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User: SchMoops

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  1. Possible to mostly disable Intel Management Engine on Malware Uses Obscure Intel CPU Feature To Steal Data and Avoid Firewalls (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 1

    There's a company that says they have found a way to neutralize the ME, overwriting all of its main modules (i.e. the ones that allow DMA and network access like this exploit uses): https://puri.sm/learn/avoiding...

  2. Re:Counting down on Ask Slashdot: How Can a Blind Singer 'See' the Choirmaster's Baton? · · Score: 1

    Well, to be fair, musicians don't generally use 5-6-7-8; that's more commonly used for choreography. With 4/4 (most) music, it's 1-2-3-4. :)

  3. Re:If you notice on the front page of ""slashdot"" on Porn Troll Panics, Dismisses Pending Lawsuits · · Score: 1

    Good luck drinking that root beer when you're not in the sudoers file.

  4. Oh I see on Evil, Almost Full Vim Implementation In Emacs, Reaches 1.0 · · Score: 1

    Ah, now I understand. "Evil" is the NAME of the editor. I thought that the Vim implementation in Emacs was both evil, and almost full.

  5. Re:Man, oh man! on US Postal Service Discontinuing Saturday Mail Delivery · · Score: 1

    About all I really get via the Postal Service would qualify as spam if it hit my email inbox. And gets treated that way when it hits my mailbox.

    You eat your junk mail?!

  6. Based on the Naming Convention on AMD Unveils Preliminary Radeon HD 8000M Series Mobile GPU Details · · Score: 1

    Well, based on the naming convention, it may obvious... or it may not.

  7. Yam-like? on Artificial Muscles Pack a Mean Punch · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yam-like? Or is that just bad keming?

  8. Well with FRANDs like these... on Apple Suit Against Motorola Over FRAND Licensing Rates Dismissed · · Score: 1

    ...who....needs..... enemies. (Oh god I couldn't stop myself. What have I done?)

  9. Re:all in all... on Linus Torvalds Answers Your Questions · · Score: 1

    :-/

    I had the opposite problem. In Germany and Austria, I'd try to speak German and as soon as they heard my American accent they would speak English back to me.

  10. Re:Psychoacoustics and perceptual coding on Neil Young Pushes Pono, Says Piracy Is the New Radio · · Score: 1

    > If you take three electronically produced 15kHz tones, one a sine wave, one a sawtooth wave, and one a square wave, that teenager can tell the difference between them.

    That statement doesn't fit into my understanding how sound works and how humans hear. I'd be very interested to see a double-blind test where this is demonstrated, and not due to an error in the sampling process.

    The thing that makes a tone a sine, sawtooth, or square wave is the presence or absence of harmonics. The first harmonic above the fundamental on a 15kHz tone would be 30kHz - inaudible. All any human (even with hearing up to 25kHz) can hear with any of these three tones is the 15kHz fundamental: a sine wave.

    The parts of the shape you lose by sampling at 44.1kHz are the parts that make up the harmonics: 30kHz, 45kHz, 60kHz, 75kHz, etc. Since no human will ever hear those frequencies, they are OK to discard in order to sample at 44.1kHz. There will be a difference to the wave shape, but it will be *completely* inaudible to any human being. (Bats would notice it, though.)

    All any person would ever hear in any of those three waves is a 15kHz sine, so all you need to record in this case is that frequency (unless you're planning to slow down/pitch shift the recording by several octaves, or play it for bats, or something).

  11. I am sure... on BT Fibre Pulls Out of Chelsea Over Ugly Equipment Cabinets · · Score: 1

    I swear there's a joke somewhere in the headline, but I'm missing it somehow.

  12. Ore-Sniffing Dogs on Ore-Sniffing Dogs Rediscovered By Mining Industry · · Score: 1

    Showing up as a new feature in Minecraft in 3... 2... 1...

  13. Re:Constituants. on CISPA Sponsor Says Protests Are Mere 'Turbulence' · · Score: 3, Funny

    In other breaking news, Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead. This has been Weekend Update with Chevy Chase.

