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User: leehwtsohg

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  1. Re:Upstream on Ask Slashdot: Best Way To Block Web Content? · · Score: 1

    But isn't it mostly the case that you know you don't want something even before you look at the content? So you can block the request before
    it even goes out to the ISP.

  2. Re:ROI on Boeing Touts Fighter Jet To Rival F-35 — At Half the Price · · Score: 4, Funny

    Isn't 24/7 for three days more like 24/3?

  3. Re:It is possible to unbrick! I did it before on What To Do When an Advised BIOS Upgrade Is Bad? · · Score: 1

    Here is the thread describing my troubles, with some more info and better links.
    http://www.tabletpcbuzz.com/showthread.php?38208-double-trouble-double-brick
    It is called a "crisis recovery disk". Now that you have the magic words, googling should be easy.

  4. It is possible to unbrick! I did it before on What To Do When an Advised BIOS Upgrade Is Bad? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm too far down for this comment to really matter, but in general, it is possible to unbrick a failed BIOS flash. The reason is that already for some time all (or maybe almost all) manufacturers have two parts of the BIOS - one that gets updated, and a second part that never does, or maybe can't. The second part (actually it is the first), only has very rudimentary software. It can read floppy disks, but not much more than that. The idea is exactly that you can recover from a failed flash.

    That means that to recover, you need to get the right program into a floppy, with the right BIOS on it. You then boot into this special flash mode, which often means pressing some key combination. I've done it on an LE1700 that I bought of e-bay, and I'm pretty sure you can do it on almost any computer.
    In some more modern BIOSes you don't need a floppy, but can do it with a USB stick.
    I'm too lazy to do a thorough search for the exact procedure, but here are two good links that I found:
    http://www.mydellmini.com/forum/dell-mini-10v/18080-how-unbrick-mini-10v-using-floppy-drive.html (this will work also on other computers, I think)
    http://www.wikihow.com/Reflash-BIOS
     

  5. Re:dental insurance ? on HR Departments Tell Equifax Your Entire Salary History · · Score: 1

    Insurance is for the type of thing that is mostly cheap, rarely expensive.

  6. Re:R mistake on The Geek Art Movement · · Score: 1

    A google search revealed that the middle top one is VHDL or GHDL ("VHDL is an acronym for Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language")
    Look here: http://ghdl.free.fr/ghdl/The-hello-word-program.html

  7. Re:R mistake on The Geek Art Movement · · Score: 1

    Of course it is a mistake. Maybe it is supposed to represent the general spirit of R.
    Probably the help page of hello world documents this bug.

    But your link seems to have the correct version ;)

  8. R mistake on The Geek Art Movement · · Score: 1

    cat("hello world!\n")

    I think I've proven something that I didn't want to know.

  9. Re:Haven't We Known This For Centuries? on Malicious QR Codes Posted Where There's Lots of Foot Traffic · · Score: 1

    Why should sticking a QR code into your phone be any different?

    less fun?

  10. Re:Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 1

    My comment was about the statement that Israel has a "right to retaliate". Which, I think, is very different from
    saying that Israel has a "right to defend itself". I think countries, people, and even kids in kindergarten, have a right to defend themselves. Saying that someone has a right to retaliate is very different.

    But, since I obviously lack the experience, could you please explain how you distinguish the agression of the ass kicker from that of the ass kickee? How come they "_never_ come back to fuck with you again"? Don't they see your agression also as a reason to retaliate, and finally kick your ass? Or is it that your ass kicking finally convinced them that they were right and you were wrong? Or maybe you were just stronger than everybody else?

  11. Re:Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 1

    Let me guess, you were one of the kids that didn't fight back?

    Pussy. You never learned a few valuable lessons. First: Parents and teachers live in a dream world where you should not fight back and all will be well. Second: Only when the bastards get a bloody nose they will stop picking on you. Third: Once you have bloodied a nose or two the rest of the bastards will leave you alone.

    It didn't really come up very often, so I don't remember the question ever being raised. I think somehow all the bastards must have gone to your school...

    But yes, for you "the right to retaliate" is really a right to be savored? That's how you feel when you get hurt? That you finally have the right to retaliate? Interesting. You see, one of the hardest things is to understand how other people think, because we all think that we all think the same way.

  12. Re:Morality on Activists' Drone Shot Out of the Sky For Fourth Time · · Score: 1

    Pretty easily - it's a fish.

    I see. Now I understand how this might work.

    I once had a moral dilemma about fish. One of my fish had a parasite, a worm, which would probably then attack the other fish in the tank. I spent an hour trying to rid the fish from that parasite, but still couldn't bring myself to kill it to save the others, or to end its misery. I let it live a few more days. I think eventually it died, the others still live. Foolish? Maybe. But morality and rationality are different things.

  13. Re:Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 1

    "right to retaliate".

    There are two interesting words in that statement:

    "right". Like they really would like to do it all the time, but only under certain circumstances do they gain the right. "In a democracy every citizen has the right to vote". "The right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". "The right to retaliate". Does the police have the right to put you in prison when you commit a crime? Do they have a right to put you to death for murder? Or maybe they have an obligation? An obligation to the state? An obligation to do something that normal people would try to avoid?

    "retaliate". This is not about preventing further attacks, or saving its citizens, or bringing justice to the perpetrators. No, it is simply a right to retaliate. Like when someone steals your purse, you gain the right to punch them back. Because that will make you feel so much better.

    "In our school, when a kid gets punched, he gains the right to retaliate."

