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User: mysidia

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Comments · 13,354

  1. Re:So can I erase yesterday's spam? on Temporal Cloak Erases Data From History · · Score: 1

    It's already been done! The new spam cloaker is 90% effective at removing spam from history!

    Thank you... unfortunately, this 10% that got left over is a big PITA.

    Is there any way we can erase the spammers from history too -- as in erase their genetic material from being communicated during conception, so that the spammers were never born in the first place, or would that be too dangerous?

  2. So can I erase yesterday's spam? on Temporal Cloak Erases Data From History · · Score: 1

    Now that the spammers have finally been identified... is it possible to integrate the temporal cloak with a retroactive spam filtering device, to erase my spam in the past before the filters were able to detect it, so I will not have wasted time reading it?

  3. Re:Yes they can on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    Even ignoring Air Print enabled printers (which are a dime a dozen), it's still easy as hell to print from an iOS device.

    Really? Without a PC, where on the iPad exactly do you plug the USB cable in?

  4. Re:Server & Tools too... on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    iPhones / iPads ever stop being big, does Apple have a backup plan?

    I think it's called the Macbook / iMac, or the ability to develop a successor that will one-up whatever has become more popular.

    Their product is more likely to be a victim of their own success -- so many iPhones/iPads on the market, everyone has one; to make more money, they have to convince their customers to fork over for an upgrade.

    An upgrade whose existence will create a reluctance in people to buy the product, for fear it too will soon be obsoleted.

  5. Re:Server & Tools too... on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    Or people are pointing out that Microsoft is just becoming like IBM. You aren't sure what they do. You own nothing from them...but somehow they continue being more successful year over year.

    Perhaps Microsoft will be acquired by IBM through merger.... now wouldn't that be ironic? :)

  6. Re:Server & Tools too... on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it is. PC sales have been flat to negative since the iPad came out.

    This is because the iPad is new and cool, shiny, and people think it can do all the things that PCs can do.

    What the PC market really needs is some new killer apps. Some new compelling applications, that everyday people will want, that have no iPad equivalent; no app that can be or will be made.

  7. Re:Server & Tools too... on Can Microsoft Survive If Windows Doesn't Dominate? · · Score: 1

    It doesn't really matter if Apple makes more money. So long as Microsoft is profitable, it will always be around regardless of other parties.

    Capital will flow towards whichever company has the better risk / return.

    The decrease in Windows market share creates new situations that increase risk for Microsoft investors by raising uncertainty.

    Any additional risk in Apple, has, so far been met with a correspondingly appropriate return

  8. Re:ISDN PRI, Channelized DS1/DS3 not going anywher on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Old Copper Pair Technology? · · Score: 1

    There are more than a dozen ISPs in our area, buts only one provider left that will do enterprise level POTS.

    What provider do you think the ISP will use to provision a circuit to your enterprise?

    In most areas it's probably going to be a HDSL 4-wire or 2-wire order, or a bunch of copper pairs, from your local phone company to deliver a bonded service -- the same as the phone company that would be installing the POTS lines. :)

  9. Re:More pertinent information on beer fridge on Beer Fridge Caught Interfering With Cellular Network · · Score: 1

    It seems to be similar to older microwaves and cordless phones that can interfere with the 2.4Hrtz frequency.

    Fortunately 2.4Ghz is a Part15/ unlicensed frequency in the US at least; and some amount of local interference is OK as long as it doesn't emit high powered harmful interference that affects a licensed radio service.

    If the status of 2.4Ghz ever changes - for example, if it becomes a frequency requiring a license -- owners of those devices might have to replace, repair, or cease use of those devices. :/

    Just because it's legal to operate today; doesn't entirely guarantee that it's legal to operate tomorrow.

    Caveat emptor.

    When possible it's wise to purchase devices with minimal spurious emissions.

  10. Re:The Robot... on Beer Fridge Caught Interfering With Cellular Network · · Score: 1

    The robot, apparently code-named 'Bender' was apparently not concerned initially until it determined that the fridge contained beer, at which point it flagged this as a priority.

    I heard this robot codenamed Bender had an antenna connected to a faulty transceiver that might be responsible for cell phone network interference (as well as satellite TV interference)

  11. Re:More pertinent information on beer fridge on Beer Fridge Caught Interfering With Cellular Network · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not his fault their network is impacted by a completely unrelated device.

    Once he's been informed of the disturbance his device is creating; he becomes liable if he fails to make it stop.

    Same as if you have a fridge that makes insanely loud noises and creates a disturbance in the neighborhood, or a fridge that shoots fireballs at the neighbor's property.

    The person operating the fridge is liable for the damage, and responsible for the repairs or to cease operation and dispose of their misbehaving equipment.

  12. Re:More pertinent information on beer fridge on Beer Fridge Caught Interfering With Cellular Network · · Score: 1

    You will unplug my beer fridge over my cold and lifeless body. This is why we Uhmerkins have guns.