  14. Lumberjacks on Software Engineers Remain Top US Job · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't know about that worst job. I mean, I'm a lumberjack and I'm OK.

  15. Conflating Dynamic Compression w/Data Compression on Mastering Engineer Explains Types of Compression, Effects On Today's Music · · Score: 1

    Good Lord. Are people still confusing these two things? Words can have different meanings.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0E5kCRsr4gQ

  16. Re:hunter gatherers on Why Did It Take So Long To Invent the Wheel? · · Score: 1
  17. Re:Thigs swinging back to Bittorrent and P2P? on Filesonic Removes Ability To Share Files · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's no less arbitrary that those of us who create content (and I'm one of them) claim it's somehow our right to profit from it.

    Take a look at this blog post by Jonathan Coulton. I can't think of any way I could agree more:
    http://www.jonathancoulton.com/2012/01/21/megaupload/

  18. Re:One other thing... on Ask Slashdot: What Can You Do About SOPA and PIPA? · · Score: 1

    But the artists are making fractions of a percent on CD sales, and paying for their advances from that net payment... Many end up in debt, even after a fairly decent hit. And the engineers usually work for hire - they get paid once for the work and make no royalties for sales.

    So the middlemen are screwing the artists (thousands, all but the top dozen or two per year, lose money) and grabbing all the cash from CD sales. Meanwhile, the engineers already made their livable but modest salary and get nothing (except possibly reputation) if a record goes multi-platinum.

    These bastards are trying to save their own gravy train by claiming that the piracy is harming the artists. They are being disingenuous.

    Piracy does sometimes harm artists, but it's not a black-and-white situation. Some piracy harms, but some piracy helps due to publicity. Personally, I'd rather become popular by giving good stuff away and letting people voluntarily pay for it - look at Jonathan Coulton's business model.

  19. Re:I just got back from a job fair today on Do Companies Punish Workers Who Take Vacations? · · Score: 1

    Slippery slope / black & white thinking. Not true.

  20. Re:No, not really on The Looming Library Lending Battle · · Score: 1

    Plenty of popular novels were written in days or weeks. Michael Moorcock, for example

    I take it he's a writer of romance novels?

  21. Re:FreeBSD is a step backward on In Favor of FreeBSD On the Desktop · · Score: 1

    Good points. One minor objection: the objective-C/kool-aid thing is true for iOS, but not really for OSX (yet, at least).

  22. If it's showing real results... on "World's Most Relaxing Music" Composed · · Score: 1

    ...I wonder if it has http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binaural_beats in it.

  23. Re:Nothing to see.. on New Mac OS X Trojan Hides Inside PDFs · · Score: 1

    Except it's NOT EVEN A PDF, so you don't need to take those precautions. OS X will say "_____ is an application you downloaded from the Internet. Are you sure you want to run it?" so any tech-literate user will know that it's an executable, not a PDF.

  24. Like The Old Joke on Living In an Unsecured World · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This reminds me of the old joke:

    Alice and Bob are camping when they get attacked by a hungry lion. Running away at top speed, Alice begins to overtake Bob. "We'll never be able to outrun it!" says Bob. Alice replies, "I don't need to outrun the lion - I only need to outrun YOU!"

    In that sense, all the security any given person needs is just not to be low-hanging fruit.

  25. Re:FLAC on Public AAC Listening Test @ ~96 Kbps [July 2011]. · · Score: 1

    It doesn't make sense to me when you say frequency-domain codecs cannot be perceptually transparent. That statement is general and absolute and is in contradiction to the experimental data.

    If a codec is indistinguishable from the original by a given individual, it is by definition transparent - at least for that person, with that source material, on that system.

    Absolute proof is not achievable in this situation, but I believe the extensive double-blind ABX tests on hydrogenaudio provide a reasonably convincing body of evidence in favor of general perceptual transparency of high-bitrate MP3 with most source material on most sound systems for most people.

    Vague and dogmatic assertions about "known issues" are less convincing to me. If it is a question of human perception, which this is, then the way to get closer to the answer is to test it by observing humans, not by theorizing without experimenting.