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User: cornjones

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  1. Re:Not embeddable devices, smartphones (or watches on The Internet of Things Is the Password Killer We've Been Waiting For · · Score: 1

    Gah, i am so disappointed in slashdot. comments like the parent are why i come here. Somebody who spends their time thinking about an interesting problem and is willing to share some of that background. Instead of discussion we get people complaining about ... anything.

    Anyway, thanks for the post. I like the way you are thinking and I love the idea of 'as secure as necessary'. I can see a future where my phone decides when it is still with me based on the myriad of data it collects (and helpfully shares) and unlocks my house as I get near (unless I mumble a 'kidnapped' signal in which case it should drop the machine guns and kill the bad guys trying to force their way in with me... B)

    tbh, the steps to get there don't seem that far off either. I spent a bit of time trying to think of 'real' road blocks but i was able to dismiss most of them outside of time and money it would take to replace everything w/ an integrated version.

    That of course assumes somebody wins a standard war and is able to push through a standard protocol for the authorization levels which the various apps and IoT vendors support. Which also needs someobdy to solve the patching problem on these IoT devices (which will hopefully allow us to move toward a solution to the security problem). gah, i was getting optimistic for a second there...

    Kidding aside, I would like to explore this more. Any podcasts/blogs you recommend in this space?

  2. Re:Yes. What do you lose? But talk to lawyer first on Ask Slashdot: Should I Let My Kids Become American Citizens? · · Score: 1

    ^This. The first few years I lived abroad I had a company sponsored tax accountant file for me. I was being paid in dollars, living in another country, ok I figured it was complex because of that. Now i have a local job and tried to file my taxes myself. Nothing fancy, no day trading or self employment. Just a middling tech job. When I tried to fill teh forms based on the older returrns, while I could follow what numbers went into which forms, figuring out which forms I would need was non trivial. I could not find any level of assurance that I was complying w/ the relevant statutes. So, back to 500$+ for a tax attorney. Even my 'simplified' returns are 80 pages. I call bullshit or non compliance on anybody who says this is easy.

    tl;dr, US citizenship = 500$/year tax.

    I did get my children US citizenship. The world will be a very uncertain place in the coming years. The US may get its shit together or it may not but I certainly see a subset of outcomes for this planet where hiding in the country w/ big guns will be advantageous.

  3. Re: just put a motor on the elevator itself on Engineers Develop 'Ultrarope' For World's Highest Elevator · · Score: 1

    why would you make it building length? Have a series of them...

  4. Re:2015: Still using Facebook on Using Facebook Data, Algorithm Predicts Personality Better Than Friends · · Score: 1

    That's an interesting take on it. I often thought it was somewhat the other way around. ie, it would be very comforting to think of a paternal god figure watching and guiding events. If I were less disciplined, it would be 'nice' to forget my doubts and the (seemingly logical) conclusions of the lack of existence or at least lake of interest of the divine. imho, it takes courage to accept that we are not special souls that will live through eternity.

    that said, I wasn't being facetious above, i hadn't considered the weight of responsibility of actions that last for eternity... doesn't change my mind but I do like the orientation...B)

  5. Re:The longer you live...Cancer could be your rewa on Silicon Valley's Quest To Extend Life 'Well Beyond 120' · · Score: 1

    why bother? if you can kill the cancer cells and make way for non cancerous growth, why bother 'reforming' them? besides, don't many cancers present as abnormally fast growing tissues? Do you want those cells around, in any form?

  6. Re:Unless it has support for Bitcoin... on Small Bank In Kansas Creates the Bank Account of the Future · · Score: 1

    They have less savings and lower incomes and fewer social services.

    It isn't quite that simple. I would give you less savings but they consume much more. The size of cars/houses and consumption of resources is simply higher in America than most other places I have travelled (admittedly, mainly Europe.) It is an open argument which is better.

  7. Re:Suprised *gasp* on British 'Porn Filter' Blocks Access To Chaos Computer Club · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, Cameron is doing his best to keep up. If we can just hold ISPs responsible and monitor a bit more, then we will have controll^H^H^H^H safety.

  8. Re:Great on UK Announces 'Google Tax' · · Score: 2

    You are having two different discussions. One is that you want to minimize what the gov't offers to curb that bill. THere is a vast area to explore there but it is not the point of this discussion.

    The people, as a block, have determined that this is the set of services the gov't is going to offer. they need to pay for it through tax policy. Running a deficit, while sometimes necessary, makes as much economic sense as credit card spending.

    Besides, over the last few years, there has been a significant amount of 'austerity' cuts to gov't spending in the UK. For the most part, the economic markers seem to show that it is working better for the UK than the rest of the EU. That said, there is still a shortfall. You need to adjust both dials, cutting spending and raising revenue.

