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User: Mik!tAAt

Mik!tAAt's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 46

  1. The articles are quite up-to-date on Floating Point Programming, Today? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Both articles are still valid today, mostly because current processors use the same IEEE floating point format than the ones available in 96 (or 91).

  2. They are doing it already: on 1660 Diary Becomes 2003 Weblog · · Score: 2

    It's called 'duplicate posting'.

    So all the stories on /. lately that have appeared several times aren't really dupes, they're just reposting the historic archives of /. as a weblog...sometimes 3 or more times over.

  3. What the regular /. reader sees: on Condor Chick Born In Wild · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is what the regular /. reader sees from the headline:

    "****** Chick **** ** Wild"

  4. Somebody has to say this on Galileo's Final Blaze of Glory · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sorry, couldn't help myself:

    All these worlds are yours - except Europa. Attempt no landings there.

    (This should be all caps, damn the lameness filter!)

  5. How about.... on Space Elevator Could Cost Less Than You Thought · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Now however, there's an 8M pdf paper on NASA Institute of Advanced Concepts [NIAC] website that says it may now be possible with existing materials and can be done for about $40 billion.

    How about building a webserver that can handle 8M PDF posted on the front page of Slashdot for about $40 billion?

  6. Booze. on Getting Introverts to Unwind at Work X-Mas Party? · · Score: 1

    Mandatory triple-whisky at entrance should do the trick =)

  7. Now this is something new on Will Working For Porn Website Ruin an IT Career? · · Score: 1

    You don't get to see a link to a pr0n site on the front page of Slashdot everyday =)

  8. This works for me on Dealing with Failures and Setbacks in the Workplace? · · Score: 2

    Repeat after me:

    I Just Work Here

    (this works only if you don't happen to own the company you work for)

  9. STILL no export templates? on Visual C++ and C++ Standard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft's goal is to have a 'competitively compliant' compiler - meaning it won't be 100% compliant. There are a couple of features of the ANSI/ISO standard (for instance the 'export' keyword as applied to template classes) that won't be implemented because they are considered by Microsoft to be obscure and, at this stage, theoretical.

    Somebody please explain to me why would somebody consider export templates to be 'obscure' and 'theoretical'? If export templates aren't available, you have to put most of your code in header files (or at least use your .cpp files as header files), and that IMHO is just plain stupid.

    On the other hand, aiming for STL, Boost, Blitz and Loki compliance is a Really Good Thing.

  10. TightVNC on WinVNC vs. KVM Extender? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Have you tried TightVNC? I don't know about it's CPU usage, but IMHO it is much better and faster than normal WinVNC. It can also do JPEG-encoding on the picture data, so it is really bandwidth-efficient.

  11. Another view on ArsTechnica Compares the P4 and G4e: Part II · · Score: 5, Funny

    Here's another comparison: Joy Of Tech (and the next 6 pages as well)

  12. A simple solution on Building Young's Double-Slit Interference Experiment? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course you could try to get some _very_ fine grid, but my physics teacher used just laser and one human hair, and got exactly the desired results (he also had some grids to proof the experiment, tho). This is because IIRC, in a double-slit, only the gap in the between matters (at least when using a laser), so any thin enough object will do.

  13. Good news on More Details of MS/DOJ Deal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At least these two points caught my attention:

    Disclosure of Middleware Interfaces- Microsoft will be required to provide software developers with the interfaces used by Microsoft's middleware to interoperate with the operating system. This will allow developers to create competing products that will emulate Microsoft's integrated functions.

    Disclosure of Server Protocols- The Final Judgment also ensures that other non-Microsoft server software can interoperate with Windows on a PC the same way that Microsoft servers do. This is important because it ensures that Microsoft cannot use its PC operating system monopoly to restrict competition among servers. Server support applications, like middleware, could threaten Microsoft's monopoly.

    If I understood correctly, they are forcing MS to open the interface specifications and protocols to others. This would be a Very Good Thing for several open source projects, for example Samba. Although I have some doubts about how effectively will this deal project into reality, this is definitely a step into a good direction.

  14. My suggestion on Antenna Boosters for Cell Phones? · · Score: 2, Troll

    Have you tried A.R.S.E.W.I.P.E? Maybe it's your head that's blocking the signal.

  15. More appropriate topic: on World's Most Exciting Chemistry Movies · · Score: 4, Funny

    How about "World's Most Slashdotted Chemistry Movies" ?

  16. A mirror for the zip on MS DRM Version 2 - Cracked · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's a mirror to the .zip file. Hope it helps.

  17. Re:Linux on these things: on iPAQ 3800 In Photos · · Score: 1

    Not too many, i think, at least not on any of the models with only 32MB memory. You could theoretically fit both wince and linux on the same PDA, but nothing else wouldn't fit anymore. (Assuming that both OS's won't fit in the flash ROM at the same time).

  18. Again old news... on 54 Mbps/100 Mbps Wireless LAN · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How do I feel that this is already posted (perhaps here?) Oh well, must be one of those Deja vu-thingies, I guess.

  19. 5GHz band on 100 Mbps Community Fiber Network: Howto · · Score: 3, Informative

    100Mbps over wireless network seems pretty cool, but the article doesn't mention anything about the range at which those cards can operate at 100Mbps. IIRC, even the traditional WLAN cards operating at 2.something GHz, were having some problems with thick concrete walls. Now if we double the operating frequency, even the cubicle walls might be enough to block the transmission, on full speed at least.

  20. This really made my day on ClearChannel Plays It Safe · · Score: 1

    - All Rage Against The Machine songs
    - Dio "Holy Diver"
    - Van Halen "Jump"
    - Queen "Another One Bites the Dust"
    - Led Zeppelin "Stairway to Heaven"
    - The Beatles "Obla Di, Obla Da" (???)
    - Simon And Garfunkel "Bridge Over Troubled Water"

    Oh please.

  21. A Problem on Remote Breathalyzer · · Score: 1

    The article fails to mention that how can the sensor tell how many people are in the car, and how many of them are actually drunk? Because if the breathalyzer just measures the level of ethanol fumes inside the vehicle, you are bound to be stopped by a police when you are for example driving home from a party with your friends, who have been drinking.

  22. Re:About time on High-speed Internet Access: Power Lines For Real · · Score: 1

    But again, the thought of hooking up a "modem" to a power outlet is kinda freaky...

    USB modems aside, pretty much every single modem hooks up to a power outlet already, in one way or another. Actually, power-line modems probably take both the power and the input from the same socket, so you'll probably end up with a box, that looks darn much like a transformer, with one end going to power outlet and another into your NIC.

  23. How about... on Terabyte File Server for $5,000 · · Score: 4

    That's easy, but how about building a webserver that can survive the Slashdot Effect for $5000?

  24. Re:Just a thought... on CD Copy "Protection" in California · · Score: 1

    Well, in that case, they would also be violating the music's copyright when they for example downsample the original 24bit 48kHz version into 16bit 44.1kHz version. Now everybody together scream copyright violation. Besides, the authors/record company is probably the one asking for the copy protection in the first place.

  25. Re:Look at the plus side... on Afghanistan Bans Internet · · Score: 1

    At the current journalistic level of /. editors, the title should be "Afganistan Bans Slashdot"