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User: Lawrence_Bird

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  1. I hope the hospital on The Man With the Golden Blood · · Score: 1

    has appropriate procedures for dealing with this nullbloodtype exception. Just think of the buffer overflow attacks

  2. Re:Verizon Fios on Verizon Injects Unique IDs Into HTTP Traffic · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the pointer. I should have read the hacker news linked in TFA as it was not clear to me whether the header was one way or on both ends of the connection.

  3. Re:waiting for the right time on Days After Shooting, Canada Proposes New Restrictions On and Offline · · Score: 1

    It is all pretty pathetic especially when you can solve the problem by just giving the boys a photo, a few two fours and new hockey sticks.

  4. Re:Verizon Fios on Verizon Injects Unique IDs Into HTTP Traffic · · Score: 0

    I just ran a test in wireshark and could not find that header

  5. An Evil Country on Proposed Penalty For UK Hackers Who "Damage National Security": Life · · Score: 1

    and one that should be avoided at all costs. If you live there, move before it is too late. Same applies to its little brother Australia. Not that the US is any great shakes either but we probably have another 10 to 20 years before sinking to the same depths.

  6. Re:Step one on White House Wants Ideas For "Bootstrapping a Solar System Civilization" · · Score: 1

    Perhaps war of 2012... ref: this

  7. A very long way to go on As Prison Population Sinks, Jails Are a Steal · · Score: 1

    Reference this document from the BOP. You should fully expect cries from not just the corps running many of the prisons but also the guard unions.

  8. Re:Step one on White House Wants Ideas For "Bootstrapping a Solar System Civilization" · · Score: 2

    some one tried to steal the strategic maple syrup reserve a few years ago. probably was you

  9. Re:Yawn on Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More · · Score: 1

    Actually they are both pretty meaningless. 12x faster at .. what? 2x faster at .. what? 12x faster at a NOP loop? 2x faster a drawing the screen (1ms instead of 2ms?)

    And what is it (other than some very poorly written apps) that requires continuous speed bumps? Are we still not drawing webpages fast enough? Are mp4s still stuttering at full screen? I suppose games might be an issue but most of the ones I've seen run pretty much fine already.

    We seem to have hit (or are nearing) a point in mobile devices where increments just dont matter anymore. 500dpi? really? Most people can't tell past 250dpi. 3GHZ vs.. 2? 32 cores vs.. 4?

  10. Sabu switched employers? on FBI Warns Industry of Chinese Cyber Campaign · · Score: 1

    Wow, now that's news. Did the Chinese give him a signing bonus too?

  11. Re:Yawn on Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More · · Score: 1

    "an ipad 12x faster than the "original ipad"

    faster doing ... what?

    At least the Google 9 was mildly interesting if for no other reason than its been a few years since the 10 came out. Apple seems to be on a 6 to 12m hamster wheel of speedbump upgrades. Yawn indeed.

  12. Re:Really? on 2014 Nobel Peace Prize Awarded To Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzay · · Score: 0

    Again, what does any of that have to do with the Nobel Peace Prize? The girl has accomplished little other than to bring an additional reminder of the plight of women in Afghanistan and some other repressive Muslim countries. Has she brought substantial change in those countries? The man has done good deeds in India but not really anywhere else.

    So in the first case you have the award going to a feel good, sympathetic figure and in the second, a country specific figure. Neither has brought peace to the world. Once again the committee has given an award to those not worthy of the award given. Unfortunately, those who mark this as famebait miss the point and instead misinterpret what is being said. To say their work is not worthy of this prize is not to say their work is not valuable, important or deserving of some other more appropriate award, today or sometime in the future.

    As to your specific comment re India/Pakistan: If the Nobel committee wishes to make statements like that they should just issue a press release - the peace prize should not be used for that purpose. What would be worthy of the prize is someone(s) who actually negotiate a lasting peace between the two countries and their disputed territories.

  13. Re:One of the worst awards ever on No Nobel For Nick Holonyak Jr, Father of the LED · · Score: 1

    I guess you missed the past 50 years of practical use of LEDs. The original red and green LED's have had a far larger impact on the world - they were game changers. I'm not denying the usefulness of blue LEDs but to call them a critical achievement is to overstate the case.

  14. Really? on 2014 Nobel Peace Prize Awarded To Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzay · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Certainly in the west nobody has heard anything about the young girl since she was released from hospital after her recovery. I'm interested to know the real world changing accomplishments she has personally brought to fruition? In addition, Satyarthi "accomplishments" appear to be limited to one country. Is this then the Peace prize for India? I've seen Mother Teresa's name bounced around in justification because of her work in Calcutta but she worked in tends (if not more) nations around the world.

    This is another Nobel fail. Nice people but not worthy of the prize.

  15. Re:FreeBSD on What's Been the Best Linux Distro of 2014? · · Score: 1

    ha you beat me to it! As much as I loved Slakware for so many years, I will not go back to linux. FreeBSD and .. gasp... xmonad.

    In fact, the past year or so I've been running my (desktop) FreeBSD installs through virtualbox on top of Win 8. If I really want, yes I can boot directly into FreeBSD. But the virtualization solution has really worked well for me. FreeBSD on one desktop and windows on another, both across dual monitors.

  16. One of the worst awards ever on No Nobel For Nick Holonyak Jr, Father of the LED · · Score: 0

    as I pointed out previously (and was marked as flamebait) this was a dreadful award. Partly because it totally ignored all earlier work, partly because it is awarding based on "technology" which, though difficult, was incremental. But all of that is being polite. You only have to read the cmte. press release to see why the award was given: politics. What was stated over and over? Saving energy! This was all about the politics of "green" and (indirectly) global warming.