    If need be, the Guvernment can order the local electric company to shut off power to his residence, in order to combat the interference. The lights can be switched off at a safe distance from the pole, without unplugging anything or approaching the residence.

  13. Re:I can't imagine this is worth it on Salvaging E.T. In Software, Instead of New Mexico · · Score: 1

    Absolutely nothing. As copyright law has nothing to say about boards. About the software in the ROM?

    The point is copyright restricts performance, distribution, and modification, not just copying.

    The first sale doctrine has been used to establish a precedent that allows you to re-sell copyright works you have purchased. The right of the copyright holder to make the copy exercised by the first sale, flows; that is: this allows you to resell the work, the first sale permits it.

    But there's a problem here.... what happens when you have an unpublished copy that was never sold to anyone; there is no 'first sale'; therefore, the first sale doctrine does not apply to this ROM you have recovered.

    And there is no first abandonment doctrine I know of, that says the copy of the work of an author who abandoned a copy of the work, or accidentally misplaced a copy, or who accidentally leaked a copy due to employee misbehavior, or subcontractor misbehavior -- enjoys a right to be redistributed.

    Therefore.... there is no right to distribute the work that is flowing to you.

    In other words: salvaging the ROM, and reselling it without copying, might be infringement. There is no precedent I know of which says that is allowed, and it encroaches on an exclusive right protected by the copyright statute, that would tend to suggest that redistributing it would be illegal (even though you haven't made the copy -- and the copy may have been legal to make, it was never "infused with a right" to be redistributed, since there was never a first sale).

  14. Re:Yeah, I'll think about that for you. on WY Teen Cut From Science Fair For Entering Too Many · · Score: 2

    A big loss would be the ethanol manufacturing plants, quickly reduced in value to scrap: all in all, a good thing.

    You really think so? What about Ethanol for human consumption?

    Given the future of the economy.... I think there's going to be a lot of demand for it.

  15. Re:ISDN PRI, Channelized DS1/DS3 not going anywher on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Old Copper Pair Technology? · · Score: 1

    On top of that, we regularly suffer multi-hour outages from our upstream provider, and they refuse to fix the problem.

    How the hell is VoIP going to be reliable, if your upstream provider regularly fails?You think their uptime and service reliability will be better with internet service?

    Either service can be unreliable with a bad service provider. POTS is easier to get right; although indeed more expensive, and not completely impossible to incompetently install, design, maintain, or manage.

    POTS is a federally regulated service, and standards of reliability are applicable. If your provider refuses to fix, you may have a complaint to take to the FCC public service commission.

    Before you start extolling the virtues of POTS, keep in mind that everything is not always flowers and sunshine. We have 20 line POTS to the building I'm in, and the up-time is atrocious. The patchboard alone is a nightmare no one wants to touch.

    This is more an equipment/implementation issue.

    I would tend to say, get rid of the 20 POTS lines, and get an ISDN PRI; or a fractional T1 and a channel bank.

    Get rid of the expensive proprietary PBX, and get an IP-based PBX with ISDN PRI as the upstream.

    In other words: a mixture of VOIP and POTS technology.

    VOIP to connect phones to an inexpensive PBX or SIP proxy (less than $5000)

    PBX to connect to the upstream phone network.

    ISDN PRI or fractional voice T1 is easily moved to a VoIP service provider at any time, for all or some outgoing or incoming calls

    So you can have a mixture of VoIP and POTS as required.

    Meaning; you could use VoIP as a failover in case POTS is down; or POTS as a failover in case internet is down, in some cases.

    And mix use of service when it makes sense

  16. Re:I can't imagine this is worth it on Salvaging E.T. In Software, Instead of New Mexico · · Score: 1

    Maybe they'll sell seven million copies of E.T. for the Atari 2600, covered in human waste and for a dollar each, proving us all wrong and freezing hell solid.

    Yup.

    I see plenty of E.T. available on Ebay with box and manual, doubtlessly taken better care of, and in better original condition for ~$8 to ~$10.

    The best use of digging it up would probably be to recycle the components; unless they intend to collaborate to make a magic cartridge modification to fix all the issues with the game, and sell an altered version.

    I suppose a big chunk of them could sell as a novelty... collector value, just because of the fact that it came from Atari's game burial.

    Maybe the 3 thousand or less copies they are likely to recover (assuming there are any packed in the middle of the 'stack' that have not decayed/been damaged beyond recognition), will sell for $10 or $20 based on that.

    It still won't recover the hundreds of thousands that a dig operation like this costs to perform :)

  17. Re:ISDN PRI, Channelized DS1/DS3 not going anywher on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Old Copper Pair Technology? · · Score: 1

    Outsourcing saved Dell, and it saved HP. Were it not possible, we would be importing our computers from China just as we do our TVs, radios, set top boxes, microwaves, etc.

