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User: MatthiasF

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  1. Re:Physics? on Why Micron/Intel's New Cross Point Memory Could Virtually Last Forever · · Score: 1

    Phase change is my guess.

    Some of the first Memristor are based on phase changing of a material that causes the resistance to adjust with the data.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    Samsung produced a test cell back in 2006 that showed promise, maybe the medium is finally reaching reliable yield and capacity density to compete with NAND and NOR.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

  2. Re:It's discomfort at working alongside older peop on Woman Recruited By Google Four Times and Rejected Now Joins Age Discrimination Suit · · Score: 1

    Highlight name in the story, right click, Search for "%name%", read down results page, find Amazon review, read review. Took probably 3 minutes.

    I do this for almost everyone in the news I have never heard of before, even other websites, no matter the context.

    And trust me, almost every person who hires people will do a web search for the person's name these days as well.

    Don't like that people will judge you for what you post publicly? Then don't post your opinion publicly (using your real name).

  3. Re:This shoudn't even really be a debate on The Science and Politics Behind Colony Collapse Disorder; Is the Crisis Over? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I never really took the situation that serious either after looking at the long term data for hives. The right time to freak out was in the 90s with the big drop, not recently.

    When the "crisis" first hit the news and kept being repeated, I suggested the issue might be Ultraviolet Irradiance. Bees see in the UV range and the sun's UV levels vary fairly drastically over the sun cycle.

    The 90s was an low UV irradiance period. Compare this to the world-wide hive population graphs.

    http://wwwsolar.nrl.navy.mil/s...

    I wish I could find another UV irradiance data source besides UARS. Data seems to end in 2005.

  4. Re:It's discomfort at working alongside older peop on Woman Recruited By Google Four Times and Rejected Now Joins Age Discrimination Suit · · Score: 1
    My bet, the twentysomethings Googled her, found her Amazon reviews and noticed how she seems to be a bitter, unforgiving person and figured the brain wasn't worth the drama.

    People need to be careful about what you share publicly.

    Someone at Chicago might disagree, but his opinion is irrelevant.

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/cdp/m...

  5. They are not alone on How Bad User Interfaces Can Ruin Lives · · Score: 3

    Hell, I'm not even 40 yet and I would like to see some of the websites I regularly use to stop changing UIs for the sake of change.

    Progress I will accept it, but if I need to spend the better part of a morning trying to figure out how to do something that only took 3 clicks before the update, that's not progress in my book.

  6. Re:It's like Venezuela but without all the gun cri on Software Devs Leaving Greece For Good, Finance Minister Resigns · · Score: 4, Informative

    Norway has massive natural resource exports accounting for nearly 33% of GPD, imports half of what it exports and only 3 million people in the labor force. Sweden's GPD is also nearly 33% exports, slight trade imbalance in favor of exports and 5 million people in the labor force.

    Greece has 12% GPD from exports, imports twice as much as it exports and has only 5 million in the workforce.

    For perspective, the USA makes only 9% of GPD from exports (that includes the recent massive increase in gas and oil exports), imports 50% more than it exports and has 156 million people in the workforce.

    Norway and Sweden's success has nothing to do with political models and entirely to do with geography. If the Aegean had oil fields, Greece would be a socialist paradise too.

  7. Re:Sounds Like A Scumbag Company on Lawsuit Filed Over Domain Name Registered 16 Years Before Plaintiff's Use · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the link. Read the guy's blog, he doesn't know how to clone a hard drive and blames "Windows", he pats himself on the back for using Outlook to transfer emails between Exchange servers (instead of free ExMerge) and spews crazy Apple rumors.

    If I was on the jury, I'd side with the plaintiff.

  8. Re:is anyone using it? on Cisco To Acquire OpenDNS · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Malware domain filtering as well, don't forget that.

    The best defense against virus and malware is blocking them before your computer can even connect to download.

  9. I literally wanted to set this up for myself using WebDAV, Apache and Subversion (SVN) to keep versions of my web programming but could not find a decent tutorial.

    Did you use a tutorial or is there a package that helps?

  10. Re:The loans are not the only university scandal on Writer: "Why I Defaulted On My Student Loans" · · Score: 1

    This has been an issue for thousands of years, even remarked on back in ancient Chinese, Greek and Roman times (hell, even Babylonian I believe).

