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User: TarpaKungs

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  1. Pond scum on UK Tabloids Doxxed the 'Hero' Hacker Who Stopped a Global Cyberattack (theoutline.com) · · Score: 4, Informative

    The UK press are twats.

    Security Researchers have had death threats and setups, like having hard drugs posted to their house shortly followed by a tip off to plod and all manner of other nasty things.

    Sadly it's not just Murdoch's sewerage - the other papers are just as bad.

  2. ***** me off on Amazon Marketplace Shoppers Slam the Spam (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    I am evaluating a well known security scanning package. Found a bug that would be a showstopper for us and have their engineer escalating to the tech team.

    In the meantime, am getting buried in spam from marketing. The last email I sent them was along the lines of "the only thing I want to hear from you is that you've fixed the bug". It is really pissing me off.

  3. Re:The price hike is minimal... on Netflix Stock Price Tanks As Customers Quit Over Higher Prices (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    Google Play manages to have content. So I don't buy that excuse.

  4. Re:The price hike is minimal... on Netflix Stock Price Tanks As Customers Quit Over Higher Prices (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    That's certainly why this user in the UK left them.

    The UK catalogue is pathetic. And as another poster below said, you are half way through the series and it disappears without warning. Seriously, how hard is it to put the "licensed until" date on the main info screen?

    This used to be tolerable with a DNS proxy switcher. That was a pain to manage at a network level[1], but the combined catalogue was very watchable.

    And you could not download content for watching on the train.

    [1] Since one had to NAT 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 to deal with Google hardcoding shit.

    Since that all went south, I cannot be bothered. So these days, I buy or rent stuff I really want from Google Play. The catalgue is excellent, if I buy, it's mine for the forseeable and I can download (with the DRM implications).

    The only thing I don't like is rooted android devices do not play nice IME.

    So if Google can have a great catalogue, why can't Netflix? Why can't Netflix have a download option? So yes, they deserve to get a kicking from the market.

  5. Re:So a useless 'bot, then? on DoNotPay Bot Has Beaten 160,000 Traffic Tickets -- and Counting (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 1

    http://www.princeofpetworth.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/conflicting-parking-signs-e1285855592236.jpg is clear enough to me (though complicated):

    To the right:
    1) No parking, ever.
    2) Standing (Loading in the UK I assume) is permitted outside of Mon-Fri rush hours.

    To the left:
    1) Parking is only permitted on Sundays between the stated hours;
    2) Standing permitted as to the right.

    Then again, I'm English and our councils invented signage like this!

  6. Re:Worked for MINI on Elon Musk Announces $35,000 Tesla Model 3 Electric Car · · Score: 1

    I hate Minis (modern ones) - worst interfaces possible. RPM is in front of me, speedo centre. Momentary action switches, indicator, heating - YUK!!! Not to mention the horrid visbility as the A and B pillars are always in the way, especially the Bs.

    I know it's a homage to the original, but by God, I'd rather drive my VW with nice positional big knobs for the heating, signal stalk that stays in position and no stupid button start/stop.

  7. It's a good thing, but it is stressful on Is Too Much Choice Stressing Us Out? (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    20+ years ago, if you were rewiring your lights (UK), you'd buy one of these:
    http://www.diyhowto.co.uk/images/projects/lightjb1.jpg

    Available in white and black (or dark brown) and 4 or 6 terminal versions.

    Now, you have those, all manner of cute enclosures, Wago terminals, DIN terminals, Wago DIN terminals.
    Waterproof ones, ones with cable clamps, ones that will fit through a downlighter hole...

    Some of the products are very nice - and if you are like me, you are always seeking to "make the best choice" - the most robust product, easiest to work with etc.

    It's a good thing - but instead of just getting on with it, people like me spend some time reviewing the options, unwilling to choose the least optimal for an installation that might last 40 years.

    That's a very specialist area. Now multiply that into every area of your life.

