Slashdot Mirror


User: Headrick

Headrick's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
49
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 49

  1. Re:That's 129.2F if you're interested. on 54C Recorded In Kuwait Likely Hottest On Record In Asia (foxnews.com) · · Score: 1

    Shut up, Hudson!

  2. Re:Seems reasonable on Japanese Court Demands 'Right To Be Forgotten' For Sex Offender (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    Because you want to fuck girls who look to be 12 years old? Dude...

  3. Re:A BMW customer? on Elon Musk Cancels Stewart Alsop's Tesla Order Over Complaints About Launch Event · · Score: 1

    What's the difference between a porcupine and a BMW driver?

    A porcupine has pricks on the outside.

  4. Re:Managed languages on The Top Programming Languages That Spawn the Most Security Bugs (softpedia.com) · · Score: 1

    It's (mostly) not about managed pointers and garbage collection. Most attack vectors arise from mishandling/mistrusting external inputs.

  5. Re:the type of situation on Secret Service Allowed To Use Warrantless Cellphone Tracking (myway.com) · · Score: 1

    Yup, I'm totally convinced that is the only situation it will ever be used in.

  6. Don't forget organ donation on Self-Driving Cars To Transform Insurance and Other Industries · · Score: 2

    A lot of organ transplants come from those killed in car / motorcycle accidents. As deaths sharply decline with self-driving vehicles this will be a grim predicament.

  7. Re:Withholding evidence? on US Gov't Will Reveal More About Its Secret Cellphone Tracking Devices · · Score: 1

    The cops are the only gang you can't call the cops on.

  8. Of Course... on Shift Work Dulls Brain Performance · · Score: 1

    Of course shit works dull brain performance.

    Oh, "shift"...

  9. Re:Very sad on "Car Talk" Co-Host Tom Magliozzi Dies At Age 77 · · Score: 1

    I share your sentiments.

    OT, having lived in Boston proper my entire adult life I can state with confidence that no Bostonian I've met would ever refer to Boston as "Beantown" including folks across the river in Cambridge and the suburbs. Just curious as to why a former resident would employ that term...

  10. Re:OT: Self-depricating humor on Living On a Carbon Budget: The End of Recreation As We Know It? · · Score: 1

    Well put. Self-deprecating humor certainly meets your criteria!

    Here in Boston we still make fun of the accent even though it's not as common as most depictions would make you think.

    That said, I would wager that the getting laid jokes are not (as?) funny to most of us who have been here from the beginning (so, at least for me, someone around 40 years old -- see my UID!) and at this point no sex would either be:

    • 1) really sad
    • 2) ok, just between relationships!
    • 3) not an issue as our significant other is static at this point.

     

  11. Re:Lots of cheap carbon stuff on Living On a Carbon Budget: The End of Recreation As We Know It? · · Score: 1

    Is this joke really funny anymore? It just feeds in to a stereotype that I've not found to be accurate. Sure, I don't doubt that some of us haven't had much action but I imagine the distribution isn't that far off the norm for our respective demographics.

    If you're not an asshole, know how to treat people with respect, and take care of yourself it's not that hard to have a relationship.

    Or I need to browse at -1 more often...

  12. Re:Not the target audience... on The Doctor Will Skype You Now · · Score: 1

    The problem I see with this service, at least in the US with the litigious nature of its society, is that it's almost to the point that if you say a common housefly landed on your arm and you are worried they will tell you to come in to the ER or urgent care. I know of no one who has called any level of their heath provider with any concern who has not been told to come in.

    The last thing they want is for someone to call in with something seemly trivial and have it turn out to be something quite serious. That's a lawsuit waiting to happen when "I called my doctor and he said I was fine." and then "My doctor said I'm fine but then I lost a limb.".

  13. I've seen firewalls that simply allow any port on any protocol right on through.

    Many PHBs seem to think that merely having a firewall is a panacea for all security issues.

    If I hear "but it's behind the firewall!" one more time...

  14. Re:Wait a minute... on Hair-Raising Technique Detects Drugs, Explosives On Human Body · · Score: 1

    I once dated a nurse who told me that acetaminophen was the most common cause of acute liver failure in the ICU.

    People keep popping them because they're over the counter -- they can't be dangerous!

  15. Re:Hey Shelby Conklin... on Tor Project Sued Over a Revenge Porn Business That Used Its Service · · Score: 1

    How do you know this isn't exactly what she wants to happen?

  16. Re:What's the solution? on The Security Industry Is Failing Miserably At Fixing Underlying Dangers · · Score: 1

    Well companies can do much more to improve on that front though.
    1. Architect the product, not just build it. All too often the focus is on meeting business objectives and security is added later. An product that was well thought-out and designed handles security as part of the core design as well as the business objectives.

