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User: Anime_Fan

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Comments · 138

  1. Re:SCSI CD... booting from a floppy? on Ubuntu Linux Live CD Release · · Score: 1

    Try Smart Boot Manager...
    I know it can boot from ATAPI CD-ROM's, but I've never tried it with SCSI ones.

    Give it a try
    http://btmgr.webframe.org/

  2. Re:Finally - make it an impulse purchase on Think Secret Predicts Sub-$500 Headless Mac · · Score: 1

    I spent $70 on my 2-port Belkin USB KVM w/ built-in cables.

    The 4-port alternative you used would cost me $288 incl. cables. Taxes sure are killing us here.

    The 2-port KVM is excellent and I would use it together with a headless Mac any day of the week.

  3. Re:K&R not credited for C? on Tim Bray's Top Twenty Software People in the World · · Score: 1

    They are credited for their work on C... If you check the detailed information.

    A shame Ritchie is only listed as coinventor of UNIX on the main page. Still, most C programmers know their names and will vote anyways.

  4. Re:Now that's what SlashDot needs! on Valve Takes the Offensive on Warez Users? · · Score: 1

    Ahhh... Return of the fossils...

    One guy writes about Portman and fast as lightning fury the dinosaurs arrive.

    Three sub-100k UID in as many hours. Impressive.

  5. Problem with viruses, maybe? on U.S. Military To Create Its Own Internet · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... I wonder if they're thinking along the lines of my own Swedish military, constructing their own intranet whose only link to the public is a mail-server.

    Let's just hope they spend enough money on a fast hardware-crypto, so U.S. troops in the middle east aren't stuck with 120,000 men sharing 1Mbit of secure bandwidth ^_^

    It's a great thing, not being connected to the internet, and having firewalls (FreeBSD-based) all over the place. Especially when doing tech support, since this means we have no viruses on FMIP, despite the fact that Windows clients are used.

    A note about the firewall... It's creators believed a slimmed-down OS would be the most secure, so the kernel is slimmed and unused applications gone. Also, I don't know why they didn't choose OpenBSD instead of free, but then again, this was 1997... *Sigh*

  6. Re:Menu Editor? on GNOME 2.8 Released · · Score: 1

    How do you change the menu for another user or all users on your system?

    You simply add a new .desktop file in /usr/share/applications (if that's where your .desktop files are saved).

  7. Re:Only in theory on Swedes Dominate Counter-Strike Championship · · Score: 1

    15 months playing with business-grade computer hardware ain't bad either. That's what I do in the military.
    Note, however that I did actually start college before getting drafted - 1/3 of my platoon did, actually ;)
    Also, I have 2 weeks of weapons training, and will get no more.
    Unlike Americans, we Swedes manage without pointing guns at everyone around us.

  8. Re:My Fave Google Trick on Google: The Missing Manual · · Score: 1

    For me, Google reports 411,000 with the -qqqqqqqq trick, but 476,000 hits without it.

    This is the opposite of what you're telling us ^^.

  9. Re:Hardware support on NetBSD 2.0 Status Report · · Score: 1

    FreeBSD makes all devices without a hitch. I even have sound working on it! Something I can't say about RedHat or any of the other 'user-friendly' Linux distros.

    I could say the same of OpenBSD. Granted, it is an old (AMD K5) machine. I would expect NetBSD and FreeBSD to do the same.

  10. Re:Windows NT at the helm on More on the Swedish Stealth Ship · · Score: 1

    Actually, no...

    You can't fit 155 men on a Swedish naval vessel.

    Visby will carry a crew of 43, and I doubt that more than 2 will be regular NT sysadmins.

    Now, if this was a US ship, I have no doubt they would require no less than 200 people to admin BSOD's...

  11. Re:Linux desktops surpassed proprietary LONG ago on KDE 3.2: A User's Perspective · · Score: 1

    Care to enlighten us on how many people can log in at a time with XP Pro?

    Only one, if he's a member of a domain.

  12. Re:Offline attack on Cisco's LEAP Authentication Cracked · · Score: 1

    local privilege escalations effectively become remote privilege escalations when you throw in access to some user's weakly protected account.

    And non-root accounts become root accounts once they utilize a local exploit. So what's the big deal?

  13. Re:Offline attack on Cisco's LEAP Authentication Cracked · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Come on guys, have you actually worked in the real world? Normal users can't remember crazy passwords, they are going to pick their dog and their favorite football player's number put together. Or their aniversary and the current food they are eating.

    At least we force hard passwords for administrators.
    I've got some 7 complex passwords for admin accounts at work.
    Add 2 for my regular accounts there.
    Add 1 for Lotus Notes there.
    Add 1 for my user at my home server.
    Add 1 for root at the server.
    Add 5 for the encrypted partitions on the server (one of which is 20 characters long).
    Add 2 for my laptop.
    Add 1 for my university logon.

    It's easy to remember passwords once you learn how to create _good_ ones (that aren't based on dogs name + 3-digit number that you raise by 1 every 90 days).

