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User: medelliadegray

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  1. Re:Devils Advocate on OpenStack Board Member Says Adding VMware Was a Mistake · · Score: 1

    It all comes down to what a Gold Member (VMware..err EMC) can do to clock block your project 10 years longer than first anticipated.

    In the end EMC does want to be compatible with others, else people will not use their server virtualization products if you are truely locked in. They just want to have first pick and mind-share of the market which is willing to pay. with mind-share, you have lock-in.

  2. ban hammer these companies on Judge Approves Settlement In eBook Price-Fixing Case · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am getting pretty annoyed how so many companies are being settled with for legal issues, at cost of a mere pittance to these companies.

    I want to see the ban hammer come down and come down hard on these guys. If i break the law with something as simple as a parking ticket, that is a substantial cost to me. if I were to break the law in something major it screws me for life. Why is this not being applied to corporations?

    Price fixing? confiscate ALL past profits gained from of the fixing, and fine future profits as an exponential multiplier of the fixing revenue. not to mention jail time for the crooks who okay the fixing. make companies leave yellow piddle marks when people even suggest they could be price fixing, colluding, bribery.

  3. Re:Sixpence None The Richer? on Message In Bottle Found After 98 Years Near Shetland · · Score: 1

    he would still be none the richer.

  4. Re:War isn't one of the classic causes of Apocalyp on How Technology Might Avert an Apocalypse · · Score: 1

    I would consider population to be the biggest chance of "Apocalypse". YES, POPULATION. Think Soy lent Green: The human population will consume EVERYTHING until we get a population crash. That means an apocalypse of all of our natal world, every cherished rainforest, undisturbed habitat, unique (delicate) species, and interconnected biodiversity.

    To me, if we lose biodiversity, if we gentrify every cubic foot of land into farmland in the name of ever denser cities of people bordering on the line of life in a shoebox. what worse Apocalypse can you imagine?

    People should thrive with adequate personal space, with enough resources to live interesting lives. If we allow populations to grow forever, space and resources will only be a luxury for the rich more so than it already is now.

  5. Re:Just get a WiFi SIP phone... on Ask Slashdot: Data-Only Phone, Voice Over WiFi? · · Score: 1

    I can vouch first hand you can do it, as well as the parents sip provider mentioned is a fine choice as I also use callcentric, and its a fair price imho. you can even call port your number to them (ATT however..... will Drag... Their....Feet... then call port you on a Friday after business hours).....

    I have a bit different setup from the parent--mine utilizes a PAYG number when i have no wifi access. If i am not logged into callcentric, they I can make a rule to auto-forward to my PAYG number.

    Get a sip capable pone, honestly, pay the extra bucks to get a smartphone, versus standarlone sip phone with no features. you'll like the web browsing and email when you have wifi. (Note: most nokia wifi capable UNLOCKED phones have SIP integrated... I use an e71)

    Voice works wonderfully for me, but people get a bit confused if i call them back from my PAYG number, and if you really need to text, callcentric doesn't support sms. but you could from the PAYG number, or from a free Gvoice account (additional confusion)

    in total, my bill went from ~54 per month plan on the cheapest 450 minute plan with sparrse texting, to somewhere around ~11-14 per month. I have paid for the smart-phone two times over at this point.

    I'm pretty techy, and I looked into a PBX solution as some have mentioned, but either you're stuck with a non-static number, a non-call ported number (google) number, or to do it yourself your rates are fractions of a cent within callcentrics cost to you. combined with the power of said device and annoyance to set it up, and be your own telco, I decided to not bother with the self-pbx route. If you need some very fancy call wizardry, then maybe a in-house pbx would make more sense. (such as screen everyone but a group of numbers after X time is what i would like)

    one more thing, do you talk a lot? cellular may still be better for you. I estimate my usage around 300-800 minutes a month usage.

  6. Re:More allergenic? on Scientists Advocate Replacing Cattle With Insects · · Score: 1

    Ammonia - they use ammonia to serialize equipment, meat, etc. they do not have to have this on the product label either. Recent studies (no i'm not going to do your work for a citation) have shown that bathing everything in ammonia is also not quite as effective a sterilization process as they'd hoped either--at least in meat factories

    The ammonia tibid i recall hearing on minnesota public radio, about a guy who won a Pulitzer i believe, for his coverage of these processes and what happens to meat at meat factories. He basically said he wouldn't eat pink hamburger, but would feel safe with a pink steak.

    Regarding your claim about animals raised in different conditions, i highly urge you to read "the omnivore's dilemma" Basically, vast majorities of cows are raised on feed lots. Their fed corn, and other stuff. Cows are not made to digest corn. Corn is nothing like grass. These cows get quite sickly, or borderline sickly because of this. They sustain a lot of infections because of this. Their consistently fed antibiotics preventive when it wouldn't be needed with grass.

