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User: softcoder

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Comments · 88

  1. Re:Patents as property. on Patent Trolls Are Losing More. Will America's Supreme Court Change That? (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1

    IANAL, but ... I don't see the patent as being the property. I see the original idea as being the property (if anything is). The Patent is a right granted by society on certain terms. Society can dictate those terms. To put in real property terms it may be more like you have a river or stream flowing through your property. The stream may in fact be yours while it is inside your boundaries, but the state has the right to dictate how you use the water, by setting quotas or not allowing you to divert it to the detriment of people downstream etc.

  2. That's HIS opinion. I disagree on Silicon Valley 'Divided Society and Made Everyone Raging Mad', Argues Newsweek (newsweek.com) · · Score: 1

    Better communication leads to better understanding. The original tower of Babel story, is that mankind was punished by being divided by many languages.
    True a dangerous enemy can unite a tribe, but it is much easier to paint an unknown group as dangerous than one that you can communicate with.
    Witness the story of the first world war where the Allied and German rank and file started exchanging Christmas gifts and singing carols. This so scared the officers (on both sides?) that they deliberately broke the truce by starting a shelling campaign. It is harder to paint someone as evil and dangerous when the rank and file can check the propaganda for themselves.

  3. Re:Biometricsare not secure on Why Are We Still Using Passwords? (securityledger.com) · · Score: 1

    How do you propose to log into a website with your fingerprint? Put it on the reader and send it to the website? Unencrypted? Oh Oh now instead of just a password compromised, if it is intercepted, your fingerprint is out there for anyone to use
    And what makes you think the websites will be any more diligent about safeguarding your fingerprint (or the encrypted version thereof) than they are about safeguarding your password (or an encrypted version thereof)?

    Using biometrics as a 'login' device is an insanely crazy idea. The only reason people are sort of accepting it is because the flaws have not been exposed by the constant attacks of millions of cyber criminals.
    Once your digitized fingerprint or face has been stolen you are in a world of trouble, worse than if your Equifax data were stolen.

  4. Did MS release GVFS under an Open Source License? on Microsoft Introduces GVFS (Git Virtual File System) (microsoft.com) · · Score: 1

    If MS released the GVFS under an Open Source License, then MAYBE their recent posturing re Open Source and Linux has some sincerity to it.
    If they did not then it is probably more Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.
    softcodeer

  5. And the OS Asus will support is?? on Raspberry Pi Gets Competitors (hackaday.com) · · Score: 1

    I get SOOOOO annoyed at these hardware announcements from micro to super computer that make no mention of the OS to be used.
    If ASUS will only support Windows on this board, then what is the price point? Is Windows included?
    If ASUS will be supporting Linux on this board, then why cant they support Linux on their OTHER Mobos, the desktop ones that are used for gaming, etc.
    If they are not supporting ANY software then what community do they expect to step up? Martians?
    softcoder

  6. Truck Botnets, and Ransomeware galore...... on Self-Driving Trucks Begin Real-World Tests on Ohio's Highways (cbsnews.com) · · Score: 1

    If you thought botnets of WebCams were bad, wait till you have botnets of hacked self driving vehicles. Sounds like something out of Stephen King!
    And Ransomeware galore.
    The mind boggles at what Organized Crime or Immigration 'Coyotes' can do with a fleet of hacked self driving vehicles.
    Does no one else see this? I feel like Will Smith in 'i Robot', "Now we have Robots building robots. Wonderful!"

  7. Why did DEBIAN not consider SMF from Solaris? on Multiple Linux Distributions Affected By Crippling Bug In Systemd (agwa.name) · · Score: 1

    I am not an expert coder or sysadmin, but a quick read of SOLARIS SMF feature it would seem to address all the needs of a robust init system, without the many concerns of a too powerful/critical PID 1.
    Since SMF is CDDL (I think), and an init process is not part of the kernel, why is it not possible to use a well developed and debugged (since 2006?) alternative to the legacy SYSV init method?
    pgmer6809

  8. Static Link = Dynamic Link? Says Who? on Software Freedom Conservancy: Distributing Linux With ZFS Is Illegal (phoronix.com) · · Score: 1

    The Conservancy seem to have glossed over this point. It is not obvious to me. If Canonical were to distribute two, CDs, tarballs, whatever, with Linux on one and ZFS.ko on the other, with a script to load ZFS.ko at install time would _that_ be different?

