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User: tlhIngan

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  1. Re:What's the point? on LibreOffice Ported To Run On Wayland · · Score: 5, Insightful

    HELL, while you idiots were sleeping the entire rest of the world (minus Apple) warmed up to the idea of remote desktop technology. If you are bound and determined to gut that, then you are giving Linux a competitive disadvantage and setting it back 20 years.

    Sure, remote desktop rocks. But they also are superior to X. For example, if your network connection burps, you don't lose your f'in work. Because the app runs locally and is displayed remotely and is completely independent on the network.

    Sure remote X is great, I use it all the time. But I'm also aware that if I start a long-running process, I need to use screen to keep it alive, because now I'm depending on three things - the Linux machine hosting the app, the network, and my desktop PC showing me the app. That's a recipe for fragility in the whole thing.

    Perhaps you don't use remote X for things that take hours to run, or don't mind losing all your work because you forgot to save and now the network connection reset. That's fine and great. But some people do, and really, X is pretty deficient compared to the rest of the remote desktop protocols out there. Even VNC.

    Remote X is great, but it's time to modernize it and put features that every other remote desktop system has.

  2. Re:Valasek and Miller are assholes and should be a on Remote Exploit On a Production Chrysler To Be Presented At BlackHat · · Score: 1

    I'd still rather have them do THIS when the systems aren't too popular than have some random swatter roll a minivan with 5 kids because he mistyped the IP address of the guy who just beat his speedrun. (Where "THIS" is a controlled test.)

    And what if the random swatter T-boned you in your car?

    Sorry, public roads are not for "testing". There's a reason why car ads all say "Professional drivers on a closed road" - because you can seriously injure someone else.

    Hell, these security researchers not only put themselves at risk, their entire occupation, DEFCON and anyone else a decent lawyer can say was the cause of it (including GM).

    Is it a problem? Yes, a serious one.
    But you don't have to put the general public at risk to demonstrate it.

    You can demonstrate the problem just fine in a closed controlled environment, like say a parking lot. In fact, it may even be more impressive, without scaring the crap out of the driver OR the drivers around him.

    In fact, you can even demonstrate it without a driver - override the brakes so you keep the car stopped, have the driver get out, then drive around. A nice, safe, controlled manner that turns it from "security researchers who put everyone's lives at risk" to "security researchers demonstrate they can take over any GM vehicle...".

    How you tell the story is just as much as important as what you tell. Do it the wrong way and the how can easily overpower the what.

    They're just lucky nothing bad happened, because the message would be quite a bit different if someone got in an accident, and DEFCON would go from "security researchers meeting" to "hackers like Anonymous set to destroy the world" in the mind of the public.

  3. Re:$805M budget on Smithsonian Using Kickstart Campaign To Save Armstrong's Moon Suit · · Score: 1

    You could think up many possibilities as to why this is, and I'm sure that a lot of it is waste due to medical businesses (e.g. insurers) being run for-profit. But I think it's pretty clear to all sane people that you don't just cut funding and hope everything works out.

    Actually, a lot of it IS dealing with insurers.

    In a single-payer system like in Canada, you bill the government for every patient. In out, easy. It's estimated the paper handling costs for this are around $20K or so per year for doctor's office - be it a single doctor, a partnership, or whatever. Just a standard doctor's office.

    But in the US, where you have to deal with non-payers, and dozens of insurance companies each with their own idiosyncrasies in billing and what is actually covered, it takes roughly $60-80K to deal with all that paperwork.

    So yes, there's a lot of waste in the system, and it's not just because insurance companies are making a profit (guess what - in Canada, you can by extended health insurance that covers above and beyond what is "free" - e.g., vision and dental care, private or semi-private wards at the hospital, etc).

  4. Re:They're worthless. on Why Certifications Are Necessary (Even If Aggravating To Earn) · · Score: 1

    While those lights on keyboards are technically outputs, they're only indicators and you won't be outputting actual data with them. Not with standard hardware anyway.

