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User: ByronHope

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  1. Re:Lack of a use case on Post-post PC: Materials and Technologies That Could Revive Enthusiast Computing · · Score: 1

    Doubt it. Most game developers have not even figured out how to use more than 2GB of main memory or more than one core. I can't even think of a game that currently uses four cores. The next gen consoles have four, and thus that will be the norm for PC games as well for the next six to nine years.

    Total War series has been using four cores for a number of years and I'm sure it's not the only game developed for the PC that does so.

  2. Re: Are you serious? on Student Arrested For Using Phone App To 'Shoot' Classmates · · Score: 1

    I should add, violence in Australia and to a lesser extent, the UK is more cultural than driven by poverty. The levels of poverty seen in the US are very rare in Australia and the UK. You're unlikely to be mugged or robbed here, more likely get in a fight drinking.

  3. Re: Are you serious? on Student Arrested For Using Phone App To 'Shoot' Classmates · · Score: 1

    Fair points, and it's similar in Australia, certain areas are more violent than others. Conservative regional areas, some indigenous communities (where alcohol is allowed) , outer suburbs and anywhere alcohol is served can be dangerous. Though with alcohol, the same can be said of most countries. However US gun violence is not limited to gangs in the inner city, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/10256057/US-teenagers-shot-Australian-baseball-player-because-they-were-bored.html

  4. Re:Are you serious? on Student Arrested For Using Phone App To 'Shoot' Classmates · · Score: 1

    However the US has almost 5 times the homicide rate of the UK and Australia. Most people would rather take a punch than a bullet.

  5. Re:10X my white and flabby ass on Flash Memory Won't Get Cheaper Any Time Soon · · Score: 1

    I do, actually using mutlpile 3TB FusionIO cards for a database migration project. Beats having to stuff around with slow SANs, shared (slow) storage and SAN admins. If you take into account performance, rack space, power consumption and cooling, it's cheaper than SAN storage. Just say no to spinning rust.

  6. Re:Before the libertarians start preaching... on Online Narcotics Store 'Silk Road' Is Showing Cracks · · Score: 1

    A quicker path to fascism is to outlaw something that people enjoy. Then you can use tax payers money to fund a vast empire that executes or puts people in prisons for either supplying demand or trying to enjoy themselves. Prohibition is the fascist weapon of choice. On the Ron Paul/tax drugs, you might have a point, tax enforcement will just replace prohibition but hopefully on much lower scale.

  7. Re:You can't beat clueless on 10 Years After SQL Slammer · · Score: 1

    That's a little harsh. At the time of slammer, I was feeling superior as I had rolled that patch out when it was released. It was then that I discovered the horror of MSDE installed, unpatched on user PCs and various application servers.

  8. Re:Sales tax and lies on New Hampshire Cops Use Taser On Woman Buying Too Many iPhones · · Score: 1

    It could also be away to get around the protectionist pricing policies of Apple. It would be cheaper for some people outside of the US to purchase the phone in the US and ship it over, but this is not allowed by Apple and is possibly the motivation for the store managers reaction. Outright, a 16GB iPhone 5 costs 649.00 USD at apple.com, at apple.com.au it's listed for 799 AUD which is a whooping 843.82 USD (using google for conversion), even if you can minus 10% for Australian sales tax, there is a 110 USD difference.

  9. Re:'Fair Use' is not sufficiently well defined on The Algorithmic Copyright Cops: Streaming Video's Robotic Overlords · · Score: 1

    "make copyright a flat 18 years for individuals and 5 years for corporations, with not extensions and a one year loss in term for each transferral of copyright (be it selling the copyright or merging/wholly owning the company)", that is the most sensible copyright suggestion I have ever seen. If I could mod up I would.

  10. Re:Copyrightable? on Open Source Beer Served Cold, With a Heated Licensing Discussion · · Score: 1

    I agree, broken the golden rule and read the article... This is insidious, Meir should not be able to force copyright on a beer recipe, protect the trademark, yes, but claiming copyright on a beer recipe is going too far.

  11. Brewers don't sue over recipes on Open Source Beer Served Cold, With a Heated Licensing Discussion · · Score: 2

    Beer recipes are generally not that secret, visit a brewery and you're generally shown the full process and ingredients. It's true that most don't give the recipe away, but if you know your brewing it's not hard to reproduce. If you get talking to a brewer and show some interest they'll point you in the right direction. I might be ignorant, but I've never heard of a brewer suing another brewer over a recipe or beer making process. Most brewers are happy to share. Yeast is another matter, many breweries closely guard their yeast, but others give it away.

