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User: fyi101

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  1. Trusted Computing, going Full Retard on Retail Copies of Office 2013 Are Tied To a Single Computer Forever · · Score: 1

    What happens when the Powers that Be go full retard with Trusted Computing? I mean, why do people think the concepts in Secure Boot stop at the UEFI? Certainly you could easily expand the bootloader verification mechanism to verify the signature for ALL software... you could also tie the License Key to the computer's "Trusted Computer Unique cryptoID chip" or whatever, and then installing the thing in a VM ain't gonna work for shit. Like another commenter wrote, there's (almost, I would say) always a technical solution, but at some point it's just not practical, even less for the average (or even above average) user.

    What happens when using a VM'd or cracked copy of a program involves basically reverse engineering a microchip with an electron microscope, and just to run the program in a SINGLE computer?

    I guess at some point this will backfire for the likes of MS, Apple, etc., but today installing other OS's than WinRT in Surface (ARM) is the only limit (not to mention what Apple and "friends" do with tablets and cellphones), tomorrow only signed apps can be installed, the day after every PC works the same way 'cause only geeks give a shit and everybody else just wants convenience, and if the competent authorities stare into nothing with their thumb up their asses... I'm NOT entirely convinced they CAN'T get away with it...

  2. LEARN TO READ, ASSHOLES on When 1 GB Is Really 0.9313 Gigabytes · · Score: 1
    The article is Ed Bott's blog post, from February 9th, 2013, and it discusses this issue in the context of the "how much storage does the Surface actually have and does it matter" shennanigans, itself one example of the issues regarding accurate reporting of actual storage space in devices.

    The forum post is an example of people's previous discussion of the issue, which by the way (and this must be the millionth example of how computer geeks live in an echo chamber, where the iPod is lame and regular people's inability to deal with config files and scripts is surprising, I mean, everyone writes at least a couple of Perl scripts in their lives, ammirite or ammirite?), is NOT common knowledge for "normal" people, you know, non-nerds, and that is a problem for everyone including nerds.

    I'm no expert on the way /. works or should work, nor do I know if timothy is competent or not, and frankly right now I do not care. But before you proclaim (anonymously, how classy of you) that someone should get fired, you Anonymous Coward little prick, perhaps you should go back to school and LEARN TO READ. Then kindly DIAF.

  3. Re:Uruguay Fiber Optic Plan on Israel To Get Massive Countrywide Optical Upgrade · · Score: 1

    Here in the US we're going to see a 3rd world status in regards to networking by the end of our lifetimes (that is if it's not already that way yet).

    No, we are not. People and companies willing to pay for top-quality networking have access to it. The expectation that rural areas should get equal connectivity at the same cost as urban areas will always keep the average service below the average service in other countries that are willing to pay what it costs. But that is not 3rd world status.

    Besides, do you really think that fiber is going to be cutting edge by the end of our lifetimes? Maybe if you are old. I personally am holding out hope for cost-effective neutrino-based wireless communication, where the boundary of urban and rural makes no difference.

    HAHAHAHAHAA*gasp*HAHAHAHA I love this kind of brilliant satire, so close to a Poe. Here, lemme help you:

    "No, we are not. People and companies willing to pay for top-quality healthcare have access to it. The expectation that poor people should get equal access to healthcare at the same level of decent healthcare as rich folk will always keep the average service below the average service in other countries that are willing to pay what it costs. But that is not 3rd world status.

    Besides, do you really think that transplants are going to be cutting edge by the end of our lifetimes? Maybe if you are old. I personally am holding out hope for cost-effective Star Trek Teleporter regeneration, where the boundary of fantasy and reality makes no difference."

    HAHAHAHA Hey, if you think neutrino-based telecommunications is great, wait until they activate the Ansible! I just hope those damned Buggers don't find us. 10/10 Troll, Would laugh again

  4. Uruguay Fiber Optic Plan on Israel To Get Massive Countrywide Optical Upgrade · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here in Uruguay we are rolling out fiber optics for the entire country (3.5 million people approx.), with about 240,000 connections by now, and connections for all populated centers of 3500 homes and above by 2015. Price tag is about U$S 550 million. I think the plan is to replace the entire copper infrastructure in a few years. Each country is different, but in principle it's doable... (Of course we have the advantage of a state monopoly on wired telecommunications. Yes, I do mean advantage.) See http://www.elobservador.com.uy/noticia/236698/fibra-optica-un-plan-estrategico-de-us-550-millones/ use Google Translate for the Spanish-impaired.