    Incorrect. The state of the lights on a keyboard are independent of the actual keyboard state.

    When you hit caps lock, num lock, or scroll lock, 2 key codes are sent from the keyboard to the computer - one for key down, one for key up. The computer processes it and updates its internal keyboard state tables. The processor then writes to the keyboard to tell it turn the LED on.

    The keyboard controller does not, nor does the keyboard, update the LED without the main CPU being involved. It's a great way to test if your OS is actually working (because if the LEDs don't update, it means the main OS crashed or is too busy to handle keyboard input).

    Linux uses them to indicate it's panicked as well - if all the LEDs blink, it means the kernel has halted.

    But they are fully software controllable and you can use them as an input and an output mechanism. Perhaps use it to show status of something, for example.

  5. Re:.NET patches = job security on Microsoft Officially Releases Visual Studio 2015 and .NET 4.6 · · Score: 1

    Companies won't adopt 10 in large groups for quite awhile. That coupled with zero day vuln's which are bound to happen, it'll be patch Tuesday every day! Don't forget a brand new browser too.. After all today MS15-078 another zero day, critical was released out of band. Let chaos reign.

    Corporate PCs don't use Patch Tuesday. They get all the patches and the PCs update themselves from WSUS or other software update mechanism.

    Only home PCs update themselves willy-nilly. Corporate PCs have had the ability to schedule and approve updates.

    You can blame Google for this one by having their inflexible 90-day bug disclosure thing release details on a bug that was being patched in a few days. Yes, Microsoft had fixed it, scheduled it for Patch Tuesday, and boom, Google tells all a few days prior.

    So yeah, thank you Google for now getting Microsoft to host our PCs every day, instead of just the second Tuesday of the month.

  6. Re:Translation on Apple Watch Still Waiting On App Developers · · Score: 2

    Apple Watch is still a solution in search of a problem.

    No, the problem is real, just artificial.

    The problem is that people are buying big-ass phones with big-ass screens, which is great if you're playing videogames or watching movies. However ,they didn't buy a game console or a media player, they bought a phone.

    And then they realize just how inconveniently big it is if you want to stay in touch or in the loop. So now they can't put their phone in a convenient location, so they put it in their bag, or one of the few pockets on their clothes that are big enough, which tend to be out of the way.

    Which makes it really hard to get to, for someone who must check for texts on a minute-by-minute basis (FOMO - fear of missing out). So they demand a solution, and we've got smartwatches to solve it. No more FOMO - the smartwatch will tell them when they get a text, or a like on facebook, or a tweet or dozens of other things so they don't have to dig out their phone unless they absolutely have to.

    Most people though, just buy a phone of the right size to begin with, seeing how the 6"+ is beautiful, but results in something unusuably large. This is a particular problem in Asia, where numbers rule, so they buy 6" phones because 6" is better than 5.5". (iPhone sales stats have it around 1:6 ratio of iPhone6+ to iPhone6 in North America, which drops to around 1:3 in Asia)

  7. Re:nothing new under the sun on Affair Site Hackers Threaten Release of All User Data Unless It Closes · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd be really surprised if the actual hacker(s) really had any moral stance one way or another. My money would be be on just pure financial greed. They see AM and it's customers as a paycheck. They see AM as a source of money and are applying pressure directly on them to pay up and/or shut down. They also pressure subscribers to pressure AM from the other side to pay up to not reveal their information.

    In the end I think it will be a loss for the hackers and customers. The hackers aren't going to get their money. AM takes a PR hit but doesn't really care because they already run a website for people with questionable ethics/morality. Customers info might get released, but for the 3 people that are actually real, married, and their partner doesn't already know, the shit might hit the fan. For everyone else, no one cares. And if you're a paying subscriber to a cheating website with your own real information, you're already a fucking idiot and get what you deserve for being a dumbass.

    Actually, you're underestimating the impact. The information you have on AM would be perfect for blackmail. And I'm sure you can find some rather large and high-powered people to whom the release of information like that could be deadly - either professionally or politically.

