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User: guruevi

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  1. Re:Go vertical! on Processors and the Limits of Physics · · Score: 1

    There have been plenty of concept designs and current chips use 3d technology to an extent. The problem IS cooling. On a flat plane, you can simply put a piece of metal on top and it will cool it. Current chips sometimes stoke away close to 200W. With 3D designs, you need to build-in the heat transfer (taking up space you can't use for chips or communications) in between and both planes will produce equal amounts of heat so either heat transfer needs to be really, really good or you need a heat sink several times larger than the space you'd save in between the planes.

  2. Buffalo routers (any) on Ask Slashdot: Life Beyond the WRT54G Series? · · Score: 1

    Some come with DD-WRT, most of their routers support it. I recommend them to clients looking for a stable business router. They are rock-stable and great support, they may not always have the latest antennae technology whenever one comes along (like 802.11ac right now). The RT-N16 was decent but is unstable even with DD-WRT (it has an under-engineered power supply).

  3. I don't see a lack of documentation anywhere in the FOSS world, it's actually a lot better than most closed source software. I don't know whether you're complaining about your lack of Google-fu or the fact that software is reliant on other things. Off course, very obscure things are not well documented but that is regardless of software you use, that's when you experiment and find out what you need, write a blog post or improve the documentation yourself. But for a regular user and regular sysadmin and developer tasks, there is plenty of help available.

  4. Re:Try to make me forget. on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1

    Feel free to move to Mars, I doubt they would know or care much about your hijinks. The world has become a small town due to the Internet. Small towns have their advantages but also their disadvantages.

  5. Re:ATO - GoA 4 on Driverless Buses Ruled Out For London, For Now · · Score: 1

    There is technology out there that could detect humans/animals even in the darkest portions (in tunnels etc) well in advance, outside human drivers' visual range. However whether or not that would make a difference is a big question, you can't stop a chunk of steel weighing in at 10T in a matter of seconds - well, you could (rocket boosters and whatnot) but then the meat bags inside the train would be omelets.

  6. Re:I'm officially old I guess on Driverless Buses Ruled Out For London, For Now · · Score: 1

    Speech recognition has been in computers since OS/2 Warp and MacOS9. It's a 'solved' problem. However we speak much slower than we either think or type/move mouses so it's a bit of a solution looking for a problem (and with mobile there are some practical uses eg. driving a car but it's still weird to talk to a device in public as if it were your butler; heck it's weird to talk to a human butler). What isn't solved very well is understanding natural language and having a 'conversation' with a computer.

  7. Re:Simple Answers to Simple Questions on Ask Slashdot: IT Personnel As Ostriches? · · Score: 1

    If I don't know any further details, I'll take it as if it were the best case scenario and someone found some irregularities and is fixing it. Irregularities doesn't mean something illegal happened, there are plenty of ways to siphon money out of a fund that don't break the law, that's what accountants are supposed to know and fix.

    If something is blatantly illegal, follow the corporate policy and report as necessary to superiors and if that fails or is not feasible, authorities. Remain as anonymous as possible, do an anonymous report to HR or at least ask them to keep your identity concealed etc etc. And trust me, authorities don't give a shit about what is and isn't legal within a corporation, you file a report and nothing ever happens unless millions of dollars are going in the wrong (read: not in their) pockets. Even the corporation won't care if an accountant syphoned 100k to their personal bank account; they'll fire the dude/dudette and carry on because the bad press will hurt their stock/client base more than the 100k. For the 'regular' guy, $100k or even $1M is a LOT of money, within the billion dollar corporation this is chump change and well within their calculated losses.

  8. Re:They should've removed one to make room. on How Many Members of Congress Does It Take To Pass a $400MM CS Bill? · · Score: 1

    Architecture is an important art with plenty of math worked into it, the human body in art is also a great case for both biology and math; art is important and should be a core academic subject supporting the rest however it should not be "arts and crafts" which is not art but a way of keeping kids busy.

    It should be the reasons behind art, what makes a thing aesthetically pleasing, what harmonics are and how colors and light mix but how do you convince a populace that doesn't even understand half of the words in this sentence that that is what art is and why it's important?

  9. Re:Sorry, but... why? on How Many Members of Congress Does It Take To Pass a $400MM CS Bill? · · Score: 2

    Math has been in the boring rote memorization exercise for decades in schools. The reason is that most people simply do not grasp the 'mechanics' behind mathematics and teachers have neither the will nor the skill to teach a subject like math. I didn't like math in school simply because they went so slow and required rote memorization of multiplication tables, axioms and rules. I even remember doing tests that were simply asking to write down axioms in text form.

    Some people do grasp math and those will be the nerds that eventually become STEM students. However 75% of the population will never enter this field because they're simply not wired to understand it.

  10. 50M loss on an almost 1B revenue on Elon Musk Promises 100,000 Electric Cars Per Year · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That is basically breaking even especially given the backers and what they're investing in. I'm surprised the losses weren't larger.

  11. Re:You're welcome to them. on Comparison: Linux Text Editors · · Score: 1

    vi just works regardless of whether you're local or remote or whether or not you have a windowing environment. It doesn't even need a correctly defined terminal. Also, it has all the features like spell check, indentation, code highlighting, colors and everything you ever need. It also a little over 1MB (smaller for some other platforms) and thus will fit anywhere.

