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User: UncHellMatt

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  1. Re:Rule of Law on Recording the Police · · Score: 1

    One of my co-workers, a police officer himself and someone who trains SWAT and special operations units, is ALL FOR recording by the public and feels there should be more recording on the part of officers themselves. During his training, he shows a video wherein an officer pulls a man over for speeding and reckless driving. As he goes back to his patrol car to run the man's license, the driver gets out of his car and refuses to get back in the vehicle, becoming verbally abusive. The officer instructs the man to come to the back of the stopped vehicle, as he is trained to do so that every word and action can be captured on video. The man begins to comply, then starts to dance and laugh. During one of his oh-so-creative dance moves, he pulls a gun and tries to level it at the officer. The officer, fortunately, stops the man's arm, and two rounds are discharged. The two then fight for a good solid couple of minutes and more rounds are discharged any time the gun gets near the officer. Now, I don't know about you lot, but let me tell you... When you're in a fight, 15 seconds seems like a year, but when you're in a fight where your life could very well end if you don't do something that same 15 seconds could seem like an eternity.

    In the end, the officer manages to get his own firearm free, and fighting the whole time, puts his gun to the back of the man's head, and "Goodnight Gracie". Had that video not been there, imagine the court room drama. Imagine the inquiries. A bullet to the back of the head? Regardless of the number of rounds discharged by the guy, regardless of the injuries the officer sustained, there would have been a very good chance that officer could have faced court or even jail time. In the end, the video showed that the officer was justified in his use of deadly force. The man he'd pulled over had a litany of priors as well as jail time, nearly all related to acts of sometimes extreme violence.

    Officers should be held to a higher level of acceptable behavior, it should be expected that they respect the populace and, you know, actually UPHOLD the constitution as stated in their oath. To help insure that they do just that, and to protect THEM, officers should embrace video surveillance on their own part, and on the part of citizens. The problem is the number of bad eggs out there who have, for so long, abused power that they don't exactly like the idea of being caught at it.

  2. Hey Google. on Google Broadens Bug Bounties To Include Web App Security · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    How about you just pay taxes, and stop ratting people out to the Chinese government. Any bugs in your software will be a lot more readily forgiven.

  3. Despite what who? on The Time Travel Paradoxes of Back To the Future · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Despite countless viewings of BTTF I still never through of a few of these. "
    Did you the whole thing?

  4. I have one. Meh. on iPad Owners Are 'Selfish Elites' · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I work for a law enforcement agency in IT, and one of the high mucky mucks decided to try out the iPad since another high mucky muck bought one. Now most of the command and admin staff have been issued the devices as well.

    From a "user" standpoint, it's... A neat toy. I bought my daughter an iPod touch, and effectively that's all it is. Bigger, heavier. The book reader is nice, some of the aps are pretty decent, but really isn't anything ground breaking. Not by a long shot.

    Now, taken from my profession's standpoint, it has the potential to be a very useful device. Currently we use laptops in our cruisers ("MDT", mobile data terminal) which we can use to connect to LEAPS (Law Enforcement Automated Processing System) and run plates, wants/warrants, BOP (bureau of parole) etc. I don't know if you've ever lifted a Panasonic Toughbook, but you could use one of these things to beat a whale to death. With a relatively simple ruggedized case, and at only about $900 (as opposed to $5500), iPads would be a great alternative for officers on foot patrol, bike, Segway and the like. However AT&T sucks balls. I am aware of talks that Verizon will be an available option for the iPad, which is currently the provider we use. They give us fixed IPs, restricted connections (i.e. goes from MDT to Verizon, from Verizon to our building's router, then off to LEAPS). Officers wouldn't be able to write reports since our and most report writing / case tracking systems for law enforcement require at least Java, but still, they'd be a great addition to the tools available.

    IF Verizon offers normal business plans (which AT&T won't for these devices or iPhones), and IF Apple were to pull their collective heads out of their collective backsides, iPads have the potential to find their way into a lot of industries, and I can see many uses in emergency services. For EMTs, for fire and rescue, for law enforcement, the ability to bring up floor plans of buildings, maps, health records, I could go on and on. However, limited choice of providers and a lack of any sort of discount make it unlikely. Beyond the "Well HE got one, we need one!" attitude which landed this thing in my lap, the purchase never would have been made had we not faced an end of fiscal budget, and "spend it all or next year you get less" (which boggles my mind, frankly... I would get penalized if I didn't spend ALL of my budget). But Apple insists on offering no price breaks, they insist on going through iTunes to activate the stupid things, they insist on going through their company for any sort of new application installation (yes yes, I know about the court case and jail breaking), and currently they insist on using AT&T.

    Anyway... Ramble ramble. They're neat toys, power to the people, off with their heads, bad social elite snobbery, blah blah.

  5. Re:Science has come so far. on Snails On Methamphetamine · · Score: 1

    Informative, good analogy and insulting! Bravo! You're my new favorite person.

