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User: Kufat

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Comments · 156

  1. Re:Dear Slashdot on EFF Tells Court That the NSA Knowingly and Illegally Destroyed Evidence · · Score: 2

    HTTPS isn't "not more secure than your ISP." It's not more secure than the worst trusted root CA. In the absence of a CA compromise, your ISP cannot MitM HTTPS or other SSL-based protocols without your browser/client warning you about it.

  2. Re:SAT is not a brute force loop on A Mathematical Proof Too Long To Check · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yeah, I'm familiar with SAT solvers and the fact that they aren't REALLY full brute force; I oversimplified it a bit for the Slashdot crowd. Might have gone a little too far on the "lies to children" scale, mea culpa.

    My point was that anyone with high school level math experience can understand the basic problem of boolean satisfiability; I was trying to draw a distinction between problems that are beyond human comprehension and those that are merely beyond human time and ability, with huge SAT instances falling into the latter category. Shouldn't have glossed over the details quite as badly as I did.

  3. Re:the beginning, not the end on A Mathematical Proof Too Long To Check · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd hesitate to call one big for loop "AI." The interesting part of the proof is the reduction to SAT, and that's easily understood by mathematicians. The computer part is a straightforward and dull brute force search.

  4. Re:2% of US Population? on DoD Declassifies Flu Pandemic Plan Containing Sobering Assumptions · · Score: 1

    I understand not reading the article, but you didn't even read the line you quoted. Congratulations!

    2 percent of the infected population

  5. Re:Stop with the conferences on Apple Unveils iPhone 5C, iPhone 5S · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes.. Note that that's an off-contract price and that it ships with a user-unlockable bootloader.

    (I have no interest in a flame war. It's an answer to the question the parent asked, not an attempt to start an Android vs. iOS argument.)

  6. Re:A little late... on Extraneous Network Services Leave Home Routers Unsecure · · Score: 1

    No, it ends tomorrow.

  7. Re:No root = developer headaches on Steve "CyanogenMod" Kondik Contemplates The Death of Root On Android · · Score: 1

    "Root" is something you have or do not have within Android. ROMs aren't flashed from within Android, they're flashed from either recovery or the bootloader. (Usually recovery.)
    GP is correct, you're misunderstanding either the terminology or the roles played by the OS/bootloader/recovery.

  8. Re:Started out impressive on Small Town Builds Its Own Gigabyte Network; Cost To Citizens $57/month · · Score: 1

    All Ethernet standard speeds (10M/100M/1G/10G/40G/100G) are in mega/gigabits per second, not bytes. So are wireless Ethernet speeds (11M/54M/300M/1.69G).

  9. Re:Where is Google again? on Google Patents Frowns and Winks To Unlock Your Phone · · Score: 1

    I live in upstate NY and I use face unlock. If I have a scarf on and need to use my phone, I just cancel out of it and punch in my PIN.

    (Also, if I have a scarf on, I probably have gloves on, and therefore probably wouldn't be using my phone at the moment anyway.)

  10. Re:Kilowatts? on Walgreens To Build First Self-Powered Retail Store · · Score: 4, Informative

    You've got it backward, I'm afraid. Watts are a measure of power, while watt-hours are a measure of energy (power times time.) A device that uses one kW of power while operating uses 24 kWh of energy per day of operation

  11. Re:A joke? on Press, Bloggers Fall For iPhone Cup Holder 'Joke' · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hats go on your head. Jokes, evidently, go right over it.

  12. Re:Recurring fee gap between flip phone and iPhone on The Strange Math of Apple's Alleged Massive iPhone 5 Order Cuts · · Score: 1

    For example, dumbphone plans on Virgin Mobile (a Sprint MVNO) start at $5 per month

    Virgin Mobile's $5 plan seems to be gone. The cheapest payLo plan I see is $20/mo.

    Ting is one of the better Sprint MVNO choices for light users and especially families of light users; they have a $6/line/month charge and buckets based on usage. You can share buckets on multiple lines on the same account, bring your own devices (subject to restrictions), and there are no surcharges for smartphones. They also have voice and text (but not data) roaming to VZW, unlike the Sprint-owned VM USA and Boost.

