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User: hh10k

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  1. Re:JS haters want native apps instead on MIT Researchers Create Platform To Build Secure Web Apps That Never Leak Data · · Score: 1

    JavaScript haters would prefer that such rich applications be made with Qt, not HTML+JavaScript.

    So, they think that it's a good idea to go back to the days where every application had to be downloaded and given free reign to access every document on your computer?

  2. Re:Quit Using JavaScript! on MIT Researchers Create Platform To Build Secure Web Apps That Never Leak Data · · Score: 1

    You can do a lot with just HTML and CSS, but you're a bit small minded if you can't think of applications that need interactivity beyond basic HTML components.

    And you obviously didn't RTFA, because their approach is about defending from security vulnerabilities on the server itself. Are we to stop using executable code on the server too?

  3. Re:Sigh. on New Information May Narrow Down Malaysian Jet's Path · · Score: 1

    You should read about how GPS works. Then you'll understand what they're talking about with the ping taking longer.

  4. Learn by example on Ask Slashdot: Can an Old Programmer Learn New Tricks? · · Score: 1

    Learning a framework (or any language or library) from scratch by reading documentation, or writing new applications by yourself, is doing it the hard way.

    If you want to use a library of code, you have to understand the mindset/philosophy of the programmer behind it. If you don't, you're just going to be fighting it by re-writing or doing things in the most inefficient way possible.

    I would recommend finding a well-regarded application that uses that framework and discover how it structures itself around it. See how it handles things like data, events and UI. Maybe it goes well with other libraries? If you still can't make heads or tails of what's going on, then maybe the example you picked is too big :-)

    Try not to immediately discount a framework if you don't understand it at first. If it's popular, it must be doing something right.

  5. Re:It's Intentional on A Protocol For Home Automation · · Score: 1

    But once one has taken over the market, it's only more reason for the others to band together to create an alternative. It took iOS to make Android.

  6. Re:following a changing spec list on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Hardest Things Programmers Have To Do? · · Score: 1

    What, you believe in the waterfall development model? An iterative process is the only way to go.

    Developing software is not like building a skyscraper. You can very easily turn your design upside down at any time, and you're going to miss opportunities for better features if you blindly follow some original plan. Of course it can come at the cost of time, but it's the manager's job to make these business decisions.

  7. Re:bound by natural selection... on Boston Dynamics Wildcat Can Gallop — No Strings Attached · · Score: 1

    So far all our alternatives suck at traversing rough terrain. The wise move is to copy nature, because natural selection has already tried so many designs for us.

    Once we get better at re-making nature new options might appear, but not yet.

  8. Re:'learn chinese' on 400 Million Chinese Cannot Speak Mandarin · · Score: 2

    My wife is Chinese, and I've visited her family who live around Shanghai.

    Her parents and grandparents only speak Shanghainese, and thus can't read or write. This isn't because Mandarin is "too hard", but because their generation never had a proper education, and they don't really encourage the elderly to reeducate themselves.

    My wife's generation grew up speaking Shanghainese, but then learnt Mandarin at school.

    The new generation of kids know enough Shanghainese to understand their grandparents, but they don't want to speak it. Their parents commonly speak Mandarin, and they're being taught Mandarin from the earliest levels of school. Within a couple generations it wouldn't surprise me if Shanghainese becomes an endangered language.

    The government seems to have a very successful campaign to move everyone to Mandarin, and they are also actively trying to prevent English from penetrating too deep into Chinese culture. If China can maintain its position as a superpower then Mandarin will definitely become a necessary language for international business.

  9. Re:Key patents controlled by Blackberry on Math Advance Suggest RSA Encryption Could Fall Within 5 Years · · Score: 1

    Big endian makes a lot of sense when sorting in left-to-right languages. You need to look at the most significant bits first, and then finally sort on the smallest.

    There's nothing wrong with writing numbers from most-significant to least, but English is inconsistent with how it writes everything else. Addresses are little endian, and dates are either little endian D/M/Y or the bonkers American M/D/Y.

    I'm learning Chinese, and its beautifully consistent. Numbers, dates, addresses are all written (and spoken) in largest-to-smallest order. Even peoples names are big-endian because they put the surname first. You can't get better than this for sorting data.

  10. Re:ASCII Art CAPTCHA for the Win on Campaign To Kill CAPTCHA Kicks Off · · Score: 1

    I think you miss the point of the original article. A blind user will find it impossible to register on your website.

    For my sign-up page, I replaced the image CAPTCHA with a text box labelled "Enter the text 'I am not a spammer'". This solved my spam problems, but neither of our solutions would work if our websites became popular and spammers decided to specifically target us.

  11. Re:life-long updates on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 1

    No, I don't think so. But this wasn't a very highly selling game :-) I'm pretty sure the cracker was one of the first two purchasers, and once it was out, nobody bothered to come back and fix it up. Some people seem to have more fun breaking a game than playing it.

