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User: hzo

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  1. Hopefully lesson learned on A Crypto Website Changes Its Data, and $100 Billion in Market Value Vanishes (wsj.com) · · Score: 1

    Coinmarketcap should have announced this change before execution. Not notifying users was irresponsible and has damaged their reputation as a reliable data provider.

  2. stuxnet target = project key 024 = Bushehr on Stuxnet Worm Infected Industrial Control Systems · · Score: 1

    Check out that README file from SIMATIC PCS 7 CEMAT libraries found at
    http://bit.ly/brTlB7

    Page 2 "Projekt Schlüssel" (=project key) 024

    I bet a "gefillte fish" that project key 024 is stuxnet's target site...

  3. Re:This will fail - because Apple only does UI on Talk of an Apple Search Engine To Thwart Google · · Score: 1

    Actually there is one thing left, but it's also the kind of hard job that Apple doesn't handle well. Right now we pick phones based on how easy it is to enter data without a keyboard. That's pretty ludicrous when you think about it. If we could input data to a phone by speaking into it how amazing would that be? Yeah, I know, voice rec is hard, but when it comes along it's going to be the only kind of smartphone worth owning. And Apple isn't even working on it.

    My old G1 did voice recognition really bad. My G2 does voice recognition much better (speaking German names in their English version is pretty funny). So as it looks, Google is trying hard to get voice recognition into Gx phones. Now Google has some brilliant voice recognition folks working for them, who really LOVE spoken words. (hi R., best wishes from Munich ;) Therefore, when the time comes that the spoken word is handling your phone, it might be a Google phone.

  4. Re: on Novell Wins vs. SCO · · Score: 1

    I can prove that she exists.

    Once I sent her something after emailing her for her address.

    After that she sent me a very kind email, a IBM robot never would send ;)

    Enjoy!

  5. Re:Don't believe the negativity on Next Generation Zune Coming for Holiday Season · · Score: 1

    And last but not least:

    iPod comes with a real touch wheel.

    Zune has an imitation touch wheel, that doesn't work as promised by first look.
    Hey, Microsoft marketing folks: what about iTouchWheel(R) as another buzz word?

    Zune: "me too" inferiority as far as the eye can see.

  6. The first freely programmable computer on What Was The First Computer Operating System? · · Score: 1

    was built by Konrad Zuse who probably was the
    first hacker too since the living room of his
    parents appartment was pretty completely filled
    out by his computer in 1941.

    Zuse

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  7. Emacspeak on Category: Best Designed Interface in a Non-GUI App · · Score: 2

    Emacspeak is a speech enabled interface
    for computer users who are blind.

    Written by T.V. Raman who is blind himself,
    Emacspeak has opened the door of high performance
    computing to many others who would be locked out otherwise.

    Even the NSA is using it. So it has to be powerful :)

    Emacspeak provides speech enabled web browsing,
    spread sheets, speech icons, speech locking
    (different kinds of text are spoken with different
    voices, similar to text colorisation in Vim),
    speech enabled handling of formulas, email, news
    and so many more features. Check it out yourself.

    Did you ever see a blind person playing Tetris?

    I did and this was the final kick that convinced me,
    that Emacspeak is the most advanced
    non graphical user interface available on this planet.
    (It is IMHO even more advanced than many GUIs :)

    I therefore nominate Emacspeak for /.'s
    Best Designed Interface in a Non-GUI App Award.

    Enjoy!
    Hans



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  8. Learn about China before posting. on Red Caps Adopt Red Hat · · Score: 1

    ...can see Red Hat stock jumping skyward if a billion communists suddenly decide...

    Ever been there? Probably not. You wouldnt find
    too many "communists" there. But it would take
    your breath when you feel their will to innovate.

    It is amazing to see that computing America
    has first class technical knowledge but
    information state about other countries remained
    on a cowboy level. I dont want to insult
    cowboys, a profession which I like very much.
    They are IMHO connected with freedom (same thing
    applies to Linux :).

    But while a cowboy doesnt need to know too much about politics, cyber cowboys should.


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  9. Problems with descent engines? on Mars Polar Lander Remains Silent · · Score: 1

    Spacedaily claims, that there could be some problems
    with the descent engine.

    That could explain, why the two ballistic
    devices didn't phone home, despite they would use
    their own transmitters.
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  10. Clarification: church ban not German law on Windows 2000 to be banned in Germany? · · Score: 1

    To clarify that Scientology produced disk
    defragmentation thing:

    It is the German catholic church which is opposing
    Windows 2000 because of that piece of software
    This has nothing to do with German government or
    German laws (not yet :)

    As so often, IMHO moral and business are often
    pretty close together. Among moral considerations,
    churches see Scientology as competition for the
    souls and the purses of their faithful.

    The church ban
    was often used in former times to fight against
    individuals which were not in line
    with religious (or political) ideas of those at
    the top of the catholic church.

    More famous people banned were Martin Luther (in 1521),
    who later translated the bible from Latin into a
    living language and queen Elisabeth I of England (in 1570).

