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User: Millennium

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  1. Re:More questions on XKCD Author's Unpublished Book Has Already Become a Best-Seller · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's not science: it's uncontrolled historical data. Not xkcd's thing.

  2. Re:This is more than a little bit naive. on Environmentalists Propose $50 Billion Buyout of Coal Industry - To Shut It Down · · Score: 1

    Nothing, so long as it's driven by well-thought-out goals and done at a reasonable pace. This, by contrast is an aesthetics-driven attempt at sudden and radical change: not remotely the same thing.

  3. Re:This is more than a little bit naive. on Environmentalists Propose $50 Billion Buyout of Coal Industry - To Shut It Down · · Score: 1

    There is a difference between sensible environmental policy and a War on Coal. I don't think Obama is attempting to wage a War on Coal.

    But it's tough to deny that some people are, in fact, trying to do this. It's that precise mentality that drives the people who want to buy it all up and shut it all down.

  4. Re:This is more than a little bit naive. on Environmentalists Propose $50 Billion Buyout of Coal Industry - To Shut It Down · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yes, but that's not War On Coal thinking. The WOC folks are attempting to use force to ensure that we funnel all our money into their pet technologies Right Quick (tm), and that this will quickly get us back up and running. And if it doesn't, then we'll just have to Conserve (tm).

  5. Re:Why aren't we using PNG? on New Mozilla Encoder Improves JPEG Compression · · Score: 3, Insightful

    PNG is great for everything but actual photos, and should be used for just that: everything but photos. But photos really do need the extra boost from lossy compression.

  6. OpenWrt? on Routers Pose Biggest Security Threat To Home Networks · · Score: 1

    Forgive me if I'm wrong, but wasn't OpenWrt based on this same firmware? Or is this bug with the VxWorks-based firmware that Linksys later switched to?

  7. Not quite the case... on Linksys Routers Exploited By "TheMoon" · · Score: 1

    Even if we limit our scope to routers-as-initially-purchased, there's still one stock model that runs Linux out of the box: the WRT54GL. It was made after Linksys otherwise switched to vxWorks, in an attempt to keep a hand in the Linux market.

    I've got one. I flashed it with Tomato, but it definitely came with Linux on it.

  8. Re:US stewardship sucks less on ICANN's Cozy Relationship With the US Must End, Says EU · · Score: 1

    I think you are underestimating the level of distrust there is for the US at the moment.

    I don't think I am, actually. I have bent over backwards to make conciliatory gestures to the more extreme camps, pointing out at every turn that the current situation is not a good one even as I demonstrate how it remains preferable to the currently-known alternatives. I realize there is nothing I can do to satisfy the outright irrational elements out there, but where I see the possibility for reasoned discussion, I take it.

    I can't really think of any entity I would trust less in the "can I trust them not to abuse this power in every way they can think of"-way (in the competence-sense, certainly).

    Are you telling me that BRIC (Brazil/Russia/India/China) doesn't rush immediately to mind? Brazil and India might not be too problematic, but they're collaborating with a pair of outright dystopian regimes. The US has fallen far, but it still has a very long way to go before it would even belong in the same league as these.

    As you stated, it is not like this is not deserved.

    Actually, I would argue that this level isn't deserved. Like I said, there are degrees, and I pointed out why the alternatives are even less worthy of trust. When all options are bad, you go for the least terrible and fight to change it. In this case, that means the US.

  9. US stewardship sucks less on ICANN's Cozy Relationship With the US Must End, Says EU · · Score: 1

    The stewardship the US has exercised has been far from perfect, and recent years have shown it to be even worse than previously believed. But for all that, even within the context of recent revelations, it has still proven considerably less-intolerable of a steward than any other proposal yet put forward.

    For all the EU's talk of Internet freedom, most nations have moved to curtail it within their own borders, and their efforts have achieved considerably more support within their borders than the corresponding efforts of the US: not a good sign. The UN-based proposals, meanwhile, are almost universally fronted by foxes seeking employment as henhouse guards, and not only does the UN lack any provisions to exclude them from this kind of power, it considers this a feature, not a bug. Allowing a body like that control over communication simply is not sane: too many foxes will hold too much of the power too much of the time. And then there is the move by the BRIC nations to set up "their own Internet," which suffers the same problems as the UN proposal, only with the the foxes enshrined permanently at the top of the heap.

    With these options, what's left? The US has shown that it cannot be trusted, but there are degrees of untrustworthiness, and while the publicly-known actions of the US are inexcusable, every other nation or group that has put forth a bid to succeed it openly intends to do far worse. The US is simply the best of a bad lot, and with no other lots coming down the pipeline, I see no other solution for now.

  10. Re:Mixup on Majority of Young American Adults Think Astrology Is a Science · · Score: 1

    This. I'm forced to wonder: did astronomy also appear on this survey, and if it did, how many people answered that both were "sort of" scientific? I suspect that a lot of answers of this kind were a misguided attempt at compromise by people who didn't know which was which.

  11. Language, Not Text on Ask Slashdot: Why Are We Still Writing Text-Based Code? · · Score: 1

    Visual programming environments will never succeed, as long as the goal is to be "better than text". In the current attempts, one writes code with shapes and connecting lines instead of with letters and punctuation, but the linguistic concepts behind the code are still recognizable and readable. The catch is that this turns out to be a far less efficient way to encode language than text is: it's harder to write, and it's harder to read, so people inevitably gravitate back toward text, and the visual aspect is forgotten.

