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  1. Re:Most other boards miss the point on Pi Stays Sky High In 2015 Hacker SBC Survey · · Score: 1

    A thousand times this. My boss (don't get me started) was denigrating my excitement about the B+ because it was still too slow or some nonsense. They're not compute engines, you idiot. They're cheap and fully capable (albeit a little pokey) unix machines.

    We're on the same wavelength- I generally use Pis for things that need just a little more capability than Arduino. Primarily a real multiprocessing OS, and often scripting-type capabilities, rather than fighting with timer interrupts or hacking code into Arduino IDE quasi-C. (It's fine, just not that versatile).

    Plus, I can do development on any unix box- that is, at work. :) And yeah, I got a Galileo at MicroCenter and returned it. Not worth the effort, not to mention the price.

        **And, as you correctly point out, it's cheap enough that I don't care if I blow it up.**

  2. Never underestimate the power of the secretaries. on Ask Slashdot: What Do You Wish You'd Known Starting Your First "Real" Job? · · Score: 1

    ...or "administrative assistants" or whatever they're called. Be on the best terms you can with them. They know everything that happens in the office, and they can make your shit happen quickly or make your life miserable.

    Corollary: Always be on good terms with the supply sergeant.

    Lots of good stuff in this thread, but in particular:
    1. Max the 401(k) immediately and put it in index funds.
    2. Humility. There will always be someone smarter than you- listen until you can ascertain.
    3. Don't be a doormat, but be helpful and friendly and free with info until someone screws you. A lot of people hoard information thinking that it gives them job security- it doesn't, really. What if they got hit by a bus? You're *much* more valuable as a team player that helps things run more smoothly.

  3. Re:You think 7 vaccines is a lot? on Study Confirms No Link Between MMR Vaccine and Autism · · Score: 3

    You are aware, are you not, that mothers pass antibodies to the fetus during the last trimester because they share, oh, I don't know, BLOOD?! There's even a name for it: 'passive immunity". Antibodies are also heavily transferred during the first couple of weeks' breast milk.

    Their effect tapers off after a couple of months, which is why vaccines are necessary. (Or if the mother hasn't had a disease or its vaccine).

  4. Re:Yep. on IT Worker's Lawsuit Accuses Tata of Discrimination · · Score: 1

    Snort. It's not always that way. Maybe in any Silicon Valley workplace loaded with semi-adolescent/self-absorbed/hipster geeks and PHBs (I've been there)- but there is actually a subset of the geek population that is quiet, thoughtful, polite, reasonably socially adept, extremely smart, and devoted to the mission over their own personal gain. For optimal results, add good management that recognizes the value of an employee that is a team player and not a prima donna that needs to be "tamed".

    It's about being professional.

  5. Yep. on IT Worker's Lawsuit Accuses Tata of Discrimination · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The comments below that article are interesting, and they- as well as the article- mirror my experience exactly.

    I used to work for a domestic (US) majority (65%+) Indian company. Not small, at least 5,000 people. The CEO and CFO were Indian, and the rest followed. Not knowing their H1-B figures, I distinctly got the impression they were using the place for an immigration/sponsorship factory for their friends, extended family, caste, whatever. Management? Virtually 100% Indian. Layoffs? Huh, no Indians in that round, either. It was pretty obvious how non-Indians were treated like crap, but no one was in a law-suitin' mood because this was just after the dot-bomb crash and tech jobs weren't falling off the trees anymore. I realize everyone is an individual, blah, blah, but it seems endemic to native Indian culture that if you're not Indian you ain't shit.

    I'm probably going to get yelled at for saying this, but the thing that pissed me off the most- another cultural thing- is that they weren't interested in working together (amongst themselves or with non-Indians) to find the best solution to a problem. Technical discussions always degenerated into dick waving arguments. They were more interested in getting *their* solution jammed through for a personal victory than the greater good. It was disgusting.

  6. Jesus, we're fucked. on Americans Support Mandatory Labeling of Food That Contains DNA · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This showed up in The Washington Post a week ago... and I'm still aghast.

    Slashdot has classified this as a "humour" story, but I find it simply frightening. There's always going to be a certain quantity of dullards on the left end of the curve, but... 80%?! 80% of Americans are unfamiliar with one of, if not *the* most fundamental concepts of biology? This isn't "Dihydrogen Monoxide" trickery, DNA is DNA and it's functionality is taught in high school- usually repeatedly.

    However, the thing that really, really scares me and keeps me awake at night is that *these fuckers vote*.

