Exactly how would a municipality provide the transport layer without a lease/contract/partnership and thus not running afoul of the law? And why would incumbent phone/cable companies want to give up their line monopolies and participate in such a scheme?
I mean, we've already been through that sort of scenario. In the 90s, the FCC forced phone companies to lease lines to competitors for DSL service. Life was slightly better. The only thing was DSL generally sucked and cable companies weren't forced to lease their lines. Then in the mid-2000s the FCC changed it back so that providers were no longer required to share their lines (the argument was that phone companies were delaying infrastructure upgrades because it would give their competitors a 'free' upgrade).
So now we are back to the same old regional phone and cable company monopoly with very few markets having any competition. And that was the history before municipalities tried doing partnerships or even their own ISP utilities and prompted incumbents to lobby for the laws restricting what municipalities can do.
Local mayors and council critters are blameworthy in many places but they're certainly not to blame for businesses going over their heads to state legislatures.
Except, of course, in the 38% of states who have laws that "protect" incumbent franchise holders and make it harder for municipalities to do that.
Even your example of a "partnership/joint venture" is expressly prohibited in Louisiana under state law (which was created through lobbying after AT&T and Cox failed to block, with lawsuits, a certain city from creating a municipal fiber utility).
The law does provide a process for cities to do things their own way but it also involves a vote. And who do you think is going to have the budget for advertising to win that campaign? And even after that, they can't really charge lower rates because part of the law addresses that too.
And if local governments were to ignore a vote on the issue then incumbents are no longer obligated to provide services, even under existing contracts, the moment any citizen within that area is provided service by that proposed colo facility.
The petition was actually set up by a Brexit supporter, before the referendum was held, in anticipation that the Brexit vote would fail and out of the hope that they could use it for another chance.
You really can't build games like you build bank systems.
Banks don't care about things like smooth game play in the face of latency, dropped packets, server main loop update bottlenecks, etc. Yes, a bank can implement a proper client-server architecture that never trusts the clients.
Given the limitations of the speed of light and modern computers you really can't do that for games and have an enjoyable entertainment experience. In my experience, multiplayer games have to trust the client to some degree and are much better off doing deferred cheating checks, memory scanning anti-cheat, and statistics to get rid of cheaters after they cheat rather than make the game unplayable for everyone and prevent cheating in the first place.
Just imagine having an fps game that had a captcha you had to fill out every time you tried to shoot your gun so that you could prove you were a human.
I assume you'd have to pay without insurance but I can't see any reason why you couldn't use any name you like at a doctor's office. It's not like they do background checks. And celebrities go to hospitals under pseudonyms sometimes, right? IANAL but, as long as you paid your bill, I assume it wouldn't be fraud.
Any sane person can see the CFAA is broad and overreaching and I get the feeling that this is just another angle the ACLU thinks might work to attack it.
Did we really need a specific law for computer-related crimes? Are existing definitions for things like fraud/wire fraud and property damage not good enough? And does it even actually help deter crime in any way? I certainly haven't noticed fewer phishing attempts in my spam box...
Just because it'll be "made available" doesn't mean any school boards or teachers will actually buy it or waste a significant amount of time on this. They might or they might not. And Slashdot should have said "marketed" rather than "sold".
In terms of games in school, educational games can be highly useful. For example, games like Mario Teaches Typing. My dad has used computers for longer than I've been alive and still can't touch type while public schools taught me to do it early (grades 1-3). I think I played Oregon Trail as well (in 2nd grade?) in school, though I'm not sure what the teacher's reasoning for that was. Maybe it was a rainy day and we couldn't go out for recess.
I could maybe see a highly modified educational version of Civ being useful for teaching history or as a reward just to keep kids busy on a day when you have a substitute teacher and the faster kids already did the busy work. Probably not but maybe.
And if computers led to unproductive class time for you then really it was your teacher that was at fault. My High School computer science classes were highly productive because the teacher didn't just send students to the computers and then ignore them. He kept tabs on students, and I believe, had remote monitoring software so he could tell when students were off task. And, with the tasks given, there wasn't enough class time to waste much if you wanted to pass.
