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User: N2UX

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  1. Re:This isn't new on Canonical Puts Ubuntu On Android Smartphones · · Score: 2

    Motorola never claimed to be running a full featured Ubuntu or other Gnu/Linux desktop, but the functionality to do so *was* built into the phone. All of the stuff you need to install packages is there.. You just have to be willing to root the phone so you can break out of the jail.

  2. Nothing new here.... on Canonical Puts Ubuntu On Android Smartphones · · Score: 1

    Other than being a more recent version of the Ubuntu apps, this is no different than a non-locked down version of the 'Webtop' functionallity that comes stock with the Motorola Atrix and kin. In fact I'd would not be surprised to find bits of Motorola's open sourced webtop code in the Ubuntu for Android distribution.

  3. Re:Don't do it! on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    In my opinion, the word "particularly" distinguishes the emergency purposes as being more important than all of the others, otherwise they would not have put it in there.

  4. Re:Don't do it! on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    I would agree whole heartedly with that. I do a *lot* of backcountry hiking, and even though I have an Extra class license, I have never taken even so much as an HT with me. I do take a cell phone and check in with my wife when I have signal, updating her on my current position and my planned route. That way, If I don't check in she can contact the authorities with my last known position and where I would likely have gone.

  5. Re:Hack a cell phone to have more power on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    The only problem with that is the possibility of FCC fines (generally running US $10,000 a pop) for modifying the equipment if caught or captured. YMMV.

  6. Re:Nice idea, but you're wasting your time on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    Yeah.... That's why I'm still using an HF tranciever with vacuum tube finals and pre-amp, and a tube based linear amplifier .... Because I Don't know how to use anything but an icebox radio. Yes, my license is current, and has been maintened current for the past 24 years.

    By the way, a pretty obvious roll attempt. You need to work harder.

  7. Re:Don't do it! on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    I don't think any amateur radio op has misrepresented that the *only* purpose of the service is for emergency communications.

    The fact is, the legislative history shows that the government interest in Amateur Radio is for emergency communications. The promotion of the radio arts, the maintaining of a pool of people trained in those arts and the experimentation in those arts are all intended to provide people and technologies that can be used in an emergency.

  8. Re:Don't do it! on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    The "comma" provides the reason for all of the other things, which is for Emergency Communications. To argue otherwise is inane.

    If Emergency Communications is not the prime reason, then we *will* lose our bandwidth to entities willing to pay a lot more than we can.

  9. Re:Don't do it! on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1, Informative

    Look at the very last part of paragraph A. "Particularly with respect to providing emergency communications"

  10. Re:Don't do it! on Amateur Radio In the Backcountry? · · Score: 1

    Actually, per the FCC regulations, the primary purpose of HAM radio *is* as a replacement for all other radio communications in an emergency. The "hobby" and "promotion of the radio arts" parts are secondary.

  11. Say Hello... on Political Bloggers May Be Forced to Register · · Score: 1

    To our new masters, same as the old masters

  12. My Life with Machinery on Introducing Children to Computers? · · Score: 1

    It's 1969. I am 7. It is summer in Alaska. Jack, my friend, and I are building a robot. Constructed of cardboard boxes and aluminum foil, it's brain is my older brothers Kraco Reel to Reel portable tape recorder. Jack and I are already avid scifi readers, so we know enough about robots to record Asimov's three laws on a tape.

    Fast forward to age 12.

    My father's workplace, the US Army's Atmospherics Sciences Lab at White Sands Missile Range, is a small space stuffed with all kinds of cool gizmos. In the corner is a Data General Nova hooked to an old paper-tape equiped teletype. My dad puts the thin strip of paper, punched with lots of holes, on the reader and hits the run switch. With a flurry of kachunks the tape is read in and my hand prints out noisily on the teletype.
    K CLUBS
    10 HEARTS
    10 DIAMONDS
    8 SPADES
    2 CLUBS

    1976 - the US Bicentennial Year. Tall ships in the harbor, a restored Statue of Liberty, Jimmy Carter. I discover the computing center at the local University. They do not seem to mind a 14 year old sitting down at one of the terminals, opening a book called "APL Plus" by AJ Rose, and starting in on the excercises.

    I am hooked. Addicted. A lost Soul. A thread has developed that will knit the phases of my life, no matter which direction they take. Submariner, Instructor, Security Guard, Shipyard Worker, Designer of Manufacturing Machines - no matter what my *job* is, my vocation is computing.

    The Present. Job and Vocation have meshed. Now a system administrator at a University, I finally get paid to do what I love.

  13. Re:If you vote Libertarian(or Republican)... on SCO Claims Linux Lifted ELF · · Score: 1

    Sorry bud. The Demos get just as many campaign donations from big business as the republicans and libertarians and anyone else. Checkout who has donated to Fritz Hollings, the Senator from Disney, who is a Democrat. Yup - the RIAA and other big businesses. All political parties are corrupt and blaming just one or two of them for the ills of this country is just plain wrong.

