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User: boogahboogah

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  1. Re:Older than this I think on Live Patching Now Available For Linux · · Score: 1

    According to a friend, who was a switchman for AT&T/Bell Atlantic/Verizon for 36 years, the machines in a single office were a dual machine architecture, running off of the primary, and in case of a problem, would switch over to the secondary machine which was already up & running & doing stuff.

    For patching, you moved to the secondary machine, installed the patch on the primary, rebooted the primary & prayed it would work. If not, then you spent lots of time on the phone to geek central to find out what was going on...

     

  2. Re:Ever switched to the other NRA mags? on Ask Slashdot: What Good Print Media Is Left? · · Score: 1

    No, because I grew up reading my dad's American Rifleman's. Still remember the WWII surplus rifles advertised for 25$ or some such. Yeah when I signed up last August I had a choice of three different mags.

  3. Re:useful given my recent experience with the linu on Linux Voice is a New Magazine for Linux Users — On Paper (Video) · · Score: 1

    Just re-read & noticed this - I'm surprised I missed it before...

    > having programmed in VB for the last 8 years doing kernel level programming

  4. Re:useful given my recent experience with the linu on Linux Voice is a New Magazine for Linux Users — On Paper (Video) · · Score: 1

    Obvious ignorant (as in not knowing) M$ shill -
    Volunteer project - professional full fledged development team
    lacks support for any type of journaled filesystem...

    I don't have to show any more, this AC is an obvious M$ paid shill.

  5. Re:Here is my current list: on Ask Slashdot: What Good Print Media Is Left? · · Score: 1

    I forgot the two newspapers:

    Wall Street Journal
    Philadelphia Inquirer

  6. Here is my current list: on Ask Slashdot: What Good Print Media Is Left? · · Score: 2

    Here is my current list:

    Analog
    The New Yorker
    American Rifleman
    Shotgun News
    Practical Sailor
    Cruising World
    Good Old Boat

    Shortest of these subscriptions ? 7 years
    Longest ? 25 years (Analog)
    Do they have websites ? Sure, but the print media is what I seriously read.

  7. Simply, It Blows on Come Try Out Slashdot's New Design (In Beta) · · Score: 1

    1) Way too much white space

    2) El Gigundo pictures that have no business being on the page

    3) Cutesy design makes me want to go over to El Reg for the antidote

    4) Slashdot is a WORDS site, not a PRETTY design site or a PICTURES site or a social networking site. Can't you Dice morons get this through your head ?

    5) Person who hired the folks to do the redesign, their salary should be tied to the readership count, so that when the readership dies he is the person to pay the price. I assume the people who did the redesign just don't know any better...

  8. NSA nightly download on Google Outage: Internet Traffic Plunges 40% · · Score: 1

    The NSA asked for a full data dump. Google, the good citizen that it is, promptly dumped all data to the NSA channel. They won't talk about it because they are prevented from doing so by the 'communist act' (originally labeled the 'patriot act', a misnomer if there ever was one...)

  9. SAP - I know what that means on Scores of Vulnerable SAP Deployments Uncovered · · Score: 2

    It's German for 'Our hands in your wallet'

  10. Seeking Alpha - Short sellers Post up here ! on No, the Tesla Model S Doesn't Pollute More Than an SUV · · Score: 1

    I've been following articles on 3D printing (via Google) and really have to laugh at the articles purveyed as journalism on the Seeking Alpha site. There seem to be few real writer/journalists on the site, rather it looks like a collection of blogger addicts and mail room boys posting for effect.. Their counts go up, they look legitimate and they even assume the mantle of 'knowledge' about a particular topic.

    I wonder who pays these shills to write this refuse ? Is Seeking Alpha another one of those sites where you can get any crap published because you can click a submit button ? Or maybe the site is kept afloat by the people short selling & then having a slam article written, like I saw happen over and over and over with 3D systems, so the stock goes down and the short sellers profit ?

    My opinion, FWIW, is that Seeking Alpha is a site where market manipulators post up to influence the market.

    (YMMV, the opinions of the poster are not necessarily those of Dice corp, etc etc etc)

  11. My monthly pile on Ask Slashdot: What Magazines Do You Still Read? · · Score: 1

    New Yorker
    Analog
    Blue Water Sailing
    Good Old Boat
    Cruising World
    Practical Sailor

    Daily Newspapers:
    Philadelphia Inquirer
    WSJ

    I'm behind on reading the New Yorker, but that doesn't bother me.

    Wanna hear about the book pile ?

  12. Re:Oh good on U.C. Berkeley Offers Free "Big Data" Class This Week · · Score: 1

    And if you or one of your friends had access to 'the good stuff' you could be in the cloud for quite awhile...

  13. Cordwainer Smith on Ask Slashdot: Most Underappreciated Sci-Fi Writer? · · Score: 1

    Those stories have stayed with me better than most other SF, over a period of 45 years. I bought a compilation from those New England folks that republish not long ago and read them all again.

  14. Re:Watson is a better button pusher on Will IBM's Watson Kill Your Career? · · Score: 2

    When watching the shows I was impressed by how well Watson could look things up. Most of the questions were of that variety, where a simple Google search would easily find the answer.

    Any question requiring logic or reasoning usually when to Ken Jennings or that other guy.

    Can I prove it ? No. I just remember my thoughts at the time when watching the show. If you want 100% certainty you'll have to pay me to do an analysis...

  15. Re:Cordwainer Smith on Ask Slashdot: Good, Forgotten Fantasy & Science Fiction Novels? · · Score: 1

    The Rediscovery of Man, NESFA Press, 24.95 for all of Cordwainer Smith's short fiction, including Scanners Line In Vain.

