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User: superskippy

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  1. Re:Thats ok , as an XP user on Internet Explorer 9 Will Not Support Windows XP · · Score: 1

    Meh, it's not that much of a problem. I can't see there being a subset of websites in the future that only work in IE9, but not IE7 or IE8, So you can keep doing what you do now- run Firefox except for the few times you need a craptacular website, in which case you can carefully an old IE.

  2. Re:Assume it is .. on How Can I Tell If My Computer Is Part of a Botnet? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I hate to break the Slashdot rules-of-posting, but I've got some sympathy for Microsoft here. A lot of the things Vista tried to do was to sweep away some of the old crud and make developers code more securely- that was what the whole Blah wants to do something- confirm or deny bit was about.

    Everyone's reaction? Waaaaahhhh, my computer is far more annoying. Where are my XP disks?

    MS are damned if they do sweep away old insecure crud (because old stuff stops working) and damned if the don't sweep old crud away (because their OS has a load of crud in it). Their main competitor (Apple) doesn't have this problem- when people move to a Mac they expect all of their old stuff to stop working- indeed none of their old applications work!

  3. Re:Assume it is .. on How Can I Tell If My Computer Is Part of a Botnet? · · Score: 1
    Fecking windows control freak admins!

    Right, here is what happens if you try and implement this:

    1. People will do anything to avoid being connected to your domain. They'll hide their computers. They'll buy new computers from a different budget pool, them claim that because they bought them from non-IT department money they can do what they want with them. They'll bring their own computers into work.
    2. Your users also spend all of their time trying to hack around your restrictions rather than doing the work you pay them for. It's very hard to lock Windows down totally.
    3. Your new full time job is unrestricting web sites from Websense Express, and installing necessary software on their PCs, and fixing programs that don't work if they don't run as Administrator

    Intrusion detection and virus scanning is great idea, but taking peoples rights to look after their own computers means you piss them off, and give yourself tons more work. The right answer is to give them something that doesn't get easily hacked. Since many companies are stuck with Windows, the GP has it right- let them do what they want, and then if they break it keep a clean image.

  4. Re:Yep, now explain that to the politicians please on The Pirates Will Always Win, Says UK ISP · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The problem is that TalkTalk sabotage their own arguments by being one of the biggest proponents of Phorm and traffic shaping. If it's just a pipe, and "oh we can't possibly be expected to look inside the packets and find out what they are", why are you planning on inserting adverts into my web pages at the ISP stage?. Why do you open up my packets and make some of them go slower or faster?

    The truth of the matter is that ISPs secretly love pirates- they pay the broadband bills. Modern piracy has been a big loss for the content industries and a big win for telecoms companies. Please don't pretend that Dunstone is resisting this because he is a huge fan of civil liberties, he is resisting this because it is good for his business.

  5. Re:As if the terms weren't draconian enough... on Facebook Reverts ToS Change After User Uproar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect that keeping your content indefinitely is what already happens, and they were merely trying to update the TOS to reflect reality. And besides, if you delete stuff from there, how are you ever going to know if all the copies have gone from their computers? And are you expecting them to go through all of their old backup tapes and delete your data?

    It's also important to remember that Facebook is a hugely popular website that makes no money whatsoever. Their basic business model is to sell your privacy and give you in return the website. They haven't worked out how to do it yet, so you can expect more stuff you don't like from Facebook at some point in the future.

  6. Re:I hope P.B. win this trial on The Pirate Bay Is Making a "Spectrial" of It · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1) People have been pirating computer games on a large scale since the early 80ies. If you haven't been able to make a buck before, you never will.

    This is true. There has always been piracy to a greater or lesser extent. To talk about music, when tapes first came out, piracy went up, then when CDs arrived there was a short golden age for the record companies of very low piracy. Then CD burners came along, and piracy went up again.

    The equation has always been about how much effort it takes to pirate and how good the pirate copy is, versus how much money it costs to buy the stuff legitimately. Traditionally, buying the stuff is good for people with lots of money, but no spare time (i.e. working people), whereas piracy has always appealed to people without a lot of money but a lot of time on their hands (typically students, and the unemployed). Taping a song from the radio in the 80s takes dedication- if your a kid in your bedroom that can't afford the $2, but you've got the time to wait for your song to appear on the radio, then you'll tape it. The kid's parents who have been at work all day will just go down the shop.

