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User: some+old+guy

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  1. Truth Funnier than Fiction on Russia Captures Alleged American CIA Agent In Moscow · · Score: 1

    The CIA and MI5 on one side, with the "no such thing as a former Chekist" FSB on the other, makes for more hijinks than anything Hal Roach could have produced with Laurel and Hardy or The Little Rascals.

    At least the Russians have some foxy spies, even if they perform like ZaSu Pitts in a custard pie fight.

    And these people are professionals? It is to laugh.

    No wonder the CIA leans on the Mossad for a great deal of information.

  2. They Learned From SCO on New Prenda Law Shell Corp Threatening to Tell Your Neighbors You Pirated Porn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sure they are perfectly aware that their claims are groundless and probably illegal. They're also aware that their lifespan is shrinking rapidly.

    I think what they're doing is seeing how many poor schmucks they can scare into settling for a few quick bucks before the whole scheme implodes.

    Clearly, SCO's "Linux Licensing" was a model modus operandi for trolls everywhere.

  3. Gleefully Counting Nails on How Facebook Ruined Comments (at Least For One Writer) · · Score: 1

    Google analysts are no doubt watching the FB decline and making comparissons to Yahoo, MySpace, et al.

    We'll soon have an answer to the question, "How many nails does it take to seal a social network coffin?"

    That still leaves open the question of what sort of nails. How many nails are bollocksed user interface features, like this one, and how many are an overabundance of marketing crappola?

    Aye, there's the rub.

  4. A Passing Thought... on No New S-300 Air-Defense System To Syria Says Russia — But Maybe Old Ones · · Score: 2

    Might this not be an opportune time for the US to stop living up to its image overseas as a big, blundering, international bully and just let the locals fend for themselves?

    With a millions of Islamic loonies on their doorstep, and their own disasters in Afghanistan and Chechnya to remind them, one would think that the Russians would have better sense than to keep exacerbating and encouraging Middle-Eastern instability.

    No, I suppose both powers' energy and defense industries are more important than anybody else's self-determination.

    Economic and political pragmatism trumps idealism every time.

  5. Re:Oh, don't worry! on DoD Descends On DEFCAD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem isn't government. The problem is the passive, benighted electorate that tolerates it. We, as a population, get the government we deserve.

  6. Re:The machine exists on Dissecting RSA's 'Watering Hole' Traffic Snippet · · Score: 5, Funny

    Being a VM, the machine both exists and doesn't exist.

    Entanglement theory proven!

    Beat that!

  7. Re:May have... on English May Have Retained Words From an Ice Age Language · · Score: 2

    I'd wait until a real linguist, rather than an archaeologist, makes this hypothesis. I wonder what Noam Chomsky would make of this theory.

  8. Re:Not true on Former FBI Agent: All Digital Communications Stored By US Gov't · · Score: 1

    Three letters, my friend: AT&T.

    The backbone your moderate-size telco routes traffic over is all the access anyone needs to to monitor and record as they wish.

    The fact that most people are so naive about government surveillance isn't what hurts. It's that people who know are so passive about accepting it.

    We are not far from that defining moment when the last facade of private communication is dropped and we welcome our Big Data / Big Brother overlords into the sunlight with open arms.

  9. Direct or Indirect Expenses? on Ask Slashdot: What's Your Company's Marketing-to-Engineering Ratio? · · Score: 1

    In a manufacturing business, engineering will often have direct expenses like one-off charges for trial materials, and esoteric accounting items like built-in down time costs, amortized efficiency, etc. that can be considerable but never approach the necessary travel, printing, and ad-buy costs the marketing weasels must budget for.

    OTOH, engineering gets next to nothing in indirect expenses like printer cartridges or the occasional professional class/seminar, but marketers are usually treated like golden children of the gods, and they get opulent offices, extravagant "team-building" and "sales-force development" group vacations, and the latest and greatest of everything.

    Is thinly-veiled jealousy or bitterness on the part of engineers justified by this? In a capitalist economy, no. It's just the way it works.

    The payback for me, personally, is the satisfaction of retaining a shard of self-respect and integrity. I will never be lumped together with salesmen, lawyers, politicians, clerics, and the other professional sociopaths.

  10. Re:What Information? on Chinese Hackers Infiltrate US Army Database, Compromise Safety of Dams · · Score: 1

    No and yes.

    Just try doing periodic security tasks. Siemens security is still a bloated, badly implemented kluge-fest. Hell, on big systems you're down for days just migrating to a new IP address range. Don't even get me started on S7 subnet ID's. Know-how Protect has bricked more 300's than all the maintenance doofusses in history.

    Honeywell Distributed, Delta V, and Rockwell are all miles ahead of Siemens on this.

  11. Advanced Automation Is A Necessary Evil on Robots Help Manufacturing Recover Without Adding Jobs · · Score: 1

    Yes, I am an evil manufacturing systems integrator. I have put hundreds of honest, hard-working, but low-paid and low-skilled people out of a job in my career.

    However, I've also created dozens of jobs for highly-skilled and well-paid operators and maintenance personnel.

