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  1. Browser authentication? on German User Fined For Having an Open Wi-Fi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The vast proportion of airports and hotels (increasingly cafe chains) in Europe have 'open' wireless networks that require browser authentication. You pump for an IP, are granted one, yet must authenticate in the browser (usually with a bite of your credit card) to get you through the gateway. Up until you authenticate you're a member of the LAN only. These APs usually have a EULA that prohibits such uses as the downloading of copyrighted material.

    So, what specifically constitutes a Protected Network in the context of this new law?

  2. Here in the EU iPhones are becoming uncool.. on Android Sales Surpass iPhone Sales · · Score: 1

    or at least it seems..

    Rather than stylish and in-the-know people buying iPhones plumbers, social workers and truck drivers have iPhones here. This is due to the offerings by telcos such that iPhones are practically free with a fairly tenable contract. iPhones are becoming not just middle-class but traversing further down the so-called classes. A few of my very self-conscious dyed-in-the-wool Mac using friends (France, Germany, Austria) have mentioned a desire to escape this ubiquity, in their lifelong quest for edginess.

    Here the uniformity of iPhones, the sheer lack of definition in their outward appearance has become a problem. Differentiation - in the quest for affirming individual identity - is much easier with other brands. The Android market will start making a lot of sense to the snobbish and the trend-setters. The Apple brand is less and less the 'BMW' or 'Mercedes' within the market.

  3. Re:Bad, but please don't overreact on How Bad Is the Gulf Coast Oil Spill? · · Score: 1

    You can think of the forest floor

    Should've read: You can think of the ocean floor..

  4. Re:Bad, but please don't overreact on How Bad Is the Gulf Coast Oil Spill? · · Score: 1

    The fishing industries, particularly those using the deep sea trawling method, have worse long-term impact on the oceans than all the oil spills combined, particularly in that they destroy the cold-water coral that a great proportion of the lower ocean ecosystem ultimately depends upon. Secondly, bottom fishing stirs up sediment that chokes life down there, turning it into the ocean equivalent of a dusty desert. You can think of the forest floor as the home of the vital organs of the ocean: the supposed right to have a ready supply of just a few species of fish impacts thousands of other species.

    This oil spill is absolutely terrible, of course. But if you care for your kids future and/or want to save the oceans, eat less (or no) fish and encourage others to do so. We're not poisoning the ocean so much as eating its guts out. Your children and grandchildren will be enjoying the wonders of the ocean eating an icecream in a perspex tube at this rate.

    Yes, it's that bad.

  5. Getting better. on Aussie Army Trains With Fleet of Robots On Segways · · Score: -1, Troll

    Practicing 'defense' produces a desire to prove it. The next step to that end is the creation of conflict itself.

    Chicken, meet egg. See you both in hell.

  6. Can Google out-innovate 2003? on Google Preparing iPad Rival? · · Score: 1

    The question is not whether Google can deliver but whether they'll be fashionably late enough while doing so.

  7. Re:I Google on Personalized Search From Google Now Opt-Out · · Score: 2

    Give me a dumb, predictable computer any way, then I can accuractly predict how it'll respond to my input, and this tailor my input for the exact response I want, every time.

    Well said..

    So often it's the geeks that are the real humanists - those that know enough about 'intelligent software' to be suspicious of it.

    It's not just (suicidal) self reflection but a potent mix of ignorance and laziness that steers us toward Vinge's Singularity.

  8. I Google on Personalized Search From Google Now Opt-Out · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This in built 'subjectivity' in the search mechanism represents a kind of fragmentation of the commons the searchable Internet supposedly represents: sometimes I want to know what other people know, what they are looking at, what is popular or interesting for them.

    Secondly, grouping searches around an assumption of my interests assumes that my interests are 1/ Statistically quantifiable (solving a loathesome and boring problem may result in many queries), 2/ Particular to me (I may be searching for someone else, or my computer could be shared with another), 3/ Can be built from clear-text (sometimes I might be searching within a context do take me to a binary, like a video, arbitrarily linked in a page (like the comments for instance)).

