So, he writes a bash script for an important backup job and doesn't "set -u" at the beginning to throw an error if you attempt to use an uninitialized variable?
Really?
It's fascinating how the old reactors are still in service because the public is afraid of them. The collective fear of the old reactors and their flaws leads to new reactors not being a favorable political decision. Thus, we are stuck with the 40 year old old versions of the most efficient clean energy production we're aware of.
Seriously, he "taped off the regular switches"? This is because he was setting it up himself, and not getting the actual smart switches to go with his smart relays, dimmers and sockets. The DIY stuff isn't for everyone. If you want a smart home without doing stuff yourself, DIY is not for you. It's kind of in the name.
There shouldn't be a dumb switch in a smart house. It should be a neat, programmable switch which your *CERTIFIED ELECTRICIAN AND SMART HOUSE INSTALLER* has set up to turn off all the lights in your house when you press it upon exit.
So your patent is in your own field of work. Let's say it's an algorithm for doing X.
Now, your new employer asks you to solve problem Y, which involves doing X. They might not even know it does, but it does, and they did after all hire you because you're an expert on that that subject, as stated on your application. Are you then going to knowingly make an algorithm worse than your patented one to avoid license issues?
Cameras share downsides of mobile devices (small, can be lost or stolen) and none of the upsides (No lock screens or encrypted file systems)... where even long since deleted pictures can be recovered easily years after the fact
True, except it's a lot more convenient to zero the storage of a camera than to wipe your phone's SD card, and while people tend to carry pictures around on their phones for years, I've never met anyone doing that with their actual cameras.
I also agree Cyanogenmod is great. Too bad it doesn't support my phone well yet:(
Using a dumb phone is not a solution. Everything a dumb phone does, by which I mean mainly messaging and phone calls, can be monitored anyway, as well as the location of the phone, by triangulation. All this means is that you lose features with implied privacy issues by going from a smart to a dumb phone, but are left with the remaining features that also have privacy issues.
It's as simple as that. It doesn't matter if you turn on mobile data as long as that is under the control of the phone's operating system, and it doesn't matter if you pay attention to your cell phone bill, as traffic to and from specific government servers is likely exempt from the monthly traffic calculations just as the provider's own servers are likely to be. It doesn't matter if you monitor your wireless network, since questionable transmissions are likely to only go through mobile data, as that's harder to monitor.
While you may be able to test this with your own base station, the phone might also detect that it's not on an official network and therefore not do anything, but that's probably taking it a bit far.
While you could switch to a "dumb" phone, those are of course also trackable, and your conversations and messages can still be monitored, so I don't see any real gain there.
Myself, I carry a phone with me all the time, but I simply do not treat it as a secure device. If you want to take private pictures with your girlfriend, for instance, your phone is not the camera you want to use. End of story.
Who is this neutral party that's been tasked to go through all their private photos and figure out which ones are acceptable? Is this up to a single individual? A committee? The two of them in company of a mediator?
Parent needs voting up. With EncFS, you can even use the reverse function, in case you like your local files unencrypted for some reason, to get an encrypted "view" of the files and sync that. You can mount a remote Windows machine's drive, for instance, get an encrypted view of said drive and sync that to the cloud.
Also, check out Jottacloud if you have a Windows machine available. I don't think their "unlimited storage" deal can be beaten.
Don't forget the various subsets of "cloud computing".
If you have a "personal cloud", you actually do, at least least in part, control the computers. From the definition I got from Microsoft Norway, it pretty much just means your server room uses virtual machines in a dynamic way with lots of automation.
Every time someone new pops by #yourfavoritedistro on irc.freenode.net, they have to learn how to pose a question on IRC.
This includes figuring out what is relevant, what is not relevant, when to include a pastebin link with logs, config files and such, the exact command the user is typing, the expected output, the actual output and often also an explanation of the higher goal in case a whole different approach could be suggested.
New users also have issues with using needless abbreviations line "u" and "plz" and use the enter key as punctuation, making it very hard to follow their broken up sentences in crowded channels. Once you stop doing that and put your entire question in one message, don't make assumptions, paste your command and output exactly, the amount of help you can get from friendly voulenteers is nothing short of astonishing.
