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User: LukaFox

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Comments · 27

  1. BSD? on Helpful Linux Links · · Score: 2, Funny

    I like how BSD is listed as the first GNU/Linux distribution.

  2. An interesting advance in technology on Star Wars Trilogy MIT Musical · · Score: 1
    From the article: "Ciborowski, who wields a working light saber, is most enthusiastic..." (emphasis added)

    If this is true, then I'm surprised the "working light saber" story hasn't been on Slashdot yet.

  3. Re:Special Relativity on IBM Slows the Speed of Light · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes. The point was that there needs to be a distinction made between "speed of light" and "amount of time it takes for light to travel a certain distance."

  4. Special Relativity on IBM Slows the Speed of Light · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It doesn't seem like the speed of light is really being "slowed down." Rather, the time it takes photons to travel a certain distance is being increased by the use of a device which scatters photons and also by means of electric fields. This is just like saying that light travels "more slowly" through certain media. Really, what I think is happening is that there is a delay when a photon is being absorbed into a certain medium before being able to pass through it. So, it seems that light slows down, but really the delay is caused by the interference of the medium and the speed of the actual photons is constant.

  5. Horrible pun on Banks to Use 2-factor Authentication by End of 2006 · · Score: 1

    Did everyone read TF-A?

  6. I'm hungry. on Time Travelers' Convention · · Score: 1

    I'm hungry. I haven't eaten since later this afternoon.

  7. Obligatory on Go Daddy Usurps Network Solutions · · Score: 1

    Netcraft confirms it!

  8. Re:A question for RMS on RMS Weighs in on BitKeeper Debacle · · Score: 1

    Like how he must love proprietary software because that's what he used to develop GNU?

  9. Re:I'm still tired and coffee'd up to my eyeballs! on Daylight Savings Change Proposed · · Score: 0, Troll

    Maybe we should measure time as just one number (like computers). The only downside would be that it'd be a huge number. Other than that, it would make doing math with dates and times easier, and we wouldn't need leap years, DST, or any of the other devices set up to keep our calendar straight and the sun high in the sky at the right times.

  10. Security through obscurity? on Symantec: Mac OS X Becoming a Malware Target · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is it really true that the only thing protecting Macs thus far has been their smaller by comparison presence on the Internet? Is there nothing to be said for the inherent security or insecurity of a particular platform? This is the kind of argument that free operating systems get against their security all the time. It'll be interesting to see whether the Mac platform can stand up to increased attacks. If it does, this might help convince people that some platforms really are more secure than others.

  11. Re:You can fill it for free. on Business Models: Napster to Go vs. iPod · · Score: 1

    Isn't any action morally or ethically questionable conduct depending on your given set of morals or ethics?

  12. Re:I almost spit my drink on my monitor at this pa on A Savant Explains His Abilities · · Score: 2, Funny

    Spoiler Alert: It turns out the zebra did it!

  13. Re:Are logs illegal? on FL Court Rules Against Spouse-Installed Spyware · · Score: 1
    I don't think that logs count as an interception of electronic communication. Usually, either party's software would be generating a log, thus not intercepting it but receiving it normally and making a record of it.

    If an ISP logs the traffic through its servers, I don't know if that would count either because that's an expected kind of mediation that has to occur. Packets go through plenty of other machines besides the end points, but that has to be expected.

  14. Re:I can't speak as a parent.. on Student RFID Tracking Suspended from School · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In some ways, this seems like the natural progression of the public school system (at least as I remember it). Efficiency and liability have already motivated policies that treat students more like livestock. Granted, that this technology would make it easier (and cause new problems and work-arounds if people become too reliant on it). It's a tough call sometimes. Parents expect that schools keep track of their kids while they're there, but does that mean having them carry devices that really do track their every move?

  15. The soy of electronics on Intel Announces Laser Breakthrough · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Silicon: is there anything it can't do? Seriously, it'll be interesting to see how this impacts optical storage, not to mention all the other places lasers are used.

  16. Re:This is really interesting. on Browser Speed Comparisons · · Score: 1

    Number of controls isn't necessarily an OS limit, and browsers don't have to implement their own widgets. For instance Konqueror just uses the KDE/QT widgets. In fact, this makes it easier to port KHTML to use gui-toolkits besides QT.

  17. Re:What about on Cooling Down Hot Processors · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that wasn't intended as a viable cooling solution. I thought it was funny.

  18. What about on Cooling Down Hot Processors · · Score: 3, Interesting

    a liquid cooling system that is also a conversation piece http://nobispro.com/aquatank/?

  19. What would commentators be like? on Pro Gaming Commentators · · Score: 2, Funny
    Wow. There could be a whole new area for sports commentators to use home-spun expressions.

    "Wow, his supply of plasma grenades is lower than a doodle bug in Aunt Tillie's root cellar."

    GOaaaall!

  20. Re:RMS? on Debian Project Nominations Opened · · Score: 1

    That's why I said that it might be illegal depending on patent law.

  21. Re:RMS? on Debian Project Nominations Opened · · Score: 2, Insightful

    These things can be done by free software. The reason that some distributions don't include software that does this is the issue of software patents. It's not that the software doesn't exist, it's that it might be illegal depending on patent law.

  22. Re:New mail protocol on Spamhaus: MCI Makes $5M A Year In Spam Profits · · Score: 2, Insightful
    That's true. SMTP is just what it claims to be: simple. The only problem with a new mail protocol would be backwards compatibility. It couldn't be compatible with SMTP and still be effective in preventing spam or email spoofing. However, ISPs are not going to want to implement a protocol that no clients can use, and email clients are not going to support protocols that are not actually in use as easily. SMTP has been around for a long time, and replacing it isn't going to be easy. SMTP would have been replaced already if it weren't so universally used.

    We've already got competing solutions to some of the problems with SMTP, but not a lot of people are using them. Most people don't encrypt email, S/MIME still is not widely used.

  23. Good on PHP Security Consortium Launched · · Score: 1

    It's good to see more promotion of secure coding practices, especially with Web languages like PHP.

  24. Re:Wake up, everyone on U.S. Kids Don't Understand First Amendment · · Score: 1

    One of the reasons to respect the flag is that the flag is a symbol of a government that is supposed to respect certain freedoms. If flag burning is outlawed, then some of these freedoms are no longer being respected by the government, and that would be a disgrace whereas burning a flag if it were made illegal would be in the spirit of what the flag stands for and what the U.S. was founded on.

  25. Re:What does the flag represent? on U.S. Kids Don't Understand First Amendment · · Score: 1
    "The flag represents the freedom to burn it."

    I agree.

    If the day ever comes when a law against flag burning is passed, that will be the day I burn a flag in protest.