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User: jpu8086

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  1. Abe is the biggest cluster on a BigTen campus on Purdue Plans a 1-Day Supercomputer "Barnraising" · · Score: 1

    Biggest on Big10 campus is a lie.

    The article lists BigRed at Indiana (#43 on Top500) based on a technicality. But even the technicality is incorrect. The ABE cluster at NCSA@UIUC (#14 on Top500) is literally on the UIUC campus.

    I doubt the Purdue one will beat Abe on the Top500 list.

  2. Re:At Least they aren't changing Thinkpads. on Lenovo Announces the IdeaPad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Drop the non-apple qualifier. ThinkPads are *the* best laptops. EOF.

  3. Re:why Palau? on Palau May Get Satellite Power In the Next Decade · · Score: 2

    because you can only have so many diesel generators on an island.

  4. Re:India likes OS software on Indian Government Keen on Open Source · · Score: 1

    ROFL. 22 billion+?

    btw, yeah, i meant what i wrote! =)

  5. Re:India likes OS software on Indian Government Keen on Open Source · · Score: 5, Informative

    Those 22 languages (AFAIK, there are only 18 official languages, but maybe this has changed recently) are the ones spoken by at least one million people.

    There are many other "minor" languages spoken by other people.

    Mind you, these are not dialects. These are full-blown unique languages with unique written scripts (however, many of them do share common traits).

    It is amazing how we are able to maintain a democracy, let alone a country.

  6. Re:If I'm not mistaken... on Washington State Outlaws Spyware · · Score: 1

    umm? what exactly is a HQ? doesn't HQ stands for head quarters?

    if so, there can only be one.

  7. Re:If I'm not mistaken... on Washington State Outlaws Spyware · · Score: 1

    You're wrong.

    Only Nintendo of America is HQed in Redmond. Nintendo (parent corp) in HQed in Kyoto, Japan.

    And, Google is not HQed in Kirkland. They're HQed in Mountain View.

    But, Redmond does have a sizable number of companies around like Nintendo, Safeco, AT&T wireless (now Cingular), etc.

  8. PETA approved on Internet Hunting Banned in California · · Score: 2, Interesting

    PETA likes this legislature. They pulled for it. They proclaim victory on their front page.

  9. Re:Economic impact of this? on Software Patents Stopped in India · · Score: 1

    "Copyright Laws are international and know no bounds"

    Umm..since when? All laws are restricted to a given legal entity (generally a country). Each entity decides how to enforce their own laws.

    It is true that most countries (if not all) have copyright laws, but the parameters (such as lifetime of a copyright) varies significantly. In that sense, your statement is non sensical.

  10. Re:Is this a UIUC comeback? on Experimental Transistor Breaks 600 Gigahertz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If I found out who you were, I'd come bitch slap you.

    First of all, this transistor was developed in the ECE dept, not CS.

    As for CS, we're not droping in rankings. On the other hand, we shall be climbing very soon. We have the highest percentage (and number) of young faculty of any CS program in the world. I give us 2-4 years before you see the results of the rampant hiring over the past 2-3 years (15+ new faculty members), who are all pushing to get tenure over the next half-decade.

    Finally, Mosaic, the original httpd and NCSA telnet were all "intented" at NCSA, not at CS department. However, they did hire tons of CS grad students on those project. Nonetheless, these 2-3 inventions are not the only things that make us prestigous, except maybe in the eyes of mainstream media and the lay man.

  11. Re:Time for open-source player lists on EA Disparages Take-Two's MLB Deal · · Score: 3, Funny

    FYI, Tactille Surreal got traded to the Miami Feat this past off season. Maybe you were thinking of Lamer Hoodlum.

  12. The Big Cheese on Gates Gets Government Guards for Gala · · Score: 2, Informative

    How Bill Gates came to be known as the big cheese (story includes the trouble that follows).

  13. Re:scammers on Best Buy Says Customers Not Always Right · · Score: 1

    Don't worry. BestBuy appreciates long-term under-paid theiving employees. It is cheaper to hire and maintain them than hire ethical high-turnover employees.

  14. Re:I use a tritium nightlight. really. on Spider-Man 2 Has Over 30 Mistakes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Actually tritium has a half life of 12.3 years, so **they** lied. You'll need to get it replaced or refilled in 10 years, just like all other tritium-based devices (like gun sights).

  15. Re:Overclockers and their "huge mamma" fans on Intel CPU Warranty Invalid w/o CPU Fan? · · Score: 0

    I dont beleive that for a second. *IF* they are loud, invest in a good case. However, I don't think the processor fans are loud by themself. Its the other case fans (which are larger and more in number) that make most of the noise.

    The Dell boxes that use retail Intel processors and fans are generally very quite. Rated below 30db.

