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User: JinjaontheNile

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  1. Re:What's the difference? on China Mandates Wi-Fi Hotspot Traffic Monitoring · · Score: 1

    At the risk of going even further off topic

    Christians have understandably been very quick to distance themselves from the Oslo nutter
    One of the prime methods has been to claim that that he was really a godless heathen
    As an Atheist, I find that disgusting.

  2. Re:Why? on Apple Laptops Vulnerable To Battery Firmware Hack · · Score: 1

    Surely if it were so dangerous, it would be thoroughly tested and then locked down.
    Externally updatable negates reliability

    In the real world, the answer is always, there is something wrong with your battery - you need a new one.
    Resistance will be met with appeals to fear (it could blow up, the plane will fall from the sky, the world will end etc)

  3. Re:Why? on Apple Laptops Vulnerable To Battery Firmware Hack · · Score: 1

    Yes, but why does a simple hardware controller need it's own login???

  4. Re:Warning, not exactly objective research here on The Cost Of Broadband In Every Rural Home · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the history moment!
    I remember drooling over ISDN at 128K.....

  5. Re:Easy on How Do You Get Your Geek Nostalgia Fix? · · Score: 1

    I'm looking at a 41CV circa 1981 on my desk at work.
    I use it everyday as well

    Sitting beside it is a nice shiny Samsung Galaxy S2, I don't want a 30 year old phone on my desk

    It's really strange how many young whipper snappers (any one under 40 these days) recognise the 41 it as "the engineers calculator"....

  6. Re:Anonymity on WSJ and Al-Jazeera Lure Whistleblowers · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a standard company email system to me.
    Companies don't want random emails from unknown people that may mean they have to do something.

    From a lame arse managers perspective:
    Option A Get random a email, don't realise it's importance, no action taken. Get in lots of trouble
    Option B Don't get a random email, no decision need - no problem

    Most companies these days seem go for option B and hide all email access from Joe Public.

  7. Re:Sigh on White House To Announce IT-Powered Smart Grid · · Score: 1

    I don't think there was any need to shorten a link to the wikipedia article on 911 (it's not as if we are on twitarse or anything)

    It is also a ridiculously long bow to draw to link defense cuts to 911 - esp when the inteligence agencies had info that something was up but decided it was nothing
    spending more money on tanks and planes isn't going to change a judgment call.

    (unfortunately we have now gone from one extreme to the other extreme - usually to the point of charades to be seen to be doing something.)

  8. Re:Not a fan boy, but... on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    Hmmm, to me that sounds more like possible rather than easy

    How about
    Right click, Copy (or Right click "search google" or Right click "Open link in new Tab")
    Or just Click (or Ctrl-tab) to change browser Tab
    Ctrl X,C or V makes moving text very easy
    Selecting text down to individual letters is also trivial

    When I am traveling I take lots of photo's
    With my netbook I can plug the SD card into it, delete the dud pictures, Copy the rest to the hard drive then do another copy to an external drive.
    3 copies means it will take an armed robbery to lose all the pictures.
    I just spent $280 on a dual core netbook so I won't cry (much) if it breaks (the old one had a glossy screen which I absolutely hated)

    On the up side, Maybe being more difficult to open lots of tabs would mean I wouldn't have so many open tabs (I often end out with over 2 dozen open - even on the netbook)

  9. Re:Not a fan boy, but... on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    I will have to take my hat of to you
    I have put the challenge I described to 3 people who loved their tablets (2 Ipads and a cheap chinese thing running Android 2.1)
    They all ended out agreeing that it was horses for courses.
    Possible != better no mater how much you love your toy

    I could probably do all the tasks with a Symbian phone as well, I would just prefer not to.
    I could easily do them on My N900 but I wouldn't unless I had no other choice.

    If you want the convenience of portability, you sacrifice size
    If you want more convenience, lose the keyboard
    If you want the same convenience with longer battery life, sacrifice processor power.
    Everything is a balancing act which the user gets to choose.

    At home or work, I want a desktop with a decent screen
    In a different city or country) I want my netbook
    On a plane, bus or train, I want my tablet or my Kindle
    Walking around, My phone is more than adequate

    Horses for Courses - unless you are involved in a religious argument

  10. Re:Well on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    Bummer

    Probably something to do with attempts to "optimise" execution time in JavaScript.
    Some of the tricks I have read sounded fantastic but also set the danger bells off

  11. I Love Bloomberg sometimes... on International Monetary Fund Hit By Cyber Attack · · Score: 1

    In the middle of the Bloomberg article is the statement:
    A SecurID device is shaped like a key fob or a computer-memory stick and generates random-number passwords used to gain access to a computer network

    Continuously changing passwords != Random

  12. Re:It's all about the angle on Historic Pairing: Shuttle Docked To the ISS · · Score: 1

    Having a spare Saturn 5 lying around after the moon shots were canceled definitely helped get pure tonnage into space.....

    (Oh dear, I am now off for another Wikipedia trivia search to find the max lift capacity of the Saturn 5 compared to the shuttle. Maybe the intertubes are a waste of time after all)

    Back already - Saturn V 119,000 Kg - Space Shuttle 24,400Kg.

  13. Re:Not a fan boy, but... on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    Try booking an Airline ticket with a tablet

    How about sending an email while referencing a web page
    Or messaging someone while VNC'ing into a remote machine

    How about anything that requires doing more than one thing at a time - or even just changing apps with something like a quick alt-tab
    Netbooks plow through that sort of thing with out blinking - Cut down OS's just choke at the idea.
    It horses for courses and the Netbook course is a lot lot bigger.

