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User: etrusco

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  1. Re:spend more time reading code than writing on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Make Novice Programmers More Professional? · · Score: 1

    Perfectly said!

  2. Re:Gave up years ago on Linux Kernel Dev Sarah Sharp Quits, Citing 'Brutal' Communications Style · · Score: 1

    People modded this "Funny", but I have my doubts it was the OP's intention. If only they said NetBSD or OpenBSD... (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theo_de_Raadt hint hint)

  3. Re:New MS business plan on HP Brings Back Windows 7 'By Popular Demand' As Buyers Shun Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Actually they kind of fit: Windows NT 4 is the NT equivalent of Win95. Windows 2000 is NT equivalent for Windows 98.

  4. Re:Hopefully on Ask Slashdot: Are We Witnessing the Decline of Ubuntu? · · Score: 1

    Ubuntu just changed the *default* package manager *GUI*, it still uses vanilla apt and deb back-end. You can still use (I do) synaptic, aptitude, smart-pm, whatever.

  5. Re:Ec*freeze*lip*freeze*se works on Visual Studio vs. Eclipse: a Programmer's Comparison · · Score: 1

    This is not exclusive to Eclipse at all. I have this problem frequently on Firefox and other applications; since it seems to happen only on Windows (several machines), I suspect some input handling problem in Windows...

  6. Re:Only one program I miss on Oracle Rushes Emergency Java Update To Patch McRAT Vulnerabilities · · Score: 1

    I would agree, if only the installer had the option not to install the plugin and the option was kept when updating.

  7. Bzzzzt. Wrong. on Facebook Lets You Harvest Account Phone Numbers · · Score: 1

    This only works if the number is already visible/public.

  8. Gateway is bad? Talk about Dell then... on US-CERT Discloses Security Flaw In 64-Bit Intel Chips · · Score: 1

    You think this is bad? Dell did the same to me, even though my machine has (came from factory with) 4GB of RAM! And the combination of their BIOS + drivers only allow 2.9 GB of usable RAM on the default OS (Win7 32-bit)! I've seen some posts saying that you're now allowed to install a Win7 64-bit with a key from 32-bit OS, but anyway you can't just upgrade a 32-bit installation to 64-bit (you have to reinstall).

  9. Or Object Pascal on Ask Slashdot: What Language Should a Former Coder Dig Into? · · Score: 2

    General programming for personal uses or your own company: Object Pascal with Free Pascal (and Lazarus).
    http://freepascal.org/
    http://lazarus.freepascal.org/

  10. Re:But this is normal on Entrepreneur Makes Millions Selling Virtual Land · · Score: 1

    I hope you're drunk (I sure am :D ). It's not the question whether the medium is "real" or "virtual", the matter is whether the "fact" is real or virtual.

  11. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? on Microsoft Exec Responds To the Google-Motorola Deal · · Score: 1

    Doh. Everything needs an equilibrium; maybe if MS didn't force them to have that low margins they wouldn't have to push that bunch of crap on us.
    Razor-thin margins on software would be a good thing for consumers, too. But since MS is a monopoly we can't have it, right? And it's not like Windows doesn't come bundled with a bunch of useless crap.

  12. Re:Holding back? on Lennart Poettering: BSD Isn't Relevant Anymore · · Score: 1

    PulseAudio is not about fixing ALSA, it's about fixing the parts the distros/people think are missing in the Linux audio stack.
    Please try these:
    http://ossguy.com/?p=347
    And from the previous article: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopTeam/Specs/CleanupAudioJumble#Use%20cases
    http://www.cio.com.au/article/320807/open_source_identity_pulseaudio_creator_lennart_poettering

  13. Re:Holding back? on Lennart Poettering: BSD Isn't Relevant Anymore · · Score: 1

    > Again I will reiterate. PulseAudio is a middleman standing between the applicating wanting to play
    > sound, and ALSA. How exactly is that going to fix an inherent flaw in the underlying ALSA system?

    What "inherent ALSA flaw" are you talking about? PA was not created to fix any ALSA flaw, other people have already stated several features it introduces *on top of* ALSA. I'll cite two more: reduce power consumption and provide multi-user/seat policy.

    > Hint: it will not and cannot.

    You can't affirm a middleman can fix all possible flaws of the lower layer, but of course it can work-around some kinds of flaws.

    > If there are such horrible problems with Dmix (that somehow I won the lottery of never personally
    > encountering), that kind of development effort should be put towards fixing Dmix. Doesn't that
    > make a lot more sense?