    Torrents have now got to the point where the effort is so low (everyone knows about the Pirate Bay) that pretty much everyone has enough time on their hands to bother. If the rights holders are to reverse piracy, they don't need to drive out all piracy, they merely need to make it more effort than buying the stuff for the majority of people. And that's what's different now.

  7. Re:I hope P.B. win this trial on The Pirate Bay Is Making a "Spectrial" of It · · Score: 1

    I've heard this argument several times that they are "just linking to illegal content", as if what they are doing is just like an HTML link, just like google.

    These guys are actually running the Bittorrent trackers themselves. That is to say they are coordinating the distribution of files, far more directly than merely linking to them. No tracker, no torrent. Although they might not actually have any of the goods on their servers, they have filenames, and SHA1 checksums of the chunks of the material. This is a clear distinction between the Pirate Bay and mere links.

    There is no doubt in my mind that if torrent trackers were around when copyright was invented, then torrent trackers of copyright material would have been made illegal. They only slip through in Sweden due to out-of-date laws. Sweden should change her laws.

  8. Re:Oh, I Was Kind of Looking Forward to It on UK Government Abandons Piracy Legislation · · Score: 1, Insightful

    To be fair, I don't think you'd need to arrest 100,000 people- I think about 1,000 would do it. Everyone else would soon stop after that. It's all about the fear of getting caught.

  9. Re:Good on UK Child Abuse Investigators Resent Being Charged For ISP Data · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The reason this attitude is considered acceptable in ISPs and not for other fields of work (do you think BT hand over phone records without charging?) is because ISPs in this country are giving way into the idea that they are responsible for what their users are doing. It's kind of become accepted that ISPs could look inside every packet and decide whether it's bad stuff.

    They shot themselves in the foot when they introduced all that packet filtering for torrents and so on, and when they started thinking about introducing Phorm. Aha, says the public, so you could tell what's going on all the time, so if you let your customers do bad things, you could have done something about it.

    The minute the ISPs gave up their common carrier status (i.e. like the post office saying- we just transport the mail. We don't open all the letters to find out if it is illegal- e.g. a blackmail demand), they invited every Tom Dick and Harry who doesn't like what is going on on the internet to bwahh at their door.

  10. the real problem... on Cisco Mulls Adding Verbal Interview To CCIE Exams · · Score: 1

    The real problem is that they don't change the questions often enough. Every exam I ever took when I was at school or university had past years questions available. It didn't matter, since this years were going to be different.

    All Cisco need to do is change the questions more often. That's got to be cheaper than interviewing people in the exam.

  11. That's just economic development on Dell Closes Ireland Plant; 2nd Largest Employer · · Score: 1

    This is economic development, and is good news, although I appreciate that it won't seem like that if you are one of the people laid off.

    The reason Dell were in Ireland in the first place is because Ireland was the cheap labour centre of Europe. As they've developed, it's no longer true and their economy has been replaced by a knowledge economy. In many ways, cheap-ass manufacturing leaving your country because the labour is too cheap is a complement. Next, the same cycle gets to happen to Poland. Everyone moves low-skill factories there, the place develops, and then the staff get expensive so Dell will go somewhere cheaper again.

  12. Why are they stopping doing these? on Steve Jobs' Macworld Keynotes, 1998-2008 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Steve or no steve, the what-are-apple-bringing-out-next keynotes are a big tech highlight. They always get lots of news coverage- e.g. this piece!

    It mystifies why Apple have decided that they can be dispensed with. Dell would kill to have this.

  13. Re:Sony needs to... on Breaking Down the Dropping Parts Cost for Sony's PS3 · · Score: 1

    The thing to remember about the XBox 360 is that it is being sold at a huge loss.

    Microsoft has a huge pile of cash lying around, in the billions. It earns money chiefly from a Windows monopoly that is looking less important by the day.

    They could do one of two things- give the cash back to the shareholders (a good idea, but one that is never popular with CEOs, since it reduces the size of their empires, and therefore the salary checks), or what Microsoft is doing, which is throwing cash at a huge rate at various projects (the Zune, Windows Mobile etc.) to try and get a foothold in another market so their business has got a future even if people stop buying Windows.

