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User: MattBurke

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Comments · 197

  1. Re:Asleep @ the wheel... on What a Black Box Data Dump Looks Like · · Score: 1

    In a racing harness in a car without airbags, I'd agree that'd be the best thing to do, but in a road car I think I'd prefer to tense my chest/stomach to add some resistance to the seatbelt+pretensioners+impact force trying to break my ribs, and keep my hands loosely on the wheel at the 9:15 position so the main airbag can deploy if necessary without propelling my hands through my skull...

  2. Re:Just do it on Illegal To Take a Photo In a Shopping Center? · · Score: 1

    > And you are telling us you can stay calm?

    and what happens to the guy's daughter while her daddy's being arrested for terrorism-related offences?

  3. Re:not according to my graphs on Malicious Spam Spikes To 'Epic' Level · · Score: 1

    You missed the point of the article. It's not saying spam volume has spiked - it hasn't - it's saying that the ratio of malicious spam (as in with a trojan attached) to harmless spam has spiked.

  4. Re:Shutter speed on Canon Develops 8 X 8 Inch Digital CMOS Sensor · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge-coupled_device goes into more detail than the AC above if you fancy a read

  5. Re:Manual Override on Hacking Automotive Systems · · Score: 1

    It's a security feature which has been around for many years called deadlocking - essentially disconnecting the door handles and sometimes locks, inside and out. The idea is that a thief who cannot work the central locking will have to climb in through a smashed window - they can't merely reach in and unlock the door from the inside

  6. Re:Did you type this on a manual typewriter? on Toyota Accelerator Data Skewed Toward Elderly · · Score: 1

    You're the one arguing automatics can't be controlled properly. I want to know in what ways.
    Not necessarily "properly", but there's things you just can't do with autos:

    Changing from barely tickover to peak power output without changing speed. Especially useful on turbo cars when you want to be able to overtake without the burden of turbo lag

    Being in the right gear to accelerate away from a corner

    Being able to manage your speed at very low speeds or while going downhill (ok auto boxes have overrides to allow engine breaking, but who uses them?)

    Long drives are boring, regardless. Having to regularly row through the gearbox just makes the whole experience more fatiguing - and the last thing you want on a long trip is more fatigue.
    All the long (500+ miles in a day) trips I've been on have all been on motorways where you stick it in top gear and leave it there. For the last (urban) section of the drive I've never felt changing gear (something as thoughtless as breathing most of the time) to be particularly fatiguing

    Cruise control is liked by people who are experienced at driving distances and realise that it makes monitoring your speed one less thing you have to worry about, again reducing fatigue.
    Agreed on this one. Since getting my first car with cruise, I'm never driving long trips without it again.

    It also helps massively on UK motorways where we've got roadworks all over the place and SPECS cameras (distance-time numberplate recognition cameras to enforce average speed limits). Putting cruise on once and not having to glance at the speedo again is a joy

  7. Re:All cars already have this system on $1M Prize For Finding Cause of Unintended Acceleration · · Score: 1

    > What planet are you living on where brake lights blind people?

    The planet where brake lights now use clusters of LEDs designed to be as bright as possible. I have a tiny LED torch on my keychain, which although only a single LED is perfectly capable of filling your vision with purple spots if you look at it from a similar sort of distance as you'd be behind a car at lights or a roundabout. At night those purple spots are sufficient to severely impact your ability to see the road.

    > The car was already in neutral. Why bother shutting the engine off, a risky thing to do in traffic, before getting off the road?

    Because it was a cold night, I'd only just started the car and didn't fancy blowing up either the engine or the turbo due to the oil being too thick to cool and lubricate properly. I couldn't get the car off the road immediately due to barriers and I know how my car behaves with no engine power so was fully aware that I'd be able to steer it off the road and increase braking effort to wheel lock-up pressure as there's sufficient vacuum in the system to have servo-assisted braking for at least 2 heavy applications in that car

  8. Re:Me thinks on $1M Prize For Finding Cause of Unintended Acceleration · · Score: 1

    I'd say anything over about 300Nm torque (not uncommon in diesels) would put up a good fight over about 100mph with non-performance brakes. At that speed if you can't immediately drop a lot of speed you'll find the pads melting and brake fluid boiling pretty quickly

  9. Re:All cars already have this system on $1M Prize For Finding Cause of Unintended Acceleration · · Score: 1

    I have nearly been in your situation myself, but I was moving at the time. It could never happen to me while waiting at lights because I use these things called neutral gear and a handbrake, so I don't warp my brake discs or blind the driver behind with my lights.

    My accelerator got stuck under the mat, which in 2nd gear would have accelerated me from 15mph to 70mph in just a few seconds. I dipped the clutch after I realised it was still accelerating after I'd moved my foot off, put it in neutral, and turned the key to 'aux' position to kill the engine without engaging the steering lock, then I steered it off the road. Easy.