    Lots of influential people didn't think dmix was the way to go, that's why there are so many alternatives.

  14. Re:Lennart bashing again? on Lennart Poettering: BSD Isn't Relevant Anymore · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Of course I hated PulseAudio (in Ubuntu) at first, but I've read enough to know it wasn't Lennart's fault and anyway now it just works.
    These "Linus' Moments" of him doesn't help much, but I always found reason in them.
    I think this might be the article with the worst ratio of uninformed and nonsense comment (per total comments) I've ever saw. "I replaced PA with ALSA", "cgroups -> jails", "BSD is relevant, it's used by Apple", etc, and all of them voted +5, Informative! WTF?!

  15. Re:Just use the hardware you have on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Choose a Windows Laptop? · · Score: 0

    And people moderate this Insightful? Sigh. The poster blatantly assume stuff just to disagree with the thread and provide a lame answer.
    Every of the 5 makers (not models) suggested have wildly differing "good enough" models, but picking a "very good" one is getting harder and harder with the lame modifications all makers are doing to the keyboards on every fscking new model.
    PS. I never had/bought an Apple product.

  16. Re:Patent risks on H.264 vs. Theora — Fightin' Words About Patentability · · Score: 1

    The intention of patents is to not spur competition, it's to encourage innovation by justifying/giving ROI to research. The examples you cite are demerits of the patent system: divergent formats were created, duplicating efforts and worsening user experience, not for technical reasons, but to avoid the patent costs and pitfalls.

  17. Re:H.264 on Microsoft Previews IE9 — HTML5, SVG, Fast JS · · Score: 1

    Just proves that's something very odd about this whole story. Every 5-buck chinese mp3 player supports vorbis, but the brand ones don't.

  18. Re:Other than, you know, Silverlight. on Oh, What a Lovely Standards War · · Score: 1

    Silverlight is almost shoved down the throat of anybody who enables Windows Update or visits microsoft.com. I can't find any number on SL user base, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's over 90%.
    It's just people like you and like me who won't install SL (just out of distrust in MS' security).

    OT: And that _was_ me, because fortunately in Brazil the price wars caused several vendors to start selling notebooks with Linux and my last one is one of those - to avoid the possibility of starting a war about Linux distros ;)

  19. Re:sanctions? on Lawyer Offers $1M For Proof His Client Could Have Done It; Oops · · Score: 1

    Wrong. This is just a disingenuous twist used by immoral people. The job of the lawyer if to defend the client so that they get a just trial.
    Just like that "enterprises are meant to profit" thing. No. They're meant to generate capital, and in the way, jobs.

  20. Re:(ignore this) on Why the CAPTCHA Approach Is Doomed · · Score: 1

    to hell with karma...

  21. Re:Forget C and Fortran on Programming Language Specialization Dilemma · · Score: 1

    Wooosh. Or so I hope ;)

  22. Re:Ask people in the music industry... on How To Verify CD-R Data Retention Over Time? · · Score: 1

    CDs aren't burned for commercial distribution, they're pressed.

    And they frequently rot nonetheless.
    I've had both data (games) and music CDs fail, if not peel out.

  23. Re:CVS all the way baby on Practical Reasons To Choose Git Or Subversion? · · Score: 1

    CVS doesn't "full copy" in any situation, it just adds a couple lines to each file. Sure it can get slow.
    A failed commit can give you inconsistent history, by it cannot hose the repository, period.
    OTOH I agree that the (infuriatingly obnoxious) way svn treats tags/branches is not a good reason to not use it. One just needs to keep in mind that tags "don't exist" in svn, you just "fake" it with a repository-side copy command.

  24. I guess it never applied exactly on How Big Should My Swap Partition Be? · · Score: 1

    Summary: If your "working set" fits your RAM then there's no use for swap.

    IMVHO the general rule should be "don't ever size your swap more than twice your RAM".
    If you needed more "virtual memory" than that you certainly should buy more RAM.
    Windows, up to Win2000, behaved very poorly without swap (at least half the RAM), but I never had a problem with Windows XP or Linux running without swap.

  25. Re:Catastrophic error on The Thirteen Greatest Error Messages of All Time · · Score: 1

    It's egregious that this wasn't included in the list.
    "Catastrophic error" is the system string for value E_UNEXPECTED of HRESULT, which is not that uncommon (e.g. calling RaiseException in the allocator of a COM factory - IClassFactory.CreateInstance - maps to E_UNEXPECTED. Actually IIRC throwing an exception inside any SafeCall method will map to E_UNEXPECTED).