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  1. Many problems on Lennart Poettering: Open Source Community "Quite a Sick Place To Be In" · · Score: 1

    There are many problems with Poettering and Sievers:

    1) they don't seem to care care about the Community
    2) they don't seem to want to interact with the Community
    3) they don't seem to want to have a discussion about the many problems and concerns the Community has voiced about systemd
    4) it takes no other than Linus himself to force Kay Sievers to get his act together and fix his crap (the "systemd kernel debug" story) and there's another one where Linus orders Sievers again to fix more crap (the "let's *not* read 1 byte at a time" story)
    5) they make bad design decisions and consequently write bad software: let's do binary log files and too bad if your journal goes corrupt. We'll just delete it and move on. Given their employer, how is that anywhere near "Enterprise"?!
    6) they ignore the Unix/Linux mantra: do one thing and do it well. Now go take a look at the systemd design and how massive that PID 1 kitchensink is. That's a SystemdOMGNucleairZombiesShock waiting to happen.

    Why did Red Hat Engineering let it get to this? It's not like this story is beneficial to Red Hat in more than one way. Death threats are of course insane and have no place in our Community. However, the underlying frustration and anger because of their abrasive my-way-or-the-highway attitude and blatant disregard for the Community is hardly surprising. It would not be a bad idea for Red Hat Engineering to reassign Poettering, Sievers et al to work on projects that have no Community interaction nor impact or at least replace their current PHB with someone vastly more capable to reign in those ego's and put an end to this epic amount of Stupid.

  2. Apple should pay taxes where their sales are on Apple Faces Large Penalties In EU Tax Probe · · Score: 1

    Excellent news. Apple, Microsoft, Google, Starbucks and all those other euro-tax avoiding organizations should be forced to pay taxes where they sell their products. I hope that the EU for once does something that benefits Europeans and return billions to the EU economy. Not play and relay but pay to play.

    The tricks that those Transfer Pricing consultants from the big tax advisory firms pull have gone way too far. It's time they are reigned in. And their customers should be hit where it hurts most. Next the EU should create new tax regulations that at least 50% of the revenues from foreign designed/manufactured products/services should be spent in the country where the sale of said products/services took place. With regulations like that, extreme globalization, dangerous trade deficits, evil transfer pricing schemes and billions in off-shore havens doing nothing will become a thing of the past.

    Imagine what those billions of avoided euro-taxes in off-shore tax havens could have done for the EU economy.

  3. Re:Update your NTP sw! on DDoS Larger Than the Spamhaus Attack Strikes US and Europe · · Score: 4, Informative

    Thank you for pointing that out. It would be great if sysadmins and vendors fixed their NTP config. Unfortunately i's not only NTP that gets abused. The script kiddies also use open DNS servers that do recursive searches. And I'm sure there are more ways kindly offered by ignorant sysadmins and vendors who just don't care. Just google for "TP-Link recursive DNS" to get an idea. The solution is to force vendors to fix recursive DNS and NTP on their Internet facing boxes (why stop there, just "disallow anything from WAN" by default) and make them liable for the default config. Educate and poke sysadmins to fix their badly configured crap if they do not want to get blocked by their ISP or upstream. Force local ISPs to drop packets with a non-local src IP address and block the idiot that sends those packets. And finally add to Spamhaus the IP addresses/ranges of idiots who just don't care. Let's see how quickly they fix their crap once their boss figures out he can no longer send email to the cute-cat-pic mailing list.