Kids who are determined not to learn aren't going to learn anyway. They'll sleep through class or doodle or read books or play with their phone or whatever. I really don't think technology has changed this in any meaningful way and I'm fairly certain that every adult in every generation has wondered "Are schools becoming time waste institutions?".
Yes, they always have been time waste institutions. Every time there's a PA announcement it interrupts class and wastes time. Every time teachers have to reteach subjects because classes from previous schools didn't properly prepare students it wastes time. Standardized test preparation wastes tons of time. When the teacher is sick or needs a personal day and you have a substitute teacher who gives busy work it wastes time. All of the little interruptions and deviations from schedule waste time.
But, in my experience, teachers generally do the best they can and schools are, obviously, still worth it. They certainly do a better job than I think most parents would. Most parents don't even take parenting classes, let alone get education certifications/degrees. </rant>
There have been so many major database leaks at this point that I feel it's a given that your name, address, SSN, etc are probably in the hands of nefarious people.
Remember when Slashdot reported multiple databases holding detailed information on millions of U.S. voters were publicly available online? One had 154 million voters with names, addresses, social networking accounts, etc.
If you google database leaks you'll see leaks involving hundreds of thousands of records that include social security numbers.
Here's how my car works if I leave it in first and start it:
A) Press clutch and turn the ignition: car starts. It goes nowhere because of the clutch (and brakes). If I ride the clutch (and unset the parking brake and take my foot off the brake) then, sure, it'll go forwards very slowly on a flat surface. But if I take my foot all off clutch completely without feeding it gas it's going to stall.
B) Don't press the clutch and turn ignition: car doesn't start. It goes nowhere.
I think it's disingenuous to say that automatic drivers have a lesser understanding of how to operate their vehicle. And I learned on automatic and later switched to manual so I've personally done both sides.
I think it's more that a MT forces you to use a parking brake and, in my experience, the parking brake is usually a more pronounced hand brake rather than a foot pedal. If AT vehicles didn't have "park" and required the parking brake then people would use that more. You can't really tell if a foot pedal is set from a glance and possibly not even from tactile feedback.
And as a MT driver, I leave my car in neutral when I park. Because you start the car in neutral, and even though I check before starting it, it still seems like a good habit. I could see an argument for leaving the car in gear if you park on an incline, or if you park on a street where you think you might be hit from behind and want less of a chance of hitting the car in front of you. Personally, I try to avoid parking on inclines.
Manual is a lot more fun to drive (usually) but I'm of the firm opinion that automatic is safer to drive because your attention isn't as divided. Sure, shifting is basically muscle memory after a while but I still feel like it takes away some attention from your surroundings.
And then there are things like stop-and-go traffic on an incline...
Though it did get a super-majority: 67% voted to join/stay in and every single region of the UK voted in favor (though as low as 52% in favor in places like Northern Ireland and turnout overall was lower at 64%.)
I'd be really curious to see demographics from the 1975 vote.
I wonder if the world war survivors in 1975 were for a stronger, united Europe and voted to join. Now that they're mostly dead, their children certainly seem to favor a more isolated, nationalist UK.
I thought that wasn't true, post-Treaty of Lisbon? I'm an American so I could be uninformed on the issue. This is my impression:
Voters directly elect their Members of European Parliament. And I assume they directly elect their heads of state, which make up the European Council members.
The Council, those elected heads of state, nominate the Commission President, who then has to be approved by the directly elected MEPs. The Council nominates Commissioners, with the agreement of the President. Then the Parliament, through directly elected MEPs, has to approve them. Basically to me Commissioners are like U.S. Executive branch Cabinet members.
Commissioners propose legislation to the Parliament but the Parliament has full power to pass, modify, and/or deny legislation. The only thing I've seen that looked shady was that Commissioner-proposed legislation can maybe pass on Parliament inaction. And maybe some cases where the elected heads of state can bypass Parliament and approve Commission proposals but I think the European Court of Justice has cracked down on both of those?