    You might think everyone having an affair is doing so with their spouse's full knowledge, but that's unlikely to be the case. I'm sure a tiny percent of those are in open marriages, and maybe a slightly larger proportion are doing so with the spouse's knowledge.

    AM is not for people "dating" or "looking for a companion" - they're specifically for people already in a marriage to commit adultery. And this isn't the sort of "let's just get a prostitute" thing either.

    So yes, the release of information is potentially devastating, and a good proportion of those marriages will end in divorce, while the others will probably end up with said spouse being a slave.

    There may be no money request now, but I'm sure once the offer to shut down is refused, the hackers will be contacting everyone one of those 37M people and asking them for say, $10/month to keep quiet. Not too much to bother police about, see, but enough for a large and steady income.

    And yes, the amount is important - ask for too much and the "punishment" for revealing you're an adulterer is probably not as bad. Make it a small amount and most people will just pay for the silence.

    Heck, even the hint of a potential affair will drive some marriages on the rocks. Even if there was no one night fling - just having your spouse know you were looking puts you in the doghouse of distrust. (And no, this isn't gender specific - men AND women who were cheated on are equally vindictive to their partners).

    I know when I first saw the ads on TV (regular mainstream TV, I know AM has been around a long time, but their profile has been quite low), I knew they would be a perfect hacking target.

  8. Re:Yes, you ARE stupid on Internet Dating Scams Target Older American Women · · Score: 1

    Much as hate to appear victim-blaming, even an utter polyanna-style naÃvette would've ended at $3,000. Beyond that, it is stupidity.

    "He" (and am not at all sure, there is an identifiable "he" to this scam â" more likely a work of an enterprise) is a crook and should be hung alive by his rib on a rusty hook. But, boy, the lady is stupid...

    Yet people throw billions, if not trillions of dollars away in "gambling" every year.

    And we're not talking "let's spend $20 on the slots to pass the time for fun", it's "let's spend $2,000 to turn it into profit". Hence why I said "gambling" and not "gaming" or "entertainment". (If you want to know why slots are called "gaming" machines, that's why - they're for entertainment).

    So yeah, that would include a lot of "intelligent" people who play the lotto or go to a casino for anything other than fun. So I guess we're pretty much all stupid because face it, few people actually win. Especially in the end since those that win small usually gamble it away again.

    This lady fell for a scammer in the same way billions of people fell for the scan of get-rich-quick.

  9. Re:Expansion / Contraction? Damage? on Plastic Roads Sound Like a Crazy Idea, Maybe Aren't · · Score: 1

    Will they be have to be melted together to prevent cracks between segments for weatherproofing against rain, snow and ice? (Water expands when frozen, remember)

    Actually, modern road construction pretty much demands that all water drain through the road, rather than just drain to the side. The reason is that if water collects on the surface (which it does even when the road is peaked as they should be), it can form ice and you end up with black ice during the cold days.

    It also makes the road shiny and makes your headlights reflect away from you, making it even harder to see the road markings on those rainy days.

    By peaking and making the asphalt drainable, the water doesn't collect on the surface, so you avoid black ice and the road appears drier in the rain so you can see the lane markings and other things much easier.

    It does, however, lead to pothole issues as the aggregate bed below it shifts more. But it's one reason why modern paved roads are far quieter (the airiness also does a number to reduce tire noise), and far easier to drive on.

    It happened quite recently, so you can still see the difference - parts of the road are nasty and hard to see and slippery, while other parts are quiet, easy to see and has good grip, In the same weather conditions.

  10. Formalizing the meritocracy a bit: How about a "consumers' union" [no relation to the org/mag] website that works like a central clearing house:

    - Any member can post a boycott request, with an explanation as to why: bad product, invasive advertising (popups, etc.)
    - Members upvote the request by signing on to the boycott
    - No downvotes to prevent astroturfing by the advertisers
    - With enough votes, all members agree to boycott the product/advertiser for the given period (say 1-5 years)

    Why not just stop buying ANYTHING then? Apple products will be the first boycott (yay Apple haters). Followed by Samsung, HTC and other Android products (yay Apple fanbois). Then we'd have boycotts of Nokia products (yay Microsoft haters), Etc. etc. etc.