I know, it's a lot, but you get used to it, and it's great!
To say something is "inexplicable", you first have to prove it is so. Otherwise I am very uncomfortable with you calling it that.
I am much more comfortable with "we haven't figured that one out yet" and am willing to live my life either not having that information, or helping to figure it out, depending on what the information is.
Deciding on one's own that something is "inexplicable" is a pointless activity and is probably detrimental to progress.
Unlike the batteries however, it can be stored indefinitely without degrading, and be "charged" (tank filled) in a matter of seconds. Also it doesn't wear down (to anywhere near the same degree, anyway) when recharged.
I really want to enroll there, make a little PHP script to redirect to a random link on either a newspaper, or the pirate bay (50% chance of each), and then distribute that link in an email. Wonder what they'd do with that.
What about a site where if you aren't logged in, all links to its content redirect to copyrighted material? They aren't *really* going there, you just don't have access to where they actually go...
$ wget --quiet -O - http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot | grep title | grep "Bet Big On Mobile Payments"
AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile Bet Big On Mobile Payments
What's with the & ?
Stop doing that, please!
Nothing more interesting than that it had to be checked in as "special luggage" I'm afraid.
It traveled in a small cardboard box which came back to me on the luggage line along with my bag.
Can I still bring a cell phone and a laptop battery, fully charged and with their power controllers removed?
Can I still bring a carry-on bag with two 1 meter reinforced steel rods connecting the handle, without anyone wondering if it could be dismantled and the steel rods used as quite effective swords?
And will they still take my pencil, so I can't bring one to take notes while I make the laptop battery explode?
Will they still not allow my modded PSP because it's see-through and the sight of electronics scares the shit out of them?
I dare you, Mozilla. Crowdsource the name.
So, he writes a bash script for an important backup job and doesn't "set -u" at the beginning to throw an error if you attempt to use an uninitialized variable? Really?
It's fascinating how the old reactors are still in service because the public is afraid of them. The collective fear of the old reactors and their flaws leads to new reactors not being a favorable political decision. Thus, we are stuck with the 40 year old old versions of the most efficient clean energy production we're aware of.
...please leave some of the Internet for the rest of us when they're done?
FTFY
Seriously, he "taped off the regular switches"? This is because he was setting it up himself, and not getting the actual smart switches to go with his smart relays, dimmers and sockets. The DIY stuff isn't for everyone. If you want a smart home without doing stuff yourself, DIY is not for you. It's kind of in the name.
There shouldn't be a dumb switch in a smart house. It should be a neat, programmable switch which your *CERTIFIED ELECTRICIAN AND SMART HOUSE INSTALLER* has set up to turn off all the lights in your house when you press it upon exit.
+1 for the Anker. Seems a much better alternative. I'm getting one.
So your patent is in your own field of work. Let's say it's an algorithm for doing X. Now, your new employer asks you to solve problem Y, which involves doing X. They might not even know it does, but it does, and they did after all hire you because you're an expert on that that subject, as stated on your application. Are you then going to knowingly make an algorithm worse than your patented one to avoid license issues?
Cameras share downsides of mobile devices (small, can be lost or stolen) and none of the upsides (No lock screens or encrypted file systems) ... where even long since deleted pictures can be recovered easily years after the fact
True, except it's a lot more convenient to zero the storage of a camera than to wipe your phone's SD card, and while people tend to carry pictures around on their phones for years, I've never met anyone doing that with their actual cameras.
:(
I also agree Cyanogenmod is great. Too bad it doesn't support my phone well yet
Using a dumb phone is not a solution. Everything a dumb phone does, by which I mean mainly messaging and phone calls, can be monitored anyway, as well as the location of the phone, by triangulation. All this means is that you lose features with implied privacy issues by going from a smart to a dumb phone, but are left with the remaining features that also have privacy issues.
It's as simple as that. It doesn't matter if you turn on mobile data as long as that is under the control of the phone's operating system, and it doesn't matter if you pay attention to your cell phone bill, as traffic to and from specific government servers is likely exempt from the monthly traffic calculations just as the provider's own servers are likely to be. It doesn't matter if you monitor your wireless network, since questionable transmissions are likely to only go through mobile data, as that's harder to monitor.