    I had a plumber in the other week to fit a couple of bigger radiators. As one has to hang partly on plasterboard (sheetrock), I gave hime some of my favourite fixings:

    http://gripitfixings.co.uk/

    He's never seen them before - but was hugely impressed. Doing some carpentry? Used to be: "Screws - number 6-14, brass or steel, countersunk, raised head or roundhead.

    By god, look at a screw catalogue now - there's a screw for every occasion.

    So yes, it can get stressful, if you care and are an "optimiser" like me. OTOH, I don't care what bread I buy - if it's crap, I 'll buy a different loaf next week!

  8. No one likes calling councils. Phone menus, long waits, many transfers to get the right dept, or just to be told "that road is maintained by the national government as it is an A road, that's a different number..."

    In the UK, we have a website/app called FixMyStreet. Councils can pay to use the service to manage reports, but if they don't the app simply emails to their general email so it does have national coverage.

    It does seem to work and the app makes it easy to take a photo, geotag, check the geotag is right, add a few words and send the report, all in a couple of minutes whilst walking along. Much more stuff gets reported and more usefully, others know what's been reported, so no need to re-report the same hole in the road.

  9. Re:Not surprising on Porsche Chooses Apple Over Google Because Google Wants Too Much Data · · Score: 1

    And in my experience, apps don't seem to much care if you kill a flag or two. Perhaps because the ability to do so is not yet that common.

  10. Re:Not surprising on Porsche Chooses Apple Over Google Because Google Wants Too Much Data · · Score: 1

    (In the case of PrivacyGuard)

    See above - the nag can be once only and you can Grant or Deny with a Remember tick box optionally. It's no big deal in reality.

    Or you can install, go to PG settings and just set it right up front.

  11. Re:Not surprising on Porsche Chooses Apple Over Google Because Google Wants Too Much Data · · Score: 1

    It is also "fixed" in Cyanogenmod 11 that I have the snapshot release of on my Samsung Note 3. It's called "Privacy Guard and it is configurable per-app (on, off, finegrained). Each requested (in the manifest) priv flag can be granted "Allow", "Deny" or "Ask". It's very seemless - the odd message pops up when it tries to *use* a privilege that is flagged "Ask" and you get to choose.

    Many apps do not actually seem to break either, when denied various things they have no business in needing.

    And the times I've been asked for "Location", "SMS", "Contacts" by things like photo apps and other things that should be working on nothing more than pure local data is frightening.

  12. Re:How to Miss the Point Completely in Only Ten Wo on UK Pilots Want Lithium Battery Powered Devices In the Cabin · · Score: 1

    Fuck you. I want to be able to take a fucking camera on holiday and I don't think bringing it is a huge risk to life and limb.

    And so you can:

    http://www.leslikescameras.com...

  13. Re:Analog for the win. Again. on 65,000+ Land Rovers Recalled Due To Software Bug · · Score: 1

    That sounds like a rather nifty device - there is no UK equivalent.

    OTOH if you folks moved on from using wirenuts :)

  14. Re:Tax dollars at work. on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    Not being a twat is usually helpful in getting out of trouble - but the PSCO was being such a complete and utter moron that I can see why he got upset.

    The correct approach, if you wish to resist, is to tell the PCSO that you will cooperate with a real policeman only and challenge her to call the real BTP. Well, he got that far.

    The next trick is, despite her being an utter moron, is he should be unfailingly polite to both her and the real BTP whilst disobeying her.

    I've known people to do this when they are in the right (but a PSCO has jumped on them) and it usually results in the BTP apologising or at least taking no further action.

  15. Re:Tax dollars at work. on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    Not completely - Network Rail is a private company wholly owned by the state. So was East Coast (trains) until March 2015.

    Our privatisation has been such a model of success that half of it went bankrupt and had to be taken over by the state (again).

  16. Re:Tax dollars at work. on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    There is no way they will let cleaners loose with a carriage key and authorisation to fiddle with random breakers in random cupboards. They'd probably hit the wrong one and isolate the pantograph gear or various critical systems, resulting in the next driver spending 20 minutes wandering up and down the train trying to figure out why he's got a warning light on or something doesn't work.

