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User: Archtech

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  1. Re:Some of us do still assemble, even now on The Technologies Changing What It Means To Be a Programmer · · Score: 1

    The problem is that they are expected to keep writing new articles about (more or less) fresh topics. Thus guaranteeing that they never learn much about anything.

  2. Re:COBOL was better than JavaScript. on The Technologies Changing What It Means To Be a Programmer · · Score: 1

    "There's a good chance that, without JavaScript, the web would have vanished".

    How amusing - but quite untrue. Haven't you noticed how, throughout the history of computing, old standards regularly become unfashionable but virtually never disappear? Now consider that the Web was originally designed purely and simply to let people read hyperlinked documents - an extremely useful and indeed fundamental capability. It wasn't meant to display moving pictures, or serve as a virtual shop, or allow people to keep the world updated with what they have eaten or worn.

    Without JavaScript, none of that would have been lost. Possibly, a new standard would have been invented to support all the trivial, self-indulgent uses, leaving the real Web unpolluted, efficient, and secure. Pity.

  3. Re:Nobody kills Java on Oracle Hasn't Killed Java -- But There's Still Time · · Score: 1

    In about 1990 Gartner estimated that there were over 100 billion lines of COBOL in commercial use. By 2003, that had become 180 billion lines. Extrapolating, I'd expect that the figure is over 250 billion lines today. It's rather like the IBM mainframe, whose "death" was being loudly trumpeted in the early 1990s. Yet mainframe sales went right on growing, and today more of them are being used than ever. Most of them probably run COBOL applications.

    What you need to decide is what software is for. If it's for fun, an art form, or a fashionable vehicle of self-expression, then by all means go with the latest and greatest languages, frameworks, and tools. But if it's a business-critical (or even safety-critical) component of vital engineering systems, doesn't it make sense to use something that is *known* to work reliably? "A legacy application is one that works", and I for one prefer to fly in aircraft that are programmed with Ada and use banks whose computers run COBOL. Call me a boring old fuddy-duddy, but some things are just better if you can count on them working.

    http://scs.senecac.on.ca/~timo...

  4. Re:Oh, hi there, threat of extinction on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    So you really think never signing the treaty - but acquiring nuclear weapons anyway - is better than withdrawing?

  5. Re:Oh, hi there, threat of extinction on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    "South Africa dismantled their nuclear program when it was no longer "necessary" to defend apartheid".

    Because nuclear missiles are the repressive nation's weapon of choice against rebellious workers.

  6. Re:Oh, hi there, threat of extinction on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    "To do so, these countries would have to withdraw from the NPT".

    You mean the way Israel had to?

  7. Re:Moving information for Freedom.... on Judge: US Search Warrants Apply To Overseas Computers · · Score: 2

    "Basically, what you're saying is that you think that if someone on US soil does something illegal, and hides the evidence offshore, the government shouldn't be able to get to said evidence without jumping through a crapton of legal hoops?"

    No, what we are saying is that if someone on US soil does something illegal, and hides the evidence offshore, the government shouldn't be able to get to said evidence without respecting the legal systems of whatever foreign nations are involved. Just as those nations wouldn't come rummaging around in the USA without asking for the permission and cooperation of its legal system.

    I understand that you might resent all the extra time and trouble. But it is the difference between being ruled by law and being ruled by a guy with a stone club.

  8. Re:Applies oversea or applies to local access? on Judge: US Search Warrants Apply To Overseas Computers · · Score: 1

    "That's the cost of being a multi-national corporation, if you don't like it then don't incorporate in those jurisdictions".

    Best news EVER!!!! At a single stroke, we get rid of McDonalds, Starbucks, Microsoft, Facebook, Twitter...

    Oh wait. How are we going to get by without Amazon and Google???

  9. Re:Applies oversea or applies to local access? on Judge: US Search Warrants Apply To Overseas Computers · · Score: 1

    "This is the US judicial system putting US companies between a rock and a hard place - the company has to comply with EU laws or face penalties, while also complying with a US court order or face penalties".

    As far as I can see, the only way out for the company is to cease trading in the EU immediately. (Do not pass GO, do not collect 200 euros). If applied on a large scale, that would do nothing for the US GDP or balance of payments.

  10. Re:It's almost sane(really) on Judge: US Search Warrants Apply To Overseas Computers · · Score: 1

    "The basic concept here is that data does not exist in the physical world. Where the electrons are is irrelevant if the entity that controls it exists in the US".

