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User: cynyr

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  1. Re:They set the pricing model on Former FCC Boss: Data Caps Not About Network Congestion · · Score: 1

    read your agreement, It's "up to 40mbps". They are giving you exactly what you paid for. Don't like it, get enterprise grade with an SLA and then you can bitch when it's to slow...

    I agree with you however on the overselling and monthly data limits, and the data rates should be best effort, or they should be sold as "XXmbps minimum, faster speeds may be available at some times" Then when there is congestion (say 6:30PM), they randomly select and throttle some people. TBH, if i could trust my ISP to handle throttling of my bittorrents, I would. Say "opt in for bulk download management" and then they can sort out long slow running things, and let the RTTs go up for those, or throttle those first.

  2. Re:Large company trying to be "fair"? on Former FCC Boss: Data Caps Not About Network Congestion · · Score: 1

    So I have a choice of comcast or century link here in my apartment. Partly due to the city, and partly due to the apartment building. This means that I chose the lesser of two evils.

  3. Re:I don't think it means even that on Former FCC Boss: Data Caps Not About Network Congestion · · Score: 1

    that does increase profit, by lowering tax "burden".

  4. Re:Transmision != viewing on The Trouble With 4K TV · · Score: 1

    I'll repost something from above...

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switched_video

    Basically it looks like multicast at the block level. Only send what each node needs/wants and never even send the rest. Given there are ~2000 homes per node, and lets say 8 channels per home (picture in picture on 4 tvs, all different) that means needing to bale able to send 16,000 things at once. There aren't that many channels, and I'm sure the cable companies know how many active users they have at any one time, etc, etc. Also if they needed to they could send 1080P or 720P video for less popular shows.

  5. Re:cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it on The Trouble With 4K TV · · Score: 1

    yes I have, where are the 300+ PPI desktop monitors?

  6. Re:US Metric System on Petition For Metric In US Halfway To Requiring Response From the White House · · Score: 1

    right, but I can without any real effort convert 1L into mL in my head... Try that in the US where soda in cans is priced in $/fluid ounce (a unit of volume not weight) and soda in large bottle in $/L, or a small block of cheese in $/oz and the large one in $/lbm, example a 6oz brick might cost $2, and a 1.34lb brick might cost $12. Which is cheaper per unit weight? no looking up oz/lbs, and you have to do all the math in your head. Like the soda example above, there are some other things that mix units as well. some weights when small are in grams, and then end up in pounds when larger. So we 'mericans already need to use both, but admit it less than the british do.

    Also last I knew all the US imperial measures were based on the metric equivalent, for example, the foot is defined as 0.3 meter (look up the real conversion) and the inch then is defined as 1/12th that. Pounds are the same way with 1lb being equal to 1/2.2 kgs.

  7. Re:No persuasion required on Ask Slashdot: Should Employers Ban Smartphones? · · Score: 1

    Right, MAC lock the main wifi network (if you have company WIFI devices) or otherwise keep the personal devices off the network. If you want to provide a network for the personal devices, then provide employees with access to a separate firewalled off network. Since the post is about malware it seems like the real issue is letting the devices on the network, and not in the physical space.

    Is the issue the camera's on these devices? If so, time to get lockers in a space outside the "secure" space.

  8. Re:No persuasion required on Ask Slashdot: Should Employers Ban Smartphones? · · Score: 1

    I live in a first ring suburb of Minneapolis (for those of you here, inside the 494/694 ring) and work in a second ring suburb. There is a bus from work to home in morning and from hoem to work in the evening, so unless I want to work nights I have to drive the 16 miles.

  9. Re:Cooling is the issue on Cree Introduces 200 Lumen/Watt Production Power LEDs · · Score: 1

    sounds like the bulbs need better power filtering... Some of us have no way to fix any of the things the GP listed, as they don't belong to us, and the apartment management does not care if our CFLs burn out fast. That doesn't cost them money and I can just buy halogen.

  10. Re:I'd be happy just to have an AC outlet... on FCC Smooths the Path For Airlines' In-Flight Internet · · Score: 1

    Care to show me a portable Mac with a workstation GPU? (FireGL or Quatro)

    Okay, even if you could get one of those, what do you think they would do to the battery life? Workstation cards tend to have only minimal power saving modes.

