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User: Mathieu+Lu

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  1. Elections in Quebec on Is Your Neighbor a Democrat? There's an App For That · · Score: 2

    If you think that's creepy, checkout:
    http://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/elections-quebec-2012/carte-du-financement-politique-au-quebec/

    Since 2011, any amount over 200$ was made public by the organisation overseeing elections. Since 2012 all amounts are public. This is (in part) to counter corporate fraud. Companies are not allowed to donate directly to political parties, so they ask their employees to do so.

  2. Re:One word on Can a Regular Person Repair a Damaged Hard Drive? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here are two PCB sellers in HK who ship overseas:
    http://www.onepcbsolution.com/
    http://www.hkmingdi.com/enindex.asp

    I found them off the forum of this site:
    http://www.deadharddrive.com/

    I wrote a short post about it in French, you can probably run it in google-translate. It took me a bit of time to figure out the PCB number on my Seagate drive, which is on the PCB, but on the side facing the disk, so I had to unscrew it to obtain it. (both HK sites were helpful and responded to my e-mails in good English).
    http://www.bidon.ca/fr/random/2011-04-12-disque-dur-ressuscite

  3. Re:One word on Can a Regular Person Repair a Damaged Hard Drive? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As the GP, I once had a burnt component on a PCB of a hard disk. I changed it using the *exact* model of the disk, and it worked. The disk was 100$ for a 500GB off eBay, which is a bit expensive, but afterwards I had a brand new disk to keep (I put the PCB back on the new disk once I finished retrieving the data). The seller on eBay provided the complete serial number in order to make it easy to find the correct replacement disk.

    There are also companies in Hong Kong that specialize in selling replacement PCBs. It's much cheaper, but bigger delays.

  4. Re:Patents on Amazon Reportedly Plans Smartphone · · Score: 1

    I guess I shouldn't feed the trollls.. but :

    I could survive with a phone running Windows, or even Vax VMS. I just wouldn't use it as much and would be far less amusing, secure and providing less freedom. Anyway, it's just a gadget, and one in decline, I'd argue.

    (I, for one, would welcome a VMS smart phone. If Microsoft did it, why not VMS?)

  5. Re:Patents on Amazon Reportedly Plans Smartphone · · Score: 1

    I don't know for the OP, but many of us still cling to our aging Nokia N900 running Maemo. Easy to hack/play, free as in freedom, based on Debian.

  6. Re:Really? on The PHP Singularity · · Score: 1

    That doesn't seem to me like a particularly good example. The reporter is being a dick and in most other languages this sort of behavior would have been classified as "undefined".

  7. Re:Features on Apple Under Fire For Backing Off IPv6 Support · · Score: 1

    Last week I was in a in a small village 2h north of San Francisco. The hotel had broken ipv4/NAT (using 200.200.200.1/32 for the internal network), but perfectly functionnal IPv6 (using Comcast).

    Most ISPs already have an IPv6 deployment plan. Most north american ISPs already ship wifi/dsl routers to their customers, so they will just switch the router at some point. No big deal really.

    (my home/office networks/ISPs/websites are already ipv6)

  8. Re:Unless you're rich, don't bother on Ask Slashdot: Store Umbilical Cord Blood — and If So, Where? · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Private cord banks are pure scam, abusing of vulnerable parents who do not want to take any risks ("a small price to pay for peace of mind").

    Public cord banks, on the other hand, save lives. Stem cells can be taken from a donor, not just from umbelical cords. Hema Quebec is a good example of an efficient public bank, imho.

    Not to mention that it is unlikely that a single umbelical cord would be enough to save a life. A person under 50kg may require up to the equivalent of 3 or 4 umbelical cords. (ref, in french)

  9. Re:Always love the "some people" bullshit. on Open Source Advocates' Attitudes Toward Profit · · Score: 1

    Your examples are a bit odd. RedHat seems to be doing fine, and more CentOS users means a bigger potential market for RedHat. There are a lot of success stories of free software communities that seem to be doing fine.

