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User: Blaskowicz

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  1. Re: Right ... on The Android L Update For Nvidia Shield Portable Removes Features · · Score: 2

    It's a trap to make you create an account*. I can imagine installing Windows 8 or 10 if needed but creating an account to run a desktop OS is something offensive. It's like showing your papers to a police officer every time you want to use a computer.
    Also why I don't care much about upgrading my PC to run more Steam linux games.

    *though per above theverge.com article, Solitaire is back as a built-in but Hearts is still on the store.

  2. Re:Use ftp.exe to get Fx from which server? on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    I did it with ftp.mozilla.org , I didn't think or knew about using releases.mozilla.org. I seem to remember ftp.mozilla.org did not work a few years ago but maybe they changed their mind :)

    My useless log, from a trial :

    (...)

    230- ftp.mozilla.org / archive.mozilla.org - files are in /pub/mozilla.org
    230-
    230- Notice: This server is the only place to obtain nightly builds and needs to
    230- remain available to developers and testers. High bandwidth servers that
    230- contain the public release files are available at http://releases.mozilla.org/
    230- If you need to link to a public release, please link to the release server,
    230- not here. Thanks!
    230-
    230- Attempts to download high traffic release files from this server will get a
    230- "550 Permission denied." response.
    230-
    230- Low-traffic files, including SeaMonkey releases, are OK.
    230 Login successful.
    Remote system type is UNIX.
    Using binary mode to transfer files.
    ftp> cd pub
    250 Directory successfully changed.

    (...)

    ftp> dir
    200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV.
    150 Here comes the directory listing.
    -rw-r--r-- 2 ftp ftp 47228492 Jun 25 00:05 firefox-38.1.0esr.tar.bz2
    226 Directory send OK.
    ftp> get firefox-38.1.0esr.tar.bz2
    local: firefox-38.1.0esr.tar.bz2 remote: firefox-38.1.0esr.tar.bz2
    200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV.
    150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for firefox-38.1.0esr.tar.bz2 (47228492 bytes).
    226 Transfer complete.
    47228492 bytes received in 48.93 secs (942.6 kB/s)
    ftp>

  3. Re: The problem with HTML5 for video on Twitch Is Ditching Flash For HTML5, Just Like YouTube · · Score: 1

    The problem with VLC is just this one. "To view this porn video, download Fake_VLC_Media_PLayer.exe".
    Or the totem plugin is launched (on a linux desktop) which is slow, crashy, doesn't work and makes the whole screen blank for an instant on loading.

    There was a short window in time where I got WMV streaming working (instead of "windows media player failed to download the codec"). That was back when you downloaded codecs to watch video, and so there was that .exe file from Microsoft you could download to read WMV9 video files on Windows 98, which happened to enable streaming to work too. So there was video playing in the browser, which you could full screen and it plays perfectly smooth on a Celeron 500MHz!

    4 years ago or so, I played a Silverlight video (never did again), which was some kind of Microsoft PR, don't ask me what or why. It lead me to a simple page for installing the linux version of the plug-in, which was very easily done. Then the video was smooth, flawless and with the then new feature of changing the stream depending on bandwith. But Silverlight did not catch on, because of Flash's 99% market share.

    So, Microsoft solved web video twice! Though WMV wasn't a great solution (need compatible player, codec and plugin for the player)
    Real Player worked too, before they did the redesign and went full on crapware.

  4. Re:Initial Windows OS installs are always fast. on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    It's worse if you don't install the fixes and end up running malware.

  5. Re:Works great on my 7-year-old Dell (Core 2 Quad) on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    Nice system still, you could change thermal paste, upgrade the heatsink or fan(s), and/or even downgrade to a dual core CPU lol.

  6. Re:The reason why it appears fast on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    eh, when I ran XP on my own PC it was just as fast as running a PC with SSD, despite running on hard drive. Hit win+E and the file manager comes up instantly etc. (configured to remove the useless panel and add useful stuff like status bar and refresh button, etc.)

    Before that I ran 98SE past its due (10 seconds boot and instant shutdown, wow!) then ran warez Server 2003 as a desktop : wow! that was actually a version of Windows XP without crap running. I now run linux, which is slower than 2K/XP/2003 but much less wasteful than Vista/7.