Mostly it seems very much in keeping with democratic republic ideals. At least as much as the U.K. parliament. I don't get why people focus on the Commissioners when it really seems like the power struggle has been between the Council and Parliament, with the Lisbon Treat increasing Parliament's power and thus decreasing the Council's.
Someone who has that level of access to your computer could certainly install drivers themselves.
And if it runs an Intel or AMD chip then you probably have remote management hardware/firmware inside your processor that can operate outside of your operating system and, at least to some extent, while your computer is "off". Theoretically that's all very secure but blocking light from entering the lens seems like a low effort high reward security practice.
If you think I'm spouting nonsense about the remote management stuff then look up presentations by people like Igor Skochinsky (HexRays/IDA) and Joanna Rutkowska.
I don't think there is a law that says that there must be an NSA.
Wikipedia says that originally the NSA was via a National Security Council Intelligence Directive, which I believe was authorized under the National Security Act of 1947.
It looks like later the National Security Agency Act of 1959 gave official authorization for the President to keep running the NSA but it's all "is authorized to" or "may do this" and I don't see a whole lot that could be strictly interpreted as requiring an NSA.
I'm not a lawyer though. I could be very well be wrong. I think at worst the President would be required to maintain certain Director positions and a minimum amount of surveillance but, certainly, he wouldn't be required to have the NSA spying on everyone.
My understanding is that it's more like 25 to 5000 customers (I think Cable Labs suggests 250 for DOCSIS 3.0) sharing a certain amount of channels/bandwidth (probably around 300Mbps down for DOCSIS 3.0 and over 1Gbps down for DOCSIS 3.1) on their node to CMTS.
The target over-subscription ratio for gigabit seems to be no more than 50:1 from the few papers I've read.
300 Mbps * 1 month = 98.6 TB; / 250 subscribers = 400 GB but that's saying if everyone used an equal amount / all of their share. With the realistic 1.3Gbps+ range for DOCSIS 3.1 with 50 subscribers it'll be over 8TB.
And, like you say, it only matters if everyone is competing for bandwidth at the same time and most of the time that doesn't happen. Flat caps don't make sense for that problem. Most people aren't home during the weekday and so bandwidth is going unused during that time.
Peak usage caps or traffic shaping heavy users to give priority to light users or even much higher overall caps with weighted data during peak usage times would make a lot more sense than the current flat cap scheme.
It seems to me that ISPs don't really want to deal with it and would rather attempt to balance keeping ahead with capacity and speed upgrades as needed while every now and then moving data cap targets to protect themselves from the heaviest of users.
You don't need a specific domain name to run an HTTP server.
They can use direct IPs and/or modified hosts files, other domain names run by registrars in more favorable countries, TOR, alternative DNS roots, etc. See: Sci-Hub, KAT, the already innumerable existing piratebay proxies, etc
Even the Great Firewall of China can't keep people from accessing information on the internet that they're determined to access and western countries certainly haven't resorted to near that level of internet oppression yet.
All they're really doing is making copyright infringement less convenient and possibly causing TPB to lose some users while Google PageRank adjusts.
Honestly, I believe more money (and man hours) is being wasted in court than is saved. Consider how many years it takes for courts to deal with things like this and that it takes just a few minutes and dollars to purchase a new domain name.
All TV is digital now in the U.S. (even broadcast OTA) in order to free up spectrum and cable TV used to be required to offer basic cable and local broadcast channels unencrypted, over the wire, via clear-QAM.
Then in 2012 the previous FCC chairman and commissioners decided to change that rule and let cable companies encrypt everything and thus require ALL users to pay a monthly fee for a set-top box, in addition to their normal service fees.
This also means that the clear-QAM tuner hardware in TVs, that increases the cost of TVs and that we already paid for, became useless.
This is a bit weird because these same cable companies are providing internet service over the same cables but users can choose to rent a cable modem from their provider or buy their own cable modem from a 3rd party.
npm does not require you to install packages from the registry and your application's package.json dependencies do not either.
For production you can very easily have your own internal git server hosting your packages and dependencies, at specific verified versions. Or if you don't like git you could have an internal SSL/TLS server hosting tarballs of all of the packages/dependencies.