  17. Re:Your post doesn't conform to their prejudice on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    I refer the honourable gentleman to my post above :)

  18. Re:Your post doesn't conform to their prejudice on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 2

    That's assuming there is a dedicated 240V line that runs through the train from cab to cab with a single breaker.

    More likely there will be a breaker in each carriage or at least each unit (set of permanently joined carriages) - and this is likely to be in some cupboard rather that with the critical system breakers in the cab. So doing this will involve a certain amount of faff.

    Yes, I guess they could have designed a computer initiated isolator on the socket circuits, but someone probably said "what's the point?"

  19. Re:Your post doesn't conform to their prejudice on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    You are probably thinking of "Walsall Gauge" 13A sockets beloved by the BBC or the T-bar-earth type that are quite common in communal areas in flats.

    No - modern trains, at least all the ones I am familiar with tend to have regular 13A sockets. On the Class 375 Electrostars, these are 1 per vestibule and are usually marked "Not for public use" or similar.

    Now, London Routemaster buses, in the days before fluorescent lighting, used funny voltage bulbs to deter people from nicking them.

  20. Re:Tax dollars at work. on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nothing to do with the company. It was a trumped up plastic "policewoman" who got all bent out of shape.

    The worst the train guard would likely do (if that train even has a guard, many are Driver Only Operation) is suggest you unplug is as the supply might be dirty and risk damaging your equipment - or perhaps, in the worst case, that your lead is a trip hazard.

  21. Re:abstracting electricity? on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.legislation.gov.uk/...

    "13 Abstracting of electricity.
    A person who dishonestly uses without due authority, or dishonestly causes to be wasted or diverted, any electricity shall on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years."

    So yes, the language is precisely correct.

    Technically he has also committed a criminal offence.

    However, PCSOs (which are sometimes known unaffectionately at "plastic policemen" are non warranted police officers with very limited powers. Most of their arresting powers are actually the same as those available to any citizen (aka "citizens arrest") and have very limited conditions of applicability. PCSOs do have some additional powers specially granted:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    However, they are a modern invention and of considerably lower status, both legally and in the public perception compared to the more traditional volunteer role of "Special Constable" - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    The problem here is that PCSOs generally lack common sense and seem to be power-happy. Unfortunately their warranted colleagues feel some obligation to back them up, rather than telling them to grow up, as might be applicable in cases like this.

    Unfortunately for the artist, even through he has been de-arrested, he now probably no longer qualifies for the visa waiver programme for entry to the USA as the US notion of arrest is somewhat different to the English notion and the USA as far as I know does not have a concept of "de-arrest".

    So actual harm has been done. No wonder the public perception of the police is falling like a lead balloon.

  22. Re:VMS queue manager and VMS breakin evasion on Ask Slashdot: If You Could Assemble a "FrankenOS" What Parts Would You Use? · · Score: 1

    You also get bonus stuff like integration to the help system and automatic shortening of non ambiguous switches.

    I did like that - nice consistency - unlike the bastardisation that is every linux command.

    I really hate commands that respond to "-h" with "Type --help for help". FFS - you parsed "-h" - how hard would it have been for you to just link that to the "--help" code!!! Or use getopt and it's more or less for free...

  23. Re:VMS queue manager and VMS breakin evasion on Ask Slashdot: If You Could Assemble a "FrankenOS" What Parts Would You Use? · · Score: 1

    And if you did not want to load the parse tree into your DCL instance at login time (because it would CoW the affected memory pages with an entire new parse tree for the whole of DCL IIRC - it was incredibly slow) you could link it to your program, call your program using the "unix like" alias method then have your main function call the same command line parser libs that DCL used. Bit more like the getopt() model but 100% consistent with the regular DCL experience.

  24. "Systemd is a relatively useful inferior process," said Emacs.

    I'm surprised noone has used init=/bin/emacs

  25. Re:I don't need a subject on UK Criminals Use Drones To Case Burglary Prospects · · Score: 1

    Has anybody said "Bring back hanging"?