  12. Re:life-long updates on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 1

    That probably wasn't me. I made my game almost a decade ago, and this sort of copy protection idea was already floating around in the indie game community back then.

  13. Re:life-long updates on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 3, Funny

    Most amusing (and effective) DRM I ever saw was actually a fairly loose and easily broken copy protection scheme

    I did this with my game. The code that checked the cd-key was easily bypassed, but that code also fixed a critical bug that happened on level 10. It was funny that we had people coming to our support forum asking for help, and we could easily call them out as pirates!

    We actually manage to convince one of them to buy the game properly.

  14. Re:Exceptions in C++ on The Scourge of Error Handling · · Score: 1

    I agree, I love the way RAII works with exceptions in C++. It's just a shame most people still learn C++ as "C with classes".

    C#'s IDisposable and using statement are probably the best you're going to get in a nondeterministic garbage collected language though, so I wouldn't complain about that.

    Java can go die in a fire.

  15. Re:Anyone here on Apple Reportedly Considering Huge Investment In Twitter · · Score: -1, Redundant

    You say "with short attention spans", I say "who must speak succinctly". And although you can just use it like a crippled RSS feed, it's also a little bit like a public chat room for people to discuss issues. There's a lot of political discussion going on over Twitter, and I do think this overlaps with educated trendy people with too much money.

  16. Re:Enact mandatory voting on Kaspersky Says Lack of Digital Voting Will Be Democracy's Downfall · · Score: 1

    What I mean by "socialising" is all about leaving your group and understanding and respecting alternative views. If you only accept news from a single source then you are only likely to become more bigoted, and so much easier to be manipulated by a politician/advertiser.

    So much of American politics is driven by emotionally-charged ignorance. Information means nothing when people are unwilling to hear it.

  17. Re:Enact mandatory voting on Kaspersky Says Lack of Digital Voting Will Be Democracy's Downfall · · Score: 1

    -1

    I wouldn't expect higher education to change people to vote more like the "educated" people. Do you hate how extreme christians vote? If you force them all into college they'll just make their own college which will amplify their prejudices.

    If you want a more informed society, get them to socialise. BSc/BAs are completely unrelated to this.

  18. Re:Why don't I exercise? on Scientists Study How Little Exercise You Need · · Score: 1

    If exercise alone is boring then you should try combining it with a mental activity (eg studying flashcards), or doing it in a social environment (martial arts groups, riding with friends, Wii gaming, etc). When you're distracted you'll be amazed how much physical 'work' you can do.

  19. Re:Those that don't do well should be embarassed on High School Kills Color-Coded ID Program · · Score: 1

    RSA Animate - Drive: The surprising truth about what motivates us
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XAPnuFjJc

  20. Re:Oh Jonesy on Last.Fm Founder Criticizes Apple Over Music Subscription Fees · · Score: 1

    iTunes cards here is Aus (and I assume elsewhere) are regularly sold with a discount of 25%, suggesting that that is the retailer's markup. Add 5% costs, and it's easy to understand why Apple can't sell anything with less than a 30% cut. Anyone who doesn't use discounted iTunes cards is getting seriously ripped off.

  21. Re:Exams in other cultures on Catching Exam Cheats With a Spectrum Analyzer · · Score: 1

    The students lost face, you see, and the teacher (not the students' cheating) was identified as the cause of the problem. True story.

    In a country like China, it's likely the cheating students (or their parents) knew how to leverage relationships with the people in charge. The outcome would be different if the teacher had friends higher in power.

  22. Re:news for gnurds? on Linux 2.6.36 Released · · Score: 1

    This is also why I come here. Except I only read the top funny comments.

  23. Re:As compared to what? on China Rejects US Piracy Claims As "Groundless" · · Score: 1

    It is definitely true that a large proportion of China is poorly educated, but things are rapidly changing. My girlfriend's parents are essentially illiterate (they speak Shanghainese, but know very little Mandarin), yet her generation is now university educated. Not that you need a university education to get a downloading program and click some links on a website. She has no idea what Bittorrent is, but I think that's what her (Chinese) downloader is using. Once kids gain access to the Internet, they'll work out what to do.

  24. Re:As compared to what? on China Rejects US Piracy Claims As "Groundless" · · Score: 1

    They will in China too, as Internet continues to propagate and the Great Firewall continues to be bypassed in more and more effective ways.

    They already download movies by the bucketload, and they don't need to go outside the firewall. My Chinese girlfriend was quite perplexed about the number of DVDs being sold here.

  25. Re:Google bombing on Google Turns On User-Tweakable Search Wiki · · Score: 2, Informative

    I was also once annoyed that the expertsexchange appeared in the results, until I realised that all the real replies are down the bottom of the page. If they weren't there, then Google couldn't have indexed them.