    So if you should get banned by accident, you are
    in prominent company :)


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  11. Debian's development model on Interview: Ask the Debian Project Leader · · Score: 1

    I have the impression that Debian's development
    model is somewhat slow compared to the release
    cycles of commercial Linux distributors.

    There is IMHO the danger that Debian falls
    behind against commercial Linux distributors.

    Could more (benevolent) dictatorship and less
    democracy help Debian to release solid code faster?





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  12. How to promote PG? on Giving Project Gutenberg Recognition · · Score: 1

    Team up with the guys from PALM and/or HANDSPRING.
    For them, the availability to download books into their devices
    has cash value since it can attract new customers.
    They'll eventually place some pointer to PG into
    their hand-held manuals or their web sites.

    Try to get some authors to sponsor PG by providing
    etext stuff (or even books?) donated to PG.

    Speak to Tim O'Reilly. ;)

    The /. crew provides a column "My Favorite
    Literature Download of the Month"
    which can
    bring new insights to geeks who usually read more
    Perl than literature pearls (training the other
    half of your brain cannot be wrong and
    might even improve your programming skills :)


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  13. You could be blind tomorrow.. on Blind Sue AOL for ADA Non-Compliance · · Score: 1

    imagine what _you_ would do without a
    decent interface to access the Net?
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  14. Re:The Web is Visual:... really? on Blind Sue AOL for ADA Non-Compliance · · Score: 1

    Sorry to correct you:
    most part of the information sent through the
    web is ASCII. Download a web page and check the
    content.

    It wouldn't be difficult to offer web pages
    which can be accessed by people who are blind.
    If your Lynx browser can access your web page,
    then a person who is blind can too.



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  15. First computer freak? on A History of Modern Computing · · Score: 2

    I'm sure his parents were really happy when
    this guy (Konrad Zuse) built the first freely
    programmable computer (the Z1, ready in 1938)
    which completely filled up their whole living room.

    BTW: his parents did sponsor him. No gov. funding.



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  16. Re:SMP Celerons. on Building an 1100Mhz "SuperStation" · · Score: 2

    Take care for the little green heat sink

    Check your SDRAMS for memory errors. I had the
    same problems for about eight weeks until I found
    out that some SDRAM memory cells were unstable.
    Memtest is quite good in finding broken memory
    chips which other memory testers cannot find.


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  17. Take care for the LGHS on Building an 1100Mhz "SuperStation" · · Score: 1

    That Little Green Heat Sink (LGHS) of the BP6 may
    need some special treatment if you want to oc your
    BP6 baby:

    The LGHS is casted out of Aluminum. The side which
    makes contact with the BX chips is not flattenened
    mechanically after casting (bean counters?).

    Problem:
    When the LGHS cools down after casting,
    it will bend upwards because of its shape
    (look at its bridge like design). Now the
    contact surface will make very bad contact with
    your BX chip.

    The original (bended) heatsink may produce hot
    spots on your BX chip. Even an additional fan
    cannot help, if the heat sink makes poor contact.


    ______|---------|______
    |-------------------|

    LGHS hot after casting


    _______/--------\_______
    |----______________----|

    LGHS cooled down after casting


    Solution:
    Pull the two white plugs which are pressing the
    LGHS against the chip and remove the LGHS.
    Take fine water resistant sanding paper (120 is
    OK), apply some water for smoothest results and
    put paper on a flat piece of glass. Now flatten
    the LGHS contact surface.

    Control result by holding a ruler against the
    surface and look against light. If surface is
    flat, you'll see a nice constant boundary.

    Use heat transfer compound when reassembling.
    This may make the difference between a stable and
    an unstable board. Same thing applies for the CPU
    heat sinks.

    Now reboot into BIOS and set fsb at will :)


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  18. Small critique of the Critique on Academic Criticism of ESR's The Cathedral & The Bazaar · · Score: 1
    Some minor discrepancy which catched my eye.
    The author first states that (A)
    Authoritarian methods will kill any
    given open source project more effectively
    than anything else.

    and later (B)
    Open source may sound democratic,
    but it isn't. Leaders of the best known open
    source development efforts often explicitely
    stated that they function as dictators


    It seems impossible that booth of these statements
    are true. Did the author miss something here?

    This leads to one major difference between
    science and (Open Source) software development
    which N.B. didn't touch:

    It can be described with hill climbing.
    When scientists work together to do research on a
    topic, they try to climb a hill. There exists only
    one hill and they know when they have reached the
    top of it because they can proof it by something
    like a formula.

    (Open Source) software design is like hill
    climbing too, but there are many different hills
    you can climb on and you have to choose one of
    them which is good enough for you. You usually
    never reach the top, because the hill grows as you
    climb. Therefore a dictator which has a good
    feeling for the right direction is of great value.
    (Therefore sentence B seems to be true).

    Science and software design may have some
    things in common. But I'm not sure if software
    design isn't related more to philosophy than to
    the scientific world.