  14. Magazines I read on What Magazines Do You Read? · · Score: 1

    Lets see - QST (From the Amateur Radio Relay League), Appalachian Trailway News (From the Appalachian Trail Conference), Equus, Horse & Rider. Hmmm, no computer mags on the list - anywhere.

  15. Re:Asberger's, ADD on Building Social Skills in Gifted Youths? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have a 5 year old who is diagnosed as an Asperger's individual. You are correct in saying that medications do not really help. The best thing to use is occupational therapy. The Asperger's individual has no inate concept of appropriate social behavior, and must be taught what to do in various situations. There are occupational therapists who specialize in this. More info at The Online Asperger Information and Support page.

  16. Is this a coincidence?? on GEOS Available for Download After 18 Years · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just yesterday I booted GEOS off of original floppies on the Commodore SX64 that sits here in my cube. It booted just fine, despite being loaded from floppies that are nearing 20 years old.

    GEOS was a great system in it's day, and probably would be still around if not for the raping of Commodore by corporate raiders.

  17. Re:AOL on GEOS on GEOS Available for Download After 18 Years · · Score: 1

    In fact, I was using Q-link as early as '83, long before GEOS was released.

  18. Re:Overblown. on Darl & SCO Overview · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Darl has already stated that SCO believes there are unstated "problems" with the USL/BSD settlement. If SCO succeeds in their jihad against Linux, I would not be surprised to see them turn their guns on BSD.

  19. Re:ASR-33 printout on Funny Things You've Seen on Resumes? · · Score: 1

    Heh. I have an ASR-33 in the basement. Maybe I'll use it for my next Resume.

  20. Re:For real on Funny Things You've Seen on Resumes? · · Score: 2, Funny

    OK, I'm guessing you live in Central Florida, because I used to work with this guy. He claimed he had studied at Oxford, Yale, and several other big name schools. He also claimed he was a CNA/CNE, MSCE, and several other things. He was no older than I, but had served in Viet Nam *AND* worked for the CIA. He eventually got the axe after another co-worker and I worked through the night rewriting this consulting document he had been working on for six months. It consisted of stuff cut-and-pasted from various web pages he had found through one of the search engines. Most it was irrelevent.

  21. Re:ACLU to help out? on Symantec Says No To Pro-Gun Sites · · Score: 1

    That may be true, but the ACLU's statement seems to omit that fact that under US federal law, the "Militia" is defined as every able bodied male between 16 and 65.

  22. Re:Oldest hardware on What's the Oldest Hardware You are Still Using? · · Score: 1

    Here is the rundown:
    PDP-8/E: EduBasic 20 or straight hand-toggled machine code, depending
    PDP-11/24: RT-11
    PDP-11/73: RSX-11M
    PDP-11/83: RSTS/E
    Commodore 64: Microsoft Basic (yeah, I know...)
    Tandy M100: Microsoft Basic (yeah, I know...)
    Tandy PC-2: Sharp Basic
    Kaypro-II: CP/M
    1.5Ghz Pentium 4 AOpen AX533-TUBE: Linux 2.6test6

  23. Oldest hardware on What's the Oldest Hardware You are Still Using? · · Score: 1

    I have a Single Sided Double Density full height 5.25 inch floppy drive installed in my PC. I use it to move files from the PC to my Kaypro II. I also have a Double Sided High Density half height drive that I use to copy files to my 20 year old PDP-11.

    The 80 meg drive I'd been using as a root drive since first installing Linux (Slackware) 1.0 way back in '94 died about a month ago, so I can't count it I guess.

    That takes care of the 'new' stuff. For old stuff, I've got a working PDP-8/E (30+ years old), a PDP-11/24 (25 or so years old), a PDP-11/73 (20 something), a PDP-11/83 ( 20 something), a Tandy M100, a Tandy PC-2, and a Commodore 64.

  24. Re:Hey can we name it Big Brother? on Drooling Over VA Tech's 1100-Node G5 Cluster · · Score: 1

    Nope. Name's taken.

  25. Re:storm + aerials on Amateur Radio Braces for Hurricane Isabel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Most Hams ( myself included ) have probably already lowered their "monstrously huge" aerials and put up the 'emergency' antennae. My emergency kit consists of a handheld VHF radio, a backpack HF radio ( 20 watts, about the size 5 CD jewel cases stacked on top of each other ), a folded dipole antenna which is made of 300 ohm tv antenna cable, a 12 V gel cell, and a Solar Panel for recharging the gel cel when the sun does come out. It all fits in a small ruck sack and can be setup anywhere in minutes.