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User: SuperQ

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  1. Re:nothing new at all needed on How We'll Get To 54.5 Mpg By 2025 · · Score: 1

    I was just thinking about this the other day. What we could really use is a 4 cylinder full-size pickup hybrid. For example the VW/Audi 2.0L turbo can do 208hp/258 lb-ft. An F-250 super duty 6.2L V8 is 385hp and 405 lb-ft. You don't even need a tesla-size electric motor (362 hp / 325 ft-lb) to make up the difference for accelerating. You could use a medium size battery pack of like 20kWh and get most suburbanites to work and back and still have enough towing capacity for their fishing boat.

  2. Re:The Problem is NOT in your ability .... on Ask Slashdot: Am I Too Old To Retrain? · · Score: 1

    Yup. An american (we grew up here) friend of mine just quit his US job and move to Germany. Apparently they're working out permanent residency after a very sort time in order to get tech people to move there. This doesn't surprise me with the number of really skilled German software people I know at my company. They want to stop the flow of good engineers to the US.

  3. Re:Other stuff in racks too on Open Compute Project Publishes Final Open Rack Spec · · Score: 1

    Probably a lot hotter than that. Drives are happy to run in the 40c range. CPUs in the 60-70c range. I'd expect the exit temp and hot side to be atleast 40c. The bigger the thermal diff between hot and cold the better. If you have a normal exit temp of 40c and a max of 50c, you can let your inlet temp range between 20c-30c. This way even when it's hot out you can get by with evaporative cooling.

  4. Re:How Much Would What Cost? on Ask Slashdot: Explaining Version Control To Non-Technical People? · · Score: 1

    Yea, it's not even hard. My girlfriend who is moderately technical was wanting to check some .xlsx spreasheets into her git repo but was annoyed that it wasn't plain text XML like she thought it was supposed to be. She's used to writing in docbook XML.

    I helped here out by writing a quick script that would unzip the spreadsheet file and then xmllint (A tool she does know how to use, and suggested it) the files in the sheet so that they're easier to diff. Then she is able to just run the script before checking in spreadsheet changes and have nice easy-to-see diffs.

  5. Re:How Much Would What Cost? on Ask Slashdot: Explaining Version Control To Non-Technical People? · · Score: 1

    No, seriously, JQP has the right answer. If my manager couldn't understand a simple explanation about what version control is, why it's a good idea, and basically a function of business continuity and software/systems best practices I would do everything in my power to get them ejected as incompetent.

  6. Re:wait... on Ask Slashdot: Explaining Version Control To Non-Technical People? · · Score: 5, Funny
  7. Re:WARNING: BPA lining in CANNED FOOD as well !! on Is the Can Worse Than the Soda? · · Score: 1

    I just made hashbrowns and omlets for breakfast this morning in my cast iron. I have a 80 year old cast iron skillet and a more modern lodge round griddle skillet. The trick I found for making hasbrowns in the cast iron is to make a couple strips of bacon in the pan first, then toss the potatoes into the bacon fat. Yummy, and no sticking.

  8. Re:WARNING: BPA lining in CANNED FOOD as well !! on Is the Can Worse Than the Soda? · · Score: 1

    Yea, my favorite pans are my cast iron. I also like my stainless lined aluminum core pans.

    However some of the modern non-stick materials are much harder than classic '90s teflon and are much more durable. I have very nice non-stick stovetop wok that is anodized aluminum and a very tough non-stick surface. I've used it in apartments for many years where I don't have a nice big wok burner that I use with my much larger carbon steel wok. The non-stick has held up for 8+ years with no problems. It probably won't out-last my carbon steel pan, but it does a good job.

  9. Re:Other stuff in racks too on Open Compute Project Publishes Final Open Rack Spec · · Score: 1

    I'm glad to see someone is finally pushing to replace the shitty old 19" rack spec.

    Yea, This spec seems slightly light on some details that I would like to know.

    Is the rack designed for one-side maintenance? I'm tired of the old design where you load a machine in the cold isle, and then have to walk around to the hot isle to plug the cables in. I want everything on the cold isle so I can have the datacenter duct the hot air directly into the heat exchangers. From what I can tell I think this is true for the openrack design, but it mostly talks about form factor.