While you may be able to test this with your own base station, the phone might also detect that it's not on an official network and therefore not do anything, but that's probably taking it a bit far.
While you could switch to a "dumb" phone, those are of course also trackable, and your conversations and messages can still be monitored, so I don't see any real gain there.
Myself, I carry a phone with me all the time, but I simply do not treat it as a secure device. If you want to take private pictures with your girlfriend, for instance, your phone is not the camera you want to use. End of story.
Who is this neutral party that's been tasked to go through all their private photos and figure out which ones are acceptable? Is this up to a single individual? A committee? The two of them in company of a mediator?
Parent needs voting up. With EncFS, you can even use the reverse function, in case you like your local files unencrypted for some reason, to get an encrypted "view" of the files and sync that. You can mount a remote Windows machine's drive, for instance, get an encrypted view of said drive and sync that to the cloud. Also, check out Jottacloud if you have a Windows machine available. I don't think their "unlimited storage" deal can be beaten.
My 27" is 2560x1440, and there's plenty more where that came from. Samsung SA850T
Don't forget the various subsets of "cloud computing".
If you have a "personal cloud", you actually do, at least least in part, control the computers. From the definition I got from Microsoft Norway, it pretty much just means your server room uses virtual machines in a dynamic way with lots of automation.
Every time someone new pops by #yourfavoritedistro on irc.freenode.net, they have to learn how to pose a question on IRC.
This includes figuring out what is relevant, what is not relevant, when to include a pastebin link with logs, config files and such, the exact command the user is typing, the expected output, the actual output and often also an explanation of the higher goal in case a whole different approach could be suggested.
New users also have issues with using needless abbreviations line "u" and "plz" and use the enter key as punctuation, making it very hard to follow their broken up sentences in crowded channels. Once you stop doing that and put your entire question in one message, don't make assumptions, paste your command and output exactly, the amount of help you can get from friendly voulenteers is nothing short of astonishing.
I know, it's a lot, but you get used to it, and it's great!
To say something is "inexplicable", you first have to prove it is so. Otherwise I am very uncomfortable with you calling it that. I am much more comfortable with "we haven't figured that one out yet" and am willing to live my life either not having that information, or helping to figure it out, depending on what the information is. Deciding on one's own that something is "inexplicable" is a pointless activity and is probably detrimental to progress.
So how do you make a "You're infected with X" page people actually trust?
Unlike the batteries however, it can be stored indefinitely without degrading, and be "charged" (tank filled) in a matter of seconds. Also it doesn't wear down (to anywhere near the same degree, anyway) when recharged.
The. Car. Is. Not. Gone. If you have the technology to copy my car, leaving the original intact so I can still use it, feel absolutely free to do so.
I really want to enroll there, make a little PHP script to redirect to a random link on either a newspaper, or the pirate bay (50% chance of each), and then distribute that link in an email. Wonder what they'd do with that. What about a site where if you aren't logged in, all links to its content redirect to copyrighted material? They aren't *really* going there, you just don't have access to where they actually go...
I thought toys with small parts had warnings and age restrictions on them, magnets or not..?
wget --quiet -O - http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot | grep title | grep "Bet Big On Mobile Payments"
$ wget --quiet -O - http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot | grep title | grep "Bet Big On Mobile Payments" AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile Bet Big On Mobile Payments What's with the & ? Stop doing that, please!
Nothing more interesting than that it had to be checked in as "special luggage" I'm afraid. It traveled in a small cardboard box which came back to me on the luggage line along with my bag.
Can I still bring a cell phone and a laptop battery, fully charged and with their power controllers removed? Can I still bring a carry-on bag with two 1 meter reinforced steel rods connecting the handle, without anyone wondering if it could be dismantled and the steel rods used as quite effective swords? And will they still take my pencil, so I can't bring one to take notes while I make the laptop battery explode? Will they still not allow my modded PSP because it's see-through and the sight of electronics scares the shit out of them?