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User: NZheretic

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  1. "unstated ability to get access to systems" on Code Published for Triggering a BSOD on Windows Computers -- Even If They're Locked (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 1
    Transcript of Internet Caucus Panel Discussion. Re: Administration's new encryption policy.
    Date: September 28, 1999.
    Weldon statement.

    Rep. Curt Weldon : Thank you. Let me see if I can liven things up here in the last couple of minutes of the luncheon. First of all, I apologize for being late. And I thank Bob and the members of the caucus for inviting me here.

    ...

    But the point is that when John Hamre briefed me, and gave me the three key points of this change, there are a lot of unanswered questions. He assured me that in discussions that he had had with people like Bill Gates and Gerstner from IBM that there would be, kind of a, I don't know whether it's a, unstated ability to get access to systems if we needed it., Now, I want to know if that is part of the policy, or is that just something that we are being assured of, that needs to be spoke. Because, if there is some kind of a tacit understanding, I would like to know what it is.

    Because that is going to be subjected to future administrations, if it is not written down in a clear policy way. I want to know more about this end use certificate. In fact, sitting on the Cox Committee as I did, I saw the fallacy of our end use certificate that we were supposedly getting for HPCs going into China, which didn't work. So, I would like to know what the policies are. So, I guess what I would say is, I am happy that there seems to be a comming together. In fact, when I first got involved with NSA and DOD and CIS, and why can't you sit down with industry, and work this out. In fact, I called Gerstner, and I said, can't you IBM people, and can't you software people get together and find the middle ground, instead of us having to do legislation.

    ...

  2. 2002 Business Case for Microsoft:Green envy &s on Microsoft Built Its Own Custom Linux Kernel For Its New IoT Service (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 3, Informative
  3. He IS the Guide Mark II in the new HHGTTG on Stephen Hawking, Who Examined the Universe and Explained Black Holes, Dies at 76 (nytimes.com) · · Score: 5, Informative
    Seven reasons we love Stephen Hawking

    Professor Stephen Hawking unexpectedly materialises as The Guide Mark II in the new series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. "I have been quite popular in my time," he proclaims, and he's not wrong. Here are just seven of the reasons why.

  4. http://www.supervinx.com/Onlin...
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TabWorks/

    TabWorks is a shell for Windows 3.x and Windows 95 and was developed by Xerox's XSoft division. TabWorks organizes files into tabs in a notebook-like interface. It was distributed with PCs from 1994 to around 1997 by several companies, including Compaq and NEC. The product was developed by XSoft, a division of Xerox PARC in Palo Alto, California, the prestigious computing research lab that invented the concepts of laser printing, the mouse-driven graphical user interface and Ethernet networking. The original concept of a tabbed book metaphor came originally from Xerox PARC. Tabworks was shipped in 1993. A business team was assembled to produce the product initially for Compaq Computers who was given an exclusive worldwide license. NEC also had an arrangement with XSoft. The software was created to replace the Windows Program Manager (PROGMAN.EXE) on Windows 3.x and Windows 95 installations. It resembled a tabbed 3-ring notebook metaphor making it easier for novice users to navigate Windows. Over 9 million copies of the software were installed worldwide making it one of the most popular pieces of software in the world. TabWorks was later acquired in 1996 by Citadel Computer systems who integrated it into their line of network security and desktop utility product lines. Citadel discontinued selling TabWorks in early 2001.

  5. Open Source & Reproducible Builds on FBI Warns US Private Sector To Cut Ties With Kaspersky (cyberscoop.com) · · Score: 1

    The solution is to just open source licence the source code and publish in a Reproducible format. The Virus matching data and backend can be kept a proprietary service. This could open up a new business model, scanning source code for potential hostile actions and vulnerabilities.

  6. Of course they would say that ... on Bank of America Analysts Say There's A 50% Chance We Live In The Matrix (independent.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    ... so they have something else to blame about past and future catastrophic financial collapses - The Matrix is to blame!

  7. Opps, just checked specs does have USB3 on Google Announces a Router: OnHub · · Score: 1

    OnHub Tech Specs I would still like the aforementioned functionality

  8. Why no USB or local storage & offline apps? on Google Announces a Router: OnHub · · Score: 2

    I would definitely purchase a Google branded router that used local storage to maintain an encrypted synced cache of my Google Drive,Mail,Movies,Music & maybe third party data.