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  19. Sorry we are full... on German Law Firm claims Linux Trademark · · Score: 2

    The typical German is a nazi.
    The typical Russian is a commie.
    The typical Jew is greedy.
    ...

    Such a spirit IMHO doesn't match with the spirit of the people behind Linux.



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  20. The web address of that German Company... on German Law Firm claims Linux Trademark · · Score: 4

    ..which filed the Linux trade mark is
    www.channel-one.de

    They have an email address info@channel-one.de
    and apparently feedback@channel-one.de ( I found
    the latter using a search engine).

    Their web pages look relatively Linux friendly and
    reasonable. So it might be worth to find out _why_
    they trademarked Linux (only stupid or unfriendly?).




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  21. From where did they take these numbers? :) on The BSDs in the WSJ: "Help Build the Web" · · Score: 1

    could it be that..... (see footer)
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  22. Why not trusting in the bad taste of the masses? on Slashdot's Meta Moderation · · Score: 1

    That whole moderation project seems to become
    over regulated. Sound pretty like a control freak
    paradise to me.

    Time to moderate the moderation?
    Why not trusting in the bad taste of the masses?

    Every /. reader who is logged in (no ACs) is able
    to moderate. The volume of moderation points
    is limited per day. People whose postings were
    loved (got points) get more moderation points than
    the average.

    Postings are not rated by absolute points but
    by relative weights. Six groups: best, better,
    equal, below, lowest, unrated

    Weights are calculated for each /. theme as
    weight = points_received * number_of_postings_for_that_theme / total_points_given_for_that_theme

    That's it.

    Just my 0.02 moderation points

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  23. Forget their marketing babble on New Dual-Celeron PC's Encourage Overclocking · · Score: 1

    Forget their marketing babble. I wouldn't buy their overclocked 466 Celeron boards because they have chosen the wrong CPU. 466 Celerons don't perform as good as 366 when it comes to oc. The only 466++ bonus: these chips run cooler than their slower brothers, 366: about 33W, 466: about 30 W booth at 550 mhz (calculated from INTEL specs. Search for the INTEL 243658-009 datasheet). But what about this 8 fold speed increase they are talking about? Do they mean the 8x multiplier setting of the ABIT BP6? Sorry to say that this doesn't matter, because Celerons have locked multipliers: The 300A is locked at 4,54, the 366 at 5.54 and the 466 at 7.0. So using a 2x multiplier, your 466 will run as fast as using a 8x multiplier. Your Celereon simply ignores your multiplier settings. Your only way to oc the cpu is by increasing the speed of the fsb. INTEL thinks that Celerons should run only using a 66 MHz fsb (perhaps Celerons would be too fast otherwise ? :) Now if you change the speed of the fsb to a healthy 100 MHz, your 466 Celeron would try to run at 706 MHz. To get it to boot (if it posts at all), you'll have to increase its core voltage to about 2.2 - 2.3 volts. But be prepared to have a fire extinguisher at hand after 10 minutes :) So you have to go down with your fsb speed back to about 80 MHz. Now your CPU runs stable without signs of smoke at about 550 MHz. But which CPU will be faster: A 466 Celeron running at 550 MHz with a 80 MHz fsb or a 366 Celeron running at 550 MHz with a 100 MHz fsb? BTW: The main problem when overclocking is heat dissipation. A 366 running at 550 will release about 33 W. Air coolers big enough to remove that amount of heat will be pretty bulky (and don't forget your BX chip with that nice tiny green cooling cap). My BP6 runs perfectly stable at 366@550 (Vcore 2.2 Volts) as long as you let it run cool. At the moment I'm using an additional big room ventilator which blows cool air into the open case. (CPUs about 50 grd C, BX chip 48 grd C). Upgrading to a water cooling system and 2x600 mhz comes into mind. Just yesterday I happend to buy a nice litte silent water pump and some copper:)
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  24. Gravitational laws apply... on egcs to become gcc · · Score: 1

    While code forking is evidence that there exists
    a centrifugal force in the world of open code,
    code reunification is the living proof that there
    must be an attractive force too.
    BTW, what about anti matter, black holes, super novae? ;)

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  25. Blind support and Linux on Handicap Access/RSI & Linux · · Score: 1
    I would beg to differ too :)
    First: My annotations came under the title 'Blind
    support and Linux'. So the argument
    moving to GUIs for those things they
    do better, graphics and netscape

    sounds somewhat strange.

    Second: Nobody will dispute the importance of a
    CLI. The point is: soon a blind power user will
    find out, that the command line interface isn't
    enough to fullfill his/her needs.

    Think about working with a spreadsheet and a
    screen reader. Now an intelligent speech enabled
    user interface like Emacspeak enters the arena.

    And finally: I didn't promote a personalized user
    interface but an intelligent user interface.
    A pretty differend beast.
    An IUI works as a transmitter between you box and
    the user. This could be a speech enabled interface
    which 'knows' that this application uses windows.
    Think about a news reader where thread info is
    stored in one window, header info in the second
    and the message in a third window.






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