Slashdot Mirror


User: lavaboy

lavaboy's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
74
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 74

  1. Re:Start with Python on Steve Furber On Why Kids Are Turned Off To Computing Classes · · Score: 1

    you forgot ICON and Prolog... oh, and I almost forgot that eternal favorite, APL

  2. Re:Costs for what? on Internal Costs Per Gigabyte — What Do You Pay? · · Score: 1

    for 30$/gb/month they are probably using the "outsource the backup to a monastery where teams of monks slave tirelessly, day-and-night, to hand transcribe all your data onto painstakingly hand illuminated parchment made out of the skin of Cashmere goats born during the summer solstice in alternating leap years" backup strategy. It's all a question of quality.

  3. Re:Paul is ahead of the class, not behind on Gulf Gusher Worst Case Scenario · · Score: 1

    Seriously?

    I mean are you really going to rush breathlessly to the defense of a breathless guy with only a tenuous connection to the science and engineering involved in this disaster? One who can't even spell/fact check his own friggin' tag-line? When he's name-dropping? About friggin' astronauts? That his dad supposedly got to the moon?

    Or did I miss the legendary but forgotten Apollo astronaut, "NEAL" Armstrong somewhere in all the ridiculous hype around NEIL Alden Armstrong?

    Dude, you need to turn in your nerd card.

  4. Solsoft.. I mean Exaprotect... I mean LogLogic... on What Is the Future of Firewalls? · · Score: 1

    I was looking for something like this a few years ago when I was working on a carrier-grade scalable multi-tenant CC project. Pretty much the only thing I could find was from SolSoft (which has morphed somehow into LogLogic in the meantime) called "Solsoft Security Change Manager". In the end, we decided to go with the high-paid admin approach so we didn't do any serious testing, but it might be what you are looking for. FWIW, I got the tip for Solsoft from a guy who worked on Netfilter.

    http://www.loglogic.com/products/security-change-management/index.php

  5. Re:Correlation Causation on Study Shows People In Power Make Better Liars · · Score: 1

    I think he was paraphrasing Caesar:

    "Libenter homines id quod volunt credunt" - Men gladly believe that which they wish for.

  6. Re:Sure on Write Bits Directly Onto a Hard Drive Platter? · · Score: 2, Funny

    damn. I was going to say "Call Woz."

  7. Re:Def better with music on Music While Programming? · · Score: 3, Funny

    sombody refer this man to the Fast Track CEO Program, STAT!

  8. Re:Schadenfreude on Google Analytics May Be Illegal In Germany · · Score: 1

    Lived here since 1989, sometimes you do see them with MP's and shotguns. Like when there was a raid on an Apartment complex near where I live - about 30 cops, heavy artillery, vests and dogs never found out what actually happened - or on patrol in the vicinity of some of the embassies (Turkey, for example).

    But the worst thing about german cops is the fact that they get to carry guns, but hardly ever get to actually fire them (something about cost cutting and the cost of ammo and range time). It turns out that they average something like 1 or 2 range days a year. I shoot more than that when I'm on vacation, and I can't hit the broadside of a barn. Every once in a while you hear about an arrest involving the use of a police sidearm. Usually ends up with someone other than the criminal being shot. I.e. the guy who stabbed the egyptian woman in a courtroom in Dresden earlier this year - the cop shot her husband instead of the killer. Or the cop who discharged her gun in the middle of the very crowed Nürnberg train station at rush hour while in pursuit of a suspect (no one was hurt). Or the two cops who shot each other during a traffic stop gone bad, because they positioned themselves on either side of the car, at the front window and then opened fire on the driver.

    There are more stories, but the general theme is when you hear about a cop using his gun in germany, it tends to include some mention of which person or object - other than the suspect - was wounded or damaged.

  9. Re:are the US figures really that high? on German Book Publishers Cool To E-Book Market · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Frankfurter Buchmesse isn't just a "book fair". It's the largest publishers convention in Europe - runs for a week, and is only open to the general public on the last weekend. Calling it just a "book fair" is like calling CeBIT a computer fair or SF ComicCon a comics fair.

  10. Re:Meanwhile ... at Demon Internet Corporate Offic on ISP Emails Customer Database To Thousands · · Score: 1

    you left out "... and everyone got a pony"

  11. Re:Simple question on Microsoft Awarded Patent For Peer-To-Peer DRM · · Score: 1

    yeah, that'll work. I can just see the conversations between the Vendors and the CIOs...

