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User: PAPPP

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  1. I use and suggest Seafile. All the parts are open source, folders can be client-side encrypted.
    Its crypto isn't perfect (they use some odd AES settings, and the design leaks some metadata) and every now and then I manage to bug the sync system and have to remove/re-add a file to get it to sync properly, but it has good clients for Linux (gui or cli), Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS, as well as web access (You have to give your passphrase to the server for that, which is security-harming in theory, it is supposed to be flushed after N minutes). They have free AWS-backed instances with a small amount of storage to try, and it isn't bad to set up a server for on a VPS or the like, they also have a specialized RPi installer.

  2. Re:The Double-Edge Sword on Nest Protect: Trojan Horse For 'The Internet of Things'? · · Score: 1

    I'm currently having a problem with exactly that. I would really like a fitbit type device (souped up pedometer/human attached IMU that can dump it's data to a computer) that doesn't announce my daily movements and sleep habits onto someone else's computers in a format I can't read without subscribing to their service. There is no value added for me letting it upload, I have no desire to make a social activity out of my daily movement and sleep habits, no desire to pay to let some random little for-profit rummage though my data and eventually get hacked and/or lose it (in either sense), or have a cashflow problem and sell it. I just want to be able to log it for my own edification.
    As far as I can tell there isn't any such device on the market, even though it would be exactly the same hardware.

  3. Re:Good to see the progress on KDE Software Compilation 4.11 Released · · Score: 1

    Nope. As nice as recent KDE is, it is still a demonstrable resource hog: http://l3net.wordpress.com/2013/03/17/a-memory-comparison-of-light-linux-desktops/
    His semi-scientific experiment matches up with my experience. I have a KDE 4.10 box and a XFCE box (both on top of Arch, so I'm reasonably aware of how they are configured) that I use regularly, and KDE is incredibly more resource intensive than XFCE, even factoring in some things I have disabled in KDE and added on to XFCE.

  4. Re:Self-hosted TinyTinyRSS on Slashdot Asks: How Will You Replace Google Reader? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I went to tt-rss as well and am more than happy with it. The web interface is nice, it's self hosted (more important in light of recent news), it's easy to set up (even in unsupported shared-hosting configurations), and the Android app is decent. The web interfaces is also very easily customizable, even for someone who doesn't like doing web fronted work.
    Fox can be a little gruff, but considering the volume of stupid questions suddenly coming in to a one-man project with the death of google reader, I can't say I blame him.

  5. Yevgeny Zamyatin on Ask Slashdot: Most Underappreciated Sci-Fi Writer? · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'll argue for Yevgeny Zamyatin, at least for authors unknown among people who otherwise appreciate Sci-Fi. We is probably my favorite of it's style of dystopian novels (Think 1984 and Brave New World) - it uses a clever mathematical symbolism as a framework for the story, it has an awesome IRL history of copies being smuggled in and out of the Soviet Union, and Zamyatin was an Old Bolshevik disenchanted with later developments in the party. This means it has a little bit different perspective than the similar pieces by western authors, and explains the nifty "There is no final revolution" mantra in the novel.

  6. This is the Weirdest Premise on App Developer: Android Designed For Piracy · · Score: 1

    Chiefly, he seems to assume that a monetized software ecosystem is the purpose of and natural sate for mobile devices. The fact is, the devices are for the users' (and manufacturers', which he did note) benefit.
    That a few developers have started making significant profit off mobile is a recent and incidental matter (PalmOS and PocketPC never developed big paid ecosystems compared to their user base. Apple didn't even support native apps when they introduced iOS in 2007, and still treats their developers like shit whenever it suits them. The modern mobile software market is in its infancy, it is probably over-inflated, and it might not even last - especially if it continues to be a sea of shit.)
    He also seems to think that the lower perceived value for software on mobile is a problem rather than the simple fact that mobile apps really aren't worth as much to users - piracy happens because either the service sucks, or the price is higher than the perceived value.
    And this is all ignoring the argument that generations of developers for personal computers have done fine targeting open platforms.
    It actually took me a while to get my head around the narcissistic "These platforms are made for people like me to monetize" mindset required for his argument to make sense. This idea that the purpose of businesses is "to make money" instead of "to provide goods and services" is how we tanked our fucking economy, get out of it.

  7. Re:Worry about the old phones on HTC One X Phone Held by Customs Due to ITC Ruling · · Score: 2

    Hello fellow MT4GS owner, allow me to introduce you the magic of community ROMs. I've been running an unofficial CM9 build from here on mine recently, and it only has a handful of bugs. The current builds are using a 2.6 kernel because the 3.0 tree isn't playing nice with the keyboard. It is a completely open community project, so you can watch progress on the TeamDS github page.
    It sucks that HTC and/or T-Mobile aren't providing us with an official ICS ROM, but when you buy a phone you are buying that phone, assuming you will be getting major updates is a sure path to disappointment. This isn't specific to Android, Apple drops iOS hardware from being supported in new versions approximately two years after release. Manufactures have a double incentive not to provide updates for devices in the cost and complexity of supporting old devices and the encouragement to buy new hardware that not providing updates brings. At least with Android you get snazzy community projects because the parts are open.