    Because you haven't really substantiated your contention; I am more inclined to believe Forbes' detailed analysis on this topic, then some Slashdot AC's unsupported claims.. please see How HP and Dell destroyed their PC advantage piece by piece.

    The outsourcing "fad" has just begun. Even H-1Bs are extremely attractive. Think one can pay a USAian with a CCIE $30k/year? Won't happen, but you can easily get H-1Bs for that pay and qualifications with just a couple forms.

    The CCIE is an expensive and difficult certificate to obtain regardless of nationality; people who hold this are valuable, regardless of nationality. I don't believe there are many Indians holding this level of qualification. There aren't very US people holding this qualification either. This is definitely not a helpdesk worker certificate.

    I will agree that H-1Bs are attractive. Especially for menial programming jobs. Outsourcing is extremely attractive for programming jobs and manufacturing.

    But outsourcing falls apart when there is work that is tied to a physical location; such as at an ISP or Telco, where you have a wire plant.

    Until robots are invented that can be operated from overseaas, and the speed of light is broken, so that latency can be reduced to an acceptable level -- there is not much fear of offshoring technicians that do some mechanical work which involves physically touching misbehaving equipment in order to troubleshoot.

  18. I can't imagine this is worth it on Salvaging E.T. In Software, Instead of New Mexico · · Score: 0

    Atari video game burial: The goods disposed of through the burial are generally believed to have been several million copies of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, a game which had become one of the biggest commercial failures in video gaming and is often cited as one of the worst video games released; and the Atari 2600 port of Pac-Man, which had been commercially successful but critically maligned.

    E.T. was a commercial failure -- do you really think it would be worth recovering a few million reproductions of a piece of trash?

    What would copyright law say about restoring and reselling boards with a copy of a copyright work that was not sold, and the author ordered destroyed?

    One or two copies of E.T. might be worth a lot. As soon as you have millions though, the value is negligible...

    Their only real value is to collectors as a historical memento; there are only so many collectors, and millions of copies is plenty enough for all of the collectors, without competing -- I see no way the dig could recover its costs, even if they find them..

    The copies of Pacman may be worth a little more, because hey: people still want to play that.

  19. Re:ISDN PRI, Channelized DS1/DS3 not going anywher on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Old Copper Pair Technology? · · Score: 1

    Unless his dad is working from India, I'm amazed he's still got a helpdesk job. Time to move on or up.

    As long as he's advanced helpdesk Level 3 or higher, and he's not in the first line Level 1 or Level 2 support job; I don't think he has much to worry about from India.

    The engineering outsourcing fad is just about over, if not over.

    Go ask Dell about how well that worked for them in the long run, farming out all their work to overseas companies -- by outsourcing everything, they outsourced their competitive edge, and then their suppliers started working for the competition - enabling the competition in various countries to provide essentially the same equipment as Dell, for a lower price: in other words, outsourcing came to bite them, because they effectively exported the core of their business, directly resulting in them bleeding sales...

    Anyways, while outsourcing customer service and low-level support works well -- a call center operator can just read from a script.

    It doesn't work so well, for helpdesk, beyond low-level jobs, when you need advanced level troubleshooting, such as helpdesk logging into service provider routers and other highly security-sensitive network infrastructure to do some diagnostics, and not following a script.

    It doesn't work so well, when a specific understanding of the customer's network design is required to troubleshoot the issue.

    It doesn't work so well when you lose customers because they are fed up talking to "engineers" with accents they cannot understand.

    It doesn't work so well when the person taking the call needs to physically touch something, to provide the service the customer expects.

    Or when the helpdesk person needs to coordinate with a field technician for diagnosis.

  20. Re: Why the iPhone of all thing? on Chicago Sun Times Swaps iPhone Training For Staff Photographers · · Score: 1

    When you remove subscription paying readers from the equation, you get less money to pay professional photographers.

    Which is bullshit; when you consider, that at the same time you removed subscription paying readers from a local area where your paper is published: you now have the opportunity to appeal to Ad revenue generating readers from all over the world -- as long as your work is high quality, including visual appeal which means professional quality charts, graphical design, and photos.

  21. Re:ISDN PRI, Channelized DS1/DS3 not going anywher on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Old Copper Pair Technology? · · Score: 1

    I won't claim to be intimately aware of telco operations, but it's my understanding that more and more telcos are ditching channelized copper on the backbone

    Telcos are usually using channelized fiber on the backbone.

    IP based protocols don't provide reliable delivery and circuit protection switching. For the forseeable future, only VoIP providers are switching voice to IP at the backbone, and providers that sell circuits to customers are not.

  22. Re:Yeah, I'll think about that for you. on WY Teen Cut From Science Fair For Entering Too Many · · Score: 1

    Check your math. Gasoline sold at retail typically has 10% ethanol (usually corn-derived) and 90% actual gasoline.