  12. Re:News Flash FUD works! on The Misleading Fliers Comcast Used To Kill Off a Local Internet Competitor · · Score: 1

    It's not necessarily the FUD that worked. Read the presentation - the proposals were killed by a State senator that was bribed to make a law that said "no office in this state can sell high speed Internet"

  13. Re:In the USA people don't pay for phones on Lots Of People Really Want Slideout-Keyboard Phones: Where Are They? · · Score: 1

    Look at the T-Mobile fine print for the BYOD plans:
    "If you switch plans you may be bound by existing term (including early termination provisions) and/or charged an up to $200 fee."
    AT&T (same "no-contract plan" page:
    Early termination fee up to $325 may apply.

    The pricing for a no-contract is actually similar or more expensive than my current 2 year contracts AND you have to pay for the phone.

  14. Re:In the USA people don't pay for phones on Lots Of People Really Want Slideout-Keyboard Phones: Where Are They? · · Score: 1

    They're not ditching the two year contracts. They're just locking you into a contract for 1 or 2 years without giving you a free phone. Big difference.

  15. Re:TCO on Valencia Linux School Distro Saves 36 Million Euro · · Score: 1

    Any sysadmin worth their salt is going to cost a pretty penny. If you cheap out on the workers, you'll get what you pay for including multi-million dollar license fees. The license fees for MS products in EDU is currently at ~$1000/year/FTE or full-time student. You only need to have ~50-150 people total (depending on your area) to pay for a good sysadmin.

  16. Re:No need for a conspiracy on Do Apple and Google Sabotage Older Phones? What the Graphs Don't Show · · Score: 2

    If you make such claims, please back them up with statements. The latest iOS upgrade has been a great improvement to both speed and usability for my iPhone 4 and my iPad 1 is no slower today through all the upgrades than when I started using it 3 years ago, it still runs all the games and whatnots.

    http://www.macworld.com/articl...

  17. Re:H-1b should not be used for lower-level workers on VP Biden Briefs US Governors On H-1B Visas, IT, and Coding · · Score: 1

    The problem is that the whole computer eco-system is built on the premise that whoever is buying doesn't have a clue what the fuck they are doing. Most of the niche and custom software (think PeopleSoft which comes as a set of basic HTML blocks and a database) is something that can be built much better for a company in less than 6 months by a team of dedicated and decent programmers.

    Yet, the person buying doesn't have a clue what they are doing so they throw a few million at it and 2-3 years of H1B's and overpaid (for their qualifications) contractors to come up with a system that is more broken in the end than when it started. The same happens everywhere and at every level. Desktop software: Throw a few millions at Microsoft and Dell so everyone can browse the web and receive the occasional e-mail on a system that could run Crysis 5 when it comes out in 2020 even though a Raspberry Pi would be good enough for most of the fleet. Web software: throw a few millions in the directions of Oracle and IBM in order to serve out 99% static pages.

  18. Re:110 or 240v on Google Offers a Million Bucks For a Better Inverter · · Score: 1

    Check your house's breaker box. Most likely you DO have 240V/60Hz coming in. And with any digital inverter worth it's salt, 50Hz is just a matter of a jumper or switch.

  19. Re:Local testing works? on States That Raised Minimum Wage See No Slow-Down In Job Growth · · Score: 1

    10-15%? Think more along the lines of 50%. You have to add ~15% in taxes but you don't just have to deal with SSI and taxes. You now also have to deal with accountants and lawyers to make sure everything is on the up-and-up, make sure your workplace conforms to OSHA and state standards, disability claims and benefits, vacation benefits and other employees to get coverage, FMLA, a variety of insurances to protect you from litigating employees, medical benefits...

    Not saying that workers should go without all those benefits but for some that is a burden too heavy to carry if the competition doesn't follow the same rules.

  20. Re:My story with those assholes... on Domain Registry of America Suspended By ICANN · · Score: 1

    They don't hijack it, the whois providers are themselves the hijackers. In case of your command line utility, it is possible your ISP simply provides their own whois (there is no requirement for whois to query the 'official' databases and it is trivial to put your own 'cache' in).

    And the best thing is that most of these 'hijacked' domains are never paid for, ICANN allows for ~$0.25 (refundable) to 'reserve' a domain name. Eg. an ISP or web service may do this as a 'service' so you're sure to have it when you pay for it (with them). Then if you don't pay for it, the domain is set up for expire and goes on a feed where decisions are made (most likely an algorithm based on keywords and name lists) and then registrars are bombarded for seconds leading up to the expiration time by requests to register the domain in a similar 'reservation' fashion.

  21. Re: Can we extend corporate rights to individuals? on Telcos Move Net Neutrality Fight To Congress · · Score: 1

    You know you can already do all of that and plenty of people do it. The problem is that the cost to do so is prohibitive unless you make more than a few million a year and can pay your own set of accountant and lawyers.

  22. Re:Curious on Obama Administration Says the World's Servers Are Ours · · Score: 1

    So Russia?

  23. Re:I think USA is right... on Obama Administration Says the World's Servers Are Ours · · Score: 1

    There is a difference in the kind of crookedness. In China/India, you pay (local) government to stop meddling with your business; in the US you pay (local) government to meddle with your competitors' business.

  24. Re: Maybe, maybe not. on Obama Administration Says the World's Servers Are Ours · · Score: 1

    They already are for tax and other purposes. This ruling basically says that if your company has any ties overseas, the oversees assets now fall under US jurisdiction.

  25. Re:Start with deceased astronauts... on Public To Vote On Names For Exoplanets · · Score: 1

    How about cosmonauts? US-centric much!