    Windows 10 might be better than linux again (and with features such as package manager, a terminal window that can fucking get resized so you can use it instead of using substitutes like putty, teraterm or a terminal over X11 server etc.) but it still at least $100 and I'm worried about phone home features.

  7. Re:Windows Mojave on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    Windows Vista with service packs is good, but another way of seeing it is that it's just the same as Windows 7 and Windows 7 is severely overrated. Windows 7 is a horrible resource hog, which everyone has forgotten because they upgraded their PC since then.
    It's usable on a slow PC though, after the hours of installing and updating it. Don't make the mistake of browsing the web before it is fully updated (or at the least, download firefox using ftp.exe not IE and don't install flash yet)

  8. These specs are actually high on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    The CPU is similar to a fast Pentium III but with two logical cores ; 1GB RAM is considered a good amount on smartphones/tablets in 2015 (but it's silly not to bump it to 2GB, and using browser tabs will fill it up) ; and the HDD is not very slow - a 320GB one is at least a 5400 rpm with mildly high density, not your father's laptop HDD.

    This thing would have perhaps been a $5000 desktop back in about the year 2000 or 2001, with an SCSI HDD and all the latest hardware.
    So, it's a good thing that a PC powerful enough to run some Photoshop, Quake 3, 3D graphics software or even some video editing can now run a damn OS and its GUI.

  9. Re:Not that big of a mystery. on Experiment: Installing Windows 10 On a 7-Year-Old Acer Aspire One · · Score: 1

    Note that a 320GB HDD is much better than 16GB or 32GB of horrible integrated flash.
    The flash may be a ton better as some things (like 100x better read latency) but writing data may be inconsistent to say the least. The HDD is consistent, and realistically allows swapping.

  10. Re:Microsoft Cardfile on What's the Oldest Technology You've Used In a Production Environment? · · Score: 1

    You can download the application programs that came with Windows 1.0x and run them under Windows 7 32bit!
    ditto Windows 2.x ones. Slightly more useful, a little known version of Reversi reworked to give it a Windows 3.x look. I ran that under Wine (the game is unforgiving, it's even worse than chess on a computer : you have no hopes of winning)

    The only quirk with the Windows 1.x/2.x software is that a window manager from 21st century Windows doesn't size the window properly, so you have to resize the program before using it.

  11. Re:What is this BS? on Bringing Back the Magic In Metamaterials · · Score: 1

    It looks like a rant about a language construct. I shrugged the word off as self-evident given we have such terms as "sub-zero temperatures", "subterranean", "subsurface", "subway". Some people might not like cooking up of new words like that, or such a rarely used word encountered in some narrow fields.

    Perhaps "nanotechnology" is a word we can bitch about, it's made up too and unlike "subwavelength" it doesn't have an actual clear meaning :)

  12. Re: "Automatic" Weapon? on Police Not Issuing Charges For Handgun-Firing Drone -- Feds Undecided · · Score: 1

    Let's imagine a button press is an individual shot, but the software doesn't allow to fire again before 3 seconds or before the drone is stabilized. Then you can tap the button repeatedly, regardless and it will be like an auto unless the software catches this and yells "Stop doing this" at the user.

  13. Re:Investigating if laws were broken on Police Not Issuing Charges For Handgun-Firing Drone -- Feds Undecided · · Score: 0

    Is it legal to build a "gun trap" where opening your front door will pull a rope that triggers the gun's firing?
    Probably not, that sounds horrible and is indiscriminate (very likely to kill an LEO or fire worker etc.)

    What if you build the gun trap contraption, but pull the trigger yourself? (by mechanical or electronical means). What if you only use it at the firing range? What if you keep it at home for use in a potential home invasion? (that latter question is out of scope here, I'll give you that)

    I don't know the answer (with US laws or some US state laws) but my intuition is that by adding a new mechanism to fire the weapon you've made a potentially unauthorized weapon modification, which should be a big no-no. Perhaps it should be unconditionally illegal. Perhaps it's okay if you register it and only use it on fire ranges under certain circumstances. Perhaps it's just a "creative" way to fire the weapon (e.g. is firing guns akimbo illegal, or just really stupid?)

  14. Oh the horror on Red Star Linux Adds Secret Watermarks To Files · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Desktop software is really horrible these days. To preserve your freedoms, use Chrome OS or Android and organize your collaborations and activities over Facebook. Capitalist computing is much more trustworthy than that evil communist Linux thing.

