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  1. Refresher - Ask Mark Shuttleworth Anything 2012 on Canonical Killing Unity For Ubuntu Linux, Will Switch To the Superior GNOME (betanews.com) · · Score: 1
  2. Flip a coin on The Moral Dilemma of Driverless Cars: Save The Driver or Save The Crowd? · · Score: 1

    And make it 2 out of 3!

  3. Re: never heard of it on RIP Kuro5hin (kuro5hin.org) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a 5 digit palindrome here. A newbie but with style.

  4. Ikea Karlstad couches designed by idiots! on Ikea Unveils Furniture That Charges Your Smartphone Wirelessly · · Score: 1

    Can't vouch for Ikea's new couches, but their Karlstad line was designed by idiots. 99% of the skeleton of the couch is made out of real wood (pine I think), EXCEPT the parts that hold the legs, where most of the stress occurs, which are made out of particle board.

  5. Wolfram tech support on Interviews: Ask Stephen Wolfram a Question · · Score: 1

    Should wolfram's tech support be as advanced as wofram's products?

  6. slashdot censorship Soviet Union stye! on EFF Hints At Lawsuit Against Verizon For Its Stealth Cookies · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While viewing stories in "0 Abbreviated and 0 Hidden" mode I noticed threads where the parent comment was missing but the replys are still there!

    Censorship Soviet Union style (pre photoshop) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

  7. misalignment also results in crappy performance on Samsung Acknowledges and Fixes Bug On 840 EVO SSDs · · Score: 2

    In my case, based on hdparm -t on xubuntu and centos, the difference between a properly aligned Samsung EVO and an improperly aligned Samsung EVO is 510 MB/sec and 182 MB/sec respectively

    http://cillian.wordpress.com/2... has some good info on setting up Samsung EVO properly on linux

  8. Compared to badbios this is a piece of cake on NSA Says It Foiled Plot To Destroy US Economy Through Malware · · Score: 1

    http://it.slashdot.org/story/13/11/01/0120220/airgap-jumping-malware-may-use-ultrasonic-networking-to-communicate

    Airgap-Jumping Malware May Use Ultrasonic Networking To Communicate

    "Dan Goodwin writes at Ars Technica about a rootkit that seems straight out of a science-fiction thriller. According to security consultant Dragos Ruiu one day his MacBook Air, on which he had just installed a fresh copy of OS X, spontaneously updated the firmware that helps it boot. Stranger still, when Ruiu then tried to boot the machine off a CD ROM, it refused and he also found that the machine could delete data and undo configuration changes with no prompting. Next a computer running the Open BSD operating system also began to modify its settings and delete its data without explanation or prompting and further investigation showed that multiple variants of Windows and Linux were also affected. But the story gets stranger still. Ruiu began observing encrypted data packets being sent to and from an infected laptop that had no obvious network connection with—but was in close proximity to—another badBIOS-infected computer. The packets were transmitted even when the laptop had its Wi-Fi and Bluetooth cards removed. Ruiu also disconnected the machine's power cord so it ran only on battery to rule out the possibility it was receiving signals over the electrical connection. Even then, forensic tools showed the packets continued to flow over the airgapped machine. Then, when Ruiu removed internal speaker and microphone connected to the airgapped machine, the packets suddenly stopped. With the speakers and mic intact, Ruiu said, the isolated computer seemed to be using the high-frequency connection to maintain the integrity of the badBIOS infection as he worked to dismantle software components the malware relied on. It's too early to say with confidence that what Ruiu has been observing is a USB-transmitted rootkit that can burrow into a computer's lowest levels and use it as a jumping off point to infect a variety of operating systems with malware that can't be detected. It's even harder to know for sure that infected systems are using high-frequency sounds to communicate with isolated machines. But after almost two weeks of online discussion, no one has been able to rule out these troubling scenarios, either. 'It looks like the state of the art in intrusion stuff is a lot more advanced than we assumed it was,' says Ruiu. 'The take-away from this is a lot of our forensic procedures are weak when faced with challenges like this. A lot of companies have to take a lot more care when they use forensic data if they're faced with sophisticated attackers.'"

  9. Re:Wait what ? on More Students Learn CS In 3 Days Than Past 100 Years · · Score: 2
  10. Yeah Right on Review: Puppet Vs. Chef Vs. Ansible Vs. Salt · · Score: 1

    and two positives make it a negative :)

  11. simply nonsense on Physicists Discover Geometry Underlying Particle Physics · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Slashdot headline, not the physics.

    http://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/

  12. PROPOSERS’ DAY CONFERENCE FOR 100 Gb/s RF BA on DARPA Begins Work On 100Gbps Wireless Tech With 120-mile Range · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is actually a DARPA help wanted ad. And from description of the project sounds like a good job opportunity for some slashdoters.

    here is the ad:
    http://www.darpa.mil/NewsEvents/Releases/2012/12/14.aspx

    and here is the proposers' day conference:
    https://www.fbo.gov/index?s=opportunity&mode=form&id=e21984e31d49c3780966a53983daa4f6&tab=core&tabmode=list&=

  13. Re:Time domain reflectometer. on Ask Slashdot: Server Room Toolbox? · · Score: 2

    in my case, poor/bad cables, especially the ones you buy, rather than ones you make, rank very low on things that actually happen. before I check the actual cable I do other things:

    1. see if nic led is on, both on router and computer
    2. ping the gateway
    3. see if there was traffic on the nic
    4. re-seat the cable, especially if plastic clip is missing - if that is the case I change the cable.
    5. if distance is short, replace cable

    had an interesting experience with a bad "connection". One summer the well pump, which is drilled inside the old stone well, 80 ft below ground, stopped working. The plumber comes, he climbs half way down the stone well in order to reach the well-cap, takes the entire pump+hose+wire (80ft) out, tests the pump, concludes that the pump is dead, replaces the pump, the wire (80ft), and makes a new water-tight connection. A year later the pump stops working again and I call the same plumber. My instinct was that the water-tight connection, 80 ft below ground, leaked, and made a short. The plumber comes, and rather than pulling out 80ft of pump to test the water-tight connection, the first thing he does is disconnect the pump from the mechanical fuse. And guess what... the mechanical fuse was bad. The fuse would trip even when there was nothing connected to it.

  14. touch screen vs keyboard & mouse interface on Ask Mark Shuttleworth Anything · · Score: 3, Interesting

    two parter:

    1. Do you think the touch screen interface already the standard on phones and tablets will replace the traditional standard of keyboard & mouse interface on desktops/laptops in the next 5 years, 10 years, 20 years?

    2. On a desktop/laptop, do you think a touch screen interface would be as functional/productive/efficient as keyboard & mouse?

    thanks

  15. Re:Considering the price of memory, why even bothe on Mozilla MemShrink Set To Fix Firefox Memory · · Score: 1

    you right... It has not been a decade, but it does have memory issues since the beginning of FF.

  16. Considering the price of memory, why even bother! on Mozilla MemShrink Set To Fix Firefox Memory · · Score: 1
  17. so no more free gropping... on Checkpoint of the Future Coming Soon To Airports · · Score: 2

    i can see why the nerds might be upset.

  18. "infiltrated and perpetrators persecuted.[37]" on NATO Report Threatens To 'Persecute' Anonymous · · Score: 1

    from the NATO document: http://www.nato-pa.int/default.asp?SHORTCUT=2443

    [37] Reducing Systemic Cybersecurity Risk, OECD/IFP Project on “Future Global Shocks”. ”. By Peter Sommer and Ian Brown. January 2011.

    “Reducing Systemic Cybersecurity Risk”

    http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/57/44/46889922.pdf

    I think the NATO paragraph is supposed to paraphrase this quote on p32:

    "The main practical limitations to hacktivism are that the longer the attack persists the more likely it is that counter-measures are developed and put in place, perpetrators identified, and groups penetrated by law enforcement investigators."

  19. if you REALLY want CS emulate an HS that offers CS on Ask Slashdot: Good Homeschool Curriculum For CS?? · · Score: 1
  20. Re:Scientific Linux on Ask Slashdot: Best Linux Distro For Computational Cluster? · · Score: 1

    care to provide a link to that "informative" claim, and please don't say OpenAFS.

    thanks

  21. Speaking of RHEL clone... on Red Hat Nears $1 Billion In Revenues, Closing Door On Clones · · Score: 1

    just found out a new RHEL clone (thanks to distrowatch.com News 03.21.2011) - PUIAS http://puias.math.ias.edu/ is an RHEL clone "... started long before CentOS or other projects were available."

    The question is: if CentOS fizzles for whatever reasons, how many will switch to one of the less than 5, one-man-show RHEL clone, how many will dig in and pay for RHEL, and how many will switch to non-RHEL?

  22. Re:Monitor on What Pinball Looks Like When the Stakes Are High · · Score: 1

    At least in Firefox, "Zoom Out" is also an option.

  23. Re:Why the press does a bad job on Interview With the Man Behind WikiLeaks · · Score: 1

    Very Medieval, but do you mean something like the "Fourth Estate" - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_estate
    or the "Fifth Estate" - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_Estate ?

    the other Estates http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Estate#Third_Estate

  24. miniscule Man in the Middle attack on More Gas Station Credit-Card Skimmers · · Score: 4, Informative

    A link http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/newest-attack-your-credit-card-atm-shims?t51hb&hpg1=mp in the original story, entitled "Newest Attack on your Credit Card: ATM Shims" has some interesting information:

    "The shim needs to be extremely thin and flexible. In fact it must be less than 0.1mm"

    "The shim is inserted using a "carrier card" that holds the shim, inserts it into the card slot and locks it into place on the internal reader contacts."

    "Once inserted, the shim is not visible from the outside of the machine. The shim then performs a man-in-the-middle attack between an inserted credit card and the circuit board of the ATM machine."

    "flexible shims are recently being mass produced and widely used in certain parts of Europe"

    "Diebold released five new anit-skimming protection levels for its ATM devices june 1st 2010...Unfortunately, none of these helps with the shim skimming attack. That problem has yet to be solved mechanically yet."

  25. Re-Post - USB-Based NIC Torrents... 04.27.09 on Network Adapter Keeps Talking While a PC Is Asleep · · Score: 1

    http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/27/2310234

    and my comment to the first story: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1213805&cid=27741803

    I'm guessing the inventor's statistics "In the office environment, 52% of respondents left their machines on for remote access, and 35% did so to support applications running in the background, of which e-mail and IM were most popular (47%)." are still true.

    http://mesl.ucsd.edu/yuvraj/research/documents/Somniloquy-NSDI09-Yuvraj-Agarwal.pdf