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User: attemptedgoalie

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  1. Re:250TB? = about $350K. on Animation Sophistication: The Croods Required 80 Million Compute Hours · · Score: 1

    After you figure in licensing, support costs, it's about $350K.

    I say that because I use the same gear, and that's how much it costs for 300TB. We have to add that every so often, so the number stuck. :-)

    Certainly they get a better discount than I do.

  2. Wasteland2 - I'm with you. on Blizzard Set To Debut 'Something New' At PAX East · · Score: 1

    I can't wait for that to hit.

    That Kickstarter was exciting. "If we get this much money, we'll do this in Linux".

    Ok, we just hit that number.

    "If we get"

    Ok, we just got that while I was typing the description.

  3. Local police won't be much help on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With an Advanced Wi-Fi Leech? · · Score: 3, Funny

    You can give them satellite images of the house of the person that stole your identity, and they won't drive over for that.

    So for something involving log files and such? Not a chance.

    You should redirect all network traffic to goatse for a week, and just use a 3G hotspot while your normal one kills the thief's eyes.

  4. Please don't post a story like this ever again. on Three Low-Tech Hacks for Phones and Tablets · · Score: 0

    I keep coming here, looking for physics, astronomy, and engineering stories.

    Sometimes I get some good stuff.

    Today, I want to cut somebody.

  5. A project for you. on Intel Details Eight-Core Poulson Itanium Processor · · Score: 0

    Go find an open source or commodity system that can be deployed in a heavily regulated power industry with SCADA systems.

    Make sure it's so cheap that the difference in cost for buying Itaniums and this software will pay the millions in training people all over the country, interfacing in the financial and billing systems, as well as covering the cost of redeveloping all of the customized code that is required to operate coal, natural gas and nuclear plants.

    Please call me when you're done.

  6. There are a hell of a lot of Itanium users on Intel Details Eight-Core Poulson Itanium Processor · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'll be buying a number of systems with these in a few months when they hit the street and the budget's ready. I'll be able to virtualize a lot of our old PA-RISC boxes into a smaller and more efficient set of systems.

    But you're right, they suck because you can't play Angry Birds on it.

  7. Security Logging. on Ask Slashdot: Little Boxes Around the Edge of the Data Center? · · Score: 1

    Security logging.

    If EventX happens on Box1 and EventY happens on Box2, I'd like to see which happened first, etc. I can correlate that with networks sniffs, firewall logs, etc. If all are on damn near the same millisecond, then I can walk the trail. If one is 3 seconds off, or a minute off, etc., it gets fuzzy.

    If DoorA opens at Time1 and CameraX sees something at Time2...

    If I have two GPS time boxes (with two weeks of time retention/accuracy in case of signal loss), I can have something that should stand up in court.

    If I have a home built box, or hope that pool.ntp.org was working perfectly as well as my connection to it, during a time that an event happened that puts us in court, it might not stand up.

  8. Get a real time server. on Ask Slashdot: Little Boxes Around the Edge of the Data Center? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Go get a GPS satellite receiver/time server. Actually, get two. Don't screw with time.

    THEN, virtualize the rest of the stuff. Monitoring, syslogging, management, patchers, etc.

    We've virtualized everything except for
    - a Windows DC so that it stays up if the vmware datastores or SAN eats itself in a horrible way.
    - The NIS server we have to use on our UX environment due to an ancient regulation. I'm not willing to put up HP-UX VMs for this right now, otherwise it'd be safe in a VM as well.
    - Anything we can't virtualize due to licensing/contract/support issues. So our VOIP environments, phone call recording, access control systems for the doors,

    My datacenter is getting a lot nicer to look at, and a lot easier to upgrade. I can shift servers or volumes all over the room so I can do live maintenance during the day.

  9. I love my Volt on Toyota Abandons Plans For All-Electric Vehicle Rollout · · Score: 1

    655 mpg so far.
    Silent, moves quickly in traffic and on the open road.

    I charge at work, so even the whopping $2.50 a week it would cost me to charge it at home is gone.

    The only time I've had to use the gas engine was the time I purposely drove to another town for a Greek restaurant, just to prove the engine actually worked. Otherwise, my commute and errands don't come close to using a 50 mile charge. In fact, it's usually 20 when I really push it. So I can charge every 3-4 days depending on my destinations that week. I plug it in every day though since my company put up the 240V chargers, it gets me front row parking.

    It is absolutely not the car for everybody. But for me, living 7 miles from work, it's awesome. And knowing I can hop in and drive a couple of states away if I have to is mighty nice.

    I've been to a gas station twice since I bought my car. Both times because I needed a large Dr. Pepper.

  10. HP-UX / Oracle / Itanium user here. on Is HP Paying Intel To Keep Itanium Alive? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm in the power industry. We have some applications that are only built in Solaris, HP-UX or AIX due to the underlying Cobol code, etc.

    If we want to maintain certain regs, or have access to certain markets, we have to keep this particular app.

    The day Oracle crapped on Itanium, we had to get HP in to tell us what the plan was as it would take us a few years to migrate to AIX if HP was really dumping it. (there is no way in hell we're running Oracle on a (now) Oracle operating system). Talk about vendor lock in. Woof.

    Since then, I have been provided HP-UX and Itanium roadmaps for a ways out. (under NDA so no more details than that)

    If Oracle wins on this, and really does dump UX, then I need to bring a bunch of AIX gear in and put a team of developers to work porting our custom code which means no optimization, no rewrites, no efficiency. All of our work to improve security, and kill off bugs will be wasted as we get it barely working in a new environment before we lose support. Just in case we get a nuclear project, etc.

