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User: FooHentai

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Comments · 47

  1. Re:Original Source and Actual Paper on Linux May Need a Rewrite Beyond 48 Cores · · Score: 1

    Or 2 buildings, 16 rooms and 64 dividers. Plus with Hyperthreading probably a water cooler and some pot plants.

  2. Re:That is the real problem on US Supreme Court Upholds Indefinite Confinement · · Score: 1

    When tazers were being introduced the mantra was repeated that they would only be used 'as a last resort, in place of a gun'. Also 'they're completely safe'.

    Here we are a few years later with regular news blips about kids and the elderly being tased for any reason or no reason at all, and there is a very long list of tazer fatalities.

    Time and time and time again, scary shit becomes commonplace because people believe the promises of restraint, safety, public good. Every time, complete bullshit.

  3. Re:blah blah iPad on Your Computer Or iPad Could Be Disrupting Sleep · · Score: 1

    Because 'portable devices' is way too difficult to convey.

  4. blah blah iPad on Your Computer Or iPad Could Be Disrupting Sleep · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I love how this article singles out the iPad for no valid reason whatsoever, just to whore up attention since the iPad is the latest hot topic. Should have thrown in some 9/11 or Obama references for added traffic. Maybe mention Haiti or Thailand a bit. Sleep patterns blah blah IPAD blah devices IPAD blah blah IPAD blah light intensity blah IPAD blah

  5. Re:Logitech...NEVER FORGET on Consumer Webcams With High-Quality Sensors? · · Score: 1

    Uh, Creative were just as responsible for the stagnation thing. In fact, they've doing it across several different technologies at the same time! Webcams, Audio cards, portable media players. Creative peddle complete shit.

  6. Re:They cracked Tor? on Anyone Can Play Big Brother With BitTorrent · · Score: 1

    Proves it? The two points you mentioned are valid but not related.

  7. Re:AV on POS computer?? on McAfee Retracts Lowball Bug Damage Estimate · · Score: 1

    Yeah you are. PoS systems are rarely able to be adequately physically secured, and located out in public areas, handling financial transactions, and operated by staff with minimal training and accountability. Not saying that AV is correct in this scenario, but you shouldn't pretend PoS is an environment that can be securely isolated, or that the network is the only vector for an attack.

  8. Re:Stack Overflow vs. ExpertS-exChange on Aussie Tech-Focused Wiki Launched · · Score: 1

    You mean Experts Exchange's 'scroll to the bottom and you get the answers anyway' intelligence-wall?

  9. Re:The emperor has no clothes: the apps are poor on Google Rebuilds Docs Platform · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bullsh. He's talking about basic text formatting options that are buggy or in some cases, broken. He's dead right about that. Issues abound in Gmail, too... like how signature text and body text are treated differently when composing an email, and often that can bug out and leave you unable to edit the body text because GMail things it's all one big signature. Dumb.

    Mind you, similar criticism can be applied to Word, too, it's less buggy than GDocs, but still has problems. Adding a page break then wondering why your new Heading 1 line is also changing the spacing on the previous page... or why you can't seem to move beyond the end of a table at the end of your document to start a new line. Stuff like that.

    GDocs has some way to go in terms of usability, even for basic corporate documentation.

  10. Re:HTML5 Features on Google Rebuilds Docs Platform · · Score: 1

    A few months back I built a new PC. Once I had the OS installed, I went online and downloaded a copy of my email client. Then I configured the client to talk to my ISPs email servers. That meant digging into my old paper files and finding my ISPs new customer letter where it had my mail server info and username/password that I don't use for anything else (so had forgotten). Then once it was set up I realised that I'd only be receiving new mail from the ISP, and had to turn on the old PC to take a copy of my old emails. Importing took a bit of time. Something about different versions of the program between backing the data up and restoring it.

    Just kidding. I opened firefox and logged into GMail.

  11. Re:Too nerdy. on Councilman Booted For His Farmville Obsession · · Score: 1

    This would be the same phenomenon where people perceive gamers as wasting time on a childish hobby, then themselves spend hours each day playing bejeweled/mahjong, or sat in front of the tube being fed drivel. Meanwhile, many gamers spend their time developing teams, honing tactical thinking, collaborating to create new 3d content, socializing, or solving puzzles.

  12. Re:USB? Software? On a BATTERY CHARGER? on Energizer USB Battery Charger Software Infects PCs · · Score: 1

    Eh? I have the euro version of this charger because it lets me boost my camera batteries from my netbook. It's perfect for the travelling that I do. It runs without the software installed, but the software shows the battery charge status, which can be handy. Not to mention, when I bought it you got a pair of 2400mA AA cells plus the charger for far less than the wall charger cost alone. Which one of us is ignorant in this matter? Oh, it's you ;)

  13. Re:Password strength vs. how often you change it on Analysis of 32 Million Breached Passwords · · Score: 1

    Deciding off your own bat that their password changing policy isn't particularly secure, then deliberately subverting it to use an even weaker password than the spirit of the policy, then attepting to propogate this out to other employees? Wow, you're an epically arrogant and irresponsible employee.

  14. Re:Happened to me on a Server 2003 box on Microsoft Investigates Windows 7 "Black Screen of Death" · · Score: 1

    This is caused by running out of disk space on C:\ Seen it a few times.

  15. Story is innacurate on Malware Hijacks Windows Update · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Its not really Windows Update that's being used in this exploit, its the Background Intelligent Transfer Service which, in a nutshell, is a service that downdaloads data to your PC while minimising disruption to other network activity i.e. surfing the net, gaming, or downloading other files. Its a built-in feature of Windows XP but has only been implemented once or twice.