  7. Re:Re-educate about crime on Cops 101: NYC High School Teaches How To Behave During Stop-and-Frisk · · Score: 1

    >> Can we talk about the culture of crime that exists among rich white men in the financial industry?

    Oh, shut the fuck up, you weak-minded twat. I'm beyond tired of hearing this useless analogy trotted out as though it's somehow compensatory. I'll tell you "Why is that?": Relatively speaking, I, and I suspect most people, really don't give that much of a shit about white-collar crime. If something happened that affected me personally somehow- and I don't mean in the greater "it costs all of us" sense, like insurance fraud- you bet I'd be pissed.

    But I wouldn't be dead. Or worse. Gunshot- or beating-induced paralysis is quite the bitch. I might wind up poor, but I'd still be around to play with my kids, run in the park, that kind of wonderful mundane nonsense.

    *That's* what people are concerned about. And *that's* the kind of violent crime perpetrated, vastly disproportionate to their numbers in society, by "brown and black people".

  8. Chambers needs to go. on Cisco Exec: Turnover In Engineering No Problem · · Score: 1

    I've been working with Cisco gear since 1992 or so, and I've seen a continuous drive to crap. Once rock solid products are now feature- and bug- bloated, impregnable silos exist between the product lines, support simply sucks on both an account team and TAC level... and every time Chambers puts forth a quarterly report he doesn't seem to have anything good to say. (Mind you, I appreciate honesty, but sometimes as CEO you have to sell the company a little).

    Perhaps if they spent a little more time preventing the attrition of decent people they'd see some benefits.

  9. Re:Network-based IPS and IDS are obsolete on Multipath TCP Introduces Security Blind Spot · · Score: 2

    "Your IDS/IPS cannot look inside SSL traffic, either, which could contain exploit code (conveniently packed and encrypted by the SSL container)."

    You might want to go read up on SSLStrip before you make that assertion. There are a bunch of other utilities that do basically the same thing, but their names escape me at the moment.

    Admittedly, SSLStrip relies (generally) on the target ignoring the bad cert warning, but if you've compromised the target and inserted your root CA into the "trusted" list, well... no more warning. And, as someone else mentioned, if you're a netadmin and control the end nodes, there are lots of companies that will sell you inline appliances that will do exactly the same thing- completely transparently.

    WebSense and PaloAlto 6.0- and probably others- will even let you take the cleartext off-box for DLP, or "archiving".

    How much you want to bet that one of the trusted root CAs distributed with all browsers (eg, VeriSign) is an NSA plant? Trust no one.

  10. Re: Nothing "near" about it on How Microwave Transmission Is Linking Financial Centers At Near-Light Speed · · Score: 1

    Amusingly, if you go to the Smithsonian Museum of Technology (iirc) there is/was a display of some Bell Labs stuff where they were (until fiber immediately- at the time- made it obsolete) doing *exactly that*. Little 1cm or so tubes, carefully soldered together, to form microwave waveguides.

    I bet you could pick that patent up for cheap... er, maybe not any more.

  11. Re:Political stunt on White House Urges Reversal of Ban On Cell-Phone Unlocking · · Score: 2

    Not debating your points, but I'd like to see people stop regurgitating the bullshit fucking meme about "half the people are below average". Half the people are below the *median*. Half the people are below the *mean* only if the data happen to fall that way, a perfect bell curve being one distribution for which this is true.

    Data: 1, 1, 1, 1, 10. (n=5).
    Mean: 2.8.
    Q: How many points are below the mean? (Hint: it ain't 2.5.)

  12. Hmm, books causing life pivots. on Ask Slashdot: What Books Have Had a Significant Impact On Your Life? · · Score: 1

    1. Out of The Inner Circle, Landreth. Read this in 1986 or so when it originally came out. Holy shit, did that change my life. It put me on the vector that, among other things, has me reading Slashdot today.
    2. M*A*S*H- Hooker. Besides being ripping funny, introduced me to the concept that if you're really good at what you do, you can get away with a lot. A whole lot.
    3. 1980 Signetics Linear IC Databook. Never underestimate the learning capability of a curious kid on a remote farm with no internet access ('cause it didn't exist. Well, not as we know it.)
    4. War Games. Yeah, so it's a movie, but life-changing nonetheless. See items 1-3.

