Slashdot Mirror


User: ncohafmuta

ncohafmuta's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
140
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 140

  1. Re:Economics of that stunt are dodgy on SpaceX Successfully Lands Its Rocket On A Floating Drone Ship For The First Time (theverge.com) · · Score: 2

    which is why they're now saying it will cost 30% less, which is still disappointingly low, compared to elon's previous $60M minus $250K statements. and which is why you have to take what people say with a grain of salt (like launch timeframes!).

  2. Lenovo has been doing fingerprint auth for years on their laptops.
    News outlets are making it sound like this is some new-fangled tech.
    Yes, i know in light of recent NSA developments.. but I still feel this is a non-story.

  3. Re:Battery... on Omate TrueSmart Watch Stands Alone — No Phone Required · · Score: 1

    that's because it's not a watch in the sense you're talking about and trying to compare. if you want something that lasts 30+ days, buy a timex. if you want to wear a computer and have it last that long then you'll have to take your time machine 20 yrs into the future where battery tech is that advanced.

  4. Re:Battery... on Omate TrueSmart Watch Stands Alone — No Phone Required · · Score: 2

    The screen is 1/3 the size of a high-end smartphone. The resolution is 1/4 that of a high-end smartphone. The battery is 1/4 that of a high-end smartphone. Sounds fine.

  5. not just search engines on FTC Demands Search Engines Separate Paid Advertisements From Search Results · · Score: 3, Interesting

    not just search engine results, but identify them from even a website's local content. how many times have you gone to a site to download a file and had to figure out which button was the real download button?

  6. Re:The farmer's recourse is to sue to sell on Supreme Court Rules For Monsanto In Patent Case · · Score: 1

    "More than 90 percent of American soybean farms use Monsanto's "Roundup Ready" seeds"

    wouldn't this be considered a monopoly?

  7. Re:So much for that! on Supreme Court Rules For Monsanto In Patent Case · · Score: 1

    This may be true, but how far can you take this argument?
    Let's put this GM on another level with an analogy.
    Let's say a company developed a process so that you could choose the genes of your baby. Not too far off in the future I imagine. They took an embryo and modified the genes to make the human with the desired traits, then patented it, and invitroed someone.
    The resulting baby and future adult then is bound not to have any offspring because doing so would violate the company's patent. That's not right, even if you think you're doing something for the good of society by creating a better race of humans.

    You should not be allowed to patent self-replicating organisms, period.

  8. Re:Citations? They need to be sued heavily on Florida DOT Cuts Yellow Light Delay Ignoring Federal Guidelines, Citations Soar · · Score: 1

    Denver also has a little known out in their camera laws.
    All traffic tickets must be given out in person by a law enforcement officer.
    So if you get a red light camera ticket, speed monitoring van ticket, etc.. in the mail, don't pay it.
    They'll send it again, and again, and eventually the TTL on the ticket expires and you go along your merry way.
    I've heard of very rare instances where an officer will come to your house after the 2nd notice to actually hand you a ticket.

  9. checksums on Backdoor Targeting Apache Servers Spreads To Nginx, Lighttpd · · Score: 2

    Why is this hard to detect if you're monitoring the checksums on your server binaries?

  10. GPL violation on Unlocking New Mobile Phones Becomes Illegal In the US Tomorrow · · Score: 2

    On an Android phone, the code the carrier's firmware is based off of has GPLed code in it (kernel, etc..) So how is locking the entire firmware not a violation of the GPL?

  11. all they had to do on Is Windows 8 Microsoft's Riskiest Bet? · · Score: 1

    All Microsoft had to do to make windows 8 a success, both financially and critically, was to make applications load faster. Think about it. People are simple, impatient creatures, as are their bosses. Imagine an app that loads in 10 secs on windows 7 and then 5 secs on windows 8. Companies would jump on that upgrade ship in a heartbeat! It's all increased productivity. That's it, that's all they had to do. But no, they go messing around with interfaces and workflows. Bunch of idjits.

  12. made in where?? on Backdoor Found In China-Made US Military Chip? · · Score: 1

    i actually think i saw a "Made in China" bumper sticker on our drones.

  13. share usb stick with cell plan? on Verizon To Kill All Unlimited Data Plans · · Score: 1

    It will also allow individuals to share data across different 4G LTE devices

    does that mean we can now share our 4G cell phone data plan with a 4G usb stick and not have to buy another stupid data plan for it?? because i'm all for that.

  14. Re:Happened to a friend of mine. on Stolen iPad's Reported Location Not Enough To Warrant Search, Say Dutch Police · · Score: 1

    "Despite the fact that the rightful owner was able to locate his iPad within hours of the theft, thanks to the anti-theft application he had installed"

    It's not a very good anti-theft application if the iPad was stolen!
    They should call it something else, no?

  15. Re:Good idea! on Russia Has Sights Set On Manned Moon Landing By 2030 · · Score: 0

    20 billion for a spaceport to go see a big ball of rock. Believe us, we've been there. There's not a damn thing there. Why don't they spend their time on something they're good at. Like letting their citizens live in slums, cold and hungry. I'm sure 20 billion for space travel does a lot more good. .

