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User: wasabii

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  1. Protected Mode Bug on Adobe's Reader X Spoils New PDF Attack · · Score: 1

    I had to disable this sandbox (protected mode) across my network. Makes it impossible to open PDF files from DFS shares. Boo.

  2. Re:They also support 6RD and 6to4 on Comcast Activates IPv6 Trial Users · · Score: 1

    The 6to4 prefix is routable, isn't it? I can connect to any IPv6 native stuff I've tried with it. Thought the real problem was if your packets got grabbed by something that advertised a route for it, but didn't do it properly.

  3. Re:why? on Comcast Activates IPv6 Trial Users · · Score: 2

    I should also mention that running IPv4 over IPv6 is kind of weird, and presents more problems than a proper dual stack.

  4. Good on Comcast Activates IPv6 Trial Users · · Score: 2

    The point of this is to uncover any issues with customer equipment that prevents it. Any modern Vista or Windows 7 box by default has IPv6 enabled, and it works just fine. I know. I use it on all of my company's machines. Any devices that isn't aware of IPv6 will just ignore it. I'm expecting some poor IPv6 translation technologies on cheap routers that break with real IPv6 presence. That's kind of the only downside I can imagine.

    Customers behind an existing IPv4-only NAT device won't even be touched.

  5. Re:why? on Comcast Activates IPv6 Trial Users · · Score: 1

    The transition technologies are in place so that it can work.

  6. Re:But... on Comcast Activates IPv6 Trial Users · · Score: 1

    No clue what that means. I run it across my company. Including 6to4 on the internet heads.

  7. NT on Comcast Activates IPv6 Trial Users · · Score: 2

    It's actually the only solution.

  8. Re:"and uses DirectX (ugh...)" on Arx Fatalis Updated, Released Under GPL · · Score: 1

    Curiously, how did it hurt them? =)

    Modern DirectX (not saying anything about whatever version this particular game uses) is so much nicer to develop games in than OpenGL. MS has spent a lot of time focusing specifically on game developers in it's design... OpenGL ain't much more than a graphics library.

  9. Re:Translation on Avoiding DMCA Woes As an Indy Game Developer? · · Score: 2

    Hah. Yeah right. Recreating images in the likeness of is just as much a copyright violation as hitting copy/paste is.

    Clone games go down like this all the time.

  10. WANLs on Avoiding DMCA Woes As an Indy Game Developer? · · Score: 2

    Hire a lawyer. He'll file a counter notice, and defend you in the lawsuit. Or preemptively sue.

    Or hire a wizard and have him wave his fingers to make your game clone go away.

  11. Re:At least someone has balls (and common sense) on DDoS Attack On Wikileaks Increasing · · Score: 1

    To convey information with intent to interfere with the operation or success of the armed forces of the United States or to promote the success of its enemies. This was punishable by death or by imprisonment for not more than 30 years or both.

    I know this is semantic bullshit, but I don't think his intention is to interfere with the operation of the US, or help it's enemies. I think his intention is simply that the information should be leaked, come what may.

  12. Re:WPF on What 2D GUI Foundation Do You Use? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The whole 'recursively templated tree' thing is really ingenious. It sets it quite a bit apart from the single tree model of all the other frameworks I'm aware of.

  13. Re:WPF on What 2D GUI Foundation Do You Use? · · Score: 1

    I agree. WPF's design is quite unlike any other UI toolkit I'm aware of. I wish there was a version that worked on !Windows.

  14. Re:.NET on What 2D GUI Foundation Do You Use? · · Score: 1

    ".Net" isn't a UI platform. You probably mean WinForms. Or maybe WPF. There are other UI frameworks for .Net, I used to do a lot of work in Gtk#, before I switched to WPF.

    I've never used WInforms for anything serious though. Gtk# was always better than it, back then.

  15. You are all wrong. on Yale Law Student Wants Government To Have Everybody's DNA · · Score: 1

    First off, his technical points are correct. The fingerprints cannot be used to discover anything specific about you by themselves.

    The second point is more complicated. Are we comfortable with being compelled by the government to carry around with us material that they can identify, correlate to discover where we travel, and then use to build a profile of our activities?

