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User: Spy+der+Mann

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  1. Re:Proper link on Shuttleworth Answers Ubuntu Linux's Critics · · Score: 4, Insightful

    An engineering project that can't be sold is just a project.

    You hit the nail on the head. I've recently been promoted to a more bureaucratic place at my company, and I've come to realize that a lot of things I considered of uttermost importance in software development were not as crucial as I thought. Now, I'm not saying they're not necessary. But I overestimated them. Also, I've learned that it's the sales department which makes the companies earn their income. No income, no salaries. No salaries, no employees.

    Linux devs who have never understood the management and marketing side of companies, simply lack the vision needed to improve and promote the kernel/OS they love so much.

  2. Re:Proper link on Shuttleworth Answers Ubuntu Linux's Critics · · Score: 3, Insightful

    About a year ago I upgraded my synaptic (the only user-friendly package manager I know so far). Turns out that the Debian guys missed a critical flaw which made Synaptic crash when loading the repos. Downgrading synaptic using command-line tools was a royal pain in the ass. That's the kind of errors that I hate, and the guys criticizing Ubuntu are much more prone to commit them.

    While I don't like Ubuntu myself (for some glitches I've experienced - ironically, in the user-friendliness area), I do agree that it has set the bar on user-friendliness. More user-friendly = more popular. More popular = more pressure on the devs to write software that just works.

    As an example, I'll use Mepis 8.5 - it's being released with the latest version of KDE. Well guess what, the installation screen is quite unusable if you have an nVidia video card. You're stuck at 640x480 (or 800x600 if you're lucky), and the installation screens are clipped. Sure, you can install the drivers in RAM, but then you have to reboot. DOH. All installed drivers vanish. Another problem that could be solved with community support.

    With more community support, these problems will go again after the devs realize that the world they're writing software for is NOT a world filled with closets stacked with old network cards, cables, old consoles, a hard disk full of debugging and developing software and regexp cheat sheets stappled on a nearby wall.

    As much as it hurts, the devs need to get off their clouds, open their eyes and see that the people who use distros like Ubuntu are people who have a life - ok, a busy life - and don't have the resources, the time, nor the brains to solve those pesky problems.

    I still remember the days where one had to edit the xfree86 .conf file by hand after following a series of instructions. I sincerely hope those days don't ever come back again.

  3. Re:iPhone secret screenshots? on Hacker Teaches iPhone Forensics To Police · · Score: 1

    Ah, but first time criminals aren't aware of the situation. It's those that are easiest to catch. And the police better do it before they become SERIAL criminals.

    On the other hand, iPhone storing screenshots of the GPS indicating where you've been... it's outright creepy. Orwell was right, man.

  4. Re:0h n03z! on Root Privileges Through Linux Kernel Bug · · Score: 2, Funny

    a redundant first post...?

    Yes, there was a redundant x in "h4xx0r5".

  5. Re:my first thought was... on Toyota Sudden Acceleration Is Driver Error · · Score: 1

    It makes all sense now! With current technology, the only thing that can make a machine CRASH is a faulty DRIVER!

  6. Re:Mmm on Education Official Says Bad Teachers Can Be Good For Students · · Score: 1

    By that same logic, every school should have a drug dealer and a child abuser, since those also "reflect society".

    And don't forget Blackjack, and hookers!

    Come to think about it, forget about the bad teachers and child abusers.

  7. Re:Uhhh... on RIAA Calls YouTube-Viacom Decision Bad Public Policy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'It will actually discourage service providers from taking steps to minimize the illegal exchange of copyrighted works on their sites.'

    Since when is it their job?

    Worse. They're saying it's an ILLEGAL exchange.

    The DMCA makes it legal UNTIL a takedown notice is issued.

  8. Re:You don't on How To Get a Game-Obsessed Teenager Into Coding? · · Score: 0

    I'd say "the touch of a woman," but that's probably insurmountable for you, too.

    You're right. I tried with your mom, but she was quite mountable.

    There, fixed it for ya.

  9. Re:Cool. on Lidar Finds Overgrown Maya Pyramids · · Score: 1

    Now find Atlantis.

    I was about to say, if Indiana Jones had LIDAR, those movies would be a lot shorter.

    Why settle for LIDAR when you can have Orichalcum?

  10. Re:"too much unnecessary porn" on Wales Supports Purging Porn From Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    A friend of mine has been recently interested in BDSM. Not as porn, but as a sexual lifestyle, and he's currently exploring contacts in his city. Of course, since this was a completely foreign practice to him, he had to do research.

    Where do you think he researched? Wikipedia, of course!

    This puts one to think: Is searching for sex articles (in an educational way) bad, even if they're considered "porn"? Let's suppose a couple engages in a wrongly-educated BDSM sexual act, and due to their lack of information, they end up harming each other, in a very bad (bad as in "OMG we need to go to the hospital") way?

    This friend of mine told me all the things he learned about SSC (Sane, Safe, Consensual) in Wikipedia. Let's suppose one of these days, these articles vanish.

    Poof.

    Is ignorance and censorship the right way to do things? Are we going back to the dark ages?

    For starters, what the fuck is this "porn in wikipedia" you speak of? So far I've never seen any!

  11. Misleading summary on Pope Rails Against the Internet and Transparency · · Score: 1

    From the article:

    "The times in which we living knows a huge widening of the frontiers of communication," he said (according to our Italian fixer/producer) and the new media of this new age points to a more "egalitarian and pluralistic" forum. But, he went on to say, it also opens a new hole, the "digital divide" between haves and have-nots. Even more ominous, he said, it exacerbates tensions between nations and within nations themselves. And it increases the "dangers of ... intellectual and moral relativism," which can lead to "multiple forms of degradation and humiliation" of the essence of a person, and to the "pollution of the spirit." All in all, it seemed a pretty grim view of the wide open communication parameters being demanded by the Internet age."