The npm registry makes sharing packages easy but nothing says you have to use code straight from that to production. Hell, you don't even have to use npm if you don't want to.
And javascript on a server can make sense for something like making an web service API that spits out JSON data (and since browsers are limited to javascript you're generally going to want your data in JSON.) JSON is already, obviously, native to javascript and thus very easy to use, you can reduce duplication of effort and manpower by having the same knowledge requirements on the client/server, and in my experience it's a bit annoying to shift gears when thinking in multiple languages on the same project. Basically, using the same language for everything can reduce complexity which every resource I've ever read stresses as a good thing. Let me emphasize that can. If you look at node.js like a hammer and every problem starts to look like a nail then you're not going to have a good time.
And for people who just hate javascript because it's javascript: yes, javascript has annoying quirks. But all languages have annoying quirks and I find scripting languages in general make you pay a toll for their convenience. Perl, php, python, lua, bash, ruby, etc are not perfect for everything either. The toll is generally worth it but it does give us something to bitch and moan about.
Honestly, we already pay gasoline taxes that are supposed to go to the building and maintenance of roads.
Only, the wall street journal (paywalled) says that states are instead using that stable, guaranteed income to pay for other things like debt. 40% of federal fuel taxes [1] go to things other than roads as well.
I'm all for top earners paying more taxes, as we honestly don't need a nobility with more money than small countries, but I'm not sure that income makes sense to put into roads.
I'd rather fuel taxes actually went to road building and maintenance like it's supposed to...
Having increased high earner income tax fund social and work programs aimed at poverty does make sense though. If politicians would actually do it and not funnel it elsewhere.
If we learn to store energy better then we can harvest all of the energy we need for the night during the day.
Fossil fuels are basically stored solar energy after all...
I agree that solar doesn't make sense everywhere and that a variety of production methods are necessary but I can't see solar going away. Grabbing some of the energy that the sun is blasting us with just makes too much sense.
Though I honestly wonder how useful it is to send people to prison for stuff like that.
Maybe if prison were some form of profitable conscripted labor where the profits went to the victims.
I'd say that justice for negligent vehicular homicide might be a lifetime ban from getting a driver's license, a term of public service of some sort as penance, and financial restitution to the victims. In the event that the person doesn't reasonably follow through on that then I'd send them to prison -- primarily to protect society.
Maybe a little prison time first as an incentive would be useful but really I think studies would have to be done to see what's generally the most effective.
Certainly our current system seems based on millennia-old "we'll just ostracize people into terrible conditions when they do bad things and treat them like they're not really people anymore" methodology with no objective measurement if that actually makes sense to do.
I was lead to believe that training and escalation of force rules basically say that once an American cop is using lethal force that their intention is supposed to be to kill. As in, they're not supposed to aim for shoulder or leg or wounding shots -- they're supposed to do center of mass body shots that will put the target down / kill them.
Most lethal force would still fall, arguably, under justifiable homicide but your "proven intent" argument seems poor. I could buy an ignorant, untrained person shooting a lethal firearm at someone else and not having an intent to kill but a trained officer?
I think it's telling that our system is broken when countries like the UK can go years without their police killing anyone (or maybe even firing a gun) while our system kills at least 1000 people a year.
Sure, in the grand scheme of CDC-tracked death causes, 1000+ people isn't really that many people but we can still do better. And the fact that we don't even have real statistics and media are having to track the fatalities themselves is also shameful.
And SoCs aren't even really made in China, are they? China isn't a big player in semiconductor manufacturing unless one counts Taiwan as China.
China assembles a lot of electronic stuff but I don't believe they are a big player in actually manufacturing it. USA/South Korea/Europe/Japan/Taiwan are.
Exactly how would a municipality provide the transport layer without a lease/contract/partnership and thus not running afoul of the law? And why would incumbent phone/cable companies want to give up their line monopolies and participate in such a scheme?
I mean, we've already been through that sort of scenario. In the 90s, the FCC forced phone companies to lease lines to competitors for DSL service.
