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User: rasmusbr

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  1. Disk cloning on Ask Slashdot: Is There a Web Development Linux Distro? · · Score: 1

    Have you looked into disk cloning?

  2. Re: Honestly... on Valve's Economist Yanis Varoufakis Appointed Greece's Finance Minister · · Score: 1

    What Europe calls austerity, everyone else calls living within one's means. Which, in the long term, is non-optional.

    That stops being true when you have the power to print money and have people think your money is legitimate.

  3. Re:They better be damn sure we're not home... on Omand Warns of "Ethically Worse" Spying If Unbreakable Encryption Is Allowed · · Score: 1

    Yeah, tell yourself that.

    The same person who hits 100 sequential bulls-eyes at the shooting range is rarely able to hit a barn wall from ten yards in a real life and death situation.

    Also, the government tends to use body armor and automatic guns.

  4. Re:If all goes well. . . on Eric Schmidt: Our Perception of the Internet Will Fade · · Score: 1

    Sigh. This is how it works:

    Big corporation A: Would you please share your most private information with us?
    Average person: No way, creeps.
    Big corporation B: Would you please share your most private information with everyone on the planet and us?
    Average person: OMGOMGOMG!!!! Am I gonna be a famous person?! HeretakemyinfoshowittoeveryoneNOWNOWNOW!!!! I swear once everyone realizes how awesome I am I'm definitely going to be famous and I'll be friends with famous people and I'll... Have you taken my information yet???! Here, here's a picture of my new awesome outfit! I should be a fashion model.

  5. Re:qwerty? on The Most Popular Passwords Are Still "123456" and "password" · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just hope that the system doesn't insist on you having a combination of letters, numbers, lowercase, uppercase and special characters

    Incorrect1!

  6. Re:Running Linux on a MacBook Air ... on Why Run Linux On Macs? · · Score: 2

    Okay, but how is that better than running OSX and firing up a VM when you need Linux?

    Aren't you missing all the optimizations that Apple has supposedly put into OSX over the years?

  7. Re:Dammit, Europe! on European Countries Seek Sweeping New Powers To Curb Terrorism · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In case you've been living under a rock for the last 14 years, they already have a war with the West/NATO.

    In a somewhat ironic turn of events, Muslim fundamentalists in countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria and Gaza now have an actual real honest-to-science angry skydaddy with winged creatures that shoot fire from the sky.

    Of course, this does not really bring us any closer to peace with the Islamists. If anything it probably helps them recruit.

  8. Re:Pressure versus mechanism on Human Language May Have Evolved To Help Our Ancestors Make Tools · · Score: 1

    Chimpanzees sometimes make tools, so tool making almost certainly preceded language, unless Chimpanzees are descended from animals that had language but lost it.

    Possibly the most interesting thing about humans is that there is an exponential increase in diversity of objects in the archaeological record, which seems to start somewhere around 100.000 to 50.000 ago. This exponential increase in diversity of objects produced continues to this day, especially if you count virtual objects like digital art.

    What happened 100.000 years ago? One possible answer is "nothing in particular". Due to archaeological sampling bias and the nature of exponential growth it may just be that the exponential increase in diversity began much earlier than 100.000 years ago.

  9. Re:The battle of WEB developer mindshare on PHP vs. Node.js: the Battle For Developer Mind Share · · Score: 1

    Lisp of course, or Racket.

    I bet it'll only take me a few days to write my own web framework. Brb...

  10. Re:Re usability on In Daring Plan, Tomorrow SpaceX To Land a Rocket On Floating Platform · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Even if they can recover the engine intact how many times can it be reused. Saving a few million on a higher chance of blowing up multi billion payloads is not exactly wise economically.

    Think of it this way: if they can fly the first stage 20 times, that along with some cost optimizations of the upper stage could cut the cost per pound by a factor of ten. Then it would become economical to launch mere multi-hundred million dollar payloads. That would dramatically reduce the economical risk of any single launch, as long as the rocket is not ten times as likely to blow up, but rather only maybe twice as likely.

    Of course, anyone who launches a lot of rockets of the same type is likely to become really good at getting that type to orbit in one piece. Just look at the Russians and their now ancient Soyuz rocket.

    Keep cutting costs and you might one day have a system where you could launch a ten million dollar payload, which you could easily insure at your local insurance company.

  11. Re:at the moment the only trend on Doxing -- Something To Expect More of In 2015 · · Score: 1

    I'm not a native English speaker, but in my mind the concept of identifying does not necessarily include communicating it to the rest of the word. Then you would have to say "publicly identify", or something along those lines, to convey the concept of doxing.

  12. Re:Terry Pratchett say... on What Language Will the World Speak In 2115? · · Score: 1

    Chinese could become malleable as well. Just get rid of everything that's weird and unique about it (and invent new words and grammar to cover for any ambiguity that emerges). Toss out the writing system and switch to pinyin.

    In fact, according to TFA, this sort of thing is what happened to English back in the early middle ages when England was continuously invaded by Scandinavians and French people.

  13. Re:That is not doxing on Doxing -- Something To Expect More of In 2015 · · Score: 1

    Sorry to nitpick, but there is no such thing as "clickbait fallacy". A fallacy is something that is logically or factually wrong.

    You probably mean that someone is using a clickbait tactic or spiel.

  14. Re:at the moment the only trend on Doxing -- Something To Expect More of In 2015 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is there a shorter or more descriptive word / phrase that you can use to describe the practice of leaking personal information in order to attack or retaliate against someone you don't like?

    Docsing or doxing sounds like a good way to express that concept.