    No power steering? Not a problem when you're moving, even in a large front-heavy FWD car.
    No brakes? Wrong, no assisted increase in braking effort when the vacuum to the servo runs out. Even then it's not excessively difficult to stop a 2+ tonne vehicle without servo assistance. I've even seen a tiny 5 foot tall stick figure woman manage it in an SUV when its engine quite literally blew up in front of me on the third lane of a motorway.

  10. Re:Given the sample set, is it a surprise? on Analysis of 32 Million Breached Passwords · · Score: 1

    Indeed. Facebook, or anything that has either personal information on you, or where you've established relationships with others are valuable sites. Having your login to such a site compromised can cost you dearly - what would your friends think if "you" posted pictures of kiddie pr0n on your Facebook page? Have you 'friended' your boss?

    Even somewhere like a gaming forum, you may build up a friendship with people over the time you may have invested there - that's worth something too.

    Some random site you spent 30 seconds checking out once and didn't feed with personal information on the other hand... Who cares... unless you've used the same login credentials as a site you DO care about...

  11. Intentionally weak passwords? on Analysis of 32 Million Breached Passwords · · Score: 1

    I don't know about anyone else, but I have accounts on so many sites it would be impossible to use strong passwords without reuse. I really don't see the harm in using the same weak passwords if I don't care if my account on the site's compromised.

    I have a number of site-specific strong passwords I use on sites I care about, and a further handful of very strong passwords I use for accounts that have the ability to charge my credit cards. My unix passwords are completely different too, and I run sshd needing key auth. If I have anything worth protecting (personal information more than an email address, an identity within a community, etc) on a website, I'll use a better password, but if I just want to comment on someone's blog or see what a site's about, I don't care - I certainly wouldn't shed a tear if one of my weak passwords were compromised! Boo hoo, someone's pretending to be Asdf Asdf from Qwer (postcode AA1 1AA) over at www.dontcare.com/phpbb/ and www.whogivesarats.as/blog/ and sending me spam on email addresses I'll just blacklist...

    I would bet money that if you look at the password complexity of users of a busy registration-required forum both before and after you discount people with less than 5 posts, there'd be a substantial difference. Likewise, it'd be interesting to see the strength distribution of the subset of these "32 million" accounts on rockyou.com that belonged to people that actually used them or had valid personal information attached. Otherwise I think it's a pretty worthless study

  12. Re:What a BOGUS article on Plug vs. Plug — Which Nation's Socket Is Best? · · Score: 1

    ~10 years ago I lived in a house in Cardiff which still used fuse wire instead of breakers, so I think there's still probably a few out there...

  13. Re:The IEC connector, in all its forms. on Plug vs. Plug — Which Nation's Socket Is Best? · · Score: 1

    They are indeed good connectors and are fantastic in server racks or on the backs of UPSs, but I wouldn't fancy switching my UK plugs for them anywhere else. Having to change a fuse in the wall socket when you want to unplug a phone charger and plug in a 3kW heater? No thanks...

  14. Re:ïI might vote for them, but it is futile on Why the UK Needs the Pirate Party · · Score: 1

    The Swedish Pirate Party managed to get a staggering 7% of the votes in their recent elections... Do you not think with a bit of PR you've got a serious chance of actually winning elections here given how most people would rather laugh at Gordon Brown than do anything to help if he were about to be hit by a truck? Just look at how many people have been voting for the BNP recently... Have you got a contingency plan in case you end up in No.10, or is that a subject for a future Ask Slashdot? ;)

  15. Re:I'm sick of everyone saying this on Music Game Genre On the Decline · · Score: 1

    It achieves the same end as say, trying to move each finger individually, in pairs, in threes, without letting the other fingers bend (particularly tricky with middle/ring fingers) which as it turns out is an incredibly useful exercise for a guitar player and is made a lot more fun with GH.

    I too have been playing real guitars for some time (20 years) and have found that my skill level has sharply increased over the last year or so as I find I'm gaining strength, speed and coordination in my left little finger, which I simply couldn't be bothered to exercise enough before picking up GH/RB

  16. Re:MPC Home Cinema VLC on Is Playing a DVD Harder Than Rocket Science? · · Score: 1

    It's not supported very well in that nobody's bothered to make a build for my Debian Etch workstation. Etch is only 2 years old for christ's sake! Why isn't there even just a statically compiled version?

    I also note the typical unqualified "all open source software is bulletproof" response. The version in Debian will neither play DVDs at all (WTF?) nor seek through many types of videos on my workstation without crashing (libmatroska::KaxCluster::GlobalTimecodeScale() const: Assertion `bTimecodeScaleIsSet' failed). You should see the problems I had with it recently under _clean_ installs of XP (refusing to play anything) and OSX (locking up the machine) too... Even when it does work (which admittedly is most of the time), it's still prone to the occasional lock-up.

