Slashdot Mirror


User: brxndxn

brxndxn's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
577
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 577

  1. Dear Corporate IT on IT Departments Try To Avoid Getting "Ubered" · · Score: 1

    First of all, fuck you. You have made way too much money by having access to the right decision makers to sell them on expensive ineffective bullshit. You have cushy jobs because you only need to actually work 2 hours a week since you have convinced management that the entire corporation cannot do anything with tablets or cellphones or bring your own device in the name of security. You have used the firewall to block everything productive or potentially disruptive to requiring your 'expertise' from the Internet access for common office workers. You have outsourced your networking experts to foreign countries. You have sold outsourcing as a way to eliminate all technical people from local offices. You have given lucrative IT contracts to friends in the business that have zero skills required. You hold the keys to the kingdom because you use loose technical mumbo jumbo to convince management that they need to wait on your slow solutions to problems easily solved by anyone in the know - anyone available outside your corporate IT kingdom. You force common office workers to spend more time working around your self-imposed technical hurdles to transfer a file than creating the actual files needed to transfer. You hold your entire company back. Second, we're coming for you and we're happy to help eliminate your worthless positions. Dear Management.. quit paying these losers already.

  2. Re:Keep up, or fall behind on Oracle: Google Has "Destroyed" the Market For Java · · Score: 1

    Is there anything that Oracle does that people (tech people and developers) really like? I still don't understand their killer platform.. All I see is that they buy old proprietary software and support it for companies that are already locked into it. Of course they should end up in court.. It's where the last remnants of SCO ended up. If Oracle doesn't have some kind of new technology that is 'awesome' or even relevant, then court and more court..

  3. What does Oracle do well? on Oracle Bullies Enterprise Clients Into Cloud Purchases, Consultant Claims · · Score: 1

    I am curious here.. What does Oracle do well? Like.. where is the Oracle software better than all the alternatives? All of my experiences with Oracle seem to be that they have old legacy software with a user base too scared to move to something modern. Oracle's business model: 1. identify software with entrenched user base 2. buy said software 3. continue to 'support' software with new versions that consist of mostly a new splash screen on startup 4. raise prices

  4. Re:Snooping Programs a help on Obama Asks Congress To Renew 'Patriot Act' Snooping · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with your assessment is that you are actually taking the FBI for their word. They are saying they need this and the only problems are possibly too much data. Of course they are saying they need this.. but the real purpose isn't for terrorism or even crime-fighting. The purpose of bulk record storage on American citizens is to have a dossier on anyone that may end up being a threat to the existing internal power structure of the US. That is why they are willing to spend so much money on a program that has so far proven to have very little use. I do not believe there has been any point in history where so many resources were spent with such few results.

  5. Re:What are those pixels for? on LG Accidentally Leaks Apple iMac 8K Is Coming Later This Year · · Score: 1

    Neither company has given us a vector-graphic 3d GUI, so they both deserve 30 lashes.

  6. Re:What are those pixels for? on LG Accidentally Leaks Apple iMac 8K Is Coming Later This Year · · Score: 1

    This whole 'human eye cannot discern' is bullshit. You can walk into any electronics store and immediately notice which TVs are displaying 4k content from the front door. Some of this may be due to the 4k media being 'pixel perfect' while the HD we are used to is typically highly-compressed shitty 720p delivered by Verizon and Comcast. I still have no problem immediately telling the difference between 4k and a 1080p Bluray, though. Just because the eye may not be able to perceive the 'single pixels', it does not mean that the displays have zero noticeable difference between 1080p and 2160p. Besides.. it doesn't even matter if the human eye can discern it or not. If people perceive it to be better, they will pay more for it and Apple will make money.

  7. Cannot regulate bitcoin in the traditional sense on Bitcoin In China Still Chugging Along, a Year After Clampdown · · Score: 4, Informative
    Bitcoin is a protocol more than it is a currency. Everything about the bitcoin protocol is made to keep a record of value that cannot be faked or stolen (when implemented properly). It is a complicated technology and governments will take a while to grasp it - just as it took years for governments and people to grasp just what 'the Internet' was. A government can make all the regulations or limitations it wants about Bitcoin - but it cannot have any influence over the Bitcoin protocol unless it participates. Participation makes Bitcoin stronger. There are no specifications in the protocol that give government any more control over Bitcoin protocol than anyone else that participates. If one country makes it harder (or illegal) for its population to use Bitcoin, that country and their population will have fewer Bitcoins.

    Unless the Bitcoin protocol is broken, Bitcoin will always have value. Bitcoin is a finite resource. The value will be determined by the marketplace.

    There are other alternative virtual currencies just like there are other alternative network protocols. However, as with almost any technology, the first widely-accepted implementation becomes the standard. TCP/IP is far from the best network protocol - but it is good enough. Bitcoin is far from the best virtual currency - but it is the most widely accepted.

    I think it's fairly stupid at this point not to have a small amount of Bitcoin just in case it really starts to be accepted.

