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User: ihtoit

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  1. Re:Clearly they've broken him and... on AT&T Hacker 'weev' Demands One Bitcoin For Each Hour He Spent In Jail · · Score: 1

    We all know this, but no one cares enough to actually do anything about it...

    A government powerful enough to give you everything you need is powerful enough to take everything you have...

    That isn't something taught in public schools of course, but it should be...

    Gerald Ford, August 1974.

  2. Re:Clearly they've broken him and... on AT&T Hacker 'weev' Demands One Bitcoin For Each Hour He Spent In Jail · · Score: 1

    running prisons for profit demands that every cell is occupied - to maximise profit. Rehabilitation of offenders as productive members of society does not bode well for the future of your private prison. What's the point of it if it's empty? You also want low-maintenance prisoners. The State can keep the dangerous ones in their high security prisons where the guards carry shotguns and watch from a safe distance and behind chicken wire, I'll take the local taxation dodgers and the parking fine refusers in my private prison, because they're the fools that can't fight their way out of a wet paper bag never mind even think about anything so radical as set light to a toilet roll and stage rooftop protests... it might also help to have a friendly judge to keep feeding the machine. Wouldn't you know, just how many judges have interests in private prisons? (answer: most of them)

  3. Re:A fifth horseman on AT&T Hacker 'weev' Demands One Bitcoin For Each Hour He Spent In Jail · · Score: 1

    Hitler was a hero to the Germans, right up to the point where he was cornered in a bunker in Berlin (allegedly), only the reports of his passing had the final diehards (pardon the pun) drop their weapons and raise their arms in surrender. I'm pretty sure the Caesars were beloved of the Roman Empire, right up to the moment the knife went in. But to those who write the history, Hitler, McVeigh, Gadaffi, Hussein, and Khan were all psychopaths. History on all those people has been rewritten, redacted, classified, buried, and reworked into urban legend. I wonder if you ask an Iraqi historian, if he'll agree that Winston Churchill was a hero, or a villain?

  4. Re:A fifth horseman on AT&T Hacker 'weev' Demands One Bitcoin For Each Hour He Spent In Jail · · Score: 1

    It's not a diehard bombing defender thing, I don't condone what McVey allegedly did, the simple fact is that placing creches in certain Government buildings is a relatively recent thing. So is planting bombs in them. Under them. Next to them. Whatever. Which came first? Employee daycare, or nutballs leaving truckloads of fertiliser outside? I've been away too long, I lost my TFH passcard. May I have another?

  5. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on NASA Laying Foundation For Jupiter Moon Space Mission · · Score: 0

    I was going to go there with the Clarke reference, you saved me the trouble...

  6. While the behaviour is illegal on British Domain Registrar Offers 'No Transfer Fees,' Charges Transfer Fee · · Score: 1

    (I'm talking about changing terms of contract without the consent of the signatory)

    The fact that you clicked "I AGREE" with that clause in place mitigates any claim you might have against them.

    I have found such clauses in paper contracts; what I tend to do is put a line through them and initial next to the strikethrough, to indicate that I do not consent to such clauses. Covered. Yes, Virgin Media have/had such a clause, they also have/had a clause that said that the customer was still liable for service charges even in the absence of service and to the end of the initial contract period (24 months!) in the case of early termination of contract! Oh yes, that bitch got a line through it!

    (more difficult to do in the case of electronic contracts, but there again you do have the option of shopping elsewhere...)

  7. Re:Simple.... Odds are even on A Rock Paper Scissors Brainteaser · · Score: 0

    actually, as each choice beats one and either ties or is beaten by the other two, the odds of winning any random round of RPS is 33%.

  8. put a spin on it on A Rock Paper Scissors Brainteaser · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Rock, paper, scissors, lizard, Spock!

    Scissors cut paper
    Paper covers rock
    Rock crushes lizard
    Lizard poisons Spock
    Spock smashes scissors
    Scissors decapitate lizard
    Lizard eats paper
    Paper disproves Spock
    Spock vaporizes rock
    Rock crushes scissors

  9. Re:Not in the 90s on Ask Slashdot: Experiences With Free To Air Satellite TV? · · Score: 1

    yeah it's doable but I can't be arsed going to the roof and realigning it to the nearest digital ground relay (which is about 140 degrees off from where it's pointing now). With the switchover here came the news that the analogue relays were being shut down and the sites abandoned, which was bad news for TV owners but great news for cable and satellite companies.

