Slashdot Mirror


User: RebootKid

RebootKid's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
62
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 62

  1. Re:Makes up for all the things lacking in iPad1? on Hands On With Apple IPad 2 · · Score: 1

    On the flip side, I can do it *right now* with an Archos device, and not having to have the adapter, just the normal cables.

  2. Re:Makes up for all the things lacking in iPad1? on Hands On With Apple IPad 2 · · Score: 1

    I respectfully disagree with you. Host USB is a hard requirement for me. What if I want to use it to download pictures from my camera, to edit up and email them around? Or say I wanted to watch a movie? There is a finite amount of space on the iPad & iPad2. External storage helps work around this limitation. HDMI out, in an easy form, is important. I often give presentations, so being able to hook it to a projector will make things work nicely.

  3. Re:The summary on New IE Zero Day · · Score: 1

    My apologies. Part of that is my own warped sense of humor, part of it is a direct quote from SANS.
    I'll endeavor to work better/worse humor into future submissions.

    *Note to self: Must work harder on pleasing all of the people all of the time*

  4. Re:Bogus shortage on Vint Cerf Keeps Blaming Himself For IPv4 Limit · · Score: 0

    Exactly. I predict that there will soon be a trade market for IP subnets.

  5. Re:He got lucky. on Heroic Engineer Crashes Own Vehicle To Save a Life · · Score: 1

    The point about him risking his children was more about putting the good of the many (the dozens of people potentially injured if the truck was allowed to continue its course) ahead of the good of the few (The people in his car)

    Was there risk involved, certainly. That said, it was still the right thing to do.
    From the article, it says that he'd seen the truck side-swipe a barrier already. He had a reasonable assurance that the driver was incapacitated to the point where he would not rouse.
    He did what I think is the most reasonable and responsible action given the known information. I am sorry that you feel differently.

  6. Re:If I was his passenger on Heroic Engineer Crashes Own Vehicle To Save a Life · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Get your head around this: His passengers were his children.
    However, knowing the physics, the risk to them was minimal. The only question would have been if his brakes could have held the pressure of two vehicles instead of one.

    I still salute the guy. He saved a bunch of people, and did what was right. We need more people like him, and less people who want to "not get involved" because they might get hurt.

  7. Re:Android is what you want on Open Source-Friendly Smartphones For the Small Office? · · Score: 1

    There are options to use Android as well. Hypermatix will do Caldav for Android, and does work with Zimbra

  8. Re:Malware warning? on Universal Sends DMCA Takedown On 1980 Report · · Score: 1

    Confirmed. I get the same warning. I suspect one of his advertisers went rogue

  9. Re:got spyware? on Careful What You Post, the FBI Has More of These · · Score: 1

    So far, every time. Same with the wild white rhinos that wander onto my property. ;-)

  10. Re:got spyware? on Careful What You Post, the FBI Has More of These · · Score: 1

    Dunno about that. Ask any police dispatcher. They do whatever they can to find range time for the patrol folks. I've been told that FBI field agents are in similar situations.
    They've got a less than 25% chance of connecting in their "double tap"
    I spend more time on the range than the typical field agent. I also wouldn't bother coming out the door to shoot them. I'd just put a shot through the window and drop them at the end of the drive. A coyote is a lot smaller and a lot faster at 100m than a FBI agent. (And yes, I realize that I just got on their watch list. It's not the first time, and it won't be the last)

  11. Re:got spyware? on Careful What You Post, the FBI Has More of These · · Score: 1

    Hate to break it to you, friend, but that would end you up in jail, or a casket.
    Castle Law has an exemption. The intruder must be acting illegally. Since the 9th circuit ruled that this is currently legal, you'd lose immediately.
    I don't agree it should be legal, but it currently is.

  12. Re:I see this alot on Why You See 'Free Public WiFi' In So Many Places · · Score: 1

    The only tools I know of, that the poster seems concerned about mentioning are tools like aircrack-ng. It's loaded in the Backtrack CD set. (Which I highly recommend as a tool to audit your own networks) He is correct, you can crack a WPA2-AES password. It's not easy, and it takes time. Basically what you do is start dumping the stuff you see in the air, identify a target network, send a disassociation notice to the client that's connected to the AP, spoofing the MAC of the AP, a bunch of times. You record the traffic its sending back. The password will be in that traffic, encrypted, of course. Then you do a re-play and dictionary attack against the replayed traffic. It does work, but it doesn't work against long, complex, and random passwords in a short period of time.

  13. Re:It's extremely good. on Ubuntu 10.10, Maverick Meerkat, Now Available · · Score: 1

    This is where redundancy comes in, and rigid "Dev" "Stage" and "Prod" environments really shine. Where I work, if it does the job, then it is acceptable, as long as you can get it to 99.999% available to the end user. You have to prove that in staging before its allowed in production.