  5. PARALAX! My favorite laxative... on Has 3D Film-Making Had Its Day? · · Score: 1

    For your parallax problems: your eyes won't pop out of your sockets from the strain anymore!

  6. GAH!! where is were... /EOM on Has 3D Film-Making Had Its Day? · · Score: 1

    Grammar poop!

  7. They killed F@#$%ING BRIGHTNESS! on Has 3D Film-Making Had Its Day? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What about the big effing elephant in the room: BRIGHTNESS? One of the things Cristopher Nolan doesn't like about 3D is that the polarized filters in the projector and glasses kills about 2/3 of the original brightness, and they didn't triple the luminance (or whatever) of the projectors to compensate. Everytime I see a 3D flick I feel like I'm going friggin' blind: some scenes in Avengers where apparently made for blind people (w/ dialog only), 'cause the only 5 things I could see where Capn' 'Merica, Thor, Loki, Jack, and Shit. Remember Avatar The Last Airbender? Might as well have been a BBC Radio Show like The Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy for all people cared.

    What's the point of 3D when I'm seeing more details in the 2D version? We get 90% of depth information from 2D anyway, plus the 3D effects are fscking unnatural: hey is that the Avengers Airplane flying over the ocean, or a TOY AIRPLANE LEVITATING OVER A BUCKET? 'Cause I didn't know I could see stereoscopically that far, with the paralax and all...

  8. OH LOOKIE!! GOOD NEWS EVERYONE!!1one! on Draft of IPCC 2013 Report Already Circulating · · Score: 1

    Overall, hardly a doomsday scenario.

    Look Ma! "Only" 3 degrees rise! Less strong storms, some more rain over here, some less rain over there... I'm sure farmers can just move, and populations will freely follow, with our current situation of open borders worldwide and such... I guess now the IPCC is no longer the CENTER OF THE ILUMINAT--er... CLIMATE CHANGE CONSPIRACY, now it's a reputable scientific report, yeah I think we can *cough* spin *cough*, I mean clearly demonstrate the "change" in "climate change" to be nothing but a small nuisance, why, less strong storms? Maybe it's an improvement! Except, you know, the part about coastal regions... But it's not like some of the most economically important cities are located near the coast, no siree... I mean, what's a meter more in rise than previously expected? Like 3 feet, right? No biggie.

  9. Re:Handing the Internet's control to the UN eh? on ITU Approves Deep Packet Inspection · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This might surprise you, but the United Nations is a big organization, and different parts of it act and think in different ways, sometimes with great disagreements. In fact, that's the whole purpose of the UN: to gather all this people together in one place and make them lob disagreements at each other instead of grenades. Just because one organization associated to the UN misbehaves doesn't mean the World Government is out to get you. Your comment about the UN's "true colours" betrays somewhat of a misconception of the way things work there. It's messy like all human things, but if you don't like the UN, just wait until the world drops any pretense of working together for a unified civilization, and the dictators participating in the Human Rights Commission leave it and drop any pretense of caring for them, then things will get really fun (at least now they admit Human Rights exist and pay lip service to them, that alone is already an ideological victory, which is more important that you might think).

