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User: nadaou

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  1. Crackers on Hackers Breach Payment Systems of Major Parking Garage Operator · · Score: 2

    Crackers people, cheese.

    (Ducks)

  2. Re:That's unchecked capitalism for you on Ask Slashdot: Why Is the Power Grid So Crummy In So Many Places? · · Score: 1

    Simply put: money * greed + lack of political will to do anything about the money * greed situation.

  3. Re:If this were ten years ago, I would have on GNOME Project Seeks Donations For Trademark Battle With Groupon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hear hear. If one of the biggest and best known names in the FOSS world can't defend themselves from something so blatant it just encourages other big corporations from abusing smaller groups.

    Red hat, we're looking at you to step up here.

    The Systemd and GNOME3 toxic manouvers are irrelevant.

  4. High frequency pressure waves on Barometers In iPhones Mean More Crowdsourcing In Weather Forecasts · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If you get the chance to monitor the barometer at high frequency there are a couple neat atmospheric phenomena which you can observe.

    The shockwaves which preceed an oncoming strong front or thunderstorm are especially cool to watch.

  5. Re:Is the really that much of an issue? on ChromeOS Will No Longer Support Ext2/3/4 On External Drives/SD Cards · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why bother developing, testing, and supporting a feature that few in their target market will ever use?

    Because Google has a vested interest in the next generation of SD card not having patented and royalty incurring filesystem such as exFAT as the mandated standard. The more they can support TF card hardware spec instead of the SD card "experience" spec the better it will be for all of us. Except for Google's main competition in the laptop market that is.

    As it stands now every smartphone with an SD card has as part of its manufacturing cost about $2 going straight to Microsoft for the privilege of using exFAT, because the SD standards committee in their wisdom decided that SD cards can't be called SD cards without it.

  6. Emacs as PID1 on Systemd Adding Its Own Console To Linux Systems · · Score: 0

    It won't be done until it incorporates a reinvention (poorly) of Emacs into PID 1.

  7. Re:Still not actually open on AMD Building New GPU Linux Kernel Driver To Unify With Catalyst Driver · · Score: 1

    > Do you really think last years video card can't support the newest
    > version of DirectX?

    I'm pretty sure that DirectX support is not that important for a Linux driver.

    > Remember the Intel chips that you could upgrade by simply soldering
    > 2 pins together? I suspect that THAT is what they are really afraid of.

    And the tens, nay hundreds of lost sales that incurred?

    > The mod community figuring out how to make upgrading less important.

    Since most or many AMD graphics these days ship as part of an APU, I'm
    also pretty sure there's more to the upgrade decision than just the
    driver.

    I'd really love the Catalyst driver to improve, right now the open source
    Radeon driver is much more stable on my system but lacks full OpenCL
    support. Anything which maximizes the open part of the driver and shrinks
    the binary blob is a gain for all of us.

  8. Re:Yesterday Oceans were warming more than predict on NASA Study: Ocean Abyss Has Not Warmed · · Score: 1

    The article from the other day was quite clearly talking about the upper waters.

    This one is quite clearly talking about much deeper waters.

    Nothing like settled and well defined science.

    You got that right! It's a wonderful thing and the way they measured this using gravitational anomalies viewed from space is a great testament to our progress as a species. We are documenting our destruction in unprecedented detail.

  9. as opposed to SanFran and LA? on Bangladesh Considers Building World's 5th-largest Data Center In Earthquake Zone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Good thing there are no tech companies along the San Andreas!

    And before anyone goes on to say that M3s and M4s are an order of magnitude or two smaller than a M5, the energy is more like 32 times more intense for each magnitude level, it's not log10.

  10. Re:net metering != solar and 10% needs new physics on Energy Utilities Trying To Stifle Growth of Solar Power · · Score: 1

    For example, I read a study a while back that pointing solar panels West of due South resulted in a much better match between electricity use and demand

    That's an interesting point. From a pure kWh point of view facing them a bit to the east gets you better numbers since the crisp morning air is clearer than the late afternoon haze.

    If you have batteries it becomes a balance between storage losses in the morning versus irradiation losses in the afternoon.

    GP completely ignores the daily demand curve, especially in areas like southern California with a million A/C units humming away at noon, which lays the rest of his arguement to waste.

    And total fail? 100-200% growth year on year certainly doesn't sound like fail to me.

  11. Re:The pot calling the kettle black on Obama Presses China On Global Warming · · Score: 1

    stop blaming this thing on Greenpeace. clue-bat: they aren't the ones blocking renewable energy in this country.

  12. Re:Already fixed in Debian... on Remote Exploit Vulnerability Found In Bash · · Score: 1

    I wonder if Debian's default /bin/sh being dash instead of bash reduces the attack surface somewhat.

    Nope. I just tested dash on a Debian system which hadn't been upgraded yet. Dash is vulnerable too.

    On an upgraded Debian dash is not vulnerable.

  13. Re:They need to get their shit together on South Australia Hits 33% Renewal Energy Target 6 Years Early · · Score: 1

    > If you're going to peg your renewable hopes on solar or wind,
    > you're going to have a bad time.