    The thought of training hundreds of people in a new system at multiple power plants and dozens of substations alone makes me nauseous. But if we screw up the migration process and wreck compliance, we could be out of business as the fines are incredible.

    I'll bet half of this could have been avoided if when Hurd was found screwing around at HP, they could have just had him executed. Then he wouldn't be at Oracle and probably influencing this situation quite a bit.

  11. Easy solution: Bigger scanner. on Backscatter X-Ray Machines Easily Fooled · · Score: 1

    Put a dome over the airport, or just the whole city. Scan at all times.

    They'll promote some sort of biometric implants at some point. You don't have an implant? What are you trying to hide?

    There's a reason these problems are never solved. There is more money in fixing/upgrading the gear than there is building it right the first time. CompanyA builds box to current specifications. Turns out those specs suck. CompanyA now given new money to build it better. Rinse. Repeat. As it's been mentioned already, the only people these systems help are the shareholders.

  12. Was it Lewis Black? on In UK, First "Anarchist's Cookbook" Downloaders' Convictions · · Score: 1

    I saw a similar bit by Eddie Izzard. Wow, you must have to get up pretty early in the morning for that.

    Death, death, death, death, breakfast, death, death, tea, death, death...

  13. What not to do. on Hot Aisle Or Cold Aisle For Containment? · · Score: 1

    What did I find when I joined the sysadmin team at my place?

    Putting cold air vents behind the racks doesn't help. Pull cold air through the front to the back? Nope. Chill the exhausted air because it sucks to walk behind the servers. Nice.

  14. Re:Possibilities? on Method To Repair Damaged Adult Nerves Discovered · · Score: 3, Funny

    (i.e., what happens if you grow too much nerves?)

    You have a lot of nerve asking that question. Or at least the person who underwent the treatment would.

  15. Re:Is a movie theater really a public place? on Woman Filming Sister's Birthday Party Gets Charged With Felony Movie Piracy · · Score: 1

    You said rape twice!

  16. Re:AC360 on this very subject on 1,600 Names Suggested Daily For FBI's Watch List · · Score: 1

    Try the middle initial.

    John Kennedy might be on the list
    John Fitzgerald Kennedy might be on the list.
    John F. Kennedy or J. Fitzgerald Kennedy might not be. How stupid is that?

  17. Undercover Brother reference on 1,600 Names Suggested Daily For FBI's Watch List · · Score: 1

    Smartly done, lad.

  18. Nicely done. on Burglar Logs Into Facebook On Victim's Computer · · Score: 1

    Signed John Ya-Ya.

  19. Brilliant. on Security / Privacy Advice? · · Score: 1

    I used to work for a Fortune 10 company. They did surveys to see where we could improve internally. When the results were released, management would create (or pay to have made) an 8 hour training session. At the end, they would explain what happened. We complained, and were punished. They would report the training was a success and that if we complained again next year, we'd take the *same* course. Another 8 hours of mandatory non-work.

    They would solicit for people to help drive the training sessions because they "had to be at an off site meeting", no doubt a golf course or Hooters or something.

    Management got off free, and got bonuses for having the training handled, the employees were beaten into not complaining again.

  20. Re:Genius on Personalized In-Game Advertising In Upcoming Titles · · Score: 1

    That pun was so terrible, I think you gave me cancer.

    And yes, I stole that line from Calculon.

  21. I'm an outsourced sysadmin for a living. on Why Should I Trust My Network Administrator? · · Score: 1

    My company manages the networks for over 100 small/medium businesses in our area.

    I am the lead admin on 8 of them. I maintain day to day operations on the servers (37 of them now!), networks, printing, desktops, applications and such.

    I have customers that won't let me see some of their data. But it's these same people who won't let anybody see it. Which makes me wonder what happens if they get hit by a bus. It makes me wonder if there is a secure backup happening, since they won't even put this info on the network.

    I think the real reason is so that nobody can check her work and see if she's embezzling. I wouldn't be able to find that out, but if she lets the stuff onto the network, somebody else might figure it out, so it stays hidden.

    Most of the time our problem is that the customer doesn't want to know about the security risk in their organization, much less from anybody else.

    These guys have passwords that are 9 years old for their administrator account, and they won't change it. OUR admin account's password changes regularly, but Administrator or root's passwords stay the same in perpetuity.

    If you outsource the IT stuff, make sure you're still admin. Make sure you're getting all of the emails from the backups, the network monitoring tools, the array controllers, etc. If they hide that stuff, start worrying.

  22. Tell my wife Hello. on Times Are Tough For Nigerian Scammers · · Score: 1, Informative

    Futurama. What an awesome show.

  23. Since when does literacy count for anything? on Cheap, Cross-Platform Electronic Circuit Simulation Software? · · Score: 2, Funny

    I *totally* missed that.

    I'll go sit in the corner.

  24. Partner with IT dept and get it hosted via RDP on Cheap, Cross-Platform Electronic Circuit Simulation Software? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We had finance apps that students had to use in their coursework. Trying to get them to work on a Win/Linux/Mac system would have been painful and time consuming.

    So we created a terminal server environment that let anybody RDP in to use the course apps. That way nobody had to pay for a real version, we paid for the terminal license.

    That might work well for you rather than finding an app to support in 3 environments.

    Good luck!

  25. None like it hot? on Antarctic Ice Bridge Finally Breaks Off · · Score: 1

    :-)