    All this is about is attempting to address the shady loopholes where corporate accountants have figured out how to avoid national taxes, by the letter but against the spirit of the law.

  9. Re:Great on UK Announces 'Google Tax' · · Score: 2

    Ok, fine, do it as efficiently as possible. But there was around 100MM GBP shortfall in the UK budget last year. This isn't about take as much as they can get, this is about we need to bring in X to provide all the things we have decided to spend on.

    Note that arguing about the validity of the things we spend on is a separate (but related) discussion.

  10. Re:Cities: an obsolete solution on Helsinki Aims To Obviate Private Cars · · Score: 1

    I would much rather more people live in cities, anything else just hastens the loss of all natural areas.

    Population is only going to grow and we are left w/ two predominant modes of housing people. Build up or build out. Heavy urbanization offers all sorts of great benefits of economies of scale and hotbeds of activity. The suburban sprawl is soul killing, imho. actual rural living, where you can't see your neighbors, is beautifully serene. But everything has its trade offs.

    If we were to try to house all americans in their own homes w/ enough land to not feel like cattle, we would a) destroy all national parks and completely rural areas replacing them w/ suburban sprawl or well, with phoenix and b) we would have to expend massive amounts for real infrastructure (those internet lines are not going to be commercially viable @ low population densities) and energy to physically move people through that much space.

    the only way to preserve some semblance of nature is to pack people tightly. And, for the most part, energy costs are going to drive us down that path.

  11. Re:Sounds like the future on Helsinki Aims To Obviate Private Cars · · Score: 1

    Yes, driving can be fun. A Sunday cruise in nice country can be just what the doctor ordered. The thing you miss is most driving isn't fun. Running back and forth to work, probably in traffic... not fun. Getting in the car to drive for groceries, not fun. And instead of concentrating on other things (sleep, media, games) you are forced to give your attention to the dreary but potentially hazardous navigation.

    Also, what most people mean when they say how fun driving is, is barreling down windy roads @ 2x the speed limit. And yes, that is really fun. But it is really anti social and dangerous. Few people go to private tracks where you are more or less just playing w/ your own life/property, that is completely fine.. More often they are either weaving in and out of traffic or praying that somebody else driving like them doesn't come from the opposite direction on that 'abandoned' rd. That is selfish.

    And none of this even touches on the drunk driving aspect. Which anybody who drinks socially is more or less forced to do in car only areas.

    There was nothing like the freedom of getting my first car. But there was another level of freedom in moving somewhere I didn't need it anymore.

  12. Re:All good until someone simulates biometrics... on DARPA Wants To Kill the Password · · Score: 1

    I thought the answer to this was to use the biometric indirectly. I would like a key fob (or app) that I would authenticate to biometrically (or other) that would then be my magic key to the what ever I am entitled to. I would sign up my fob to any service I needed to auth to, say work, subway, etc. If the fob is ever compromised, I can disable it and issue a new one. Possibly even move auto move my old services to my new fob.

    Ideally, we would have different levels of auth needed. To enter my work, I would just wave the fob (or the door would realize it as I near). To access money, I would give it my thumbprint. To transfer my house title, i would have a few more factors required.

  13. Re:Cheaper beer on The Man Behind Munich's Migration of 15,000 PCs From Windows To Linux · · Score: 1

    I don't follow these lines at all:
    > it is an excellent deal for people in the 1st world as it is a drain of resources.
    > confusing the interests of a a few unionized groups of people with the interests of the country.

    That said, I think you misunderstand me. Lets make up a scale. say the average standard of living around the globe is 100. Basically everybody living in the US (w/ a few exceptions) already enjoys a standard of living far above the mean, say 150. Now, as trade becomes global and we can chose talent from a much wider pool, the flood gates are open and much of the wealth of the 1st spreads to the rest of the world, the world as a whole (should) benefit. More innovators, etc. But we end up all balancing out at 125. overall, a great deal for the world. A bitter pill for the 1st world.

  14. Re:Cheaper beer on The Man Behind Munich's Migration of 15,000 PCs From Windows To Linux · · Score: 1

    > Spreading the work around increases the wealth of the human race as a whole

    This is true, the economics are pretty straightforward. And it is working very well for the 2nd and somewhat 3rd world. the problem is the disproportionate wealth accumulated in teh first world will 'leak' into the wider pool. Eventually, that pool may rise enough to bring everybody to the standards of the 1st world, but, imho, not for a long time, if ever. This isn't such a good deal for the people in the 1st world who will lose access to the standard of living that they have been enjoying.

    To think of it another way, this is similar to having the 1% spread their wealth to everybody in America. Or even just the poorest half. that would, likely, jumpstart the economy , people invest in education and more people have the chance to innovate. In aggregate, everybody is wealthier. But the 1%s will be poorer and won't attain the same levels of wealth accumulation in the foreseeable future.

