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User: BranMan

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Comments · 551

  1. Re:Naive optimism in headline on Photon Pair Coupled in Glass Fiber · · Score: 1

    What is wrong with all you people? Stop using the Internet for exchanging keys! Make a 2048 bit or so secret key, go and physically hand it to the person you want to communicate with, then encrypt to your hearts content - basking in the certainty that your communications is not being intercepted by said agencies.

    If 2048 does not seem strong enough, use more. At some point it becomes impossible to brute force crack it.

    Key exchange is the bane of security - STOP USING IT. Do NOT depend on it for anything important.

  2. Re:And it could be worse. on DoJ: Law Enforcement Can Impersonate People On Facebook · · Score: 1

    LOL - Well played sir, well played.

  3. Re:I have a Supra, and it's true on Which Cars Get the Most Traffic Tickets? · · Score: 1

    Just pull into the first place you see and park. Let him go off somewhere else..

  4. Re: I never thought I'd say this... on FCC Chairman: Americans Shouldn't Subsidize Internet Service Under 10Mbps · · Score: 1

    Exactly. Most people don't get it, but subsidies are our insurance policy for food. It makes sure it is always there, regardless of the market.

  5. Re:$1.1 Trillion over 54 years... on Cuba Calculates Cost of 54yr US Embargo At $1.1 Trillion · · Score: 1

    Hi Dave,
        Whew. Thanks for the reply. Have to take this one at a time - there is just too much. I'm afraid you have lived much too sheltered a life.

    Freedom of Religion - is very special, and it is not everywhere by any stretch of the imagination. Common across the world? Wow. Um... No. Iraq is falling apart due to a lack of this - people are killing each other over there in Sunni vs. Shiite violence. They are two sects of the Muslim religion, and everyone in Iraq thinks of themselves as Sunni or Shiite - not Iraqi. It is tearing them apart - to the brink of genocide. Look into it - please. The news media does a poor job of it.

    Also look into the persecution of Muslim immigrants in France - they were rioting because they were not allowed to get jobs - by the government. Look into the IRA - Catholic vs. Protestant in Ireland. Killing each other with bombs and machine guns just for being of the 'wrong' religion. Look into the background of the Puritans having to leave England in the 1600s (yes it was a long time ago) - can you even conceive of the level of DESPERATION of a religious group to leave everything they own and have ever known to embark on ships to reach a new land they have never seen to maybe, god willing, survive the journey, just to have a chance to live in peace and practice their religion? I know I can't.

    I use the examples above as France, England, Ireland seem very very close to what America is like. There are hundreds more examples all through history. I don't know - Crusades anyone?

    Freedom of Religion is very rare - rarer than it seems growing up in the US. Not unique to the US, but rare. Unique may be that we actually codified it into Law - the very Constitution itself.

    And no, I don't think American culture is this list of things - I think it is built on these things, like the foundation to a building. It is these basic things that helps make us different in the world, and allows us to do all the awesome things we do.

  6. Re:$1.1 Trillion over 54 years... on Cuba Calculates Cost of 54yr US Embargo At $1.1 Trillion · · Score: 1

    I will answer this as a serious question: What is American Culture? Complicated question - complicated answer:

    Nationalism - we started as a Nation - collection - of States. Roughly the size and specialization of European countries. Forming as a Nation we have changed from early days "I'm a Virginian!" to modern days "I'm an American!". This is in vast difference to the rest of the world - the old USSR never got this far as it never held together long enough, even though it too was a collection of States - there is no tribal-ism, there is no clan-ism, racial bigotry is minimal (there are those who would argue, but compared to the rest of the world that erupts in literal genocide from time to time, ours is nothing).

    Upward Mobility - by and large there is no constraint on individuals becoming successful. Gates is a billionaire, but so is Zimmerman. Refugees can come here with the clothes on their backs and little else and become successful business people. As a corollary to that we have homeless too.

