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User: Penguinisto

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  1. Re:Power? We dont need no stink'n power! on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 1

    He means that the controls are dual/quad redundant (as in multiple paths for the signal), and every fly-by-wire jet has backup power units (EPU/APU, batteries, etc.)

  2. Re:Power? We dont need no stink'n power! on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 1

    One word: pinball wizard.

    Not sure if a deaf, dumb, and blind kid could pass the FAA check-out exam... ;)

  3. Re:And when the video feed dies... on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 1

    What then?

    Alt+F4 - it always closes the window and gets it out of the way.

  4. Re: Failsafe? on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 5, Informative

    If the system is down so far as needing that, then it's already crashing i'd suspect.

    Not necessarily.

    Even 'fly-by-wire' systems are always at least dual-redundant (quad-redundant if it's a military jet), and it *always* has a source of backup power (EPU/APU, batteries, etc).

    These screens we don't know about, and always have a single-point of failure: the screen itself. So if power dies off, at least with glass windows, the pilots can still see out and glide to a 'dead-stick' landing (even if it's not on a runway) using the backup power to the flight controls.

  5. Re:besides that on Employees Staying Away From Internal Corporate Social Networks · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's more of a router... geez.

    No, it's more of an overactive IMAP server with a busted spam filter...

  6. Re:One non-disturbing theory on Ninety-Nine Percent of the Ocean's Plastic Is Missing · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...given that the bottled water aisle of my grocery store strongly suggests that water is a little less ultimate than you imply.

    Funny you should mention that, because the reason most bottled water has an expiration date isn't that water goes bad, but because the plastics' volatile components in the bottle leach into the water (which is why everyone freaked out over BPE's awhile back).

    Another theory? stuff clings to the plastic and sinks it. Having lived on the Oregon coast, I found it rather rare that something would wash up on the shore which didn't carry barnacles, seaweed, algae, and other stuff that clung to it - all of it using the bit of flotsam as a miniature base of operations from which to spend one's lifespan. Eventually so much stuff clings to it that any buoyancy the plastic once had is negated by the weight of the lifeforms and suchlike clinging to it.

    Hell, even a sealed glass bottle eventually does this, as algae sticks to outside of it, which in turn attracts sand... the stuff dries like glue, BTW.

    One other reason I can think of, speaking of which - did they account for all the stuff that eventually washes up on shore somewhere? I suspect they had to have, but maybe they underestimated it?

  7. Setting aside $100/mo and dividing the rest by 12, that is over $1200/mo for rent+utilities.

    ...and groceries, and transportation costs (which in a rural area figures much larger into the budget), and sales taxes (unless you live in Oregon), and...

  8. Re:Classic Obama on White House May Name Patent Reform Opponent As New Head of Patent Office · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This does lead to an interesting question... and not a troll, I promise:

    Now mind you, I'm not saying that suddenly everyone should vote Republican (I'm registered as "no party" in my own state), but I want to know how the folks who support the President no-matter-what can continue the cognitive dissonance and devotion to the guy in spite of crap like this (and much, much more). We see a lot of it even here on /. , so I think it's relevant. Even towards the end of the Bush years, you never saw this level of personality cult... and yet I'm bombarded with folks who will hotly defend the guy no matter what he does (my perception may be biased due to living in Portland, but still...)

    Does anyone else see this? And if you are among those who still support the guy, please tell me why not support someone such as a Green Party candidate, or someone who isn't part of the party machine, so to speak?

    PS: Simply pointing the finger at The Other Party doesn't really cut it either, IMHO (mostly because I find both to be equally distasteful) - in other words, give me an answer that doesn't involve fear of someone else...

    PPS: Please be civil about it to each other and otherwise - this is an honest question.

  9. Re:Just visit the website? on Krebs on Microsoft Suspending "Patch Tuesday" Emails and Blaming Canada · · Score: 1

    https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/security/advisory

    Are calendars with recurring reminders a thing anymore?

    You can even setup a cronjob or a windows task to open the website on a regular basis if you are extra forgetful or lazy.

    Of all the things to bitch about with respect to Microsoft...

    Because, you know, the typical small businesses are overflowing with IT-wizard-like employees who are masters at using these things, and hold the process in high enough regard to keep an eye peeled for patches.

    Oh, wait, they aren't.

  10. Re:Good? on Mayors of Atlanta & New Orleans: Uber Will Knock-Out Taxi Industry · · Score: 1

    Hapless families on their once-a-decade flight get left waiting for a bus.

    ...or they'll just call up a private airport shuttle service, like anyone with a brain in SanFran does now (because the airport shuttle services only cost you $30 from Mission to OAK, whereas a taxi will cost you around $60-$80 for the same distance.)

    Oh, and most decent hotels have complimentary shuttles on top of that, throughout the country.

    You don't get out much, do you?

  11. Re:Email is expensive? on Krebs on Microsoft Suspending "Patch Tuesday" Emails and Blaming Canada · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought Email was cheap...

    It is unless you use Exchange server farms to send it. Then it's gawdawful expensive.

  12. Re:Castle doctrine on What To Do If Police Try To Search Your Phone Without a Warrant · · Score: 1

    Indeed - and you'd be in handcuffs anyway.

    If you want to insure that they don't go pawing through your phone, put a passcode on the stupid thing. Mind you this isn't to keep them out, but to get the case thrown out later on if they decide to go into the thing minus a warrant (of course they can get one later and search it then, but in the meanwhile...)