  8. Every ecosystem needs a Debian on Chief Replicant Dev On Building a Truly Free Android · · Score: 2

    It's much easier to sell vendors on "Hey, use this, you don't have to develop your own" than "Open up that code you wrote because it's the right thing to do." Good, working, open solutions trickling in upstream because they are established and convenient is the best way to make a platform open, even if the fully open versions are never quite as friendly. The strictly Free systems, like Debian and Replicant, are how the open solutions get developed, improved, and established as standard so that everyone benefits.
    I'd love it if the SoC vendors were on board, but that would require a very large external disruption. Making open (preferably GPL-style so it stays open) code the standard will win out by attrition.

  9. Hey T-Mobile... on AT&T Threatening To Raise Rates After Merger Failure · · Score: 1

    Now that you have $6 billion of our cash and spectrum allocation, why don't you take our customers too?

  10. Turn off Third Party Cookies on US Congressmen: Facebook Evading Privacy Questions · · Score: 1

    The best thing you can do about all this as an individual? TURN OFF THIRD-PARTY COOKIES. I've been browsing with third-party cookies disabled for the last six months, and am yet to find something I care about that doesn't work because I have them disabled. It protects your privacy and security, it eliminates various irritating bits of targeted advertising and the like, and most browsers have a "block third-party cookies" setting built in.

  11. Aggregation, not creation on Google Buzz Buzzing Away · · Score: 1

    I'm not surprised, because it is eminently clear that Google wants to concentrate their social features on Plus (in effect, to compete with Facebook by cloning Facebook), but I am still disappointed.
    I genuinely like Buzz; it aggregates activity from a whole range of services that I don't care to deal with (personal blogs, google reader, twitter, tumblr, etc.) for easy reading, instead of being another one of those services (Hi Plus!). It was even better because it used an open standard mechanism for identity management to do what it did.
    Apparently the APIs for re-posting into Plus from external sites are starting to come together, so I guess that is the migration plan, even though it isn't as open or convenient. It would be nice if Google would set up rel=me peering behavior for plus to replace the functionality.

  12. Scifi Trope on 3D Printer For Your Kids · · Score: 1

    The implications of individuals, especially kids, having access to 3D printing is a pretty well-explored scifi trope. Cory Doctrow's Makers, and Bruce Sterling's Kiosk are both based on the concept, reasonably good, and make a solid starting point for implications.

  13. Cluster software & GPU experence on Ask Slashdot: Best Use For a New Supercomputing Cluster? · · Score: 5, Informative

    I assume this is an epic troll, but am going to give an honest answer anyway, because there are some legitimate questions buried in there.

    I work with a aggregate.org a university research group which has a decent claim to having built the very first Linux PC Cluster, set some records with them (KLAT2 and KASY0 were both ours), and still operates a number of Linux clusters, including some containing GPUs, so I feel like I have some idea of the lay of cluster technology. It is *way* overdue for an update (and one is in progress, we swear!), but we also maintain TLDP's widely circulated Parallel Processing HOWTO, which was the goto resource for this kind of question for some time.

    In a cluster of any size, you do _not_ want to be handling nodes individually. There are several popular provisioning and administration systems for avoiding doing so, because every organization with a large number of machines needs such a tool. The clusters I deal with are mostly provisioned with Perceus with a few ROCKS holdovers, and I'm aware of a number of other solutions (xCat is the most popular that I've never tinkered with). Perceus can pass out pretty much any correctly-configured Linux image to the machines, although It is specifically tailored to work with Caos NSA (Redhat-like), or GravityOS (a Debian derivative) payloads. Infiscale, the company that supports Perceus, releases the basic tools and some sample modifiable OS images for free, and makes their money off support and custom images, so it is pretty flexible option in terms of required financial and/or personnel commitment. The various provisioning and administration tools are generally designed to interact with various monitoring tools (ex. Warewulf or Ganglia) and job management systems (see next paragraph).
    Accounting and billing users is largely about your job management system. Our clusters aren't billed this way, so I can't claim to have be closely familiar with the tools, but most of the established job management systems like Slurm, and GridEngine (to name two of many) have accounting systems built in.
    The "standard" images or image-building tools provided with the provisioning systems generally provide for a few nicely integrated combinations of tools, which make it remarkably easy to throw a functioning cluster stack together.