  4. It's already non-US on Can There Be a Non-US Internet? · · Score: 1

    There are way more Internet users outside of the US many of them with faster Internet at cheaper rates. The two biggest Internet exchanges are in Frankfurt (DE-CIX) and Amsterdam (AMS-IX) and in terms of traffic peaks and traffic transfers they leave the US as a tiny dot in their rear-view mirror. The biggest e-commerce market in the world when measured by the amount spent per capita? The UK, in 2010. The e-commerce market in absolute numbers in China will at least equal but probably surpass the US in 2013. And that's only one of the BRIC countries. Now add Japan (Rakuten) and Europe and it's easy to see that the Internet is global and definitely not US centric. Anyone who thinks that follies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram make up the majority of the Intertubes is probably American, thinks Fox News tells the truth and has never left his/her country :-) The same goes for those fine optical cables transporting all those cat videos. Most cables are not owned by US companies. And most cables are not even near the US. US companies may lease fibre in those cables but that's not the same. Have a look at all submarine cables here: http://submarine-cable-map-2013.telegeography.com/ Building your own Internet is a matter of finding the cash, hiring one of those cable ships and put your cable between point A and B. Next thing you will do is hook it up to an Internet exchange at which point it will start to transport traffic from the US (the NSA, cat videos) and to the US (the NSA backup, when posting, tweeting, tumblering and instagramming about those cat videos). The only place where the Internet is US centric is in regulatory control: ICANN. It's time ICANN got replaced by an extension of the IETF located outside of the US in a neutral place like Switzerland. ICANN can keep .com, and .mil but anything else should get transferred to the new organization. And no I will not hold my breath for that to happen any time soon.

  5. Re:40%? No. on Google Outage: Internet Traffic Plunges 40% · · Score: 1

    There is this neat concept called "peering". A massive amount of Google's traffic does not go through public ports on Internet Exchanges. Instead it's delivered to Google caching nodes hosted at ISPs around the world and delivered from those caching nodes directly to the ISPs customer. This saves a few zillion petabytes in bandwidth (and dollars). By the way, it looks like the Amsterdam Internet Exchange, AMS-IX, has overtaken DE-CIX as the biggest Internet Exchange in the world.

  6. So where is the Monsanto link? on Europe Needs Genetically Engineered Crops, Scientists Say · · Score: 1

    Anything pro-GMO should be subject to extreme scrutiny and is probably Monsanto playing the field. This pro-GMO guy is from a Spanish university and it's obvious that Spain is pretty far up the creek with a gigantic unemployment rate and staggering debt which surely had an impact on his university's funding. So where is the Monsanto link? Did anyone follow the money? Who funded their pro-GMO research? GMO is a bad idea and Monsanto's GMO patents and their litigation are in an evil scale of their own.

  7. Re:As we all know?? on Wikipedia Moved To MariaDB 5.5 · · Score: 1

    "Since then it has been very public with Oracle Linux"

    Ah you're maybe referring to the CentOS-like clone they created from Red Hat's source packages. Once they spun their isos and slapped together a 3 page website they went after Red Hat's customers saying "their" so called unbreakable Linux is better than Red Hat's. That same unbreakable Linux which is based *entirely* on Red Hat's source packages. That's pretty evil in my book. Add how they are shielding off MySQL bugs and development and what they did to OpenSolaris and you get a pretty clear picture of a dinosaur-going-the-way-of-the-dodo who's trashing anything Open while giving in to its insatiable hunger for ginormous license fees and sending ginormous invoices to misguided customers for their $1000-suit "consultants".

    It makes total sense to migrate to MariaDB, Percona, EnterpriseDB or PostgreSQL as fast as you can. While you are at it replace BerkeleyDB with LMDB. Last time I looked OpenLDAP, Postfix, OpenDKIM and other projects already support it. And it's faster and more reliable than BerkeleyDB too.

    The only way Oracle will (hopefully) make some attempt to become a proper member of our Community is when they feel it where it hurts most: revenue streams. So slam the door in the face of that pompous Oracle rep, don't renew the license(s), drink the F/OSS Cool Aid and enjoy the view.

  8. Say "Code monkey" and thou shal suffer the cons... on Jonathan Coulton Re-records 'Code Monkey' For Us · · Score: 1

    Anyone remember that a long time member of the Community used the phrase "Code Monkey"? It's been a few years but hearing this version I wish people would just first take a deep breath, count to ten and then focus on the things that really matter...

  9. Welcome to Fedora on Ubuntu Will Now Have Amazon Ads Pre-Installed · · Score: 1

    As a Fedorian I welcome everybody from Ubuntu who seek an alternative. Fedora is a free cutting edge distro. The good side: no ads and other commercial ties making *you* the product or that unity abomination. The downside: Fedora is void of any (potentially) patent encumbered or non-free software so you will need to make a bit of an effort to get all those codecs, flash and non-free apps etc installed on your shiny new Fedora powered box. It's worth it though. Even GNOME3 grows on you once you have slapped some sanity into it by installing a bunch of extensions. If you are not interested in Fedora, there are a ton of different distributions to choose from. Head over to distrowatch.com to get an idea how many there are.

