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User: hirschma

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Comments · 409

  1. So much innovation for so little value on Undiscovered Country of HFT: FPGA JIT Ethernet Packet Assembly · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Things like high frequency trading make me want to vom. Essentially, all they're doing is shuffling money around, taking advantage of an outdated system, and increasing risk for the entire world.

    It'd be great to see this kind of innovation in something that actually is useful and valuable - not for creating an incremental improvement on a corrupt system.

  2. Re:Not True on Valve Announces Hardware Beta Test For 'Steam Machine' · · Score: 1

    HDCP is cracked, this means you can record from the Tivo or the PS3 just fine.

    Some helpful links? I'd love to record from those devices.

  3. 100 million? on Valve Announces Steambox, Sort Of · · Score: 1

    Both the PS3 and the Xbox have lifetime sales figures of under 80 million.

    I think that 5-10 million in sales, first year would make them a contender.

  4. Old news is old on Robotics Research Lab Willow Garage Shutting Down? · · Score: 1

    That story was from the 21st. Of August :) If a robotics company falls in the Valley...

  5. Poor, poor Stephenson on Work Halted On Neal Stephenson's Kickstarted Swordfighting Video Game · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wow.

    So let me get this straight: Best-selling, presumably well-heeled author uses his star power to hold the beggar's cup on Kickstarter.

    Author spends the proceeds without delivering anything.

    Author pens a nice FU to the folks that trusted him, gives up.

    Stephenson: how about digging into your pocket and delivering what you promised? I sincerely hope that he now has 9000+ former fans that will never buy another book from him, and will tell their family and friends to do the same. And thus ends up taking a bigger financial hit than just simply doing the right thing.

  6. Um, no. on Nokia To Release Lumia Case Design Files For 3D Printers · · Score: 1

    "The N900 might have been this neat little device but clearly it sold poorly or Nokia wouldn't have ditched it."

    Your entire post starts from a false assumption. Actually, it sold really well considering. Some estimates are over 1mm. Here's some substantiation:

    http://www.intomobile.com/2010/06/01/how-many-n900-units-has-nokia-sold/

    This was a phone with no subsidies, no marketing or advertising, not compatible with anything else...

    OK, then of course, the N9 must have been a sales failure, right? Nope.

    http://www.quora.com/Is-the-Nokia-N9-MeeGo-handset-still-outselling-Nokias-Windows-Phone-7-handsets-February-2012

    Again, no subsidies, no advertising - and Elop shitting all over it, disowning it, etc.

    If anything, it looks like Nokia made the absolutely wrong decision. It's almost as if there was an agenda that wasn't primarily motivated by profit or unit sales. Hmmm.

  7. Thank you, Jeremy Allison! on Samba: Less Important Because Windows Is Less Important · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Jeremy,

    Since you're hanging about, let me take the opportunity to say thanks for making such a vital, useful and wonderful piece of software - and thanks to the rest of the Samba team, too.

    I've used it at work over the decades, I use it at home even now. It's made my life better. That is not at all hyperbole.

    I know that this is Slashdot, but it wouldn't hurt to say thanks, right?

    Cheers!

  8. Makergear M2 is *NOT* Open Source on Engadget Experiences the Solidoodle 3 3D Printer · · Score: 1

    Like Makerbot, they went closed source for their latest printer - the M2 that you're touting.

    I have an M2, and it's a great printer, but there's nothing Open Source about it, sadly. Well, except for the fact that Makergear looks to the community for help with support and such.

  9. Re:Thought plenty on The Three Pillars of Nokia Strategy Have All Failed · · Score: 1

    The N900 sold somewhere between 1 and 1.5mm units.

    This was without advertising.
    Without marketing.
    Without subsidies.

    Yeah, that didn't sell particularly well. The N9 apparently did substantially better, even with Elop bending over backwards to prevent its success.

  10. Re:Extra E on The Explosive Growth of 3D Printing · · Score: 3, Informative

    There was a presentation about the genesis of Maker Faire at the Open Hardware Summit last week. The pointed out the French translation of "faire" - and said that it was something that they learned after the fact. FYI.

