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User: The+Other+White+Meat

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  1. Every time they tried to add his resume to the blacklist, it just disappeared.

  2. This is _exactly_ why I do not work for Amazon. Because after an all day interview, including being interviewed during lunch so I couldn't actually eat, I was asked to stand at a whiteboard and design a novel algorithm and write accurate Perl code from memory. (I should mention that my job at Disney involved writing great Perl code all day, and I did just fine. No thanks to Bezos and his grist mill.)

    I should also mention that one of the first things I saw when I walked in was a young woman standing at her desk, just crying. And everyone walking by acting like that was a perfectly normal thing to see there. And when I went to the lunchroom, not a single person was smiling, or laughing, etc. They all just looked beat down. By the time the whiteboard came up, I had already decided I didn't want to work there.

  3. Encryption and Digital Signatures on One of Europe's Biggest Companies Loses 40 Million Euros In Online Scam (softpedia.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they had used PKI Encryption and Digital Signatures, technology that has been available for DECADES, they could have authenticated that message properly and prevented spoofing. To be performing transfers based on unauthenticated email is absurd.

  4. Re:Maybe the driver believed it was enabled? on Elon Musk: Autopilot Feature Was Disabled In Pennsylvania Crash (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    That was my exact thought as well. Everything here suggests a driver who was not fully aware. I am not familiar with the Tesla thrust levels, but was does 42% thrust imply - maintaining cruise or acceleration?

  5. Re:Maybe the driver believed it was enabled? on Elon Musk: Autopilot Feature Was Disabled In Pennsylvania Crash (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    The system keeps a complete timestamp of events on the log. They can tell exactly how much time has passed between shutting off the assist and the crash.

  6. Re: Beyond a doubt on Elon Musk: Autopilot Feature Was Disabled In Pennsylvania Crash (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    The car almost certainly starts sending log data as soon as it detects a crash. Even if the accident were so severe the car went up in flames, the system could likely upload all of that data long before the fire prevents it.

  7. Re: Why do companies do this? on AT&T Open Sources Its SDN Framework To The Linux Foundation (fiercetelecom.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    That hasn't been true since the 1970s.

  8. Re: development environment? on Assembly Code That Took America to the Moon Now Published On GitHub (qz.com) · · Score: 1, Troll

    Calling it 'girly crap' is both offensive and ignorant. Many of the people who operated and programmed those systems were WOMEN.

  9. Re: Linux Foundation job interview question on New Chip Offers Artificial Intelligence On A USB Stick (pcmag.com) · · Score: 1

    That question is absurd. A straight linux nerd? Please.

  10. Re:Bullshit on New Chip Offers Artificial Intelligence On A USB Stick (pcmag.com) · · Score: 1

    This is precisely the type of HARDWARE that AI SOFTWARE needs to reach maximum performance. They are making this technology more accessible, which means more developers have the tools they need to start working in the AI field. How is this a bad thing?

  11. Slashdot needs to fix it's commenting system NOW on Japan's Space Agency Loses Contact With New X-Ray Telescope Satellite "Hitomi" · · Score: 1

    As you can see from these posts, Slashdot's allowance of anonymous posts is to its detriment. End Anonymous Cowards, and put in a real vote up/down system that allows everyone to vote on every post.

  12. A Write Once Register would solve this issue on TP-Link Begins Lockdown of Firmware In Response To FCC · · Score: 1

    All that needs to happen is that new radio chipsets need to have a write-once register that can be used to lock the chip to a specific radio band. They could manufacture one chip for global use, and a simple write to that register by the router manufacturer would lock it down to a region. No need to deal with locked firmware at all.

  13. Give it Time on Should Programmers Be Called Engineers? (theatlantic.com) · · Score: 1

    The construction industry has been around for thousands of years. Software Development? Little more than fifty. Software Development will reach the same level of rigor that is applied to other engineering fields, and will reach it in far less time than those other fields took.

