Slashdot Mirror


User: superid

superid's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
313
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 313

  1. My brother had one with a serial number in the 500's. Out of the box, the first generation had a version of basic that supported only two string variables. $a and $b. That was all you had to work with until you got the upgrade a few months later.

  2. I'd like to try this but the build is failing on a newly updated ubuntu system.

    bazel build --config=opt :install

    C++ compilation of rule '//sonnet/cc/kernels:resampler_op' failed

    Has anyone had success following the build instructions here: https://bazel.build/versions/m...

  3. Re:Trigger an Opposite Reaction? on Arizona County Attorney To Ditch iPhones Over Apple Dispute With FBI (networkworld.com) · · Score: 1

    There is obviously a market split between iPhone, and Android. The OP's hypothesis is that based solely on Tim Cook and Apples current stance on the issue, that a measurable and statistically significant number of potential buyers will actively switch from iPhones to Androids.

    My "intellectual objection" is that the idea is completely unsupported. I could equally argue that I "suspect" it has led to an increase in the number of students studying 19th century manchurian folk dancing and I'd be equally correct.

  4. Trigger an Opposite Reaction? on Arizona County Attorney To Ditch iPhones Over Apple Dispute With FBI (networkworld.com) · · Score: 1

    The OP says "I suspect Apple's public refusal to decrypt, and Tim Cook's strong words in favor of user privacy, have probably triggered an opposite reaction among many would-be phone buyers"

    Based on what exactly? Why do you suspect this? Your opinion? Gut feeling? unsubstantiated rumors? Tea Leaves? Fox news?

  5. EMACS Memory Footprint? on GNU Emacs Now Has Native Support For GTK Widgets (phoronix.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember when you would say "Eight Meg And Currently Swapping" and that was a funny criticism of how bloated EMACS was.
    What's the mem footprint today?

  6. Re:"Peripheral Processors", not "Parallel Processo on Seymour Cray and the Development of Supercomputers (linuxvoice.com) · · Score: 2

    I came here to say this. In the early 80's I worked on Control Data Cyber 174C mainframes (we had two). Liquid cooled, about maybe 20 feet long with hinged chassis that swung out like doors (maybe 40" by 6' and about 10" thick) . One chassis was a CPU, two were memory I think, and one was for 10+ Peripheral Processor Units (PPUs) which did 100% of the I/O. A whopping 40 MHz! and a 208 bit memory bus with SECDED.

  7. Poison the well on EFF Releases Privacy Badger, an Addon That Algorithmically Blocks Online Trackers · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd rather disrupt the whole tracking network by injecting false information on a mass scale to ruin the economic value of tracking.
    Are there any add-ins that do that?

  8. Re:In his memory - Teaching on James Jude, MD Co-inventor of CPR, Dies At 87 · · Score: 1

    Our town was the first in MA to make CPR certification a graduation requirement.

    I agree with your comments about AEDs and availability too. I'm about ready to buy one for myself because my office of over 3000 people has *one* AED and it's locked in the part-time nurses office.

  9. In his memory - Teaching on James Jude, MD Co-inventor of CPR, Dies At 87 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm a CPR instructor and I will mention this to the class of 16 that I'm teaching in 2 hours. Out of hospital cardiac arrest survival rates are still an abysmally low 8% because bystanders are often paralyzed, fearful, unwilling to get involved, and timidly participate when they do. The American Heart Association's new goal is to double survival rates by 2020. In his memory, you should find a class, bring a friend, learn how to react and be willing to do so.

  10. Generally known but incorrect... on FCC May Stop 911 Access For NSI Phones · · Score: 1

    If you call 911 from a cellphone in southeastern MA, your call is sent to state police headquarters, then it is transferred to the nearest state police barracks, THEN it is transferred to the primary PSAP. So I guess it is more correct to say that you will be connected to the PSAP *eventually*.

      Source, I'm an EMT, my paramedic partner is also a MA state cop.