    I cannot calculate exactly what will happen, but increasing the concentration from 90% to 100% tomorrow means that every person who buys 9 gallons of gasoline today buys 10 gallons tomorrow.

    The US driving population is approximately 200 million. Gasoline is already a scarce raw material.

    Lets assume 100 million people fill up their cars with 10 gallons at the pump twice a month.

    That's 18 = 9 gallons x 2 in the world before the removal of additives

    And 20 = 10 gallons x 2 in the world after we removed the additives.

    In other words, 50 million people buying 2 additional gallons of gasoline twice a month = 100 million gallons

    This translates into approximately 5 million barrels of oil.

    Of course, people buy more gasoline than that, so it is actually a multiple of that of gaslone taken off the market.

    So while demand for Ethanol will be going down; There will be a demand shock for Gasoline, at least temporarily.

    The Demand for Gasoline might eventually go back down, if indeed, vehicles are sufficiently more efficient with the new mixture -- people should be buying their 10 gallons less often.

    However: they will still be floating more fuel in their vehicles; that is the increase in concentration increases the effective quantity of gasoline that each individual person is demanding to be stored in their vehicles, because they will be always filling their tank up completely.

    When the gasoline is in your fuel tank, it's already been taken off the market. It's as if everyone's fuel tank was suddenly expanded to carry an additional gallon -- artificial incentive for everyone in the market to hoard an extra gallon gas per 9 gallons of fuel.

    Therefore, you have a rather complicated economic situation. The engine efficiency may be higher. In fact, if you visit the gas station less often, and less fuel is burned -- then gasoline is burned at a lower rate by the entire population, and yet, you have a short term demand issue.

  23. ISDN PRI, Channelized DS1/DS3 not going anywhere on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Old Copper Pair Technology? · · Score: 3, Informative

    As for helpdesk support... support isn't going anywhere. Although I feel like it's a fruitless pursuit to spend your entire career in. If you're 15 years away from retirement, I would seriously be looking for opportunities for education and advancement, to a more managerial position, where you could have more impact, and maybe get a higher inome for a better retirement.

    As you mentioned.... people too far for DSL.

    Aside from clear channel DS3; which I don't think is even an argument, that those are going anywhere -- businesses still buy those. And the capacity and assurance that the bandwidth will be available is much higher than DSL.

    As you didn't mention... businesses that need something more reliable than DSL, and a SLA from their telecommunications provider. DSL is typically best-effort by the ILEC; sometimes taking 48 to 72 hours to repair. ISDN services are less fragile, and typically have a tigher SLA for diagnosis and repair -- and hey the insult required to break ISDN are essentially drastic situations like stray voltage on the line, cut or short-circuit.

    DSL reception can be totally broken, or the speed suddenly greatly diminished, by a huge variety of minor insults to the copper, where electrical continuity isn't lost.

    The performance you will get from a T1 link by contrast, is pretty much a certain thing, barring severe damage to the copper.

    Businesses requiring POTS applications; believe it or not, VoIP doesn't work for just anything, and still might not be preferred even if it's cheaper; the reliability and security characteristics of POTS may be preferred.

    For example: IT security departments like POTS, because VoIP is so vulnerable, and easy to record, intercept, and forge calls, in case of network intrusion.

    Various applications work better with POTS, such as fax machines and alarm systems. In large sites, there is likely to be some need, and maybe enough need that a PRI or channelized T1 is required for 24 phone lines.

    Existing services where T1/T3 is already in place are unlikely to be changed; where they are filling the need. Not every business wants to tempt fate by switching kinds of service if there is no need to it --- for the forseeable future, there is no massive exodus for DSL.

    DS3 signalling isn't going anywhere either; it's the way of muxing a bunch of T1s or SLA guaranteed customer circuits for circuit protection and mapping across the transport network infrastructure. A bunch of DS0s become DS1s; a bunch of DS1s become DS3s; a bunch of DS3s become OC-xxx; a bunch of those so-called obsolete T1s form the backbone of a telco transport network.

  24. Re:Yeah, I'll think about that for you. on WY Teen Cut From Science Fair For Entering Too Many · · Score: 1

    Then I'll wonder exactly how many pre-1981 cars are actually still on the road, and I'll wonder about the percentage of total fuel usage by all cars which is accounted for by pre-1981 cars.

    If they stopped putting in additives; the price per gallon would explode, because the expensive part is now more concentrated. How do you think the average person will feel about paying $2 to $3 more per Gallon?

    It would be commercial suicide, unless all the retailers did this, they wouldn't buy the more expensive gas; furthermore, consumers would be unhappy, the resulting price increase would be seen as a profit grab...

  25. Re:How? on WY Teen Cut From Science Fair For Entering Too Many · · Score: 1