    Although MySQL is in a weird spot now, the way it evolved is impressive. Also note that MySQL folks use to explain the dual-license as: "if you make money, then so do I". i.e. if your program is proprietary, no problem, you can link with MySQL, but then pay a licence fee. It was a good model for MySQL, imho.

    I'm a developer and contribute/adapt/deploy fundraising and member management solutions that are completely GPL (CiviCRM and Drupal). Any patch I do for my clients, I publish it online, or put in more billable time to get the patch into the original program. My clients understand that they now have a choice of consultants and find it wonderful that we are a ton of people who understand this code. They are more autonomous, can do more stuff, and usually at less cost.

    Anyway, the quote from Monthy seems really out of context. Afaik, Stallman finds proprietary software immoral, not profit. The argument is usually made that making money from proprietary software, while it may feed your family, causes harm to others. I don't see how making profit from free software would be an issue.

    This said, imho, everyone has to do some compromises in order to survive, but more people succeed than you think.

  10. Re:Implementation on Have Online Comment Sections Become Specious? · · Score: 1

    I agree on the common ground aspect.

    I'd add that when the story summary on slashdot is incomplete, someone usually reads the article and posts a better summary, gets modded up, and discussion moves on from there.

    Most big media outlets will not let you criticise their summary. They usually post short-term rubbish to attract clicks and do advertising revenue. They often use misleading headlines and poor context. Not much of a surprise that the discussion afterwards goes nowhere.

    Ideally, I do secretly wish that online discussions could be more similar to a real roundtable. It's very difficult to summarise a slashdot discussion. After 24-48h, it just kind of slows down and we move to something new and shiny. In a roundtable, a moderator usually tries to re-state the divergences of opinion to get a good understanding of the various positions. Otherwise it's just the same people repeating the same thing with different words. "Slashbacks" (something like that?), a while ago, kind of tried to do that, I guess, but they were done by slashdot editors.

  11. Internal e-mail: issue tracker on Europe's Largest IT Company To Ban Internal Email · · Score: 1

    I use e-mail a lot, but I also have a hard time keeping track of it. Group discussions over e-mail can be a mess.

    For internal communication, most companies fail to use an issue tracker (to keep track of internal task dispatching between teams and announcements). I find that for small-medium sized companies, tools such as Redmine are a great way to reduce the quantity of e-mail. (and yes, even in non-development shops)

    It's also nice to have a person create a weekly/monthly digest so that no one misses anything important -- but only one e-mail per week, and only with links to what is in the tracker.

    Anyway, I'm sure there are tons of books/articles already on the topic, but I was surprised not to see much talk about issue trackers in this thread.

  12. Re:Anti-Trust on MS To Build Antivirus Into Win8: Boon Or Monopoly? · · Score: 1

    Well, exploits are used by viruses to spread. You have intent and escalation, the rest is just how you deliver the payload.

    But no argument from me on the rest of your post. I haven't used MIcrosoft software in 12 years, including at work. :)

  13. Re:Anti-Trust on MS To Build Antivirus Into Win8: Boon Or Monopoly? · · Score: 5, Informative

    When was the last active Linux virus released?

    To be fair.. under Linux you do have userspace exploits that allow you to gain root, and from there install a rootkit. They tend to be really obscur and get patched quickly, but they still exist.

    So an attacker usually needs to combine, for example, a Firefox/Libreoffice/PDF/Mail/PHP exploit, userspace exploit, then rootkit. And there are tons and tons of servers out there with old versions of PHP and Linux kernel. Most of the time people discover it only because they are exploited by spammers.

  14. Re:Gnome 3 User on Ask Slashdot: Unity/Gnome 3/Win8/iOS — Do We Really Hate All New GUIs? · · Score: 1

    You can re-enable nautilus using the gnome-tweak-tool.

    I have to admit that I always disliked nautilus in gnome2 (visual clutter), so I was happy to see it disabled by default. I only re-enabled it on my HTPC so that my 4 year old kid can find her stuff easily.

