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User: BoRegardless

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  1. Who Got Fired for This? on Adobe Hacked: Almost 3 Million Accounts Compromised · · Score: 1

    It is not like this hasn't been reported at least weekly for years for various companies.

    What the hell are major companies thinking?

  2. Re:competition on The Next Big Fiber Showdown: Austin · · Score: 1, Informative

    Free market competition in almost all cases, except for absolutely needed government actions, always results in intense competition and ultimately the lowest cost that a good provider can supply and maintain. Government has no interest in providing the best at the lowest cost if they run a service.

    Any time the government gets involved they warp the competition one way or another with politcal ends and increase the overhead cost. Cable TV should have always been open to multiple providers so people could order what they want from whatever carrier or carriers.

  3. Post Again When Practical on New Headphones Generate Sound With Carbon Nanotubes · · Score: 2

    The researchers noted that "unfortunately" the nanotube speakers use much higher amounts of power to drive them.

  4. Efficient for Risky Missions on Boeing Turning Old F-16s Into Unmanned Drones · · Score: 2

    & using near obsolete aircraft to boot at low cost. What is not to like?

  5. Times & Technology Change Everything ... Alway on Its Nuclear Plant Closed, Maine Town Is Full of Regret · · Score: 1

    You have to be prepared for large changes by being willing to say "This place is going down and I am moving."

    Growing up in the Northwest in the 50s & 60s, wood product mills, companies and machinery for them looked great. However access to faster growing wood in the Southeast and stands of virgin large trees put on the market by the British Columbia government wiped out 3 dozen mills of various types in my home area of Columbia County Oregon and decimated the jobs for well over a decade or so.

    There is a tendency to think that what we grow up with is what we will have for our & our children's lives. The fact is we have undergone more changes in lifespan, health and technology in 150 years than in the entire previous history of primates and it is likely to continue and that means destruction of "what I grew up with."

    GE's Jack Welch said it right "Change before you have to."

  6. Humans will boldly die in space! on To Boldly Go Nowhere, For Now · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Intense radiation levels alone during Solar storms & extra-solar Gamma rays along with normal human frailties in health will doom long extended space voyages in any near term.

    Way in the future, extra-long multiple lifespan voyages at super-high speeds will also be futile as "space" is note "empty space" but full, chocked full of ions and molecules which spacecraft will hit at these projected "hyper-velocities". This effect on metals and other surfaces is similar to what is experienced on earth in plasma cutting now: See Wikipedia on "plasma cutting"

    People think "space" is automatically 'cold'. That may be true in most places, but if you get into high velocities and run into a string of hot gas, you may find your spacecraft melts surprisingly fast. True, it is not likely as sensors should let spacecraft avoid these areas, but we simply don't know. Our own Sun throws out these super-hot plasmas, so it is not uncommon.

    Robotics seems to have great advantages the minute you leave immediate Earth orbit.

  7. Re:Conscience? EFlop has on Nokia's Elop Set To Receive $25 Million Bonus After Acquisition · · Score: 1

    no more conscience than EFlops Redmond puppet master, Vladimir Ballmer.

  8. Someone's Trying to Make Money Here on Join the Efforts of a Manned Mission To Jovian Moon Europa · · Score: 1

    Can't think of any other reason to put out this sort of wacko mission. Let's see, if it costs 20 Billion and I take just a 1% cut in salary and bennies ... my retirement is guaranteed.

  9. Good Long Review on Ars Technica Reviews iOS 7 · · Score: 1

    Did not see iBeacon noted in the excellent review & the implications for new apps and hardware accessories. I'll ave to read it several times.

  10. Perfect Example of a Clueless POTUS on Obama Asks FCC To Make Carriers Unlock All Mobile Devices · · Score: -1, Troll

    I am convinced the guy doesn't read virtually anything of modern life. He stopped with something like Marx & Muhammed as far as I can determine from his actions.

  11. Re:Fraud - The Union Cares on London Tube Cleaners Don't Want Fingerprint Clock-in · · Score: 1

    But ... with a fingerprint sensor at a work entry point there is one less union worker checking people in.

    And unions want to be just like government work, where no job is ever eliminated.

