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User: goombah99

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  1. Xbox+ Skype = done on Ask Slashdot: Bulletproof Video Conferencing For Alzheimers Home? · · Score: 1

    bullet proof video conferencing is exactly the idea behind the xbox appliance

  2. Tizen definition on Samsung Delays Tizen Phone Launch · · Score: 1

    Tizen is the german word for dingleberry-- those pieces of crap that cling to the hairs of your butt. I think if they ever intended to ship they might have checked that.

  3. mine protein structures on Ask Slashdot: What Would You Do With Half a Rack of Server Space? · · Score: 1

    install the rosetta @ home boinc project and predict and desing protein strucures.

  4. Re:Human recall slows down too. on Do Apple and Google Sabotage Older Phones? What the Graphs Don't Show · · Score: 3, Interesting

    perhaps Apple and google will ration their back end service such that a user of an old phone only gets the equivalent compute power that was available at the time the phone was first sold. Newer phones thus pay for upgrades in the computing infrastructure, and thus are entitled to superior backend services.

  5. Human recall slows down too. on Do Apple and Google Sabotage Older Phones? What the Graphs Don't Show · · Score: 3, Informative

    Studies have also shown that as humans age their rate of recall also slows down, not because their brains are slower but because they have to navigate a database filled with entangled excess information. I've noticed that google searches by voice are vastly more word-accurate than siri searches by voice. But that's because google is doing something in the context of something else-- it has clues to context. Siri is trying to do free-form semantics over a much greater realm of possibilities. When you narrow Siri to a phone specific function, it does better than google. As the AI realm grows, perhaps to include sarcasm and slang, these services will require even more compute power to keep going.

    However, these days, phone services are done on back end servers, so there is no great reason they should slow down in "modern" times.

  6. crouton in nuts on Chromebooks Are Outselling iPads In Schools · · Score: 2

    I installed crouton and it totally sucks!
    1) you have to run in developer mode which means one accidental miss boot or wake up and you entire hard disk is erased.
    2) you get no live updates from google for the chrome portion
    3) crouton linux has all sorts of network adapter problems, like seeing it at all, on my machine.
    4) the archiving system for saving your current state for a reinistall after you accidentally press the space bar when it tells you to at boot (and reformats the hard drive) is byzantine and only for very serious experts who think there time has no value (e.g. want to buy a cheap computer and then waste tonnes of their time learing the tricks.
    5) printing is a total disaster, and at a minumum requires a real computer or a special printer.

  7. call them on Netflix Reduces Physical-Disc Processing, Keeps Prices the Same · · Score: 5, Insightful

    netflix listened to customer feedback when they tried to spin off their disc rentals to another company. so call them and give them feedback. they are easy to reach by phone. if you dont complain to them please dont whine on slashdot

  8. debug my software please on Google's Project Zero Aims To Find Exploits Before Attackers Do · · Score: 4, Funny

    SO I just post my software and these guys do a free security analysis. Cool, now I can be sloppy!

  9. Re:Lovelace? on The Lovelace Test Is Better Than the Turing Test At Detecting AI · · Score: 2

    "the server sucked my job right in"

  10. hexagonal? on BlackBerry's Innovation: Square-Screened Smartphones · · Score: 2

    A hexagonal screen would not only solve the vertical screen problem but also the 60 degree angle screen.

  11. no rest no peace on Intelligent Thimble Could Replace the Mouse In 3D Virtual Reality Worlds · · Score: 1

    These 3D whizmos, like for example LEAP motion (incredibly cool), all work great.... for about 20 minutes. Then you put them in the drawer because they require too much muscle coordination and energy to operate. in contrast when you REST your finger on a scroll wheel or REST your hand on a mouse it is not merely not moving, it is at rest in 3 dimensions. it only takes a small effort to move it, but you are not having to run a whole lot of muscles in coordination to keep the hand or finger in a constant position. it's hard to poise your hand in empty space. In the old days, good typists could do this with hands poised over the KB and fingers hovering above the keys. Most people now days use palm rests or put pressure on the keys. those old time secretarial pool typists had to sit up straight and brace their feet on the floor to pull that off. Girdles probably helped!

    the first successful mouse replacement will have that feature. Perhaps something with haptic feedback to support your finger a little till you really want to move it.

    personally I suspect the some sort of eye motion or maybe a joystick like thing will be the first 3D controller that people can use for long periods.

  12. split the difference on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 2

    why not just reduce the window area to half it's current size. If the savings is really significant then that would be significant too. Then compensate with the video system. the remaining window would be the failsafe.

  13. Python is better overall but R is more like SAS on Ask Slashdot: Switching From SAS To Python Or R For Data Analysis and Modeling? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    R has more single function high level commands devoted to stats, these are done right internally and are self consistent with other functions for further processing. But its not as general a programming language as python. if you want something different than the canned functions in R then you will need to write them yourself at which point you might as well be using python. however if you like SAS then chances are R will seem more like what you are hoping for.

