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User: TWX

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  1. If you work on the bleeding edge... on Spaceport America Loses $1.7 Million Due To Virgin Galactic Delays · · Score: 2

    ...you get sliced from time to time.

    While I commend New Mexico for their efforts toward making it possible to push the limits, this was bound to happen. On top of that, if they're balking at $1.7 million , how do they feel about their other budget line-items, like their schools that probably exceed a couple- billion dollars spent?

    I don't know New Mexico's budget off the top of my head, but I do know that in my state, the largest school district's budget is somewhere between $600 and $700 million dollars, for about 65,000 students. There are upwards of a hundred school districts, and the education budget is something like 70% of the state's annual expenditure. $1.7 million dollars on the scale of a state budget is almost down to rounding-error money.

  2. Re:How is this "News for Nerds"? on Linux On a Motorola 68000 Solder-less Breadboard · · Score: 2

    If Slashdot is going to drop one or the other, I'd much rather they drop the News aspect than the Nerds aspect.

    About fifteen years ago I had a Macintosh Centris 660AV running Linux, just as an experiment. I kind of wish that I still had that computer; it had an AUI port so I could adapt to 10Base-T Ethernet, and could have redirected all incoming unsolicited network connections to it. Let 'em hack it; with no compiler, all binaries for m68K only, and 16.9 bogoMIPS it would have made for an entertaining honeypot.

  3. Re:Not resigning from Debian on Longtime Debian Developer Tollef Fog Heen Resigns From Systemd Maintainer Team · · Score: 1

    Well, I can tell you with my Windows 8 experiences, a lot of functionality went away with the loss of the Start Menu, especially when it comes to reopening previously-opened documents. Sometimes it can be difficult to locate the document in question by just browsing the filesystem.

  4. Re:Not resigning from Debian on Longtime Debian Developer Tollef Fog Heen Resigns From Systemd Maintainer Team · · Score: 1

    Okay, I can believe that. I'm still rather surprised that there weren't any other posts though. Your friend must have Slashdot on an RSS feed or something to know when the next new story goes live.

  5. Re:Not resigning from Debian on Longtime Debian Developer Tollef Fog Heen Resigns From Systemd Maintainer Team · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The concept of being able to 'just fork' the system sounds great on the surface, but init is not your average package. I'd argue that init is just as important as the kernel itself, and possibly more important as it impacts how all init-aware applications and daemons will be developed. The use of System V init allowed Linux to be comfortablef for UNIX admins looking for a less expensive or more widely installable solution, and the end of the use of System V init means that Linux is starting to head away from the UNIX operating systems.

    It's been said that Ubuntu switched to systemd because they anticipated that Debian was going to do so, not because they really wanted to, but since Ubuntu re-forks Debian for a lot of its packages and development, as a derivative work it really doesn't have a lot of choice unless they want to make a clean break of it. With other distros also going systemd, inevitably like when Slackware was extremely late to the party with the whole libc5/glibc2 switch, a bunch of us will end up on Slack again, even without the advanced package tools that we've come to like with more modern distros.

  6. Re:Not resigning from Debian on Longtime Debian Developer Tollef Fog Heen Resigns From Systemd Maintainer Team · · Score: 2

    I'm a little skeptical of this "anonymous reader" that Slashdot cites as the submitter of the article truly being anonymous when the subject of the article manages to get the first word in. No "omg f1rst p0st!", no commentary on the situation, literally the subject himself posting about it.

  7. Re: Why? on Apple Disables Trim Support On 3rd Party SSDs In OS X · · Score: 1

    I'm well aware of NeXT's fusion with Apple, but the fact remains, the computers are Apple, not NEXT, the OS was able to emulate the environment for MacOS9 and to run most MACOS9 software, and MACOSX ran on pre-NeXT Macintoshes with all of the Apple-specific features of those machines. NeXT as an entity ended, even if its intellectual property and managers ended up at Apple.

  8. Re:Why? on Apple Disables Trim Support On 3rd Party SSDs In OS X · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are three approaches to computing.

    There's the commercial-ubiquitous approach. This is Microsoft's approach. Try to support (or to get manufacturers to support) as much hardware as possible. Be the default solution. Things generally look good (I can't fault Microsoft over their years for most of their UI decisions), stability may not always be terribly good though, and that's the sacrifice, ubiquity over stability, but the gain is to run on just about all hardware in existence. Android is also mostly falling into this category too now.

    There's the commercial-restricted approach. Sell your hardware and your software, and only allow a select-few others to sell hardware or software that is compatible with your products. The upside is that the platforms are highly stable, but the downsides are that users will sometimes find they simply can't do something because it's disallowed. It also requires the company to be ever-vigilant about pushing more features and capabilities, as stagnation will mean death. Apple currently leads this community, but SGI, Sun, NeXT, Commodore, and a whole bunch of computer companies throughout the years have tried it and ultimately closed up shop.

