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  1. Re:It's part of the fantasy on US Lawmakers Eyeing National ID Card · · Score: 1

    Ha, I love this. My gut reaction is to call you delusional, but upon further inspection I must call you brilliant. Your Noam Chomsky quote is great too.

  2. Re:High Speed Rail and Freight are Mutually Exclus on China To Connect Its High-Speed Rail To Europe · · Score: 1

    F--k... Bruce Perens? What the heck are you up to these days, man? Wait a second, I'll just click on your webpage and find out...

  3. Sure to be a hit on Wireless Power Group Sees Standard Within 6 Months · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With all the /. users saying "this is going to be pointless," and "it's already easy enough as it is," this is sure to be a hit.

  4. Re:99 Luftballoons on DARPA Network Challenge Lasts All of 9 Hours · · Score: 1

    Red balloons really piss SkyNET off. You don't want to make SkyNET angry.

  5. Re:What if, for a start... on Multi-Button OpenOfficeMouse At OOoCon 2009 · · Score: 1

    Yeah! Those jerks should get back to coding! I'm not paying them to goof off!

  6. These things already being investigated on Prehistoric Gene Reawakened To Battle HIV · · Score: 1

    I didn't see this already mentioned, but the Wikipedia page on Aminoglycosides mentions that these aminoglycoside antibiotics are already being investigated to treat cystic fibrosis because of their ability to make a cell "skip" the "termination codon." It says that a compound called gentamicin does this. So, these drugs are already being investigated for similar purposes. Maybe that'll speed the approval/testing of these things for HIV! It seems like somebody must already have an idea of what kinds of side effects will be encountered. This sounds like some pretty awesome stuff...

  7. Re:Yep, that's why God put em there on Something May Have Just Hit Jupiter · · Score: 3, Funny

    I have new hope for Slashdot and the Internet in general.

  8. Re:Great for hype, not great for teaching on Med Students Get Training In Second Life Hospitals · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I agree. I've seen one or two of these things before and it usually seems like it'll turn into more of a social playground than a training environment.

    I can understand how this might allow med students to practice diagnosing something, but the OPs point about it being more valuable than resuscitating a dummy in real life seems way off. They will never be able to teach something that requires a specific physical action in a simulated world. For instance, you have to actually practice CPR on something that resembles a human in order to truly understand how to do CPR. You have to actually practice placing the defibrillator paddles on a human form, you can't just right click and select "defibrillate."

    Now maybe if we had a Matrix-style brain jack...

  9. Re:Bad Article. Poster didn't bother to RTFA. on A GNU/Linux Distro Needing Windows To Install? · · Score: 3, Funny

    I dream of the day that we see the article titled: "A Windows distro needing Linux to install?!?!"

  10. Home Automation on What to Do With a $99 Wall Wart Linux Server · · Score: 1

    This is great! I'm building some home automation hardware and wanted something to serve up control software webpages. For a little over a year I've been putting all my computers into sleep when I leave to conserve power and I was dreading going back to the old mode of operation. I considered modding my WRT54G to have a USB port-serial port, then adding a webserver, but this seems like the perfect solution.

    Good timing!

  11. Re:Oh dear...did he even search the internets? on Using 1 Gaming Computer For 2 People? · · Score: 1

    It's a trap!

    For everybody taking this seriously, this is a joke about an Internet meme.

    http://xkcd.com/467/

  12. Re:How dare they? on Military Enlists Open Source Community · · Score: 1

    I was very impressed by my one major experience with the Marines. They were generally a smart, efficient and professional bunch. My experience with them was in Iraq while I was doing coding/engineering stuff for them. I'm active duty Air Force, in the acquisitions career field (project/contract management), so that is where my opinion was coming from.

    I guess, part of the problem with the civilian workforce and the contractor workforce is the way our contracting and incentives work out. I've met some S-H civilians, but I've met some plain S ones too, and I've heard the stories. Perhaps if there was more flexibility in the hiring/firing system, more ability to get contractors other than General Dynamics and the major defense contractors, etc, it'd make more sense (even money-wise) to shift these jobs. As it is, a lot of your points and the other points in this thread make good sense.

    Hopefully, we'll see a joint cyber-command here soon, getting together the best geeks from all the services and putting them to work building the tools they need to defend/attack computers.

    The fitness level of the Marines was awesome, I wish we could bring more of that to the Air Force, and the rest of the country for that matter.

  13. Re:How dare they? on Military Enlists Open Source Community · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I get the impression that you think this is an awful shame. Do you think we need programmers that take an oath to support and defend the Constitution? Do you think programmers need to maintain the high standards of fitness required by the Marines? I guarantee you that wearing a uniform makes it harder to code (it's much easier in flip flops and shorts).

    It's unlikely that those civilians are actually paid $120k, but you're right that they make more than $14k. I think that (in many cases) it's an awful shame to have folks working in an office who are willing and able to run out into a field in the middle of nowhere and setup comms.