  11. Re:$10,000 CHALLENGE to Alexander Peter Kowalski on Poll Finds Americans Think the TSA Is 'Doing a Good Job' · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that's pretty much it. The poll is polluted by non-traveling mouth-breathers.

    Consider that only 1/3 of Americans hold valid passports. I'd guess that the percentage that flies more at least once a year is around the same, perhaps less.

    Which means that the non-travelers are just fine with whatever tactics that the TSA uses.

  12. I'll never forgive Blizzard over bnetd on Linux Users Banned From Diablo III Servers · · Score: 2, Informative

    Screw Blizzard. They did this:

    https://www.eff.org/press/archives/2002/04/08

    The headline: "Blizzard Freezes Bnetd Gaming Platform, Sues Own Customers"

    I've never bought anything from Blizzard ever since, and never will.

  13. Re:For $1300 I'll buy an M2 on Cubify 3D Printers Aren't Just for Squares (Video) · · Score: 1

    Well, for $1300 and weeks-to-months of waiting.

    FYI, I plunked down my cash on an M2; I was given a "fuzzy" ETA of 4 weeks, now passed. New guestimate of arrival is... 1st-2nd week of July.

    Has anyone received one yet? Any reviews?

  14. Re:Yup, laser cutters are very cool on A Maker Space Favorite: Using a Laser Cutter (Video) · · Score: 1

    Hey DBC - in case you're still watching, i'd love to hear about your thoughts on the lasersaur. Email me at jonnyh at gmail dot com, if you'd be so kind.

  15. Re:I design the best reading the light for the Kin on Next Kindle Expected To Have a Front-Lit Display · · Score: 1

    Actually did a good job promoting the campaign, but the rest of the critique is fair enough.

    But that was my original point - people don't get excited over Kindle lights.

  16. Re:I design the best reading the light for the Kin on Next Kindle Expected To Have a Front-Lit Display · · Score: 1

    Why was it the best?

    It was cheaper. It used less electricity, about 1/3 as much. Despite the video, it threw more diffuse and even light than the Amazon cover. The LED used was "warmer". It was provided a kickstand feature, and worked great as an ergo-grip. The light could be adjusted optimally for many different reading angles and positions, while the Amazon light worked just for one (it's not good for reading in bed, for example).

    And for some folks, the Amazon light offends their vegan sensibilities, and mine doesn't.

    Things like close-up lighting are really hard to get right on video, FYI.

  17. I design the best reading the light for the Kindle on Next Kindle Expected To Have a Front-Lit Display · · Score: 1

    ...and no one wanted it. Seriously:

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/pieco/kapsule-lightstand-kindle-accessory

    I guess if it's built-in and "free", people will want a reading light. Otherwise, not so much.

  18. Re:Crashplan on Ask Slashdot: It's World Backup Day; How Do You Back Up? · · Score: 1

    Another vote for Crashplan. I have the family plan. It's Linux friendly. There are no data limits. It's fairly cheap for what it is (I think that I can backup all of the computers in my "family" for $200 for two years).

    But it isn't enough.

    My semi-paranoid backup plan (and yes, I know that RAID is not backup):

    • Windows machines boot from soft-mirrored drives
    • They also back up to a Linux server w/ RAID 5 via Macrium Reflect
    • Most files are stored on a another Linux server, RAID 5
    • The main server rsyncs its contents to a "hidden" RAID 5 once a night. Gives a 24 hour window to retrieve accidentally deleted files locally
    • All Windows and Linux boxes constantly backup to the cloud via Crashplan (but not the Macrium backup files - too large).

    Sadly, Crashplan's worst problem is that it can't keep up with my FIOS speeds. It tops out at about 1-2MB/s, while FIOS allows up to 5MB/s up speeds. If it could, I'd even backup the Macrium image files.