    The Open-Source method is the third approach, and it's both leading edge (ie, research projects by major universities) and completely behind (many user applications simply don't exist or are only partially functional).


    I use Windows, OSX, and Linux daily as desktop environments. Linux is stable and fast, but often not compatible with developments out of Redmond and with a lot of work to make some features function. OSX is very smooth, very stable, and awkwardly locked-down to where some things simply aren't options. Windows is compatible with just about everything and requires weekly reboots to keep it running.

    They all suck. All of them.

  9. Re:510kph is airliner speed? on Japanese Maglev Train Hits 500kph · · Score: 1

    It just depends on how far you are looking to travel. If you're going from Boston to Washington DC then the time and hassle for security and boarding may make the train faster. If you're going from Boston to Chicago then even with the extra overhead imparted at the beginning of a flight, you're still going to get there more quickly flying than you would by high-speed rail, even if the train doesn't stop anywhere else along the way.

    Out west high-speed rail is less practical until you get all of the way to the west coast, and even there, most of the cities are oriented toward driving, not walking or mass transit. You're probably not going to get a lot of benefit for high-speed rail servicing Albuquerque or Phoenix or Denver, the cities are too far apart to make high-speed rail any more practical than flying, and would probably have too much environmental impact in the process of construction to make it worthwhile.

  10. Re: Yet Another Fake Picture on Alleged Satellite Photo Says Ukraine Shootdown of MH17 · · Score: 1

    Someone would take out that aircraft because they just got their hands on a SAM battery for the first time and are trigger-happy to use it and lack the training to distinguish friend, foe, and noncombatant, and don't have any idea how international air corridors work or are laid-out.

    Another aircraft as close as the doctored image shows would be close enough to identify the airliner as being painted in commercial livery, not painted as a military vehicle. Plus the vehicle had already flown 90% of the way across Ukraine and was just about to leave Ukrainian airspace, so it would have been in communication with Ukrainian air traffic control the whole time. Ukraine would have known what it was and wouldn't have needed to scramble fighters to intercept it on its way out of the country.

    Separatist fighters, regardless of who's backing them, wouldn't have known anything about the plane to start with, and if they weren't listening for transponders then they simply would have seen a subsonic jet flying high over the area they control. If through their lack of training they didn't bother to research the situation (ie, air corridors, contact on civilian frequencies, listening for transponder traffic and having equipment to display it) then they could have interpreted the situation as they wanted to interpret it, as a military incursion, rather than for what it actually was. So they saw something fly in and they shot it down. Didn't ID it, didn't try to contact it, just fired on it.

    And now Russia is adding insult to injury. They should simply shut up and stop mentioning it altogether.

  11. Re:Comcast tried to steal $50 from me on Overbilled Customer Sues Time Warner Cable For False Advertising · · Score: 1

    Or the VP in charge figured that if he didn't assign a job to send them out to anyone, that few enough customers would complain that it wouldn't be a big deal to handle those few that would.

  12. Re:It does make you wonder ... on Your Incompetent Boss Is Making You Unhappy · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately many companies can stand to have a layer of incompentency between those that make decisions and those that actually do work. One can even argue that when the workers actually know what they're doing and are actually working toward a goal, most of Management's job should be to keep obstacles out of their way, to anticipate the needs of the project, and to handle the company-external communications and initial deal-making. While it's true that some companies do make their earnings using entry-level workers or are structured to be profitable even with incompetent workers making up sizable portions of their ranks (Walmart, Fry's Electronics, and just about all fast-food come to mind), that should not hold true for companies that employ primarily skilled workers.

    It's really aggrevating when skilled workers are both treated as if they're unskilled workers, and when they're managed by a former unskilled worker that somehow managed to get promoted up to lower-level management. Those kinds of managers tend to push everyone down to the lowest level, and to treat the skills of the talented workers as if they are unimportant. Ironically though, even good workers can often make for terrible managers, as often they cannot accept someone working in a different way than they did/do.

    I will say that I have been happiest when I've had bosses that were better at the job than I was, that I could learn from, that actually respected what I was able to do even when it was not necessarily what they would have done. I felt that they trusted me to do the damn job and to get a positive result, without worrying about my methods so long as they didn't make things worse in the process. Those bosses have been very, very few and far between though.

  13. Give me a ping... on Study Shows How Humans Can Echolocate · · Score: 2

    ...one ping only...

  14. Re:G-nome ? on Groupon Backs Down On Gnome · · Score: 1

    As opposed to the Gnome Foundation's people pronouncing it, "guh-nome"?