    How about if they distribute Ubuntu on one CD, the ZFS source on the other and a script that builds and loads ZFS.ko at install time? Would _that_ be legal?

    If you can distribute linux with binary blob graphics drivers I don't see a big difference with a filesystem module.

    softcoder

  9. ReTransMeta on Variable Instruction Computing: What Is Old Is New Again (hackaday.com) · · Score: 1

    Yes and Transmeta were not particularly successful in spite of the promise the technology showed.

  10. Typo in Story 50 KILO watts, not 50MW on Boeing Installs World's Largest 'Reversible' Renewable Energy Storage System (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    The in the story has a typo. It is not 50MW as stated, but 50KW.
    Also the diagram on the page the link points to has the Anode emitting electrons (to go through the load) which are then collected by the Cathode.
    I thought that it was the Cathode that emitted the electrons, which were then collected by the Anode.

  11. Project Gado -- Open source Document Scanning on Ask Slashdot: State-of-the-Art In Amateur Book Scanning? · · Score: 1

    You might investigate Project Gado.
    A free open source robot for taking pictures of documents without exposing them to danger.
    Not sure if it has all the software you want, but there is an open source community developing for it, the Univ of Finland seems to be the hub.

    http://projectgado.org/2015/07...

  12. Notecase Pro on Ask Slashdot: Open Tools For Logbooks and Note-taking? · · Score: 1

    I know that you asked for Open Source tools, but if others are going to propose Notepad and Microsoft products, let me mention Notecase Pro.
    It comes in flavors for windows, Linux, and Mac. There are constant updates. There is a user community developing plugins. You can write in different fonts, with font colors and background colors. You can embed screenshots.
    It is a hierarchical note manager. The price is reasonable, you can get a single user (any number of computers) perpetual license, or pay more and get a multiuser license.
    It is not open source though.
    pgmer6809

  13. will they allow pocket calculators? on Naval Academy Reinstates Teaching of Celestial Navigation · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When I was learning Celestial Navigation, there were two sets of 'Almanacs' we had to use. One was the Nautical Almanac which gave the positions of the stars, the Sun and the Moon for each minute of each day of the year. These were issued every year by some National Observatory. The other set was just a cookbook of spherical trigonometry. Obviously you can program any modern calculator with the appropriate trig formulas so the Midshipmen would not have to waste time looking up those numbers in the books. I am pretty sure that with modern memory you could put the entire almanac for the year on a USB stick, and so you would not need to look up those numbers either. Add the two together and you can have a rugged, solar powered device that can do the calculations for you. Now all you need to do is get out your sextant and clock, take the sights, plug in the time, the readings and the corrections, and let the pocket calculator do the grunt work.
    pgmer6809

  14. Sen Rand Responsible for this? on NSA-Reform Bill Fails In US Senate · · Score: 1

    There is no mention in the article of Sen Rand's filibuster opposing the bill.
    I presume that when the article says that they could not get enough Republican votes they mean they did not get enough to override the filibuster?

    (I'm Canadian and so not as knowledgeable about american political procedures as I could be.)

  15. M3800 Works well with Ubuntu on Dell Precision M3800 Mobile Workstation Packs Thunderbolt 2, Quadro, IGZO2 Panel · · Score: 2

    I have a recent 3800. I got it with Ubuntu, no Windows.Mine does not have the 4K screen. All the hardware I have tested works well with it, which is unusual for laptops in my experience.
    The media keys work. Sleep/resume works. The camera works. It will boot in UEFI mode, secure boot ON of OFF (i.e it comes preloaded with a shim that allows secure boot). The trackpad works. Two finger scrolling works. Wireless works with no hassle. The RJ11/USB dongle works. Have not tested Thunderbolt.
    I think Dell could have done a much better job with the documentation (there is none that is not Windows releated) and the startup screen where you install Ubuntu, has an 'EULA' that is obviously a Windows artifact (and probably illegal under the GPL). Further given that mine came with an SSD Dell could have fixed the fstab to make some of the filesystems as type "tmpfs".
    But overall I am quite impressed and happy.
    pgmer6809

  16. American Pressure did it. on Canadian Prime Minister To Music Lobby: Here's Your Copyright Term Extension · · Score: 2