    But yes, most of my users tend to forget their passwords and need me to reset them once a month.
    And the rest of the bunch use as weak passwords as they can.

    The good thing is, their accounts don't matter to me. It's only some files they're going to find.
    The admin accounts, OTOH can access any users' files in an instant (saved locally on the computer or on Novell doesn't matter). This is the account that needs protection.
    That, and keeping the company off the internet, wireless networks et al.

  14. Re:They're not ROMs you imbeciles! on Legal Arcade ROM Vendor Talks Business · · Score: 1

    Do you also get annoyed if someone refers to a CD "ISO"? That is somewhat sillier if you recall what the letters mean. Extending usage of a term is fine as long as there is no confusion created.

    But "ISO" in that context is short for ISO9660, the data format used on the CD. It's equally valid.

  15. Re:Ironic observations on Microsoft FUD Machine Aims at OpenOffice.org · · Score: 1

    4) Had they written it in Word format, folks
    who couldn't afford Microsoft Office would have
    to download open office so they could
    use open office to view a word document
    telling them why they shouldn't use
    open office to view word documents.


    Partially true. There are AFAIK free word readers.

    office.microsoft.com/downloads/2000/wd97vwr32.as px

  16. Re:some stuff on Why You Should Choose MS Office Over OO.org · · Score: 1

    They are judged based on whether they can hold a tech support call to under 12 minutes - PERIOD.

    12 minutes is a long time. I'm used to providing an accurate answer within 2-3 minutes. Be it a problem with Office,Notes,Novell or Windows.

    Then again, I HelpDesk our users. We're not answering phone all the day just to try and get rid of people. We do it so that they can work with mission-critical documents.

  17. Re:Non-Exploitable Security DOS Exploit on Multiple Vulnerabilities in OpenSSL · · Score: 0, Redundant

    So you honestly believe that Microsoft forwards flaws detected in software to its vendor?
    Without charging huge ammounts of cash for forwarding said information. My bet is that nvidia pays huge ammounts to see its flaws in GFX drivers.

  18. Re:bits on Intel Plans CPU Naming Change · · Score: 1

    this will bring isssues like if NEC comes out with a system that has 2 128 bit processors, is it a 256bit system?

    No, two times 128-bit would be 129-bit.

  19. Re:blind script kiddies on Three Blind Phreaks · · Score: 1

    CGI isnt a language! And thats a direct quote from him. What kind of idiot says "I can program in CGI."

    What kind of idiot complains of someone who says he can program in CGI when HTML was on the list?

    Also, I don't consider Basic to be a language. It's an ugly hack at best.

  20. Re:Is this stock typical? on SCO Wants to License Europe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Something worth $250,000,000 could be worth $2 in less then 30 days time and it's an average risk?

    Actually, there's an average risk you'll lose money if you try to short it. Maybe they weren'
    t clear enough.
    If I had $20,000 to bet, I'd have shorted some SCO stock a couple of days ago.

  21. Re:SCO to offer licenses for dictionaries! on SCO Wants to License Europe · · Score: 1

    kami@kami $ grep -ic sco /usr/share/dict/words
    1611
    kami@kami $ grep -i sco /usr/share/dict/words | wc -l
    1611

    It seems we're both using the same dictionary. Unlike the others who can't agree if it's 2,13,467 or 1613 words...

  22. Re:Free access at Universities on Is WiFi Access Worth $10/hour? · · Score: 1

    Yes, we have WiFi access in Linkoping, Sweden.

    It is authenticated via a login-page (naturally over https). Once authentication is completed, you gain DNS access, as well as any port open that you could ever ask for.

    The connection may not be the best in the world, but at least we get full-speed access to sunet.se. A couple of seconds to download Mozilla.

    However, the WiFi connection isn't stable in all places (and some places doesn't hvae coverage yet). Most of the places engineering students hang out in have coverage.

    In some places, we also have normal cat 5, but most of the outlets are alarmed and alreasy have computers hooked up to them.

  23. Re:S3 hasn't been cool... on The Return of S3 · · Score: 1

    Agreed, mine is even able to run on Gentoo.

    Compile times suck, however. Maybe it's time for FreeBSD ^^.

  24. Re:Get Real on Future of 2.4 and 2.6 Kernels · · Score: 3, Informative

    /dev/input/mice works in the 2.6 kernels.

    It's a very nice node. I never even got /dev/input/mouseX working in 2.4, though.

    $ ls /dev/input
    mice mouse0 mouse1

  25. Re:repeat after me... on Windows Security GM Talks NGSCB (Palladium) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Also Windows XP activation would also be considered "succesful enough".

    They were successful? Oddly, I seem to remember licence keys to corporate/enterprise versions of Windows XP before I could even try and purchase a copy.

    This didn't change much with SP1, despite the fact that said master keys were removed.

    If you only look at Windows XP Home, it isn't pirated much (due to Windows XP Professional being freely available anywhere). Everyone I knows hate it due to the fact that one has to call Microsoft Support every once in a while.

    HalfLife didn't check keys in LAN. And I never had problems with Quake3 servers.

    So, I'd have to say they aren't in the very least successful.