    That's the problem - "the wisdom of the masses" is really quite dumb. We've seen this through Google bombing (every one of those "type blah into Google then click "i'm feeling lucky"" is an example), reddit (if you have an unpopular opinion, you're going to get downvoted to obvlision), even /..

  11. Re:Watchout for statistics on Famed Aircraft Designer James Bede Dies · · Score: 1

    The BD-5 will always be there, even when the last one is scrapped or hung-up in a museum, as inspiration to the young future aerospace engineer. RIP Jim Bede. Not a perfect airplane guy, but always pushing to make things better for aviators while others went with the mainstream flow.

    Well, don't despair - others have taken inspiration from the BD-5J and created their own version.

    The only difference is it might actually be flyable.

  12. Often, employees can get the WORST of both worlds...if they are hired as a W2 employee of the contracting house (usually the prime) of a federal gig. Yes you get some benefits, but you don't get the pay and freedom of a full blown contractor.

    OTOH, the employer has to pay payroll taxes of the employee, there's paid time off, etc. And well, the person doesn't have to seek out work when the contract's running out (because of the way things work, an independent contractor has the obligation to seek additional work to provide "independence" - you cannot have your contract renewed over and over again otherwise you can get classified as an employee.

    All that is why contractors are paid more money - because instead of benefits and perks, all that is cashed out. You take time off - you don't get paid, so you're paid more to compensate for that. The contracting company doesn't pay payroll taxes on you - that's now your responsibility, etc.

    Of course, the downside is you're cashing out your perks. If you're taxed at 25%, that means your paid time off is now taxed. So instead of taking 8 hours off, you got cashed out 8 hours, and effectively were paid for 6 hours.

  13. Re:Avoidable? on Google Self-Driving Car Rear-Ended In First Injury Accident · · Score: 2

    It's good that Google's autonomous cars haven't caused any accidents, however the bigger question is if there was a human driver in those situations, would any of them have been avoidable? I try to keep an eye on vehicles coming to a stop behind me when I'm stopped, which is something the Google cars may not be programmed to do (or even have rear-facing sensors to detect that at all). I'm sure these vehicles are safer than a good many drivers on the road, but they can only react and respond in ways they were specifically designed for.

    May be avoidable if you're a top-tier driver who leaves sufficient gap ahead of you for such things (my driving class taught me to leave a 3-4 car gap between you and the car in front, narrowing it as traffic builds behind you), so you have the ability to maneuver - either changing lanes or simply using it as absorption space in a crash (or moving forward a bit to give a bit more distance for the guy behind to stop).

    But you're talking top tier drivers. Average Joe probably will be just on their phone not looking out for traffic, ahead or behind. And most drivers don't pay attention to their rear view mirrors while stopped, either - if not on their phone, they'll just be looking ahead at the light.

    And given an accident like this, it's even harder to debate as it appears people don't even look far enough ahead while driving.

  14. Re:Northeast winters on Google Self-Driving Car Rear-Ended In First Injury Accident · · Score: 1

    I'd be curious to see how it responds to really weird northeast conditions like a snow squall or black-ice. Or my personal favorite, when it's really snowing and you need to make sure you're stopped in a good spot that you can get traction once you can start moving again

    The problem is that people drive entirely way too fast - when conditions are bad, you don't want to go fast. Especially in snow and ice - changing your velocity (accelerating or braking) is hazardous and should be avoided.

    Autonomous cars also have a greater sense of slippage than humans - tires work because the road doesn't move underneath them - and anyone with basic physics knows the coefficient of kinetic friction (slipping) is lower than the coefficient of static friction. What that means is the instant you detect slippage, you stop powering that wheel because once it slips, it will continue to slip - you have to slow down the wheel until the speeds match again.