  12. Re:What some people don't realise on Sir Tim Berners-Lee Accuses UK Government of "Draconian Internet Snooping" · · Score: 1

    Only takes one...

  13. Re:What some people don't realise on Sir Tim Berners-Lee Accuses UK Government of "Draconian Internet Snooping" · · Score: 1

    Timothy McVeigh and Anders Behring Breivik, both terrorists and both Christians, so by your "logic" we should watch Christians as well.

  14. Re:Sales Tax is the problem, not the solution. on Impending CA Sales Tax Sparks Amazon Buying Frenzy · · Score: 1

    Why was the parent comment modded as Troll? Seems to be fair comment, sales taxes are regressive taxes, the less you earn the greater percentage of your income you pay. Are the mods FoxNews fans?

  15. Re:Conspiracy or not on Did Sweden Pay Cambodia For the Pirate Bay Co-founder? · · Score: 1

    The South Americans may disagree with your version of history...

  16. Apple workers commit suicide, Apple patent is safe on Behind the Scenes With Samsung's Factory Workers · · Score: 1

    At least the Samsung workers don't need safety nets to stop them committing suicide. Glad to see Samsung is not infringing Apple's patent on suicide inducing labor conditions.

  17. Re:Begs the questions... on Australian Attorney General Pushes Ahead With Gov't Web Snooping · · Score: 2

    The two major parties are identical with these types of moves. The opposition will come from some sections of the media, but not the dominant Murdoch media, and The Greens and possibly some of the small right-wing parties.

  18. Re:Translation on Australian Attorney General Pushes Ahead With Gov't Web Snooping · · Score: 1

    Yes, copyright is one of the stated reasons for this draconian proposal.

  19. Re:That's not what it says at all... on Australian Attorney General Pushes Ahead With Gov't Web Snooping · · Score: 2

    You forget about ASIO, they will not require a subpoena, warrant or any form of court order. Once the data is stored it will be mined. Despite ASIO wiping up fear about terrorists, their main targets are political. ASIO targets environmentalists. The data retention is designed to strike fear into the general population, terrorists (if there are any) and criminals will use secure VPNs, Tor or what have you, to hide communications. The other target of this proposal is copyright infringement, mainly Bit Torrent users. There is no "HUGE" difference, if the data exists, it will be abused.

  20. Re:Speaking as an AV guy, this does not bode well on Iran and North Korea Team Up To Fight State-Sponsored Malware · · Score: 1

    To back up your points, 27C3: Adventures in analyzing Stuxnet (Bruce Dang from Microsoft). An amazing video where Bruce gives a blow by blow account of the discovery of Stuxnet and the measures that were taken to close the holes it exploited.

  21. Re:I don't see it on Windows Has a Future In RAM: AgigaTech Samples DDR3+Flash DIMM · · Score: 1

    OLTP database systems. The bottleneck for transaction systems is hardening transactions. It's the D in ACID (atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability). If you can harden a transaction in RAM, throughput will be amazing.

  22. Re:A good answer for a bad question? on Ask Slashdot: What Should a Unix Fan Look For In a Windows Expert? · · Score: 1

    If you can use PowerShell, you can pick up Perl and Python. Using standalone executables defeats the purpose of using a scripting language. Want to know what a script does? Open the script the file and read, no so with executables, doable, but not ideal. I really like Perl, and in a mixed OS environment, Perl makes sense. In a team of windows admins, it's tough call to expect all the team members to learn Perl, however PowerShell is an easy sell.

  23. Re:A good answer for a bad question? on Ask Slashdot: What Should a Unix Fan Look For In a Windows Expert? · · Score: 1

    I second that, ask if they like PowerShell. A windows admin that can script is a productive admin, an admin that has invested time in PowerShell is an admin that can adapt and possibly understands the windows environment well.

  24. Re:Sanity and a lack of mythos tentacles... on Ask Slashdot: What Should a Unix Fan Look For In a Windows Expert? · · Score: 1

    Asking someone how to query an Access database would frighten decent admins. "OMG they rely on Access in a production environment, nasty".

  25. Re:The PC is Dying on PC Makers In Desperate Need of a Reboot · · Score: 1

    No benefit in trying out the latest hardware? We now have disk subsystems that can almost match RAM for speed, they didn't exist 4-5 years ago. If you're doing serious development, that is a huge paradigm shift. Sure, if you're not writing multi-threaded applications or test harnesses or running various database systems, you could cruise by with old hardware. To make the assumption that just because you don't explore the new or have reason to push bounds that no-one else does, is ignorance and time wasting. Your attitude is identical to Bill Gates claiming that 640K of RAM is enough for anyone. Then there is gaming...