Life was slightly better. The only thing was DSL generally sucked and cable companies weren't forced to lease their lines.
Then in the mid-2000s the FCC changed it back so that providers were no longer required to share their lines (the argument was that phone companies were delaying infrastructure upgrades because it would give their competitors a 'free' upgrade).
So now we are back to the same old regional phone and cable company monopoly with very few markets having any competition. And that was the history before municipalities tried doing partnerships or even their own ISP utilities and prompted incumbents to lobby for the laws restricting what municipalities can do.
Local mayors and council critters are blameworthy in many places but they're certainly not to blame for businesses going over their heads to state legislatures.
Except, of course, in the 38% of states who have laws that "protect" incumbent franchise holders and make it harder for municipalities to do that.
Even your example of a "partnership/joint venture" is expressly prohibited in Louisiana under state law (which was created through lobbying after AT&T and Cox failed to block, with lawsuits, a certain city from creating a municipal fiber utility).
The law does provide a process for cities to do things their own way but it also involves a vote. And who do you think is going to have the budget for advertising to win that campaign?
And even after that, they can't really charge lower rates because part of the law addresses that too.
And if local governments were to ignore a vote on the issue then incumbents are no longer obligated to provide services, even under existing contracts, the moment any citizen within that area is provided service by that proposed colo facility.
The petition was actually set up by a Brexit supporter, before the referendum was held, in anticipation that the Brexit vote would fail and out of the hope that they could use it for another chance.
You really can't build games like you build bank systems.
Banks don't care about things like smooth game play in the face of latency, dropped packets, server main loop update bottlenecks, etc.
Yes, a bank can implement a proper client-server architecture that never trusts the clients.
Given the limitations of the speed of light and modern computers you really can't do that for games and have an enjoyable entertainment experience.
In my experience, multiplayer games have to trust the client to some degree and are much better off doing deferred cheating checks, memory scanning anti-cheat, and statistics to get rid of cheaters after they cheat rather than make the game unplayable for everyone and prevent cheating in the first place.
Just imagine having an fps game that had a captcha you had to fill out every time you tried to shoot your gun so that you could prove you were a human.
I assume you'd have to pay without insurance but I can't see any reason why you couldn't use any name you like at a doctor's office.
It's not like they do background checks. And celebrities go to hospitals under pseudonyms sometimes, right?
IANAL but, as long as you paid your bill, I assume it wouldn't be fraud.
Any sane person can see the CFAA is broad and overreaching and I get the feeling that this is just another angle the ACLU thinks might work to attack it.
Did we really need a specific law for computer-related crimes? Are existing definitions for things like fraud/wire fraud and property damage not good enough?
And does it even actually help deter crime in any way? I certainly haven't noticed fewer phishing attempts in my spam box...
Just because it'll be "made available" doesn't mean any school boards or teachers will actually buy it or waste a significant amount of time on this.
They might or they might not. And Slashdot should have said "marketed" rather than "sold".
In terms of games in school, educational games can be highly useful. For example, games like Mario Teaches Typing.
My dad has used computers for longer than I've been alive and still can't touch type while public schools taught me to do it early (grades 1-3).
I think I played Oregon Trail as well (in 2nd grade?) in school, though I'm not sure what the teacher's reasoning for that was.
Maybe it was a rainy day and we couldn't go out for recess.
I could maybe see a highly modified educational version of Civ being useful for teaching history or as a reward just to keep kids busy on a day when you have a substitute teacher and the faster kids already did the busy work. Probably not but maybe.
And if computers led to unproductive class time for you then really it was your teacher that was at fault.
My High School computer science classes were highly productive because the teacher didn't just send students to the computers and then ignore them.
He kept tabs on students, and I believe, had remote monitoring software so he could tell when students were off task.
And, with the tasks given, there wasn't enough class time to waste much if you wanted to pass.
Kids who are determined not to learn aren't going to learn anyway. They'll sleep through class or doodle or read books or play with their phone or whatever.
I really don't think technology has changed this in any meaningful way and I'm fairly certain that every adult in every generation has wondered "Are schools becoming time waste institutions?".