    It is one situation where sometimes the automatic "creep" is actually useful since creep is typically slow enough that you can get going. And you shouldn't be driving to fast anyways because stopping will require an equally gentle slowdown. Too many people try to do regular speeds and that's what leads to issues.

  15. Re:*Sigh*...I miss the simple cars of yesteryear.. on Toyota Recalls 625,000 Hybrid Vehicles Over Software Glitch · · Score: 1

    You have got to be kidding. Yes, those cars were easy to work on, they had to be as they required constant service. Ever wonder why all the 'service stations' became 'mini-marts'? Because new, electronically-controlled, cars no longer provided the steady cash stream that all that mechanical crap did.

    I remember when I was a kid in the 60s that a big part of the family vacation budget was 'get the car ready.' Going on any trip of more than a few hundred miles meant 'major tuneup' - points, plugs, distributor cap, rotor, idle adjustments, etc. And of course it had to be done ahead of time, because there was a fairly good chance that something would not be right and it would have to go back.

    My current car has 102K miles on it, and the only service it has ever required is fluid and belt changes.

    Exactly.

    Today's modern car got to be "twist and go" - you insert key, twist, and car is running. Doesn't matter if it's -40C or +40C (let's say -40F to 100F).

    Hell, you can even put the wrong octane gas and it'll still work! (if it needs premium, you can put in a tank of regular and it won't kill itself from knock/preignition). The computer handles it just fine. And while not wholly recommended, normal consumer level cars that say they need mid-grade often run just fine on regular (I won't do it to say, a BMW, but a Toyota or Honda? Sure).

    Plus, starting the car after it's been running for a while doesn't result in vapor lock.

    And let's not forget all things mechanical are perfect, for more than one automatic transmission has needed recall because a hole was 1/32" an inch too small. (The hole was in the control unit - a mechanical computer, if you will).

    In fact, if you want to "go back to the good old days" take up flying. Small piston single engine planes are purely all mechanical for the most part - the spark's done by magnetos, even. You manage the carburettor (some have fuel injection, but it's continuous, always spraying fuel), the mixture, etc.

    And many pilots are anticipating the day when instead of all that, they have a simple throttle and the rest of that stuff is managed by a computer (FADEC - Full Authority Digital Engine Control) - two of them for redundancy.

    Hell, with something as "complex" as a servo-controlled throttle has gotten rid of annoyances like stuck throttle cables.

    The modern car is actually very freaking reliable. You won't believe how far some people will actually run them - they will buy a 25 year old car for $1000 and literally run it into the ground - oil changes? Well, they'll dump a quart in every month of so. Check engine light? Been on for 10 years, if it hasn't burned out yet. Yeah, it doesn't perform as good, the transmission is laggy and all that, but even a simple tune up costs more than the car's worth.

  16. Re:Your post doesn't conform to their prejudice on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    They have to have them manufactured, shipped and installed in all of their locations and then there is the conundrum of plugging the equipment in, too. Do they order vacuums with special plugs? Replace the plugs on COTS vacuums?

    Actually, until recently, most appliances in the UK were terminated in pigtails. You had to buy your own UK plug and wire it up yourself. (And it was taught in school how to wire a plug properly).

    So technically, the COTS appliance would do absolutely squat since the line cord is provided as a pigtail anyways.

    And while yes, you may need to "develop" a plug, there actually are plenty of existing plugs - using Australian plugs would suffice - the voltage and frequency is the same, and the angled pins would foil it. Or use one of the many North American ones (I think we have spinning locking ones that work at 240V that won't fit a standard 2 prong plug).

    Then again, they are rather proud of their plug. And their ability to wire a plug.

  17. Re:Take his own advice on Facebook's New Chief Security Officer Wants To Set a Date To Kill Flash · · Score: 1

    Indeed. Facebook had HTML5 video enabled on mobile for some time but until recently, the desktop page was still using Flash.

