Slashdot Mirror


User: swissmonkey

swissmonkey's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
203
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 203

  1. Re:Hmmmm on Linux Kernel Dev Sarah Sharp Quits, Citing 'Brutal' Communications Style · · Score: -1, Troll

    Only a true moron refers to people negatively as "SJW". As if social justice was a bad thing, your idiot.

    As for being a weak willed human being, you won't be offended if I call you a weak brained human being I guess. Because that vile post of yours confirmed that fact.

  2. Re:Damn, No Arabic on Google Aims To Be Your Universal Translator · · Score: 1

    If it's not available you can always use simple English to send your love words to Bush, Cheney and all other American assholes who led to the illegal invasion of an Arab country, leading to 100'000s deaths and the total destruction of its social construct.

  3. A list done by a 15 years old on The World's Best Living Programmers · · Score: 2

    This truly is the crappiest list I've seen, and I have seen crappy lists. Creating a 'cool' site like Quora somehow gets you on that list, so does answering StackOverflow questions. I guess you either have to create websites or have Google on your resume to be on that list.

    How about creating 2 of the most successful and important operating systems the world has ever seen ? Namely, VMS and Windows NT.

    Oh yeah, David Cutler for example isn't on that list, I guess he should have stuck to creating websites in PHP...

    Leslie Lamport anyone ? Oh no, he didn't work on some crappy website either, doesn't count !

  4. Re:It's a huge undertaking on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    There's no need for patching, the code builds and runs on ARM, it simply doesn't ship because it's not needed. There's no enterprise software that will run on if for a couple years anyway and by then next release will be there. So removing it saves on testing, RAM, HD space and support along with battery life & security (less attack surface).

  5. Re:No. on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    If you do a poll on Windows 8 and the new Metro interface, you'll actually find that the majority is positive. It's obviously not 100%, but it's more than 50%. People are actually excited about Win8 coming.

    So you might want to get a larger sampling than the people who tried it in your shop.

  6. Re:No. on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    And what enterprise you think will buy non-x86/amd64 tablets ? There's no enterprise software for them and there won't be for a few years at least. The iPad has barely any itself.

    MS will arrive with Win8 tablets that can run existing entreprise software, that can join domains : the x86/amd64 versions.

    There's no point in having those features on the ARM port because there's simply no software to take advantage of it and there won't be for a significant time.

  7. Re:You're not a cross platform kinda guy, I see .. on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 0

    Lesson of the day : Windows 7 is Windows NT 6.1

    You clearly are clueless

  8. Re:You're not a cross platform kinda guy, I see .. on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 0

    And he proved you wrong with his link, so how about you stop being an arrogant d*ck and have the humility to recognize you don't know what you're talking about ?

  9. Re:You're not a cross platform kinda guy, I see .. on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    The truth is that you have absolutely NO basis to claim that Windows NT (it's latest incarnations being Win7 / Win8) is not portable today. You're just making baseless claims based on your wishes.
    You have absolutely no clue as you've shown in your previous posts as to how MS develops Windows, even less when it comes to secure software.

    Now feel free to prove me wrong, give FACTS showing that NT is not portable TODAY.

  10. Re:You're not a cross platform kinda guy, I see .. on Did Microsoft Simply Run Out of Time On Windows RT? · · Score: 1

    If you weren't such an idiot you would know that :
    - Windows NT was built with portability as a central goal. It didn't run on x86 to start with, they chose the i860, an exotic CPU on purpose to avoid x86-centric assumptions. It ran on a wide variety of CPUs from x86 to i860 to PPC to Mips to Alpha to even Sparc (not released publicly) to Itanium to amd64 to now ARM.
    - Linux was originally built as x86 only, totally contradicting your claims, they had to pretty much rewrite the kernel to make it portable, so the OS built from the ground up with portability was NT, not Linux !
    - Microsoft is viewed today by pretty much the entire security industry as THE company when it comes to secure software development. Every security head from Dan Kaminsky to Charlie Miller to Bruce Schneider will tell you that. You clearly have no clue about the subject

    So really, you're clueless and got it totally wrong.

  11. Re:Left out the best part on Iran Unveils Its First UAV Bomber · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's probably due to the fact that Iran has never invaded another country, while it found itself attacked by Iraq without any valid justification. Back then Iraq was supported by pretty much the entire western world. I won't even go into how the CIA overthrew Iran's elected government to replace it with a dictatorship(the Shah)

    End result: Iran has every reason to build up its defences. History has shown Iran that the western world's propaganda about justice and fairness only applies to them, not to other countries, that the western world will support unjustified attacks on Iran and thus they need to be able to defend themselves.

  12. Re:never mentions design or economics on Are All Bugs Shallow? Questioning Linus's Law · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The funny thing about this article is that he essentially never mentions (a) design flaws or (b) perverse economic incentives to sell defective software. IMO these are probably the two biggest reason why MS has such a terrible reputation on security.

