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User: teambpsi

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Comments · 166

  1. Force his hand..."Sue me! Sooner than later..." on Student Photographer Threatened With Suspension For Sports Photos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Threats of lawsuits are mostly idle. Call his bluff and see what happens when the ACLU gets involved and crowfunding his defense sends the principal looking for a new job..

  2. You mean like trolling PASTEBIN? on Some Hackers Unknowingly Gathering Intel For the NSA · · Score: 2

    I'm sure there is a whole set of robot eyes watching for pastebin urls on IRC / Twitter et al

  3. A lot of circumstance and some suspicious experts on There's a Problem In the Silk Road Trial: the Jury Doesn't Get the Internet · · Score: 1

    My read so far based on the video blogpost I saw on http://beta.watchmybit.com last night is that there is a lot of circumstantial evidence and not a lot of hard facts.

    Also, the agent who worked Chicago border control seems to know an aweful lot about IT and TOR that makes me wonder why he's working packaged duty.

    Starting to smell like a lot of planted evidence...

  4. And cue the story about how they were infiltrated. on Lizard Squad: Xbox Live, PSN Attacks Were a 'Marketing Scheme' For DDoS Service · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "anyone willing to pay" -- you mean like an FBI agent with a credit card?

  5. Unless it has support for Bitcoin... on Small Bank In Kansas Creates the Bank Account of the Future · · Score: 2

    This is the same tech refresh upgrade every big bank is in flight doing.

  6. Of course you can have self cleaning windows! on Window Washing a Skyscraper Is Beyond a Robot's Reach · · Score: 1

    Using simple magnets the windows could self clean in the same way someone can clean the inside of a fishtank

  7. Crypto's Behave More Like Securities Than Currency on Researchers Find Problems With Rules of Bitcoin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Bitcoin for all its technical sophistication is more of a threat to "stock exchanges" or "equity allocation" than it ever will be to "currencies"

    It is not suitable to a "drive-thru" transactions due to the number of "confirms" required to have veracity in the exchange.

    However, it is VERY WELL SUITED to the exchange of equity -- and is, given the current settlement times, much more of a threat to public ledgers like TORRENS (property exchange logs) -- or stock/ownership exchanges.

  8. Re:That main issue is actually the solution. on Researchers Find Problems With Rules of Bitcoin · · Score: 1

    The transactions are BY DESIGN to subsume the block reward and will handily make mining worth the price of admission.

  9. White Noise Generators As Countermeasure? on Scientists Extract RSA Key From GnuPG Using Sound of CPU · · Score: 1

    EOL.

  10. Where's the love for GPG/PGP Email ? on Joining Lavabit Et Al, Groklaw Shuts Down Because of NSA Dragnet · · Score: 1

    So what's the sentiment around using GPG/PGP for email ?

  11. Hope they fix the lending system too! on DoJ Investigates eBook Price Fixing · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While touted as replacements for traditional dead tree varieties, ebook book owners should have the same rights to lend and transfer on a 1:1 basis as they see fit.

    Perhaps look at how the BitCoin "public transaction" model works to manage the lending (DRM) ??

  12. Re:I learned the value of money by paying as I wen on Ron Paul Wants To End the Federal Student Loan Program · · Score: 1

    Either it was not the case in the mid 80's or my parents couldn't co-sign.

  13. I learned the value of money by paying as I went.. on Ron Paul Wants To End the Federal Student Loan Program · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't want to be "that old guy" -- but I didn't qualify for student loans in the 80's & early 90's because my parents were in that bracket where they were supposed to be able to contribute, but just couldn't.

    I had up to three part-time jobs while doing my undergrad, and I definitely wanted the education -- I found that as "consumer" I demanded more from my instructors for my hard earned cash.

    In the end it made me who I am, and I subsequently went on to get both an MS in Software Engineering and an MBA recently -- both paid for with cash that I earned and saved.

    Sure it took a little longer to finish the degree's and barring Alzheimer's, the lessons learned all around will be mine for life!

  14. Fire that NTAC asap and keep the WebOS team on HP Begins Laying Off WebOS Developers, Potentially Firing CEO · · Score: 2

    Apotheker has to be one of the worst appointments I've seen in 20 years.

    At least Chain-saw Al Dunlap was hired for the express purpose of being a major league a-hole.