    Finally, isn't there a problem with diminishing returns here? The set that represents my interests will get 'smaller' in subject matter as I continue to search within that set.

    I'll certainly be switching if Google's approximation of my interests goes under the radar, digging into cookies when I'm 'signed out'.

  9. The US is no gauge.. on Why Open Source Phones Still Fail · · Score: 1

    Typical US-centric, generalisation, extrapolated to the corners of the galaxy..

    The US has what the vast majority of mobile phone users consider utterly unacceptable, total telco lock in. A company like Nokia has 41% of the world's largest handheld market, China, where Nokia phones are a status symbol, not to mention South America and India! Really open phones haven't been tested in the market (the Moko doesn't count, it never left the developer version and was never intended for the mass market) - it's too early to ring the bells of doom. Western Europe alone has more people using the internet than there are people in the US, that's a lot of people that want the web in their pocket and this is where the N900 proves to be a perfect fit.

    From where I sit, with my N900 (which incidentally is selling like hotcakes - Nokia is struggling with the demand), such speculation seems vacuous. The N900 is an absolutely incredible device with the best browsing experience bar none, flash support, beautiful screen, powerful preamp, great phone (Skype/SIP VoIP and regular calls) absolutely gorgeous UI and a physical keyboard you can actually type on at a real clip.

    As proof, I typed this post on the thing.

    Thanks Nokia for being this brave. I'm glad it's clearly not just us geeks that are loving the thing.

  10. Big speedups for media workstations.. on Linux Kernel 2.6.32 Released · · Score: 4, Informative
    This 'Per-backing-device writeback' is pretty significant. I'm sure the feature film and database industries will love it especially:

    The new system has much better performance in several workloads: A benchmark with two processes doing streaming writes to a 32 GB file to 5 SATA drives pushed into a LVM stripe set, XFS was 40% faster, and Btrfs 26% faster. A sample ffsb workload that does random writes to files was found to be about 8% faster on a simple SATA drive during the benchmark phase. File layout is much smoother on the vmstat stats. A SSD based writeback test on XFS performs over 20% better as well, with the throughput being very stable around 1GB/sec, where pdflush only manages 750MB/sec and fluctuates wildly while doing so. Random buffered writes to many files behave a lot better as well, as does random mmap'ed writes. A streaming vs random writer benchmark went from a few MB/s to ~120 MB/s. In short, performance improves in many important workloads.

  11. Meat is murder, get over it. on Scientists Create Artificial Meat · · Score: 1

    I agree.

    I have been vegetarian most of my life yet I used to hunt and eat animals. I differ from other vegetarians in that I see no ethical issue with eating what you personally take responsibility for killing.

    Paying other people to kill animals for you however is cowardly, it's an industry built on cowardice, and is about as far away from the Great Hunter every meat eater loves to cite, in an effort to argue that eating meat is a vital part of human culture. Well, it's not. Worse, it's environmentally detrimental, causes gross hormone imbalances in humans and is horrifically cruel.

    You don't need to eat meat to live a very healthy and active long life. You eat meat because you like the taste. Then go out and take another's life to defend your hedonism. Look at it in the eyes while you cuts its throat. Gut it, bleed it and eat it.

  12. Re:Linux is a support nightmare on Google Eliminates Gizmo5 Client For Linux · · Score: 1

    In that light, I think it makes perfect sense for an organization to support, say, Fedora Core, but no other Linux distros.

    I agree.

    They support OSX in many cases, a BSD, and so they can also support 'a Linux', ideally the distribution that is most popular. If other distributions complain - in the absence of source code - the appropriate response would be "It's a jungle out there".

  13. That said.. on What the iPod Tells Us About the World Economy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Each iPod, sold in the US for $299, provides China with an export value of about $150, but as it turns out, Chinese producers really only 'earned' around $4 on each unit.

    The differences in salary relative to cost of living ought to be taken into account. The average daily salary of a Chinese person is was around USD14.1 last year..

    Secondly, it's not just about revenue but longer term industrial dependency. Were China to suddenly refuse (due to political embargo, for instance) to produce such items Apple would suffer a considerable economic loss, if only while they secured an alternative manufacturer. Chinese and Taiwanese companies are in a good position to steer the market in their favour, eventually producing (if not already) competing products for their own market - the world's biggest in many sectors - and others abroad.