    That is a really, really lame idea. Whether or not "data" exists in the physical world, something physical must exist for anyone to be able to use that data. Where the electrons are, that is where the data is for all practical purposes.

    If the corporation that controls the data were to be dissolved and cease to exist, the data would still be right there as long as the electrons continue to exist and do their thing.

  11. Re:It's almost sane(really) on Judge: US Search Warrants Apply To Overseas Computers · · Score: 1

    "But, in practice, it can only enforce them within its jurisdiction or via treaty".

    Or by threats of overwhelming violence. A situation that comes close the obliterating the distinction between law and brute force.

  12. Re:Finally! on Judge: US Search Warrants Apply To Overseas Computers · · Score: 1

    Multinationals have operated above the law for far too long. The US is sending a clear message that if you do business in a country you are subject to its laws -- globally.

    So from now on, any country in which Microsoft operates can demand access to all its computers in the USA?

  13. Re:Walmart on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    Funny, isn't it? But Lenin foresaw it exactly, when he remarked "the capitalists will sell us the rope with which we hang them".

  14. Re:Angry Proliferation Game on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    Ironically, MAD works only when none of the participants are actually mad. Unfortunately for us.

  15. Re:Angry Proliferation Game on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    Little to early to say but so far it looks like removing nuclear capability isn't really working out too well for Ukraine.

    Anyway, the glove puppets in Kiev are being operated by people with plenty of WMD. Which they are hoping to line up, wheel-to-wheel, right on the Russian border. As well as filling up the Black Sea with nuclear-armed ships, especially if they can take Crimea away from Russia and deprive it of a sea port closer than the Arctic Circle.

  16. Re:Angry Proliferation Game on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 1

    Little to early to say but so far it looks like removing nuclear capability isn't really working out too well for Ukraine.

    Although it's lucky for the inhabitants of Donyetsk and Lugyansk. Because the nutjobs in Kiev would probably have used them by now.

  17. Re:Oh, hi there, threat of extinction on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: 2

    "China is secretive..."

    Although not quite as secretive as Israel, which (rather cleverly) denies having any nuclear weapons while relying heavily on the fact that everyone knows it does. Reminds me of Raymond Smullyan's celebrated book on logic, entitled "What is the name of this book?"

  18. Re:Oh, hi there, threat of extinction on China Confirms New Generation of ICBM · · Score: -1, Troll

    Except that recently the USA has been going to quite extreme lengths to antagonize both China AND Russia. Whereas they (although never the best of pals) have been moving closer together under the outside pressure. I wonder when Brazil, or some other South American nation) will acquire ballistic thermonuclear missiles? India, of course, already has them... what about South Africa?

  19. Looks like a brilliantly decorated VAX... on Unboxing a Cray XC30 'Magnus' Petaflops Supercomputer · · Score: 1

    ...but what on earth has happened to the Unibus???

  20. Re:medical services need a billing time limit on 35% of American Adults Have Debt 'In Collections' · · Score: 1

    Can't be free if you're dead. Being in a wheelchair or broke kind of takes the sheen off freedom too.

  21. Re:The American Dream on 35% of American Adults Have Debt 'In Collections' · · Score: 2

    Its not a complex problem, the problem is really really simple: people are stupid.

    If you will rephrase that observation in the first person singular, I believe that it will prove to be singularly accurate.

  22. Re:They were in their system for four months?!?! on Hackers Plundered Israeli Defense Firms That Built 'Iron Dome' Missile Defense · · Score: 1

    But you can't have an air gap in the 21st Century... employees would be cut off from Facebook and Twitter, and that would deny them their human rights.

  23. Re:Please consider the facts on Satellite Images Show Russians Shelling Ukraine · · Score: 1
  24. Re:Great... on Satellite Images Show Russians Shelling Ukraine · · Score: 1

    "Because russians doesn't understand what faschist [sic] means".

    Have you even heard of the Great Patriotic War? The one in which ONE IN EVERY SEVEN Russians (including civilians) was killed by Fascists? (And before you start, I'm British).

  25. Re:Great... on Satellite Images Show Russians Shelling Ukraine · · Score: 1

    "Two wrongs don't make a right".

    True. But the pot should not call the kettle black - especially when the kettle is only pale grey, whereas the pot is heavily encrusted with black filth.