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User: Monty845

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Comments · 57

  1. Re:Controlling the message on SourceForge Responds To nmap Maintainer's Claims · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm done with Slashdot. Its long had quality issues, but this is just over the top. The whole network of companies is contaminated at this point. Deleting my Slashdot shortcuts.

  2. Re:This seems foolproof! on Russian Space Agency Misused $1.8 Billion, May Be Replaced · · Score: 2

    What is really going on is that there were two high profile rocket explosions. As long as the rocket launches were going fine, no one cared about the corruption. Now so "something" needs to be done, so they will take this action against corruption to fix the problem.

  3. A species that patient isn't going anywhere ever. on How Civilizations Can Spread Across a Galaxy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Any species that is willing to wait 250,000 years to avoid a 16 LY trip would never get to space at all. A race needs the drive to challenge obstacles and overcome them if its going to make it to space, not look for excuses to not try.

  4. Re:Put it this way on Invasion of Ukraine Continues As Russia Begins Nuclear Weapons Sabre Rattling · · Score: 2

    There is no way the West would attempt to invade Russia after it had already demonstrated willingness to use Nuclear weapons. That is the surest way to nuclear apocalypse. The west would be forced to abandon the Ukraine, and limit its response to sanctions and digging in along the NATO border. Every nation with the means to develop nuclear weapons would look at what happened to the Ukraine, look at what happened to the NATO countries protected by US nuclear arms, and start crash programs to develop or extent their own arsenals. Good bye anti-proliferation.

  5. Re:Guys, 2020 is just sixe years from now on Bookies Predict the Future of Tech · · Score: 1

    You could flip that on its head, and say that despite the challenges of a mars colonization mission, and the exponential increase in difficulty that trying to do it in 6 years would add, they wont give worse odds than 1 in 250 that it could happen... given the launch windows, 6 years is too short, even if you really believe in Musk, and think we can colonize Mars... but it does highlight the short windows of these predictions. Just pushing them all out to 2030, and I'd be really interested to see what they start making the odds.

  6. Possibility of improved driving on Google Fighting Distracted Driver Laws · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Legislatures should wait to see how things develop, and not ban a product before it causes problems, based on the presumption that it will. Consider the possibility that you could build in driver aids to the Google glass that could actually make driving easier/safer. You could augment human senses with car sensors to identify potential hazards sooner then the average person would see them, or even something as simple as making your navigation info easier to see without looking away from the road at all. Second, to the extent that using them is banned, it should require more then just having one attached to your glasses, it should require that you were actually using it. Its simple with a cell phone, there is no reason you would have it in your hand other then to use it, but with Google glass, you could turn it off while driving and just keep using the same glasses. Ultimately it all comes down to legislators seeing an opportunity to get some free press for passing a law that wont piss off too many constituents, regardless of whether a law about it is really necessary. The basis for a law shouldn't just be can it reduce harm, but can it reduce harm substantially enough to justify an intrusion on our freedom to do it. I don't think banning Google glass while driving justifies that intrusion at this point.

  7. What happens when it can't keep up? on Next-Gen Windshield Wipers To Be Based On Jet Fighter "Forcefield" Tech · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What happens when its raining heavily, and a vehicle going the other way hits a puddle, and dumps a massive wave of water on your windshield? What happens when its full inch of heavy slush? I'd say its a nice addition on top of regular wipers, but I'm very skeptical about replacing them.

  8. Re:202586 on Final Mars One Numbers Are In, Over 200,000 People Applied · · Score: 1

    Summed it up in one word. Someone offered me the chance to go to mars, hell yeah I'd go, but I'd want to know a lot more about the details of the plan then those guys are providing. There are tons of big hurdles, they can be overcome, but its not gonna be simple, or cheap. I don't think a reasonable person would put faith in the group running this to be able to overcome those hurdles. Now if SpaceX was recruiting for a mars mission, sign me up.

  9. Population Density on We're Number 9! US Broadband Speeds Rise, But Slower Than Many Other Countries' · · Score: 1

    Look at the population density, it is a lot easier to provide services like high quality broadband to a dense population. South Korea - 1,303/sq mi Japan - 873/sq mi Hong Kong - 16,876/sq mi Switzerland - 505/sq mi Netherlands - 1,287/sq mi Latvia - 80/sq mi Czech Republic - 344/sq mi Sweden - 60/sq mi United States - 89/sq mi Denmark - 337/sq mi Only Sweden and Latvia really out perform us without having several times higher population density.

  10. Got it backwards on One-Time Pad From Caltech Offers Uncrackable Cryptography · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A one time pad is impossible to crack in theory, but may be crackable if the method for generating the pad is flawed. Creating true randomness is a tricky proposition, and I don't see why its safe to believe that "shining a light through a diffusive glass plate" will generate true randomness.

  11. Right, but value in the fashion industry is more about style, aesthetic, and branding. Very little is about improved utility. People will pay 1000% more for a piece of clothing from a famous designer, but not 1000% more for a branded drug, or branded computer when there is a generic of equal quality and utility available.

  12. Re:Good! on (Highly Divided) Federal Circuit Opinion Finds Many Software Patents Ineligible · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Suppose I invest $1B in researching a new drug, getting it through FDA approval, and bringing it to market. Then you immediately offer a generic version that is exactly the same composition. Our drugs are functionally identical, there is no way I can offer a superior version because when it comes right down to it, the composition is what valuable, and its easily replicated. How will I make my $1B back when you can offer the drug at a price that never needs to pay back the research investment. Don't get me wrong, the patent system is seriously messed up, but there is a need for patents in some cases.