  9. Yes and more productive as well on Ask Slashdot: I Want To Read More. Should I Get an eBook Reader Or a Tablet? · · Score: 2

    It works for me. Carrying around both an e-ink reader and a cheaper larger Android tablet allows you to use the tablet to take notes without screen swapping. When used in combination with a Bluetooth keyboard & folio stands I find it far more productive than lugging around a laptop.

  10. Deja vu:HP first ported Linux to Itanium &SCO on Is HP Paying Intel To Keep Itanium Alive? · · Score: 2
    The Trillian Project : Proof of SCO's actions

    In February 1998, well before even the first prototype IA-64 chips were available, a skunkworks team at HP, with some assistance from Intel, began the work toward porting Linux to IA-64. By October 1998,around the same time that IBM, Old SCO and Sequent had finished negotiations, HP had completed the build toolchain. By January 1999, the Linux kernel was booting on an IA-64 processor simulator, months before the actual Itanium processor was available. In March 1999, at Intel, Linux was booting on the actual Intel Itanium processor.

    The SCO Group (then Caldera) which had purchased the rights to sell copies of the old Unix from Novell, sued IBM because the freely available Linux competed the SCO Groups old Unix offering.

    So Oracle has become the next SCO Group, quick somebody tell PJ!

  11. How valuable is the data held/services provided? on How Can I Justify Using Red Hat When CentOS Exists? · · Score: 1

    Put an arbitrary valuation of the businesses data within each server per licence needed and lost of service by hour for each and compare it to the cost of Red Hat licensing. If the data is valuable enough and downtime expensive enough then Red Hat Support is really worth every cent.

  12. Re:Google Should Buy it for Corporate Chromebook on Why HP Should Sell Its PC Business To Save It · · Score: 1
    Do you expect Google/Motorola to sell Microsoft Phones? no.

    Why should Google/HP sell Microsoft Windows PCs?

    Just sell the hardware with Linux Distros, Chromebooks, or sell the hardware no operating system installed to organizations with corporate licences. They could even farm out the Windows drivers and support to a third company.

  13. Google Should Buy it for Corporate Chromebook on Why HP Should Sell Its PC Business To Save It · · Score: 1
    This may be a great opportunity for Google to acquire a corporate brand and a large patent portfolio for its Chromebook for the enterprise.

    Makes as much sense as Google acquiring Motorola for the same platform and patents for android.

    I would like to see HP/Google enterprise hosted google apps appliances hooked up to Chromebooks as a replacement for the Microsoft Quagmire.

  14. Google desktop search was/is much better on Google To Shut Down 10 Products · · Score: 1

    Google desktop widgets were an annoyance but the desktop search works very well in a small business environment where the files are stored on NAS or SAMBA servers.

    I really hope that Google could produce a Chrome Local Search Plugin that replicates the search functionality that was in Google Desktop.

    It would be a killer app if Google was also to include two way file merge functionality ( unison or two way rsync ) with removable media, remoter servers, other desktop computers and Google doc accounts

  15. MS reputation so bad-forced to buy customer base? on Microsoft Buying Skype for $8.5B · · Score: 1

    Has Microsoft's reputation with the public sunk to such a low point where they are now forced to acquire other Internet companies in a desperate attempt to expand Microsoft's internet/Live customer base by proxy?

  16. Re:Eat Them! on Scientists Advocate Replacing Cattle With Insects · · Score: 1
  17. /. losing its edge on Scientists Advocate Replacing Cattle With Insects · · Score: 1

    No one pick up on Them!

  18. Eat Them! on Scientists Advocate Replacing Cattle With Insects · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "When man entered the genetics age, he opened the door to a new world. What we may eventually find in that new world, nobody can predict."

    Countdown to breeding larger insects for human consumption starts in ...

  19. Evolution in action on Oracle Asks OpenOffice Community Members To Leave · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Quoting myself

    At some point some open source projects developers may go in a direction that the distribution vendors and end uses may disagree with. It is the licensing which allows a fork of the project to develop that sets the open source development model apart from the pure proprietary development model. Apache, X.org and even the current version of the GNU GCC compiler toolset have been all derived from an outside fork of an existing open source project. No vendor or open source software developer can block development for any substantial period of time without the risk of the development being taken over by a descendant of the same project -- it's called evolution.

    Every time the leading members/developers of each of those original projects complained bitterly about the interlopers.

    The longer the original team remains entrenched in their design/implementation choices, the less the original team control has over the successor project and the less original product's market share of total users.

