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User: TheMathemagician

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Comments · 214

  1. Re:All the non-coders STFU on Heartbleed Coder: Bug In OpenSSL Was an Honest Mistake · · Score: 1

    Well apart from the quality of his work ... how can he even bear to look at all those hard-coded 'magic numbers' permeating the code, never mind the memory allocation issue.

  2. This has damaged my faith in Open Source on Heartbleed Coder: Bug In OpenSSL Was an Honest Mistake · · Score: 1

    Most of the Open Source code I've seen has been high quality and I assumed such a high-profile project as OpenSSL would be the same. Having dug out the code myself when this blew up I was shocked at how ropey it is. Magic numbers everywhere, memory handled in a cavalier way, no clear structure. Now I feel bad defending Open Source against FUD shills because I know they can whip out this example.

  3. Re:Let it die on How Cochlear Implants Are Being Blamed For Killing Deaf Culture · · Score: 1

    Yes I've always thought an interesting project would be to generate a magnetic field similar to the Earth's but a hundred times stronger and see if people could learn to detect its orientation.

  4. Re:Why from one pit of snakes to another? on London Council Dumping Windows For Chromebooks To Save £400,000 · · Score: 1

    Linux of course.

  5. Re:The really amazing thing... on London Council Dumping Windows For Chromebooks To Save £400,000 · · Score: 1

    "Tax paid by the UK financial services industry rose from £63bn to £65bn last year, equivalent to 11.7 per cent of total tax receipts to the Exchequer" --- Financial Times, December 2013. Also the top 1% of earners paid 30% of all income tax. Banking is a regulated industry. The sort of dodges which sports stars and actors use to avoid paying millions in tax just aren't allowed. So the Square Mile isn't in fact the problem at all.

  6. Re:This is proof? Really? on Why Bitcoin Boomed During the Government Shutdown · · Score: 1

    They're not anticipating a post-Apocalyptic "Mad Max" landscape, just one where banks collapse and/or the government steals their savings. This has occurred in many countries within living memory to a greater or lesser degree.

  7. Re:Sure... on US Nuclear Commander Suspended Over Gambling · · Score: 1
  8. Re:Abolish the licence fee on BBC Thinking of Canceling Sky At Night · · Score: 1

    Nice. Bizarre racist abuse as you can't counter my arguments. Fyi, I and my ancestors have been in Britain since time immemorial.

  9. Re:Abolish the licence fee on BBC Thinking of Canceling Sky At Night · · Score: 1

    Allowing multiple TVs per household per license does not contradict my statement that it's a tax on hardware. My objection - as you know perfectly well - is the lack of any reasonable mechanism for opting out of watching BBC channels and not having to buy a license.

  10. Re:Abolish the licence fee on BBC Thinking of Canceling Sky At Night · · Score: 1

    The BBC's funding mechanism is so utterly indefensible that it almost renders any discussion of quality moot. A tax on hardware which goes exclusively to one content provider??? This is just ridiculous. Of course it manages to produce the occasional high quality programme but overall the standard is mediocre and falling. Also senior management are drawn from a very small soi-disant intellectual liberal elite.

  11. Re:not a good sell on How IP Law Helps FOSS Communities · · Score: 1

    "Another partial boon to FOSS communities is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA)." I guess when you're in jail for watching your DVD on a Linux box on the grounds you subverted the DRM you'll have that to console you.

  12. Decouple this from gaming on How Gamers Could Save the (Real) World · · Score: 1

    Games? What do games have to do with it? How can these idiots be so muddled in their thinking? If disasters create a need for this sort of labour then build a platform and let people who want to help download a a client and get assigned some chunk to work on. The server aggregates results and assigns the chunks. Spread the word via social media when there's an urgent need. Job done. I don't play computer games at all these days but I'd be happy to tag images for an hour if it would help responders to a disaster. This utterly mistaken idea that this concept needs to be coupled with gaming can only have come from a sort of 'cargo cult' view on computing. Oh, look at all these geeks playing computer games all day, we need to harvest them for our tasks, so lets embed them in the games...

  13. Re:Not sure which side I'm on on Radiohead's Thom Yorke Pulls Albums From Spotify In Protest of Low Royalties · · Score: 1

    If you build a car then it's not the case that anyone else can perfectly replicate that car and distribute it globally at effectively zero cost. Therefore your analogy is invalid.

  14. Mo' computers, mo' problems on CERN Testing Cloud For Crunching the Universe's Secrets · · Score: 1

    I'd say the astronomical (quantum mechanical?) amount of computing power required is more indicative of a lack of progress or any real theoretical ideas. The rapid progress in theoretical physics of the 20th century happened via theoretical breakthroughs and experimentation not computing.