  13. Re:Just a publicity stunt on Over 1000 Volunteers For 'Suicide' Mission To Mars · · Score: 2

    That isn't even the biggest issue for me. There are several key challenges a real attempt would face, and little to nothing is said about them. 1. Money - Not even considering design, construction or training, and even presuming future price reductions in orbital launch, the launch costs would run north of $100M, and likely much more. Yet almost nothing is said of how that or anything else would be funded 2. Radiation - Both during the trip to Mars, and while on the surface, the crew would be exposed to solar and cosmic radiation, while to some extent increased exposure is just one of the risks, without any mitigation, the crew could be exposed to lethal doses just on the trip there. 3. Landing - Nothing is said of the difficulties of landing on mars. The concept art has heat shields like you would expect of an earth landing module, but nothing is said about dealing with the martian atmosphere. There are of course plenty of other challenges, but that those huge ones are totally unaddressed, and instead they are moving ahead with crew selection, seems very suspect. They are putting the thing they can certainly achieve first, selecting a crew, to distract from the things they may not be able to deal with.

  14. Re:Good book, but has some holes on Book Review: The Windup Girl · · Score: 2

    See, thats where it doesn't make sense. They have the infrastructure to make the kinetic energy storage devices and to continue bio engineering, so they should be able to produce solar/wind/hydro/tide power, and did use a limited amount of fossil fuel generated electricity. Even if it wasn't economically viable for the masses, certainly the rich and or gov't would have been able to afford some as a prestige item or for critical purposes. Both solar and wind have major drawbacks, but in a time of such energy scarcity, the draw backs could be lived with.

  15. Good book, but has some holes on Book Review: The Windup Girl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There were a lot of interesting ideas discussed in the book, but it fails to really explain why things like solar power were not used... at all... not to mention any other form of green energy that is available even today. It seemed a pretty big hole to me.

  16. Re:I wish... on Chinese Legislature Conducts Large Online Vote · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, I wouldn't worry about the results not getting released. Instead we would get loaded questions designed to influence the results. A skilled pollster could move public opinion pretty far based on how they ask the questions, and there is no way they would be unbiased. "Do you support closing the gun show loophole" vs "Do you support the ban on the sale of guns between private citizens without requiring a gun shop as an intermediary" Same outcome, but will get very different results.

  17. One Way on NASA Wants Spacecraft For Mars Return Trip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Who needs to come back. We should send a one way craft, there would be countless volunteers even if it was clear that they are never coming home. Once there, you could start working to establish a sustainable off planet colony... Would also make getting there a lot cheaper.

  18. Uhmm NO on 80% of Browsers Found To Be At Risk of Attack · · Score: 4, Informative

    So first I needed to enable javascript for the site. Now it wants me to allow some random website to install a plugin so that it can tell me if my security is up to date... yeah if it can't detect a security vulnerability without me going through a bunch of hoops and ALLOWING it to install on my system, I'm going with the whole thing is BS.

  19. Cool idea, destined to turn out badly on California Wants To Put E-Ads On License Plates · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The idea is cool, but I would be really pissed if someone could put ads on my car without my consent. But how else will they rake in the money for the state? (Maybe make it optional and split the ad revenue with the driver?)

  20. Re:Privacy laws on Germany Demands Google Forfeit Citizens' Wi-Fi Data · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You want the data turned over to the government? That is the absolute last thing I would want if google inappropriately collected my wifi activity. The government should supervise the destruction, not be given the data set to do with as they please...

  21. Re:Pitchforks down, please, no story here on Chrome Private Mode Not Quite Private · · Score: 2, Interesting

    From the google bug tracker: "we (the UI design team) made the choice to purposefully remember incognito zoom levels."

    Sounds like the intentionally gutted the security of the incognito mode for the zoom levels... Its one thing if its an oversight, but to do it intentionally reveals a total disregard for the privacy someone using incognito expects.

  22. I've never had a problem on Net Shoppers Bullied Into "Verified By Visa" Program · · Score: 1

    I use a VISA card and have never had a problem with an online merchant refusing a transaction after I declined to use verified by visa... Of course I only use my card when dealing with major retailers, is there some segment of the market the author is dealing with that is paticularly prone to charge backs or something?

  23. Re:I guess some places are just lax on No-Fail Identity Theft – Live and In Person · · Score: 1

    The ultimate test in an organization that prides itself on security like that is what happens when a person penetrates the primary layer of security. Say someone steals & alters a legit badge (which is then not reported promptly)... if the badge opens the doors, and looks legit will anyone question it? What about the person who has done thier research? Someone who has researched a paticular employee (who just left for vacation), ooops I forgot my badge, could you show me who is in charge of issuing the temp badge? Yeah I'm XXXX (who wont be around to notice). USB dongles in the parking lot (the suggestion of the break room would require more access)... There are lots of ways to penetrate the first line of defense, whether you have a real security culture is how many more lines of defense the average employee will enforce before accepting someone as legit.

  24. Re:how about "focus on quality not market cap" on What Kind of Alternate Business Models Could ISPs Use? · · Score: 1

    If only there was a company rolling out fiber in US cities... If only they provided more bandwidth at the same cost as cable... If only they provided the bandwidth they advertised If only they didn't throttle Well, thats my experiance with FIOS... I pay for 20/5, I get 20/5... I don't see what the problem is... just move someplace where you can get it, and pray verizon doesn't change to be more like comcrap

  25. What is the vulnerability? on AntiPiracy Macrovision Bug is Actually Six Years Old · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It should be required that any story about a security hole indicate whether user interaction is required for the system to be comprimised... If I have to download/run something then I could care less... only if the vulnerability can be exploited remotely with NO interaction on my part do I care... There are many stories that hype threats were it all boils down to the user running something they shouldn't have.

    How is this vulnerability exploited?