox can remember. Or even better, a single URL that I can bookmark that logs me in when I access it. Slashdot used to have something like that a few years ago. When that disappeared, at least we had the loging box on the right. Now that's gone too.

    There are a good number of issues put forth in this thread. How about a RESPONSE to some of them?

  14. I've been saying this for years on Threat of Cyberwar Is Over-Hyped · · Score: 1

    Where's my check?

  15. I agree with some of what he says on Bastardi's Wager · · Score: 4, Informative

    I like how Bastardi is not grinding any political axes. What he says sounds logical. If you look at the wikipedia entry on him there's mention (but no link) of Bastardi's long-range forecast for this winter, that was released by AccuWeather last October. It has already been shown to be very far off the mark of what has happened the last couple of months. So this guy's track record isn't any better than any other "weather man".

    AccuWeather isn't above trying to aggrandize themselves, either. They tried to get the government to close down the National Weather Service and halt the distribution of weather satellite data to the public a few years ago.

  16. unbelievable on Fed Goes Hunting For Malcontents · · Score: 1

    When you have a budgetary office asking other government deptartments if they have psychologists evaluating their employees so as to prevent the leakage of government "secrets"..... you know what? you have too many goddamn secrets.

  17. I remember the original Tron on Tron: Legacy · · Score: 1

    Some of us went to see it on the big screen at a local theater. To be honest, I didn't like it very much. The effects were good, but they alone weren't enough to save what was a weak and obvious plot. I thought it was boring. Today I really like Jeff Bridges' work, but I barely remember him in it.

  18. Not space news on NASA Confirms Discovery of Organism With Phosphorus-Free DNA · · Score: 1

    Kirk and Spock discovered the Horta over 40 years ago and this is about the same thing. While interesting, this experiment took place here on earth and the results had to be coerced. Not saying it couldn't happen in the wild somewhere out there, but the announcement was anticlimactic.

  19. We're above average intelligence here on Sarah Palin 'Target WikiLeaks Like Taliban' · · Score: 1

    This is the last place I'd see "news" about that half-baked politician who doesn't have the 3 brain cells she was born with. It's a good thing slashdot let me remove the "Politics" category just now, or our long relationship would be at an end.

  20. Re:Good to see on Microsoft Says IE9 Beta Demand Overwhelming · · Score: 1

    Not to mention, "... change the web forever". I thought it smacked of astroturfing, myself, but, alas, no mod points today.

  21. What a waste of time on Linux Wall Warts Small On Size, Big On Possibilities · · Score: 1

    TFA is a 3-page waste of electrons. Linux runs well on very small, low-power single-board computers, often no bigger than your cellphone charger! The End

  22. Sick of perpetual motion machine articles on Gasoline From Thin Air · · Score: 3, Insightful

    These are a staple on slashdot lately. Every crackpot scheme to extract energy from X very cheaply seems to get immediate front page coverage. There's at least one a month and they range from overblown PR at best to outright snake oil at worst. /. seriously needs a "Perpetual Motion" category for these stories so I can ignore them completely.

  23. Hoax is more like it on Afghan Tech Minerals — Cure, Curse, Or Hype? · · Score: 1

    Afghanis realizing the benefits of minerals in their contry is about as likely to happen as finding yellowcake uranium in Nigeria.

  24. Seriously? on Rumor of Betelgeuse's Death Greatly Exaggerated · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I mean, does this story warrant inclusion on slashdot? There are plenty of other places to go for bad rumors and conspiracy theories.

  25. Equivalent to false advertising on Taylor Momsen Did Not Write This Slashdot Headline · · Score: 1

    I find it difficult to shop for things online. Every retailer now seems to show up in Google search hits, whether or not they even sell the item. There's nothing quite so infuriating as following a link you think will get you to a fair deal on the item you're looking to buy, only to discover they don't even carry the damn thing!

    The idea is the same: get the eyeballs watching and pick their pockets while they're distracted.