    This. Also, be sure to include threat modeling https://www.owasp.org/index.ph... as part of the architecture. Microsoft actually has a pretty good (free) stand-alone tool that you might want to check out: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us....

  17. Re:Or call your credit card company ... on AT&T To Use Phone Geolocation To Prevent Credit Card Fraud · · Score: 1

    A text whenever your credit card was used saying "Card with number ending in xxxx was used in location yyyy, if this was a fraudulent charge reply to this text" would work just as well without the privacy issue of tracking locations.

    My Chase VISA did exactly this while my girlfriend was buying some furniture using her copy of the card. It's the only time this has happened but it was the first expensive purchase she made. She was on her laptop next to me at the time so I immediately replied "YES" or "OK" and then the transaction went through.

  18. Re:Translation: on Driverless Cars Could Cripple Law Enforcement Budgets · · Score: 1

    Well said. The police are the only gang you can't call the police on.

  19. Re:ANOTHER DEAD BODY! SWEET JUSTICE! on Robbery Suspect Tracked By GPS and Killed · · Score: 1

    And then why shoot at an officer who you know won't shoot at you?

    Because you know that he is no longer a threat to you and whatever you are trying to accomplish (i.e. he's dead or wounded).

    Believe me, I'm generally what one would characterize as "anti-cop", but in a nation with so many guns and our particular gun culture (along with the war on drugs among other things), I don't follow this argument.

    I don't know the complete solution but I feel that cameras on all cops and their vehicles (on at all times) is a start.

    Yes, in America often the cops are the one gang you can't call the cops on but I can't really fault any gang member for being armed.

  20. Re:Aaaaaaannd..... on Let Spouses of H-1B Visa Holders Work In US, Says White House · · Score: 1

    Can we stop this stereotype now? I've been working for IT companies for nearly 20 years and most of my colleagues (regardless of gender or sexual orientation) have had significant others or spouses.

    Sure, there's been the occasional guy/girl that I can't ever see being able to handle any sort of romantic relationship but I've no reason to believe its been due to their profession.

  21. I haven't seen the movie but this is also covered in Feynman's book "What Do You Care What Other People Think?". Lots of other good stuff in there too.

    Of course don't forget to read "Surely You're Joking Mr. Feynman". Feynman was a guy I would've really have liked to have known.

  22. Re:Yes they did. on Ask Slashdot: Does Your Employer Perform HTTPS MITM Attacks On Employees? · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I have my phone set up as a wifi hotspot over its 4G connection (unlimited data) and connect any personal devices (usually just my tablet) so I can browse, send, and receive personal communications. I can't imagine logging in to any social network, getting my personal email, or anything else that I wouldn't feel free to forward or print out for my boss.

    It's my employer's network and I use it for work.

  23. Re:much ado about nothing on Quebec Language Police Target Store Owner's Facebook Page · · Score: 2

    Given that this article is not about the United States government or its constitution I think a better analogy (if we still want to use the US) would be to look at how certain state-wide laws are inapplicable at border towns.

    Not so long ago you could not buy any alcoholic beverage on Sunday in Massachusetts (at a store, restaurants were exempt). This gave the liquor stores of border towns in northern MA a disadvantage as some folks made their "regular" store just over the border so they need not worry about the day of the week. Even if they didn't use it as their primary source of alcohol on Sunday it was the only solution. So these border towns, which did not cross in to New Hampshire, were allowed to sell on Sundays (I can't recall exactly how many miles you had to be from the border).

    As we gradually eliminate our so called "Blue Laws" in Massachusetts it is now legal to purchase alcohol in MA stores so long at it is after noon.

    I'm in no way defending this law, merely presenting a somewhat analogous situation.

  24. Re:We're the best country in the world!!! Woo!! on US Plunges To 46th In World Press Freedom Index · · Score: 1

    An apt passage from Joel's "Angry Young Man" which you appropriately mention:

    I believe I've passed the age of consciousness & righteous rage
    I found that just surviving was a noble fight.
    I once believed in causes too, I had my pointless point of view,
    Life went on no matter who was wrong or right,

    The quotes in bold represent the sentiment of a lot of the populous, even those who were or are somewhat "active" in the political spectrum. It's more important to make the paycheck and feed the kids even while we know another drone strike in Yemen (or wherever) is imminent.

  25. Re:You act the part, and blame people for believin on Programmer Privilege · · Score: 1

    Totally agree dude, know what I'm sayin'?