    Yes, actually, I did need it spelled out. To use that analogy, we're still talking about two rather different "network protocols" and topologies, aren't we? Again, I admit I know nothing about how neural networks function, but I would think that a drug like meth or even weed would have a vastly different effect on human minds and biology than that of a snail, and gleefully admit my ignorance, hence the questions.

  6. Re:Science has come so far. on Snails On Methamphetamine · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... So you're suggesting that the whole Amy Winehouse problem could just go away eventually?

    /I keed

  7. Science has come so far. on Snails On Methamphetamine · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can imagine these are the same folks who thought it was "BRILLIANT!" to blow smoke in their dog's face with a one hitter. However the "On meth it does" ads will get much more amusing. "A snail doing 60mph down the highway isn't normal. But on meth it is..."

    All joking aside, being no biologist I do wonder about the validity of such experiments. Anyone able to educate me on how they think that the effects on so different a neuron network will yield important information about how humans store / process memories? Are our brains THAT similar to ones found in a snail? Congress not withstanding, of course.

  8. Re:It's really not that difficult. on Open Source Utilities For Facebook Privacy · · Score: 1

    Hey, thanks for this! I'm googling it now.

    And yes, 7min for kids... "easy enough for a grade schooler" to figure out doesn't translate into easy enough for (unfortunately) many adults. Particularly ones who are in there hoping that I'll have some magic wand that'll take away all their problems surrounding FB and maybe do their parenting for them.

  9. Re:Offtopic on Open Source Utilities For Facebook Privacy · · Score: 1

    Sorry... Hitchhikers Guide reference. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somebody_Else's_Problem

  10. It's really not that difficult. on Open Source Utilities For Facebook Privacy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I work in IT for a small police department, and recently have begun doing presentations for parents on Facebook and general online privacy, what steps can be taken and how to watch out for warning signs of problems. I'd say at least half the parents I talk to are completely unaware of what information is freely available online about their kids, if allowed to use such a site, or how much information their kids are making available online.

    It only takes about 20 minutes to educate a neophyte, if they're willing to learn, how to lock down privacy on Facebook.... He said with a pained expression. One thing which never ceases to boggle my mind is the number of parents (and people in general) who really don't understand and don't CARE what information is out there, or what it can mean. ID theft, home intrusion, stalking, all that pretty much is "someone else's problem", producing enough SEP power to cloak an average sized nation.

    While products like this are certainly useful, the bigger issue is education. If you're aware of the changes to FB and the like, setting security takes all of a minute. If you're unaware and someone tells you, and if you're not particularly inclined toward looking over security settings, it might take someone 10-20 minutes to go over them with you. If you just plain don't care, no amount of open or closed source software is going to make any difference whatsoever.

  11. You give them POWER! on Creating a Better Facebook · · Score: 0

    Well I mean first of all, having a link at the bottom of a /. article allowing users to post to their FB and Twitter accounts (emphasis on "twit" deliberate...) is certainly not going to assist the 600lb gorilla in losing market share, even if that gorilla is serving up all your personal information and pictures and all personal information and pictures of all your friends. At this point, you could have that gorilla holding up a neon sign saying "I SERVE UP YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION" acompanied by a mariachi band singing "We Expose Your Private Information CHA CHA CHA!" and still most lusers would gleefully keep using the site.

    If, and I do mean if Facebook were to lose market share, it would take a stroke of pure luck. Good luck OR bad luck, as they are deeply entrenched.

  12. All this wonderful work. on Demo of Laptop/Tabletop Hybrid UI · · Score: 1

    And most likely Chat Roulette will be the first place it's put to use...

  13. I use my phone quite a bit. on Cellphone Radiation May Protect Brain From Alzheimers · · Score: 1

    And I may have alzheimers, but at least I don't have alzheimers.

  14. Damn it. on 8% of Your DNA Comes From a Virus · · Score: 4, Funny

    She told me she was TESTED!

  15. Toughbooks live up to the name. on Dell Rugged Laptops Not Quite Tough Enough · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I work for a small police department, and did considerable research before choosing the Toughbook. They're certainly not made for speed, and they're heavy and ugly. But they're not made for that, they're made to take the abuse that is almost inevitable in the hands of people who are, shall we say, not exactly delicate flowers.

    Before actually mounting these computers in our cruisers, I dropped the Toughbook while holding it above my head (I'm about 5'10"), I punched the back of the screen (only succeeded in giving myself a bloody knuckle), poured hot coffee on the keys, and generally did things you would REALLY not want to do to your laptop. They took it with just little scratches here and there, but no issue other than cosmetic.

    One thing I did find is was that, of course, the screen is tough but it's still a laptop screen. The clamps used to mount the laptops on a swing arm in the cars goes slightly over the sides of the Toughbook. If the screen is slammed hard, that can actually cause a crack. Fortunately I'd paid the extra dosh for a better warranty covering such things, and was able to remind the officers that they need to be aware of that issue.