  11. Re:Does This Make Sense? on Tesla To Unveil Its $35,000 Model 3 In March 2016 · · Score: 2

    no it does not make sense. Because it's wrong. 39% comes from coal.
    http://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/...

  12. Agile or not, I don't care on IBM CIO Thinks Agile Development Might Save Company · · Score: 1

    IBM needs to make a product that I want to buy. I do not care if they use agile, waterfall, spiral, or whatever other model is the flavor of the week.

  13. My Town Paid on Writer: How My Mom Got Hacked · · Score: 1

    The police dept in my relatively small town got hit by this (or similar) last year. They paid the two BC ransom and decrypted their files.

  14. I know two victims on TechCentral Scams Call Center Scammers · · Score: 1

    I know two elderly people, both bilked out of $300. I see dozens of stories in this thread about how so many of us have been called and how you like to string them along and frustrate them. I've been called at least a dozen times. We need something other than just frustration to battle them. How can we prepare tools and tactics to respond and try to stop this?

  15. Prehospital Paramedicine on The Doctor Will Skype You Now · · Score: 1

    This is going to be commonplace in the next few years in the field of Community Paramedicine. I'm an EMT and work on a 911 ambulance. A very large percent of our calls are for patients that can easily be treated in place, but our scope of practice does not allow us to "treat and release". So we use the most expensive method of transportation (an ambulance) to take a non critical patient (with a problem not an emergency) to the most expensive destination, an emergency room.

    A very common example (like DAILY): Mr. Smith is a 72 year old male with congestive heart failure. He was admitted a week ago for treatment and was discharged yesterday morning. He does not have adequate family support, may not have understood his discharge instructions, may not have the ability to obtain or manage his medications, and may not recognize changes in his signs/symptoms that indicate recurrence. Yes, he can obtain SOME in home care, like a visiting nurse, but they are not typically available 24/7 and cannot typically do things like a 12 lead EKG in the field. Any one of the gaps I listed could cause Mr. Smith to be readmitted for the same problem.

    Under the Affordable Care Act, if Mr. Smith is readmitted within 30 days, the hospital will not be reimbursed by Medicare. This is HUGE. There is a tremendous financial incentive for hospitals to invest in telemedicine like facetime and Skype to manage these chronic patients (CHF, pneumonia, elder falls, etc) to avoid readmission penalties.

  16. New Name on Frigid Brown Dwarf Found Only 7.2 Light-Years Away · · Score: 1

    A cold brown dwarf star?
    Did they name it "Gary Coleman"?

  17. Sad but True on Adults Make Riskier, More Inconsistent Decisions As They Get Older, Study Finds · · Score: 1, Informative

    My dad is an engineer and has an MBA. He's 79 and been retired for a while. He could be the case study for this article. He has made horrible financial decisions for the past 15+ years despite a career of doing exactly the opposite.

  18. Today I learned... on The City Where People Are Afraid To Breathe · · Score: 1

    We had a prisoner of war camp in Arizona during WWII.

  19. Communication is Always a Problem on Battery-Powered Transmitter Could Crash A City's 4G Network · · Score: 2

    I hate to say it but 4G for an emergency network is just a money sink. I hate to have a defeatist attitude but at least in my small new england town this would be a complete waste of time and money and effort. We have no unified dispatch system. All land line 911 calls go to police. If you want Fire or Ambulance it's transferred to the Fire department, who then transfers medical calls to the ambulance. If you call from a cell phone it goes to the state police regional office first, then to the local state police barracks, then to town police, etc. Police and fire are on separate frequencies. ICS is a joke and never implemented. EMA is run with all donated equipment and goodwill of Ham operators. Better than nothing? certainly but not by much. I put an IP camera onto their EMA vehicle, punched a hole in their firewall and the chiefs were able to view the scene and control the camera from the EOC. It took me 10 minutes but it was like the natives seeing an airplane. The average Police/fire/EMA chief is 50+ years old and typically holds a grease pencil, not an iPad.

