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User: Spliffster

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Comments · 295

  1. I work in a hospital and you are right. Multi million dollar FDA approved equipment is slow to get updates. The larger the company the worse the service (I am looking at you GE). However, MRIs should talk DICOM and not SMB. SMB would be a very stupid option!

  2. If I had modpoints! You are too reasonable for these murica-first/total-comunism slashtards. You describe a model that works pretty well where I live. 10mbit is the minimum available for everyone at a reasonable price (40-50 USD/mo).

  3. Re:Can it run Flash? on $35 Quad-core Hacker SBC Offers Raspberry Pi-like Size and I/O · · Score: 1

    Thanks! I'd prefer debian but I didn't bother checking how to install it. After all, at the moment it is only an xbmc box. in the long run i'd like to build a groundstation for my autonomous vehicles on it, then a reliable distor matters more.

  4. Re:Can it run Flash? on $35 Quad-core Hacker SBC Offers Raspberry Pi-like Size and I/O · · Score: 2

    I don't know about this one, but I own an Odroid U3 (Cortex A9, quad 1.7ghz) and it does very well. It costs abit more (I think it was around usd 50 or 60).

    Their Linux distro is not the best, based on ubuntu and their documentation is really crap. Fine hardware tho.

    Cheers
    -S

  5. Re:It's fast enough for office use on Lost Opportunity? Windows 10 Has the Same Minimum PC Requirements As Vista · · Score: 1

    Actually our central IT buys core i7 with 1GB ram and HDDs. What we do (after the fact is) adding an SSD and 4GB ram for my departement. Also we have been heavily pushing for 1GB ethernet to all offices.

    After that we started buying clients with slower cpus but with SSD, more ram and combined with the faster network the overall performance is much better for an office user. And the average price per client is now usd 400 instead of usd 1200. Our researchers get faster computers where needed.

    Best
    -S

  6. It's fast enough for office use on Lost Opportunity? Windows 10 Has the Same Minimum PC Requirements As Vista · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am working for a company with 6000+ desktops. I do not understand why our client engineering is rolling out faster hardware every year. 95% of all office workers need MS office, a browser and email. Most of the home users just need a browser these days. Those core i7 are just idling around heating office space.

    I have now started rolling out 200 dollar desktop hardware (zotac). Which could really become a problem for microsoft. The windows licence price tag looks really expensive with these hardware prices.

    Office problems are solved, we do not need faster hardware. And microsoft is manly making money from, *drumbeat*, office workers.

    Best
    -S

  7. Re:Quite useless article on New OS X Backdoor Malware Roping Macs Into Botnet · · Score: 1

    Good questions indeed. Apple has rolled out a "Safari Update" on Sept 29th, but there seems to be more to it, however, apple is very secretive about the security updates. Something I really dislike about them:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT...

  8. simply no.

  9. Re:Dear Aunt, let's set so double the killer delet on Microsoft Demos Real-Time Translation Over Skype · · Score: 1

    Haha, my fist thought after reading the headline.

    For those who don't know, this comes from a Windows Vista speech recognition demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... skip to 0:30

  10. Re:Still need Microsoft Office unfortunately on Apache OpenOffice Reaches 100 Million Downloads. Now What? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is because microsoft manages to be incompatible with their own ISO standard (I guess their own "standard" is not documented).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O...

    Best
    -S

  11. Re:Duh on Study Finds US Is an Oligarchy, Not a Democracy · · Score: 2

    I am feeling very privileged to live in a direct democracy, the country is very small and is called Switzerland. We do have 2 instruments to keep our Politicians behaving and represent the people:

    1) Referendum: if we don't like what our policy makers have enacted, we can collect 50'000 signatures and the people have to vote on it

    2) Initiative: Our policy makers don't want to take care of a certain topic? we, the poeple will vote on it after collecting 100'000 signatures.

    It's not a perfect system and it might not work in larger countries on national level, because it is a somewhat slow process to find consensus. However, only the thought alone that politicians' decisions could be overthrown by the people helps keeping them thinking twice what to support and do.

    Best
    -S

  12. Re:Slashdot is ridiculous on Microsoft Confirms It Is Dropping Windows 8.1 Support · · Score: 1

    Our Linux servers (there are many) are updated much more frequently than the windows servers, because we expect and have less problems.

  13. Re:Slashdot is ridiculous on Microsoft Confirms It Is Dropping Windows 8.1 Support · · Score: 1

    Generally Windows bugs get patched fairly quickly.

    This is appropriate use of "generally" and "fairly" in that sentence I guess.

    They are the only big-name vendor who was supporting a 12-year old OS until a week ago.

    Microsoft had to support XP so long because Longhorn development was a disaster. Only with win7 they gave companies a viable upgrade. I am working for a large company and we are only just finishing the transition from XP to 7. Guess why? because of loads of Microsoft specific technologies that are not supported anymore and had to be replaced.