    Dells offerings are really GOOD laptops, and not bad if you need rugged, but not insanely durable. I finally settled on the Toughbook not just because of the abuse I put them through, or just from asking other local PDs what they used. One of my users, a recent hire only a year or so out of the Army Rangers, told me that the Toughbook are what they jumped out of aircraft with. The abuse a grizzled old geek like myself can throw at a computer is pretty much NOTHING like what an Army Ranger could do.

    So far, the TBs have been worth every penny we spent.

  16. So... on Artist Not Allowed To Stream His Own Music · · Score: 1

    ...in effect, what this is suggesting is that MySpace is run by people of roughly equal intelligence to the majority of it's users?

  17. Re:Ahh, nice to see ... on Windows 7 Reintroduces Remote BSoD · · Score: 1

    *ahem*

    It would seem I need one myself... There must be some law (such as Godwin) which states that any post calling someone out for poor grammar, spelling or punctuation will have X chance of containing one as well.

  18. The question is... on SA's Largest Telecomms Provider vs. a Pigeon · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...African or European?

  19. Ahh, nice to see ... on Windows 7 Reintroduces Remote BSoD · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...that my fellow Boston Public School graduates are writing for seclists.org.

    Section V: "An attacker can remotly crash without no user interaction, any Vista/Windows 7 machine with SMB enable. "

    Yes, because we been done had seen that explot in the pasts.

    Dear $DEITY, are there no proof readers or editors alive on these sites?

  20. Re:The beginning bit is probably tricky too on Making Babies In Space May Not Be Easy · · Score: 1

    I would humbly like to volunteer myself to NASA as a test subject in just such a study. Being the selfless individual I am, and in the interests of Humanity and furthering our knowledge of space based copulation, I would also suggest Felicia Day as my co-participant.

    In the name of science, of course.

    Please?

  21. Re:lmgtfy on How Do IT Guys Get Respect and Not Become BOFHs? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I work as the lone IT person in a police department. It's remarkable how much more patient and calm one can be with lusers who are A) Armed and B) Much, much bigger than me.

    That said, in this position I gained some semblance of respect from my users by doing several things many people don't "teach" you. First and foremost, I set boundaries. If someone calls me in the middle of the night (being a 24/7 "shop", that sort of thing is inevitable), and it's for something like they can't print, I tell them that I'll help them when I get in, and let them know that while I don't mind that they called me, try to keep it to emergencies. Also, I made sure that the supervisors (shift sergeants) were aware of what would count as an emergency, and we talked that over. Maybe what THEY view as an emergency I wouldn't, and vice versa. Another important thing, I go by "when in Rome". Cops are a very, very different breed of user. Most I wouldn't trust with anything more complex than an abacus and smoke signals, and even then I would want someone standing by with a fire extinguisher. So I try to keep as many processes as I can as simple as I can. In other environments I've worked, when managing a network for a software development house, it was simple: I made everything as obfuscated as possible and then had 20 pages of documentation for every 2 steps taken in a process.

    OK, I kid (sorta) on that last bit. But the point is, try to style your IT work to fit the people you're dealing with.

    What I'm saying is don't let people walk all over you. Demand some respect. If you come over to someone's desk to help them, and they're treating you like some drive through window fast food help, walk away, and tell their supervisor you want to be treated with a little more kindness before you'll deal with them again. You don't need to electrocute users in order to gain that respect, though it IS a more fun method.

  22. Re:This is perfectly valid on Microsoft Family Safety Filter Blocks Google · · Score: 1

    Or if, say, you're in China and would like to learn about democracy, the Dali Lama, etc. etc.

  23. I believe B. Liskov did both. on Women Skip Math/Science Careers To Have Families · · Score: 1

    I work at MIT, and have had the pleasure to meet Mrs. Liskov a number of times.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7937010.stm

    At last check, she not only did both, she excelled at both. It's a pity so few women realize that not only can they do this, but they can do just as well as men (not to mention make some very tasty salaries). There are not nearly enough females in the industry, and damn it we need more "Geek chicks" calendars.

    Mrs. Liskov is, of course, exempt from having to pose.

  24. Re:You Have Stolen From Your Bandmates & the R on Lars Ulrich Pirates His Own Album · · Score: 1

    I'm still getting over his statement "Wow, this is how it works."

    He's figuring this out now? Ooooh, he should really consider taking it slow, perhaps trying out velcro. Or maybe something he has, as yet, never tried: Making music.

  25. Sometimes, movie quotes are best. on Slashdot's Disagree Mail · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A simple reply: "Go sell crazy someplace else. We're full up here." Ages ago, while selling computers at $BIGCOMPSTORE, I had a guy come in who was convinced that the people at Netscape were spying on him (this was back about '99). He insisted that he needed a new computer, and wanted a Mac because they don't have the same "intrusion issues Windows computers have." He buys one... Has us remove the modem and network port. Goes home. Three days later, he's back in and "this computer is infected too!" He was insistent that the fiends at Netscape had used a satellite to beam in programs to spy on him via IrDA. We politely took the computer back, then refused to sell him another, as this was the 5th one in a month he'd bought then returned, and the manager suggested he seek medical attention. The world is just chock full of crazy. Of course, that just means they fit in at /.