    Go ahead and hate me, but the companies I work for are still in business and still employ people. Without automation, they'd have been long gone.

    Any serious effort to bring more manufacturing back on-shore has to include maximing the operational efficiency of the factory.

  12. Whatever They Do on House Judiciary Chairman Plans Comprehensive Review of US Copyright Law · · Score: 1

    you can be absolutely certain that it will

    1. Benefit comapaign-contributor busnesses.
    2. Cost consumers money.
    3. Result in uneven, draconian enforcement.
    4. Require a bigger burocracy to implement (3).
    .

  13. Re:China also buiding coal plants like mad on China Leads in "Clean" Energy Investment · · Score: 1

    Also, let me state the obvious. In China, the government has great power. It can use this power to accomplish big things. Some of these things are good. Many are bad. Use state media and censorship to give the population one side of story? Check.

    China's economic and political power structure is merely the reverse-polarity flow of the USA's, all of it biased by the Big Global Capital Dynamo. In China, government controls and enables companies; in the US, companies control and enable the government.

    Oh, that crap about Constitutions, Manifestos, and other political ideology? C'mon, mate. That's SO mid-20th Century. It's window dressing for the masses, nothing more.

    There is no "competition" with China, because there is no competition. Just international profiteering.

    Insert obligatory "In Soviet Russia..." remark here:___________________

  14. Term Limits for All on Ask Slashdot: What Planks Would You Want In a Platform of a Political Party? · · Score: 1

    Two-term lifetime maximum regardless of office. No more entrenched career hacks.

  15. From Russia With Love on One Boston Marathon Bomb Suspect Dead, Other At Large After Shootout With Police · · Score: 1

    I just happened across a UPI story that our favorite no-such-thing-as-a-former Chekist telegraphed Obama with an offer of investigative assistance. Two days before it became known they were Chechens! Maybe the FSB was sandbagging us? Or just coincidence? I don't know. I just found it ironic. Here's the link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2013/04/16/Putin-offers-Obama-aid-in-Boston-Marathon-bombing-investigation/UPI-59841366130396/

  16. Re:Golden Opportunity on Google Gets Consumer Service Ultimatum From German Consumer Groups · · Score: 1

    I think I like German law. And beer.

    Too bad that American privacy laws, and most beers, suck.

  17. Re:Golden Opportunity on Google Gets Consumer Service Ultimatum From German Consumer Groups · · Score: 1

    Google response: In accordance with the ToS you agreed to, that information is the property of Google and we can do whatever we damned well feel like. Go ahead, sue us. We have more lawyers than you.

  18. Re:Children don't like their parents music on Ask Slashdot: What's the Best Way To Preserve a "Digital Inheritance"? · · Score: 1

    My 23-year-old stepdaughter plays Pink Floyd and Jethro Tull in between her Foo Fighters and Three Doors Down.

    My 14-year-old-son thinks the Beatles are amazing.

    My 21-year-old nephew is a Dead Head.

    Your knowlege of other peoples' children is somewhat sparse.

  19. Re:iterative dev, no docs, took us to the moon... on How NASA Brought the F-1 Rocket Engine Back To Life · · Score: 4, Funny

    65 unique, poorly-documented builds?

    Sounds like a typical SAP migration to me.

  20. Re:Envy, jealousy, socialistic class warfare on Electrical Engineer Unemployment Soars; Software Developers' Rate Drops to 2.2% · · Score: 1

    If I had points I'd mod this up to the Moon.

    However, there is a better name for our state than "quasi-socialist-fascist".

    It's called this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoliberalism

  21. Shodan HQ Slashdotted! on The Search Engine More Dangerous Than Google · · Score: 1

    404 City!

  22. Re:Useless Russian police? on Russian Cyber Criminal Unmasked As Creator of "Most Successful" Apple Malware · · Score: 2

    Not useless, complicit.

    Regarding the FSB, "There is no such thing as a former Chekist."- Vladimir Putin

  23. Oooh! Faster! on IEEE Launches 400G Ethernet Standards Process · · Score: 1

    Marketing buffoons: "Woohoo! More blinly-twirly CGI widgets and streamed kewt kitteh ads!"

    Web Developers: "That will be $$$, please."

    Data Center Professionals: "It's about time!"

    Consumers on throttled DSL or cable connections: "Meh..."

  24. Re:In other news... on Cuban Video Game Recreates Revolutionary History · · Score: 1, Insightful

    When you have a combat boot crushing your throat, it doesn't matter if its a Left boot or a Right boot.

  25. Re:I don't understand. on Real-Time Gmail Spying a 'Top Priority' For FBI This Year · · Score: 1

    You still labor under the illusion that warrants really mean anything any more.

    What this is really about is providing a framework of legitimacy for what the NSA and the other alphabet agencies already do.

    It is designed to prevent unpleasantries like adverse court rulings and bad publicity for said agencies.

    Don't lose any sleep over it. It's too late to stop any of it, so why bother trying? It will only get you investigated, blacklisted, and jailed.

    Oh, that "vote" thingy? LOL, that's a good one!