    Everyone's brains are tuned in different ways. Some people's brains are tuned to memorize and regurgitate, whereas others are more geared to problem solving but terrible at memorizing. The former seem to do great in most schools because the average educational testing process relies more on memorization, while the later often do very poorly in school but have plenty of imagination or drive to build careers.

    While these are two over-generalized extremes, there are a multitude of elements inside each person's brain, personality, etc., that affects not only their ability to learn but what concepts they can learn. Education (and indeed career paths) should be geared towards these elements, otherwise a particular type gets too much attention and entire society loses out on an important resource not being supported properly.

  11. Music Industry Exists because of Technology on Ask Slashdot: Will Technology Disrupt the Song? · · Score: 1

    The current model for the music industry based on recorded media exists literally because of technology. Before recorded music, music artists did not make much money at all without a wealthy patron and today they make massive amounts of money (literally becoming wealthy patrons).

    The industry itself needs to realize that the era of printed media recordings (LPs, tape, CDs) is over and those record profits will never happen again. The era of digital purchases was also brief and now we're moving into the era of streaming music.

    Each time, consumers have followed the trend into the method that gives them the most for their money and there is absolutely nothing wrong with that. The industry as a whole needs to adapt, again, and stop bitching about the fact consumers don't want to pay tons of money for music.

  12. Re:dreams over, the manifesto is dead. on Firefox 38 Arrives With DRM Required To Watch Netflix · · Score: 1

    Two sides to the coin, the majority of the Internet exists because there is money to be made from the content being shared.

    If a particular type of content cannot be monetized, then it will not exist on the Internet because the Internet is not "free" as in costs $0.

    Sometimes I think people equate freedom with the ability to take from others as much as they want and not the true meaning that you have all options available to you and offered equally to all.

  13. Re:I'm shocked ... on Two Programmers Expose Dysfunction and Abuse In the Seattle Police Department · · Score: 1

    One must also consider that in some communities witnesses will often intentionally lie or make conflicted statements against the police as well. So, the body cameras would protect both sides from false allegations.

    From a privacy standpoint, though, we must also consider adjusting the law so that recordings of unrelated crimes cannot be prosecuted outside of a certain time frame or context. Otherwise, you will have police departments scanning footage, either by eye or software, looking for misdemeanors and using it as a way to generate fines.

  14. Re:MS is a "distant" #2? on Amazon's Profits Are Floating On a Cloud (Computing) · · Score: 2

    Microsoft, though, also includes revenue from different online applications into that figure. Its revenue from a cloud business called Azure, which is more directly comparable to Amazon’s cloud services, was recently estimated by Deutsche Bank to be as little as one-tenth of that from AWS.

    Source:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04...

    Microsoft's numbers include Office 365 and other service revenue, not just straight Azure services. Where are you getting the $1.57 billion number for Google?

  15. Re:Personal Anecdote on Amazon's Profits Are Floating On a Cloud (Computing) · · Score: 1

    Anon stated: "I eventually gave up and started a new AWS account which is now billing me $30/month for a Windows Server 2008 "Workspaces" instance I NEVER use." I assumed he setup the Workspace since he said he never used it, instead of saying he never set one up.

    In my four years of using AWS, attending Amazon events, webinars and participating in cloud computing forums, I have never seen a billing issue that was not caused by the user or a user sharing the account.

    The only billing issue I have ever seen Amazon cause was two years ago when their billing process sometimes skipped a day and so the second day included the previous day's usage. That ruffled a few feathers and was attributed to a maintenance window being mis-scheduled on their end or something.

    I am, however, incredibly pissed at them for losing my email addresses in one of their big data breaches. I get tons of spam now on several of the AWS account email addresses starting literally the week after the breach.

  16. Re:Personal Anecdote on Amazon's Profits Are Floating On a Cloud (Computing) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OpenMPI is a messaging system designed for massive cluster supercomputers on private high-speed networks, why would you think running a test would be cheap using cloud resources which already have a significant premium?

    And it sounds like you need to spend some time looking through the AWS console. If something shows up on your bill in AWS, it is running somewhere and you most certainly set it up. The entire process is completely automated so the only human error is your own.