    Well, a certain mobile platform pretty much ensured mobile platforms won't have flash. And that certain platform is also somewhat of a target for facebook as well.

    Though, on the topic of flash killing... why is it YouTube has no problem serving up HTML5 video to Firefox, but Chrome (on the same machine) insists that YouTube must use Flash? Yes, the machine is old, but Firefox can play HTML5 video from YouTube and Chrome cannot?

  18. Re:"Truckers" should use commercial solutions on NYC Asks Google Maps For Fewer Left Turns · · Score: 1

    Truckers shouldn't use google maps anyway - they don't provide legal truck routes. There are other applications out there like ALK PC Miler that provides truck routes based on verified truck routes, height and weight limits, etc.

    Guess what? Truckers are like you and I.

    Truck-capable GPSes are available, and expensive as heck. Many even let you enter the size of your rig so they will not plan routes where the clearance is lower than your height.

    Of course, most truckers don't realize that and assume it's just another way to screw them out of money, so they avoid them and go for the "free" solutions. Because free is good, time is money, and GPS units are all the same... right?

  19. Re:Yeah, blame the parents on CSTA: Google Surveying Educators On Unconscious Biases of Students, Parents · · Score: 1

    No one is researching the bias leading to 99% male construction workers, or garbage men.

    Apparently a woman thinks you're wrong. So wrong she started a company creating a working clothes line for women. Specifically, she worked in the mining industry and was forced to put on the standard safety equipment. Which works great for men, but not so much for women (notably, using the facilities requires taking it all off).

    So the fact she's able to create a clothing line for working women and build a company out of it (she expanded to better work wear for men, too) shows there's actually demand and the numbers are there.

    And why it there are so many women in tech in the past, famous ones at that?

    I think the real truth is that IT is the new "construction worker". And despite IT workers supposedly being "more intelligent" or "skilled" or even "meritocracy", they just have poor social skills and in general are just boors. Talking to the computer, the computer doesn't care about etiquette, manners, or other things, so you can grunt and make racist and sexist and other jokes with impunity. That's probably the real truth, and we don't want to admit it because we LIKE it that way. Sort of a "no girls allowed" clubhouse.

  20. Re:It only works without humans on A 'Star Trek' Economic System May Be Closer Than You Think · · Score: 1

    Greed isn't a question of absolute amounts. It's about having more than others, whether or not you can actually use/consume/enjoy it. It's about status and power -- limiting what others can have so that you get to have something special.

    Of course, a sane person will care little about status. If your neighbour has a faster computer, you can still be a better programmer, which is something no amount of greed will ever take away.

    And that's why Star Trek's replicators will cause a ground-shift in economic thinking.

    I mean, so you have a faster computer today. In 5 minutes, I can have one just as fast as yours out of a magic machine.

    That's the thing - "things" are effectively infinitely replicable. You want gold? Ask the machine to make it for you. But you having 100lbs of gold doesn't mean I can't go and do the same. So now having more "stuff" is really an exercise in futility because what you have, I can get easily.

    And that's what changes the greed equation significantly - because what you have, others can as well.

    Greed works when others can't have what you have. I have a 200ft yacht, you don't, therefore "I'm better than you".

    But geez, if you can get a 200ft yacht easily, then my 200ft yacht is kind of pointless.

    About the only thing that's not easily replicable is things that are not "stuff", like knowledge. But you better keep that on your own, because otherwise anyone else can look it up too.

  21. Re:Cry More on Making FOIA-Requested Data Public: Too Much Transparency For Journalists? · · Score: 1

    That actually happened here - one government corporation recently came under FOIA discovery, and their FOIA procedure was to post all requests fulfilled on a public website.

    So naturally, the FOIA requests came in, and the results were well, made public.

    The news agencies made such a loud noise about it and filed lawsuits all about it, to the point where the company stopped putting the data up for 24 hours.

    While the intention was to foil FOIA requests, I always felt that putting the results up immediately was the proper way to do it, not trying to hide it so someone else can make big bucks from it. We the taxpayer paid for that too.

