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User: Old+Flatulent+1

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  1. Now that the political attack failed, on Microsoft Sues Motorola Over Android-Related Patent Infringement · · Score: 1

    How quickly we forget the screw Google efforts and the fact that because the Republicans no longer control the house or the White House they are trying desperate tactics. The cost in bribes and "taking fat cats to dinner" alone to get into bed with the Democrats must have put Microsoft off the lobbyist angle. So why not try the courts?

  2. Fully capable Linux based TVs coming very soon. on ARM Unveils Next-Gen Processor, Claims 5x Speedup · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Right now my Samsung 5000 series LED tv runs an arm with busybox linux as the firmware. It is only a matter of time before TVs become fully internet capable and use usb 3 for storage. I also have seen demos of touch screen remotes that have qwerty capability for your TV. So the only thing missing is a simple cursor system and presto you have it all. Seeing that arm processors are becoming this powerful the market for all in one home entertainment devices is there. If Microsoft does not see this coming and continues to have mediocre support for arm based devices then embedded Linux will continue to dominate the living room. Three of my home entertainment devices are already based on the Linux kernel!

  3. Zombies do exist and are hidden everywhere! on 7 Scientific Reasons a Zombie Outbreak Would Fail · · Score: 1

    At least in the world of Windows users.

  4. A simple solution to the problem on String Quartets On the Web? · · Score: 1
    As long as companies like Sony can hog all the great stuff and squirrel it away or let it out in dribs and drabs. Then classical music distribution is doomed. The simple solution would be to set up kiosks with the ability to burn high bit rate content on demand! That way the distribution costs of inventory would evaporate and a new system of music distribution could make the industry flourish once more. I would gladly pay top dollar for premium recordings of the great artists as I am sure most other classical listeners would.

    Trouble is the people who distribute classical music have got their head up their ass and cannot see the forest for the trees.

  5. Re:The Day the Music Died on Broadway Musicians Replaced With Synthesizers · · Score: 1

    i hesitate to ask here, but: what's a clam?

    when a musician makes an unintended noise that is not in the score.

  6. The Day the Music Died on Broadway Musicians Replaced With Synthesizers · · Score: 1
    So essentially composition has become the realm of the musically illiterate and the of human performance of live music is dying.

    I want to hear the sound of the bow on the string. I want to hear the difference between individual performances. Heck I even forgive clams and wrong notes.

    What we now have is not art it is synthetic swill produced for the masses and will not stand the test of time. If we cannot afford real musicians then the art will become cheapened to the point of meaningless twaddle by untalented musically illiterate bean counters.

  7. Re:How do you analyze and debug Windows malware on REMnux, the Malware Analysis Linux OS · · Score: 1

    They also often have checks and tricks in place to detect if they are being run in a virtual machine and either crash itself or act differently. How do you run a Windows executable with this so that they actually work normally?

    All the more reason to run Windows within a Linux emulation! This is exactly why 7 Server 2008 and Vista are not catching on as quickly as Microsoft wants them to in the real world. They are too hard to run under emulation whereas server 2003 and XP can be backed up and just run on an IBM, HP or Dell blade within a Linux core. Run a good server raid that has isolation and guess what.. no problem dealing with even the most sophisticated of Window malware. You just make sure that the core OS which is Linux can reset the raid on the fly. Heck you can even log the activities of the malware and back-trace what happened and who got you if you are smart enough!

    Considering how much of the Internet and how many servers run Linux it puts the lie to the old saw "if it had the market share there would be just as many viruses and worms for Linux". By far and away the biggest fud indoctrination which is still coming out of Redmond, and is oft times repeated by most Windows salesmen...heck it is even more of a Mantra than the bs statement "the retraining costs of Linux will make it more expensive than paying for software rental per seat from Microsoft!" Or "there is no open source substitute for ...."

    Just about every tech shop that I know uses Linux for 1. disk utilities 2. file transfer 3. analysis of "wtf happened to my windows install!"

    Yes good computer forensics software is necessary and the cost of using windows software for this purpose is just plain stupid. But thanks to the real software gurus (most of who write for Linux)real good software is available without having to ship more cash to some Windows ware shop. Some of who even hide logic bombs in their ware so that you will need to upgrades or pay for support!