    As for GPUs... be aware that the claimed performance for GPUs, especially in clusters, is virtually unattainable. You have to write code in their nasty domain-specific languages (CUDA or OpenCL for Nvidia, just OpenCL for AMD) and there isn't really any concept of IPC baked in to the tools to allow for distributed operations. Furthermore, GPUs are also generally extroridnarly memory and memory bandwidth starved (remember, the speed comes from there being hundreds of processing elements on the card, all sharing the same memory and interface), so simply keeping them fed with data is challenging. GPGPU is also an unstable area in both relevant senses: the GPGPU software itself has a nasty tendency to hang the host when something goes wrong (which is extra fun in clusters without BMCs), and the platforms are changing at an alarming clip. AMD is somewhat worse in the "moving target" regard - they recently deprecated all 4000 series cards from being supported by GPGPU tools, and have abandoned their CTM, CAL, and Brook+ environments before settling on OpenCL, and only OpenCL. Nvidia still supports both their C

  14. Re:What's wrong with it? on What's Wrong With the American University System · · Score: 1

    Uh... That's why they're professors. They DO know things you don't, and you are theoretically there to learn some of those things from them.

  15. HPC Community on "Install Other OS" Feature Removed From the PS3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder how the HPC community is going to respond; there is a not insubstantial community who heard "150Gflop/$400" and "Linux" and decided to build clusters from PS3s. Those machines can probably just have updates held back, but it makes replacement a problem. To forestall the inevitable "that isn't a serious use" argument, US Airforce owns Something like 2,500 PS3s for compute work.
    Killing Linux on the PS3 also presents something of an issue for the other Cell "partners", who seem to be looking at the PS3 as a low-cost Cell development starter kit. The other Cell machines on the market are *much* more expensive (an IBM QS22 blade is $8-20k, depending on configuration, and Mercury Computer Systems doesn't even like talking about how much their Cell boards cost). Given that Cell is an enormously difficult architecture to target, having relatively inexpensive systems to test and train on is very desirable for the other vendors, especially now that so many of the HPC folks are fixated on GPGPU, which is also terrible to program for, but has a far lower cost of entry. It could be that IBM's decision not to pursue Cell in the HPC market is how it became politically tenable for Sony to kill off Linux on the PS3.

  16. Accessibility != Scalability on Shuttleworth Suggests 1-Way Valve For User Experience Testing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The idea that an interface can be entirely judged by how well a user handles it in the first few minutes of exposure is, in my opinion, one of the bigger *problems* with UI design of late. A quality interface should both be immediately accessible, and SCALE WELL TO MORE ADVANCED USE CASES. In my experience, Gnome, OS X, and the bundled native applications that come with each currently fail miserably at the latter. The former head of Apple's UI team makes a pretty good case for this being a problem here, although the article focuses specifically on a facet of the OS X design philosophy which causes scalability issues, rather than the problem in general. To borrow a line from the article: "The beginner today will be the expert of tomorrow. The user with 200 photos today will be the user with 2000 a year from now. The user with 10 songs today will be the user with 100 songs six months from now. The user with one or two extra apps on the iPhone will be the user with 100 apps three months from now."

  17. Re:Problems with Chrom in the x64 version on In-Depth With the Windows 7 Public Beta · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I didn't have any luck with daemon tools under Windows 7 (32bit), but SlySoft Virtual Clonedrive (free, http://www.slysoft.com/en/virtual-clonedrive.html ) works fine for me. On a more general note, Windows 7 is making it not a chore to leave my usual Linux/XFCE environment, so they must have done something right.

  18. N810 on Apple Updates iPhone and iPod Touch · · Score: 1
    Agreed. I picked up a N810 (and a 4gb miniSD card) a few weeks ago, and it hasn't been more than a couple meters from me since. While there aren't a whole lot of features out of the box, the collection of easily installable applications(the included package manger is a frontend for dpkg, you can use apt from the command line if you prefer) more than make up for it. I was looking pretty seriously at an iPod touch (not an iPhone, I don't like paying carriers for the privilege of using my gadgets, my simple cellphone is prepaid), and decided I'd prefer a device that I could use how I saw fit, as opposed to how apple decided I should. A few of the features that distinguish it:
    • The included microb browser uses the same version of the gecko engine as the current Firefox3 builds, and renders anything Firefox will (except for a few sites that check user agents) just like on a desktop. It even has real Flash9 support for games and flash video.
    • In the same vein, theres a complete port of pidgin for all your instant messaging needs
    • The memory mounts as mass storage when plugged into a computer via microUSB (no fussy proprietary connector, no horrible manager software)
    • The USB port is OTG compliant, you can connect accessories (storage devices, keyboards, etc.) with an appropriate cable.
    • You can set up SSH on it; both client and server. That means SFTP/SSHFS to push/pull files from the device.
    • For media playback, while there is a simple built-in player, I've come to love Canola2, which has all the bells and whistles, and uses mplayer as a backend for broad format support.
    • Theres a great owners community at Internet Tablet Talk
    I am a bit disappointed with the free GPS software (you can buy wayfinder if you really want), the useless little camera, and the quality of the PIM apps available, but as an internet widget/media player its nearly perfect. The core functionality is the same as the much cheaper (but slightly larger and keyboardless) N800 that takes a pair of full-size SD cards if your looking for more storage or a lower price.
  19. OpenMoko Exists on Can Apple Find a European iPhone Partner? · · Score: 3, Informative