  10. Re:Do we have any credible on Scientific American's Fred Guterl Explores the Threats Posed By Technology · · Score: 1

    Repeat after me: the absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence [wikipedia.org]

    A phrase often ritually quoted by people whithout thinking about it first. I believe it was here in Slashdot that I read a comment to the effect of: "YES, YES IT IS. Absence of evidence is not PROOF of absence, but it certainly is EVIDENCE of it". I can't help but to concur, although I think this can stem from the ambiguousness of the word "evidence" (evidence as proof, or evidence as something that increases the probability of truth for a prediction). Failing to detect something can mean simply that the instrument or method used were inadequate, but as "failures to detect" pile on, scientists who predict said observation can begin to get nervous, and rightly so. Sometimes a prediction is tied to a well tested theory, and it's more reasonable to wait for further studies than to dismiss the theory altogether, but eventually the observation is made (or the failure of the prediction is ratified) or the theory can't be considered to be falsifiable, and is therefore unscientific.This (in my opinion) mistake is the reverse of another often misused phrase "Correlation is not causation", that is: "The presence of evidence is not evidence of presence" (I'd say: Yes, it is, it's just not PROOF of presence).

  11. I should add that I myself am an atheist, but one that respects the beliefs of the religious. I can name many religious people who are intelligent, tolerant, and open-minded.

    See, I don't get that. I respect the religious, and the religious' right to having their beliefs, I just don't see why I have to respect their beliefs. I understand the line between skepticism and prejudiced denialism is hardest to see for those who have crossed it, but it's hard to trust the good faith of your criticism when you throw blanket statements like that, mischaracterizing skepticism as simply "critical examination of fringe science", labeling everyone now claiming to adhere to skepticism as a troll... Although, it's great that you are skeptic about skepticism and the people who claim to be skeptics, which along being skeptic about one's own skepticism are both important requirements for properly being a skeptic to begin with, which is more a philosophy of life than the glorified peer review you make it out to be.

    Einstein wasn't religious at all. He did believe in God, but his notion of the deity was pretty abstract.

    I suppose it can be argued that it all hinges and the meaning of the word "believe", but aside from that, what can I get away with calling "God"? Truth, Liberty, Love, Free Speech, the Right to Property, Gravity? At some point saying that someone "believes in God" because they apply that label to something simply becomes an easy cop out. eg.: Christians who say "God is Love" don't stop at that, and at some point have to profess their specific devotion to Jesus Christ as their savior. If I can pick and choose the meaning of "believe" and "God", then "I believe in God" becomes some sort of tautology, everyone "believes in God":

    10 LET BELIEVE_IN$ = "Adhere to the philosophical principles of"

    20 LET GOD$ = "Skepticism/Atheism"

    30 PRINT "I " + BELIEVE_IN$ + GOD$

  12. Encyclopedia Dramatica on Wikipedia Is Nearing "Completion" · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm completely devastated about the current state of Wikipedia, just like you, I hate all this bureaucratic crap. That's why I take all my factually correct information from Encyclopedia Dramatica, where the asylum is running the inmates. Why have bureaucracy when you can have "bureaucrazy"?

    But seriously, do you expect something as vast and ambitious as Wikipedia to exist without a somewhat intimidating rulebook? I'm not saying Wikipedians shouldn't be more welcoming or helpful, or that they're not, perhaps the problem is related to the way the site is structured. It's not easy for newcomers to find their way around the place, or around the people.

  13. Re:And the real crime... on Analytics Company Settles Charges For User Tracking · · Score: 1

    Huh? What does not taking obvious loser cases have to do with this? And since when does knowing you can win a case mean you are taking advantage of the plaintiffs? I mean, if it's so "clear cut", they can surely "shop around" for lawyers then... The plaintiffs are not going to win this without some good legal advice anyway, are they?

    By the way, "Never take a case you know you won't win" contradicts your sig: "We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower" (I'm sure the context for the quote is different, but still...)

      And who decides what a "clear cut case" is? Setting the fees at 10-15% of the awards for all cases pretty much kills the posibility of many people succeding in cases where the legal expenses are high and they can't afford it, and if you think the problem is (not quoting you, just defining) "clear cut cases where the lawyers know they'll win and take home an easy paycheck", trying to codify into law what a "clear cut case" is involves putting the cart before the horses, I believe. It pretty much collides directly with habeas corpus, doesn't it? It involves deciding the case before there's even a trial... I'm pretty sure the defendants wouldn't consider it so "clear cut".