  14. Re:Slashdot is ridiculous on Microsoft Confirms It Is Dropping Windows 8.1 Support · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The SSL flaw has been fixed and rolled out very quickly, it was not the first and will not be the last. How many known Security flaws for windows, IE and many other Microsoft products are out there, unfixed?

    Could you explain why "Microsoft has a bigger problem with having to support old platforms" than anyone else? They seem to have vast resources and should actually be able to react quicker than others.

    Best
    -S

  15. Re:How did this go to trial? on Drone Pilot Wins Case Against FAA · · Score: 1

    These statements show exactly why the FAA cannot be trusted about matters of small Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. I am an sUAS operator myself and I am doing it for charity (check http://conservationdrones.org/ if you want to find out more).

    Raphael's statement has always been, that he is operating an RC plane. The FAA does not regulate RC planes. There are no binding rules at least. They gave out recommendations and acted as if they were binding rules. Since 2007 the FAA has been grounding aerial photography businesses on the grounds of these recommendations.

    Raphael was the first to challenge it in court. And the Judge ruled that this is non of the FAA's business. At least not as long as they come up with proper regulations as I understand this. The FAA has been dragging it's feets for 7 years now and they will most probably not have any regulations in place by 2015 (the next deadline).

    This means that hollywood has to hire foreign countries abroad to use multirotors for some of the footage they want. And this is only the tip of the iceberg. Thousands of farmers, civil engineers, maintenance workers, security workers, you name it have been forced to stop doing their business for 7 years without a resolution in sight. This ruling clears up the matters for commercial drone use in the US.

  16. Re:Gov't project on Administration Admits Obamacare Website Stinks · · Score: 1

    All the early rockets in the space race were later used as ICMBs (mercury -> atlas, gemeni -> titan, both became ICBMs). Except the saturn V most prior mature rokets became ICBMs and NASA did the development. You might head over to wikipedia and read a bit about it. Usually it's not clearly stated but if you compare the military programmes with the NASA's you'll start to see that the space race actually survived because of the military value (and the obvious political one, but that wasn't the only reason).

  17. Re:What does IT run on .. on Administration Admits Obamacare Website Stinks · · Score: 1

    Looks like you need to blow off some steam, have you considered posting to alt.sysadmin.recovery lately?

  18. Re: What's keeping you from switching? on Ask Slashdot: Is Postgres On Par With Oracle? · · Score: 1

    Not in our environment. I am working as developer for a large company, using oracle 10 and 11. There is no way our oracle servers can distinguish between NULL and an empty string (varchar2):

    http://asktom.oracle.com/pls/asktom/f?p=100:11:0::::P11_QUESTION_ID:5984520277372

    Cheers
    -S

  19. Re: Contracts will never go away in the USA on The Days of Cheap, Subsidized Phones May Be Numbered · · Score: 1

    Hello. I am living in a country where cellphone network providers are regulated by the state. They must offer sim cards without phone contracts. I get 100% coverage in my country with all carriers and pay 69$ a month for unlimited text, speech and internet. The phone i bought (Galaxy Nexus) has cost me $380 and will last for 2 years.

    Before we had this regulations I payed at least twice the price per year. I took about 2 years for the market to adjust and priced dropped significantly. Our telcos are still reporting huge profits every year so the must have made much more before.

    Basically because most f the people here started buying the phones, the cellphone providers became just another data provider (utility). Subsidized phones have kept the prices artificially high in the past.

    Best
    -S

  20. Re:Goose meet Gander on An Open Letter To Google Chairman Eric Schmidt On Drones · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am co-founder of a company that produces small autonomous aircrafts. Google bought one from us.

  21. OMG rot13, lame and even smaller than a nomad.

    I guess rot13 is the new troll standard for /. users (even for mods), I don't really think this is funny. Going back to read A.S.R

  22. Re:Grow Up on Ask Slashdot: Mac To Linux Return Flow? · · Score: 1

    I feel your pain. My primary desktop computers run linux since 2001. The last couple of years has been a real PITA with change for changes sake. I've been through KDE, Gnome, XFCE and various light weight DMs. With the release of e17 I switched to Bodhi and am pretty happy. If they keep their release cycle, e18 will be out around 2020 ;)

    Best
    -S

  23. Re:Goodbye Windows on Valve Officially Launches Steam For Linux · · Score: 1

    I didn't know MacOS is Linux based. Care to tell me a bit more about this linux stuff in OSX?

  24. Re:Why? on ARM-Based Chromebooks Ready To Battle Windows 8, Tablets · · Score: 1

    My ISP (cable and wireless) is constantly getting cheaper while offering more bandwidth (they do not only promise but deliver more).

    But hey, I am not living in the US ... my phone's bandwidth will supersede my cable subscription this year by a 5 fold (LTE for approx US 80/month).

    Best
    -S

  25. Automatic Docking? on ISS Robotic Arm Captures Dragon Capsule · · Score: 1

    Is this spacecraft going to be docking automatically in the future? Something that the early soyuz (read ~1970) already did.

    Best
    -S