    Rule of Law - The Law rules the land, and with some argument, covers all equally. Property rights are pretty much paramount - what is yours remains yours. We have exceptions to that that some would argue, and I agree there is no absolute. But the fact that those exceptions get such attention is because they are rare. And worth fighting against. If the government or a corporation wants to do something bad, they need to hide it. And be in a shit-storm if it comes out.

    Freedom of Religion - Pretty much a founding principal, and makes us one of the few places in the world there can be open talk of the FSM without fear of repercussions.

    Capitalism - Basically we have an economy that works by incentive (I do things to make money, then can spend it how I want) instead of direction. Greed is a great motivator and helps us work hard - cause it benefits us. Directly.

    Global Economic Interdependence - We NEED the world - the whole world - as we need materials that are scattered all over the planet. That is a big reason we are in everyone's business - we need to keep the oil, and wheat, and molybdenum, and rare earths, and everything else flowing everywhere, just so we can do all the things we do. So we work to keep the world stable (for us) as that benefits us (greed again - great motivator!) directly.

    How's that for a starter - fee free to add to the list.

  7. Re:Standing Desks? on 3 Short Walking Breaks Can Reverse Harm From 3 Hours of Sitting · · Score: 1

    One of my colleagues bought a standing desk from a Kickstarter. So search for that. About $100, all cardboard (and not flimsy - weights 20-30 pounds and he can sit on it without a problem)/

    Can't beat that price

  8. Re:I'm starting to wonder... on Taking the Ice Bucket Challenge With Liquid Nitrogen · · Score: 1

    Yep - darned right. Five gallon bucket full of water == 40 pounds. Lifted straight over your head, then twisted to dump it on you. Not the easiest thing in the world to do.

  9. Re:More, done watching on First US Appeals Court Hears Arguments To Shut Down NSA Database · · Score: 1

    Very. Well. Said Sir.

  10. Re:No, it wasn't. on Deputy Who Fatally Struck Cyclist While Answering Email Will Face No Charges · · Score: 1

    Actually the PO DID break traffic regulations - says so right in the summary. The reason he hit the biker is that the PO drifted into the bike lane. That is the infraction. He was distracted by his laptop, went out of his lane, and struck a biker who was in the correct lane. PO's fault, and it definitely should be negligent homicide.

  11. Living laboratory? on Saturn's F Ring Is Now Three Times As Wide As During the Voyager Flybys · · Score: 1

    This is a really interesting finding. So far as I know, even a lowly 3 body gravitational interaction cannot be exactly predicted. I'm wondering though - if enough high quality observations of the F-ring can be gathered over a period of years, is it possible to use them as a life-sized demonstration of the N-body gravitational solution? And could we curve-fit or otherwise reverse-engineer the paths of specific particles (or groups of them) to come up with (at least) better approximations for such N-body interactions?

    Now THAT would really be something.

  12. Re:Limits of Measurement on More Quantum Strangeness: Particles Separated From Their Properties · · Score: 1

    "This is the argument that Heisenberg used (yes, I've read his book)."

    Fine. But did you read it in the original Klingon?

  13. Re:Mars Direct - Unanswered? on Interview: Edward Stone Talks About JPL and Space Exploration · · Score: 1

    I just thought of an analogy that may be very fitting. Few know this, but the first submarines used in combat were built during the US Civil War (or WoNA, whatever floats your boat). It was possible, but incredibly dangerous, and more than one was lost entirely.

    Fast forward to WWI and WWII, where submarines were solid, dependable, and safe (to a large degree - not including combat of course). And on to the modern nuclear subs - downright luxurious in comparison.

    So, Space Flight was in the Civil War era with the Apollo missions to the moon - we could do it, just, and it was incredibly dangerous, and we nearly lost one (13). The Shuttles were more of WWI tech level - still really dangerous, but doable on a regular basis.

    We need to reach the stage in Space Flight analogous to nuclear subs, I think, before we can reach Mars. We just aren't there yet. And without wars to push the development (like it did subs) it may take a while.