    Militaries are built to go out and accomplish a mission. Pay somebody else to stay home and accomplish it.

  14. Re:Love my G1, not sure about a netbook on First Android/ARM Netbook To Cost $250, Maker Says · · Score: 1

    I wish they'd announce when the next gen HTC device is coming out in America. I've been looking forward to purchasing an Android phone through T-Mobile for a little while but hoped to wait for the next gen. Recently I've been thinking that QWERTY keyboard might be nice, especially with the option of a soft-keyboard supposedly coming out in May.

    Does anybody know when Google Docs will get working on Android? Surely they're working on it...

  15. Re:+1 Star Trek! on How Piracy Affected the Launch of Demigod · · Score: 1

    Would power over other human beings still be scarce? People could still be selfish with that...

  16. Re:Printing on RIP the Campus Computer Lab, 1960-2009 · · Score: 1

    The printers are network printers connected directly to the network.

    That's how most of them were setup at my school too. The library and one of the engineering labs had the printers hooked up directly to the print monitor... While I never messed with the library print monitors, if I remember correctly the engineering lab print monitors had a non-standard port open and serving CUPS or something. I could print using that port, bypassing the print monitor.

  17. Re:Printing on RIP the Campus Computer Lab, 1960-2009 · · Score: 1

    It's very possible that he's talking about a University experience at some point in the past, or in some other country. I'm pretty sure coin-op electricity wouldn't fly at any University in America these days.

    I was one of the engineering students at my school that got around the printing quota monitors. Not so much because I wanted to print a lot, just because I wanted to figure out how to get around the quota.

    It also came in handy for a prank or two.

  18. Re:It's about interoperability, stupid on TomTom Can License FAT Without Violating the GPL · · Score: 1

    I've been wondering about the feasibility of creating a new filesystem driver for Windows. I've used a few, but none work well. If a company (TomTom) poured some money into it, I wonder what could get done... Then they wouldn't have to use vfat, they could use ext2 / whatever.

    I bet they could have used UDF or something...

  19. Re:indeed on National Ignition Facility Fires 192-Beam Pulse · · Score: 1

    It's today's clean coal technology, haven't you heard?

  20. Possible Firefox Feature Needed? on Sun Slips Firefox Extension Into Java Update · · Score: 1

    So, you install some software which automatically installs a Firefox addon. Then the next time Firefox runs the addon is automatically enabled? I know that's how plugins are installed. It would be nice if third-parties just didn't do this, but it seems like a change in Firefox must be made to prevent this.

    Secure systems must include measures to prevent tampering. Installing code that automatically executes is most certainly tampering, and if my estimate of how this works is correct, I'd call this a Firefox security bug.

    It may not be worth it, or even possible with current hardware, to prevent all software from installing addons "under the radar." Still, I'd bet that Firefox could incorporate a more secure way of keeping tabs on enabled addons.

    With the Firefox plugin feature, Firefox could keep a list of installed plugins, their md5sums and their filenames. It could then hash this list and store the result somewhere. This would make it easy to detect changes to the installed plugins and prevent programs from simply changing the list of installed plugins. Malware could simply change the list then rewrite the hash, but I'm not sure you could ever get around security through obscurity (in this case) with a normal Linux install and consumer hardware. When different software is run as the same user and without any kind of sandboxing, this is what you get.

    Maybe Linux distros need to make a change to enable more sandbox-type security. As Linux's popularity increases, I'll bet we see more of this behavior, just as we see so frequently in Windows. All the software already exists to implement this fairly well, and it's not like disk space is an issue anymore.

    Microsoft should be making this change in Windows if building a more secure system is one of their goals.

  21. Re:c.f. "Stellerator: A Quantum Intimacy Machine" on Human Eye Could Detect Spooky Action At a Distance · · Score: 1

    Very interesting...

  22. Re:What it'd be like to be entangled: on Human Eye Could Detect Spooky Action At a Distance · · Score: 1

    Scientist 1: "Dude, I totally just got a jones for some X-Files, especially Fox "Spooky" Mulder."
    Scientist 2: "Whoa, me too!"
    Scientist 1: "Spooky!"

  23. Re:Dear Human Race, on Human Eye Could Detect Spooky Action At a Distance · · Score: 1

    He's saying that politics == spooky action. Maybe it's a "corruption in government" joke. As in, everyone who follows politics knows that it's easy to spot "spooky action." Kinda clever IMHO.

  24. Re:Frogs on Human Eye Could Detect Spooky Action At a Distance · · Score: 1

    Sorry, it looks like I lost my mod points. I wish they lasted a little longer in this case. Your post seems very informative.

  25. Re:You can test this yourself on "Microsaccades" Help To Refresh Your Field of View · · Score: 1

    I've never experienced it to that extreme, but definitely know what you're talking about. Standing at "attention" is really boring, and it gets slightly more interesting if you can make everything turn kinda gray. I can always still see whatever is directly in front of my eyes, but everything else fades out.