  14. Re:Hmmm on Parenting Official Says Lesbians Make 'Better Parents' · · Score: 1

    We should be encouraged to compete and to play and to roughhouse.

    That's all very lovely, the fact remains however that physical aptitude - the core value of the Male in a given society - has become increasingly irrelevant in post industrial Western society. Women are, by most accounts, able to do just fine without us. They are just as competitive and just as able, technically or otherwise. No conclusive evidence suggests otherwise.

    In the broader scheme of things it's our own scientific and social revolutions that have outmoded the role of the male gender. Masculinity, it would seem looking at lesbian couples I've known, is something in itself relatively easily approximated where roles and children are concerned.

  15. Re:Great idea on Apple Patents "Enforceable" Ad Viewing On Devices · · Score: 1

    Oops, you're right. That rather important detail escaped me.

  16. Re:Great idea on Apple Patents "Enforceable" Ad Viewing On Devices · · Score: 3, Informative

    but I can't think of a time when a corporation patented something bad soley as a way of preventing someone from using it

    I think you'll find that a cursory look at Pharmaceutical patents will reveal a large number of cures that no big player in medical marketplace would ever want to see in the wild, let alone see a vast population of people in need have access to at affordable prices.

    Look also at Microsoft research: they come up with some extraordinary technologies/solutions that would no doubt undermine the broader, stable market for their existing inferior products if available on a desktop near you.

    I believe that all these nonsense Apple patents relating to advertising may reveal that Apple may soon ship an ad-encumbered version of it's OS for Intel hardware more generic than that already in the Apple line.

  17. Meat and milk are also a source of concern. on Environmental Chemicals Are Feminizing Boys · · Score: 1
    Thankfully Europeans have banned what is considered safe practice in North America.

    By introducing female and male sex hormones into the animals, it is possible to increase the amount of meat that they produce without increasing the amount that they are fed.By adding the female sex hormones oestrogen and progesterone to cattle, scientists can stimulate the animals to produce extra muscle and fat. Adding the male sex hormone testosterone increases muscle growth, and decreases production of fat. Oestrogen has been linked to an increased risk of breast cancer and to reproductive disorders in men. Progesterone has been shown to increase the development of ovarian, breast and uterine tumours in laboratory animals.

    From here

    Cows pumped up with hormones to produce milk all year round is seemingly also doing damage. Men receive a lot of oestrogen via milk produced in this fashion, nothing the dairy industry wants anyone to know about, of course.

  18. Re:Am I the only one who cares? on Mandriva Linux 2010 Is Finally Out · · Score: 1

    My upgrade on an Acer Aspire also went very smoothly. It's quite a speedup too, noticeably across SSD performance and Intel graphics.

    A shame Ubuntu 9.10 looks absolutely awful out of the box. The icons look like the come from 4 different eras of desktop computing, folder decorators for Music/Pictures/Video etc look oddly childish and tacked on. The Software Center icon looks like a moldy cardboard box and the wallpaper is so bright it competes for the foreground.

    Mark really does need to keep his fingers (and those of his 'artsy friends') out of the aesthetic pie and pay real designers to resolve this mess. Such a good OS, so empirically horrible to look at.

    While I don't use Mandriva, one thing the devs have always paid attention to is visual and thematic consistency across the desktop experience. Mark S, for all his talents, is a fish out of water in understanding the importance of this.

  19. Re:Flash? on Ubuntu 9.10 Officially Released · · Score: 2, Informative

    Will this version support Flash? It sure would be nice to view Youtube movies or play online games.

    Ubuntu users have been watching flash content in their browsers for a long time. If you're referring to out-of-the-box support, no (which Windows doesn't have either).

    Just visit a webpage containing Flash content and you'll be guided to install the plugin.

  20. Before Installing, note: on Ubuntu 9.10 Officially Released · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the Release Notes.