Yes, they always have been time waste institutions.
Every time there's a PA announcement it interrupts class and wastes time.
Every time teachers have to reteach subjects because classes from previous schools didn't properly prepare students it wastes time.
Standardized test preparation wastes tons of time.
When the teacher is sick or needs a personal day and you have a substitute teacher who gives busy work it wastes time.
All of the little interruptions and deviations from schedule waste time.
But, in my experience, teachers generally do the best they can and schools are, obviously, still worth it.
They certainly do a better job than I think most parents would. Most parents don't even take parenting classes, let alone get education certifications/degrees.
</rant>
There have been so many major database leaks at this point that I feel it's a given that your name, address, SSN, etc are probably in the hands of nefarious people.
Remember when Slashdot reported multiple databases holding detailed information on millions of U.S. voters were publicly available online?
One had 154 million voters with names, addresses, social networking accounts, etc.
If you google database leaks you'll see leaks involving hundreds of thousands of records that include social security numbers.
Here's how my car works if I leave it in first and start it:
A) Press clutch and turn the ignition: car starts. It goes nowhere because of the clutch (and brakes).
If I ride the clutch (and unset the parking brake and take my foot off the brake) then, sure, it'll go forwards very slowly on a flat surface.
But if I take my foot all off clutch completely without feeding it gas it's going to stall.
B) Don't press the clutch and turn ignition: car doesn't start. It goes nowhere.
I'm pretty sure you have to do that? Isn't there a clutch safety switch or something that requires the clutch to be engaged for the starter to work?
After looking into what other people do, apparently some owner's manuals say to leave the car into 2nd when parked. Interesting.
I think it's disingenuous to say that automatic drivers have a lesser understanding of how to operate their vehicle. And I learned on automatic and later switched to manual so I've personally done both sides.
I think it's more that a MT forces you to use a parking brake and, in my experience, the parking brake is usually a more pronounced hand brake rather than a foot pedal. If AT vehicles didn't have "park" and required the parking brake then people would use that more.
You can't really tell if a foot pedal is set from a glance and possibly not even from tactile feedback.
And as a MT driver, I leave my car in neutral when I park. Because you start the car in neutral, and even though I check before starting it, it still seems like a good habit.
I could see an argument for leaving the car in gear if you park on an incline, or if you park on a street where you think you might be hit from behind and want less of a chance of hitting the car in front of you. Personally, I try to avoid parking on inclines.
Manual is a lot more fun to drive (usually) but I'm of the firm opinion that automatic is safer to drive because your attention isn't as divided.
Sure, shifting is basically muscle memory after a while but I still feel like it takes away some attention from your surroundings.
And then there are things like stop-and-go traffic on an incline...
Though it did get a super-majority: 67% voted to join/stay in and every single region of the UK voted in favor (though as low as 52% in favor in places like Northern Ireland and turnout overall was lower at 64%.)
I'd be really curious to see demographics from the 1975 vote.
I wonder if the world war survivors in 1975 were for a stronger, united Europe and voted to join.
Now that they're mostly dead, their children certainly seem to favor a more isolated, nationalist UK.
I thought that wasn't true, post-Treaty of Lisbon? I'm an American so I could be uninformed on the issue. This is my impression:
Voters directly elect their Members of European Parliament. And I assume they directly elect their heads of state, which make up the European Council members.
The Council, those elected heads of state, nominate the Commission President, who then has to be approved by the directly elected MEPs.
The Council nominates Commissioners, with the agreement of the President. Then the Parliament, through directly elected MEPs, has to approve them. Basically to me Commissioners are like U.S. Executive branch Cabinet members.
Commissioners propose legislation to the Parliament but the Parliament has full power to pass, modify, and/or deny legislation.
The only thing I've seen that looked shady was that Commissioner-proposed legislation can maybe pass on Parliament inaction.
And maybe some cases where the elected heads of state can bypass Parliament and approve Commission proposals but I think the European Court of Justice has cracked down on both of those?
Mostly it seems very much in keeping with democratic republic ideals. At least as much as the U.K. parliament.