  11. Re:I'd be happy just to have an AC outlet... on FCC Smooths the Path For Airlines' In-Flight Internet · · Score: 1

    The last planes I was on for the 3.5 to 4 hour flight between MSP and SAN, were a 757 and a MD90. Neither have any sort of power anywhere on the plane. A 4 hour flight on a workstation laptop running autocad/inventor is just never going to work. Nor is it going to work for a movie.

  12. Re:If it doesn't run XBMC... on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 1

    I'm just surprised that an SD card and USB2 can keep up with blue-ray files. Shame it doesn't have an option for gigabit ethernet that isn't just an internal USB bridge.

  13. Re:WOW!!! on New KScreen Supplies Some Magic For Multi-Monitor Linux Set-Ups · · Score: 1

    None of the applications I use make sense being spread across monitors horizontally, maximized, so never needed it. Can you give me an example of such application?

    A wide table in Excel/OO.calc, CAD. I agree with you though. Generally it's not needed.

  14. Re:WOW!!! on New KScreen Supplies Some Magic For Multi-Monitor Linux Set-Ups · · Score: 1

    Also should have added, that in both cases both monitors have different resolutions, which makes windows even harder to use well. I'd still like a third monitor. (hopefully when I get a new work laptop).

  15. Re:WOW!!! on New KScreen Supplies Some Magic For Multi-Monitor Linux Set-Ups · · Score: 1

    I'll bite... I use windows XP dual monitors at work and Gentoo Linux dual monitors at home. Both setups are nvidia video cards.

    Work: I use the nvidia config utility to give me viewports. These are not as nice as the ones in XFCE4 mainly as they have been grafted in, and many windows apps don't like them, they do work. Multi-monitors are setup using windows builtin tools for that. Main screen on the left, secondary on the right. This means I need yet another third party program to mangle backgrounds so that they display correctly. (hopefully this has been fixed in win 7). I also used tweakUI from MS to setup my mouse to be X style with autoraise. This also only mostly works. Excel is my biggest grievance, I cannot have one workbook open on each monitor and retain DDE(dynamic data exchange, paste values, formats, etc) between workbooks.

    Home: I have enabled dynamictwinview and used nvidias tool to set up the dual monitors. Main on the left secondary on the right. The background image just works. Full screen on a single monitor(mplayer, vlc, wine games, etc) all just work. XFCE4 provides great support for viewports. With the newer nvidia drivers, I'm not sure I even need the nvidia tools, and could just go back to using xrandr. In general everything works well on linux.

  16. Re:WOW!!! on New KScreen Supplies Some Magic For Multi-Monitor Linux Set-Ups · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Office is an application for making pretty documents with incoherent formatting, and using a pseudo-database with calculations, that grew into something that has more in common with absurdist art than any productive activity. People who only use it, would be better off with a tablet-keyboard combination -- too bad, one that Microsoft tried to sell is total crap, at large extent because their tablet-style UI is almost as bad on tablets as it is on desktops. If you judge workstations use by the type of users who waste computers' capability the most, you you are bound to end up with idiotic preferences -- oh wait, this is what Windows mlti-screen support is!

    Preface: I'm a mechanical engineer who makes custom designs of a "standard" product for customers all day. Getting correct answers back quickly is a big part of getting sales.

    Okay, seeing as I use Microsoft Excel pretty heavily every day at work I'd like to point out the reason it gets so much use in the engineering world is that it really is the lowest common denominator. No one that isn't fresh out of school (i.e. less than 3-4 years on the job) has even touched VB.Net or any other programming language. I have some python scripts running around to do a handful of things for me, but any tool that would like to send to others is done in excel. Not to mention that trying to add support for calculations via DLL in something like MsSql or postgresql would be a huge pain and take probably an hour of setup when all I want to do is bang out a quick set of repeat calcs on 100 lines of input. Despite having pywin installed, and a fully working python setup on my windows (XP, I have to get a new computer to get a new OS.) machine, Excel is still my goto app for getting things done quickly. It lets me build decent looking tables with a hand full of keystrokes and clicks (thanks MS for letting me pin macros). It lets me do some basic sed/cut/grep sorts of operations on my input data. It lets me run the same calc on each row/column of input in a few keystrokes. There are times I push my input data through gvim, or a one-off python script, and I have even been known to push data back to my home computers via ssh to do some more advanced stuff, but again, it all ends up in excel.