  8. In Seattle they say it differently on Information On Philips' "Coffee" Machine? · · Score: 1
  9. This is why Android could take over the market. on App Store-Aided Mobile Attacks · · Score: 1

    It comes down to if you cannot see the source don't trust it. As long as blackhat crooks are out there making closed binaries there will be problems with trojans. If Google is smart they will insist that all code must be visible to operate on the Android OS. Perhaps Rim will follow suit and make sure that all third party binaries are clean. I know this really irks some developers but if your code is clean, unique and has a copyright why are you afraid that others will see it?

  10. Re:Flamebait my arse! on How Bad Is the Gulf Coast Oil Spill? · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    If we were to use the gifts of the Earth with any sense of intelligence then we would never run out of oil or any other natural resource. We need to change our mind set about consumption. I am getting old and do not have long left to make a social difference. We are using up the Earth and our children will pay for our greed and stupidity.

    Our cities and infrastructure are designed around the automobile and have no sense of real community or ecological plan. The future must be designed around a society that plans for the ecology of more than the just the needs of cars! Perhaps a crisis like this is necessary to wake up the most industrialized consumptive stupid nation on Earth to the facts of the future.

    I grow old and tired of being just a "stupefied-consumer" in the eyes of a corporate crazed system of consumption and waste. Our corporate culture of greed and consumption must change now or we will be considered as a lost generation of essentially greed driven parasitic humans.

  11. I look in a mirror and see the cause! on How Bad Is the Gulf Coast Oil Spill? · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    We will all just have to get in our SUVs and drive down to the nearest oil company head office and protest! I remember not too long ago when a Republican President poo hooed the heck out of Al Gore about his statement that the "greatest threat to American society is our reliance upon the personal automobile". This statement might have cost him the election, certainly in Florida the result would have been different if not for his political gaff of telling the truth! His statement is still far too true to be funny....

    If there is anyway BP is going to actually pay for this disaster then we all are going to lose. BP will not survive this and will just be absorbed by some other multinational. Perhaps even some corporate entity associated with the Bush and Chaney crowd. It was all well and good to bail out the auto industry but we are just delaying the inevitable social collapse caused by our collective stupidity and greed!

  12. More costs than you would think! on Medical Professionals Aren't Leaping For E-Medicine · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The reality of going to an all digital system is not as clear cut as many on /. would believe. Vancouver Island Canada has to a large extent undergone a huge change over to E-film and E-records, and has perhaps the most advanced systems around. The costs of making all this work has not been reflected in reduced numbers of staff needed to handle data instead of paper.

    There still are large amounts of paper necessary for day to day operations and getting Doctors and clinics to effectively use secure online services has been nothing short of a nightmare. It costs more to do day to day operations and many say they would find going back to simple reliable terminal based systems more efficient and cost effective! The costs of supporting, securing and system training for PC based software is over the top and is a tremendous burden on any essential service.

  13. New perspective at the dinner table on Dinosaur Feather Color Discovered · · Score: 1

    OH God I had a Dinosaur/Chicken dinner last night, no wonder... I have been having Jurassic Park like nightmares.

  14. Re:What if there is no FTL? on SETI Founder Outlines Ambitious Future Plans · · Score: 1
    Communication at ftl speeds might be all that is necessary. If it turns out that there are other forms of waves other than emr for example graviton waves then just perhaps we are looking with the wrong equipment. After all Seti is only examining emr that is moving at C.

    It is interesting that as more and more satellites are place in far earth orbit the possibility of finding signals longer wave lengths could occur using the communication beams between satellites themselves as a form of antenna.

    I suspect that matter will not move faster than light but some form of long wave lengths just might based on the destruction of small quantities of matter and if sub particles reduced to almost strings form waves. The LHC is investigating the possibility of long wave creation, the problem is how do you detect them except at extreme distance.

  15. Update your Acrobat Reader. on Widespread Attacks Exploit Newly-Patched IE Bug · · Score: 3, Interesting
    There was a similar hole in the way Acrobat Reader prior to 9.2 handled xml multimedia calls. And there were resent releases of updates for Shockwave Flash.

    It is rather telling that the same type of buffer trouble is showing up in other peoples software. I am just wondering if the flood "Gates" are about to open and we will wind up seeing multiple trouble with things like WMP, Silverlight ...there was already the same update happening for RealPlayer

    Just maybe there is a system xml call that is easily exploited in all versions of Windows....I can just see it now some lazy MS exec using old legacy system xml that is written using the gets and puts function. I would not put it past Microsoft to use old garbage code without even checking the old source then including the pre-compiled executable

  16. Re:Why not just disable it instead. on Microsoft Patches "Google Hack" Flaw In IE · · Score: 2, Interesting
    here is a good way to disable IE and make sure that nothing can access it and all stupefied widows only morons will be forced to use the default browser you set up. There sure as heck would not have a clue as to why IE will not work.