    This will remain true for all freely licensed source code that Oracle has purchased or inherited. Even for the forks of the GPL licensed Java.

    In the end freely licensed source code can have no dictators, only obsoleted dickhead.

  20. The Future Today in 30s - makes perfect sense on Jet Packs, Finally On Sale · · Score: 2, Funny

    In 1980 they said that by 2010 some of us would be using jet packs to commute to work.
    What they did not foresee in 1980 was the rise of telecommuting and that those same commuters would not have to travel very far.
    Hence the need for only thirty seconds of flight time - it all make perfect sense.

  21. Does "facilitate theft of service"=NO Competition on Google & Verizon's Real Net Neutrality Proposal · · Score: 1

    3) connecting their choice of legal devices that do not harm the network or service, facilitate theft of service, or harm other users of the service

    The phrase "facilitate theft of service" is so vague that it could be interpreted as just being in competition with the carrier's own provided services e.g. voice,SMS, video etc.

    This statement puts the Internet in the USA back into the pre-dialup days before the split up of AT&T, where the carrier could deny access to any modem because it could "harm the network" or just compete with its existing services.

  22. "Patentable process" like "hardcore pornography" on Supreme Court Throws Out Bilski Patent · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The patent in question was effectively denied, but the court would not impose further limits on patenting.

    No. 08-964. Argued November 9, 2009--Decided June 28, 2010

    Today, the Court once again declines to impose limitations on the Patent Act that are inconsistent with the Act's text. The patent application here can be rejected under our precedents on the unpatentability of abstract ideas. The Court, therefore, need not define further what constitutes a patentable "process," beyond pointing to the definition of that term provided in 100(b) and looking to the guideposts in Benson, Flook, and Diehr.

    Which is about the same as saying ( Justice Potter Stewart, concurring opinion in Jacobellis v. Ohio 378 U.S. 184 (1964)),

    "I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description ["hard-core pornography"]; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it, and the motion picture involved in this case is not that."

  23. the tide changed before and will change again on Is the Tide Turning On Patents? · · Score: 3, Informative

    Fed-Soc.org - Patents: Legitimate Rights or Grubstakes that Obstruct Progress? - Winter 2000

    This history shows the patent / free competition balance to be dialectical, not static. In this country, since the turn of the century, the pendulum has cycled twice between the patent right and free competition poles. The last free-competition era occurred between 1930-1950. Perhaps the zenith (or nadir, depending on point of view) was Mercoid Corp. v. Mid-Continent Inv. Co., 320 U.S. 661 (1944) where the Supreme Court held that tying sales of a non-patented product to a patented product constituted an impermissible extension of the patent monopoly and therefore patent misuse. Ironically, Mercoid facts today could support loss of profits damages under Rite-Hite Corp. v. Kelley Co., 56 F.3d 1538 (Fed. Cir. 1995). Partially as a reaction to certain court decisions (including the need to overturn Mercoid), the 1952 Patent Act slowly turned the pendulum back in a pro-patent direction. That movement accelerated full-bore with creation in 1983 of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit to hear all appeals from trial court patent infringement decisions.

    As I said before The 2000-2010 "Intellectual Property" boom is about to go the way of the "Subprime" Mortgage, Dot-Com vapor startup, Junk bond and Dutch Tulip futures. The Patent Troll Business Model is inherently flawed, and just like the aforementioned others, add nothing to a nations REAL economy.

  24. One giant I Told You So on Groklaw Will Be Archived At Library of Congress · · Score: 1

    SCO Group copyright claims:
    9th June 2003 What evidence of origin,ownership,copyright + GPL
    And soon SCO Group Vs IBM:
    12th June 2003 The Trillian Project : Proof of SCO's actions

    "Now there is one element of OpenServer that is not coming over, we don't the IP, we just own all the right to distribution, ongoing development for the open server, and that has to tax and other considerations"

    Random Love, CEO Caldera, keynote address,LINUXWORLD 2000 conference, August

  25. The Patent Troll Business Model is Subprime on NZ Draft Bill Rules Out Software Patents · · Score: 1
    The 2000-2010 "Intellectual Property" boom is about to go the way of the "Subprime" Mortgage, Dot-Com vapor startup, Junk bond and Dutch Tulip futures. The Patent Troll Business Model is inherently flawed, and just like the aforementioned others, add nothing to a nations REAL economy.

    Let the lawsuit mushroom clouds rise over the remains of USA's Tech industries the rest of the world will go their own free way.