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User: ttucker

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  1. Re:CPU not compatible on Windows 10 Upgrade Strategies, Pitfalls and Fixes As MSFT Servers Are Hit Hard · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have a Windows 7 Pro virtualbox vm

    Full stop, it doesn't matter what chip the host system is running. You need to ensure that VirtualBox is providing all of the required features in the virtual processor.

  2. Re: Windows sounds easier to update than Debian. on Windows 10 Upgrade Strategies, Pitfalls and Fixes As MSFT Servers Are Hit Hard · · Score: 0

    "Victim" is the right word.

    Who is victimizing you? The unpaid volunteer maintainers of software that you also did not buy?

    Just don't upgrade if systemd is a major issue. Ubuntu will be maintaining 14.04 LTS for a long time.

  3. Re:Right ... on The Android L Update For Nvidia Shield Portable Removes Features · · Score: 1

    Nvidia is actually progressive in this. They could just as easily leave you with a 2 year old brick having a useless version of Android.

  4. Re:Secure Boot on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    Cross platform software is a very possible to write, but it requires commitment to a tool that supports it from the beginning. For example, with Java, it really will run anywhere. This is even possible with compiled code. Using C carefully with APIs that run everywhere (like GTK+ instead of WIN32 widgets).

    Some programs are just written in languages or using libraries that are toxic to portability, and the only option is to basically re-write them.

    All I am saying is give your programmers a break if they are maintaining code... some things are not as simple as hitting a switch to make portable. If portability is important, make it important during initial design and tool selection... not later.

  5. Re:Secure Boot on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    I'm a systems guy, knowing only enough programming to keep from being bullshitted by programmers. Andf teh idea that coding is too hard to do on anything but one platform is just that sort of bullshit.

    It kind of depends on what language it is written in... Cross platform is easy if you start with something that supports it well, but if you started with C# or some other .NET stuff, it would probably mean rewriting the turd, or at least porting it to a unsupported reverse engineered run-time.

  6. Re:Worst? Heh on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    Does XM Satellite radio count? It maxes out at 64kbps.

    Is XM satellite radio an internet streaming service?

    The internet is not involved in any way... hmmm.

    Streaming services allow for users to select songs and skip to any position... no XM can not do that either.

    XM does not even claim to be a streaming service, but instead a satellite based broadcast radio... that doesn't seem good.

    I have often noticed that XM sounded like crap though.

  7. Re:Worst? Heh on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    Ahh, the common call of the 'strawman' [...]

    Have you considered that this is only common in regards to your arguments? How many times is a coincidence?

  8. Re:I'm sure this isn't about Young vs Trump, right on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 2

    AM radio was restricted to 30khz channels even in its best days, which would mean a maximum frequency response of 15khz. Now it is even lower, something like 10khz. Pretty awful compared to the 22khz that can be expressed by modern digital audio stuff.

    Beyond that, AM is antique. It is vulnerable to multipath propagation, and the receivers generally have awful noise rejection.

    It would feel warmer because of the implicit low pass filter effect, and more natural because of the terrible SNR. It renders voice in a non-annoying way. Super low bitrate MP3 is poppy and twangy.

  9. Re:Worst? Heh on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 2

    Note very carefully that I never mentioned anything about comparisons, or anyone telling the difference between two codecs or signals.

    My interpretation is that you are making an argument that is weak, and that you are doing so by discussing situations where lossy encoding is clearly inferior as if they were relevant, when they are not.

    Presenting the opposition argument in an overly broad, narrow, or otherwise indefensible manner, is called the straw man fallacy.

    To rise above the standard of internet trolling, this discussion must consider formats and bitrates relevant to online streaming, and nothing else.

  10. Re:Worst? Heh on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 4, Informative

    To be perfectly fair, nobody is talking about bit rates that would be considered low in any universe.

    Most streaming services use at least 256kbps, and some use much more. Most streaming services use vastly superior codecs to MP3, such as Vorbis or AAC, that fully eliminate any rational complaint about lossy compression, even at low bitrates (which is irrelevant still, because we are literally only talking about extremely high bitrates).

    Nobody has made the claim that lossy compression never perceptively degrades quality. You argument is a straw man.

  11. Re:I'm sure this isn't about Young vs Trump, right on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    The whole quote is not on your side here, find it!