    Possible corruption of large files with ext4 filesystem

    There have been some reports of data corruption with fresh (not upgraded) ext4 file systems using the Ubuntu 9.10 kernel when writing to large files (over 512MB). The issue is under investigation, and if confirmed will be resolved in a post-release update. Users who routinely manipulate large files may want to consider using ext3 file systems until this issue is resolved. (453579)

    Ubuntu One client requires post-install upgrade


    A serious bug in the Ubuntu One client software included in Ubuntu 9.10 that could potentially result in loss of data has led to disabling file syncing access for this client version on the Ubuntu One servers as a precaution. Users who see a "Capabilities Mismatch" error when trying to use Ubuntu One should install the post-release upgrade of the client that will be made available immediately after release, fixing the original bug and restoring file syncing access to the Ubuntu One servers. Files are still available via the web interface at http://one.ubuntu.com./

    Contact syncing and tomboy syncing services are not affected by this issue.

    Package list must be manually refreshed before installing drivers

    The "Hardware Drivers" tool (Jockey) requires up to date package lists before it detects and advertises necessary driver packages. Immediately after a new installation, these package lists will not be present. Before running Jockey for the first time, update the package lists using System->Administration->Software->Update Manager (on Ubuntu) or "KPackageKit" (on Kubuntu). (462704)

  21. Re:Good grief.. on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 1

    I'm not defending the meat industry in either continent, quite the opposite. Rather I'm drawing attention to a broader romance we Europeans have with our meat industry, imagining all meat is somehow grown here more or less as it always has been, of free roaming, grazing cows. This is simply not the case. Much of the meat in Europe may be grown locally but is in fact fed soya grain from elsewhere. As a vegetarian I think I'll take the soy beans before they become steaks.

  22. Re:Good grief.. on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 1
    I wasn't talking about 'hill-farms'. I was referring to your gross generalisation that the meat industry in Europe is so vastly different from that of the U.S

    You did say:

    That is pretty much entirely untrue outside the US, where people seem to think that cows can eat grain. They can't eat grain, and most of it gets shat out largely undigested. Cows eat grass.

    Which is not entirely correct. Had you read the article I posted you would have understood that the European meat industry is deeply dependent on import Soya Beans (largely from South America) to feed European Cattle. What was growing on the soil before soya crops?

    The European meat industry is increasingly similar to that of the U.S, short of the health-hazardous (practically de-regulated) hormonal alteration of livestock that Americans employ.

    Peat sodden hill-farms are not at all representative, geographically or industrially, of the means for raising livestock that Europeans actually eat.

  23. Re:Good grief.. on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 1

    The final point is that it's not really useful to talk about turning the world's farmland over to arable farming. It works where you've got hundreds of acres of gently-rolling countryside and you can actually plough it without your tractor rolling sideways down a hill or disappearing into a hundred-metre-deep bog. It does not work where the vast majority of farms are hill farms, which are more suited to grazing animals. I know this might be hard for people in the US to comprehend, but not all farms are rolling Iowa cornfields.

    And how many trees are cut down so this seemingly benevolent and indigenous pastoral scene can be enacted? Many of the world's cows are in continents that never even had bovines until a few hundred years ago. I think you've mixed your chickens with your eggs..

    Eating cow meat as a part of your diet, from wherever it comes, has an undisputedly negative impact on the environment. Another cow is reared to replace it, another tree felled for the next born human reared as a carnivore.

    Recommended reading regarding our wondrously pastoral European meat-industry.

  24. Bah, Bollocks. on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 1

    Well, while vegetarian humans may have a seemingly lower environmental impact, everyone seems to forgetting the impact of all the supplements that they have to take, because the human body is evolved as an omnivore and thus needs various things we cannot get from a vegetable diet.

    I have friends that have been vegetarian since birth. I have been vegetarian most of my life. I've never taken supplements, very rarely get sick and have been a competitive runner.

    More drag-and-drop propaganda from Meat Corp. We've never killed animals with our own hands or with our teeth. We invented a technology called The Weapon to do so, the same used to kill (and, on occasion eat) other humans.

    Bollocks I tell ye.

  25. Re:HTC on HTC Finally Releases Hero Source Code · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sounds like you need to upgrade the firmware..

    People are reporting huge speedups after doing so.