    I help run six AWS accounts, ranging in monthly expenses of $400 to over $12,000, and never had a billing issue. In fact, on that bigger account we were leery of the costs as well so we setup an auditing system to keep an eye on transfer costs and S3 usage on the servers themselves. The numbers our auditing system provided matched what Amazon was telling us down to the tenth of a cent. Many transactions differ by a tenth of a cent because I imagine our auditing system was tracking at a faster pace and Amazon rounded up somewhere in the difference.

    We do not use their Workspaces service but I am pretty sure the moment you create a Workspace, there is a box sitting there running for you at all times so it doesn't matter if you use it or not. The service is meant for people who work remotely constantly. If you want to be billed only when you are using a box, you can setup an EC2 instance and only turn it on when you need to use it.

    I think there are even apps for desktop or smartphones that can do that for you (turn the EC2 instance on when you want to connect).

  17. Re:Big brave man picking on the weak on Wellness App Author Lied About Cancer Diagnosis · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The majority of the pan handlers aren't even homeless, they're just lazy, incompetent con-artists.

    And for that reason I relate more to the Marine and Runaway's sentiments, because there are tons of people working and resources going to helping veterans. So much so, there is literally no reason for a veteran to be pan handling or homeless.

    If this Marine did find out the pan handler was a real Marine, I guarantee you he would have got the guy in touch with agencies to help them.

    Because that's what it means to be a part of a fraternity like that. If enough care, stuff gets done and people get helped.

    Cancer survivors shouldn't let someone abuse their accomplishments either. Shaming this woman and showing others is the best way to make sure other people don't try the same thing to get ahead.

  18. Re:So? on Futures Trader Arrested For Causing 2010 'Flash Crash' · · Score: 2

    Um, producing trades that you do not intend to act on to manipulate prices is literally fraud and illegal. This will never be legal, nor should ever be legal.

    The laws aren't written specifically for the stock market, this is a general principal upheld by any type of market.

  19. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system on William Shatner Proposes $30 Billion Water Pipeline To California · · Score: 1

    No, using the Great Lakes was not suggested. More like setting up reservoirs along Mississippi tributary flood plains, giving the river breathing room for flooding and holding onto the fresh water to be used on land instead of letting it slip into the sea. The water would not be cheap, so I do not see this as enabling bad behavior at all and by no means will the water from the Midwest made it across the Rocky's to California. I suspect most of the water would go to Prairie states and Texas (or hell, help the Great Lakes eventually too).

    But I take real offense to the protectionist tone that you and others responding to me have taken on. Should Pennsylvania start deciding on the temperature in people's homes in Michigan because they supply the natural gas? Should Texas tell Iowa they can't use their fertilizer or gas products without their approval? That's not how things should work nor how they do work. We all chip in to supply need and protect a common living standard. To force others into squalor because you don't want to sell them your resource (at fair cost), is not just immoral but unethical as well.

    Honestly, this is suppose to be a UNITED STATES. You already take advantage of a massive amount of resources and labor from other states to survive (this goes for any state), why the hell do you think you can take such a position is beyond me.

    All you selfish twits need to pull your heads out of your asses and look at the life you live. You are not independent, you need the rest of us and some of those people need the water to give you what you want.

  20. Re:"Prevent"? on Resistance To Antibiotics Found In Isolated Amazonian Tribe · · Score: 1

    No, you can't. People assert this constantly by stating evolutionary pressure propagates drug resistant bacteria but that is by far not the leading cause.

    Bacteria are more like a city of people and less like a field of crops. When a new type of bacteria joins a location, it tries to talk to all of the bacteria around it (even outside it's species) using chemical triggers or even electrical pulses. When one type of bacteria is having troubles, either by not getting what it needs to survive or being attacked by anti-biotic or virus, they send out stress signals. Sometimes other bacteria in the area receive these signals and start taking action even though they do not need to do anything. This in turn leads to chaos, either from bacteria starting to produce a barrage of chemical defenses (setting off more defenses of other bacteria), trying to split to create new cells, throwing all their resources into unnecessary processes, etc., that starts to severely limit resources at the location for all of the bacteria.

    During this chaos, the rate of mutation is likely to drastically increase, characteristics between bacteria are more likely to be shared and bacteria will try to create defenses to random items it finds during the period. This means that bacteria not directly affected by the anti-biotic can develop the RNA or DNA to combat or avoid the anti-biotic, and then share it with those who are affected.