    That's why Mars is 20 years away. Still.

  14. Re:Will no one think of the Irish Obama? on Washington Redskins Stripped of Trademarks · · Score: 1

    Why does everyone seem to think Obama is African-American? We have yet to elect an African-American president - and may never at this rate. Obama's mother is American. His father is African. That makes him the first African American president, with nothing at all in common with African-Americans. Historically, culturally, or genealogically

    Why does everyone overlook that?.

  15. Re:https on Google and Facebook Can Be Legally Intercepted, Says UK Spy Boss · · Score: 1

    Against the average Joe, fairly secure. Against the wrong people? Not even a speed bump. HTTPS works using Public Key encryption, not Secret Key encryption. That difference makes all the difference - Public key encryption is used to generate Secret keys, which are then used to pass information back an forth securely.

          The problem is that Public key only depends on mathematically hard problems to make is secure (it's a hard math problem to break it, but not anywhere near impossible) vs Secret key, in which the key is basically random, and can be made long enough (i.e. use enough bits) to be physically impossible to break, no matter what (though often fewer bits than that are used to make it faster). Public key also has part of it public (hence the name) and part private. If you know the private key - game over - 'cause the Public key is already out there, by design.

          Piled on top of that are Certificates that make sure you are using the right Public key to talk to who you want using encryption. Assume all the Certificates and Certificate Authorities (who vouch for them) have been compromised. Assume Public keys used by a lot of people have been broken (I'd include HTTPS to any well known group).

          Today? I'd assume HTTPS is not secure - at all. Kinda leaves you SOL though, so really we're stuck with it.

          Does that help?

  16. Re:Why your government is so corrupt and arrogant on Google and Facebook Can Be Legally Intercepted, Says UK Spy Boss · · Score: 1

    And to add insult to irony, even though both tomes are approaching 100 years in age, neither one has passed out of copyright protection into the public domain. Isn't THAT depressing?

  17. Re:Not ideal on Group Demonstrates 3,000 Km Electric Car Battery · · Score: 1

    I guess they call it a battery as the output from it is electricity, like a battery, not mechanical motion, like an engine.

  18. Only one? on Plastic Trash Forming Into "Plastiglomerate" Rocks · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that thought... Cool!

  19. They better leave early.... on Solar Impulse 2 Makes First Flight · · Score: 1

    I hope they take off in Jan. - at 30 kts the trip may take the whole year!

  20. Re:Blame the courts on Local Police Increasingly Rely On Secret Surveillance · · Score: 1

    Pray tell, good sir, what leads you to believe the formation of an Air Force is not constitutional?

  21. Re:Send it back.... on Declining LG's New Ad-friendly Privacy Policy Removes Features From Smart TVs · · Score: 1

    So don't just sit there - GO FIX IT.

    Please.

  22. Re:Computer Science is not IT and at times not cod on US College Students Still Aren't All That Interested In Computer Science · · Score: 1

    Edit it on your resume. Write it as Computer Science (Network Systems Administration). That way it matches the buzzword bingo and tells a real human what you have when they actually READ IT. (No pun intended)

  23. An answer to the Fermi Paradox? on Supermassive Black Hole At the Centre of Galaxy May Be Wormhole In Disguise · · Score: 1

    That does make for an interesting idea - if the center of every galaxy has wormholes, and every advanced civilization discovers this, and they can be used for travel.....

    Maybe the reason we have not seen any alien civilizations is that they all congregate towards the center of the galaxy. Then we would not see them because we are out towards the rim, in a backwater if you will.

    Makes for an interesting thought at least.

  24. Re:It is God. on Supermassive Black Hole At the Centre of Galaxy May Be Wormhole In Disguise · · Score: 1

    Who are you that is so wise in the ways of science?

  25. Re:As my houseboy always tells me on Ask Slashdot: Minimum Programming Competence In Order To Get a Job? · · Score: 1

    You are(,) number 6.