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User: hackertourist

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Comments · 1,427

  1. Re:how do they do it today? on New Fiber Optic Signal Processing Technique Doubles Communication Distance · · Score: 1
  2. Re:The real mystery... on NFL Asks Columbia University For Help With Deflate-Gate · · Score: 1

    Indeed. It seems the word is subject to...

    inflation.

  3. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on FDA Wants To Release Millions of Genetically Modified Mosquitoes In Florida · · Score: 1

    But is 95% enough? It reduces the problem for a while, but as long as there are viable mosquitoes left, they'll start breeding again until you're back where you started.

  4. Re:Wow so negative here on Latest Windows 10 Preview Build Brings Slew of Enhancements · · Score: 1

    If you don't know their name then are you just reading them all and hoping on jogs your memory?

    Yes. Categories help, and once I see the name, recognition is usually instant.

    How exactly do you go about this on other platforms currently?

    In OS X, the Applications folder is one click away. Not ideal, I'd rather have a menu with all of my applications (and I used to have that in OS 9).

    You're forgetting that there's not just one Start Menu folder in Windows, there are two: one user-specific and one for all users. So two locations to scan. Are you seriously suggesting this is a good replacement for the Start menu?

  5. Hothardware.com has all of its headlines in English, but using Hebrew script instead of Roman, making the site unreadable. Or is that just me?

  6. Re:Wow so negative here on Latest Windows 10 Preview Build Brings Slew of Enhancements · · Score: 1

    Having a mouse and clicking around a GUI browsing for files was the most gimmicky, mouth-breather way of launching programs that added nothing for users. If you want something then just type it, it's faster than hunting ...

    Sure, it's faster for the programs you use often enough that you remember their name. That's maybe 20 out of the 200 programs I've installed. Many of those I need twice a year, and searching them by name doesn't work because I can't remember what they're called. I do know I filed them somewhere in Programs->XML tools (or one of a few categories I've set up and that make sense for me). Accessible via one click and a bit of moving the mouse around (in XP or with Classic Start Menu installed), or more clicking and scrolling (in Windows 7). Windows 7 was a regression in this regard, and Windows 8 threw my method under the bus.

    Different strokes for different folks. I like the Search option, but for the love of God don't make it the only option.

  7. Re:Wow so negative here on Latest Windows 10 Preview Build Brings Slew of Enhancements · · Score: 1

    I, for one, like new things if, and only if, they are an improvement over the old things. That's why I use a computer in the first place: to improve my life and make things easier. Anything that gets in the way of that gets the vitriol poured on.

    For something as fundamental as the UI, I have a substantial investment in the old way of doing things. Throwing that away means I have to start learning again, and it'll take a while to get up to the same speed I had with the old UI. This is all wasted time, so the new UI has to be a lot better than the old one to make a switch worthwhile.
    Many of the UI changes in Windows have not been improvements at all. Instead MS seemingly randomly moved things around (Control Panel), or they removed functionality (Start screen). So yes, we consider this change for change's sake. I, for one, would welcome some actual improvements instead.

    There's also the alienation factor. A new UI feels as if people have broken into my home and rearranged things.

  8. Do you trust them? on New Google Fiber Cities Announced · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Great: Gb internet. Not so great: provided by Google, who now have even more access to your internet activity. My ISP may be a stodgy old fart incumbent telecoms company, but at least it's not got an advertising agency as its main profit center.

  9. Drawbacks of external HD backup on Ask Slashdot: Best Medium For Personal Archive? · · Score: 1

    If you backup to an external HD and then stick it in a safe, chances are you won't back up very often: your backup routine contains manuals steps you have to remember/set reminders for.
    Also, this HD is used only occasionally, and in my experience that's not a recipe for high reliability: I tried using HDs this way (accessing them only once every few months), and of my limited sample, pretty much every one broke down in a few years. Exacerbating factors: flaky USB enclosures (the tiniest nudge of the connector and it'd interrupt the connection, potentially corrupting the drive) and stiction.
    I'd want to carefully monitor the backup drive, reading back what it wrote to make sure the backup matches the source. I'd also want to read the entire drive at regular intervals to pick up signs of trouble at an early stage.
    I've got an excellent program (Watchdrives) from a fellow Slashdotter that does this for my main drive: reading the drive using dd in a low-priority process, so that the entire drive gets read once every ~2 months.

  10. Does it preserve my workspace yet? on Windows 10: Charms Bar Removed, No Start Screen For Desktops · · Score: 1

    The single biggest gripe I have with Windows is that I frequently lose state: I usually have lots of programs and files open. When a Windows update requires a reboot, I lose all of this so I have to spend time reopening apps, finding which files I was working on and reopening them.

    Apple has figured this out for OS X, and Microsoft planned it as a feature of Windows 7. I've seen no mention of this for Windows 10. What's keeping them so long?

  11. depends on features on UHD Spec Stomps on Current Blu-ray Spec, But Will Consumers Notice? · · Score: 2

    Will the standard contain provisions for unskippable items? Then I won't buy an UHD player.