  15. Re:Whisky Tango Foxtrot? on Greek Government Abruptly Shuts Down State Broadcaster · · Score: 1

    Hehe you meant 'most' for minorities. Never mind. Should it be the government's job to extract £145/year from everyone with a TV so that it can be given to an extremely unrepresentative group to make programmes of interest to minorities? You obviously think it is, but most people would disagree.

  16. Re:Whisky Tango Foxtrot? on Greek Government Abruptly Shuts Down State Broadcaster · · Score: 1

    See my answer to AC for more details but the BBC news has repeatedly been shown to be biased. They themselves have acknowledged that to some extent. The quality of other programmes is generally very poor. It would be more accurate to say I want to abolish the license fee rather than shut down the BBC. The alternative is for anyone who wants to try and run a commercial channel. With digital technology it's probably never been more achievable.

  17. Re:Whisky Tango Foxtrot? on Greek Government Abruptly Shuts Down State Broadcaster · · Score: 1

    Luddite doesn't mean what you think it does. Anyway to cover your points I have ideological objections to a state owned broadcaster. I don't mind a government budget (from general taxation) for news or factual programming being distributed to various broadcasters but the current model is absurd. Would you agree with taxing every computer sold and paying Microsoft the money even if the user only ever used Linux? If you would then you'll support the BBC funding's method but for the rest of us ... If it's really great value (it isn't, it's terrible value - but that's what apologists always claim) then it will have no problem at all funding itself on a commercial basis. Strange how the BBC themselves are vehemently opposed to such a strategy despite what fantastic value they supposedly provide. You yourself are doing it now. Simultaneously claiming something is worth it (in an economic sense) and yet refusing to allow it to function in a normal economic way. Don't you find that suspicious? Can't you sense your own cognitive dissonance? Probably not.

  18. Re:Whisky Tango Foxtrot? on Greek Government Abruptly Shuts Down State Broadcaster · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm envious. I wish the UK government would shut down the BBC.

  19. Developers overwrite each other? on Why Your Users Hate Agile · · Score: 1

    If a user requests a new feature or behaviour then capture it in tests, implement, and release. No-one can now overwrite the behaviour without breaking the tests which should force either some internal resolution or feedback to the user: "Bob said this number should be calculated this way, you asked for it this way, you need to agree between yourselves". If developers are overwriting each other's changes then you are really are doing it wrong.

  20. Re:I tell them I feel the same way! on Why Your Users Hate Agile · · Score: 2

    I almost thought this was a troll it's so crazy. Of course there is a huge difference between designing a car and designing software. Manufacturing a car requires the assembly of thousands of physically pieces in a precise three-dimensional structure. The design process needs to analyse all the forces, internal and external, the car has to cope with, the flow of various fluids, electricity, changing conditions of temperature and humidity etc etc etc If a user suddenly wanted an extra window or a periscope or larger rims half-way through the process then it's not going to be possible. With software development changes like this to an application should be easy.

  21. Re:What kind of encryption did the FBI break? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    "... a well-trained interrogator could get anyone to confess to anything in short order." No they couldn't. Not at all. Certain vulnerable people with low intelligence can be browbeaten into making false confessions but most /. readers wouldn't falsely confess.

  22. Re:Timex Sinclair 1000 on How Did You Learn How To Program? · · Score: 1

    Yes you're correct, it was 24 rows of 32 characters. However when nothing was displayed on a particular line it could be represented by a single NEWLINE character saving 31 precious bytes. The system variables took up another 128 bytes too I think. Numbers in BASIC code were stored as 5 bytes but you could use the inbuilt PI value to express 0 as PI - PI or 1 as PI / PI which only took 3 bytes. 1K Space Invaders and Breakout weren't too bad though!

  23. Nepal can charge what it likes on First Video Broadcast From Mt. Everest Peak Outrages Tourist Ministry of Nepal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nepal has never made a secret of the fact that it doesn't want hordes of Westerners climbing over its mountains. However rather than ban them they've decided to charge them through the nose and use the money to alleviate the environmental damage, provide some employment, and educate some kids. Nepal is relatively corruption-free (compared to India) and most of the $$$ does actually do some good. If you don't like it, don't go to Nepal.

  24. Re:Why would a celebrity on Canadian Man Pleads Guilty In Celebrity Hacking and Harrassment Case · · Score: 1

    Because they're attention whores - those in showbiz anyway. Like Hayley from Paramore "accidentally" tweeting a topless picture of herself. Yah right.

  25. Re:Hey Slashdot, racist jokes are not OK anymore on Ask Slashdot: Moving From Contract Developers To Hiring One In-House? · · Score: 1

    Yes somewhat surprising ... of course this is a very old joke. In the UK I've heard it as a Scouser (someone from Liverpool) in a suit.