    Then remove the entries from the start menu and take all the icons off the desktop. Of course this is not practical with XP but will work just fine with vista and 7 as the updates are independent of the default browser. It will work if you control the updates in XP and only enable IE when a critical update happens.

  17. Re:Maybe not so glad about WMP on Microsoft To Ship Emergency IE Patch · · Score: 1

    I just updated to 9.3 after having shut off the reader auto update! However after reading the specifics of how reader before version 9.3 was compromised it is rather telling that the attack vector was a call to a WMP that left open space. It left buffers open but not in the Reader section of the malloc. This would indicate that there might just be another un-patched hole in external program calls to Windows Media Player or perhaps in WMP itself. It would not surprise me if the Reader exploit was actually another WMP exploit involving bad memory allocation practices from Microsoft!

  18. Re:Nothing new here just ask Rocket J Squirrel! on Air Canada Ordered To Provide Nut-Free Zone · · Score: 1

    Rocket J Squirrel would hole heatedly agree especially when flying over Gimli! Just hope they have learned how to do metric to British Standard unit calculations by now.

  19. Nothing new here! on Air Canada Ordered To Provide Nut-Free Zone · · Score: 3, Informative

    Flying with Air Canada it helps if you are nuts.

  20. Re:Only reason for any IE6 market share on Firefox 3.5 Now the Most Popular Browser Worldwide · · Score: 1

    Seems to me IE6 having any market share at all is because of the huge number of XP non registered copies floating around in places like China and even the US.

    Some people might run unsigned business applications from unc shares. If OS is updated by IE7-8 browser, it starts complaining about unsigned apps every time app is started. We don't need that stinking warning box and these IE OS updates and WGA addons are kept away from user machines.

    I see your point.. the WGA is the main reason why Vista bombed out in business. Trouble is that many moron devs still regard the registry as a play ground for hiding settings. The only clients that I have seen that work really well with Vista are from Citrix fortunately they work without having to do anything other than save settings in a user profile...the way apps should work in the first place. Unfortunately having to develop business web apps that work with IE6 has become like shoeing a horse with three legs compared to what is possible with standards compliant browsers! It would make more sense if Microsoft just allowed pirates and slow to update businesses update from open released updates so that better internet security could become a reality. This would be much better than trying to stop piracy by making us all pay with the WGA crap.

  21. Re:Please... on Hackers Counter Microsoft COFEE With Some DECAF · · Score: 1

    WGA's been cracked six ways from Sunday. The issue is Microsoft's server-side validation - illegitimate copies can't get updates. This is why MS goes apeshit on unauthorized patch distribution.

    I agree and this is the reason why there are still umpteem gazillon users with IE6 and windozeXP. The point is that perhaps the server side validation has also cracked! I seem to remember a bunch of copies of XP that showed up in Taiwan that could do IE7 updates recently. If I remember correctly the site that issued the certified update proved to be a malware site that managed to hose a great many illegitimate copies of windows that were being sold in Asia.

  22. Only reason for any IE6 market share on Firefox 3.5 Now the Most Popular Browser Worldwide · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seems to me IE6 having any market share at all is because of the huge number of XP non registered copies floating around in places like China and even the US. Besides how would bot nets survive without Windows warez! Hopefully as HTML5 becomes more developed it will kill it once and for all.

  23. Perhaps there is more here than meets the eye. on Hackers Counter Microsoft COFEE With Some DECAF · · Score: 1

    Could be that Microsoft is also really concerned about Cofee accessing protected encrypted files that would allow hackers to pirate legitimate copies of Windows if the device identity encoding within WGA is cracked! I am afraid someone might have just let the horse out of the barn through a Windows backdoor. The heads are about to roll in Redmond again!

  24. For a simple answer to the question... on How Do I Keep My Privacy While Using Google? · · Score: 4, Funny

    Justs Google it....oops!

  25. whats next virtual Monopoly? on Virtual Money For Real Lobbying · · Score: 1

    Beware there might be a lawsuit from Milton Bradley..having the HMOs using virtual money to lobby is rather like having the advantage of some really well healed (pardon the pun) lobbyists just playing a game that we all have to pay for!