  14. Re:investigating pigeon shootings on Activists' Drone Shot Out of the Sky For Fourth Time · · Score: 1

    As for specific types of hooks, I have my own lake, I paid for it to be dug, and I stocked it. It is a private lake on an 850 acre farm, which is also private property. I will fish what I want with what I want, because what I catch is going on the frying pan. However if I go fish on public property...then yes i will follow any fishing laws to the tee..

    Up to this point, you kinda made sense. But, animal cruelty laws aren't just for public property. Even you intend to eat a cow, and it is your own private cow, you're not allowed to just kill it whatever way you like. You might get away with it, because no one can monitor you, but you'll still be committing a crime. It would also be highly immoral.

    Same for fish - it doesn't matter if you own the lake, dug it on your private farm, hand raised the fish etc, etc, and you intend to eat it, and are on the brink of starvation. You're still not free to do with the fish whatever you want in terms of animal cruelty. Again - you might get away with it.

    Morally, I don't see how you could get away with it, though.

    I eat meat. It tastes great when prepared right. But one of the reasons is that I assume the animals where killed so as to cause minimum suffering.

  15. Re:People don't know the meaning of the word "hack on Inside Look At Eastern European Vs. East Asian Hackers · · Score: 0

    We'll never win this fight. How about we make up a new word for "hackers", and let it go? It happened to the best words... that's why it is good we have a symbolic language, mostly - easy to switch signs.
    Maybe code artists? code artisans? cartists?

  16. Re:Not just Bbbbrrrraaaiiinnnssss!!! on California's Unspoken Health Problem: Brain Parasites · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not to mention all those nasty deseases the european immigrants brought with them to america.

  17. Re:Real Costs on Calculating the Cost of Full Disk Encryption · · Score: 1

    Well, you have to also include the gain to the competitors.

  18. Re:Cool on Australian Billionaire Wants To Build Jurassic Park-Style Resort · · Score: 1

    No, just clone a chicken, and you'll have cloned a dinosaur. Not a very big one, though.

  19. Re:Please Journalists, get facts! on The Nuclear Approach To Climate Change · · Score: 1

    I'm always suspicious of such calculations. It seems you can get whatever answer you want.
    But in mining coal, is there no CO2 emitted? No CO2 in the construction of the plants? All the workers get to the plant by bikes?
    In theory you could construct and mine both of these with 0 CO2 emission: just use electricity from solar power, and electric vehicles.

  20. Act on best, prepare for worst on Ask Slashdot: How To Evacuate a Network · · Score: 1

    Writing as someone who knows nothing about networks or fire or anything even closely related, but I am a bridge player, this is taken from bridge, and I know a bit of game theory...

    I would act on the scenario that minimizes your loss.
    If the fire doesn't reach you, you don't want to have a big loss from having to build everything back, debugging everything from scratch.
    Don't take apart too much that is hard to put back together.

    But, be ready for the worst case. Take the data, everything easily movable and easily put back in its place.

    What you should really be doing is minimize loss incurred over all actions, integrating for every action over the probability of every possible outcome. The strategy I outlined above is supposed to be an approximation to this exact formula....

  21. Re:Quality vs. quanity? on Organics Can't Match Conventional Farm Yields · · Score: 1

    Previous studies showed that organic farming doesn't give bigger nutritional value. But both of these aren't the point of organic farming. It isn't to get a bigger yield, or to get more nutrients, it is to get LESS POISON. This third little ingredient in food. I don't like it.

    And the question when we make food with LESS POISON, how much nutritional value and yield do we have to give up. The answer that recent studies give is "not much". I'd be willing to give up 33% yield to get food without poisons.

  22. Re:The biggest Mistake Today on A Better Way To Program · · Score: 1

    My own experience (i.e. sample size=1), trial and error in the end takes longer. That's the problem really... that it seems to take shorter, but enventually takes much longer. Probably mainly for slightly complicated problems.

  23. Re:What, Pray Tell on Google 'Wasting' $16 Billion On Projects Headed Nowhere · · Score: 1

    Google doesn't make money from ads. They make money from selling user attention classified by user type. They have a resource of user attention to sell, because of their ability to do searches, provide mail services, and this they managed to do because of their algorithms in search and distributed computing. They manage to classify users with similar algorithms.

    So, google converts algorithms and infrastructure to user attention, which they can then sell.

  24. Re:The biggest Mistake Today on A Better Way To Program · · Score: 1

    I totally agree with you (well except for your last paragraph.)! I used to work with C/C++, and switched to working mostly with R (interpreted). Working with an interpreted language makes you lazy. You write an algorithm, and try to make it work by trial and error, because you think that it's almost there. (Just like in the binary search example he showed). But that's the wrong approach. You don't want your program to work, you want to work correctly. You can never make sure it works correctly by trial and error. You have to take a minute or an hour, think about what the code does, and why this unexpected behavior happens. When compiling takes 10 minutes, you sit and think before trying. When it is instantaneous I get lured by the trial and error approach.
    Another problem is that to invent a new algorithm you have to think. You have to understand what an algorithm does, how it can be improved.

    But a lot of his ideas are cool, too. In some cases (a debugger for example) immediate feedback is great.

  25. Re:Seems reasonable.. on Doctors "Fire" Vaccine Refusers · · Score: 1

    It is because every vaccination has a small chance to fail. If there are enough un-vaccinated individuals, an epidemic will spread, and "check" the vaccination status of each and every child.