Slashdot Mirror


User: mr+crypto

mr+crypto's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
31
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 31

  1. Why is Nokia spending money doing this? on Nokia Announces Qt 5 Plans · · Score: 2

    As much as I'd like to believe that it's because they are good people doing good things, why are they putting money into this, and how long can we expect them to keep doing so?

  2. A file system? Seriously? on Microsoft's Approach To Battling the iPad In the Workplace · · Score: 1

    Both the iPad and Chrome netbooks intentionally omitted a file system, yet the MS slides treat the omission as if it were a weakness. Having one creates all sorts of security, reliability, and administration problems. Old-world corporate MS is really getting bogged down in details and legacy (must support Silverlight, Sharepoint, etc.) and missing the vision.

  3. Re:Simple definition for Network Neutrality on The Right's War On Net Neutrality · · Score: 1

    Excellent explanation. Commercial sector after sector (airlines charging for baggage and whatnot) have discovered the magic of 'unbundling', which is often nothing more than making an experience so confusing that they end up nickel and diming you to death, and telcos want to do it here too.

  4. Re:Holy Biased Article, Batman! on Obama Will Nominate Elena Kagan To the Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    Agreed. And to pile on -

    The article was less about the nomination and more about another article, quote: "According to this article ..." . If ./ is going to post something on such a widely reported item, it should at least a report that gives a first hand account.

  5. Re:oh great. on 3D Graphics For Firefox, Webkit · · Score: 1

    I'm in medical software development and we desperately want a good 3D browser solution. Not sure if this one will fill the bill though in terms of all of the other facets to software tools like standardization, reliability, stability, etc.

  6. Re:highly trained morons on Radiation Therapy Mistakes Cost Lives · · Score: 1

    I actually develop software for radiation oncology. I had mixed feelings when I read the article - it heavily stressed the errors and briefly mentioned that RO saves many lives. Our group is a little more advanced than most, and we have extra checks (such as doing a dry run for every patient: irradiating a sensor matrix before the actual patient). I agree with the article that errors need to be discussed, and in fact our head of research is trying to convince the RO community that we should follow the airlines model (where lives are also on the line) of studying errors, determining root causes, and improving process to avoid them.

    There is always tension in our industry between having the latest techniques available and having reliable treatment procedures, and it's tough to draw the line. Please don't condemn the field as a whole, but instead push for an environment where if someone makes a mistake, it is handled in a way that improves the system. Most of the professionals in this field have 10+ years of college and great aspirations of saving lives, but they're all human. If they are crucified for making a single error, then a culture of covering up will become more entrenched. If you think that mistakes should never happen, then I'd like take away your backspace key.

  7. Re:Because it's a PITA - Pain In the Ass! on What's Holding Back Encryption? · · Score: 1

    Agreed. People switch between computers at home, work, and public workstations and don't have a universal login to make it 'just work' anywhere. It also definitely suffers from the "if everyone would just use OUR system it would be easy" problem. Try coming up with your own solution and run through setup scenarios for different users (including your mother) and you'll find that there are too many steps. Even just doing authentication is tough to make simple (relies on contacting some central authority).

  8. Re:IPv6 addresses are overly complex on Windows 7 May Finally Get IPv6 Deployed · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... Looks like the tiny URL problem all over again. We need tiny IP! :)

  9. Mostly dead-on on The Science Credibility Bubble · · Score: 1

    Nice article highlighting the fragility of reputation. The author goes on to screw it up by saying:

    "The Obama administration's new head of policy at EPA, Lisa Heinzerling, is an advocate of turning precaution into standard policy."

    Government should absolutely prepare for events that _might_ happen (that's what the DoD is all about). Ex-VP Cheney pushed "The One Percent Doctrine," for threats to the US, but somehow only wanted it to apply to military threats. More at: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/09/opinion/09friedman.html

  10. Re:Marketing/advert submissions on Silicon As the New Lithium · · Score: 1

    Seconded again. It seems like new energy technologies are announced at around one per week, and they invariably use "could", "might", "hope" and other terms for "it is not proven but we want more money for research". Everyone is hoping for a silver bullet, but continuation of these articles just breeds cynicism.

    We need a Slashdot tag for these, something like "hopeful".

  11. Re:The question is... on Ambassador Claims ACTA Secrecy Necessary · · Score: 1

    I would trust them more if representatives from organizations like the ACLU were included in their discussions to ensure that the rights of the people were defended. If the representatives had a non-disclosure agreement, then this would allow them to maintain secrecy. If they refuse such representatives, then they are disregarding the people's rights.