    V: We have this new DRM that will protect your content from unauthorized access.
    C: Really? How's that work?
    V: We use the new <suspiciously vague but vaguely exciting technology name> technology!
    C: Cool! And this is all free, right?
    V:...
    V: Actually, it will cost <fantastically high number> of <appropriate currency>...
    C: ...
    V: And we will of course have to update everything, and redesign most of your existing infrastructure over the course of the next <unfeasibly long period of time> ...
    C: ...
    V: It's really cool, though! It's got <suspiciously vague but vaguely exciting technology name> technology!
    C: Oh. Then, No.
    V: ...
    C: Ok, moving right along, let's talk about that exciting new Word Version Licensing program...

  12. "Wear Sunscreen" on Security / Privacy Advice? · · Score: 1

    chances are you are never going to be able to do this again, and in the short term the security threats that your audience will be exposed to will be different, new and completely oblivious to the prophylaxis and methods you describe today.

    So just tell 'em to wear sunscreen, 'cause that's always a good idea...

  13. Re:Something needs to be done as today's system is on HR 3200 Considered As Software · · Score: 1

    It would be equally easy (and equally invalid) to create a similar conversation where you are portrayed as a dictator.

    I think you misspelled "dick" in that last bit... Oh, wait a minute... that's the conversation he related...

  14. Re:Something needs to be done as today's system is on HR 3200 Considered As Software · · Score: 1

    Dude, you are a loon. And a selfish one, to boot. On the other hand, perhaps you're simply ignorant or disoriented, in which case I sincerely hope this rant helps a little...

    Healthcare in the US is a tragedy, and your attitude is tantamount to sociopathy. Part of being a member of a community is being willing to sacrifice a little for those farther to the left side of the income/opportunity bell curve - even those who get there willfully.

    "Socialized" healthcare and insurance just works. I live in Germany, and am privately insured. My wife isn't, she is covered by the "public option" - one of several dozen privately run group insurance "co-op's" that are strictly regulated by the government. My wife is also a long-term HIV survivor. All together, her drugs alone amount to about 65k Euros a year - and she has been taking them in one cocktail or another for the last 20 years. She is unemployed, by choice, as her doctors told her that the stress of a regular job could dramatically affect the quality of her life, not to mention the duration - and the unpredictability of her symptoms and the side effects of her drugs made working regular hours intractable for her and her employer. The government (and my taxes) also help out here by providing a minimal disability pension, based on the income she earned before becoming unable to work.

    If she wants to, she can switch to any of the other public option co-ops tomorrow. Or I could take her onto my private plan. Tell me how exactly the system would take care of her in the States? Personally, I am thankful that I never had to find out. My last brush with the American health care system showed me that.

    A few years ago, my wife and I were in Las Vegas on vacation. She had a sudden attack of pleurisy - which pretty much seemed like a heart attack when it happened in the middle of a show at the Wynn. The result was 24 hours in a Vegas hospital, a couple of really expensive aspirin, a couple of liters of saline and glucose, a clear bill of health and a bill for about $24000. This probably would have been a serious financial blow for anybody who was as surprised by it as we were. Fortunately, I'm not covered by a US insurance plan. I (not my wife, me) have a travel health plan (also private) from my credit card company. It's part of the 35 Euro annual fee I pay. I called them (1 call) and they took care of the rest. Worked a deal with the hospital, paid the bill and let me know everything was ok. They even dealt with the hospital when they contacted me directly and tried to squeeze me for the difference (about $8000) between the initial bill and the settled amount. The whole deal cost me about 20 Euros in long distance mobile charges for the initial call - which they also offered to reimburse. No hassle, no new restrictions, no new premiums.

    I pay a load of taxes, part of which goes to help defray the cost of regulating the health care industry in Germany, as does part of my medical insurance premium. I have absolutely no problem with that. The "public option" insurance scheme includes government regulation that keeps all players in the industry in line. Services require approval (if they are not emergencies) beyond a certain baseline, but are generally covered. This also applies to my private insurer. The fees hospitals, pharmacies and doctors can charge are regulated as well, as are the awards in malpractice cases. If I want additional coverage (e.g. orthodontia), I can purchase it privately - as can my wife - at reasonable rates.

    Of course there are a minority of tragic, exceptional cases where treatment is of poor quality, withheld for extended periods, or unavailable - but nowhere near the number (46 million uninsured?!) that surely occur daily in the US. I have yet to hear of RAM (Remote Area Medial Volunteer Corps) setting up shop in a German soccer arena to provide basic services to regular citizens.

    Be very happy and consider yourself fortunate. Pray (you are in that demographic, I'll bet) that you never are in a situation where your w

  15. hmmm... on Adjustable-Focus Glasses Can Replace Bifocals · · Score: 1

    Has everyone forgotten the cautionary tale of Navin R. Johnson?