  12. Patentability Originally Req'd a Physical Model on "Patent Troll" Closes Controversial Podcast Patent Deal With SanDisk · · Score: 2

    The whole patent system was designed to encourage building physical things people used. Patents were never intended to cover the thought process or logic or eventual machine readable logic derived from the mind on how a person was to use a product.

    New Zealand has just disallowed software patents and maybe that will proceed to other countries.

    If you want your product methods & operation choices and commands to be secret, then obfuscate your code.

  13. Re:accidental misdoping even more troubling on Stealthy Dopant-Level Hardware Trojans · · Score: 1

    For us uninformed, please define doping.

  14. Re:M.Dell on Michael Dell To Buy Dell Inc. · · Score: 1

    The question is if Dell can challenge IBM, SAP, HP, et al at "services" for IT systems?

    Then the question is can Michael Dell get the executives with the skills and vision to make it happen in an arena that is cutthroat.

  15. Chaos Theory Leads to ... on Flash Mobs of Trading Robots Coalescing To Rule Markets · · Score: 1

    Chaos, when a small perturbation allows a gain for a small action that one player has that others don't see.

    It is like playing poker with a card counter near the end of the deck, but you aren't counting. You lose.

  16. When is it too complex to maintain? on Microsoft Botches More Patches In Latest Automatic Update · · Score: 2

    Given all the backward compatibility for legacy items and new OS items, how long can it go before it becomes virtually impossible to maintain reliable code?

  17. Re:Team effort? Cooking with Ive on Can Even Apple Make a Watch Insanely Smart? · · Score: 1

    Ive has been there about 2 decades and has seen what it takes mentally to kill off losers & I see him having the strength to do it.

    I agree with other Slashdot comments that a smart watch needs to be able to work with an iPhone, so you don't have to pick up the phone all the time.

    Unique features might allow NFC to work exchanging contact info and "approvals", instead of cards and cash.

  18. Safety takes Precedence over Ethnic concerns on Could Technology Create Modern-Day 'Leper Colonies'? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are rough neighborhoods and bars in white neighborhoods that I would not expect women to go near at night in good cities.

    Facts are facts.

  19. Buy more bandwidth or Become an ISP! on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Fight Usage Caps? · · Score: 1

    Don't waste time. Act!

  20. Re:Climate Correlation is not Causation on 'Half' of 2012's Extreme Weather Impacted By Climate Change · · Score: 1

    What bad climate change that happens 100 or 1000 years being caused by humans is the argument of human caused climate change.

    It could easily be that variations in the Suns output both in the past and in the future totally dominates climate change (excluding multi-kilometer asteroids and mega-volcanoes). The Maunder minimum is evidence within documented human history.

    I understand scientists wanting to do theories and remain employed so they write "what is hot."

    However, as pointed out recently in the news, there are multiples of physicist PHDs available versus the number of available PHD positions. That means PHDs have to dream up projects to keep themselves even underemployed at this point. If they have a job, they have to invent some project to keep employed or keep or get a grant.

  21. Climate Correlation is not Causation on 'Half' of 2012's Extreme Weather Impacted By Climate Change · · Score: 1

    Show me the detailed worldwide climate model including the future cycles of the Sun before I will consider believing 1 year worth of change is due to any particular cause.

    Come on now. Rational, scientific work doesn't confuse Correlation with Causation!

  22. Shows me the Money on Can Closed Public Schools Become Makerspaces? (Video) · · Score: 1

    The floor space cost is just a pittance of what it takes to get a "makerspace" up and running.

    Show me the project spreadsheet. You can easily go beyond $1 million in equipment without even trying.

  23. Conspiring to Illustrate False Science? on Feds Seek Prison For Man Who Taught How To Beat a Polygraph · · Score: 1

    The actual point of science is to properly point out both false positives and false negatives of any test so we can get to actual truth if possible by another method.

    To be banned or imprisoned for pointing out the failure of science is deeply troubling for a country founded on liberty & freedom.

  24. Give me dead nuts reliability! on Intel Plans 'Overclocking' Capability On SSDs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    After you deal with HD & SSD failures, you are only concerned with reliability.

  25. Oak Ridge Troll on Fukushima Actually "Much Worse" Than So Far Disclosed, Say Experts · · Score: 1

    We showed you how to fix this with Thorium in the early 1970s.