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User: weicco

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  1. Re:Call me skeptical on Horizontal Scaling of SQL Databases? · · Score: 1

    If you don't understand what's wrong with reading an entire table with a million records, and discarding all but 5 of them client-side

    I think more common case is to read entire table with million records and discard all but 5 of them on the server-side, just because the one who designed the db didn't know a squat about indexing. I've seen databases without a single clustered key. This force a full table scan even if you return just a single record to client-side.

  2. Re:Legal response on Swedish Court Orders Detention of Wikileaks Founder Assange · · Score: 1

    Oh fuck! I just figured out how to get free of child support payments to my ex-wife. I just tell the police that she raped me 8 years ago! Unfortunately I don't think that this works in Finland :(

  3. Re:Oh, the outrage! on MS Adds Security Suite To Update Service, Antivirus Rival Objects · · Score: 1

    This is funny. I thought the AV industry has been touting that AV software is an essential part of operating system for at least a decade now. But for some reason, if the OS vendor itself brings that essential part to the system it's not OK anymore.

  4. Re:Nice, but... on Microsoft Open Sources F# · · Score: 1

    I thought Open Source projects are supported by "the community"?

  5. Re:Google What Now? on Google Wave Creator Quits, Joins Facebook · · Score: 1

    Ah. So it's more like a distributed minute book and not agenda. Interesting idea.

  6. Re:Google What Now? on Google Wave Creator Quits, Joins Facebook · · Score: 1

    I thought the purpose of agenda is that you have an agenda in the meeting and you prepare for and discuss about things in the agenda :) If everyone can change the agenda the meeting can disorganize rather quickly.

  7. Re:When you cut out the bullshit it's very simple. on How the Global Seed Vault Aims To Fight Future Famine · · Score: 1

    This is in fact quite correct.

    There's a country in Africa, which name I just forgot, which was doing quite OK by their own. They had stable food market there and so on. Enter the charity organizations...

    Charity organizations brought free food to the country because it was said that people there are starving. Well, they weren't, but hey! it's Africa and everyone MUST be starving there because it's Africa. Now what happens to economy, when free goods are introduced to the market? It collapses! Production drops to zero. No-one did any farming after that because food prices were zero. Why waste time and resources on farming when you can't get any income from it?

    No imagine what happens when that free food is taken away from the market and production is near zero? Starvation. It takes time to put your fields back in order and start growing things. Then it takes time to things to grow. After that you need to harvest and take it to the market place.

    So charity organization destroyed a good stable economy just that they could get publicity points in the eyes of the rest of the world. They would have probably done much better job by just staying at home.

  8. Re:Begun, the clone war has on Apple Counter-Sues Motorola Over Touchscreen Patents · · Score: 1

    No wonder it leads to stagnation. We need a good, brisk, war to drive development!

  9. Re:Begun, the clone war has on Apple Counter-Sues Motorola Over Touchscreen Patents · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's what I'm hoping, an all out patent war. Maybe some good would come out of it because things can't get bad any more.

  10. Re:just what the tax payer needed on UAV Helicopter Flies 12 Hours Charged By Laser · · Score: 1

    They couldn't get any sharks so they had to settle with ill-tempered mutated sea bass.

  11. Re:Shame on Inside Google's Anti-Malware Operation · · Score: 1

    Yes, I see your point and understand it. I'm a programmer and whenever I've made a dumb error I put on a hat which says "ass". Well, I used to, not anymore. It always gave a good laugh to coworkers :)

    But on the other hand if manufacturer has found the defect, offered to fix the thing with no costs, and I refuse it... I don't see why manufacturer should feel shame anymore. It's my shame not to allow them to fix it.

  12. Re:I don't get it on School Children Are Now Too Fat to Fit In Class Chairs · · Score: 1

    Well, yes, that could be explanation but still I'm not sure how that could be a problem.