  22. Re:In the past this has been working under the tab on The Uber Economy Needs a New Category of Worker · · Score: 1

    Funny, that's exactly what contractors do. I was a contractor for 4 years at a desk where I had to show up in exact hours, attend OIG presentations about sexual harassment and child pornography on business systems, and of course was not allowed to post on Facebook where I work.

    Then more likely you weren't a contractor. You were an employee treated as a contractor.

    It's why tax agencies are scrutinizing employment contracts because there are a bunch of differences between a contractor and an employee. And simply calling an employee a contractor doesn't make them one - there are many things a contractor is free to do, and tax agencies look to that.

    In other words, most "contractors" are really working in an environment where the employer is just screwing them over - they aren't real contractors.

    Uber's probably looking at the same as well - paid indentured servant perhaps? I mean, it isn't that hard to make them real independent contractors - you just have to run the risk that half your Uber drivers might also work for Lyft and competitors. Binding them to Uber and making them follow Uber's way is closer to employee than contractor.

  23. Re:Still don't trust SSDs on OCZ Toshiba Breaks 40 Cent Per GB Barrier With New Trion 100 Series SSD · · Score: 1

    I did not choose the SSDs. They came with the industrial panel pc and were marketed as industrial grade.

    Yeah, that'll be the problem.

    "industrial grade" is typically code for "industrial temp" and they just pick whatever crap meets that requirement. And knowing that you probably want that, the controllers are probably full of bugs.

    I'd actually trust the good consumer version of the SSDs than the buggy industrial ones where the technology dates to before Intel SSDs made them good.

    We've improved things a lot -SSD failure on power loss is generally limited to the cheap non-name brand crap or they have built in power protection, speeds have exceeded what SATA can do, etc.

    Heck, sometimes what's inside those "industrial ssds" is probably just a CompactFlash type card which have poor speeds and so-so reliability.

    By far the biggest failure among dozens of SSDs deployed is power failure induced loss, and it was rare. We did limit ourselves to good quality SSDs from Intel and Samsung. The data loss happened when the owner dropped his laptop while it was on and it shattered into many pieces. (Laptop was a write-off, as well). But the SSD was recovered by a secure erase.

    In an industrial environment, I can see sudden power loss crapping out the SSDs - no one takes the time to properly shut down the PC, and industrial SSD vendors typically don't follow the advancements in SSD technology that's happened in the past few years.

  24. Re:rip-off on Are Certifications Worth the Time and Money? · · Score: 1

    The problem is how to judge expertise on a resume.

    So certifications get you past the HR filter.

    Only then do you get to talk to someone who (in theory) knows programming/whatever enough to evaluate your actual expertise.

    So, what is it worth to get past that first hurdle?

    Well, you bypass HR.

    HR is only if you're really just starting out and have no clue how to get started. If you're in secondary school, start making friends and visit job fairs held there. Especially the ones where the companies are interviewing on the spot because it's real employees (not HR) looking over the resumes and doing the interviews.

    And after that, make sure you're keeping tabs on people as they join and leave because these people will form your network, and networking gets you at those jobs that aren't listed. And using your network means you're bypassing HR. Plenty of hiring is done word-of-mouth and there are even hidden jobs posted publicly to meet HR rules.

    You skip the HR filter, and you get involved with someone who can champion your cause and push your candidacy forward.

  25. Re:Yippie!! on Chromecast Gets a Hardwired Ethernet Adapter · · Score: 5, Informative

    it's an usb ethernet dongle.

    True, but it's actually a USB power adapter with a Ethernet port on it. The USB-Ethernet adapter is in the power aadapter and the single USB cable goes to the Chromecast.

    So it's not a dinky adapter dangling from your Chromecast (and slowly unplugging it if your HDMI ports are the wrong orientation), but it accepts Ethernet at the power adapter and asingle cable goes to the Chromecast. Quite elegant a solution, really.