  10. Re:Dish/Direct TV should offer free basic channels on Ask Slashdot: Experiences With Free To Air Satellite TV? · · Score: 1

    not even that. I live not many miles from the Prime meridian, and to align my satellite dish (done it several times, most notably after I had to replace it after my south wall fell off the back of the house), all I did was point the thing South and elevate it about 20 degrees. 65% average signal strength on the Astra constellation - enough to actually decode - a full channel list on my 5K receiver (Fortec Star 4400). I'm pretty sure if I used a satfinder I'd get better than 90% signal strength, but that doesn't bother me too much if I can pull enough signal to lift it above the noise floor and decode it, I'm golden. :)

  11. Re:Not in the 90s on Ask Slashdot: Experiences With Free To Air Satellite TV? · · Score: 1

    I use my analogue antenna as part of my HF radio array now since there's no analogue TV in England anymore.

  12. Re:Hack it. Flip it. Update and Rip it. Technologi on Ask Slashdot: Experiences With Free To Air Satellite TV? · · Score: 1

    get two of them and weld them together, make a hang drum. They make a wonderful noise. :)

  13. a very typical digital setup on Ask Slashdot: Experiences With Free To Air Satellite TV? · · Score: 1

    Fortec Star receiver with a handy USB port for channel programming and the facility for adding a hard drive (or SSD, flash, whatever) off a standard Sky 90cm dish.

    Outlay: £50 for the receiver, £0 for the dish. 5,000 channels and nothing on.

  14. Re:Winprinter on Shuttleworth Wants To Get Rid of Proprietary Firmware · · Score: 1

    tried several bottom-shelf Lexmark inkjets, a couple of the Canon portables (BJ-10e and a BJC-80) and an HP Deskjet 320 as well. Ended up hooking up a Brother HL1030 (laser with manufacturer-supplied CUPS driver) and a HP Officejet 6210 MFD (ran through HPLIP), the other gear is gathering dust and spider colonies in a closet somewhere - can't even give the bloody things away...

  15. they probably won't be seeking permission, they'll more likely be tasking the system as the political landscape changes. Exchanges switching to IP-PBX from traditional PBX would make the task far easier, they'd just intercept the trunk via the Internet and pull the whole lot in one go instead of having to locate a specific physical point to carry out the intercept. This latest revelation sure is a step up from simply logging call endpoints and durations, though. We're into tinfoil territory here (though I do know from observing it myself that the police can access cellular location data - which in 2010 was accurate to 3 metres 24/7 and retained for well over a year - for use in evidence, and they apparently don't need a warrant to do it (R -v- Stafford A (arson, attempted quadruple murder))).

  16. Re:Silly Rabit on Shuttleworth Wants To Get Rid of Proprietary Firmware · · Score: 1

    I love Zipslack... still use it on a positively ancient Dell CP (Pentium MMX) laptop. It's handy when all I want to do is type and don't need to be hearing the fan (which hasn't worked since ever and that isn't an issue anyway as the processor barely gets warm).

  17. Re:Silly Rabit on Shuttleworth Wants To Get Rid of Proprietary Firmware · · Score: 1

    Yeah, most of those popped into my head one second after I hit "send"(!)... but speaking from my own experience, I've never been able to get a Winprinter working under CUPS (maybe I'm being 'tarded about it). As to graphics, I wasn't even going to pick up the whip if it wasn't an ATI/AMD or NVidia chip (OK, the drivers are proprietary for both, but I'm not bitter - I even managed to get Beryl running on an upgraded Rage Pro). Trying to get anything near "accelerated" on any other graphics chip was for me, like pushing a cow backwards up a staircase.