    The second thing I would LOVE to see is the elimination of rack rails. Fucking hell I'm tired of every brand and model having a different type of rack rail. I'm also tired of the random depth sizes for these rails. Sometimes a rack rail will only have half an inch of adjustment and I can't even bolt down the back of the rail since it won't reach the depth we have our rails set to. It looks like they're doing some kind of built-in standard tray shelf. This is great.

  10. Re:Your first server, in 2012 on Intel Confirms Decline of Server Giants · · Score: 1

    kvm and drbd on 12.04. It's been running fairly well except for a qemu bug that causes the network (bridged) to stall. I'm going to be testing a patch that will probably hit release soon that fixes the bug.

  11. Re:Your first server, in 2012 on Intel Confirms Decline of Server Giants · · Score: 2

    I run a co-op VM cluster on Ganeti. We bought 3 supermicro 1U single-socket machines (12-core AMD, 64G of ram) for about $7,000. We have about 60% of our capacity rented out. The nice part is we allocate based on 1G of ram slices so you get a pretty powerful minimum server.

  12. Re:I can hear it now... on Google Announces Its First Latin-American Data Center · · Score: 1
  13. Re:Rent a truck on White House Finalizes 54.5 MPG Fuel Efficiency Standard · · Score: 1

    The biggest problem here is that you need a car for "every day trips to the store". Sorry, but this is a problem with city design. I don't own a car because I can walk or ride a bike to the stores I visit regularly. Sometimes I do want to pick up a few things that won't fit easily on my bike. So I grab a zipcar for a few hours, or maybe the day. I can do all of the heavy lifting stuff like the twice a year trip to the store to pick up a 6 month supply of cat litter or something like that. I average about $100/month in zipcar costs over the year. Zipcar use includes gas as well. If I owned a car, I'd probably be spending $400-500/month on payments, gas, insurance, and off-street parking in my apartment. Sure, I could buy some shit box, but if I own a car I want something nice. I typically get the Audi A3 zipcars for running errands during the week and I still save money over owning one.

  14. Re:CAFE Kills on White House Finalizes 54.5 MPG Fuel Efficiency Standard · · Score: 1

    Why does more power matter? You're missing the point. It's about weight and agility. Avoiding accidents rarely has anything to do with power. You want to be able to stop quickly to avoid hitting anything. Or turn quickly to avoid an object.

  15. Re:CAFE Kills on White House Finalizes 54.5 MPG Fuel Efficiency Standard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yea, I would much rather be driving a Fiat 500 than an F150. The Fiat can get out of the way or stop much faster than an F150. Just being able to avoid an accident beats size way more often.

    The fact that people have given up avoiding accidents is a sad description of the state of driver education in the US.

  16. Re:Farm Animals on Do Antibiotics Contribute To Obesity? · · Score: 1

    Yup. I eat just about anything I want and as much as I want. I put 4000-5000 miles on my bicycle per year.

  17. Re:Employ a teacher! on Ask Slashdot: How To Best Setup a School Internet Filter? · · Score: 1

    I setup a network for a school a long time ago (1997). We filtered nothing, but here's how the network worked.

    Each student had a NIS login and a NFS homedir. All web traffic went through a squid proxy. All of the desktop PCs were Linux (RH 4 or 5 at the time, I forget)

    Basically we had a reasonably good way to do two things:
    * Know which students were on which computers at what time.
    * Know exactly what sites they were hitting.
    * We loudly and repeatedly reminded the students that they were monitored.

    Of course this was not a foolproof solution, but it was good enough to keep the students in line. If someone at that school was smart enough to get around the proxy, they probably earned the right to do so. We had no problems with that school. We even put the "troublemaker/hacker" kids to work keeping the crappy PCs up and running instead of doing stupid shit like ban them from computers. They took pride in the responsibility.

