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User: mick232

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  1. Re:Of course it is. on Rumor of Betelgeuse's Death Greatly Exaggerated · · Score: 1

    No it doesn't. "edelweiss" is pronounced like "adle-wise".

  2. Re:Firefox, eh? on Breakthroughs In HTML Audio Via Manipulation With JavaScript · · Score: 1

    We use Flash for video. I see no reason to not use JavaScript (or Java) for audio.

  3. Re:Rogue-like game for the blind on Gene Therapy Restores Sight To Blind · · Score: 1

    There should be plenty of games available from a time when computers were not able to display graphics. Those text-based games sometimes feature much more elaborate storylines than today's games. I think you could probably play them using braille lines or similar devices.

  4. Re:x64 on Man Spends 2,200 Hours Defeating Bejeweled 2 · · Score: 1

    You make exactly the same mistake as the original coder by assuming no one can actually achieve a score of 2^63-1. The way to go is to use some arbitrary precision math data type.

  5. They broke the law on At Issue In a Massachusetts Town, the Value of Two-Thirds · · Score: 1

    The law says 2/3. They used 66/100.

  6. Re:Not always feasible... on UK University Researchers Must Make Data Available · · Score: 0

    So what? Someone else will publish something that you didn't find out. Society will nevertheless benefit and thus get what they pay for. They don't pay for the individual benefit of single researchers.

  7. Re:My university is happy about our DC network. on File Sharing Remains a Perk of College Life · · Score: 1

    Same here. The top 3 users in the DC++ network host 9TB, 6TB and 5TB... quite impressive.

  8. Re:It's what we did too on File Sharing Remains a Perk of College Life · · Score: 1

    You're indeed way too old. An "album" nowadays is a set of MP3s, not a compact disk.

  9. Could last a while on Iceland Volcano's Ash Grounds European Air Travel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The last eruption was in 1821 and lasted 2 years... you better get yourself some train tickets if you want to travel in Europe!

  10. Re:I've got the cure on Gonorrhea As the Next Superbug · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, my religion doesn't allow me to use them...

  11. Re:And the lesson people don't learn is... on How To Evade URL Filters With (Not-So) Fancy Math · · Score: 1

    You're right. Equally important is the question: why do we have to be able specify IP adresses in more than one number format? I don't see any benefit in that.

  12. Re:Stop calling it 'insurance' (or update Wikipedi on House Passes Massive Medical Insurance Bill, 219-212 · · Score: 1

    You seem to forget that there would be no "pre-existing conditions" if everyone would have had access to health insurance previously. It is only a problem in the current transition phase, going from optional to mandatory insurance. Where I live, you are insured automatically from the moment you are born (conceived actually, because it also covers pre-natal illnesses). Never heard of "pre-existing conditions".

  13. Re:Seems a bit high on The Billion Dollar Kernel · · Score: 1

    He didn't claim that the resulting kernel would contain 12 million lines of code. 12 geniuses might come up with the same functionality coded in considerably fewer lines. That being said, I actually doubt it's possible. Not even for 1 billion, because projects of such size have a high likelihood of cost explosion.

  14. Re:why? on x86 Assembler JWASM Hits Stable Release · · Score: 1

    You must live under a rock, right? Java was an interpreted language 10 years ago, but that has changed since. Probably about the same time as HTPP/CGI got obsolete.

  15. Re:why? on x86 Assembler JWASM Hits Stable Release · · Score: 2, Informative

    And this is precisely why Facebook requires 30,000 servers.

    They might need 30.000 servers, but at least they don't need 30.000 programmers and another 30.000 testers.

  16. Re:How does this differ from Truecrypt? on Encryption Cracked On NIST-Certified Flash Drives · · Score: 1

    What's more: because they "use" AES (no matter how they use it), they can also put one more bullet point on the box: FIPS-140 certified by the NIST. This certification is misleading and should no longer be given.

  17. Re:Truecrypt on Encryption Cracked On NIST-Certified Flash Drives · · Score: 1

    Similarly, you'd have to be a complete idiot to give such devices any kind of certification. We all know that companies can sell any junk they want, that's why we rely on certification agencies. But now we know that certification agencies really work as marketing agencies, boosting the sale of junk hardware by sticking their logo on it.

  18. Re:some data on Encryption Cracked On NIST-Certified Flash Drives · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The flaw clearly is in the device! The access software is irrelevant because anyone can copy or modify such software. The device must protect the data regardless whether the access software has been compromised. If the FIPS approval does not consider this, then it's nothing more than a marketing gag.

  19. Re:Article title misleading... on Encryption Cracked On NIST-Certified Flash Drives · · Score: 1

    This "encryption" is just as effective as locking one's door with the most powerful locks available while leaving the window wide open... As someone else said: the unlock program is irrelevant. The security must be in the USB stick. But it obviously isn't, hence the device (if not the "encryption" per se) has been cracked.

  20. Re:car analogies on The Last GM Big-Block V-8 Rolls Off the Line · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're right, but: Like the big block, the Itanium arch hasn't seen considerable enhancements for years. Now it's obsolete because there are more efficient and more economical designs, which exceed the Itanium also in absolute performance numbers. No one will miss it in the long term.

  21. Re:Innovation! on The Last GM Big-Block V-8 Rolls Off the Line · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If IT companies started to phase out their 50 year old designs _now_, we would still be dealing with punched cards and probably not even use magnetic tapes. So you better look for more suitable analogies. No company buys a computer just because it hauls ass and looks good. Instead, they throw 3 years old machines away because they are not (cost) efficient anymore.