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User: Brainix

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Comments · 46

  1. The Barn Door on Test of 16 Anti-Virus Products Says None Rates "Very Good" · · Score: 1
    In Modern Operating Systems, Andy Tanenbaum put it best. I can't remember the exact quote, but it was something like:

    Running anti-virus software is akin to locking the barn door after the prize horse has escaped.

  2. Re:amazon vs. Google on Google Takes On Amazon With Own E-Book Store · · Score: 1

    SIP is a fun feature, but I think it has the potential to be more. I agree, it's "nothing more" than simple collocations, but I'm not sure how that's a critique. In the end, all software boils down to simple assembly instructions, nonetheless the magic emerges.

    For further commentary, see this blog post. SIP is just simple collocations, but that's exactly what makes it so appealing. It's moving indexing and search in a more semantic direction, but in a way that's reasonable to design and implement.

    This is probably premature, but I've even heard some pundits compare SIP to PageRank.

  3. Re:amazon vs. Google on Google Takes On Amazon With Own E-Book Store · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Amazon has done some interesting research and development lately. In particular, look at Amazon's EC2 cloud computing platform, as well as Amazon's statistically improbable phrases (SIP) algorithm. I have a fetish for natural language parsing, so SIP is particularly interesting to me. These are innovations.

  4. Re:This will backfire on Encrypted Traffic No Longer Safe From Throttling · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The ISPs will continue down this path until it is no longer economically feasible to do so. And that day *is* coming. One day, it'll be more expensive to play these cat-and-mouse games than to just give away cheap bandwidth, disk space, etc.

  5. Re:Apple software not secure. on Firefox Susceptible To QuickTime Security Flaw · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Really? Where are the gozillion iTunes exploits? Or is iTunes "less popular" too?

  6. Re:It's about CRITICAL MASS... on Fake Codec is Mac OS X Trojan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your argument isn't as original as you'd like. It's also flawed. Just compare Apache to IIS. Apache has much greater market share, but IIS get exploited like Swiss cheese. How do you explain that?

    Another counter argument: Although Linux has a much smaller installed base than Windows, a cracker could stand to gain much more by exploiting Linux. Imagine the wealth of sensitive data hosted on Linux servers.

  7. Re:This is another triumph of politics... on No OLPCs for Cuba, Ever · · Score: 1

    What's the reward for goodwill towards murderous enemies again? Does it make European elites send you a birthday card or something? Can we drink organic cocktails at the enlightenment club while turning a blind eye toward the suffering that results? Do we get a 2% discount on a Prius?
    I don't harbor goodwill toward my "murderous enemies." I harbor goodwill toward their children.
  8. This is another triumph of politics... on No OLPCs for Cuba, Ever · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...over goodwill.

  9. Re:The damage is done. on Novell Goes Public with Microsoft Linux Deal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Free Software / Open Source "community" is and has always been split. That's its greatest strength. Some people (like RMS) are into Free Software for idealistic reasons. Other people (like Linus) are into Open Source for practical reasons. People disagree about everything on every level - from the topmost philosophical level all the way down to the implementation details of the code. There's enough room for everyone and, frankly, the discussions and flamewars are healthy.

  10. Re:Dmitry, spam me first on Microsoft, Sue Me First · · Score: 2

    I don't care that my address is going to be harvested. I post it without obfuscation all over the web. I use Apple Mail (which has a spam filter) as a POP3 client for Gmail (which also has a spam filter). Every week, only about one spam trickles through Gmail, and Apple Mail always catches it. And neither has ever marked a legitimate email as spam.

    Also, I think it makes more of a statement to provide my email address.

  11. Slashdotted on Pidgin 2.0 Released · · Score: 2, Informative

    Uh oh. The Pidgin server seems to be hammered, but you can still download it from its SourceForge page.

  12. Specific Project or Movement as a Whole? on Writing Open Source Documentation? · · Score: 1

    The bad news: It may be difficult to jump onboard a specific project (particularly one as complex as Linux or Firefox) solely as a technical writer. Documentation ranges from extremely technical (as in code comments) to quite understandable (as in FAQs on websites). In my experience, the more technical documentation is left for the developers and the more understandable documentation is left for the admins.