  17. Re:Switching kernels for one install or? on Debian Gets FreeBSD Kernel Support · · Score: 2, Informative

    > Does this actually work 100%? How?
    No. The only reason I run Debian on my desktop instead of FreeBSD is because I need to use VMWare, which hasn't run under the Linux compat stuff since VMWare Workstation 3, but given that it *did* work once is a bit of a tribute to its completeness.

    I spent several years running an extremely busy yet stable Counter-Strike server under Linux compat, which performed significantly better (lower latency, less CPU load) than when running Linux natively on the same hardware. Good times...

    > what does FBSD do when I open("/proc/*") and start parsing stuff?
    If you've got linprocfs in your kernel and mounted, it should work in most cases.

    In general, linux compat stuff works surprisingly well unless you need a high level of kernel interaction such as modern VMWare releases. In 99% of cases It Just Works.

  18. Re:*Finally* DVD media on FreeBSD 7.1 Released · · Score: 1

    Who uses the live cd?

    Personally I tend to just use the bootonly.iso - it's quicker than downloading the whole of disc1, then burning it, then having to read it off slow media...

  19. Re:Is this....legal? on UK Police To Step Up Hacking of Home PCs · · Score: 1

    Yep, very much so, to the point where I worry about being pulled by coppers in my car because I have a breaker bar in the rear footwell. Ok so it's there because I don't want it rolling all around the boot and it's too big to fit in the toolbox I carry in the car, but it /is/ enough to be charged for possession of an offensive weapon

    Thinking about it, I may resort to taking out an AA membership instead of taking the risk of falling foul of dumb laws

  20. Re:Is this....legal? on UK Police To Step Up Hacking of Home PCs · · Score: 1

    If a copper catches you walking down the (UK) street with a screwdriver in your pocket, you're going to be arrested and charged for carrying an offensive weapon...

  21. Re:Not a question forum on MySQL 5.1 Released, Not Quite Up To Par · · Score: 1

    Do you need the "and myBlob is not null"?

    IIRC count(foo) returns the count of rows where foo is not null hence why a lot of the time where foo is a column name, it should really be * because the coder mistakenly thought specifying a column meant the db server has to do less work

  22. Re:Why? on OpenSolaris 2008.11 – Year of the Laptop? · · Score: 1

    > what is the compelling reason for choosing Linux over OpenSolaris or, say, PC-BSD

    VMware. Only thing stopping me from running FreeBSD on my work desktops

  23. Re:Blackbox on E17, Slimmed Down For Cell Phones · · Score: 1

    For many users, myself included, the themes make the window manager.

    I use Enlightenment DR16 with the Arctic theme and have done for around 10 years because it's very minimal, uses colours that are easy to the eye and I can middle-click the title bar to 'shade' a window which reduces to pretty much just the width of the titlebar text.

    Sure, almost any other window manager could probably also give me what I want, but I'm crap with graphics software and haven't got the time nor inclination to figure out stuff like theme configuration files, so I just take my desktop settings (~/.gnome* and ~/.enlightenment) with me when I get a new job/computer. I bet that's applicable for quite a few people who've used X every day for the last decade or two too.

  24. Re:What a guy on E17, Slimmed Down For Cell Phones · · Score: 1

    > So what that e17 is lightweight when every PC has a dual core, 4 gigs of ram and a powerful gpu? ...
    > Today. Who needs it. You can have a PC that can run any hardware accelerated window manager for peanuts, even laptops got GPU's for ages now.

    Some of us use computers for working on, not for playing about on.

    I don't care if someone's desktop flips over with a flashy 3D accelerated rotating cube effect, if it were me I'd be annoyed that my computer's unusable for the 2 seconds or so while the flip's in progress. 4 seconds if flipped accidentally.

    And then there's the faffing around trying to get 3D acceleration working on a nonstandard kernel. It doesn't happen in a business environment. Nobody could ever justify spending half a day messing around because they want their desktop to look pretty.

    FWIW I use Gnome+E DR16 with the Arctic theme for its FAST, reliable, minimalistic (by today's ludicrous standards) approach. I have a pre-setup home directory I wget and untar onto a new box so my setup time's virtually nil providing I can stop distro du jour's bloatware from trying to reconfigure everything for me. I've had pretty much exactly the same setup for around 10 years, bar the change from Gnome 1.4 to 2, and a few other minor upgrades here and there, but I have no intention of changing it any time soon because it works a hell of a lot better than anything I've seen recently

  25. Re:IPv4 is drying up - and i'm not helping on No IPv6 For UK Broadband Users · · Score: 1

    Provided, of course, your ISP has kit in the exchange. Most ISPs rely on BT to terminate ADSL lines and tunnel it (IPv4 only) to their datacentre. Even the largest ISPs do this as it's a waste of money to put expensive kit in an exchange which only has 10 of your customers hooked up to it