    Er, so you're saying Australia suffers from lack of sunshine and bushfire-loving winds?

  14. Re:Why is this here? on Friendly Reminder: Do Not Place Your iPhone In a Microwave · · Score: 1

    you've fallen into a fallacious trap -- what makes you think the sets overlap?

    are you really saying that everyone without a background in electro-magnetics is evil and should be punished, because you knew a dumb jerk in grade school?

    or are you just beating up the next weakest kid after you to make yourself feel better about yourself? (and so become the bully)

  15. Re:Just Apple? on Sapphire Glass Didn't Pass iPhone Drop Test According to Reports · · Score: 1

    I dropped my iphone 5 from 2 meters (i leave it to the Americans to make out how many badger's kidneys it is) to a hard, stone floor. Glass intact.

    Says the guy who still lives in a castle.

  16. Re:Shouldn't be a problem on CBC Warns Canadians of "US Law Enforcement Money Extortion Program" · · Score: 4, Funny

    the commas just clutter up the natural spaces.

  17. Re:Straight to the pointless debate on Out of the Warehouse: Climate Researchers Rescue Long-Lost Satellite Images · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I happen to live near one of the main weather stations which was caught up in that FOX News brouhaha and happen to know about the local history. tl;dr as usual, the whole story was all a load of vaporous bullshit. And apparently it worked since you took the bait.

    One hundred years ago the local weather station was established outside the harbor master's office down by the docks (and the water). The city grew up and forty years ago or so the weather station was moved 500 feet up a hill to outside the local observatory, which is surrounded by forest.

    Moving a temperature sensor away from a large body of water, out of a "heat island" of now-paved urban roads, out of a canyon of concrete and glass buildings, and to a higher elevation will all change the readings of the sensor. If you want to keep a continuous record before and after moving, before and after various construction projects and re-roofing nearby, and before and after population changes, you're going to have to figure out and apply a correction factor for each of these things.

    There is nothing particularly unusual about our local weather station's story which hasn't been repeated in most cities around the world. So it is not surprising that noisy long term time series need to be cleaned up before being fed into sensitive predictive models. It would be dishonest not to if you know there was a change in the sampling history which required it.

  18. Re:Key exchange on Tox, a Skype Replacement Built On 'Privacy First' · · Score: 3, Informative

    Phil Zimmermann has already done all this. It's called ZRTP.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

  19. Re:info on Tox, a Skype Replacement Built On 'Privacy First' · · Score: 1

    It's really not that hard at all.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-the-Record_Messaging#Authentication

    and it comes with a very good implementation and pedigree,

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

    Here's a video demo of ZRTP in use:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udBBDHT-_UA

    So as far as the user is concerned, there's not reason it can't be dead simple.

  20. Re:Binoculars on Slashdot Asks: Cheap But Reasonable Telescopes for Kids? · · Score: 1

    Don't buy a telescope. Instead, get a good pair of 10x50
    binoculars and an intro astronomy book with pictures.

    Specifically, buy them The Stars: A New Way to See Them by Hans A. Rey, the creator of Curious George.

    http://www.amazon.com/The-Star...

    The reviews on the back cover are worth the trouble of reading, if you can make them out in the Amazon image. Hell, just the names of the authors of the reviews on the back cover are worth the trouble of reading.

    It is quite simply the best popular book on observational astronomy ever written.

  21. Re:Ha ha! on Munich Reverses Course, May Ditch Linux For Microsoft · · Score: 2

    One politician said it failed... all other reports of the project
    (even very recently) have said it's been a success. The actual article
    says they are convening a panel of experts to consider whether to go
    back to Microsoft, so despite the misleading summary here, nothing has
    been decided.

    When has there ever been a "panel of experts" assembled by a politician
    which was not stacked with "experts" guaranteed to deliver a predetermined
    result? They're the consultants of the public service world.

    Hell, one of the famous Microsoft Halloween Documents even discusses this
    exact scenario: stack the speakers in a public panel with ones known to
    favor your side and to the public the discussion and conclusion looks "fair
    and balanced".

  22. Re:meh on Giant Greek Tomb Discovered · · Score: -1, Troll

    Ah yes the metric system. The premier international system of internet trolling, quantified.

  23. Re:They're all evil. Really evil. on Skype Blocks Customers Using OS-X 10.5.x and Earlier · · Score: 1

    too bad /. doesn't have a +1 'Excellent Rant' mod option

  24. Re:and linux aswell on Skype Blocks Customers Using OS-X 10.5.x and Earlier · · Score: 1

    Alsa support is now dropped too. You have to use PulseAudio. ew yuck.

  25. Re:Millionare panhandlers on Cable Companies: We're Afraid Netflix Will Demand Payment From ISPs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Reminds me of the stories of panhandlers begging at intersections
    who get picked up by their chauffeurs at the end of the day to go back
    to their mansions.

    You mean complete imaginary bullshit made up by and propagated by greedy
    sociopaths eager to rationalize their abandonment of their fellow man?

    Yeah, something reminiscent in it.