    I think the reason this was done was because of american diplomatic pressure. The US state dept has classified Canada as a 'pirate country' right up there with China, and other countries that make billions from counterfeit knock-offs just because we have different copyright laws. Further, the US has pushed hard, and successfully to have the the 70 yr term included in the new (quasi secret) Trans Pacific trade treaty. None of the other countries wanted that term but the US got it in there anyway. Canada finds it very difficult to do things the US is strongly opposed to; and once the Treaty was approved we would be stuck with 70 years anyhow. This is very much a case of 'Resistance is Futile' and the Borg is the US state department.
    softcoder.

  17. 10,000 year clock on Ask Slashdot: After We're Gone, the Last Electrical Device Still Working? · · Score: 1

    It's not electronic, or even electric, but if they finish it, I hope that it is still running 10,000 years from now.
    http://www.10000yearclock.net/

  18. Re:It was an app on a WORK-Issued Phone! on Worker Fired For Disabling GPS App That Tracked Her 24 Hours a Day · · Score: 1

    Well they could reach her on her personal phone, which would not be subject to company installed spyware.

  19. Re:GPS tracks nowadays on Worker Fired For Disabling GPS App That Tracked Her 24 Hours a Day · · Score: 2

    Why does she not have two cell phones, a work phone and a personal one. The work phone provided by the company could have whatever crap they wanted installed on it. She could leave it at work when she went home for the day or the weekend. She could carry her personal phone when she was not working.
    This would be akin to the company providing a computer. The courts have sort of ruled that what you do on company provided computer, network or email account, cannot be expected to remain private. The same might apply to a company provided cell phone.

  20. Re:Dave Cutler's work lives on on PDP-11 Still Working In Nuclear Plants - For 37 More Years · · Score: 1

    I remember it that Cutler left DEC when DEC would not develop a 32 bit real time OS, or a 32 bit PDP-11.
    MS hired him partly to rescue NT development, which was in trouble, and partly because they wanted an Alpha ( the next great DEC chip) port of NT.
    But I would sure like to know if Anonymous' post has any truth to it.
    Sad to say MS's ethics are so bad that one cannot dismiss it out of hand.

  21. Sony vs Dutch Police. Money Talks. on Antivirus Firms "Won't Co-operate" With PC-Hacking Dutch Police · · Score: 2

    so where were these anti virus folks when Sony was planting its virus?
    Not a single one of them reported it.

    I suspect that it is not principles but money that talks here.
    let the Dutch police pony up some cash and see if they get a different reaction.
    pgmer6809

  22. what OS please? on LLNL/RPI Supercomputer Smashes Simulation Speed Record · · Score: 1

    and the operating system it runs is?

  23. How Does Apple Control This? on Apple Angers Mac Users With Silent Shutdown of Java 7 · · Score: 1

    My wife has an an Apple MAC OS/X. I don't recall ever giving Apple permission to modify my machine. Does Apple have a back door built into all OS/X systems that allows them to disable whatever they want at will without me knowing? What else can they do? Should I be encrypting all my disk partitions?
    pgmer6809

  24. Fool Me Twice? on Microsoft Blames PC Makers For Windows Failure · · Score: 1

    Maybe the reason that the H/w mfgs didn't commit heavily to Windows 8, is that they learned from the Novell WordPerfect disaster that you are a fool if you trust MS advance info. I can just see a mfg committing big money to a Windows 8 based touch machine, only to find out that MS had to change the API at the last minute to accomodate their own Surface Product. MS are perfectly capable of getting the industry to ramp up the hype for a Windows 8 based tablet, and then try to scoop the market by a) releasing their own competing tablet, and b) crippling those mfgs credulous enough to believe their advance specs by changing the API at lhe last minute. They have done it before.
    softcoder.

  25. FRAND Patents? on Microsoft Picks Another Web Standards Fight · · Score: 1

    Given Microsof'ts history I would be very leary of adopting any standard they proposed. There have been several standards that were adopted before people realized that they contained submarine patents. Microsoft typically proposes FRAND terms for their patents, and FRAND terms are incompatible with the GPL among other things. Any standard that requires FRAND licenses cannot in practice be used by FOSS (Free and Open Source Software).
    pgmer6809