  13. Re:CPAN on An Army Medal For Coding In Perl · · Score: 2

    We like to call them "classes", and there's way more than a thousand. ;)

  14. Re:He has no clue. on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    And post ACA, it's still not a big deal, since they can no longer charge you extra for pre-existing conditions and suchlike.

    Dude - I have a bridge to sell you too... they can and will do this, because lifestyle choices are not considered to be pre-existing conditions, only medical conditions are (e.g. Diabetes as opposed to drinking booze).

  15. Re:Banning cars could save more lives on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    Not the OP; just thought it would be a fun exercise.

  16. Re:Unpopular opinion ahead on If Immigration Reform Is Dead, So Is Raising the H-1B Cap · · Score: 1

    ...what sibling said; all you need do is to step inside an R&D or dev department of any Fortune 1000 tech company... it's like the UN in there, and good luck getting your foot in the door w/o an impressive resume or skills that they cannot otherwise import.

  17. Re:what about? on Exploiting Wildcards On Linux/Unix · · Score: 1

    Most wouldn't run it in / , but rather in some odd subdirectory, in which case it will stumble across "..", work its way up, then find "." - whereupon most *nixes will immediately devour ./usr , ./etc, ./var, and suchlike.

    I think they finally fixed this behavior in recent distro releases, but the incident in question happened in 2006-ish; can't recall exactly if it was an RHEL 2.x box or an older FreeBSD one, but it was hella fun to watch.

  18. Re:Banning cars could save more lives on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 0

    Well, let's go into nanny-state mode and see:

    If you ban cars, how will people in areas of the world designed for cars get access to food? Heathcare?

    Expand mass transit and force people to relocate into denser urban living situations (see below as to how). Fixed.

    How will companies that service utilities service the infrastructure?

    Eventually, certified/approved CDL-licensed drivers will still be allowed on the roads, but no one else without a special (and costly) permit shall be allowed. Because, you know, the commercial drivers don't die as often as the typical passenger car drivers do.

    How many people would consequentially die by banning cars?

    You ban it the same way TFA wants to ban smokes and fatty foods - you make it so effing expensive and obstacle-laden that folks won't have a choice but to move to a dense city and rely solely on buses, trains, etc. You know, sort of like Caves of Steel.

      It's for your own good, Citizen; we care enough about you to go to all this bother to protect you, so why are you whining so much about it and not just doing what you're told?

  19. Re:He has no clue. on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    d'oh - site ate part of my post:

    "(but this time make it bigger, because, you know, you should have been more up-front in that little health survey they required you to take.)"

  20. Re:He has no clue. on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    See, as an extremely rich and powerful BILLIONAIRE, he doesn't have to give a fuck about anything. He doesn't have to worry that any negative information against him will prevent him from getting a job, loan, or harassed.

    Oh, it gets worse...

    At my previous job, United Healthcare levied a $70 per person per-month surcharge for "tobacco use", and those who claimed they didn't use tobacco were subject to random testing. Those who failed the testing were fired on the spot.

    Now they'd just have to check the data mine and see if you bought a pack of smokes, and levy the fee anyway (but this time make it bigger, because, you know, you . I could also see healthcare insurers charging you extra money if you visit a fast-food joint more than x times of month (where x > 1), or bought more than x amounts of soda at the grocery store.

    Before the whole ACA thing, it wouldn't be a big deal - you just don't bother with the full-coverage health insurance if you're young and healthy, instead opting for catastrophic coverage (where this wouldn't really be a factor), and you'd be fine. Post-ACA, you're required to pay for the thing, and you're going to get screwed financially if you don't live an 'approved' lifestyle. It's like Bloomberg's little soda ban, except now it's nationwide and the government no longer has to enforce it.

    Fuck. That.

  21. Re:what about? on Exploiting Wildcards On Linux/Unix · · Score: 1

    Oh, thought of another one, just to mess with other admins:

    # chattr +i /*.*

  22. Re:Question... -- ? on Exploiting Wildcards On Linux/Unix · · Score: 1

    Always be cautious when running someone else shell script, that's even more dangerous..

    If you aren't capable of auditing an untrusted-sourced script before you run/use it, then don't run it or use it.

    Seriously.

    I grab (cut+paste) script bits from online when I'm lazy, but I always take the time to audit the chunk of text, and insure that it doesn't do anything dumb before I use/incorporate it. Doing this gives me two benefits: First, I can double-plus insure that it doesn't do anything I don't want it to, and second, I learn a bit about the person who wrote it (and in some cases, I discover a trick or bit of info that I didn't know before.)

  23. Re:what about? on Exploiting Wildcards On Linux/Unix · · Score: 2

    # rm -rf *.*

    (I actually saw a Windows-centric guy do that once as root while he was learning Linux. The look of horror on his face as the entire box began to delete itself was hilarious...)

  24. Re:CPAN on An Army Medal For Coding In Perl · · Score: 1

    Pfft - I'm certain there's at least four Python eggs out there for it.

  25. Jersey deserves it. on Germany Scores First: Ends Verizon Contract Over NSA Concerns · · Score: 1

    ...never forgiven them for blighting us with that abortion they called a "reality show".

    As for TFA, I'm kind of surprised that Germany's Interior Ministry hadn't been with Deutsche Telekom/T-Mobile all this time.