  14. Re:I wold love a car that drives itself... on Google Secretly Tests Autonomous Cars In Traffic · · Score: 1

    For some people, a 6 block walk is impossible. I have a number of disabled co-workers who drive simply because they have no other option.
    I choose mass transit because I believe in it.
    My morning commute: Drive 45min to the nearest train station.
    Ride the train for an hour
    Walk half a mile to my office door.

    Doing the "right" thing gives me a 2 hour commute each way. It's also the only job I have been able to find recently. I've got a family to feed, so I do it.
    I could save 30min off that trip if I drove, but then I'd have to pay for parking, and I don't have that money.

    I live in the San Francisco bay area. We have a fairly good public transit system compared to most parts of the US.
    When my car broke down, I had to take the bus. I was leaving the house at 4:22am to make it to work by 8am. The trip home was equally bad.

    Oh, and we don't have any confidence that the mass transit will get us to work on-time either. MUNI regularly has delays, as does BART.

  15. Re:Could have been interesting on College Student Finds GPS On Car, FBI Retrieves It · · Score: 1

    You placed something on my car? Huh. That's odd. I've got no clue about what it is, was, or where it is. Sorry.
    I went over a really bumpy road a while ago. Sounded like something fell off, but the car was driving fine so I just kept going


    Or hey, maybe do something really fun, like call in the bomb squad, and have them detonate the thing.

    You don't know what the device is, how it got there, or what its purpose is. Say it looks like a bomb to you.

    I get the massive fear of law enforcement and the FBI, but really, the vehicle is your property. You can do anything with your car you want. (Assuming you've got the pink slip.) Heck, if I found one attached to one of my cars, I'd seriously consider sending that car off to the smasher.

  16. Still available in the US. Still and MS Tax on Ubuntu Won't Moan To EU About Microsoft · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think it must just be Dell in the EU. Here in the US, you can still configure systems preloaded with Ubuntu.

    In fact, I just ran the numbers. Buying a Latitude 13 configured exactly the way I like it, running 9.10 (32bit): $1753.98
    Running Windows7 (32bit): $1862.98

    I didn't see a way of doing 64bit installs for either option. This also doesn't take into account any of the specials that may be running, or employee discounts, etc.

    In this circumstance, the Microsoft tax is $109

  17. Re:Anonymous Coward on Skype Officially Available For Android · · Score: 1

    Verizon's had a bundled version for a while. It was not available to the general user base.

  18. Re:So we like open source, but not open protocols? on Skype Officially Available For Android · · Score: 1

    If using SIP with an Android phone was as easy as installing Skype, then you'd have a point there. The problem with SIP is that it has a high barrier to entry for VoIP usage. Sure, I can figure out Ekigia, but most folks can't, or don't.

    I looked at using Google Voice with my G1, I've looked at SIP, and a few options. I didn't see how it was anything more than "complexity for the sake of complexity." If it works for you, then good for you. It doesn't work for me. Skype does. Skype is easy to use, and in this case, ease of use counts.

  19. Re:access rights? on Skype Officially Available For Android · · Score: 1

    Still, I applaud mercurized for actually taking the time to look at the permissions requested, and think critically about them. We do this with apps we install on our PCs, why not on our phones?

  20. Re:Software Quality on Android Software Piracy Rampant · · Score: 1

    For starters, I posited the theory that if there was a better value provided, there would be less piracy. I didn't condone the piracy.

    Additionally, piracy isn't "stealing" contrary to what the RIAA and MPAA are trying to program into our culture.

  21. Re:Hooray! on Las Vegas Hotel Vdara an Accidental Death Ray · · Score: 1

    Oh for mod points.

  22. Software Quality on Android Software Piracy Rampant · · Score: 1

    So, rather than read the article, and comment, I actually went out and checked out the software package in question. It's Screebl by Keyeslabs.com.
    There is a free version out there for folks to try out. That said, it does't actually do much of anything useful. All it does is use the position of your phone to keep your screen on. They want $2 for the app. Now we're talking about perceived value. In the case of this specific app, there is no value to me.

    I buy apps regularly that work, work well, and provide a good value for their money.
    If this app was actually useful, and provided some value, I suspect that the would see less piracy. Oh, and their report is crap. We really need stats to look at this.

  23. Re:Kids these days? on Android Software Piracy Rampant · · Score: 1

    I think the poster was referring to ROMs used by the phone, i.e. Cyanogenmod and the like. Those aren't piracy.

  24. Re:Iron Man on Marvell Launches First Triple-Core Hybrid ARM Chip · · Score: 1

    mod parent funny

  25. Re:really? on Police Publish 'An Introduction To PEDO BEAR' · · Score: 1

    I respectfully disagree. The only instances I've seen Pedo Bear being used is two fold 1) As a joke (95% of the time) 2) When someone is being skeezy about kids, someone will reply with a Pedo Bear reference, basically using it as a tool to call someone out on it. If there is a 3rd category, I haven't seen it, nor have I been able to find it in various searches, so I'm going to go with a [Citation Needed] in reference to pedophiles using it as a tool to discuss with minors. Law enforcement is being stupid in this case.