  7. Re:really? Are they? on Apple Patent Hints at Net-Booting Cloud Strategy · · Score: 1

    and after decades of with this capability, what percentage of capable systems actually do this? ... very few.

    who would want this w/o strong encryption either: Maybe a telephone company, and their vendor locked in phone. "oh i'm sorry, it wont work w/o the net boot OS"

  8. Re:What ? on Pirate Bay Down; Police Raids Across Europe · · Score: 1

    I would notify your state's attorney general of that. That is tampering with YOUR data & packets--surely breaking some laws out there.

  9. Affordable? on Intel Targets AMD With Affordable Unlocked CPUs · · Score: 1

    Intel is not affordable compared to AMD.

    My system here has been frizzing out on me after 4+ years, and literally 2 hours ago I ordered an AMD 3ghz 3-core processor for 75 bucks. the board (with on board GPU) , 2gb memory, and cpu with shipping came to $230...

    JUST 14 bucks more than the only Intel's dual-core processor listed in the article.

  10. Re:Requires PC on MagicJack Femtocell Gates Cell Traffic to VoIP · · Score: 1

    I realize i worded that oddly, but
    incoming + outgoing calls are not charged for the same call.

    incoming calls cost one rate
    outgoing cost another.

    there's a couple plan options for each.

  11. Re:Requires PC on MagicJack Femtocell Gates Cell Traffic to VoIP · · Score: 1

    I feel the $5 range is pretty optimistic for most people as you talked for 130 minutes of incoming calls. $9 bucks gets your unlimited incoming.

    Users should also realize that outgoing costs money too. it's $0.019 per min on top of the incoming costs......

    This is what i do with callcentric. Get a VOIP capable cellular-phone, i use a Nokia e71... (most UNLOCKED Nokia smartphones all have a sip client built-in as i understand). Give friends your call-centric number, setup a rule in callcentric that forwards you to your PAYG number and if you are not logged in.

    The savings alone from dropping my cellular-400 min plan paid for the phone in a matter of a few months. You then get big telco independence, and you'll save hundreds per year overall.

  12. ha! on The LHC, Black Holes, and the Law · · Score: 1

    Yes, all of the scientists working at CERN are colluding together to...

    1.) Cover-up the statistical odds of the destruction of earth so they can get grants to...
    2.) Implement LHC, which will....
    3.) WHOOOSH....
    4.) There would be no profit.

    Nevermind that much higher energy cosmic rays hit our atmosphere every minute, and we've somehow never been gobbled up. But hey, perhaps we should go back to becoming hunter-gatherers because "fire" may cause an uncontrollable reaction consuming the very earth itself! We'd better not risk it, 'lest the gods become angry.

    The author appears to me to be an idiot of the 'global warming isn't real' type.

  13. Re:Will the same happen to phones? on Technology Changes To Kill Netbooks? · · Score: 1

    The netbook is only going to grow, so long as companies keep making more and more apps for linux, xor companies keep moving their applications onto the web. There's only the balance then of what does a consumer need to run locally versus connected.

    Your prediction of low margins may be true to a point---but that is the beauty of globalization. These US companies who want to make only huge profit items will eventually wither from a thousand cuts as Taiwan/Chinese companies decide their happy to make 10 million netbooks with a net profit of 3 bucks each.

    If you need specialization, then you're going to pay through the teeth (GPS Navigation / E-Readers). Those companies make a killing on you from both software and hardware. Personally, i wont touch e-readers until they allow me to place them onto a general-computing device. Same reason I've never toughed DRM-Music.... its too expensive and too limiting.

  14. subject here on Electric Company Wants Monthly Fee For Solar Users · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's called a line connection fee. EVERYONE already pays this. There is no reason that solar CONTRIBUTORS should have to be charged to help the power companies, if anything excel should have to pay them. Think about it, power, they dont have to maintain, service, or otherwise pay to implement, comes into their grid magically.

    These guys just want to remain a near monopoly on power generation, so they want to create barriers of entry. People who propose stuff like this should be flogged, or worse.

  15. Re:Electronic Health Records is very hard on IT and Health Care · · Score: 1

    I don't know which particle it would be, but basically cosmis rays can flip bits. Fortunately, ECC will generally correct this--most times--In the below writeup, IBM is advocating why their advanced ECC chipkill is something that would be very relevant for highly critical servers. The big brand servers basically all use chipkill now.