    The plaintiffs did indeed win "a" victory, as you put it. They burned a hole in the defendant's pocket, didn't they? And they showed a succesful strategy towards hitting them again where it hurts, if the defendant again breaks the law. I don't think arguing the results are unfair without clearly explaining exactly why they're unfair, providing an alternative, and showing how the alternative doesn't result in more injustice, is constructive.

  14. REFRIGERATOASTER on Apple CEO Likens Surface To Car That Flies, Floats · · Score: 1

    Cook: refrigeratoaster, buwahahaha
    luser1: A toaster AND a refrigerator? BY JOVE THIS IS BRILLIANT
    luser2: Small freezer, only makes 2 toasts at a time. Lame.
    If I'm to go by Apple's past behavior, expect the iRefrigeratoaster on Q2, 2013.

  15. Re:And the real crime... on Analytics Company Settles Charges For User Tracking · · Score: 1

    I always see all this outrage about lawyers fees at Slashdot, and how the plaintiffs get just a fraction, and how this should be made illegal, etc. Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the case many times that the lawyers bare the cost of the lawsuit (sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars or more in legal and evidence investigation, staff, expert testimony, etc.) and therefore the risk, and if they lose they get nothing? I mean it's peachy and everything if they WIN and they get 10-15% and the plaintiffs the rest, but what if they lose?
      I'm sure many lawyers abuse the system, but I sure wouldn't put so much of my own money on the line if the payoff isn't worth it or the risk I end up ruined is extremely high (spare me any "sacrifice for justice" bull****. YOU go be a martir with your own money). If I'm not mistaken, some lawyers HAVE ended up ruined after losing a case.
    And even if they didn't end up ruined, what's wrong with these fees atracting top notch legal talent to the case and kicking some corporate butt? I'm not sure how a mandatory fee limit of about 10-15% to cover ALL expenses (say, about 60,000 dollars for this case) is going to help the plaintiff get good legal representation. Does a plaintiff really have to get 250,000 dollars to feel vindicated about some cookie tracking? I would think winning the case and hurting the company in its pocket would be 90% of the vindication...

    <sarcasm>But anyway, the important thing is that the lawyers are getting too much money, which is preventing all these companies from getting away with their illegal activities-- er, I mean preventing the plaintiffs from getting their money... yeah, that's the ticket! It's not that I have a thing against lawyers or anything...</sarcasm>

  16. Re:ideas of what a robot is on African Robotics Network Challenge Spurs Rash of $10 Robots · · Score: 1

    I wasn't commenting on the intentions, I was refering to the food aid that you pointed out as the presumed culprit of African woes. I was saying that the results you see may have a lot more to do with unfair market competition than with food aid, and that removing food aid while ignoring the flooding of markets with subsidized food from the 1st World could mean starving populations, without actually solving anything.

    Having to compete with cheaper is just as bad as having to compete with free, farmers can't sustain themselves, employ others, and no one can pay for food.

  17. Re:ideas of what a robot is on African Robotics Network Challenge Spurs Rash of $10 Robots · · Score: 1

    I was under the impression that 1st World subsidized food production was a much bigger problem for African farmers, by way of the Western World dumping millions of tons of cheap food into the markets and making it impossible for them to compete; you make it sound as if the "good intentions" of the 1st World is what's causing the damage, I think it's a bit more depressing/sinister/insert-cynical-consideration-of-the-way-the-world-works. Perhaps you can correct me on this.

    The worst part is that the subsidies don't even help the small-to-medium 1st World farmers anymore, if I'm informed correctly. Most of the money goes to farming Megacorps.

  18. Re:Back to School on When a Primary Source Isn't Good Enough: Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    Who the FUCK is this Wikipedia person? Is he/she an embodied human encyclopedia? Or perhaps the website now has a mind of its own? (Hello Skynet! Happy John Connor hunting!) Wikipedia is edited by thousands, all of them fallible human beings, with different motivations, and some of them are idiots and/or assholes. There's no "They". It's not a fucking conspiracy. Some articles are properly handled, others are handled by somewhat obtuse people. Quoting Will Smith in "Independence Day": "Welcome to Earf!".

