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User: CajunArson

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  1. Ooh ooh! New Research Topic! on Oil Dispersants Used During Gulf Spill Degrade Slowly In Cold Water · · Score: -1, Troll

    I have this thing called a car and when it is used in an approved manner to drive down an empty road it transports me. This actually happened last Tuesday.

      We should do research on what would happen if we dropped my car from a cargo plane at an altitude of 20,000 feet and then decide if cars should be banned if there are any ill effects.

  2. North Korea just set off a nuke on Of the Love of Oldtimers - Dusting Off a Sun Fire V1280 Server · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Since Slashdot won't post it for another 36 hours: North Korea just set off another nuke. The USGS has detected a 4.9 to 5.1 magnitude artificial earthquake centered at the same location as previous tests: http://inagist.com/all/301169171180433408/

  3. Re:You must be stupid, stupid, stupid on Moving the Linux Kernel Console To User-Space · · Score: 2

    You're flat-out wrong with calling the standard console "ultra-fast"

    Wall-clock time to run "tree" on 152,724 files on my Arch system (repeated runs were made for each technique to ensure consistency):

          1. Using the supposedly bloated & slow Konsole under KDE: 1.8 - 1.9 seconds.

          2. Using the supposedly "ultra-fast" kernel konsole: 12.7 - 12.8 seconds.

  4. LET THE HATE BEGIN! on Moving the Linux Kernel Console To User-Space · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    This is new and new stuff is EVIL! We should get our pitchforks and BURN it right alongside Wayland for daring to do something different than the perfection of 1985 era technology!

    Now please excuse me while I get back to ranting about how patents are the one and only cause for innovation being squelched in the modern world.

  5. Re:OPENVPN on Barracuda Appliances Have Exploitable Holes, Fixed By Firmware Updates · · Score: 1

    Interesting, I didn't even know it had shared-key support. I think they prefer a PKI setup and I didn't delve into all of the options in that much detail. Good call.

  6. Re:OPENVPN on Barracuda Appliances Have Exploitable Holes, Fixed By Firmware Updates · · Score: 1

    You could say that. In fact, it requires certificates & PKI to work. You can be a self-signing CA if you want, so there's no need to deal with Verisign/etc. if you don't want to. OpenVPN links to utilities that make it manageable to setup the CA and generate certificates for end users.

  7. OPENVPN on Barracuda Appliances Have Exploitable Holes, Fixed By Firmware Updates · · Score: 3, Informative

    Live it, love it, use it (oh and it has commercial support too so it's not just a toy). http://openvpn.net/

  8. Re:Is this good-bye? on Intel Demos Optical Data Transfer For Servers · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oh yes, Intel's reign of terror that includes foisting tens of millions of systems that can easily boot practically any version of Linux and their insidious plot to use standardized system interconnects has truly ushered in an age of darkness from which the world will never recover. Don't even get me started on their insidious projects where they infiltrate the Linux kernel with completely open-sourced GPL'd graphics drivers! Truly they should all be put up on war crimes charges!

    Now excuse me while I return to my secret resistance base where we are attempting to load updated ROMs on our Android phones. One of these weeks we'll download the right set of magic files & instructions from some random forum and hopefully not permanently brick the phone in the process. Only ARM can save us hobbyists from the tyranny of well documented and easily modified computing systems!

  9. We need gas control! on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Considering how easy it would be to set off some of those cheap Blue-Rhino propane tanks and get a similar death-toll, I hop that NYC is going to have gas control next on the agenda.

  10. Re:SOUNDS LIKE FRACKING! on Geothermal Power Advances · · Score: 1

    I was actually referring to the infamous youtube videos of supposedly ordinary tap-water that was incredibly flammable due to fracking and just so happened to burn in exactly the same way that Everclear/Bacardi 151/etc. would burn when lit on fire....

  11. SOUNDS LIKE FRACKING! on Geothermal Power Advances · · Score: -1, Troll

    This sounds WAY too much like that bad evil fracking thing that I've been programmed to be scared of. I've seen videos of Everclear-- uh, I mean "tap water" -- that lit on fire because of fracking!

    We need Matt Damon to make a move (funded by Abu Dhabi of course) that exposes the evils of this non-OPEC produced energy source immediately!

  12. OpenAFS REally? on College CIO Predicts Tablets Will Kill Smart Boards · · Score: 1

    " I think the issue of file storage was solved by openafs a long time ago, certainly at the scale of small University."

    LMFAO... and yes, I am a Carnegie Mellon Alum and yes, when I was in Grad School I did manage to hack my research Linux box enough to be able to mount my Andrew share. Having seen how people who aren't in grad school at CMU actually use computers in the real world, somebody needs a bit of a wakeup call.

  13. Axing on March 15? on Microsoft Axing Messenger On March 15th · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No No No, for the Ides of March you need to STAB messenger to death. We come here to bury Messenger, not to praise it!

  14. Re:Same old, same old... on Info On Intel Bay Trail 22nm Atom Platform Shows Out-of-Order Design · · Score: 1

    Uh... so you are saying that ARM is copying Intel's strategy with the never-ending harping about how great the A57 cores will be? I seem to recall sitting through 3 years of ARM hype about how the Cortex A-15 was going to permanently destroy Intel, and here we are with real systems running real tests that show that it isn't even insanely better than 32nm Atom parts. How come ARM hasn't completely taken over yet? I've been promised miracles!