    If you actually knew what you're talking about, you'd know that MS has a VERY GOOD reputation on security. It used to be awful, but they completely cleaned up their act these past few years and now when you talk to security consultants(IO Active, Leviathan, iSec partners, ...) and ask them who's doing a great job, the first name they pronounce is ... Microsoft

    In the security world, your reputation is based on real things: the # of issues your code has, how hard you make it for people to exploit your code, whether your system is secure by default, ... not by the number of times you show up in the news, because that last one is purely driven by your market share, not by the quality of your code.

    Take a look at SQL Server, compare its security record to any other database with a decent market share on the market.

  13. Re:Good Press for Microsoft? on Did Microsoft Borrow GPL Code For a Windows 7 Utility? · · Score: 1

    So you're telling us that the installs you have done were botched and had to be redone. Why would that say anything about the quality of Windows 7 ?

    Because let's be frank, if you can't keep a Windows 7 stable, you have no business touching other people's computers.

    You sound *EXACTLY* like a Windows fanboy complaining about Linux because he has no clue about how to use it.

  14. Re:containment theory... on Iran's Nuclear Ambitions · · Score: 1

    Buddy, 44% of this country voted for McCain, after 8 years of Bush, Jr. If you think Iran using a tactical nuke wouldn't push them plus a bunch of middle-of-the-road people over the edge to annihilate Iran, you're crazy. The U.S. doesn't do the "well, maybe it was deserved and we should consider our options" thing very well. We'd destroy first and consider many years afterward.

    No they won't, because this would have implications in regard to China and Russia as well as pretty much the entire world, with a backlash against the US that the world has never seen before, and tactical nukes would then lose their entire value as the US could never use them again, as Russia/China would have every reason to treat it the same way the US did : massive nuclear retaliation.

    The fact that 44% voted for McCain doesn't change anything, the people in power and at the Pentagon know what's at stake. They're more interested in keeping the US's strategic influence and military advantage than pleasing a bunch of republican retards

  15. Re:containment theory... on Iran's Nuclear Ambitions · · Score: 1

    You're right. We'd sit off shore and bomb 'em back into the stone age. There wouldn't be an invasion, because there'd be nothing left to invade. If you think for one second that a nuke dropped on a U.S. army force would give the U.S. cause to sit back and rethink the whole thing, you're sadly ignorant of history.

    Nope, you wouldn't even start to invade, because you know the US public would absolutely not accept casualties at that level, as no behavior from a country besides setting off a nuke in the US would justify the killing of 10-20'000 US soldiers(and more in the following years from radiation). That's the whole point of having nukes for Iran.

    If Iran were to set off a nuke in the U.S. or against U.S. forces, there wouldn't be any invasion. We'd annihilate the entire country. THAT is why a single nuke isn't a deterrent to the U.S. It is a saber to rattle against Israel, but not the U.S.

    You're actually quite ignorant about the strategy of your own country.
    Setting off a nuke in the US would certainly trigger massive US reprisals.
    Launching a nuke on attacking US forces far outside the US would certainly not, the whole point of tactical nuclear weapons during the cold war was to repulse attacking enemy armies without setting off a total nuclear war

  16. Re:containment theory... on Iran's Nuclear Ambitions · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh really ? Don't you wonder what is the only country besides the US to have F-14s ? Iran...
    Besides that they have a number of M-60 tanks and such, far from being a small player.

    The Iranian civilian airliner DID take off from a military airport and was flying damn close to a conflict area and no-fly zone.

    a) There was no no-fly zone for civilian airliners
    b) It was clearly a civilian airliner, an Airbus radar signature is every different from a fighter plane, bomber of even a military transport

    Finally, Iran can't possibly develop enough nuclear weapons or launch systems to "defend itself" against the U.S. The idea is ludicrous.

    It's far from being ludicrous, Iran has US soldiers sitting in two of its neighbours, the US has repeatedly threatened regime change in Iran, and a nuke well placed on a US army attacking Iran would have a very very profound effect on US strategy and would prevent any invasion of Iran, something that chemical weapons can't do since the US army has gear to protect somewhat effectively against that.

  17. Re:They signed a treaty on Iran's Nuclear Ambitions · · Score: 1

    1) So did the US, France, UK, ... They were supposed not to proliferate, yet they gave Israel the bomb
    2) Really ? The reality is that Iran never attacked another country. Want the list of countries the US attacked or helped attack ? It's quite long (Panama, Grenada, Iraq, Iran, ...)
    3) They never said they would do it, they want to see Israel disappear yes, they never said they would do it themselves
    4) The facility is an enrichment facility, nothing in that fact makes it military, it's still under construction and was reported by the iranians themselves to the IAEA, as they were supposed to do, so they respected their part of the contract.

  18. Re:containment theory... on Iran's Nuclear Ambitions · · Score: 1

    The real trouble is that Iran never attacked another country, while at the same time the US helped overthrow its democratically elected government to put a dictator in the 50s and the US and the west supported Iraq's invasion of Iran in 1980 and put a complete boycott of weapons sales on Iran, not budging when Iraq launched chemical weapons at Iran.
    Let's not forget that iranian civilian airliner blown out of the sky by a US Navy ship a few months after the PanAm crash, nobody can mistake the radar signature of an Airbus with a fighter plane and let's not even talk about all these imperialist governments in the US who keep talking about regime change in Iran and other countries they don't like.