    I had a bad Windows disaster and lost a bunch of data two years ago. It was a BIOS bug, I think - Windows 7 suddenly thought I had a new drive geometry, and it blue-screened and started to automatically try to "fix" things upon reboot. I'm surprised that no one has shit all over them for this "user-friendly" design decision.

    And it turns out that the precautions I had in place at the time ALL FAILED. The mirror (Intel fakeraid) had silently failed a while before (probably because of the crap BIOS) - not that it would have probably made a difference. The previous backup software had silently failed a while before. I wasn't using cloud backup. And the drives in my file server started to fail one after another at the same time.

    It took two sleepless weeks to get most (but not all) of my data back.

    Lesson: have several layers of backup and redundancy. And CHECK that everything is working as intended periodically, or you'll find that all of your condoms have broken.

  19. Re:Was there an Amazon WebOS app in the works? on Amazon In Talks With HP To Buy Palm · · Score: 1

    Um, the Touchpad shipped with the Kindle Reader. It was marked a Beta, but it works very well. And they just updated it a couple of weeks ago.

  20. Well, actually... on What If Tim Berners-Lee Had Patented the Web? · · Score: 1

    I was once out to dinner with Tim (and some others). It was at a Benihana's in Napiersville, IL. It was for a W3C thing.

    After several sake-bombs, he wistfully expressed regret that he hadn't gotten a patent on the URL. He his idea was that he would have freed the patent, except for anyone putting a URL in print for purposes of advertising. Those folks would have had to pay him a fraction of a cent per impression.

    I'm not so sure how serious he was, be he really looked pretty sad.

  21. Re:That's nice for the multi-remote people... on XBMC Gets a Dedicated Remote · · Score: 1

    This sounds great. Can you give some more details about your setup? Like, what hardware, how you're doing the TCP/IP stuff, etc?

  22. Re:Poor usability. on Windows 7 vs. Ubuntu 10.04 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and it's even worse for their Netbook Remix. I can't tell you how often I find that I can't see the full contents of a window because it is hardcoded to be larger than the vertical resolution of a netbook.

    While this problem is rife on added software that was not created to be "netbook safe", it is present for some of the utilities and config options on the Netbook Remix out of the box.

    Of course, the same issue was present in the original Windows XP that shipped with the machine. I'm guessing that MS got it right for W7.

    That being said, it works very well. My battery life is fine; it is mostly compatible with all of the hardware (but I needed to do research before I could use Asus' config keys), it wakes up from sleep and hibernation better than Windows does, etc. It was well worth getting rid of Windows.

  23. Re:The A4 processor.. on Apple's "iPad" Out In the Open · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a close relative of the ARM Cortex-A8 and Cortex-A9 Says who? You're probably right, but why can't it be a PPC CPU - which was PA Semi's expertise before they got bought by Apple (low power, high performance PPC CPUs). Seems that OSX and derivatives are pretty portable. Does anyone actually know what the iCPU's instruction set is? Which graphics core that they're using? Any other particulars?

  24. The Siemens SL785 does (some) of what you want on Home Phone System That Syncs To Computer? · · Score: 1

    See:

    SL785 on Amazon. It is the only cordless phone on the market that has some semi-smartphone features.

    You can push .vcf cards to the phone via Bluetooth (I exported from Google, and pushed my entire contact list in one go). Alternately, you can use the optional software to sync a handset with Outlook via USB or Bluetooth.

    Once one handset is updated, you can push the entire phonebook to any other handset.

    The phones themselves are very pretty and well made, and work great as phones. They can also display photos, and you can use your own custom ringtones. The handsets can (or claim to) use Bluetooth headsets, too, but I've yet to have one work well (something off with the bluetooth radio in the handsets).

    Very, very pricey compared to other phones, however.

  25. I'm sure the Gates Foundation can help, too on All of Vietnam's Government Computers To Use Linux, By Fiat · · Score: 1

    Bill can kick in a few billion to fight some disease - money that will at least partially go into government official pockets - get some good PR, and keep Vietnam buying MS.

    Cynical? Perhaps, but it worked in India.