  16. NESFA - Cordwainer Smith & Cyril M Kornbluth on Ask Slashdot: Good, Forgotten Fantasy & Science Fiction Novels? · · Score: 1

    They have reprinted much of the classic SF and have a website located at http://www.nesfa.org/press. No financial connection, just a satisfied customer. Also reprints by Fredric Brown, Murray Leinster, Anthony Boucher, Algis Budrys and many more.

  17. Re:I "signed" it on White House Petition To Investigate Dodd For Bribery · · Score: 1

    Firefox 9.01 on SuSE didn't get me there, the "sign this petition" stayed greyed out even after 5 logins.

    Opera worked though, so I 'Voted'

  18. RIM never heard of due diligence ? on Trademark Trouble For RIM Over New "BBX" Name · · Score: 2

    I mean, c'mon, do a google search before you name a flagship product, at least check to see if the name has already been used.

    The BBx folks (company name BASIS) have been around for over 25 years and have many thousands of sites using their products in the US, Eurozone, and the far east. A large VAR base and some great new products built with Java that run almost anywhere, from server to PC to hand held phone or tablet..

    Maybe the RIM folks think they'll get away with it because they're bigger ?

  19. Most of the classic top shelf is there on Flowchart Guides Readers Through the 100 Best SF Books · · Score: 1

    but some of the more recent SF has gotten the short straw, maybe because the folks that read SF 30 years ago haven't read any recently. Me ? Still have an Analog subscription (with a few interruptions over the years), and still see some of the good 2/3/4 parts series turning into books that are worthwhile. Stories that resonated with me while I was growing up have been sort of imprinted, so I understand where the bias comes from for the 40/30 year old classic stories.

    Now about that 'wave a wand' or 'cast a spell' stuff ? Not interested.

  20. Were you one of those guys on So Long, CmdrTaco, and Thanks For All The Posts · · Score: 1

    sitting on the floor, indian style, with a laptop balanced on your knees, I forget what the booth was (maybe the SourceForge booth?) at one of the Linux conferences at the Javits center many years ago, constantly work work working to find content to post on /. ? I remember seeing two guys surfing the internet like they were top graduates of the Evelyn Wood speed reading course, just flashing pages back & forth, an almost hypnotic combination of color and graphics. One of the booth people told me 'those guys run a site called slashdot, you probably never heard of it. They're here because we can get them a fast internet connection, theirs went down.'

    Many thanks for the good reading material over the years, and for not being M$ butt kissers, and for being mostly irreverent, and for calling a spade a spade (even if it wasn't), and... and... and...

  21. SAP is German for "Our Hand In Your Wallet" on Army's Huge SAP Project 'At High Risk' · · Score: 1

    I had the wonderful experience of seeing SAP, which was German manufacturing software at the time (1998), sold to an extremely large travel tour operator. SAP kept trying to shoehorn the tour operator into their software. Everything was an 'operation'. Why ? Because that was the only SAP function that would come close to providing the tour operator the functionality they needed. Tour pricing ? The morons ended up reading most of the pricing table each and every time they had to calculate a price.

    SAP is smart, they sell upper management only, frequently in bed with consulting organizations like Accenture & such (the culprits that I saw in action at the tour company). After the years go by management is forced to continue so they don't have to acknowledge how big their f#&kup was. Don't believe me? I was there. I watched it all happen. I have talked to the culprits and the victims and the grunts.

    After six (!) years this travel company finally had something which would run, pretty much, and the tour pricing was right, most of the time. About the time I left their system uptime was around 85%. All of this is after having a team of 16 programmer/analysts (and spending and spending for OJT), also after spending millions for more and more hardware because SAP is such a resource hog, They went from one big server and a few disks to a super SAN and 60 dual processor blades and lots of other hardware I can't remember at the moment. They still have a crew of 16 programmers to keep this crap system patched & running but it is not pretty by any means. Now that they have customized their system to make it actually work, they have to do partial re-writes every time SAP comes out with a new version (big upgrade $$ for SAP to be sure). I used to feel bad for them, but if management is stupid enough to believe the salesman and not do due diligence before the purchase, it's their own darn fault.

    On second thought, SAP is German for "Our Shit Doesn't Stink, To Be Sure!"

  22. Ramp Up Slowly on Ask Slashdot: Becoming a Network Administrator? · · Score: 1

    As an applications programmer I can tell you that we have network consultant's at our customer's sites. They get paid T&M, and little config issues we handle ourselves.

    By getting network support from a third party:
    1) Network will stay up with few hiccups
    2) Your transition to Network Dude will leave you with hair on your head
    3) Your education will not interfere (too much) with the operation of the network
    4) You'll get book learning and practical OJT
    5) PHB won't have to bitch about downtime or cover his own butt

  23. Very quick Slashdotting on Intel To Build Next Gen Processor For iOS Devices · · Score: -1, Troll

    they must be running a windows server...

  24. Way cheaper than Iridium for Boaters on AT&T Introduces Satellite-Enabled Smart Phone · · Score: 2, Interesting

    At 40 cents a minute, it is way cheaper than all other Sat phones, and would be great for marine use.

    Too bad they will only target the US, that leaves any cruising boats out of the picture once they venture away from the shores of the US (_sigh_).

  25. Anybody else notice the fake photo ? on Japan Successfully Deploys First Solar Sail In Space · · Score: 2, Informative

    Looking at the photos in the referenced article, the fourth picture, showing the solar sail fully extended with all kinds of nice wonderful colors (photo from a perpendicular angle) cannot have been shot from the same camera as the other photos. Different color saturation, different focus, different depth, different starfield luminosity, a rather idealized picture of the earth. Offhand, I think this is an artistic or fictional or Photochop representation, and, it is not labeled as such.

    It's nice that the Japanese have launched a sail, but that hoked up photo just killed it for me.