  16. Overclockers and their "huge mamma" fans on Intel CPU Warranty Invalid w/o CPU Fan? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is obviously a scheme to deter overclockers from scamming away at Intel's Expense.

    Holy shit, the 3.2 Ghz Processor blew up when I ran it at 4.0 Ghz. Let me try and get a new one. Oops, I glued on a custom industrial-quality fan to cool the damn thing.

    I mean why would a person NOT use the fan provided by Intel in the retail package? The complete package is warranted, if something happens -- it is Intel's problem. So, don't put monster fans when the retail package will do.

  17. Re:Konqueror on Future for Web Standards Pondered · · Score: 2, Informative

    FIrstly, QT was never available under GPL on Windows. It was available under a free for non-profit basis (some restricted "freeware" license). This stopped with the 2.3 release because lots of Win32 developers would just use it and never buy the full license until the final release of the program. In other words, buy 1 license for mutliple developers and only near the end of the release cycle.

    Additioanlly, the $2000 license is a propreitary license. You can not just simply compile konqueror on it for both technical and financial reasons. Konq uses KDE extensions to QT, which are not available with the QT on Windows. Secondly, Konq and KHTML are released under the GPL, which means that the Windows developer would have to release the code under GPL too. I suppose this could be stall point as recuperating costs could be a problem. I know donations can be accepted but no guarantees.

  18. Re:Round Two on More From Tanenbaum · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not arguing your point about being multilinked, but making a point regarding the variance in slashdotting:

    I suppose the popularity of GNU/Linux, the historic Linus vs. Andy debates, the FUD being brought out by ADTI (and the aforementioned Brown book) all must play a role in getting a "bigger slashdotting".

    This report was of core essence to all users (and fans) of GNU/Linux, so one can easily assume a slashdotting of great proportions. It only helps that a person of great respect, prestige, and fame has tarnished the credibility of Brown and boosted the legality of the Linux kernel in the report.

  19. Re:You said it... on Worst Explanation From Tech Support? · · Score: 4, Informative

    "had him cuss the tech support guy in Hindu"

    Thank god it wasn't me, I would have cussed him out in Christianity.

    Hindi is the language. Hindu is the religion.

  20. Re:US: Protection by the fifth amendment on The Man Who (Really) Makes Google Tick · · Score: 1

    Ah, you didnt specify civil vs. criminal. =)

  21. US: Protection by the fifth amendment on The Man Who (Really) Makes Google Tick · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At least in the US, a good lawyer can make a case that the PGP will self-incriminate based on the fifth amendment.

    I dont know about the other parts of the world.

  22. Re:Uh, prior-art? on Professor and Student Thwart P2P File Sharing · · Score: 1

    I was just talking about the Sybil attack in general. However, I see how that doesnt follow directly.

    However, but do tell how do you trust the first time you swap keys? What if it an RIAA enforcer? And this doesnot have to just deal with mp3/audio files.

    I was talking about a global trust matrix. There are many complications with this:

    For example: Client A, B, C.

    Client A trusts Client B and vice versa
    Client A trusts Client C and vice versa

    So, Client B is introduced to Client C by Client A.

    However, there is a misunderstanding between Client B and Client C and they mistrust each other.

    Now what?

    Does B still want to trust A? Does C still want to trust A? Does A still want to trust either on of them?

    Wow. This situation sucks.

  23. Re:Uh, prior-art? on Professor and Student Thwart P2P File Sharing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Only your key is known to the central sites so that your identity remains anonymous but your habits can be tracked"

    You contradict myself. You are not anonymous if someone knows who you are. You might get a feeling of anonymity because of the shelter provided by the powers to be. But, that is all at their mercy.

    Don't confuse privacy for anonymity.

  24. Re:Uh, prior-art? on Professor and Student Thwart P2P File Sharing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Things that are really, really hard to implement in a true P2P network:
    - Global trust matrix
    - Economy
    - Authentication

    These are hard because the equality of peers can always be exploited by users with malicious intent. They can join in the P2P network as multiple peers (if a network limits one user per IP, an attacker with multiple computers and sufficient resources can compromise). Remember that in a true P2P network everyone is equal - it is nearly impossible to implement schemes that avoid the Sybil attack.

    You need a central certificate authority to validate the autheticity of users. And, that is a big no-no in P2P systems.

    So, forget about trust matrix. You can't trust anyone in a true P2P network.

  25. umm, isn't something wrong here? on Estonia Embraces Wi-Fi Wireless Internet Access · · Score: 5, Insightful

    how in the world do 280 public hot spots cover two-thirds of a country (that is 45,226 sq km in area)?

    what is the technology behind these super hot spots? or is this just another case of aggrandized mathematics?