  12. Re:Illiteracy isn't a visual impairment. on Intel's New E-Reader For the Visually Impaired · · Score: 1

    Very well put.

  13. Re:Does that mean... on ZFS Gets Built-In Deduplication · · Score: 2, Interesting

    De-dup also means some unexpected behavior. Want to copy a 5 GB file? Done in less than a second.

    Over-write a section of a dup'ed file with new content? Suddenly you're using more disk space, or could even get a "disk full" message even though you were just replacing data, but not increasing it's size in an obvious way.

    Trying to make space on a drive by deleting lots of big files that happen to be dup'ed? No effect.

  14. Re:If you need it, you'll know it on The Case For Mandatory Touch-Typing In High School · · Score: 1

    That's absolutely right on several levels. Kids are perfectly capable of learning to touch type at a younger age. We got a program for our kids when they were 8-9. High school is a busy enough time with other stuff. Also, even if you only learn to touch type at 5 words per minute, when/if you do need to use a keyboard, you will at least use the proper technique and get faster with practice.

  15. Re:The goal of the chamber on Global Warming To Be Put On Trial? · · Score: 1

    But if we wait until everyone is absolutely sure, then it may be too late.

  16. Re:And? on Bing Search Tainted By Pro-Microsoft Results · · Score: 1

    Yes, surprised that they would make the same mistake twice, as an earlier MS search engine (a few years ago) was observed returning 14 search results for 'Linux' (with the first being 'How to migrate from Linux to MS'), while the same search on Google would yield hundreds of thousands.

    A search engine will not be successful if it is not trusted, and if people catch it misleading them on something they know, then they will not trust it for most other searches. MS should have learned this. Google's "Don't be evil" doctrine is as much a business requirement as anything - they are maintaining relationships with millions of people and if they are perceived as evil then business will go down the crapper fast.

  17. Re:Physics? on MIT Electric Car May Outperform Rival Gas Models · · Score: 1

    Agreed. They have a lofty goal, but I did not see any reason to expect that they will attain it. This is vaporware. Pivotal phrase: "... we're exploring rapid recharge, ..." but they don't mention having even a prototype using a single battery with which they can recharge it quickly.

  18. Re:I know why. on Bill Gates Puts Classic Feynman Lectures Online · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because requiring Silverlight (and therefore Windows) severely dilutes the notion that Gate's action is altruistic. The content is only kinda free.

  19. Re:Nice on Firefox To Get Multi-Process Browsing · · Score: 1

    They should call it skulk ...

  20. Re:You will have to know tech either way on Tech Or Management Beyond Age 39? · · Score: 1

    I agree strongly that "You will have to know tech either way".

    When you say: ... always having to keep myself up-to-date ...

    it strongly implies that you are not as thrilled with tech as you
    used to be, so take this into account.

    Going into management means that you are still technical, but dealing
    with issues at a higher level. For example, instead of coding a search algorithm
    you are deciding that the program needs search functionality.

    As a programmer over 50 I can say with some authority that that mental
    quickness and memory for detail diminishes, but judgment improves. I think that
    you are leaning towards management anyway, and I suggest that you do go into
    it to capitalize on your changing brain.

  21. Re:CrossFit on Staying In Shape vs. a Busy IT Job Schedule? · · Score: 1

    You're working a 60 hour week? Simple solution - Come work for us. We'll only work you 11 hours per day, and that will give you an extra hour to work out!

  22. Re:Contact MIT and their archival department on NASA Requests Help With Von Braun's Notes · · Score: 1

    NASA's responsibility is not formatting the data so much as making it available. It should be available at least as images so that others have access to the raw data. Beyond that, OCR'ed to simple text to facilitate search by others. Whatever OCR fails to reliably interpret should be fed to reCAPTCHA.

  23. Re:Original Source and Large Images on Pictures of Kuril Islands Volcano From ISS · · Score: 1

    Great weekly pictures. Thanks for the link.

  24. Re:That's great... on Time For Voice-Mail To Throw In the Towel · · Score: 1

    The author ignores the convenience of voice mail by the sender. I think that voice mail etiquette will evolve to use only shorter messages.

  25. Re:Could you be more vague? on What To Do When a Megacorp Wants To Buy You? · · Score: 1

    "money is that it lets you do exactly that" is very well put.

    I would like to add that in these types of deals the only rules are the ones you make. When eloan was bought, the sellers sold 1/2 the company as a compromise to mitigate their risk. You should also figure out what is important to you in terms of product development and marketing and propose them as terms of the contract.