  14. but you can still grind on them right? on Boston Trying Out Solar-Powered "Smart Benches" In Parks · · Score: 1

    skateboarding can be a crime

  15. Re:FP on Supreme Court Rules Cell Phones Can't Be Searched Without a Warrant · · Score: 3, Insightful

    no problemo. they will just buy the self-same info from facebook or amazon and it's "affiliates" (anyone with money).

  16. Re: two factor ID based on cell phones is crap on Trivial Bypass of PayPal Two-Factor Authentication On Mobile Devices · · Score: 1

    It's better than nothing,

    To the extent that this fig leaf is accepted in place of having real security via the simple expedient of a secondary e-mail address for password recents means this is getting baked into the system and hard to unwind later.

    to see what I mean look at the silly "application specific password" kludge Google introduced to let you collect e-mail bypassing two-factor ID, and password storage vulnerabilities. nuts.

    it should be baked in that all sites that use 2-factor also allow (or require) a 2nd address for all password resets.

  17. two factor ID based on cell phones is crap on Trivial Bypass of PayPal Two-Factor Authentication On Mobile Devices · · Score: 1

    currently the paradigm is if someone has control of your cell phone your two factor ID becomes zero factor ID. This is because nearly all cell phones can collect e-mail, allowing a password reset to be performed. Likewise cell phones display text messages with the second factor. So you are hosed. Even if you have a screen lock on your phone, have you ever lent your phone to a stranger to "make a call" or take a photo?

    The workaround for this is to have a second e-mail address that you don't have associated with your phone's e-mail program. Then you can send all your finanical accounts to the e-mail address. But that's not really very convenient (e.g. amazon and google wallet would be awkward to use that way).

    What needs to be done is to have financial companies send all non-critical e-mails (e.g. paypay receipts and notices) to your general e-mail, but require a second e-mail address for all critical transactions where money is movable.

    or even better, they could simply require that all password resets go to a secondary e-mail address. this would be even more convenient.

    until then two factor ID using cell phones is just a very vulnerable layer of the security onion.

  18. Re:What happens if on Bitcoin Security Endangered By Powerful Mining Pool · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Also if the bit coin miners get concentrated into just a few, what happens if these 3 were to get DDOSed? if the big miners are off line then would the next largest miner have a window of time where they controlled more than 50% of the mine? Would they be able to pull off some shenanigans in that time?

  19. What happens if on Bitcoin Security Endangered By Powerful Mining Pool · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder what happens if someone with more than enough CPU power to get 99% of the mining jumps in one night. What kind of Damage could they do in a short interval before people notice? What if their goals were not to steal bitcoins but rather to snatch all the coins from, say, Kim Jong Un, or Al Queda. E.g. for example the NSA or Samsung or Saudi arabia. They would not care about the loss of value in their stolen coins, the point is to deprive an adversaries use of them.

    Does the Amazon or Azure networks have enough rentable time to pull this off?

  20. Adults are the carriers on California Whooping Cough Cases "an Epidemic" · · Score: 1

    Having had had family members with whooping cough I looked into this. Adults are believed to be carrier's with silent symptoms. This year (2014) when adults get their physical they will very likely be offered an immunization for whooping cough. I just got mine since I was exposed to it. Although vaccines after the fact may not be useful for protection, the wisdom apparently is that the vaccine helps your body supress the silent infection. Not sure I understand why.

  21. First informative post on TweetDeck Hacked · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    penis penis penis

    I am amused that I'll be modded informative.

  22. tuttle or buttle? on Chicago Robber Caught By Facial Recognition Sentenced To 22 Years · · Score: 1

    Imagine this scenario: I don't know if this person did it, but if the facial recognition software says it's true, it must be him. "Yes, officer, that's the guy."

    your question reminds me of the movie Brazil. How can someone have done something is the computer says they are dead?

  23. why there is no competition on Amazon Launches Subscription-Based Billing And Payments Service · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There's two reasons

    first Visa and MC both require merchants not to charge extra fro using their card. Thus there's no reason for consumers not to use the most widely accepted cards.

    second, even though Visa is a franchise of issuers, the master company avoids putting them in competition.

    Thus there's just no easy way for competition to breakout since merchants don't want to just restrict their sales to AMEX holders anymore.

    It's also likely it's an illegal price fixed cartel but I don't have any evidence for that.

  24. Re:Why isn't there competition on fees? on Amazon Launches Subscription-Based Billing And Payments Service · · Score: 1

    Once enough people switch to Amazon it will start squeezing merchants and consumers to pay more. See Hatchette

  25. meet the new Bus, same as the old bus on 'Pop-Up' Bus Service Learns Boston Riders' Rhythms, Creates Routes Accordingly · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Won't get fooled again. Um this is what bus planners have always done with the best available data, in setting routes.