  8. Re:What's missing from this story? on Online "Swatting" Becomes a Hazard For Gamers Who Play Live On the Internet · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think this is the bigger problem. This.. and pretty much ignoring common sense across the board when it comes to any excuse to allowing the government to become more heavy-handed (and frankly, fascist). The media will report this like 'people doing the swatting' are the problem. But, bomb threats and other similar attempts at mayhem have been around since way before the Internet and the police used to respond to them in a sensible manner. I am not saying the police should ignore a 'swat' call - but I am saying they should have some common sense before they suit up 20 officers for warlike conditions and inject them with a 'spasmodic roid rage only-for-the-movies attitude.' I don't care what a random guy on the phone says - it does not mean the other party should forfeit all of their Constitutional rights and have their front door knocked down. In all of this, I would say the biggest problem is not knocking by the police. However, this all fits if you realize the purpose of police militarization and the ridiculously disproportionately expensive warrior on terror is to move us (the US) in a fascist direction since fascism benefits the people currently pay our lawmakers (ie.. the 1%).

  9. False premise... on Yik Yak Raises Controversy On College Campuses · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Colleges are largely powerless to deal with the havoc Yik Yak is wreaking." This assumes that Yik Yak is wreaking havoc. So far, the article itself does not even give any real example to 'havoc' being wreaked by Yik Yak. This whole article can be summed up by "A new disruptive way of anonymous communication is catching on amongst college students. Naturally, a bunch of Orwellian-type people are worried about their lack of control over it." Further, if any actual violence happens because it was first announced on Yik Yak, it would be no different than if actual violence happened because it was announced via email, Facebook, or someone yelling and screaming it at a crowd.

  10. Re:Why lay fiber at all when you can gouge wireles on Verizon About To End Construction of Its Fiber Network · · Score: 1

    There is no free market when Verizon is granted an anti-competitive monopoly on property-owners' easements and given tax breaks for infrastructure that equal more than Verizon pays for infrastructure. Verizon needs to be held accountable for their failure to live up to taxpayer promises. They are hardly a private company.

  11. Re:ATI/AMD has had shitty drivers for 20 years on AMD Catalyst Is the Broken Wheel For Linux Gaming · · Score: 1

    I suppose you think Intel developed AMD64 instruction set too..

  12. Re:ATI/AMD has had shitty drivers for 20 years on AMD Catalyst Is the Broken Wheel For Linux Gaming · · Score: 5, Informative

    AMD is most certainly not a shit company ~ you have a shit opinion. AMD was pounded into the ground financially by Intel competing unfairly when AMD had the clear performance advantage. Intel made their agreements so companies like HP would actually save money if they went 100% Intel even though the market was clearly calling for AMD processors. This was made obvious when AMD offered to give free processors to HP and HP still refused. Since Intel is basically a monopoly and our regulatory agencies are run by ball-less cowards, AMD has a tiny research and development budget compared to both Intel and Nvidia. AMD continues to exist with research money being their only real limitation. History shows that AMD can create processors that outperform Intel with less than a quarter of Intel's research budget. AMD has nowhere near a quarter of Intel's research budget at the moment. As far as ATI/Nvidia competition, Nvidia tends to make things as proprietary as possible while AMD makes them more open. AMD's graphics hardware tends to be more advanced while having a simpler design than Nvidia. However, AMD's very limited software/driver development budget keeps AMD graphics cards performing less than optimally. Further, my experience of gaming on Linux a few months ago gave me no issues with the Metro 2033 Redux and my Radeon 7970.. so I am going to take this 'benchmark' with a grain of salt. Perhaps the latest driver is slow or has a bug - but they do tend to get fixed from my experience. Even if you hate AMD as a company, you can thank them for the reasonable prices of CPUs and graphics cards. Without AMD, both become extremely expensive.

  13. Re:Build your own fab on AMD, Nvidia Reportedly Tripped Up On Process Shrinks · · Score: 1

    No, it isn't. The entire market cap of AMD is less than the cost of building a new fab. Intel royally fucked AMD in 1999-2003 and AMD has been in a dismal financial position ever since. Intel does not play fair - and until Intel is forced to play fair, the best you can expect from AMD is for them to stay alive. Intel was forced to pay a fine that was about 5% of where AMD should have been financially.

  14. Re:More centralised control on The One Mistake Google Keeps Making · · Score: 1

    I have to agree with this sentiment. As an automation programmer, I integrate new technology into existing systems all the time. No matter how old something is, there is usually an interface or way to make it communicate and work seamlessly with newer components. I'm sick of every goddamn writer saying generalized idiocy to the effect of 'we need more government for everything.' If there are enough 'sensors' on existing roads for humans to make good driving decisions, then there are enough sensors on existing roads for machines to be programmed to make the same decisions.

  15. Re:Dem haxxorz dey be haxxin. on North Korean Defector Spills Details On the Country's Elite Hacking Force · · Score: 0

    Gotta agree with your sarcasm. Se-yul is also saying the exact things US officials would want him to say if they're trying to justify a typical bloated 'cyberwarfare' budget and new laws that limit freedoms in the US. "OMG the scary North Korea and their elite hackers are going to bring the US (home to the programmers of most of the worlds' major software) to its knees!"