    Does this mean visual programming is doomed? Not necessarily, but it needs to refocus its goal on something much more radical than attempts to date have really done. Current attempts try to be "better than text," and even the article here seems to advocate this approach. Instead, they need to focus on being better than language. This is where visual programming really has potential: rather than trying to replicate what text can do, it needs to focus on what text can't do.

    How would something like this work? I haven't the faintest idea. I literally cannot imagine what it would be like to code without language. But a lot of concepts have emerged, even just during my own lifetime, that I could not have imagined before seeing them. Perhaps this is the same.

    So there's my challenge to the "visual programming" folks. Express to me the nature of (and a possible solution to) some moderately complex problem, without using language of any sort. Manage this, and your task is largely finished: all that remains is to come up with a visual editor for encoding information in your chosen method. Do this, and you will have your revolution.

  12. CSS/JavaScript on Ask Slashdot: It's 2014 -- Which New Technologies Should I Learn? · · Score: 1

    If you thought you knew CSS and JavaScript three years ago, but you haven't done much since then, relearn them. They're rapidly becoming very different beasts from what they once were.

  13. Well, it's a step at least on Obama Announces Surveillance Reforms · · Score: 1

    This is not where we need to be, nor anywhere near it. But it is a step in the right direction, and should be both encouraged and taken.

    This does not mean we should let up in even the slightest degree. Far from it: we will need to intensify the message after this, to counteract the inevitable complacency that comes with having done a tiny amount. But this is how battles like these are won: take what is offered, then demand the rest, and repeat until you've got it.

  14. Re:It's exactly why GTK was born! on Intel Dev: GTK's Biggest Problem, and What Qt Does Better · · Score: 1

    It's kind of scary just how much saner Tk still manages to be than most other toolkits, even with the cruft and stagnation.

  15. Re:It's bad for all OS's on Many Mac OS Users Not Getting Security Updates · · Score: 1

    Good luck getting your hands on the right SIMMs, though.

  16. Reverse Santa? on Disney Pulls a Reverse Santa, Takes Back Christmas Shows From Amazon Customers · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why not just call this a Grinch move and be done with it?

  17. Re:Real enough to tax. on Norway Rejects Bitcoin As Currency; Taxes As Asset, Instead · · Score: 1

    At this point it's more like a kind of bullion than a currency, per se. You can store and transfer raw value in BTC without much trouble, but other than a few notable-but-narrow exceptions, you can't walk into a store and buy something with it.

    Since it doesn't act much like a currency yet, and probably isn't going to within the next five years or so, it doesn't make much sense to treat it as a currency yet. But you have to treat it as something, so for now, treating it as an asset makes the most sense. When and if the situation changes, the laws can also be changed.

  18. Re:And why ... on Program to Use Russian Nukes for US Electricity Comes to an End · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Trust has very little to do with it. The people who have these weapons have them. The best that can be hoped for is a process of disarmament that does not cause too much damage if trust is broken, and one which prevents other parties from gaining the weapons and thus becoming risk factors in and of themselves.

    That said, this particular program was an ingenious way of proving that these weapons were destroyed. It put the most critical parts -what actually makes these things nuclear weapons- through a relatively open, transparent, and auditable process that rendered them, if not precisely inert, then at least unsuitable for use in weapons. Trades of this sort should be more common among countries decreasing their stockpiles.

  19. Re:isn't it possible to detect on Thieves Who Stole Cobalt-60 Will Soon Be Dead · · Score: 1

    It depends on the exact type of radiation and such, but the big thing is your uncontained. They wouldn't have been able to detect the material until the container was opened, which the thieves didn't do immediately.

    When they found the material, that's exactly what had happened: the thieves had opened the box. But they had also already run away, which is why the thieves still haven't been caught.

  20. Re:Why put the automation in if not to use it? on Airline Pilots Rely Too Much On Automation, Says Safety Panel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Automation fails from time to time, and when it does, pilots are the failsafe. But to be able to do that, they need to stay in practice, and that's the problem being highlighted here: they're getting so little time in control that they're getting out of shape.

  21. Re:Friendly request to non-Brits on Google and Microsoft To Block Child-Abuse Search Terms · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Nobody will be that dumb" is one of the most dangerous bets a person can make, regardless of context. Someone will always be "that dumb".

  22. Counting versus Indexing on Zuckerberg To Teach 10 Million Kids 0-Based Counting · · Score: 3, Informative

    Programmers don't count starting at zero. They index items in collections starting at zero, because it makes certain actions more convenient when you're working at a very low level. But when it comes time to count the items, they start at 1 like everyone else.

  23. Automatic everything? on Stephen Wolfram Developing New Programming Language · · Score: 1

    So you can do anything you want with Wolfram language? The only limit is your imagination?

    Will the first project be the long-awaited 1.0 version of Zombo.com?

  24. No, but neither can gaming on Can Nintendo Survive Gaming's Brave New World? · · Score: 2

    HD has made games inherently too expensive to produce. The only things that turn any profit at all are graphics-are-everything reskins of games developed back when it was profitable to focus on things that actually mattered, and those will only sustain the industry for so long. We're headed for another crash, one that Nintendo could have survived a generation ago when it resisted the HD gimmick. Now that it has fallen into that trap, though, it's as hosed as Sony's and Microsoft's gaming divisions will be.

  25. To some degree... on Ask Slashdot: As a Programmer/Geek, Should I Learn Business? · · Score: 2

    It's useful to know enough about these things that you can discuss the basics with the people you work with. That said, you do not need a degree in marketing to speak marketer, and you do not need an MBA to speak boss.