    Example, there was a mill fire in the neighboring city. Multiple towns responded. No ICS, no communication plan, everyone on one channel walking all over each other. There is no way any of these communities could implement, monitor or effectively use a 4G solution.

  20. Bioinformatics Bubble? on ROSALIND: An Addictive Bioinformatics Learning Site · · Score: 2

    I've been casually trying to learn some basic bioinformatics skills and have played with biopython for about a year. My son is a a senior in HS and has been thinking about a BS in Microbiology and a minor in CompSci. We've been to a couple of University open houses lately and they all are pushing bioinformatics programs. I see chatter about it online and even on TV. I even discovered that one of my cousins just got his PhD in bioinformatics. It's everywhere!

    Is there a risk that 4 years from now there will be WAY too many bioinformatics grads? I'd hate to reccommend a field to my son where the employment bubble will burst soon. Any thoughts about job prospects down the road? [ mitigating factor - We're near Boston which appears to be the hub of the industry on the east coast ]

  21. Stock Price on AMD64 Surpasses i386 As Debian's Most Popular Architecture · · Score: 1

    And AMD stock slips below $4 per share losing about half of its value in the last year. I've always been an AMD fan but never an ATi fan and I don't think they ever recovered after that tragic acquisition.

  22. Re:Problem? on Algorithmic Pricing On Amazon 'Could Spark Flash Crash' · · Score: 2

    I'm sure some people got good deals in the flash crash but IIRC didn't the NYSE back out many of the trades saying that they were erroneous?

  23. Plea for Help - Bioinformatics Sci Fair on Google Science Fair Back For 2nd Year · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok slashdotters, I've had no luck getting this question answered elsewhere so I might as well try here. My son is very interested in coding. He's competent in Java and he's picking up c quite well. He's taken an interest in GPU programming and I know over the next year he will do OK with those concepts too (I've been able to get both OpenCL and CUDA code up and running). In other words, we've got the computer end of a sci fair project pretty well established. The problem is that while I know generally what bioinformatics is all about, I have no background or resources in the appropriate biology to help him find a worthy project.

    Ideally, what he wants is 1) a bioinformatics problem with a large data set (yes I realize that is redundant by definition) 2) one that would benefit from GPU programming 3) a problem that makes some kind of physical testable prediction that could be tested.

    Last year a kid (from Canada?) did a drug interaction study where he took candidate compounds and determined where on a protein they would attach. From that he found two compounds that could mate at the same time because their locations did not interfere. Thus increasing the effectivity. He actually clinically tested "his" drug on cells. Pretty impressive. I'm not expecting my son to reach that level but I'd like to find something real world and challenging that couples computer science with a physical biological process.

    any input is greatly appreciated! gary.huntress@gmail.com

  24. MS Versus Metasploit on Same Platform Made Stuxnet, Duqu; Others Lurk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The video is very interesting, but one thing really does annoy me. He talks about discovering the initial vuln and how they were able to understand it literally within minutes (around slide 15/16) and they realized how serious it was (100% successful loading of a DLL from a WebDAV path via LoadLib because control panel icons are handled in a different (broken) way).

    Hey says that the vuln existed for years and that a 7 year old could exploit it because it was included in Metasploit (slide 16). He clearly indicated that Metasploit knew about this before MS and that they were tipped off by 1 or 2 other 3rd party malware researchers who sent in "just another LNK exploit" that they happened to bother to look at. He even said "it's a good thing we did [look at it]".

    So this tells me that MS does NOT bother to review Metasploit scripts to get a leg up on zero days..... that surprised and annoys me.

  25. Don't need more spectrum on Jobs Bill Funds Safety Network With Spectrum Sale · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm an EMT, there are 5 radios in my ambulance. I don't need more ways to talk to people. I need policies, documentation, good equipment, and most of all consistent interoperability training between multiple departments and jurisdictions. I really don't think the fix is more spectrum.