    No human work is perfect, specially when it's the collective work of hundreds of thousands. The only agenda I see is your agenda to portray the common pitfalls of Open Development and the people who participate (and their mistakes) as some Grand Conspiracy against the Truth ("They have their own AGENDA! Truth be damned! WHARGARRBL!).

  19. Spanish slang problems on HP Launches Beta of Open webOS · · Score: 1

    The webOS GUI is interesting. Too bad the project's name sounds like spanish slang for "testicles" (huevos). I suggest a name change to "kohOneS". At least it'll sound intimidating to iOS and Android fanboys.

  20. Re:No on Would You Pay an Internet Broadband Tax? · · Score: 1

    You cannot reasonably claim a Right to be given a service for free.

    Define "free" (nice semantic strawman by the way), because I think parent is quite aware of the fact nothing is "free" in the sense that resources don't magically appear out if thin air.

    As there is no such thing as anything for free,

    Yes there is, relative to individuals and subgroups, although (sometimes) not relative to the entire economic system. This is like people who refuse to believe entropy can decrease in some physical systems (open ones) just because the entropy of the whole universe inexorably increases.

    Also, remember the economy is NOT A ZERO SUM GAME (jeez). Just because somebody gets something "for free" paid with your taxes, doesn't mean you're not winning something in the process too.

    what you're really demanding is that the government use force of arms to take from one set of people and give to another.

    You mean parent demands the government be, you know... a government? Give some balance to things that are subject to arbitrary events and chance? Anyway, I'm really sorry you are burdened with paying for services such as Police, that you probably don't use that much. I happen to live in a country where people are "forced" to pay towards maintenance of our Fire Departments, and firefighters watching your house burn down and doing nothing because you failed to pay your "Fire Department subscription" or something like that, in a town where people don't think paying taxes for a FIRE DEPARTMENT is worth it (google it) is the stuff of distopian nightmares in fantasy books, not something to look forward to. We all like it that way.

    And people wonder why the EU is falling apart financially....

    AGAIN with the myth that Welfare is what broke Europe's back... At this point, why do you guys even bother complaining about Bank bailouts and Wall Street scammers not being in prison? I mean, if you're going to blame the safety net that keeps you from taking a nosedive onto concrete, instead of the Finance Industry guys playing with everybodys money, you might as well just stop complaining and take it up the ass like a man. I'm always fascinated how Moral Hazard arguments "obviously" apply to Social Safety Nets (which work) but they're only a technicality when we are talking about destructive global financial practices (which don't work).

  21. Re:Who really cares? on Doctorow on the War on General Purpose Computing · · Score: 2

    I just want things to work.

    Why are "Things just working" and "General Purpose Computing" in opposition? You see, that's just the thing. After a certain point of adding and adding restrictions, things will just "not work". I mean, you said it yourself regarding iPhones:

    ...its working is binary; either it works perfectly, more or less easily, or it doesn't work at all...

    I can understand how this "seems" to be a nice thing (maybe if iPhones where 20 bucks a unit, and you could buy them from a vending machine along with a sandwich)

    After all, if you work for your machines, who owns who?

    You imply that the choice is "(in Soviet Russia) you work for machine" xor "machine works for you", when it's more along the lines of "you work for YOUR machine" xor "you work for THEIR machine". In any case, this is all nothing but empty expressions. I think there is a balance between "just works" and "tinker ready". I don't see how this things are mutually exclusive, if users are sufficiently warned about the problems of tinkering. Are we talking about "walled gardens" or "walled prisons"? Real walled gardens are supposed to protect from intrusion and protect children from wandering off, not protect from entry and preventing everyone from escaping. The good thing is that the nature of general purpose computing means putting TRULY EFFECTIVE limits on certain activities almost certainly means crippling the machine in some important way. The bad news is... that the nature of general purpose computing means putting TRULY EFFECTIVE limits on certain activities almost certainly means crippling the machine in some important way. And given the nature of computers as an extension of ourselves (like all tools), this means crippling OURSELVES.

    Windows 7 just works.

    Inigo Montoya:You keep implying that Windows 7 is an example of "tinker proof walled garden". I don't think you're implying what you think you're implying...