    It is hard to sell people on such an altruistic ideal at their own expense. It is likely what will happen (worldwide, not the 1% analogy) but, imho, standard of life in the first world is going to drop considerably.

  15. Re:Higher SAT scores, etc on The Poor Neglected Gifted Child · · Score: 1

    make the gifted students tutor the remedial students.

    That is an excellent, simple idea. Nothing shows you whether you really know a subject like teaching it to someone else. Note to teachers, do this!

    I would like to subscribe to your newsletter... B)

  16. Re:Higher SAT scores, etc on The Poor Neglected Gifted Child · · Score: 1

    A better solution is to not force such students to attend the schools

    while i don't disagree with your point about high school kids taking care of them selves, the differentiation (may) happen much further up the line, at a time when you might not want the kid to be home alone. Hence the need for the schools to cater to the gifted. And, ideally, to push each kid to their potential.

    Also, it is the rare person that wouldn't benefit from quality instruction.

  17. Re:Lifers? on Financing College With a Tax On All Graduates · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I really don't get this argument. the UK system is much like is being proposed here but w/ less burden on the student. You are asking the student to go into 9k/yr debt but it is only payable once you get a good job. That is a good deal for the student, if you spend a bunch of money on school and still can't get a job, you don't pay it back. the risk is all on the gov't (which i am ok with).

    this 'tax on future earnings' really sounds like a loan w/ slightly different terms. Rather, terms that never end.

  18. Re:Spell it out the first time on Linus Torvalds: Any CLA Is Fundamentally Broken · · Score: 1

    The place has changed but the cornplaints have stayed the sarne.

    Fewer beowulf cluster jokes though. And I haven't noticed a cowboy Neal poll option in a long time.... memories...

  19. Re:Z-Wave on New Home Automation? · · Score: 1

    I have no use for coax otherwise.

    I had the same thought when I was wiring my house for ethernet. my neighbor had a good point in that life can have many changes. I don't know what would happen that could cause me to sell my house but the next person in may value not value ethernet. They may satellite tv more than me. If it helps sell the house at all, it is a very small incremental effort to lay the extra wires along side the ethernet. Plus, who knows, now I am thinking I may as well pull in some international FTA satellite feeds. The house is already wired for it, after all.. B)

  20. Re:A natural reaction to Faux News i think on The Rise of Hoax News · · Score: 2

    When either colbert or stewart shows video of (generally) politicians contradicting themselves, i would say it is fair game for quoting. They are really good at digging up footage like that.

    Quoting the monologues, yeah, that is a stretch.

  21. Re:News for Nerds? on Oregon Signs Up Just 44 People For Obamacare Despite Spending $300 Million · · Score: 2

    The problem comes in that the US population tends to be more or less evenly divided as to what constitutes what is best for the good of the whole country, and those visions of what is best are very far apart in some cases.

    THere is definitely something to that but there are several things on the side that are neither red nor blue issues but that most of the country does get behind. If we could stop framing everything as a red vs blue issue, we could move forward on the non partisan issues without worrying that the 'bad guys' are going to 'win'.

  22. Re:Not entirely new on DRM To Be Used In Renault Electric Cars · · Score: 1

    Yeah, apparently they changed something in the wiring so it isn't a computer reset, it is actually new software. I'm just not quite comfortable torrenting car software. (not that I didn't consider it)

  23. Not entirely new on DRM To Be Used In Renault Electric Cars · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is obnoxious but not entirely new. My 2005 volvo has a 'feature' where the power steering pump can only be changed by volvo as the software 'needs an update' before the car will start again. Can't even have another garage do it, you need the volvo computers.

    I guess it is just a way to ensure the dealership garages stay in business.

  24. Re: no thanks on Building an Opt-In Society · · Score: 1

    ... it is the UK/City of London that actually holds the majority of US debt

    citation needed. Pretty sure it is china and then japan.
    yup
    Hell, even belgium seems to hold more US treasuries than UK. Unless you mean that somehow City of London has high volume and Japan is buying those treasuries through London banks, which is possible but completely unrelated to who owns them.

    The sale of treasury debt is a risk in a few ways. It gives the holder of that debt power to call the debt (rather than rolling it over) which could bring you up short. It is also a sign that you are living beyond your means and your creditors are in a better position to buy your assets than you may be to hold on to them.

  25. Re:Outdated trains on New York City Considers Articulated Subway Cars · · Score: 1

    I'll take the NYC subway over the London underground any day. Besides being air conditioned, the subway runs 24 hours a day. None of this last train around midnight scramble for people that don't live right in zone 1.