    And this also means that the primary culprit of the spread of drug-resistant bacteria is not the actual use of anti-biotic, but the sheer fact that bacteria is being shared between people.

  21. Interstate Water Sharing system on William Shatner Proposes $30 Billion Water Pipeline To California · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I hope this raises awareness that the country should have an interstate water sharing system, so that reservoirs can be built in wet areas and pipelines can send excess to states that need it.

    It's the key 21st century project that needs to get done to keep the US safe from droughts, aquifer depletion and powerful storms.

  22. Re:A different atom smasher on Years After Shutting Down, Tevatron Reveals Properties of Higgs Boson · · Score: 1

    Two short paragraphs later, the writer explains both in more detail. I doubt it was an issue of envy, but sticking to standard writing conventions (start broad, dive into details, wrap up).

    And it's called the Large Hadron Collider, not the "European Large Hadron Collider". A lot of countries outside of Europe helped build it.

  23. Re:Do It, it worked in AZ on Gen Con Threatens To Leave Indianapolis Over Religious Freedom Bill · · Score: 1

    No, the civil rights battles STARTED with religion and continued on to race, women and homosexuals.

    This law would literally blow away ALL civil right progress since Philadelphia in 1776, not just Montgomery in 1955.

    Completely un-American to support discrimination of any kind for any people and I would even debate un-Christian as well.

  24. Re:Do It, it worked in AZ on Gen Con Threatens To Leave Indianapolis Over Religious Freedom Bill · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Extremist strawman is extreme.

    Any public shop must allow the public to enter and purchase products or services. A merchant doesn't have to do everything the customer asks and they can refuse service if they have good reason. But any shop that discriminates on any stereotypical ground is at least being unprofessional and unethical but at worst breaking discrimination laws.

    This law is a thinly veiled attempt to remove all of the civil rights successes of the last sixty years.

    Anyone can make a religion and say they aren't allowed to do X or talk to Y, then discriminate against anyone they choose. The entire point of the United States of America (LITERALLY) was to avoid that kind of thing.

  25. Re:Sigh on NVIDIA's GeForce GTX TITAN X Becomes First 12GB Consumer Graphics Card · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I completely disagree. The majority of the HPC realm still uses Nvidia only because they know CUDA and not because of any technological advantage. AMD has held the line at not allowing sloppy programming methods into their OpenCL compiler and that has held back a lot of HPC users from jumping ship. You can even see this in many complaints from open source projects, like Blender, where they refuse to produce proper multi-threaded code and rely heavily on the CUDA compiler to do the work for them.

    The rest of your complaints, "shitty drivers", "piss-poor memory handling" and "worse performance per watt" are also bogus. I own or manage machines using a large number of Nvidia and AMD video cards, and have seen as many driver issues between the two that neither has come out worse. This is a typical fanboy stereotype that keeps being repeated with no real fact behind it.

    Your second complaint is seen a lot in programming forums, but I have never seen anyone do a proper write up of any memory issues with any of AMD's generations and most of the conversations lead me to believe it was an issue of the programmer's personal preference not wanting to learn a second platform with less market share than an actual technical issue. Most of these issues would be alleviate if the programmer would just use a common optimized library and stop trying to redo the work themselves.

    Lastly, AMD's offerings have historically produce more performance per watt and their latest offerings continue that trend. This, besides the bit shift ability you mention, is also one reason why AMD was used for Bitcoin mining and supercomputers.

    http://www.tomshardware.com/re...
    http://www.green500.org/news/g...

    Now, my latest personal computer has an Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 inside because I more often need to fix CUDA code and noticed some of the games I wanted to play ran better on it (again, from the game designer's preference and not a technical merit). I personally own eight other video cards across AMD, Nvidia and Matrox (who use AMD GPUs these days) and three generations for testing.

    And I am only sticking up for AMD because I admire their push to get people to code for multi-core better. Nvidia has been too conciliatory in the last six years in that respect, which is fine for their revenue stream and market share but not a good thing in the big picture for the broader computer industry. Since Moore's law has begun to slow, we are going to need a massive shift to multi-core optimized applications and we need programmers ready for that day.

    AMD seems to be ready with the tough love to get everyone there while Nvidia keeps enabling bad behaviors.