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User: skeldoy

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  1. Re:iOS NFC Only Being Used for Apple Pay on Apple Locks iPhone 6/6+ NFC To Apple Pay Only · · Score: 2

    NFC just can't be "secure" like that. The whole thing about security on NFC is the proximity needed to communicate. You can easily eavesdrop on the communication by sitting in between the devices communicating. So there is really no security work needed here. What they need is to just implement the standard that all the other phones have had for years. It's that simple. The only reason that they don't start in that end is that they see this thing as serving their own purposes first and foremost. If they spend an entire year "polishing the stack" then they get a bigger piece of the pie. If they started by implementing this thing properly right away and then building their service on top of that - that's another story. All they really needed to do in order to get this right for the rest of the world was to follow the standard. The Android implementation is completely open source so getting that done would be a matter of weeks not years.

  2. Re:Incorrect speculation on Apple Locks iPhone 6/6+ NFC To Apple Pay Only · · Score: 1

    There are similar apps all over the place. It's only in america that this thing hasn't already started. Sure they want to make it secure. But they could still sell their ApplePay as a "premium unhackable product" and allow other actors to use the chip for other purposes. Their approach is great for Apple in the US. But for the consumers it just means another level of lockin. The rest of the world; well they just got one more reason for buying something else.

  3. Re:Detectable by scanners? on Apple Locks iPhone 6/6+ NFC To Apple Pay Only · · Score: 1

    Your PN532 would probably detect it's presence. But what to do about that? Unless they support the standards that triggers events on the phone then you have nothing. Seeing that they will not even allow people to create custom applications for at least a year - well; even though the chip is there you can't use it for nothing. Say that they open up the chip for use in custom applications after a year - well dang - it's still not supporting the standards - so it's going to behave very differently from every other NFC-enabled device out there. I'll buy a Samsung Galaxy S5 now. I've had it with waiting for Apple to start supporting this tech.

  4. Re:WTF on Apple Locks iPhone 6/6+ NFC To Apple Pay Only · · Score: 1

    Very interesting indeed. It's also going to be interesting to see just how much this will impact their sales in any other country than the US. They want to eat the whole cake but they are missing the bigger picture. The cake is far bigger than contactless payments in the US. If they loose their position in the global devices game - well - it will be a very different world to conquer by the time they lift their heads.

  5. WTF on Apple Locks iPhone 6/6+ NFC To Apple Pay Only · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've been a long time iPhone user (every model since it's inception) and I have liked all those phones a lot. I've made some apps and have made myself completely tied down to the platform by spending money on apps and music. This NFC-thing is kind of like magic. I have a friend with that capability on his phone and it seems to me that this NFC-thing is a complete no-brainer in terms of interconnecting devices. I was actually waiting for the moment that Apple finally introduced this NXP-chip into the iPhone. Apple want to restrict the use of the chip to ApplePay? Guess what: In the country where I live - there is already an NFC-infrastructure and the banks have apps that use it - just not on iOS. What to do? Should I ditch the whole Apple universe and go for a Linux-phone and at the same time leave my wallet at home. Yeah. I think I might just do that. One year of waiting for Apple to "maybe" get their shit together and realize that the world is larger than the US; that's a long time for something that's been around for years now. Bye bye Apple. It's been good. iOS is the best OS and the iPhone is catching up. But this is it for me. I want that wallet-killer right now - not "when Apple decides that it has enough monopoly in the US to maybe open it up for other actors".

  6. Software is the new worker on Ask Slashdot: What Will IT Departments Look Like In 5 Years? · · Score: 1

    There may be differences between the continents here but at least in Europe I don't see a future with enough staff to warrant an IT department. Consider that most of the stuff we do today are actually being done by computers: robotic assembly in industry, online retail, digital video workflow in journalism & entertainment, online learning, learning algorithms on big data replacing analysts with spreadsheets, bureaucracy moving from people to algorithms and databases with web front-ends, hell even driverless cars replacing taxis and goods transports. We will need the "common Joe" to be as proficient with a computer as the baseline in any IT shop today. Sure for old companies stuck in the pre-internet world that have to answer phones, do spreadsheets and carry crates - there will be a place for an IT shop but a company starting up today has to vacuum up the able people so IT shops in old companies will experience brain drain. If you start a company today and think you need a fax-machine, a printer, a mail-server, a laptop per employee with the office on it - you are looking at it the wrong way. Hell if you need employees you are probably not thinking it through. Sure history is cyclical. Everything will happen again. But the internet and the huge dent it has made on every possible business out there - we are just seeing the start of a transition to another way of structuring companies. People say that "ze cloud" is too expensive for IT. That might be true for an old shop. But if you don't have whitespace, techies, cables, a good power deal, servers or even a building - that's a hefty price tag right there to get to a place where scaling the sucker is an even bigger investment. Buying IaaS and SaaS makes sense in the same way as not creating your own electricity and not building your own servers. Things are going to change but for most people it just means being employed somewhere else doing the same thing but for more customers.