  15. Re:What is this BS? on Bringing Back the Magic In Metamaterials · · Score: 1

    Wave length is techno babble now? Where have you been for the last 150 years?
    Clearly those 19th century scientists were all basement dwelling Star Trek nerds!

  16. Re:Windows 10 has Secret Screen Recording Tool on Windows 10 Will Have Screen Recording Tool · · Score: 1

    It's more known as RDS (S for "service"), RDC being the name they now give for the client.
    I thought you were talking about RPC first :) (Remote Procedure Call)

  17. Re:Windows 10 has Secret Screen Recording Tool on Windows 10 Will Have Screen Recording Tool · · Score: 1

    They'll creatively find a way to let you have a genuine, activated supported Windows after you install a warez Windows 10 pro from a random torrent site.

    I first read your first sentence the other way around : I had far more downtime due to intrusions than to Windows updates. The one that bit me was upgrading to Internet Explorer 6 on a Windows 98SE installation, which made the OS completely unusable (no big deal as I was used to boot under DOS, load smartdrv and run the setup from D:\WIN98 on the other hard drive)
    Now in the XP days I always disabled the updates (and ran without antivirus too) and ran as admin, security was assured by using firefox, being behind a router and disabling all autorun/autoplay. That crumbled down precisely in the year 2009 for me. Now it's do all updates, or disable/remove networking (and don't plug untrusted USB drive or hard drive)

    If you're an update refuznik, you should like Linux Mint though : updates are easy, conservative, optional, vetted (run "level" 1, 2 and 3 while ignoring 4 and 5 as per default, or do something else ; right click on a package to put into the "upgrade ignore list")

  18. Re:Except, of course... on Antineutrino Detectors Could Be Key To Monitoring Iran's Nuclear Program · · Score: 1

    Iran has a sinister and evil plan. At the table, they will cast a vote recognizing they are in violation, and an outraged US will oppose its veto.

  19. THX 1138 on Which Movies Get Artificial Intelligence Right? · · Score: 1

    The robot cops's trouble with pathfinding is a very faithful depiction of AI.
    It preceded by over 30 years the Counter-Strike gamebots getting stuck in some place of the map.

  20. Re:If visiting Europe, card should have chip AND P on Cashless Adoption Growing In Europe · · Score: 1

    We've had PIN since at least 1992, and most people don't expect to be able to change the PIN or most likely never ever thought about it.
    I guess it used to be fused in at the factory. Making it rewritable just adds complexity and perhaps a security issue.

  21. Re:Limited data plans on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    If they get a new or reinstalled PC, then it may cost them like $50 per GB, rest of the month without internet access, or both.

    Now imagine that in the third world or in a semi-prosperous country (Eastern Europe, Latin America etc.) : you get a $250 bill, same as the PC's price and same as your monthly income. Not quite fun. Or you had a monthly 300MB and used it for email etc. : no bill but it's gone.

  22. Re:who cares? on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    I installed Windows 7 Home Basic 32-bit on a few systems, on purpose. Less crap installed! while still keeping some important software around (namely, MS Hearts)

    It's the version that can't run the desktop 3D-accelerated : can't crap out on old/random hardware.
    The command line seems uncrippled (ftp.exe, tasklist and taskkill are available).

  23. Re:Disk space on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    I wonder which distro you're using. Linux cleans up fine but I have to tell it. Once in a while or when I get a pop-up that there's less than 1.1GB or so left, I will do this :

    df -m
    sudo apt-get clean
    df -m

  24. Re:Data loss on restart on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    A good old dumb textarea's content is saved (perhaps missing the last few seconds's content sometimes) but a slashdot comment is more like the execution state of a javascript program.
    For the browser to be robust with that it probably should work like an OS and "hibernate" itself - then wake up with expired connections and ssl sessions. Then if you get back to your slashdot comment and hit "submit", slashdot will say something about an invalid session and your comment is lost.

    Some recent forum software may auto-save your unfinished comments, on the server. But I don't think you can ask every website to code for something like that and eat up the cost in CPU, bandwith etc.

  25. Re:Don't worry.. on Windows 10 Home Updates To Be Automatic and Mandatory · · Score: 1

    Is that a copy-paste of an older post?