  17. Re:Yes, this is amazing on New KScreen Supplies Some Magic For Multi-Monitor Linux Set-Ups · · Score: 1

    dynamictwinview (nvidia) and XFCE4 here as well. Works out of the box, as did my old laptop with intel graphics and randr.

  18. Re:If it doesn't run XBMC... on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 1

    Where are your storing the rips? also are they a stream dump of of the blue ray disk?

    I didn't see an interface that would take a streamdump of my copy of serenity. ~30-40Mbps for just the video, and then add 5.1 or 7.1 DTS on top of that and the 10/100 ethernet won't keep up, nor an SD card, or a USB wifi dongle... My hardwired gigabit will though.

  19. Re:Settle Down Francis. on Drawings of Weapons Led To New Jersey Student's Arrest · · Score: 1

    depends, 80% in a criminal trial, no way. In a civil trial 80% sounds like a preponderance of evidence.

    Disclaimer: I've only been called for jury duty once, and was going to college out of state at the time, so was unable to go.

  20. Re:Hypocrisy... on F-16 Engines Stolen From Israeli Air Base · · Score: 1

    Never said it was trivial, just "do-able" given enough funding, and talented people. Also note, that I agreeing for the most part with the article, and against the GGP, in that the loss of the F16 engine is basically a loss of a F22/F35 engine.

    Nothing I saw reported to have been leaked by wikileaks contained info on on-going, or future-useful info.

    To use a car analogy, at this point leaking the spec's to a horse and buggy would not be upsetting at all, but a '64 mustang would provide a substantial amount of the info needed to build a modern car. An out of date "un-safe" car, but a car none the less.

  21. Re:Hypocrisy... on F-16 Engines Stolen From Israeli Air Base · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think there is a difference between the info wikileaks was leaking (info on past events), and technical data for currently used devices. I would say that if wikileaks were to release plans to the engine in the P51 I wouldn't car at all. It is no longer in use, as it has been replaced by newer tech. I'm willing to bet that there is not a substantial difference between the F16 engine, and the F22/F35 ones.

    I wonder how long it would take to engineer and build a jet engine with the info available on the internet about jet engines and various design issues, for example, keeping the inlet air at below super-sonic speeds while the aircraft is flying at supersonic speeds. There was an article on /. a while back about that, and I believe it included basic solution.

  22. Re:end of US hedgemony is a Good Thing(tm) on Russia, China, and Others Seek Greater Control Over Internet · · Score: 1

    What do you propose we replace "the creaking DNS system" with?

  23. Re:You can make this work here.... on A US Apple Factory May Be Robot City · · Score: 1

    So why is foxconn spending hundreds of millions on automating its factories in china?

  24. Re:Aren't the US already a low wage country? on A US Apple Factory May Be Robot City · · Score: 1

    If only i had the option of a train/bus/bike to get to work... Unless I start working the night shift here in the upper mid-west i don't have the option of the bus. Work is an a suburb 16 miles from home, and the bus runs from the 'burb to downtown in the morning, and back out again at night. There is a single run per day and if i miss the bus, I would need to call and pay for a taxi, in a low density area, and that would cost quite a lot of cash. Not to mention that if I wanted to stop off at the grocery store on my way home, that would mean I'd also not have a bus for the rest of the journey.

    Biking would also be a thought, but have you tried to bike 16 miles to work, in a 15 mph wind when it is 10F out and there is 6+ inches of snow on the ground?

  25. Re:Automation and unemployment on A US Apple Factory May Be Robot City · · Score: 1

    Ahh, but what would you do?

    I know what i would be doing, designing/programming the robots that do service work, but then I'm a mechanical engineer, and I don't see that field going anywhere anytime soon (on a macro scale).