  16. Re:others trying to force their morales on us on Reprogrammed Skin Cells Turned Into Baby Mice · · Score: 2, Interesting

    let's make it even more fun. Suppose that, as is actually the case, liver donation doesn't necessarily have to be fatal - you can in fact donate a part of your liver to someone in need of one, and it will grow in them if everything works out right. So, who is immoral in the situation where the posited homeless guy makes a deal with the posited CEO to sell him a chunk of his liver? Homeless guy? CEO? Some idiot(s) proclaiming the the sanctity of the abdominal cavity? hmmm...

  17. I think I've seen a video of this research... on Cats "Exploit" Humans By Purring · · Score: 2, Funny
  18. Re:Why "Contemporary?" on Tomorrow's Science Heroes? · · Score: 1

    hmmm... well, in that vein, there is always SJG, too. Tons and tons of essays that are almost all entertaining and enlightening. Especially good are "Wonderful Life" and "The Mismeasure of Man." And all from a guy who studied snails...

  19. Re:I assure you God is real, Jesus is Lord! I know on Tomorrow's Science Heroes? · · Score: 1

    dude, your god sucks.

    He's not omnipotent, omniscient or even benign. He's a friggin' unsupervised 6-year-old with a magnifing glass, an ant-hill and a sunny-day. Bitter, jealous, cruel, capricious, mean-spirited, unfair, misogynistic, indecisive and generally not the kind of person you'd want running the DMV, let alone the whole universe. Pretty much the definition of a closet misanthrope.

    What good is there to find in "If God stepped in every time that someone wanted to do evil and stopped him, that being never really could be guilty of doing evil could they? God is allowing the tares to grow along side the wheat. At the end of time, God will throw the tares into the furnace."

    Believe whatever drivel you want, but keep it to yourself, for fuck's sake.

  20. Hmmm... Maybe for the same reason that the Dev... on Game Developer's Response To Pirates · · Score: 1

    ...feels that he isn't required to license/attribute the photographic material that he "pirated" to make his web site? AFAIK, those images are copyright to the studio that released Pirates of the Carribean...

  21. Re:Quality on the decline on Decent Book Clubs for Sci-Fi Fans? · · Score: 1

    the sequel to Old Man's War is pretty good too.

  22. Re:Wow on City-Provided Wi-Fi Rejected Over "Health Concerns" · · Score: 1

    hmmm... I'm interested in this "European Commonwealth" thingie, too. Here in Germany, we have lots of community WiFi and, even worse, almost 100% GSM/EDGE/UMTS and DVB-T coverage, and WiMax is on the way... So, yeah, we here in Europe are "much more advanced" than the benighted little village in the article, but I really pity the poor residents of this "European Commonwealth" who have to live under such backward and draconian laws...

    Of course, there is always the off chance that the quoted person is a traveler from some far, far, future or other-dimensional post-sovereign Europe, and is simply confused as to which time-period/reality he/she is currently inhabiting. Or maybe he/she just plays a lot of spy RPGs... Either possibility is certainly more likely than actually having a physiological reaction to WiFi.

  23. Re:More seriously, though on Electric Motorcycle Inventor Crashes at Wired Conference · · Score: 5, Insightful

    first rule of riding bikes: Dress for the crash, not the trip.

  24. Re:Normal democracy in a capitalist nation? on Senate Majority Leader Takes On File Sharing · · Score: 1

    actually, i think the newspeak term ("democracy") you are thinking of translates to "fascism" in 20th century English.

    there is a checklist:

    nationalism? Check. Ribbons and Flags festoon yards and cars all over the country.
    statism? Check. DHS.
    Authoritarianism? Check. Erosion of civil liberties and freedom.
    Militarism? Check. "Peace through Strength" "We have to fight them over there so we won't have to fight them here"
    Corporatism? Check. That's the part you already noticed.
    Populism? Check. "an ideology which pits a virtuous and homogeneous people against a set of elites and dangerous 'others' who are together depicted as depriving (or attempting to deprive) the sovereign people of their rights, values, prosperity, identity and voice". Fox News, anybody? It's obviously all the furriners and gays and kids and stinking liberals making all the trouble. You know, the TERRORISTS!
    Totalitarianism? Check. Intolerance of activities which are not directed towards the goals of the state. This is a toss-up between stuff like the whole Scooter deal, and GWB's Veto and "Signing Note" shenanigans.
    Anti-Communism? Check. But that's nothing new...
    Opposition to economic and political liberalism? Check. They aren't called "Neo-Libs," now are they?

    Get over it and try to elect a president that seems to want to change this. Problem is, I only see Michael Bloomberg and Arnold doing anything to show even token interest in actually changing the political status quo - albeit in a pretty heavy handed manner...

  25. sounds more like on King Kong Lived? · · Score: 1