    I HATE that. They claim it's from pronouncing GNU as "guh-new". When I point out that the animal gnu is pronounced "new" and that since that animal is the mascot of the GNU project and that it too should be "new", they get all butt-hurt.

    At least no one has called it "guh-rep" yet.

  15. Re:I recommend... on Canadian Police Recommend Ending Anonymity On the Internet · · Score: 1

    Honestly I don't think it would be as bad as one might think. Most people, including criminals, are not homicidal to begin with, so police officers and their families would be relatively bodily safe, and given the effort needed to case a home to verify no one is home in order to break in and vandalize or burglarize, it's unlikely that a police officer's home would be targeted for vandalism or theft either, over and above statistical average.

    If anything, if criminals are paying attention to where police officers live, the neighbors of cops might find less problems, as there's a possibility for a quicker response by calling a neighbor (ie, the cop) and more effort into an investigation relative to the importance of the crime, to appease the neighbor. Or it could come to nothing.

  16. Re: Cart not just before the horse on The Strangeness of the Mars One Project · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Exactly. I don't think that humans will go to Mars to remain there until robotic missions have essentially built and distilled and mined and refined enough to make the human settlement functional to the point that it runs without the human presence stressing the systems. It's going to be like remotely building a combination aircraft carrier and submarine on another planet with a communications loop of 20 minutes.

  17. Re: Cart not just before the horse on The Strangeness of the Mars One Project · · Score: 1

    I assume that it'll be LOADS more difficult. Even the most optimistic well-thought science fiction work on the subject, Robinson's Mars Trilogy, opens with a description of the advance equipment sent at considerable expense to provide colonists with as basic things as water and air. And Robinson, for literary license, makes things far easier than they really will be to make the story fit within one lifespan.

  18. Re:They can be tried again, I think? on Manslaughter Conviction Overturned For Scientists Who Didn't Predict Earthquake · · Score: 1

    If that trial of that American girl for murder, its overturn, and its refiling is any indication, then yes, it may be possible.

    I think that if they do refile though, it'll give incentive for scientists and other intellectuals to move, and with the EU rules allowing one from a member-state to live anywhere within the EU, it would probably be an easier choice to leave if one's work could be interpreted this way.

  19. Re:ISPs don't want to take Cogent's money on President Obama Backs Regulation of Broadband As a Utility · · Score: 1

    Yep. Lower speed, no common-carrier benefits anymore.. No reason to continue to use them.

  20. Re:Don't forget the Trenders on The Math Behind the Hipster Effect · · Score: 1

    I carried a palm pilot before the modern smartphone, and the network-synchronized smartphone is an improvement when one wants a central device that functions as a pocket calculator, an address book, a phone list, a tasks list, a pocket calendar, a walkman-replacement, etc. It's also convenient when one needs an address and doesn't have any other practical way to find it. We were on a road-trip and the car needed service, we were able to find a place while in the middle of nowhere that we were confident would be able to take care of it.

    Palm's insistence on using palmdesktop and serial/usb hotsynch is what cost them the market. Had they come up with a network-based synch that would work over the cell network transparently and automatically then they probably could have remained on top.

  21. Re:Having problems reading this.... on The Math Behind the Hipster Effect · · Score: 1

    Honestly these days the bulk of what I use telnet for is testing the mail servers. It's much faster to test SMTP that way than it is to open a client, especially when the bulk if what I need to know is if forwarding/relaying for a particular IP/range works or is blocked.

  22. Re:Having problems reading this.... on The Math Behind the Hipster Effect · · Score: 1

    Cute. Did you go find an ASCII-to-binary chart to make it?

    Once walked up to some kid wearing one of those shirts-in-binary that Thinkgeek sells and said to him, "Nice shirt, and no I'm not." Based on the look on his face, apparently I was the first person to understand what it said.

  23. Re:Don't forget the Trenders on The Math Behind the Hipster Effect · · Score: 1

    I take the skeptic approach, I'm not sold on new things just because they're new. I need to see a valid reason to use them; a benefit to whatever this new thing is over the status quo. With this mindset, I can tell you that the majority of new things are bullshit or are reimplemented old things trying to pass themselves off as new.

  24. Re:True anticonformancy on The Math Behind the Hipster Effect · · Score: 4, Funny

    If we're lucky, no. Most of 'em aren't in nearly as good a shape as Tim Curry. Most look more like Meatloaf.

  25. Re:True anticonformancy on The Math Behind the Hipster Effect · · Score: 2

    This is as much anticonfirmancy as most people that want to hold-down a good white-collar-ish job with full benefits and matching 401K can do.

    Which is to say, that it's not really nonconformist at all. And besides, any counter-culture that establishes itself is a culture all its own, even if it is deviated enough from societal norms to where it doesn't mesh well.