  10. Re:Part of Microsoft shake down plans of Android on Attachmate Does the Right Thing For Mono · · Score: 1

    Really De Icaza, posting as an AC? How's the funding going? Did Microsoft find you a new Baystar yet?

  11. Re:Part of Microsoft shake down plans of Android on Attachmate Does the Right Thing For Mono · · Score: 1

    And why would that be? Seems all I hear from those Mono lovers is that those who are opposed to Mono and De Icaza's little ploy have no clue. Yet I am still waiting on what the right clue is. Why is there no patent threat in Mono? Why is it safe to use? Why will I never be sued by Microsoft when I deploy/sell Mono crap? Give me proof and nothing but proof. Thus far all I hear is a thundering silence.

  12. Part of Microsoft shake down plans of Android on Attachmate Does the Right Thing For Mono · · Score: 0

    De Icaza may have gotten that license and it seems to be all about Mono but if you read their plans then you can see that De Icaza, as one can expect from a good little Microsoft footsoldier, is moving towards closed, proprietary applications for iPhone and Android. With Microsoft already targeting Android phone vendors what do you think what will happen if vendors ship Mono based applications created with De Icaza's Trojan Horses or sell Mono based apps in their app stores? It's all about getting more Microsoft Intellectual Property on Android phones so Microsoft can continue & further expand their shake down or sue for (alleged) patent infringement. It's all about making sure that Microsoft can say to potential hardware partners: Android is *not* free, there is a monetary (legal/IP) cost attached and this is why we are cheaper. Microsoft provides the bullets (via Attachmate this time) and De Icaza as usual bends over for Microsoft and does as he is told. This announcement should be a wake up call to the entire Android Community that Microsoft is trying very hard to make everybody who's doing anything with Android bleed till they drop dead.

  13. More than you think on Man With 10 Million Air Miles Gets Plane Named After Him · · Score: 1

    I don't know how many here fly an average of 200 times a year but that is a lot. Having flown for decades my record was 200+ European flights and about 50 (twice a week) flights from Amsterdam to the US. People I met with a lot actually thought that I lived there where "there" was e.g. London, Paris, New York etc. At some point you become the guy Up In The Air so I knew it was time to get out. That and the jet lag that never left. He did it for 29 years. That's pretty amazing.

  14. What a surprise, Dutch socialists mess up on Dutch Legislature Accidentally Votes For Internet Filtering · · Score: 1

    This "oopsie" is just a small fail in a long history of epic fails. In the last 100 years the Dutch socialists have destroyed education and healthcare, have initiated massive blue collar immigration without thinking one second of the consequences if you don't do anything about integration resulting, besides increased crime, in considerable emigration of highly educated white collar knowledge workers. Furthermore Dutch socialists have subsidized ridiculous initiatives with ridiculous amounts of taxpayer money as long as it furthered their socialist cause and retained or expanded votes, spent money like there was no tomorrow (thanks for the staggering debt...) and generally lined their own pockets forcefully paid for by hard working people with a real job. The fact that politicians know next to nothing about the in-ter-nets is shameful and labor should have consulted with experts on the subject before casting their vote and making their even more stupid mistake of voting for the wrong bill. Thank $deity these socialist idiots lost the elections and are no longer part of the government. As usual the mess the Dutch socialists left can now be cleaned up by the new centre-right government which has to come up with $12 billion worth of spending cuts (about 2% of estimated 2011 GNP). This was Dutch Rant radio. Thanks for listening & have a great day!

  15. Technology is not the issue on Encrypting Phone Storage and Transmission? (2011 Version) · · Score: 1

    Technology is not the issue: get your favorite OS instance from your favorite cloud provider/hoster or whatever, setup ssh and openvpn. Part 1 done. Now hop on irc.freenode.net to #asterisk or #freeswitch and ask around for a provider that offers encrypted SIP calls using TLS/SRTP or even ZRTP using non standard ports (like 80, 443, 25 etc.). If your new overlords don't block ports perhaps Skype works too. Use creditcard to throw some cash at the service, configure phone. Part 2 done.