  18. Re:Silly Rabit on Shuttleworth Wants To Get Rid of Proprietary Firmware · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it's called reference frameworks. By the time you get to Userland, a Creative soundcard looks to the software identical to a Turtle Beach. This would be impossible without a reference. One obvious example is DirectX. What you want out of the arse end of the driver layer is a device interface that's compatible with DirectX. What happens between the driver layer and the hardware is entirely up to the manufacturer, but the DirectX compatibility is a certain requirement for even the slightest hope that you'll even get a peep out of it in Windows. And one of the reasons why the Linux driver model, at least from my own personal perspective, is horribly broken. Is there a reference framework for *anything* in Linux?

  19. The problem isn't one of resources on NASA-Funded Study Investigates Collapse of Industrial Civilization · · Score: 1

    The problem is one of the continued and rampant upward flow of monetary wealth and the specious notion that everybody has to earn a living - read: "everybody who is not moneyed should be employed in drudgery for drudgery's sake". One day those exploited workers who are still alive will down tools and give the fat lazy cunts the biggest finger the world has ever seen.

    I look forward to that day.

  20. Prior Art on Transformer-Style Scooter Lets You Ride Your Briefcase To Work · · Score: 1

    Mike Jittlov.

  21. Re:Ah, "unlimited"... right. (*cough*) on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    All marketing is deceit. That's the point of it.

    Prime example right there; another one is these ads for DVD/BluRay movie releases: "OWN IT NOW!" No - you don't "own" it, you have merely bought a limited and revocable license to view the content. The movie is still owned by the copyright holder, which is why they're still bitching about format shifting and not only trying to reverse SCOTUS decisions on it, they're making it ever more difficult to pull it off by going for DeCSS developers with all but tactical units on dawn raids and six year old girls on Gramma's broadband connection.

    Oh, not marketing here, this is purely anecdotal: I have a 3G connection on an "all you can eat" pay-as-you-go plan. I regularly pull upwards of 20GB/day, often more, and as far as I can determine I've never been capped or throttled. Not in over five years on the same plan. I wish I could work out how to pool daily packet statistics on Windows 7 (which I've been using since March 2011 - and the warranty on the laptop expired today), but hey, you'll just have to take my word for it :)

  22. Re:Good luck. on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    my legal file is more than 5GB. In fact, that would just about cover the preliminary court bundle from 2008. Hell, the audio recordings run half a Terabyte.

  23. Re:Ah, "unlimited"... right. (*cough*) on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    your average user will probably never fill the 8GB memory in their phone with all the irreplaceable data they commit to digital their entire lives. That's what these "unlimited" plans rely on; average users having no more than 8GB of data to back up. Sure, there'll be some dick with 8TB, but if you've built for 1000 customers and just one kills your storage then you've got to do something. "Fair using his ass" is only fair!

    (OK, vastly oversimplified things, your average cloud provider will probably have built for a million potential customers - 8PB total storage with multiple failover and power contingencies up the wazoo, but again, bump up the stats - it'll only take a thousand 8TB dicks to kill *that*. I'd like to know how Google are doing it, my byte clock is showing 14.2GB of "free" storage right now that I don't use, I guess the other 800MB is my mailbox, and their platinum plan is $800/mo for 16TB).

  24. Re: Don't bother. on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    20TB for me is at maximum shy of 60 hours of "decent"* quality video.

    I shoot lots of uncompressed *QHD (720p) and 625 PAL footage. That takes up a LOT of space. 370GB/hour and 93GB/hour respectively. Yes, I am poor and can't afford a 1080p DSLR much less a Red 4k, yet I never delete a single frame. All that raw footage is copied twice, one goes straight into storage, one is the working copy, and the original stays on the camera until the production is finished.

    I will burn a 2TB drive on a day's shoot without even thinking about it.

    I'm not even going to try and estimate how much stock footage I have (several TB), never mind how many drives I have it on (a walk in wardrobe with a custom pop-rack and several dozen drives ranging from 200GB to 2TB). All I know is, I have a stack for personal use and a stack for work, and when a job comes in the first thing I do is buy a new drive for running backup. Pretty much guaranteed it'll get filled.

  25. Re:Tell em how you feel on Ask Slashdot: How Do You To Tell Your Client That His "Expert" Is an Idiot? · · Score: 1

    short answer: yes.