  14. I've been calling Sudafed PE "Sudafed Placebo Edition" for years.

  15. Lockable Frequency and Power is the real answer on FCC's WiFi Rule-Making: Making It Fair For Both Open Source and Proprietary (fcc.gov) · · Score: 1

    The real answer to the issue that concerns the FCC is to have the chipset manufacturers add write-once registers that can be used to lockout frequencies and power levels that are illegal in certain regions. That way, the manufacturers can make one hardware design, and still ensure compliance with regional regulations. This is such an easy solution to implement, and would completely eliminate the "need" to DRM the firmware.

  16. A good example on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Best Way To Hold Onto Your Domain? · · Score: 1

    I am the owner of the domain OSVISTA.COM. You would probably think "he must really like Windows Vista", followed by "how has Microsoft not sued him for that domain?" Thing is, I bought that domain years before Microsoft announced Vista; I just liked how it sounded. I use the domain for email, and I don't host any Windows related websites. Microsoft has never even contacted me about it, presumably because once they saw the registration date and that I am not using it in a way that conflicts with their trademark, they decided to leave me alone.

    As long as you don't deliberately conflict with someone else's trademark, they have a very tough time arguing that they should be given the domain. Combine that with the fact that domain related cases are not heard through the regular court system, but under UDRP, and most companies won't bother.

  17. We have already figured most of this out. on Can Civilization Reboot Without Fossil Fuels? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We already know how to create biodiesel and other fuels from non fossil sources. If we limited their use to critical needs, and had everything else using renewable electric sources, then we probably could do without oil. The biggest challenge appears to be the lack of tar and asphalt for road construction; we'd have to find a workable substitute. For everything else, suitable engineered substitutes exist.

  18. Re:Dark Energy on Supernovae May Not Be Standard Candles; Is Dark Energy All Wrong? · · Score: 1

    Why is it that literally EVERY physics related article has at least one nut-job who thinks all of the (sane) physicists are wrong, and that his incoherent ramblings are the one true theory of everything.

  19. Re: LOL no info on distance on Nokia Networks Demonstrates 5G Mobile Speeds Running At 10Gbps Via 73GHz · · Score: 2

    Nothing. It's not ionizing radiation.

  20. Re:No. on Will Fiber-To-the-Home Create a New Digital Divide? · · Score: 1

    So $1000 gets me 3+ months of Lindsay Lohan? Where do I sign up...

  21. The Solution is not Passwords, it's Certificates on Password Security: Why the Horse Battery Staple Is Not Correct · · Score: 1

    Figuring out a better way to create and manage passwords is only a stopgap, and a suboptimal solution at best. What we really need is a straightforward and easy way to use client certificates. You should be able to receive a signed client certificate when you pick up your driver's license. You should be able to receive a signed client certificate when you visit your bank. You should be able to receive a signed client certificate at your local library. Certificate in hand, it should be easy to install that certificate on your devices, with a certificate management system that grandma can use.

    The technology is already here, it would eliminate so much of this grief, and set the stage for the next level of secure monetary transactions as well.

  22. Re: Dust? tsarkon reports on "Big Bang Signal" Could All Be Dust · · Score: 3, Funny

    In the comments for any article related to physics, on any website, there will always be at least one comment from someone who mistakes their schizophrenia for a PhD in Physics.

    I advise you, pay them no heed.

  23. Dilithium on Universal Big Bang Lithium Deficit Confirmed · · Score: 1

    Maybe most of it is in a form that has a different spectral profile, maybe crystalline, and maybe it's "warpy"

  24. The tools ARE there on Normal Humans Effectively Excluded From Developing Software · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Lightswitch is a great example of just such a tool. Visual Basic is still around, and the Express versions available for free today are better than Visual Basic 1-6 ever were. Mac has been stuck with Objective-C for years, but it looks like Apple is finally addressing that.

    Web Programming? Yes, its the spawn of Satan. But if you want to point the blame for that look to Brendan Eich for the monstrosity that is JavaScript, and the idiots that decided that CSS needed to be so alien and broken compared to HTML.

  25. Keep Your Enemies Closer on US May Prevent Chinese Hackers From Attending Def Con, Black Hat · · Score: 1

    Instead of banning them, we should be inviting their hackers over here and either bugging them or turning them. Isn't this spycraft 101?