    Bottom line is that when you are in a country with scary overlords with many scare drones who like to see you in a scary basement with scary tools you want to keep your head down, do the work, grab the pot of gold (I hope) and get the hell out. If you are from the US be prepared for some serious negative sentiment towards you and the US in general. Do not comment on anything political ever. Do not comment on the pothole in the street, the food, the music, do not comment on girls/women ever. Basically do not comment on anything. Just smile, shut up, respectfully say you have work to do and back out of the discussion as fast as you can. And remember, your biggest "friend" is probably the guy that reports about you every night and gives the other scary drones the intel based on which they might decide to drag you into one of their basements. Do not confide in any person. Oh and just because some other expats say there's no problem with having a few alcoholic beverages at home does not mean that it's save for you. Just imagine the scary basement with the scary tools before you do something that is totally normal in the US but might be or is conceived as insulting and illegal in your nice new restrictive country.

    I hope it's worth it.

  16. /. now a Microsoft PR drone? on Cybercriminals Shifting To Bugat · · Score: 2

    It's nice to see that even /. will not clearly specify that this is a Microsoft Windows-only problem. The Microsoft PR drones have been "generalizing" and "de-Windowfying" the trojan/virus/malware problem for a while now. And quite successful it seems when even /. serves its articles the way Microsoft's PR drones like to see them. If you read the first sentence then it is basically unclear, to the untrained, inexperienced eyes of this world, that this is not a problem for all Operating Systems and platforms but unique to one particular vendor. Time to give the Microsoft PR drones more work and put the blame were it belongs.

  17. Re:Open source VoIP alternatives? on More Skype Back Door Speculation · · Score: 4, Informative

    FreeSWITCH (www.freeswitch.org) is completely open, is MPL licensed and supports TLS & SRTP. Make sure you get the right phone with the right firmware because not all phones properly support TLS & SRTP. Ask in the #freeswitch irc channel on freenode.net or the FreeSWITCH mailing list which phones are known to work.

    Asterisk has support for TLS in their development tree. Afaik their SRTP support is an untested patch in the bugtracker. At this point in time Asterisk does not seem to offer a working, stable TLS & SRTP solution.

  18. Re:FreeSWITCH can do Video Conf. on F/OSS Multi-Point Video-Conferencing · · Score: 2, Informative

    Please read the comment more carefully. FreeSWITCH is not FreePBX nor Asterisk. It's Asterisk done right and then some. More info about FreeSWITCH is at http://www.freeswitch.org/ and joining #freeswitch at irc.freenode.net will get you in touch with a very helpful community ready to answer your questions. Try it, be amazed, contribute, and enjoy!

  19. We are all winners on Linux Desktop Distro Shootout · · Score: 1

    In good /. tradition I really quickly browsed the article and before I saw the last of it typed in my comments:

    1) Informationweek is utterly clueless. Calling CentOS (aka RHEL) "probably the slightly friendlier of the two distributions" is silly as we (who actually work with/know both of them) know that CentOS/RHEL is the conservative *server* version and is way behind in features & functionality to Fedora. Compare the F9 featurelist with the latest CentOS/RHEL (beta) features list and all I can say is "nuf said".

    2) Informationweek is even more clueless when talking about hardware support and declaring Ubuntu the winner: "it works with almost any hardware you throw at it". Maybe someone should tell those clowns that hardware support is pretty much generic amongst distro's because they all use pretty much the same kernel. Hell, even Slackware is up to 2.6.24 these days.

    3) Informationweek has reached a rare state of cluelesness: "Most of the software in CentOS is also similar to what you get in Red Hat". Hello?! For your information, Informationweek, they are actually the same.

    This is as much a shootout as I am Steve Balmer going into I-wont-throw-any-more-chairs-please-me-let-me-keep-my-job-after-messing-up-the-yahoo-deal therapy.