I don't get why people focus on the Commissioners when it really seems like the power struggle has been between the Council and Parliament, with the Lisbon Treat increasing Parliament's power and thus decreasing the Council's.
Someone who has that level of access to your computer could certainly install drivers themselves.
And if it runs an Intel or AMD chip then you probably have remote management hardware/firmware inside your processor that can operate outside of your operating system and, at least to some extent, while your computer is "off".
Theoretically that's all very secure but blocking light from entering the lens seems like a low effort high reward security practice.
If you think I'm spouting nonsense about the remote management stuff then look up presentations by people like Igor Skochinsky (HexRays/IDA) and Joanna Rutkowska.
I don't think there is a law that says that there must be an NSA.
Wikipedia says that originally the NSA was via a National Security Council Intelligence Directive, which I believe was authorized under the National Security Act of 1947.
It looks like later the National Security Agency Act of 1959 gave official authorization for the President to keep running the NSA but it's all "is authorized to" or "may do this" and I don't see a whole lot that could be strictly interpreted as requiring an NSA.
I'm not a lawyer though. I could be very well be wrong. I think at worst the President would be required to maintain certain Director positions and a minimum amount of surveillance but, certainly, he wouldn't be required to have the NSA spying on everyone.
Contrary to popular anime plots, girlfriends don't magically appear in basements.
My understanding is that it's more like 25 to 5000 customers (I think Cable Labs suggests 250 for DOCSIS 3.0) sharing a certain amount of channels/bandwidth (probably around 300Mbps down for DOCSIS 3.0 and over 1Gbps down for DOCSIS 3.1) on their node to CMTS.
The target over-subscription ratio for gigabit seems to be no more than 50:1 from the few papers I've read.
300 Mbps * 1 month = 98.6 TB; / 250 subscribers = 400 GB but that's saying if everyone used an equal amount / all of their share.
With the realistic 1.3Gbps+ range for DOCSIS 3.1 with 50 subscribers it'll be over 8TB.
And, like you say, it only matters if everyone is competing for bandwidth at the same time and most of the time that doesn't happen.
Flat caps don't make sense for that problem. Most people aren't home during the weekday and so bandwidth is going unused during that time.
Peak usage caps or traffic shaping heavy users to give priority to light users or even much higher overall caps with weighted data during peak usage times would make a lot more sense than the current flat cap scheme.
It seems to me that ISPs don't really want to deal with it and would rather attempt to balance keeping ahead with capacity and speed upgrades as needed while every now and then moving data cap targets to protect themselves from the heaviest of users.
You don't need a specific domain name to run an HTTP server.
They can use direct IPs and/or modified hosts files, other domain names run by registrars in more favorable countries, TOR, alternative DNS roots, etc.
See: Sci-Hub, KAT, the already innumerable existing piratebay proxies, etc
Even the Great Firewall of China can't keep people from accessing information on the internet that they're determined to access and western countries certainly haven't resorted to near that level of internet oppression yet.
All they're really doing is making copyright infringement less convenient and possibly causing TPB to lose some users while Google PageRank adjusts.
Honestly, I believe more money (and man hours) is being wasted in court than is saved.
Consider how many years it takes for courts to deal with things like this and that it takes just a few minutes and dollars to purchase a new domain name.
All TV is digital now in the U.S. (even broadcast OTA) in order to free up spectrum and cable TV used to be required to offer basic cable and local broadcast channels unencrypted, over the wire, via clear-QAM.
Then in 2012 the previous FCC chairman and commissioners decided to change that rule and let cable companies encrypt everything and thus require ALL users to pay a monthly fee for a set-top box, in addition to their normal service fees.
This also means that the clear-QAM tuner hardware in TVs, that increases the cost of TVs and that we already paid for, became useless.
This is a bit weird because these same cable companies are providing internet service over the same cables but users can choose to rent a cable modem from their provider or buy their own cable modem from a 3rd party.
Yeah, those cable customers are going to drop their cable TV service to watch Netflix... on their cable internet connections.
That'll really show those big bad regional cable monopolies who is boss.