  13. Re:They don't enforce snooping on everything on Ask Slashdot: What's Your Take On HTTPS Snooping? · · Score: 1

    No, not really, at least not in my experience. The primary motivation is to be able to peer into SSL/TLS traffic to see if there's malware using it as a transport. Internet caching is... well, I won't say a dead technology, but at least in the enterprises where I've worked bandwidth is sufficiently cheap (and caching proxies tend to break stuff unpredictably) that they typically don't bother.

    Consider: if you don't block 443, and you don't decrypt/examine it, that's a wiiiide open hole out of your network for any botnet members to phone home or exfiltrate data... or a host of other things. It's a real problem.

  14. Re:They don't enforce snooping on everything on Ask Slashdot: What's Your Take On HTTPS Snooping? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Wrong.

    The https proxy server is trusted as a signing CA. It generates server certs real-time for any requested https content, then retrieves the content for you on the other side- via it's own https session- before sending it back to you. Since the proxy is trusted by your browser, it doesn't complain.

    Without getting into a protracted discussion about x.509 certs and their completely fucked implementation, suffice to say that while the proxy can effectively decrypt your https traffic, noone else can. There's still a reasonable amount of security there.

    Although it depends a great deal on the proxy admin to keep it secure...

  15. Re:Let's just be clear about that. on Some Hotspot Operators Secretly Intercept, Insert Ads In Web Pages · · Score: 1

    You're almost right. There are a number of commercial appliances (Websense makes one, which I've deployed for corporate use) that do exactly this so the corporate powers-that-be can peer into SSL encrypted traffic. This is generally (hopefully) for IDS/IPS purposes.

    The key is that:

    1. Corporate workstations have to be loaded with a CA cert generated by the appliance so they trust all certs issued by the appliance, and
    2. The fake server certs are generated *real time*. Pre-generation isn't necessary.

    So the reality is that this happens every day if you're running one of these systems. You raise an interesting point, though, that if a CA with their CA cert already in browser distros did this, it would be pretty much undetectable. However, then anyone with one of those appliances could do this man-in-the-middle attack, rendering the CA's infrastructure/reputation worthless. Additionally, they'd have the CA's private key, which is the crown jewel of a CA- so I doubt that would happen.

    Now, if someone maliciously inserted their CA key into a browser distro, well, that opens the door for all kinds of fun...

    J-.

  16. Re:Do you even bother to edit submissions anymore? on Researchers Create a Statistical Guide To Gambling · · Score: 1

    Sigh. Not always. You have to look for positive expectation games in casinos, but they can be found. Google "positive expectation video poker" if you don't believe me.

    Also, there's card counting at blackjack, of course, but you'll be detected quickly and summarily removed.

    That said, if becoming a VP playing drone is your idea of fun, that's your business. I'm there for the free beer and to have fun, and I'm willing to pay a nominal fee to do so. Playing craps, getting loaded, and minimizing that fee are what I enjoy. Did you know that depending on how you play craps, you can make the house advantage asymtotically approach zero?

    J-.

  17. Well, not really. on With Troop Drawdown, IT Looks To Hire More Vets · · Score: 1

    I've worked in a number of military-oriented institutions (TLAs, if you get me) and while I have nothing but respect for the warfighter, I rarely found any of them to be technical superstars. Like any population, there were a few, but overwhelmingly they were put-the-square-peg-in-the-square-hole guys. They could memorize a manual and know everything about a piece of equipment (well, on a sysadmin level), but innovation was not their strong suit. At all.

    And this is why the government/military has had and will continue to have immense problems attracting really, *really* good people to work in their CyberCorps or whatever they're calling it now. There's too much procedure in those circles; good techies quickly go insane.

    One thing I did find, though, was that *usually* the officers had damn good project management skills and knew how to solve problems, support their people, and get the job done. That skillset is really universally applicable to all fields, though, and not just IT.

  18. Re:Over the top, but not a free speech issue on Disorderly Conduct Charge for Offensive Classmate Ratings · · Score: 1

    What are you, twelve? Free speech *especially* protects offensive (ProTip: who decides what is offensive?) speech.

    I can't believe people as stupid as you exist. Well, actually, I can. Let me guess: you're in San Francisco, right?

  19. Re:Blackjack team? on MIT Blackjack King Takes SMTP Public · · Score: 1

    You've never seen those rules? Where do you play? They're all over the place in Vegas and Atlantic City. I've also seen games where you could only double on 7, 8, and 9, no resplits, all kinds of stuff. Wizardofodds.com has a table with all those stupid rules and their impact on the house edge. Interesting reading. And don't just mistrust the CSMs, they help the house too- since there's always the same (many) number of cards in play naturals are less likely. Bastards.