  20. Re:Grumbling on GCC 4.2.1 Released · · Score: 1

    And one developer who complains that not allowing backported patches to stay under GPLv2 will be a burdon to companies offering support for older versions (eg Novell, Xandros and Linspire).
    Given the fact that these companies have sold out to Microsoft frankly I could not care less. Let the corporate sock puppets at Novell et all figure out how to commercially leech on the GPLv3'd work of the developers. Not allowing backports to stay under GPLv2 will ensure that Novell et all & Microsoft are rapidly closing in on a dead end. But let's not kid ourselves that this will put an end to it. Microsoft will be relentless in pursuing ways to hurt the F/OSS Community were it can. We should not give them an inch and not allowing GPLv2 backports is following that strategy nicely.
  21. Re:Gentoo is First on x86 Linux Flash Player 9 is Final · · Score: 2, Informative

    For Fedora Core users you can go to this website: http://macromedia.mplug.org/
    It has the required yum repo file that you need to install the flash-plugin with yum.
    Quick howto:
    $ wget -v http://macromedia.mplug.org/macromedia-i386.repo
    $ sudo mv macromedia-i386.repo /etc/yum.repos.d
    $ sudo yum install flash-plugin

    Restart Firefox for the plugin to become active.

    If you already have that repo file installed you can upgrade the flash-plugin with:
    $ sudo yum upgrade flash-plugin

    Thanks Adobe. Hopefully we'll see a 64bit version soon.

  22. Re:Active directory is what we need on Novell Dumps the Hula Project · · Score: 1

    Have a look at the Red Hat Directory Server http://www.redhat.com/solutions/directoryserver/ which is a commercial offering or the Fedora Directory Server http://directory.fedora.redhat.com/ which is free. This is the offspring of the former Sun/iPlanet Directory Server and way up on the enterprise-grade scale and includes a java based management console.

  23. Re:My suggestions on Which Asterisk Or Other VoIP System To Deploy? · · Score: 1

    "Get Digium's version of it that they provide support for."

    I tested a setup with a couple of Asterisk Business Editions and decided against deploying it in our environment. The reason was that the ABE version we got was based on an ancient version of Asterisk (1.0.x) and lacked required functionality that was only present in Asterisk 1.2. Call Digium sales and ask them if the most current ABE version is based on Asterisk 1.2 or 1.0. At the time they weren't too forthcoming with that information and I had to push them a bit to come clear. Also get an overview of the functionality in the ABE and compare that to the functionality that you require for your environment. If stuff is missing then I guess the non-commercial Asterisk is your only option.

  24. Re:Two tips for you. on Which Asterisk Or Other VoIP System To Deploy? · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, they use Octastic echo cancellers which are top in the industry. "

    The latest generation of Digium cards use this chipset too.

  25. Re:Two tips for you. on Which Asterisk Or Other VoIP System To Deploy? · · Score: 3, Informative

    "get real digium cards, nothing else."

    I can strongly recommend reviewing Sangoma cards too. Do some googling around and search for the reviews/comparisons of both Digium and Sangoma cards and you will see why you should give the Sangoma cards a good look/test too. Ask around and you will likely hear that Sangoma's support gets a major thumbs up. My personal experience with Digium's support is not good. The proverbial "Mike" in India was totally useless. If I call the Support dept. of a company that makes cards that interface with voice E1/PRI lines, then I should not have to explain to this guy what a g.703/704 interface is, period.

    Do also compare the hardware echo cancellation specs of both the Digium and Sangoma cards. Don't use the marketing specs but review the real nitty gritty stuff like how many tabs the echo cans support at which tail length. Iirc the Sangoma cards have better tail length specs when the max amount of tabs is used. One thing about echo on a phone line: if you have it, you have a problem. If you have it and you can't make it go away, you run the risk of having to look for a new job. So make sure you go with the solution that works best for your infrastructure/financial environment and provides your users with crystal clear phone calls.

    The Asterisk-Sangoma cards combination is a very strong one. That is definitely not to say that deployments based on Asterisk-Digium cards suck. On the contrary. There are many, many installations that work fine. You just have to make sure that if you go the Asterisk route, your decision to go with a certain brand of interface cards is based on some serious testing of *all* combinations on your shortlist.