  12. Re:Better Link on WhatsApp vs. WhatsApp Plus Fight Gets Ugly For Users · · Score: 2

    Please be aware that WhatsApp Plus contains source code which WhatsApp cannot guarantee as safe and that your private information is potentially being passed to 3rd parties without your knowledge or authorization

    That's rich coming from them.

  13. Re:Crusty Hardware on User Plea Means EISA Support Not Removed From Linux · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile in that era, us Apple users plugged in & played with our NuBus cards without ever having to fiddle with IRQs. Doing things right the first time saved us a lot of aggravation.

    (Get off my lawn, etc. )

  14. Not a secret on Fake Engine Noise Is the Auto Industry's Dirty Little Secret · · Score: 1

    TFTitle is stupid: none of this is a secret, every car manufacturer that does this readily admits it to the motoring press.
    I, for one want my car to be as quiet as possible so I'd want the option to disable it. Or I can do what I've done with my current car: replace the stereo.

  15. Re:Time for a UNION! on The Tech Industry's Legacy: Creating Disposable Employees · · Score: 1

    That's a solution only if you accept the drawbacks of being a contractor. Suddenly you have to do acquisition, you're a business so your taxes get 10x more complicated (e.g. VAT), etc.

    We're seeing some industries moving towards an all-contractor model over here (.nl). Postal delivery and the building trade for instance. Some contractors do well for themselves, but there's a large number of them subsisting below the poverty line. As a contractor they're no longer protected by employment laws so they get screwed over no end. Especially in the building slump of the past few years people were agreeing to work for a pittance, not realizing the consequences in time. And if they don't get a contract, they're business owners so not eligible for unemployment benefits either. Meanwhile the contract prices are under pressure as workers from low-wage countries migrate here and accept conditions that result in a wage that is livable in their home country, but not here.
    This is a gigantic poverty trap, and an end run around employment law and the unions by building companies. IMO a service/contract culture is not something we should wish for.

  16. Re:Be afraid, be very afraid on Microsoft Reveals Windows 10 Will Be a Free Upgrade · · Score: 1

    Hardly unique, because Apple claims the same thing.

  17. Re:Good news! on Librem: a Laptop Custom-Made For Free/Libre Software · · Score: 1

    Interesting, didn't know that.

  18. Yes, but on Librem: a Laptop Custom-Made For Free/Libre Software · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    does it run OS X?

    Seriously: this is a nice-looking laptop, and one I'd prefer to the current Macbook Pro line due to those not having user-upgradeable HD and RAM.

  19. Not as efficient: TFS is wrong on Microsoft Researchers Use Light Beams To Charge Smartphones · · Score: 2

    TFA says: "Using a light beam to charge a smartphone could be as quick as many wired chargers, the researchers found, depending on the size of the PV panel."

    Efficiency is going to depend on the efficiency of the PV panel in the phone, but at 20% it's a long way off from the efficiency of a wired charger.

    The lengths to which people will go to avoid plugging in a wire still amaze me.

  20. Re:Wait a minute on SpaceX Landing Attempt Video Released · · Score: 1

    The point of an open system was not to dump the hydraulic fluid overboard after use, but to not need a pump that can return and reuse the fluid (and a system to power the pump, and fuel for that etc).

  21. Re:Wait a minute on SpaceX Landing Attempt Video Released · · Score: 3, Informative

    The main hydraulic system on the F9 (for gimbaling the engine nozzles) uses RP-1 (i.e. rocket fuel) as its hydraulic fluid. Spent fluid from that system goes into the fuel tank.
    The fins are driven by a separate system at the top of the stage, if they pumped the spent RP-1 overboard you'd have flammable liquids running down the stage, I'm pretty sure they don't want to do that. Returning the RP-1 to the fuel tank is unlikely (needs an insulated pipe around the outside, next to the cold LOX tank). So probably a separate waste tank near the fins.

  22. Re:How could this all happen? on Belgian Raid Kills 2, Said To Avert "Major Terrorist Attacks" · · Score: 1

    Could you please let me know which Govt Department I go to in France to apply for the location I am allowed to live in?
    I seem to be having trouble finding it - hell - last time I was there I just lived where I damn well wanted to and could afford..

    The word 'afford' is key here. If all you can afford is the lowest-rent housing, then that's where you end up. That's how many large European cities ended up with immigrant ghettos.

  23. Re:i knew it was Bennett on Your High School Wants You To Install Snapchat · · Score: 1

    Dictionary entry or not, lede is a recent 'invention' by people who should know better than to make up new words when the old one was clear and unambiguous. See also "when it bleeds, it leads".

  24. Re:i knew it was Bennett on Your High School Wants You To Install Snapchat · · Score: 1

    It's lead, not lede.

    (this post brought to you by the committee against the degeneration of language)

  25. Re:Great to see on Chinese Spacecraft Enters Orbit Around the Moon · · Score: 1

    You're confusing technology with "currently in production". Several companies in the US posess all of the technology needed to put humans in space. They just haven't produced and flown spacecraft yet.
    It is a political issue, pure and simple. The transition between the Shuttle and new manned systems was planned badly, allowing a several-year capability gap.