    This interests me because my son is 7 and couple of weeks ago somebody thought he was around 11 and 12. He's taller and heavier than average 7 year boys but he's not fat. He's just big like Eric Lindros. Should I be worried about this and what the heck I could do about it, saw him to half? :)

    Maybe it just runs the family because I'm not a little guy myself. I'm 190cm tall and weight a little over 100kg. My brother is tall also, 200cm with socks on :)

  13. Re:Not just IE specific apps on IE6 Addiction Inhibits Windows 7 Migrations · · Score: 1

    That is a good question. Currently we've had to give admin accesses to people on some machines. I wasn't in the house when this decision was made and I don't know history about it. In the future, with Windows 7, this is sure going to change.

  14. Not just IE specific apps on IE6 Addiction Inhibits Windows 7 Migrations · · Score: 1

    A lot of applications are developed against directions in MSDN. For instance a lot of apps write stuff under %ProgramFiles% or replaces DLLs under %SystemRoot%. This means that they don't work well (read: at all) in Vista or 7 without administrator rights. As a member of our IT staff I'm really reluctant to give administrator password or administrator rights to, well, anyone. That's why we've been sticking to XP.

    In fact, I can't think a single ActiveX component that's holding us back. In fact we just upgraded IE6 to IE8 on all our machines. Some internal website didn't look so good in IE8 but that was easy to fix. Personally I've been running Windows 7 and IE9 beta for couple of months now.

  15. Re:Shame on Inside Google's Anti-Malware Operation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Should Linux developers feel shame also when someone gets his/her machine compromised by running ten years old unpatched stuff? Should door lock makers feel shame if I get my house robbed because I didn't fix broken outdoor lock?

  16. I don't get it on School Children Are Now Too Fat to Fit In Class Chairs · · Score: 1

    Please, someone help me out with this. From TFA

    Paediatric dietician Susie Burrell said children who were overweight often didn't carry obvious fat but instead looked older than their age.

    She said children risked weight problems or diseases such as diabetes and fatty liver.

    So they aren't fat but risked weight problems. Where does the weight (and weight problems) comes from if they aren't fat?

    And what the heck means "looking older than their age" and how's that a problem?!

  17. Re:Nicely twisted summary on Microsoft Charging Royalties For Linux · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nope. I think don't you understand patents.

    If this IS a Microsoft scheme to enforce usage of their OS, surely it'd backfire, considering the manufacturers don't want to pay royalties as it is?

    If manufacturers don't want to pay royalties then they have to switch to a country that doesn't recognize patents. Otherwise they can be taken to court and ordered to pay hefty fines + pay hefty royalties or pay hefty fines + stop manufacturing.

    I think it would encourage makers to use Open Source even further.

    This is a question about patents, not copyrights. Open Source doesn't cover you from patent suits. And unless you didn't notice, TFA is about vendors using Open Source.

    Patents have upsides and downsides. I'm not sure how they balance. It seems that at least in the software world there's more downsides than upsides to put it nicely.

  18. Re:Well, duh. on DOS Emulator In and Out of App Store · · Score: 1

    I don't know this case particular but my understanding is that if you are the copyright owner it is in your power to license your code any way you like. You license it under GPL and that's fine too. Then you license it under some other license and that's fine. There's a restriction thought that you can't relicense your GPL version because it's already out in the wild. What I mean that you can't change the license of the version you licensed under GPL and released into the wild (like SCO tried to do with Linux I think). What you can do is to license the same version or modified version again under some other license thus ending up with multiple licenses. You can't relicense code you don't have ownership, of course.

    Now FSF would want all the code be under GPL and that's their right. But FSF isn't an author in interpreting the license, even though they wrote it. Courts and/or juries, depending of your legal system, are. FSF might have a good opinion about it of course but until a court of law has said its opinion in the matter, it's "just" FSF's opinion. Just like members of parliament don't interpret the laws they write, courts do that.

    ps. I don't if GPL has been tested in court of law (in country X). If it is I would be thankful for links to the matter. (I'm too lazy to google)

    Then the four freedoms and Apple. I'm not going to express my opinion about the subject, since it's irrelevant, I just wanted to say that that's a matter of opinion. Apple is allowed to reject any GPL code if they want and FSF is allowed to feel bad about it. It's then up to the developers and consumers to make their decision about it. Ultimately it's the consumers that votes with their wallets like in any open market (except monopoly situation which I on the other hand wouldn't call very open market).