    I'd say the second point is a duh. We already are. I have on me now a government ID, which I scan to get into a bunch of bars. Which I'm compelled to show on demand to a cop when driving. My car's license plate correlates to me, and lets any camera anywhere identify where I am. I guess I'd wonder how much easier could it get to them? I guess if every hair I dropped could identify me, that'd be a bit worse. But certainly not much.

    If we care about the second point, we should really start showing it. You know. Stop driving. Ride a bike. Don't carry ID with you. Since I doubt we're going to do that, they've already won. We should just give them the DNA fingerprints so they stop wasting our tax dollars on doing it the more difficult way. :)

  16. Silly on Ryan Gordon Ends FatELF Universal Binary Effort · · Score: 1

    This is silly. Nobody even distributes Linux binaries. They distribute Linux packages. Hell, even on Windows, the number of distributed .exe's has gone down. Most things get packaged into MSI. This is fine.

    Maybe what he wants is an easier way for developers to package their stuff for many distros.

  17. Re:Nice on HTC Finally Releases Hero Source Code · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What, if any, is the (physical or otherwise) obstacle for this device to become a hacker's darling? Here "hacker" is used in that old, positive meaning.

    I guess the same as every other Android phone? A signed flashing process that needs to be cracked?

    The only reason people can install custom Android copies on the G1 is because of a leaked SPL and the root console bug. Oh, and the ADP.

  18. Re:Ha ha on Firefox Disables Microsoft .NET Addon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Mike,

    Hi.

    I have over 100+ boxes at work that depend on this plugin. When I get into work tomorrow, if they're not working (they run FF), then I'm not going to have much choice but to switch back to IE, am I?

    I frankly did not know you guys had this ability to unilaterally disable things I depend on. That is a bit disturbing. It's going to unexpectedly cost me HOURS tomorrow.

    Can you at least switch the block to only block unpatched versions? I'd agree with that.

  19. Re:MS kinda overstepped its bounds on this one. on Firefox Disables Microsoft .NET Addon · · Score: 2, Informative

    A vulnerability which has already been patched. I use this functionality on over 100+ machines at the office. I've already deployed the patch. As far as I can tell, there's no easy way for me to disable the block list. I'm going to get into work tomorrow and switch 100+ boxes back to IE, if they don't reverse it. And I won't be switching them back to FF.

  20. Re:Bad for Firefox in the long run? on Firefox Disables Microsoft .NET Addon · · Score: 2

    Yup. Basically. I'm going to be super pissed if I have to walk around to 100+ machines tomorrow morning and uninstall Firefox. Seriously. That'll be the end of that.

  21. Re:Great on Firefox Disables Microsoft .NET Addon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not exactly. It also allows you to run .Net and WPF apps inline in the browser, hosting a CLR instance. Not to mention mapping the ClickOnce file type.

  22. Re:Security issues with Google Chrome? on Microsoft Says Google Chrome Frame Makes IE Less Secure · · Score: 1

    I don't know. This makes sense to me. The IE frame spawns processes with less privledges than the user has, when running on Vista. This means plugins that are harmful cannot actually access the hard drive or registry, nor a

    Since Chrome does not do this, then yes, it is less secure.

  23. recommended review on How To Make Science Popular Again? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I recommend Jerry Coyne's review of this book. It eviscerates it.

    http://whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com/2009/07/14/unscientific-unscientific-america-part-1/

  24. Re:how much is it? on Nokia Releases Linux Handset · · Score: 1

    SDK? Funny.

    It's Linux. With Debian. You build .deb packages and install them. Really. That's it.

    The UI, at this point, is still Gtk+ based. Hildon. They're changing it to Qt though.

    So.. really. You just write normal Linux apps for it.

  25. Re:When the price comes down a bit on Nokia Leaks Phone With Full GNU/Linux Distribution · · Score: 1

    I think the claims of the Android being 'locked down' have absolutely nothing to do with your ability to write apps for it, just your principaled stand.

    Are you going to be distributing apps that run as root?

    The security model on Android is USEFUL: it keeps apps isolated from each other. if Maemo doesn't have this, there will be no third party market of any reasonable size. Soon as there is some dumb shit will release an app that takes over phones and makes them zombies.