    While the consumer Neo1973 phones aren't shipping, calling it vaporware is a bit of a stretch, there are a healthy number of developer units out there, including some that are near-identical to the pending commercial release hardware. Read carefully at http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Neo1973 and you'll see that the phones are being produced by FIC , a fairly large Chinese electronics manufacturer who initiated the project. The software stack (a nice scalable gtk on linux environment), while missing some applications and features, is basically complete, and can be run in an emulator on the PC or on a few ARM platforms which are currently available. So. Its' not quite shipping yet, but a hefty Chinese corporation is vested in the project, and a truly impressive amount of work is already done and out there to look through. Weather either platform (iPhone/OpenMoko) takes off depends on the market, and its too early to say if either one has a chance of long term success. Who knows, one of these things might actually make me decide my featureless clamshell could be improved upon. (also remember, the US cellphone market is not in any way representative, and the phone market in Asia is far larger and more diverse than in the US or even Europe.)

  20. BBEdit/TextWrangler? on Apple Safari On Windows Broken On First Day · · Score: 1

    Have you looked at BareBones Software's BBEdit (shareware) or TextWrangler (freeware, feature subset), I haven't used them for quite a while (moved to linux w/ scite/nano), but it really is a nice editor, it meets all your requirements except being OSS, and it uses a peculiar "Document Drawer and Navigation Bar" system, that looks and feels about the same as tabs (feature was added since I last used it much, can only say that people I know who use it seem to like it). I think all the specifically addressed features are in TextWrangler (=free).

  21. Use it. on Learning More About Linux? · · Score: 2

    Really. Just use it. Like many other things, the best way to become familiar with Linux is to use it for your daily tasks for a while, and find out how to fix any problems you run into. I've used a dual-booted machine for some time, and about 6 months ago I made the decision to switch my main OS over from WinXP to Linux, and relitively painlessly went from dabbling to a being well versed pro user in a few months.

  22. Re:Installed patched OS, same as old OS on DIY Service Pack For Windows 2000/XP/2003 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of the best "In Soviet..." jokes I've ever seen, for those not in the know, it refers to some US made technology, most famously pipeline control software, the soviets stole in the early 1980s which was carefully designed to pass QA tests, then go haywire. Suffice to say, the plan worked, and in fact produced the largest non-nuclear explosion seen from space when it took out a large natural gas pipeline in Siberia. A version of the story here.

  23. STI Mobile on Reasonable Pre-Paid Cellphones in the US? · · Score: 1

    I actually can't complain about my STI Mobile phone. The plan I use has a $.10/day service charge, $.12/min daytime, $.10/min night/weekend, and minutes DO NOT expire. You can get text/data options or more standard monthly plans from them too. Minutes are carried on the Sprint network, so coverage is pretty good most places.
    I origionally got the phone(Samsung A660) because it was free after rebates on black friday a year or two ago, but have been pleasntly surprised by the service. Looks like now you can pay between $0 and $60 for a phone from them depending on what features you want.

  24. Re:What happened? on IE7 Released and Available for Download · · Score: 1

    I usually have a strict "Don't feed the trolls" policy, but this is too easy.
    It sounds like someone is bitter about their menial tech support job...
    Hint 1: Geek Squad != Computing Professional.
    Hint 2: You may want to see a therapist about your homophobia.

  25. same as allofmp3 and the like on The Day Against DRM · · Score: 1

    Convienence? Quality Assurances? and in this case, Wanting to support the author?
    I currently use one of those lovely russian mp3 sites for the first two reasons; they have a vast catalog, and I can always get files in my prefered (encoding-error free, DRMless, 192kbit LAME MP3) format. I would even go as far as to say I would jump ship to another (even if slightly more expensive) one if it (somehow) found a way to recompensate the artists without bowing to label pressure to cripple the files. It's worth a few bucks per album (to me at any rate) to be able to simply click and get what you want, instead of having to hunt through crapflooded P2P networks and fields of broken links.
    From the look of the FilesForever site, if it takes off it will also have a huge advantage for finding things from little/obscure sources (music and otherwise), which would be overlooked in a more centeralized system.