I wish slashdot had a Kappa emoticon.
npm does not require you to install packages from the registry and your application's package.json dependencies do not either.
For production you can very easily have your own internal git server hosting your packages and dependencies, at specific verified versions.
Or if you don't like git you could have an internal SSL/TLS server hosting tarballs of all of the packages/dependencies.
The npm registry makes sharing packages easy but nothing says you have to use code straight from that to production.
Hell, you don't even have to use npm if you don't want to.
And javascript on a server can make sense for something like making an web service API that spits out JSON data (and since browsers are limited to javascript you're generally going to want your data in JSON.)
JSON is already, obviously, native to javascript and thus very easy to use, you can reduce duplication of effort and manpower by having the same knowledge requirements on the client/server, and in my experience it's a bit annoying to shift gears when thinking in multiple languages on the same project.
Basically, using the same language for everything can reduce complexity which every resource I've ever read stresses as a good thing.
Let me emphasize that can. If you look at node.js like a hammer and every problem starts to look like a nail then you're not going to have a good time.
And for people who just hate javascript because it's javascript: yes, javascript has annoying quirks.
But all languages have annoying quirks and I find scripting languages in general make you pay a toll for their convenience. Perl, php, python, lua, bash, ruby, etc are not perfect for everything either.
The toll is generally worth it but it does give us something to bitch and moan about.
I sort of agree.
Honestly, we already pay gasoline taxes that are supposed to go to the building and maintenance of roads.
Only, the wall street journal (paywalled) says that states are instead using that stable, guaranteed income to pay for other things like debt.
40% of federal fuel taxes [1] go to things other than roads as well.
I'm all for top earners paying more taxes, as we honestly don't need a nobility with more money than small countries, but I'm not sure that income makes sense to put into roads.
I'd rather fuel taxes actually went to road building and maintenance like it's supposed to...
Having increased high earner income tax fund social and work programs aimed at poverty does make sense though. If politicians would actually do it and not funnel it elsewhere.
If we learn to store energy better then we can harvest all of the energy we need for the night during the day.
Fossil fuels are basically stored solar energy after all...
I agree that solar doesn't make sense everywhere and that a variety of production methods are necessary but I can't see solar going away.
Grabbing some of the energy that the sun is blasting us with just makes too much sense.
Though I honestly wonder how useful it is to send people to prison for stuff like that.
Maybe if prison were some form of profitable conscripted labor where the profits went to the victims.
I'd say that justice for negligent vehicular homicide might be a lifetime ban from getting a driver's license, a term of public service of some sort as penance, and financial restitution to the victims.
In the event that the person doesn't reasonably follow through on that then I'd send them to prison -- primarily to protect society.
Maybe a little prison time first as an incentive would be useful but really I think studies would have to be done to see what's generally the most effective.
Certainly our current system seems based on millennia-old "we'll just ostracize people into terrible conditions when they do bad things and treat them like they're not really people anymore" methodology with no objective measurement if that actually makes sense to do.
I was lead to believe that training and escalation of force rules basically say that once an American cop is using lethal force that their intention is supposed to be to kill.
As in, they're not supposed to aim for shoulder or leg or wounding shots -- they're supposed to do center of mass body shots that will put the target down / kill them.
Most lethal force would still fall, arguably, under justifiable homicide but your "proven intent" argument seems poor.
I could buy an ignorant, untrained person shooting a lethal firearm at someone else and not having an intent to kill but a trained officer?
I think it's telling that our system is broken when countries like the UK can go years without their police killing anyone (or maybe even firing a gun) while our system kills at least 1000 people a year.
Sure, in the grand scheme of CDC-tracked death causes, 1000+ people isn't really that many people but we can still do better. And the fact that we don't even have real statistics and media are having to track the fatalities themselves is also shameful.
And SoCs aren't even really made in China, are they? China isn't a big player in semiconductor manufacturing unless one counts Taiwan as China.
China assembles a lot of electronic stuff but I don't believe they are a big player in actually manufacturing it. USA/South Korea/Europe/Japan/Taiwan are.
Global economy and all...