  13. Re:WTF? English fail on Linux Nukes 386 Support · · Score: 1

    I'd assumed they meant a pull in the Git sense, i.e. fetching a changeset from a remote repository (Igno's) and merging it into the current repository (Linus's). Sloppiness is a possibility too, though.

  14. Re:Incremental updates? on Custom Android ROM Developers Get OTA Update Capabilities Like Carriers · · Score: 1

    You really don't need to wipe and reinstall as often as they say you do. I recently upgraded from CM7 to a CM9 kang without wiping anything except cache and only had to reinstall a few apps. (That said, sometimes you'll end up with a non-working mess and will have to wipe anyway...but it's very rarely necessary for point release or nightly upgrades.)

  15. Re: Not Surprising. on Dutch Artist Admits Faking Viral 'Human Bird Wing' Video · · Score: 5, Interesting

    To be fair, the troll who made the videos did claim that motors were providing 95% of the net power. That made it a good bit more plausible.

  16. Re:What happened to phones that 'Just Work'? on Microsoft Scraps 'Where's My Phone Update?' Site · · Score: 1

    Here you go.

    Seriously, if people want computer functionality on phones, they're going to have to deal with the associated tradeoffs. A lot of people stick with feature phones for just this reason; I did too until recently. Nothing wrong with either choice as long as it comes from an informed decision.

  17. Re:Nothing to see here. on Amazon Releases Kindle Source Code · · Score: 1

    You can include the FSF in the list of authors of GPL programs who disagree with your interpretation. See http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#MereAggregation for information on aggregation; bundling GPL and proprietary parts and having proprietary parts execute GPL parts in an automated fashion is permitted. A common example would be the way many proprietary router web interfaces execute GPL utilities and receive their output via pipes or similar mechanisms.

    I'm not sure how you define "aggregation", but it seems clear that it differs from the FSF's definition.

  18. Re:Nothing to see here. on Amazon Releases Kindle Source Code · · Score: 1

    Whoops. ncurses is MIT licensed, not BSD. Bad example, but what I said still applies to the components that ARE licensed under the GPL.

  19. Re:Nothing to see here. on Amazon Releases Kindle Source Code · · Score: 1

    You can reproduce the binary for the Linux kernel, the binary for busybox, the binary for ncurses, etc. Those are the components covered by the GPL. The GPL does not prohibit the distribution of GPL and non-GPL components on the same device or in the same distribution, nor does it have anything to say about components covered by another license.

  20. Nothing to see here. on Amazon Releases Kindle Source Code · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's just a minimal GPL drop. No application level source. Unlike (for example) Netgear or Linksys, they don't even provide the object code and build tools to let you build your own usable device ROM image from a combination of proprietary and OSS components.

  21. A mixed recommendation: WNDR3300 on Ask Slashdot: DD-WRT Upgrade To 802.11n? · · Score: 1

    DD-WRT is very stable on my Netgear WNDR3300, but the CPU reaches 100% usage at relatively low throughput. See here for some benchmarks recorded by another user.

    I'm looking to get a better router and to OpenWRT in the near future. (The amount of writable flash on my router is too small to have a usable OpenWRT install with a JFFS2 partition.)

  22. Re:Duh. on The End of the Gas Guzzler · · Score: 1

    I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you don't understand rather than assuming you're trolling, so:

    Times in the quarter mile are measured from a standing start, not a moving start. A 12.5 second quarter mile does not in any way imply a top speed of 6/5 miles per minute (72 mph). That's the average speed over the 1/4 mile distance, and the initial speed was 0.

  23. Re:I just canceled by Netflix account. on Netflix Announces Streaming Only Plans and Higher Prices for DVDs · · Score: 1

    Just closed my account as well. (It would've renewed on the 15th.) I tried to e-mail them to explain why (there's no free text field in their survey), but I couldn't find an e-mail address or contact form.

    Yes, I could've waited til September; this was one of those voting-with-my-wallet decisions.

  24. Re:linux 3.0 on Linux 3.0 Will Be Faster Than 2.6.39 · · Score: 3, Informative

    They're currently on 3.0 RC4. So I imagine that what will and won't be in the release has pretty much solidified by this point.

  25. Re:Fimbulvetr anyone? on Big Drop In Solar Activity Could Cool Earth · · Score: 1

    Sounds more like the Year of the Jackpot to me.