    The Pope wasn't talking about transparency. He talked about the dangers of the information age. The "digital divide" between haves and have-nots is a very good example of it.

    Nothing new here, move along.

  12. Re:Storage of encryption key? on Mass. Data Security Law Says "Thou Shalt Encrypt" · · Score: 1

    If it is something Alice and Bob are likely to do it is encryption.

    "Alice and Bob go into a bar..."

  13. Re:Boobies on EyeDriver Lets Drivers Steer Car With Their Eyes · · Score: 1

    Wait a second. You could train the system to find boobies for you, recognize them and tell you to look back at the road!

    On the other hand, if the girl with boobies has a T-shirt with a "dangerous curves" road sign... it would be a self-fulfilling prophecy :D

  14. Re:It is called "a love/hate relationship" on Confessions of a SysAdmin · · Score: 1

    To be honest, they are "things", not people. Should we really consider loving "things"?

    Some Otaku would disagree with you!

  15. Coming soon: on EFF Assails YouTube For Removing "Downfall" Parodies · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Parody about Hitler complaining at Youtube's stupid copyright policies - in 3... 2... 1...

  16. Re:spam will be with us forever on Google Says Spam Volumes On the Rise · · Score: 0, Troll

    I said it before and I'll say it again: It's all Microsoft's fault. Thanks to the Microsoft swisscheese security model, millions of computers are turned to zombies which in turn send the spam.

    Microsoft could very well give free upgrades with improved security models for old boxes - but OH NO, PIRACY! GASP! We must not give the benefit of a secure operating system to those damned overseas pirates!

    Thanks to the "genuine advantage" scam, XP users are skipping Microsoft upgrades rather than having to deal with Big Brother taking control of their computers.

    Meanwhile, botnets are roaming around the world, running in infected XP machines while their users are oblivious to the fact. How to solve that? Users think that by purchasing antiviruses the problem will be fixed. It's as if botnets and antiviruses formed a very well-thought ecosystem, with the antiviruses relying on the viruses' threat to survive.

    Fix the security of the machines, and both will disappear: Botnets will become more and more scarse, and antiviruses will become redundant and disappear for lack of use. Sadly, that doesn't go well with Microsoft struggling to sell us more and more versions of Windows. If Microsoft comes with its own antivirus, antivirus companies will sue.

    Spam will not be over until it becomes unprofitable for Microsoft and the antivirus companies to have all those zombies running in the wild. That will only happen if spam quantity becomes exceedingly high. But that won't happen because of the bandwidth costs. The outcome is that spam will increase slowly, as bandwidth costs become lower, and that people will still find it tolerable, as long as they pay for an OS with a slightly improved security and the mandatory antivirus.

    For now, all we can do is educate people on spam, botnets, and contribute with our grain of sand by switching to a more secure OS.

  17. Re:New Tag... on Is OS/2 Coming Back? · · Score: 1

    Can we have a new tag: "Rhetorical questions to which the answer is 'No'"

    "DONOTWANT".

    This is the tag you're looking for. *waves hand*
    Move along.

  18. Re:interesting concept on Wake Forest Researchers Swap Skin Grafts For Cell Spraying · · Score: 1

    I mean you'ld have to be a bit sadistic to want to burn living animals for a living.

    I think I can imagine who did those experiments...

  19. Re:xkcd on Gaming in the 4th Dimension · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Has anyone of you noticed the pun behind A. Square's words?

    Guy: "Hey, A. Square, how's flatland?"
    A. Square: "Still flat. What's up?"

    Take a look at the picture, and notice that there is no "up" in flatland. So, was A. Square's question metaphorical, literal or philosophical?

  20. Re:Next step: a better name on 90% of the Universe Found Hiding In Plain View · · Score: 3, Funny

    Followed by the Ridiculously Large Telescope and the Ludicrously Large Telescope which, due to licensing and trademark issues, can ironically fit on your desk.

    Spaceballs, the Telescope!

  21. Re:I Smell Another Apple Ad on 90% of the Universe Found Hiding In Plain View · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Shit, man... he had to change his liver!

    "Apple. Shit different."

  22. Re:He was a retard on De Icaza Says Microsoft Has Shot .NET Ecosystem In Foot · · Score: 1

    I hate this phrase. "Microsoft threatening Linux", as if Linux was an end and not a means.

    It's not Linux per-se which is threatened by Microsoft, but Free Software as a whole. Linux just happens to be the greatest example of Free Software.

  23. And THIS, ladies and gentlemen... on Disgruntled Ex-Employee Remotely Disables 100 Cars · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...is the perfect example (and with car analogy indeed) of why DRM and remote product (de)activation is doomed to failure.

  24. Re:Simpler "Hello World" in C? on Simpler "Hello World" Demonstrated In C · · Score: 1

    In other words, you need a f'ing compiler on your path to be able to display "hello world". We jumped from 42 bytes to nearly a meg. Reminds me of the compression contest entry where the data was hidden in the filename itself. Go figure.

  25. Re:He Can Vote With His Wallet on XML Co-Founder Joins Google, Blasts iPhone · · Score: 1

    Also, as Developer Advocate for Android, part of his job is trying to change people's viewpoint on whether they ought to develop for the iPhone or Android.

    I'd rather say that he's now getting paid for doing what he always did. SCORE!