    So really, Iran has every reason and right to get nuclear weapons to defend itself, because the past has proven that western countries really are just assholes looking only after their own interests that are not interested in justice and peace.

  19. Re:There is a LOT that uses MS Office on IBM Policy Switches From MS Office To OO.o · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Wow you sound ignorant. For a "security engineer" you need more training, or more exposure to the real world.

    HA, HA, HA


    HINT: The real world doesn't run Vista or Windows 7 in a business environment. The ones who run Windows tend to run XP, which is a sieve security-wise.

    And ? The guy talks about issues that are supposedly unfixable in Win32, Vista and Win7 prove he's wrong. Nobody ever talked about market share.

    The latest unpatchable exploits are just another demonstration of the lack of security focus at Microsoft, which if you've been around long at all you must recognize as a pattern.

    Latest unpatchable exploits ? Which ones ? Come on, instead of insulting people when they don't spit on MS like you do, why don't you bring FACTS ?!?

    Lack of security focus at MS ? Yeah, I suggest you go talk to guys like Dan Kaminsky, Chris Paget and others to see who in their opinion is a leader in developing secure software, you're up for a serious surprise. But then, you wouldn't know, you probably never talked to them since you don't seem to have a clue about what secure software is.

    As for the "shill" comment -- considering your comment history, one has to wonder if you are being paid for your comments, as they fly in the face of reality as we know it.

    That's right, not spitting on MS all day long like you guys make me a shill.
    But then again, facts show that I'm right. Now, does being right make me a shill ? Or is it simply because you dislike reality that you hide behind this "you're a shill" shield ?

    Of course the possibility is that you're some Best Buy or Office Depot employee playing "security engineer" on the weekends. In either event, I pity you.

    You're right, I *might* be your boss in that department store

  20. Re:There is a LOT that uses MS Office on IBM Policy Switches From MS Office To OO.o · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You probably also knew about the message queue vulnerability... didn't you? A professional would know.

    If you're talking about the one you cited, yes, for years. It's a very moderate vuln actually, even on XP / Windows Server 2003

    And I wouldn't be too sure that 32 bit Vista or 7 could effectively patch the problem without changing the Win32 message queue and breaking compatibility. Do you have any references to cite this achievement?

    Look at MSDN : http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb625963.aspx

    Preferably one that explains why it isn't fixed in WindowsXP.

    That is very simple: the changes are extensive, too big to be ported back.

    I've read through your comment history a bit. You might as well add a signature that says "I'm a Microsoft shill."

    Oh right, since I don't talk shit about MS like you do, I must be a Microsoft shill... Now I could go take a look at your comment history and tell you you're a [some insult], but what good would that be ? That would say more about me than you.

    The reality is, I'm right and you're wrong, you had no idea what you were talking about and got caught red handed.
    Calling others shills won't change any of that.

  21. Re:There is a LOT that uses MS Office on IBM Policy Switches From MS Office To OO.o · · Score: 1

    Vista and Win7 are protected against that attack(concept of low-medium-high integrity processes and processes can only send messages to same or lower integrity) and they have done so without breaking the apps.

    Sorry, doesn't fit what you claimed.

  22. Re:There is a LOT that uses MS Office on IBM Policy Switches From MS Office To OO.o · · Score: 1, Interesting
    (This is irrelevant since there are known exploits that cannot be patched in Win32 without breaking every application ever written that enables privilege escalation)

    I would love to have you clearly articulate those known exploits that cannot be patched in Win32 And I bet you won't be able to, why ? Because they don't exist.
    Hint: I'm a security engineer, watch what you're saying.

  23. Re:Why MacRuby Matters? on Experimental MacRuby Branch Is 3x Faster · · Score: 1

    Oh yeah, supported by a dying company (Sun) and one that has absolutely no server market share.

    Way to go Ruby !

  24. Re:Herd Mentality on Why Game Developers Should Support OS X and Linux · · Score: 1

    Just because you decide to code for Linux won't make your software any more interesting or creative than if it was on Windows. Get a reality check, people don't code for Linux because it's not worth it, not because they have a 'herd mentality'.

    Whether that app is one in 10'000 on Windows doesn't make it less or more creative and innovative. Even with that, it would still have much more impact than in the 1% market share of Linux, comprised mostly of people totally reticent to spending money on software.

  25. Re:Herd Mentality on Why Game Developers Should Support OS X and Linux · · Score: 1

    What does it have to do with passion ?

    Whether your game runs on Linux or Windows doesn't say anything about the game and how interesting it is.

    You can make a really shitty game for Linux, and an amazing game for Windows.

    Instead of asking people to grow up and join the rest of the world, I'd ask you to get out of your hole and realize that people need to earn a salary to pay for their apartment, food, ... so their company needs to be able to sell the game to pay its employees, and the Linux market ain't gonna pay the bills.
    So instead, let's create an amazing game on a platform that allows game developers to feed their children: Windows