    MS don't care about making any money from the XBox 360. They in theory are thinking about the XBox 1000, a Playstation 5 competitor to make the money back. In practise what they really care about is throwing money in and trying to get market share, so it looks from the outside like they are competing in an new area, bumping their share price.

    I feel sorry for Sony, since they are trying to run the games business like an actual business that they try and make money from, rather than a multiple-billion loss leader.

  14. Re:I'm confused.. on BBC's iPlayer Chief Pushes Tiered Charging For ISPs · · Score: 1
    The trouble is that there are three strategies currently used in the UK. One- increase $y. Two decrease $x. Three, lie about what you are providing.

    I estimate that strategies one and two probably have around 200,000 customers, and the remaining 20 million lines are with the liars :-)

    The average joe sees that unlimited broadband for cheap offer and plumps for that- he's typically He's got no way of telling he isn't getting what he's paying for. He isn't going to plump for another offer that costs more or has a cap- since that's clearly worse, comparing spec-for-spec. He'll go for the cheap stuff, and get stuck in their traffic shaping software, and he won't know anything about it. So any ISP that moves away from the lying business model will rapidly lose it's customers.

  15. I own a scratched disk on Microsoft Knew About Xbox 360 Damaging Discs · · Score: 1
    I own a scratched, unplayable copy of Lego Star Wars thanks to this problem. The console was getting hot where it was so I tried to move it upright.

    I'm not sure why you want to read this comment, but it makes me feel much better having told you all :-(

  16. No, on AIX On the Desktop Is Getting the Boot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, it's just you.

  17. Re:Strategy on Sun Banks On Open Source For Its Survival · · Score: 1

    That's exactly what I'm saying! If you've got the best platform, and no one wants to buy it, you suck at selling stuff.

  18. Re:Long term prospects are not good for Sun on Sun Banks On Open Source For Its Survival · · Score: 4, Insightful
    No, that's IBM.

    I remember Sun adverts during the dot-com boom days that mocked IBM for having a huge range of stuff, where as Sun sold only one simple stack of stuff- theirs.

  19. Re:Strategy on Sun Banks On Open Source For Its Survival · · Score: 3, Informative
    I disagree. Whether you think Java is any good or not, Sun have made a profit of 0c over all time on it, and will never make any money on it. I think MySQL is cack, but even if you don't, if you've got money to spend on databases, you aren't going to give it to MySQL.

    Solaris on SPARC hardware is the gold standard of reliability and quality. So if need the best reliability and you've got money to burn (i.e. banks), that's what Sun should be able to persuade you to buy. If you own the best OS in the world, and you can't make money, you've got big problems.

  20. daft on Sun Banks On Open Source For Its Survival · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Much as I like open source, giving stuff away is really not what a business that need some cash needs right now.

  21. Re:Wow... on UK Court Rejects Encryption Key Disclosure Defense · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The simple truth is that being nasty to foreigners in immigration controls is an easy vote winner since it creates imaginary "extra security" layer for people who do get to vote, and all the people affected don't get to vote, since they're foreign.

    This equation is true all over the world.

  22. Yes you're right on People Prefer Angry-Faced Cars · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, you're right. A survey of just 40 people will change the direction of car design, especially since they spend billions on car development, but they haven't thought to ask people what they thought of the appearance of cars.

  23. Re:What's the market for these engines? on 16th World Computer Chess Championship In Progress · · Score: 1

    Yes, this is very depressing- I struggle to beat GnuChess on easy.

  24. Re:in hindsight on AMD Graphics Chips Could Last 10X To 100X Longer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Anyone familiar with Nvidia's hiring practices could've predicted a disaster of this magnitude. They have absolutely moronic screening quizzes (yes, quizzes)... canned technical questions with only one "right" answer. Throw original thinking out the window, they just want to hire drones to do their dirty work. You know what Nvidia, you get what you deserve. Maybe they had a majority of good employees at one time, but the way they treat their people, I imagine there's been alot of brain drain. It's a clear sign of a failing company when they rely on marketing & sales to hide shoddy engineering. You had agood run Nvidia, but the last stop is coming up. Get off while you can, the train derails up ahead.

    So you didn't get the job then?

  25. Re:I lost a lot of respect for Wietse Venema on Postfix's Creator Outlines Spam Solution · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's quite simple. If you write an MTA, you have to be an asshole. It's the law.