    Windows update makes use of the BITS service. Malware can make use of the BITS service. Its not logical to then say that Malware is exploiting Windows update. Any more than an attack that utilised Java would be exploiting Azureus (A java application).

    The reason malware utilising BITS is a problem is because with any application-level firewall, permission for BITS to access the net is already granted and so unlike a regular trojan, the firewall won't spit a potentially suspicious permission request up when it tries to download more malware from the 'net. This same exploit is true of the JVM too.

    A solution to the problem might be to instance such services. But by doing that it sort of renders them not services anymore.

    So eh, mark my stats +1 pedantry, but to perpetuate this as a Windows Update exploit isn't accurate.

  16. Re:And that's Computerwang on Apple Mac/PC Ads With a UK Twist · · Score: 1

    "Zero"
    "That's computerwang!"
    "One"
    "That's computerwang!"
    "One"
    "That's computerwang!"

  17. Re:In 2004 China was against space weapons.... on China Tests Anti-Satellite Laser Weapon · · Score: 1

    And now they're testing weapons designed to neutralised space weapons.

    I don't see this as inconsistent. You're against the weaponisation of space, so you develop tech to counter it.
    If they were developing space-to-earth weaponry, that would be another story.

  18. Watch out for interference on Networking in Extreme Conditions? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Having worked on and in a networked environment for a 24-hour steel mill, I can predict that you'll have just as much trouble with interference as you will with heat. Assuming you overcome the heat issue, whatever's generating it will also be generating so much interference you'll be lucky to get 10mbits from a gigabit line.

    Our solution was to use fiber for pretty much everything, to the point that we were using so much that it was simpler to use fiber for every tasks than mix in cat5.

    Regarding the heat issue, if you're based as an IT specialist in an industrial environment, then you have to liase with the site engineers for this kind of task. It's outside of your experience/training/knowledge, so don't succumb to vanity and assume that you have the intelligence to pull through it unaided. Such a place will already have other heat and interference-sensitive equipment which has been installed by engineers on-site, and they'll be able to do the same for your equipment.

    Expect a hefty price tag for installing a suitable thermal casing and ventilation system. Or after due consideration and consultation, if it can't feasibly be done then that's the end of the discussion.

  19. Games and more on Can Games Fly On Google Earth? · · Score: 1

    Sure. Games, simulators, business systems, educational programs.

    Once virtual world software goes through the initial period of being peddled in various forms by various vendors, and the realisation of a mapped virtual model of earth starts being treated as a single data source from which other systems can draw information, then it could be channelled into a whole host of applications.

    Unfortunately, this vision kinda falls down on one point - Unlike teh intarnets, which could survive and expand without needing much of a central host to run on, a full-on virtual earth allowing the kind of thankless data serving described here would probably be too much of a challenge for not enough reward for any single group. And I doubt we'll be lucky enough to have such a task picked up as a government service.

    The point is kinda drilled home right in the topic itself, because Google Earth is named specifically. We're at a state of technological development now that can support the creation of a digital clone of our world, yet in terms of a civilisation, we don't have any structures in place that would allow us to reap the max benefit from it.

  20. Why not just one camera? on London Police Equipped With 360-Degree Cams · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I still don't understand why they don't just use a single higher res camera, mount it facing upwards, then stick a curved lens above it to give a 360 view all round.

  21. Re:The end of Sony bashing? on Playstation 3 Sells Out At Japanese Launch · · Score: 1

    As popular as it is to hate on large corporations, it's often overlooked that large corporations are formed from large bodies of employed persons. While one might be entirely guilt-free in hoping a corporation does not entirely dominate their market, it would only be to the detriment of the 'little people' if a corporation got into serious trouble.

    Mass layoffs aren't something anyone should be cheering on, IMO. Most of the anti-sony noise started out (I believe) as a hope that Sony would have its wings clipped and its arrogance tamed, rather than wishing the wholesale destruction of the 'evil corporation' and the massive job losses that would accompany it.

  22. Re:Chicken and egg on Redemption Still Possible For Sony? · · Score: 1

    There's been a fair bit of noise in the development community over the work involved in porting games to the cell architecture, too. No doubt this is going to hinder developers since more and more are moving towards cross-platform releases as a way to capture enough market to recover cost/increase revenue.

    Sony could pull off something fantastic by enabling its range of SOE titles to interact from the PS3 to the currently existing servers. Planetside, for a start, had pretty high system requirements which limited adoption... if it became open to the console crowd as well I think that would boost both the PS3 sales and SOE's dominance in the face of WoW.

    But this seems a pipe dream. Unless they're going to shock everyone including their shareholders and reveal a slew of surprise facts surrounding the PS3, it simply looks like a complete dog.

  23. Business as usual on Proposal to Implant RFID Chips in Immigrants · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This isn't such a surprising strategy. If you can convince the masses to do something to the least favoured members of society, then you can start to gradually argue the case for doing it to everyone.

    All they had to find was the lowest rung on the ladder of american society.

    Surprised they didn't go with pedophiles TBH. It's probably because they were already on with the immigrant thing.

  24. Re:Looks like I'll get Spore on the Wii then on DirectX 10 Only On Vista · · Score: 1

    "I'm sure Microsoft made some kind of deal that worked for them."

    I overheard something about souls and I think the phrase 'for all eternity' got used a few times.

  25. Re:It's the space, stupid! on Blu-Ray Should Have Been Optional on PS3? · · Score: 1

    correction, 30Gb vs 50Gb.