    The good news: If you're creative, you'll find a fulfilling way to help. If you're only interested in supporting a particular project, you could find its official discussion channel and work your way up to being a channel operator. If you're interested in the movement as a whole, you could contribute to a more generic (non-project-specific) documentation site. Many such sites even have author's guides where you can RTFM about WTFM (Writing The Firkin' Manual).

    Good luck!

  13. Lightweight Management on Technologies To Improve Group-Written Code? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I firmly believe that social problems require social solutions, business problems require business solutions, technical problems require technical solutions, etc.

    Two of the issues that you mention are poor code reuse and a lack of code comments. These sound like human problems. Don't try to solve them with technology.

    Your company may benefit from a different project management style. As many people have mentioned, you may be interested in Agile (specifically Scrum and XP). Lightweight management, lightweight processes, and lightweight tools can breathe new life into a company.

    Good luck!

  14. Apple's 1984 Commercial on IBM Touts Smart Surveillance System · · Score: 1

    Suddenly, Apple's 1984 commercial seems even more appropriate.

  15. Re:Won't someone think of the children? on Britain's First "Web-Rage" Attack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're right. Sadly, misguided politicians use unfortunate incidents like this to hammer through legislation. This has less to do with the internet than one might think. Assault has been illegal long before the birth of the internet.

  16. Bill Joy on A Visual Walkthrough of New Features in Vim 7.0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    For the younger ones in the audience, Vim is a superset of vi, which was originally written by Bill Joy.

    Yes, the same Bill Joy who heavily contributed to BSD, TCP/IP, NFS, and csh.

    Yet I still count vi as one of his top contributions. :-)

  17. More Articles on Teen Sues MySpace Over Sexual Assault · · Score: 1

    It seems as though, after the first viewing, The Statesman harasses you to register. Here are some more reports of the same story.

  18. Deja-Vu on Memo Outlines Microsoft's Plans · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Why does this look so farmiliar?

  19. Friction on Intel Dropping Pentium Brand · · Score: 1

    Interestingly, there already seems to be a bit of friction between Apple's and Intel's marketing departments.

    Our other customers aren't boring
    New Apple ad catches Intel by surprise

  20. More Insight on The Man Behind Apple And Pixar · · Score: 4, Interesting
    For more insight into Steve Jobs, click here.

    Also, the following quotes are spoken by Steve Jobs' character in the movie Pirates of the Silicon Valley. Steve Wozniak has verified the movie as accurate.

    • Information is power.
    • It's better to be a pirate than to join the navy.
    • 90 hours per week and loving it.
    • Real artists ship.
  21. Sad on Court Rules in Favor of Anonymous Blogger · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It makes me sad that this is news.

  22. Re:seems like a lot of work on Mini-ITX Computing For Everyone · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Then the author didn't write the article for you.

    Some of us don't see assembling a computer as work -- we see it as play.

    DIY -- scratching the itch -- is the very spirit of Linux.

  23. Re:Slackware's purpose? on Slackware Linux 10.2 Released · · Score: 1
    Linux has surpassed traditional Unix in many ways:
    • O(1) scheduler
    • aggressive virtual memory subsystem
    • /proc filesystem
    • quality documentation
    • active developer/user communities

    I enjoy these Linux features. But I prefer traditional, Unix-like distros. I use Slackware.

  24. Multiuser Operating Systems on Bill Gates Speaks Out · · Score: 1
    "Gates: Software in general, whether it was from Microsoft or somebody else, was not set up for an environment where all the computers were connected together. So it's not like there was some software that had this security capability and our software did not."

    Mr Gates, you're wrong. The internet is the very tool that enables distributed development. Networking (in both the technical and social senses) is at the core of Linux development.

  25. Technical Subjects on Rickford Grant Interview · · Score: 4, Insightful
    My dad doesn't know as much about computers as I do. Whenever he asks a technical question, he reminds me, "Simplify, but don't over-simplify."

    From this interview, it looks like Rickford Grant knows what he's talking about, but crosses the line into over-simplification.

    I don't think I'll recommend this book.