  15. Re:Novelty Media is Novelty on Vinyl's Revival Is Now a Phenomenon On Both Sides of the Atlantic · · Score: 1

    Uh, yeah. Vinyl was hot among hipsters about a decade ago.

    The thing is, if you like the album art then the vinyl version is objectively better than the CD version, since the art is bigger on vinyl. A lot of these records are bought primarily as home decor items.

  16. Re:Those backwards Ruskies on War Tech the US, Russia, China and India All Want: Hypersonic Weapons · · Score: 1

    Active sonar works fine as long as you're in deep water, far away from land, where you're suppose to be if you're an aircraft carrier.

    Diesel subs are designed to wait in ambush near the bottom in shallow waters, where active sonar operator could easily mistake them for natural formations.

    It does not seem likely that carriers and diesel subs would ever face one another, unless a sub managed to sneak across the Atlantic and into shallow US waters, near an aircraft carrier port... But then we're talking Hollywood/Clancy scenarios.

  17. Re:yeah not really on Peter Diamandis: Technology Is Dissolving National Borders · · Score: 1

    When the Singularity happens we will have such convincing VR gear at such low prices that an Afghan peasant will easily be able to afford it. So, when Talibans come around to his village to collect taxes and rape the women, they can all just put on VR gear and instantly be in London, or New York, or wherever they want.

  18. Re:Frames in 2014 on MIT Unifies Web Development In Single, Speedy New Language · · Score: 1

    The demo site uses frames. FRAMES. I think this is unlikely to catch on.

    It might be the xmas timing, but this gives me a warm fuzzy feeling. I only wish they'd design the main.html page using tables for formatting.

  19. Re:Call me conervative, but on The World of YouTube Bubble Sort Algorithm Dancing · · Score: 2

    FYI O(n^2) is called quadratic complexity/time, O(n^3) is cubic, O(n^1) is linear and O(n^0) = O(1) is constant.

    Exponential complexity would be O(c^n), where c is a constant.

  20. Re:AI + organisations will be the real problem on Economists Say Newest AI Technology Destroys More Jobs Than It Creates · · Score: 1

    If you're worried about what'll happen to driving, look at what happened to horseback riding and sailing.

    If self-driving cars become a reality, car driving enthusiasts will probably settle down in an area where there is at least one good racetrack that they can frequent and racetracks will probably have garage spaces for rent, much like marinas have dock spaces for rent. So you won't have to drive your race car to your regular race track.

    Many towns will have a historic car day, say on a Saturday, when certain streets will be open to traffic with manually driven cars, with curious onlookers lining the streets to get a glimpse of the old machines.

  21. Re:Does the job still get done? on Economists Say Newest AI Technology Destroys More Jobs Than It Creates · · Score: 2

    But humans have a long history of having to work in order to get food, clothes, shelter and other essentials. We have at least a cultural instinct, possibly a genetic instinct, to think that people who work a lot deserve to have a lot of possessions and status, while people who work a little or don't work at all deserve nothing. It's not going to be easy to relearn that instinct.

    Of course, there are already large swaths of people who do little to no useful work and have high social status...

    Maybe the short-term solution to the problem is for more people to become politicians and lawyers, the former creating jobs for the latter by imposing more and more laws.

  22. Yeah, let's lower the standards on Google Suggests Separating Students With 'Some CS Knowledge' From Novices · · Score: 1

    I had some programming background when I took CS101. I found that being good at writing spaghetti code (or even simple OO code) that works is not something that puts you ahead of other students in a computer science course, and that you actually have to learn the course material in order to pass. Who would have guessed!

    If people like me don't have to take CS101 then we're slowly but surely going to end up with a community of programmers/engineers who don't have a firm enough grasp of basic concepts in computer science, and they'll be worse at their jobs for it.

    A better solution is to have after-school workshops for high school kids where they can prepare for a degree in CS. They way it ought to work is that math teachers in poor neighborhoods should keep and eye out for kids who are talented at math and recommend them for the CS workshops.

    Now, I imagine this sort of discrete sorting of students will probably get you sued in the US, but it would work in most other countries.

  23. Re:This is not news on Airbus Attacked By French Lawmaker For Talking To SpaceX · · Score: 1

    The Ariane 6 sounds like it would entail a lot of pointless duplication of work that SpaceX has already done. Skylon should be funded, but there is no guarantee that it'll work.

    I think the best way to get the European space launch industry back on track might be to take a hint from how the Chinese go about things and buy something like 100 Falcon 9 launches at above the normal going rate, with a special requirement that the rockets must be built in Europe.

    Then SpaceX could either turn down this giant deal that would give them financial security for years, or they could accept it and build a factory somewhere in Europe, which would then cause knowledge and technology to seep out into the European space industry.

  24. Re:What the hell is wrong with Millennials?! on Peru Indignant After Greenpeace Damages Ancient Nazca Site · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What the hell is wrong with Millennials?!

    Same goddamned thing that's "wrong" with every other generation ever. Greed, selfishness, etc. The difference in outcomes stems from things like cheap air travel, which makes it possible for local idiots to literally go global. I bet these Greenpeace activist could have never afforded to fly to Peru in say 1964.

    Of course, the boomers and their Soviet counterparts came pretty close to inadvertently wiping out civilization during Able Archer, which no other generation has managed to repeat since then.

  25. Re:Free Enterprise on Swedish Police Raid the Pirate Bay Again · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yeah...

    First they came for TPB, but you didn't say anything because you weren't running a piracy torrent tracker, then they came for, uh, TPB again. And yeah, next they'll probably raid Spotify.