  15. This would probably be better as a poll.. but for what it's worth, I like Gnome 3.

    I used fvwm for the past 10 years, always the same config file. I really disliked Gnome 2 (too much clutter, clunky). However, I was starting to have a few annoyances with fvwm and found myself wasting too much time on getting it to work right.

    Gnome 3 (using Debian unstable/experimental packages) is great. I tweaked a few things, but even with the default conf I don't mind.. except maybe how alt-tab is broken, and sloppy mouse focus is not great, but I see they are working on it.

  16. Re:And all 300,000... on Paywalled NYT Now Has 300,000 Online Subscribers · · Score: 1

    Thanks for clarifying. You state valid and interesting points. I agree that paper is deprecated, by "newspaper" I meant news site or whatever, in reference to your 300 000 idiots.

    With regards to your second point, I pay to support journalistic independence and editorial integrity. I don't have time to read the news every minute. I take around 15 minutes to read the news in the morning from 5 websites (1 is my local newspaper, the others are a mix of Canadian, British and French). I also like to listen to the short 5 minute bulletin which is aired on the national radio at 7 AM when I wake up, and around midnight they have a short news bulletin which is the summary of all francophone national radios. I appreciate the editorial work that they do in order to communicate as much information as possible in a tiny amount of time.

    I want the news to be useful, non-redundant, insightful. I don't want to waste time with tabloid news just because they need to boost their advertising revenue.

    About advertising, I use adblock+. I really can't stand advertising.

    But I think, as you mention, the problem is that the US media are broken. People on this forum mentioned the Ecoonmist as a good example of a news digest, but personally I'm not a big fan. I have to admit that I am happy that I can read news sources in a few languages. The contrast is often stunning.

  17. Re:And all 300,000... on Paywalled NYT Now Has 300,000 Online Subscribers · · Score: 1

    Can you elaborate why?

    The way I see it, either you're the client, since you are paying a subscription, or the advertisers are the client, in which case you are just a product sold to advertisers.

    I gladly pay my 15$/month to my local newspaper. It helps to guarantee their editorial independence, which is why I read their newspaper.

    Otherwise, please elaborate on how we could be non-idiotic and have alternative business models. The only one that comes to mind is citizen journalism, such as Indymedia, which I very much appreciate, but I appreciate professional journalism as well.

  18. Re:Can't be right on Telecomix Releases 54GB of Syrian Censorship Logs · · Score: 1

    Have you been to Syria? It's quite a complicated place, and has a fascinating history :)

    I was there last year, slightly before the uprisings started. While I did most of the usual backpacker routes (Damascus, Hamah, Aleppo, Palmyra), with the occasional getting lost, hitchhiking and crossing to/from Lebanon using odd routes), I met a lot of people who barely spoke English and just felt like communicating. I found people to be very open minded, proud of their culture, curious about others and somewhat indifferent about their incompetent government (as if it's that big brother who just keeps screwing up, until it reached a breaking point where they figured it's time to kick him out).

    https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Syria

    Generalizing about "arabs" is the same as those who generalize about "americans". Ex: americans are just a bunch of ignorant trigger-happy rednecks who don't realize that sexual abstinence has a high rate of failure (increases the risks of teen pregnancy and STD propagation). The US are capable of doing the best .. but also being irresponsible of doing the worst.

    (disclaimer: I am from Montreal, and from the current path we are on right now, it won't be long before we end up in the same ditch)

  19. Thanks on Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda Resigns From Slashdot · · Score: 1

    Slashdot has always been a great place for interesting news and discussion. I wish you the best in your new adventures.

    matt

    (some random guy who just happens to have a low uid, but let me know if you visit Montreal!)

  20. Re:I can't wait . . . on Russia Approves Siberia-Alaska Railway · · Score: 1

    If you take the train from an Eastern European country to Russia, they usually make you switch trains. It's not a big hassle.