  14. Re:Well on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    Yep, but as everyone already knows
    Motorola = Douchebags (bootstrap fuses anyone)

    When the Xoom was released, it was duly noted by all the reviewers that some advertised features were missing.
    Anyone who jumps onto the bleeding edge of technology based on a marketing promise deserves to get cut to ribbons.

  15. Re:Well on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    Like, browser being essentially unusable on Slashdot

    Somehow that might not be the browsers fault (There is miles to much javascript on Slashdot these days)

  16. Re:Well on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    There are a couple of good points there, Part of an open system is of course that it is open to everyone - including douche bag marketers.
    I personally would like it if Google were a bit fussier in there acceptance of apps but I vastly prefer their approach to Apples closed door policy.

    With Android, I can load any app I want from anywhere I want. (including my own)
    I hate it when companies decide they know better than me as to what I can and cant do with my own equipment!

    You should be thankful to Google for some of the functionality you now enjoy (Like teathering, VOIP over 3g etc)
    Without Android, Apple would happily ignored the wants and desires of their users while raking in the dollars

    On a side note, I Australia we are now getting an enormous number of advertisements for Iphones and Ipads. Something we have never had before.
    I wonder if Apple is getting a bit worried that android is outselling them by so much?

  17. Re:Well on A Deep-Dive Look At Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 · · Score: 1

    Itunes - How many fart apps would you like today????

    Sure, people could write more apps for Android than iOS... but they haven't (yet)

    corrected that for you

  18. Re:Apple may not have ripped this off. on Apple Rips Off Rejected App, Says Wireless Sync Developer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Rejecting it because it would be in IOS5, that doesn't help people prior to the release IOS5 and kills a nice little niche market for those who don't want to updgrade to IOS5

    The smell of corruption is strong in this one
    Combined with apple having proven itself time and time again to be a "do as I say, not as I do company"
    It is the sort of thing that companies can get away with due to trade secrets and closed source.
    The only way we can know for sure is for a disgruntled employee to spill the beans.

    I can never figure out why so many people try to be innovative with Apple products knowing the high probability they will be screwed over - They should just stick with Fart Apps and have done with it.

  19. With a bit of Luck on Tennessee Bans Posting 'Offensive' Images Online · · Score: 1

    Something good will come of this law
    Goatse will disappear forever in case someone in Tennessee sees it (I doubt it)

  20. Well Duh on Ex-Google Engineer Blasts Google's Technology · · Score: 1

    What did you expect ?

    If you must keep something running then updating the entire architecture every couple of years is expensive (and plain stupid)
    Upgrading requires a realisable benefit and a budget.
    I have an acquaintance who works in a company that sells spares to the military and get this, they make a fortune selling unused MFM and RLL hard drives that have been properly stored.
    Device X works, whats the problem.
    Once again, upgrading requires a realisable benefit and a budget.

    I say the same sort of thing to people who want a computer.
    For most people an Atom processor is more than capable.<BR>
    You do not need an I7 processor to surf the net or use word! <BR>
    If you're not playing high end games or video editing, save hundreds and go for the low end processor<BR>

  21. Re:scared of invisible bits on Could the US Phase Out Nuclear Power? · · Score: 1

    I ran the article thru google translate and it is the same hydroplant I found.
    The article does mention the existing weir but for some reason it doesn't say it actually uses it

    The pamphlet I found is
    http://www.enbw.com/content/en/group/_media/_pdf/water_is_energy.pdf
    Page 26 explains what they did and page 29 has some details of the plant (esp the head of water)

  22. Re:I usually have nothing but hate for Jobs... on Want iCloud With Windows? Ditch the XP · · Score: 1

    I don't mind friends and family asking for help in XP, There's a good chance I already know the answer and the rest don't need that much effort.
    Anything they are likely to do or want has usually already been done.

    Windows 7 support usually involves explaining why they need to click OK so often (I am looking squarely at Adobe here) Yes, I want to update, Yes I give permission to Update, Yes I want to download the update, Yes I accept the terms and conditions, Yes I am happy you finished updating. Yes I want you to stop asking stupid questions.

  23. Re:scared of invisible bits on Could the US Phase Out Nuclear Power? · · Score: 1

    Do you have a link to the Heidelburg hydro plant?

    The only one I could find is the Karlstor hyrdoplant which is a standard run of river hydroplant
    That means it relies on a head of water generated by a weir to turn the turbine.
    The new Karlstor generating plant was built under water at the site of the existing weir so as to keep the existing view.
    It has a 2.6 metre head and uses 140 cubic metres a second to generate 3.1MW from 2 turbines.

    While the genset might be hidden, the weir is not. The is different to the GP's suggestion

    Extracting energy from kinetic energy of moving water alone is nowhere near as efficient (or controllable) as using a head of water. If it were, it would already be done.
    The changing political environment of GW might be enough to make something like this more attractive but I doubt it.

  24. Please read the article on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    The article said nothing about silverlight being dropped

    It said that developers are upset that it is not being used for the upcomming windows 8 desktop

    Silverlight will remain for web based "Rich Interactive Applications" (as long as you run windows and use the plugin's) - just like it does now.

    If developers chose silverlight in the hope it would be the new desktop app system they were mistaken and will pay the (a small) price for their decision

  25. Re:Short Answer on Could the US Phase Out Nuclear Power? · · Score: 1

    Sure they could. Never underestimate the power of fear and ignorance, my friend.

    Until reality hits home - like rolling blackouts, then things will happen
    Then it will quickly change to Burn more coal, Build more Nuclear plants etc.