    Apotheker showed a shocking poverty of understanding of the empire he was entrusted to run that it makes me seriously question the competency of the people that vetted him?

  15. Pricing games and post cancel charges oh my! on Netflix To Lose 1 Million Subscribers · · Score: 4, Informative

    I tried changing my bank account info and when I called to ask them to reverse a pending charge on the wrong/old account I was told that I would have to close/cancel my service with them, and then restart service at a new higher rate!

    So I cancelled. Completely.

    Now I have to play the "contest the charge on the credit card game" even though I cancelled on the 9th the charge still showed up on the 11th.

    You'd think they would be doing anything to just maintain their current customers, but evidently not.

    Say hello to RedBox !

  16. And WHY should we trust HIM? on Former Wikileaks Spokesman Destroyed Documents · · Score: 1

    Clearly he can't be trusted -- with the exception of course of furthering his own interests...

  17. Great Strategy! After all, it worked for GeoWorks on HP Spinning Off WebOS and Exiting Hardware Business · · Score: 1

    Oh wait, it didn't.

  18. A system called DISCOURSE had this in the 90's on Microsoft Seeks 1-Click(er) Patent · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In Minnesota an in classroom system called DISCOURSE had this in the early 90's -- should be an easy patent to knock down.

  19. V was a voice processing language in the early 90s on R In a Nutshell · · Score: 1

    :V (the dots were above it) -- was a cross platform byte-code compiled language used for voice processing applications (DOS & Unix)

  20. McKinsey and the US Navy are masters of KM/KT on IBM's Patent To "Capture Expert Knowledge" With Games · · Score: 1

    The consulting company McKinsey has knowledge management and transfer down to a T -- pairing and making available ANY older expert anywhere in the world available to any younger (really any) consultant.

    The US Navy also excels in their job short-term job rotation -- how does a entire carrier operate (as a system) with so many new people in roles they've never held before.....think about it....

  21. The logic is obvious...but the conclusion is.... on In UK, Two Convicted of Refusing To Decrypt Data · · Score: 1

    Uhm....if you are clever enough to use encryption -- I would also think that you would already have an encrypted code-word or phrase that you would use to notice your pals that you've been compromised ???

    You're not going to run out and say "hey I'm being forced to give up my keys"

    You'll instead tweet out something like "I prefer Mr. Pibb over Dr. Pepper". Because OBVIOUSLY something has gone horribly wrong......

  22. There IS something the author is missing on First Internet-Connected Pacemaker Goes Live · · Score: 1

    This is nothing new. Boston Scientific (formerly Guidant) Latitude system has been working wirelessly in exactly this manner for nearly five years.

    And "researchers" have been trying to hack the protocol -- mainly by reverse engineering the wanded communication.

    Gradma is in more danger of a "pillow-attack" for the inheritance than someone trying to tweak her pacing.

  23. Re:Why not pilot it with a small group first? on Can a Small Business Migrate Smoothly To OpenOffice.org v3? · · Score: 1

    Make sure the group has management in it as well -- need a Lead By Example person.

    Also, you'll need to understand the interoperability comfort level, as your clients and business partners will continue to use M$oft.

  24. On whose authority? on IT Job Without a Degree? · · Score: 1

    I think you're missing the point -- its not that the degree automatically proves you have more capacity to learn or do more than the autodidact

    Its that its been VALIDATED by a host of instructors in a variety of areas and signed off by the school or university.

    They are vouching for the persons capacity at that point in time.

    I would take it on their authority over the candidates any day.

  25. You'll hit a Glass Ceiling without the Degrees on IT Job Without a Degree? · · Score: 1

    I completely concur with the sentiment and posts regarding the ability to "navigate a complex system" -- the OTHER important part of the degree is follow-through. It shows that you're goal oriented.

    I can tell you from first hand experience that, unless you start your own consulting firm or IT company, you'll hit a glass ceiling. You'll likely never ascend into the CxO ranks.

    The lack of degree will likely become an albatross around your neck, and the older you get the heavier it becomes.

    You will find that your access to social circles will diminish, and you'll likely be passed over for ANY candidate that has one.

    But if you want to be the equivalent of an electronic custodian for the rest of your life, go for it. The world always NEEDS you...it just doesn't have to pay you what you think you're worth.

    I'm 40, have a BA in CS, an MS in Software Engineering, and in a few months my MBA. They have made ALL the difference in terms of opportunity (and starting salary).