  16. Re:Why it should be free... on Pay the TSA $100 and Bypass Airport Security · · Score: 1

    Exactly. So what basically happened is, the TSA increased security post-9/11, the TSA increased wait times, so now the kind of security i was getting for free pre-9/11, i now have to pay $100 for. Oh, and it only works 80% of the time, oh, and only for 2 airlines, oh, and only for some airports. The TSA are the ones causing the delays! And not only are we footing the bill for the technology and laws that cause the delays, but now we're also paying to get rid of the delay. It's a scam, pure and simple. We've certainly come a long way from innocent until proven guilty. Or until proven suspicious apparently.

  17. Re:Only when they don't already know? on US Appeals Court Upholds Suspect's Right To Refuse Decryption · · Score: 1

    Nowadays though, porn sites open all sorts of crap without your approval. Let's say you go to a legitimate porn site and it opens up on its own a pop up or new tab or new window, which is very normal, and in that content is kiddie porn. Now, it's on your machine, you were on the computer, but you didn't voluntarily download it, it was pushed upon you. So how does one prove you did or did not voluntarily download it?

  18. Re:US Has Confirmed It on Iranian TV Shows Downed US Drone · · Score: 2

    Last message between Drone and Ground Control: Can you hear me now?

  19. Re:Skepticism is fine on OPERA Group Repeats Faster-Than-Light Neutrino Results · · Score: 1

    I know i'll get flamed for this, but, come on, it's 60ns. we're really gonna spend millions of dollars and hundreds of hours of time over 60ns?? Yes, I know, over large distances it's a different story, but is this really as big a deal as people are making it out to be? I'm just asking.
    Isn't it quite possible that Einstein just rounded down when he was calculating 'c'? ;)

  20. Re:Give me the security I traded my privacy for on TSA Puts Off Safety Study of X-ray Body Scanners · · Score: 1

    Because it's easier to kill terrorists than to kill cancer

    Personally, i'd be ok with everybody bringing an uzi on flights if i never had to walk through another security checkpoint for the rest of my life.
    They should hand out guns at security checkpoints, like bags of peanuts. 1 terrorist with a gun onboard versus 200 of us passengers with a gun. i'll take those odds.
    I'm joking of course. mostly.

  21. Finally on Android Ice Cream Sandwich SDK Released · · Score: 1
    From the platform highlights..

    VPN client API
    Developers can now build or extend their own VPN solutions on the platform using a new VPN API and underlying secure credential storage. With user permission, applications can configure addresses and routing rules, process outgoing and incoming packets, and establish secure tunnels to a remote server. Enterprises can also take advantage of a standard VPN client built into the platform that provides access to L2TP and IPSec protocols.

    this, to me, is the most signifigant part of the release. End-users and IT people have been asking for this forever.

  22. change takes time but the free tools are out there on Ask Slashdot: Standard Software Development Environments? · · Score: 1

    I don't agree that it's the norm, even for a small company. You don't need big money, esp. for java development.
    We're small and we get by well. cvs, eclipse, junit, cruisecontrol, ant, rpm. Throw a little money for Jira and you're doing pretty well.
    But you're there, so either run or try and change things. But believe me, it's not easy. Developers get engrained in ways of doing things. And even if it's for the better, changing that takes time. Convincing your boss and a senior dev guy to start is your best bet.

  23. Re:Can't be pretty and work simultaneously? on Linus Torvalds Ditches GNOME 3 For Xfce · · Score: 1

    At least for me, the thing that's wrong with a pretty desktop environment is trust.
    Instead of editing a config file directly and being at the heart of the matter, you're trusting a program to do it for you behind the scenes.
    Maybe that's ok for the lay man, but i could never get used to it. I want to know what's going on. It's like the people that say, why don't you use webmin to edit your web/mail/db server config files instead of doing it manually? I can't trust it. Simply have not been able to get past it..
    But, that's me.

  24. Re:You know, what is more shocking on The Science of Password Selection · · Score: 1

    that's what i preach. password sentences. i'm over the 8 char min, upper case, special character required passwords.
    i'll do 14 char minimum, no complexity requirements, 60 day expire all day long.
    I like to pick something that's relevant to current life events, like:
    "i have a crush on the pizza delivery girl!"
    It also helps that you provide actual disincentive. If through regular auditing you find a user's password stupidly easy. like joebobjoebobjoe or a user has written their password in plain sight, they have to wear the company 'Dunce' hat for a whole day. More subtler is revoking a user's internet access to all non-work related sites and services for X days for a security violation. gmail, hotmail, facebook, etc..
    Works better in smaller companies :)

  25. no talk of NEW subscriptions on Netflix Deflects Rage Over Price Increase · · Score: 1

    I like how the analysts talk about churn and that the increased revenue will make up for the lost customers, but they don't talk about the potential customers the increase may scare off. What's that number like??
    I think a modest price increase would have been fine. 10% maybe. But 60%? come on.