    But people still play them... Oddly, I've found- especially in Vegas- that the higher end casinos have the worst rules. You'll almost always find the best rules in the dumpy little off-strip places. Hmm, Fremont St. is calling to me...

  20. Re:Blackjack team? on MIT Blackjack King Takes SMTP Public · · Score: 1

    With the wealth of information available at your fingertips, you really should have done some research before posting that. I even told you what to look for.

    I'm quite serious- and I'm right. You have to read the pay tables and find a video poker terminal that has been configured for positive expectation. Why the casinos do this I have no idea, since yep, they're potentially losing money on that one- but in any decent sized casino you can usually find a couple. I suppose the likelihood of a skilled player wandering by is low enough that they don't care. After all, you still have to play the game in mathematically optimal fashion. There's certainly no shortage of idiots in casinos.

    War story- I've seen- more than once- a roulette pit where half the wheels were single zero and half were double zero. Every wheel had players. (Hint: the double zero table has roughly twice the house edge of the single zero game.) I've also seen a 6:5 blackjack table next to a 3:2 table, with identical rules otherwise- both occupied. Sadly, people are, on average, not very bright.

  21. Re:Blackjack team? on MIT Blackjack King Takes SMTP Public · · Score: 1

    Actually, I posted AC accidentally. Oops.

    Yes, the dealer can pound out cards fast, but if you're at 5th base there's plenty of time to count while the other bozos consult their tea leaves or strategy cards to figure out what to do.

    Um... I *have* done it and *do* do it. Actually, the hardest part now is finding a game with good enough rules that you can get a positive expectation while counting. Most of the corporate casinos are running CSMs, naturals pay 6:5, no double after split, and other annoying crap that increases the house edge to the point of absurdity. Personally, I practice maybe 10 minutes a day. I find that's enough to keep it more or less automatic. If I have to think about it, it becomes too much like work. ProTip: Hoyle Casino (I use a custom driller I wrote, but for anyone wanting to mess with counting) will track the hi-lo count so you can check yourself.

    Which brings us to your final point: "if you get it slightly wrong you will lose". Bullshit. I count hi-lo- other schemes may be different- but It depends on how large the house edge is to start with. If you're counting against a low-edge game there is a margin of error before you move into negative expectation territory.

  22. Another example of mgt/tech staff disconnect on America's Cubicles Are Shrinking · · Score: 1

    Thankfully, I have an office (and an officemate, but he's cool) now but I have done the cubicle sea thing in the past. I realize the apparent economy of cubicles, but the loss of productivity must be staggering. If I'm deep in the middle of a firewall hack, or trying to configure a router without bringing the entire company down, I *really* need to be able to concentrate. I know my productivity suffers greatly. I found myself working off-hours just to avoid having to listen to the idiot two rows over yap with his bookie or frat brother or whatever he was doing. This also probably impacted productivity, because my hours then overlapped less with the rest of the company.

    And, to those of you who can screen out the world with headphones: I envy you. Maybe it's a by-product of being a musician, but even if I put classical music on, it's distracting because I actually find myself listening to it. The noise canceling headsets make me feel like my head is full of cotton.

  23. Re:No history is worse than bad history on Google's CEO Warns Kids Will Have to Change Names to Escape "Cyber Past" · · Score: 1

    > Do you also have sex with every person who happens to come within 10 feet of you?

    Well, I try...!

  24. Re:Overpopulation on Plowing Carbon Into the Fields · · Score: 1

    Yes, 100 years ago you could just show up at Ellis Island. However, 100 years ago the US also didn't have absurdly extensive (and expensive) social programs. You were expected to work, and we had poor houses (farms) where anyone could labor for a meal and a bed while they got back on their feet. I also believe those that emigrated via Ellis Island possessed a very strong work ethic, and were coming to be part of the American dream, join the culture, and make a better life for their children.

    While there are exceptions, this is no longer the norm. A large portion of immigrants- generally the illegal portion- come for the handouts and free medical care (yes, via emergency rooms) that their shithole countries don't provide. They game the system and don't assimilate.

    20 years ago CA had the best school system in the country. Today it is the worst. Care to guess why?

  25. Publicity stunt on Judge Rules To Reveal Anonymous Blogger's Identity Over Insults · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I strongly suspect this is a last-ditch, desperate publicity ploy by a second-rate has-been model.

    No matter what, bring on the Streisand effect!