  15. PEAK OIL! on 2012 Set Record For Most Expensive Gas In US · · Score: -1, Troll

    The consumption figures can't go down because, as is posted constantly on Slashdot, capitalism is a lie and supply and demand are evil conspiracies created by corporations to repress the sheeple.

    The U.S. couldn't possibly produce more oil since everybody knows that peak oil happened in the 70's and there is no more oil anywhere. Peak oil is right and Holocaust^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H "Peak Oil" deniers should be executed for the greater good.

  16. Re:Which tablets? on Why Linux On Microsoft Surface Is a Tough Challenge · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So basically you are assuming that the Microsoft locked-down bootloader is impervious to hacking while all the Android ones suck and can be circumvented easily. Without knowing it, you've just complimented Microsoft's software engineering ability.

    If the Surface doesn't just bomb out in the market, there will very probably be some hacks that make it possible to load on a new OS. Frankly, my Android phone is much harder to install a new OS on that any other piece of hardware that I've ever owned even though it theoretically isn't "locked down" so I'm not going to point fingers at Microsoft for copy-catting everybody else in this space.

  17. So by the logic of this article... on Bloomberg: Steve Jobs Behind NYC Crime Wave · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So they are saying that it is "unfair" that iWhatevers cost a bunch so making them cheap means nobody will steal them.

    So using this jumping-the-tracks train of logic, we should make guns free so no criminal will ever want to steal one. BINGO!

  18. Chernobyl was not a light-water reactor on Is Safe, Green Thorium Power Finally Ready For Prime Time? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Chernobyl was a graphite moderated water-cooled reactor. Any commercial nuclear plant in the U.S. is a water-moderated and water-cooled reactor.

      Despite the normal perception of the word, a "moderator" actually increases the nuclear activity in a fission plant since it slows-down ("moderates") neutrons and therefore increases the probability that the neutrons cause a fission event. In Chernobyl, the coolant (water) was blown away in the pressure explosion, but the moderator (graphite) remained in place which led to the runaway meltdown.

    By contrast at Three Mile Island & Fukushima, the loss of coolant led to a meltdown (literally heat causing melting to occur), but since the water moderator was also missing, the accidents did not lead to a runaway that was anywhere near as severe as Chernobyl. If Fukushima had included a pressure vessel of the same caliber as the one used at TMI, then hardly any radioactivity would have been released during the Fukushima accident.

  19. Re:I'm on the verge of not caring on Newest Gov't Tracking Threat: Cell-Site Data Without a Warrant · · Score: 1

    Is this the usual propaganda where corporations having your data == scary bad and government having your data == It's OK, the government is your friend and you need the government to take care of you because you are a helpless moron?

    How about: Corporations suck and shouldn't have my data && Government sucks *more* (getting shot by the government is a lot worse than having advertising sent to you) and *definitely* shouldn't have my data?

  20. The moral of the story is... on Newest Gov't Tracking Threat: Cell-Site Data Without a Warrant · · Score: 0, Redundant

    If you want to be a drug dealer or engage in other criminal activity, don't broadcast your location to the rest of the world with your cellphone.

  21. Sweden doesn't have a judiciary? on Swedish Pirate Party Presses Charges Against Banks For WikiLeaks Blockade · · Score: -1

    Looks like Sweden lacks an independent judiciary when any political party can file charges at will. I'm sure there are plenty of people here on Slashdot who'd *love* to see Obama file charges against any Republican he didn't like... fortunately that isn't his call though.

  22. Uh... on Is the Flickr API a National Treasure? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dave Winer has just launched a petition to Obama asking the President to declare the Flickr API a National Historic Landmark, thus (by Dave's reckoning) legally protected from arbitrary withdrawal or wholesale changes by its corporate masters."

    Yeah nice meaningless stunt.

    If the API is truly "open" then this guy can buy the servers and the network connectivity and the electricity and the hosting support needed to host the sotfware that keeps it going in perpetuity and he won't have to worry about Flickr suing him becuase it's "open".

    Something tells me he is more upset that somebody else won't be paying for all of those things for his personal gain. Well guess what: When you live by the "free" service you die by the "free" service.

  23. Re:Treaties on US Refuses To Sign ITU Treaty Over Internet Provisions · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thanks for condensing every anti-American platitude into a single post for easy two-minutes of hate consumption. You get bonus points for using Star Wars references while citing exactly zero facts to support your arguments and pointing out exactly zero treaties that the U.S. has "violated".

  24. Re:Corporate Taxes == Political Favoritism on Schmidt On Why Tax Avoidance is Good, Robot Workers, and Google Fiber · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't tax *completely foreign entities*. If a corporation is doing some type of business in the U.S... then by definition it isn't completely foreign! (duh). If you open a shoe shop in Burundi, you don't pay U.S. taxes selling shoes to people in Burundi. If you are multi-national corporation based in Burundi doing business in the U.S., you pay taxes for your U.S. activities. It really isn't that difficult to regulate those businesses since they have to be doing something in the U.S. to begin with.

  25. Re:This just in... on New Hampshire Cops Use Taser On Woman Buying Too Many iPhones · · Score: 1

    Uh.. I don't think it's because the police were out of shape. They sure could have tackled and pinned her to the ground, which likely would have caused a hell of a lot more long-term injury to her than simply getting tazed would.