  12. Re:I'm sure this isn't about Young vs Trump, right on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    Personally, I find that hard to believe. Does he allow his music to be sold as non-streaming MP3s? Does he allow it to be played on FM radio? What about AM radio?

    Yes, he even considers AM radio better, which is provably false... using math!

  13. What about FM radio?!? on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    For my money, 320kbps Ogg Vorbis is just a *slight touch* better than cassette tapes!

  14. Re:Define Free - on Ask Slashdot: If Public Transport Was Free, Would You Leave Your Car At Home? · · Score: 1

    Free: Anyone can get on the bus at any time and use it as an air conditioned adventure ride. Probably the same people that used to stand beside the road.

  15. It would need to be fast, safe, and not infested with creepy weirdos. Free would probably only hurt all three of those things.

  16. Re:Reasons I'm not a judge. on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 1

    I agree that the idea of a ten year sentence is totally absurd, particularly considering the class of crime that you would then need to compare it to (ie. people actually died).

    It is unfair to imply that justice in the USA is absurdly excessive... people are tried and sentenced in a court of law, and not Slashdot comments, for a reason. For the misdemeanor charge here there is not even a minimum sentence!

    In the case of this guy, there must have been circumstances surrounding his extended stay in prison. Something is unsettling about the wanton but brutal nature of the crime.

  17. Re: Reasons I'm not a judge. on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Enforcement is a deterrent as well. When law enforcement has the capabilities to find these people, and district attorneys are willing to extradite people, this swatting thing will get much less popular.

  18. Re:Reasons I'm not a judge. on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 3, Informative

    There's a limit to how far "What might have been" goes in the criminal justice system.

    In Arizona, there is a rather precise limit, and it is a serious crime. Saying that section B is relevant seriously questions the restraint and professionalism of the raiding police officers, but a class 1 misdemeanor has a 6 month maximum sentence.

    13-1201. Endangerment; classification
    A. A person commits endangerment by recklessly endangering another person with a substantial risk of imminent death or physical injury.
    B. Endangerment involving a substantial risk of imminent death is a class 6 felony. In all other cases, it is a class 1 misdemeanor.

  19. Re:Reasons I'm not a judge. on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I guess that's the difference between viewing imprisonment as a correction vs. a punishment.

    In my book, the objective is to catch these guys consistently enough, and provide a serious enough sentence, that nobody else thinks it is a good idea.

  20. It didn't on How Television Is Fighting Off the Internet · · Score: 1

    This article just recounts the collective fantasy of some tv executives.

  21. Re:PDF link to PDF exploit on Security Researcher Drops 15 Vulnerabilities for Windows and Adobe Reader · · Score: 1

    I dropped Firefox because it is built on the carcass of an ancient browser

    And Chrome sprang fully-formed from the brow of its creator when they spake the word?

    Chrome is based on a rendering engine that was originally created by Apple in 2001. Webkit was a fork of KHTML, which was at the time a very short and cleanly written open source project. When Webkit began to impose crufty legacy problems on Chromium, a new fork was created with the intention of excising problem code. The Mozilla foundation got too comfortable with Firefox, and it is losing relevance quickly.

  22. Re:PDF link to PDF exploit on Security Researcher Drops 15 Vulnerabilities for Windows and Adobe Reader · · Score: 1

    If you'd ever bothered to actually pay attention to Mozilla's bug tracker or Firefox release notes then you'd understand how full of shit you really are. But who needs reality to get in the way of their fantasies?

    My opinion is formed basically entirely on asinine bugtracker comments from core developers. One of my biggest peeves is the reluctance and downright refusal to consider moving forward from NPAPI, even though it is one of the biggest security risks for web browsing.

  23. Re:Windows is a toy on Security Researcher Drops 15 Vulnerabilities for Windows and Adobe Reader · · Score: 1

    Where does OpenSSL fit into your story? No software is perfect, and assuming it is invites peril.

  24. Re:PDF link to PDF exploit on Security Researcher Drops 15 Vulnerabilities for Windows and Adobe Reader · · Score: 1

    I can trust my Okular software to view it. Can *you* trust your software? No? Then why are you still using it?

    Sounds like hubris.

  25. Re:PDF link to PDF exploit on Security Researcher Drops 15 Vulnerabilities for Windows and Adobe Reader · · Score: 2

    I dropped Firefox because it is built on the carcass of an ancient browser, and its developers are more worried about playing tech specification hardball than implementing features that are/will be needed.