    IBM directly seems to be charging for these reports, but the writeup here.

    http://www.ece.umd.edu/courses/enee759h.S2003/references/ibm_chipkill.pdf

  16. Re:One idea... on Newspaper Execs Hold Secret Meeting To Discuss Paywalls · · Score: 1

    Where have you been? they've been blending the content for years. Have you not noticed those annoying mouse over pop ups quite a large number of advertisers use for keywords embedded in articles?

    I don't know about you, but i often use my mouse to follow where i read, and before adblockplus came into my life, i wanted to punch my monitor every time i was mined by one of those things.

  17. Re:Latency on Telepresence — Our Best Bet For Exploring Space · · Score: 1

    as you say, 4 light years to the closest star... how fast can we actually propel something with today's technology? It's a ridiculously low % of C as i understand it...then we have to slow it down, so as not to destroy our precious payload in a high-speed impact, or flyby.

    The way i see it, without an absolute breakthrough... the only thing I can imagine feasible are purely mechanical probes.

    When traveling at such ridiculously low percentages of C, it'll take many thousands of years to visit all but the closest stars--likely even that kind of time for our closest star. Whats the life expectancy of a million dollar o-ring? How long could a bank of computers be designed to operate for before too many units fail from too many cosmic ray hits?

    Given today's technology, or even increasing speeds by 10x what we can do with today's technology, I'm having a hard time imagining anything realistic.

    If we ever got to the point of creating effective Von Neumann probes (and i think we will) that could make serious exploration, perhaps colonization, possible, across a many thousand year time span.

    If we ever got to a point where Terraforming makes something habitable, then perhaps few batches of test-tube baby deployments could be considered. Anything less than a terraformed world, and I'd call it cruel to stick someone unwillingly inside of a can for their whole lives.

  18. Re:Why not open it up on Microsoft Ending Mainstream Support For XP · · Score: 1

    I disagree,

    When you're a business with a large deployment of PC's, it's ideal to have a uniform platform.

    It then gets absolutely unreasonable to upgrade 1000 machines just because the OS manufacturer decided they want to make more money, and wont support your platform after just a handful of years of implementing it.

    Also, many software vendors will not even officially support new OS's/IE versions for multiple years after their released.... and if their not supported by the vendor, the business will not willingly jump on board. So it's very likely a business wont even start to deploy the next new OS for 3 years after it's released.

    With the monopoly that Microsoft has with their product in the business world, they need to realize that these fast version releases in the desktop alienate everyone from IT to bean counters to management to users.

    Vista should not have had a "business" or AD join able version.

  19. Re:Big surprise on US Electricity Grid Reportedly Penetrated By Spies · · Score: 1

    I agree,

    It seems foolish on so many levels to have this kind of crucial infrastructure on a non-isolated network.

  20. Re:Shame on Trick Used To Pass French "Three Strikes" · · Score: 1

    i don't understand why many of these countries (the US included) don't make a provision where an absent vote equals a no vote. this would put a dead stop on laws 'sneaking' through in this manner.

    This also makes the politician BE THERE regularly, to do, you know, their job. Otherwise, they get get flagged as voting NO for some such vote or another.

    Seems like a win win situation for the public.... but then the politician would actually have to do their job...Ohhh! now i get why this system's not widely implemented. i just had to talk myself through this one.

  21. Re:Where do they store 4.5TB off site on Internet Archive Gets 4.5PB Data Center Upgrade · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i find it impressive they have all that hardware for a mere 200k users a day.

  22. Re:I question the future of Open Office, Netbeans, on Sun In Talks To Be Acquired By IBM · · Score: 1

    Yet, somehow, IBM manages to continually make gobs and gobs of money.

  23. Re:Why use bleeding edge intel chips? on Cisco Barges Into the Server Market · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You dont seem to be too familiar with vmware, and it's lack of single points of failure when implemented correctly. Sure, something can fai, but everything else should be able to pickup the slack.

    Also, when you're paying per CPU 3K for Vmware licenses, another 3k for MS datacenter licenses, and who knows how much for each license on on each virtual server instance.... that extra 30 watts you're worried about is NOTHING if you can cram 2 more virtual servers onto a CPU.

  24. Re:My heart leaped on Judge Orders Record Company Execs To Duluth · · Score: 1

    If it were earlier in the year, and given a choice, i feel many people coming from a moderate climate would surely consider death a viable option versus going to somewhere as cold as duluth.

  25. Re:There's no stopping this on Designer Babies · · Score: 1

    I feel there's little enough to worry about.

    If we first world countries wholly adopt and practice these genetic screenings on a hugely wide scale, and all end up dying horribly because we breed out some UNKNOWN DANGER WILL ROBINSON, then at least we'll have also helped to bring 3rd world citizens out of poverty, since they'll get to inherit everything we had.