  16. Re:Not a Real Question on Ask Slashdot: How Should a Liberal Arts Major Get Into STEM? · · Score: 2

    WTF does STEM even mean? To me, it sounds like someone who is so goddamn unfamiliar with anything technical that he is trying to find a word more generalized than 'anything technical.'

  17. Re:I'll donate some onions for the cause... on Julian Assange Trying To Raise Nearly $200k For a Statue of Himself · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Holy shit what a fucking insightful opinion. Mod parent to 5! Nobody else thought this initially and had the bold cavalier mental fortitude to just fucking post it... without wondering if there's really any truth to this.

  18. Re:Really? .. it comes with the job on CIA Lied Over Brutal Interrogations · · Score: 1

    As a private citizen, you can do that without representing the neighborhood. The CIA tortured on behalf of the United States.

  19. Good job, FBI on FBI Seizes Los Angeles Schools' iPad Documents · · Score: 2

    This is what the FBI should be doing with our taxpayer money instead of going after individual software pirates or trying to push for easier backdoors into consumer devices. Teachers often get handed expensive devices that they don't really need - and they get denied funding on simple things like books, crayons, and copies. Meanwhile, teachers get paid shit and county officials get paid 3-5x as much.. The FBI should be cracking down on these corrupt jackasses.

  20. Re:Confession - I didn't like Interstellar on Physicist Kip Thorne On the Physics of "Interstellar" · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I loved this movie.. It wasn't perfect - but no science-based sci-fi movie is. It's up to us to figure out how to make the impossible possible. No one needs another engineer or scientist telling us what we cannot do. We need more people like Elon Musk saying what we can do - and going out and proving it. The laws of physics are there to be broken. Defy them. Prove them wrong. Einstein broke Newton's laws.. Someone needs to break Einstein's laws.

    I'll take Interstellar over any one of the normal Hollywood we get fed to us.. (ie.. XMen, Random war movies, save-the-world CIA shit). So please tell me you think this movie was at least better than the typical Hollywood movie.

    If engineers and scientists tended to be optimistic rather than pessimistic, engineers and scientists would be running the world. Obama didn't get elected by telling us what mankind cannot do.

  21. And this is why... on Jackie Chan Discs Help Boost Solar Panel Efficiency · · Score: 1

    you save all of your AOL cd's...

  22. Dear Judges, on Judge Unseals 500+ Stingray Records · · Score: 1

    Clandestine agencies in the US have circumvented all pillars of free and open government in order to slice off your balls, and tell you that you do not need to look down when you notice the pain. Please act with urgency while there are still means to sew them back. It is your duty to push back. No matter what maze-like justification is used to create a framework that undermines the foundation of our country; it is never justified nor does it serve to create justice. Stingray breaks the law just by existing.\

  23. Re:Use Bitcoin Blockchain technology.. on Another Election, Another Slew of Voting Machine Glitches · · Score: 1
    That is bullshit. That's like saying "Nobody understands the inner workings of a jpg file format so the average Joe cannot understand how to benefit from the technology."

    Paper can be thrown away.. Hidden.. burned.. counted wrong.. etc.. Not everybody can verify the paper. No matter what, with paper, you are trusting it in the hands of a few. You cannot cheat the blockchain. Further, you can make a paper printout with the blockchain that has a web address where any average Joe can in fact verify that he voted for Turd Sandwich.. with a date and everything.

    https://blockchain.info/tx-ind... Here is an example of one of my Bitcoin wallet transactions. Notes can be entered for each Wallet location that show what candidate they are (or business.. or whatever). For the life of Bitcoin, that transaction cannot be changed or recorded differently.

    For the average Joe to verify, it's as simple as him going to a website he feels he can trust, clicking the 'verify my vote' button.. and typing in his unique voting hash from his printout. The average Joe does not need the same experience it takes to program fucking Bitcoin just as the average Joe right now does not need the experience of counting the whole US set of votes to feel good about his paper ballot.

    Like I said, there's probably 1000 different ways voting can be done using the blockchain.. while still making it simple for the average Joe.

  24. BULLSHIT.. Gamergate needs a real explanation on Bounties vs. Extreme Internet Harassment · · Score: -1

    The gaming community is angry because the whole GamerGate scandal exposed how the entire gaming media industry works together to control the opinions of the gaming community through lies and propaganda. Further, no major media publication is actually trying to explain GamerGate. Even Wikipedia leaves out the details.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... Here's a quick GamerGate explanation: (I believe this one is closer to the truth) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v... It's really sad how every major publication leaves out half the story and instead tries to paint the gaming community as the source of the problem. Also, I really doubt the gaming community as a whole would condone any threats of violence against these women.

  25. Re:If they're going literal.... on Undersized Grouper Case Lands In Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    I have to agree with this.. To apply Sarbanes-Oxley to a bunch of Florida fishermen catching fish off the coast of Florida is basically ignoring the US Constitution (the foundation of law in the US) in order to go after a harsher punishment by an overzealous prosecutor. There no interstate commerce here.. Pulling fish out of the water and putting them in a cooler is not commerce. They should've been slapped with the normal fine and some sort of fine/court case for destruction of evidence.. But this seems like an example of the system going after the little guy in a strange manner in order to change overall opinion on regulation.