    Besides, trains in Russia need a samovar, and the US would probably find a way to consider that too dangerous for passengers :)

  21. Re:Pedestrian problems? on Roundabout Revolution Sweeping US · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A few places in Montreal use round-abouts with zebra crossings for pedestrians, with a small sign that says "100$ fine if you do not give priority to pedestrians". While there are always exceptions, it works pretty well.

    Cars drive a bit slower, but given that they don't have long lights to wait for, it is generally faster. Win-win.

    (which is a bit surprising, since Montreal is probably one of the worst cities in North America with regards to respecting road signs, by either motorists, cyclists or pedestrians, but my impression is that when removing road clutter, people kind of start thinking again)

  22. Running IPv6 in practice on Vint Cerf Calls For IPv6 Incentives In UK · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I always had a hard time understanding IPv6 until I read the Running IPv6 in practice howto on Debian-administration and tried it at home. The next move is configuring the office where I work to use such a tunnel, then a friend's colo server, then our hosting environment. It's really not hard. Get over the adressing scheme. IPv6 is much easier to manage than NAT.

    Tunnelbroker by Hurricane-Electric also does a great job of making IPv6 easy to use and fun to learn (the "certification" games). They also throw in free DNS hosting, and announcing IPv6 addresses using BGP is possible.

    Now stop whining and bite the bullet :-)

  23. Re:Are they 'kin mad? on Microsoft Holds iPhone Funeral Event · · Score: 1

    Nah, it's just to remind developers about all those zombie Windows boxes out there on the networks, reminding us that looking at the past is a way of looking into the future.

  24. Re:Are IE 7 or 8 useable? on Wine 1.2 Released · · Score: 1

    You can try the Vista + IE8 VirtualBox images provided by Microsoft at no cost: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=21eabb90-958f-4b64-b5f1-73d0a413c8ef&displaylang=en

    I use this to test websites for IE7 / IE8 under Linux. It should be used only for testing purposes. The images expire after 60 days (just re-donwnload when they expire).

    You could probably get Windows to run with your license in VirtualBox too (VirtualBox is similar to Vmware, but Free Software).

    Here is a short tutorial for Debian in French that you can run in google translate, though I am sure there are tons of howtos in English on the web:
    http://bidon.ca/random/2010-03-13-configurer-virtualbox-pour-tester-ie7-ie8-sous-debian-gnulinux

  25. Re:Never sacrifice proven infrastructure on AT&T Readying For the End of Analog Landlines · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Still sounds like a rip-off. I just pay a specialized VoIP provider, such as unlimitel.ca or voip.ms, for a "by the minute" SIP/IAX2 account. It has a 3.50$/month base fee and 1.1cent/minute for north-american calls. Our monthly bill is rarely more than 10$/month. It also gives us reasonnable rates for calling Europe (2-3cents/minute). Call quality is always good (although that will mostly depend on your broadband connection). Stuff like caller-id, multiple concurrent calls, etc. are included. You can also change your outgoing caller-id, so that if you work from home, your clients will not notice. There is a good choice of VoIP providers, and you can use many providers at once.

    For incoming calls, we also have a DID in a european country (where my wife has family) that costs us a 8$/month flat fee (unlimited) from didww.com. This allows family to call us by making a local call (good for the grand-parents). We also have a north american 1-800 number for when we have do to calls from a public phone booth (which you can find in every metro station, while waiting for the train). The 1-800 is 4cent/min, so it is usually cheaper to make short calls than the 50cent/call that Bell charges. Using Asterisk, we have special codes to reroute calls from a phone booth to do outgoing calls, so that if we are outside home, we can easily make a call to either home, or elsewhere, for just a few cents (ever had to call Australia, while waiting for the metro?).

    Finally, as people migrate to VoIP systems using Asterisk, we route calls between us directly (p2p SIP), so that there is no fee to call each other. Also works well with mobile devices such as Nokia n800/n900.

    Anyway, VoIP can be a great thing. But as geeks, this is one thing that most of us can easily learn and extend. We should never depend on large carriers for VoIP, since if they can get another penny by making yet-another-marketing-scam, they will.