  18. Re:Appearance matters on Ask Slashdot: Is There a Professional Geek Dress Code? · · Score: 2

    Yea. I've been slowly growing out of just jeans/tshirts for a while. About 5 years ago I decided to get in better shape and stop dressing like a slob. Of course that doesn't mean dropping the relaxed jeans and t-shirts altogether. I also didn't want to be a boring suit or wear awful business casual crap. I see enough of the cookie cutter kahki-and-baby-blue-shirt bros around. Worse yet is the ones that can't even get button down shirts that fit them properly. It's like they're a baby-blue hot air baloon.

    Here's what I've been doing recently:
    * Properly fitted non-faded jeans unless the fading works with the shirt. It doesn't have to be skinny hipster jeans, but it should fit better.
    * Nerdy shirts, but never if it's a haynes square cut T. They have to be similar cut to the American Apparel standard fit T. Get rid of the baggy shit.
    * Some button down shirts, but never baby blue, pink or some shit unless it's fitted or has some style. The best ones I have are custom taylored. There's a few places online that will make you taylored shirts for dirt cheap. I got mine from http://taylorstitch.com/
    * I've got a personal taste for wool suit vests. They work well with un-tucked shirts and arn't as boring as a normal suit.

    If you gotta wear a suit, don't goto a department store unless you want to look like a sales droid. There are a ton of small to medium size designers out there that have much more cool stuff.

    Boring white button down shirt? Hell no, try this:
    http://storeroom.nicecollective.com/men/shirts/higgs-button-up.f11-5129/

    Polo shirts? Bleh.
    http://www.shopskunkfunk.com/#view=details&item=ABENE-MN1

    Sales robot suit? Nope.
    http://www.johnvarvatos.com/Cotton_Hook_And_Eye_Jacket/pd/c/66/np/66/p/4173.html

  19. Re:Why would anyone ever want to run a Tor exit no on Tor Project Experiments With Funding Fast Exit Nodes · · Score: 1

    And if you're not brave enough to run it yourself, you can donate to exit nodes like NoiseTor - http://noisetor.net/ or to Tor itself.

  20. Re:Why would anyone ever want to run a Tor exit no on Tor Project Experiments With Funding Fast Exit Nodes · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hi, I help run an exit node. Specifically NoiseTor - http://noisetor.net/ Yes, we do get police/FBI/etc calls regularly. Most of the time it takes a few min of explaining what tor is, we have no logs, and there's nothing we can do to help track down where the traffic came from.

    It's invaluable to run exit nodes, and the risks are fairly minor.

  21. Re:Privacy issue in Europe on Ask Slashdot: Are Smart Meters Safe? · · Score: 1

    Yea, it would be easy to tell bed/wakeup/cooking times. But smart meters where I live (PG&E) only sample at 15 min increments. That's not enough of a sampling resolution to detect much more than large appliance use.

  22. Re:Don't be stupid. Hire someone. on Ask Slashdot: Provisioning Internet For Condo Association? · · Score: 1

    Yup, my first thought is "Avoid anyone who is a ${VENDOR} partner".

    Find a network consultant who can deal with a bunch of vendors and play the bidding game between them to get you the best deal.

  23. Re:Hook on Opiates on Indian Man Charged With Blasphemy For Exposing "Miracle" · · Score: 1

    Or capitol punishment.

    This is a generalization, but I have found the stronger the religious belief a person has, the more they will let cognitive dissonance turn them into a hypocrite.

  24. Re:A better question... on Indian Man Charged With Blasphemy For Exposing "Miracle" · · Score: 1

    And similar to the above post, engagement rings are an extreme marketing blitz on the world. A tradition that was invented by corporations who wanted to sell things.

    If I wanted to show a potential spouse how much I cared, I would probably do something like take them on a trip somewhere. But then again, to me, actions are more valuable than objects.

  25. Re:real problem on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Manage Your Personal Data? · · Score: 1

    1mbps can transfer about 10GB/day.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=1+megabit+per+second+in+gigabytes+per+day

    Uploading 1T would take you a few months.

    I would suggest CrashPlan. They have a 'backup seed' service: http://support.crashplan.com/doku.php/feature/seed_service

    Basically they mail you a 1T drive, you let it fill up with ecrypted backup data, and then you mail it back to them.