    Just my two cents (and I got a change to practice my English) :)

  19. Re:the US and Israel butchers assassins torturers on WikiLeaks Releases Cache of 400,000 Iraq War Documents · · Score: 1

    Because democracy is only good when it's on your side. If it's not then you have two choices: live with it or whine about how people voted "wrong".

    Sadly opposition almost always chooses the latter one instead of bringing something constructive to the table.

  20. Re:Wow.... on Ray Ozzie Quit... What Took Him So Long? · · Score: 2, Informative

    The sentence starts with conditional "if" and it looks like a question but has no actual question mark so I'm not sure if that is a question that one should answer or a statement of opinion. But either way it is highly biased sentence. If it's a question then it's a leading one and would be objected if asked in court of law. If it's a statement of opinion then it's biased by definition.

    And no, I have never wondered that exact thing ;)

  21. Re:Ray's Real Job on Ray Ozzie To Step Down From His Role At Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Those kind of printers are still used somewhere so one actually needs to pass CR if one want to print, for instance, shipping documents right.

  22. Re:End of Azure on Ray Ozzie To Step Down From His Role At Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Agile in contrast is a mess. Define your test cases up front, but don't have your actual goals defined.

    Well, I think TDD works if you are making something which can be systematically tested. Like some algorithm which you give X as input and you expect Y as output (and you know what Y is supposed to be). When combined with CI you get regression tests. But I've yet to see this in action with anything complex. I've personally used TDD with a very limited part of a project. It worked fine but I'm not sure if the extra hours I put can be justified in such a small case.

    I really can't understand how one can run a project where you don't know what the goals are. How an earth can one know a) when the project's finished b) how to test it, if you don't have at least decent requirement specifications! If your customer changes requirements all the time you need make them understand that it's going to cost a lot and it's going to push the deadline back or you have to drop functionalities out. If things get really messy you just have to tell your customer "we are going to do this version production ready new and put all the changes to the next version". Otherwise you ruin your business and customer's business.

    And yes, the guy I worked with in the past was/is also a programmer so he had to eat his own dogfoot :)

  23. Re:End of Azure on Ray Ozzie To Step Down From His Role At Microsoft · · Score: 1

    I think you are right about design patterns and software development models but, well, let's take an example. Let that example be me, which is my favorite subject :)

    I've been writing software over 10 years for living and plenty more as hobby. I've been using development models which I don't recall all anymore and design patterns that even didn't know had a name. These days I'm in a lucky position that I don't have anyone above me (in corporate hierarchy) who comes and tells me how to do my job. I can use what ever pattern or model seems to fit and usually it works adequately fine, though sometimes I'm in a hurry and I don't have time to think so I have to rewrite some parts later. Now I wrote adequately because that's what our company needs, software that works and it must works now! We don't have to time to wait that I write my stuff following all the fancy rules of modern software developing. So my code isn't "brilliant" but usually it works.

    But if we go back ten years and put me in same kind of position where there's nobody to tell me how to do my stuff. I would be absolutely lost! I would most likely open up Wikipedia, use every goddamn pattern there is and the outcome would be a big mess which is very past deadline. I'm lucky that I had a good software architect to guide me ten years ago. One that knew what to use and when (mostly German beer and all the time but every now and then we did some coding too).

    Now so that my comment wouldn't be moderated too high I slip something about my feelings towards software development models here: Waterfall rules! Agile sucks! You just need to plan your projects beforehand! ;)

  24. Re:What's still keeping me away on Desktop Linux Is Dead · · Score: 1

    Or you could totally skip Linux and go to FreeBSD. At least documents and support is better than "When in Rome".

  25. Re: Ireland has had this for some time on Internet Dismantling the State Church In Finland · · Score: 1

    In Finland church tax is 1% from incomes. Church also gets some percent from every company in Finland through taxes to maintain cemetaries and keep funerals. So it's possible to avoid church tax if you are in the proletariat class but not if you own a company.

    Eroakirkosta is great service! I used it some years ago and so did my wife. I've heard that before this you had to go to church office in person to fill out resignation form. I've even heard that some had to state reasons for their resignation form was accepted like if church had the power to keep you in binding contract against your will.