  17. Re:Worst physics nobel on 2014 Nobel Prize In Physics Awarded To the Inventors of the Blue LED · · Score: 1

    DId you read the fucking press release? Did it mention any of that other shit? NO.

    It was all about political happy "green" talk.

    As about one fourth of world electricity consumption is used for lighting purposes, the LEDs contribute to saving the Earth's resources. Materials consumption is also diminished as LEDs last up to 100,000 hours, compared to 1,000 for incandescent bulbs and 10,000 hours for fluorescent lights. The LED lamp holds great promise for increasing the quality of life for over 1.5 billion people around the world who lack access to electricity grids: due to low power requirements it can be powered by cheap local solar power.

    Can we sing Kumbaya now?

    If blue LED's were the first LED made, I would not object. But which was a bigger first? Blue LEDs or

    The first visible-spectrum (red) LED was developed in 1962 by Nick Holonyak, Jr., while working at General Electric Company.[9] Holonyak first reported this breakthrough in the journal Applied Physics Letters on the December 1, 1962.[20][21] M. George Craford,[22] a former graduate student of Holonyak, invented the first yellow LED and improved the brightness of red and red-orange LEDs by a factor of ten in 1972.[23] In 1976, T. P. Pearsall created the first high-brightness, high-efficiency LEDs for optical fiber telecommunications by inventing new semiconductor materials specifically adapted to optical fiber transmission wavelengths.[24]

    wikimedia

    So my point again - this was a dreadful choice of Nobel prize. And just because something was hard to do and took a technological breakthrough to do is not reason for a Nobel prize. If it were, we could give them out like candy.

  18. Re:I don't the big MPG/GPM deal on Fuel Efficiency Numbers Overstate MPG More For Cars With Small Engines · · Score: 1

    er no. I want to know how many miles I can go PER GALLON because the gas in my fuel tank is measured in... GALLONS. When that E light comes on I know how much further I can go.

    we purchase fuel, not mles.

  19. Worst physics nobel on 2014 Nobel Prize In Physics Awarded To the Inventors of the Blue LED · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    that I can remember. The jury is far from in on the true worth of LED lighting. Longevity claims are just that, claims and unproven. The cost remains very high and a burden to anyone forced to use LED lighting. Efficiency matters not if the bulb designed for 10 or more years dies in one or two.

    While Nobel wished to award for discovery or technology, there had to be better choices on the technology side than this obviously political choice.

  20. TV is not dead on The Era of Saturday Morning Cartoons Is Dead · · Score: 1

    When "Dancing with Stars" pulls 12.8M in the number 10 spot and a 8.3 rating, there are still a lot of people watching broadcast TV. The highest ranked prime time cable show that was non-football pulled 4.1M with a 2.5 rating. Netflix has about 45M subscribers. Their most popular showing, House of Cards was estimated to garner about 15% viewership (by one ISP on day), so thats in the 6M ish range.

    So while internet based viewing may have put a dent into broadcast (and cable), they are still the heavy weights by a good margin.

  21. Re:what of data resolution? on Supercomputing Upgrade Produces High-Resolution Storm Forecasts · · Score: 1

    That has to be perhaps the best AC post I've read on /. in a very long time, perhaps ever. Well done.

  22. Attribution? on JP Morgan Chase Breach: Shades of a Cyber Cold War? · · Score: 1

    Fail, fail and more fail. The press, three letter agencies and especially the congress critters love to a) inflate the threat and b) give attribution when none is possible. This book is extensively researched and has footnotes out the ying-yang. Bottom line is attribution at a level where one can say "these guys did it" is rare and even saying "probably did it" is difficult. And beware that many of the players involved have multiple objectives and even relationships with each other (when convenient).

  23. what of data resolution? on Supercomputing Upgrade Produces High-Resolution Storm Forecasts · · Score: 1

    Has the resolution and reliability of initial data points improved as well? Or are we just doing a finer interpolation of model output with same data input?

  24. Et tu, Linux? on Lost Opportunity? Windows 10 Has the Same Minimum PC Requirements As Vista · · Score: 2

    Slackware Linux doesn't require an extremely powerful system to run (though having one is quite nice :). It will run on systems as far back as the 486. Below is a list of minimum system requirements needed to install and run Slackware.

            486 processor
            64MB RAM (1GB+ suggested)
            About 5GB+ of hard disk space for a full install
            CD or DVD drive (if not bootable, then a bootable USB flash stick or PXE server/network card)

    Debian:

      A Pentium 4, 1GHz system is the minimum recommended for a desktop system.

    Table 3.2. Recommended Minimum System Requirements
    Install Type RAM (minimal) RAM (recommended) Hard Drive
    No desktop 64 megabytes 256 megabytes 1 gigabyte
    With Desktop 128 megabytes 512 megabytes 5 gigabytes

    Ubuntu Desktop Edition

            700 MHz processor (about Intel Celeron or better)
            512 MiB RAM (system memory)
            5 GB of hard-drive space (or USB stick, memory card or external drive but see LiveCD for an alternative approach)
            VGA capable of 1024x768 screen resolution
            Either a CD/DVD drive or a USB port for the installer media

            Internet access is helpful

    Linux Mint 16

    System requirements:

            x86 processor (Linux Mint 64-bit requires a 64-bit processor. Linux Mint 32-bit works on both 32-bit and 64-bit processors).
            512 MB RAM (1GB recommended for a comfortable usage).
            5 GB of disk space
            Graphics card capable of 800×600 resolution
            CD/DVD drive or USB port

  25. 6 months early? on GNOME 3.14 Released · · Score: 1

    did nobody think to release it on the proper date or just skip that version number? No wonder so many people hate on Gnome