  7. Re:They're fucked. on 'Of Course We Are In a Post-PC World,' Says Ray Ozzie · · Score: 1

    seriously - have you seen windows 8? It's at best a shadow of XP and at worst an utterly horrible mess based on a brilliant idea that nobody wants. It's like ubuntu's unity - it's shit and it's the final nail in the coffin that is MS. Sure they'll be around for non-tech management types to buy crappy products from - but for the web-generation they don't really mean anything anymore. When I was a kid I had a poster of Bill Gates in my room. Then I listened to Linus pronounce Linux Linux and then I basically stopped worrying and now do most of my off-work stuff on iThings. Bill Gates was a long time ago - and kids today don't really care about it anymore. Linuxish things will be around for a while until somebody does that proper and then it will probably dominate - come on - it's unix - it was the best idea - only the suits and the marketing made MS - the plan was crap the minute they stopped xenix.

  8. XP is still the best MS OS ever on Microsoft Pulling the Plug On Windows XP In Three Years · · Score: 0

    It's sad to say it, but considering the crap they spend the next 10 years on building I'd rather bet on continued support after the supposed 1000 days. If people seriously believe that XP won't be the majority amongst the MS desktops - even in 2014 - then think again. It's a good OS - the only one that's usable. The other crap is as pretentious as it is error-prone. We even have real serious systems running XP instead of 2k3-server - just because it's more stable. 2k3+,vista,win7 are jokes - utter travesties. If I where given 10$ every time I saw a Microsoft Server blue-screen-of-death.. XP right now - never see it anymore. At last it's a proper OS.

  9. Fud on My $200 Laptop Can Beat Your $500 Tablet · · Score: 1

    The story is full of fud. 1: DVD-burner? Who needs that now - really - come on. 2: Get a bluetooth keyboard won't you 3: Start streaming from your NAS-box or from the Web - use home sharing to play your music from the computer 4: Ports for what? AirPrint or what it's called - mouse on a touch screen? My mother syncs here DSLR with the iPad so I guess that can be done 5: It does multitask 6: The "limits" of the iTunes is backup, restore and update - he can have his 200$ laptop for that and be happy. 7: The battery is so much better on the iPad compared to the run of the mill laptop's that replacing it isn't really going to happen.

  10. Lockpicks on How Do You Handle Your Keys? · · Score: 1

    Get a small (4-5 piece) lockpicking kit. That way you don't have to carry any keys with you :)

  11. Why the crappy accuracy? Re-invest in peace? on Meet the Men Who Deploy Airstrikes · · Score: 0, Troll

    Considering the hardware I find it peculiar that they kill so many civilians. I guess the people meant to limit the amount of false positives are basically hillbillies. I guess good hardware has no effect as long as you do not train your forces to fight fair. No amount of "freedom" or technology can explain away the fact that the largest army on the planet are still basically just killing for fun / at random. I hope those stupid oil-/gass-wars end soon. I wonder if they would have if we invested all the money we currently invest in those wars in alternative energy. Considering that they evidentially have the needed technology to avoid civilian casualties; I guess not. :/

  12. Re:as long as it kills flash... on Adobe Evangelist Lashes Out Over Apple's "Original Language" Policy · · Score: 1

    I hate flash for burning my nuts to a cinder. That is all it really does. In the winter it can be a little cozy to have a laptop running full speed ahead, burning a hole in my pants, but now spring is coming and it is time it died and left something equally closed-source but more effective in it's wake.

  13. Re:Not sure in USA but in Spain... on The Apple Paradox, Closed Culture & Free-Thinking Fans · · Score: 1

    I couldn't agree with you more. I used to have a wintel-box at work and it demanded to be booted almost daily. That boot effectively stopped me from working and the machine was slow running system-specific closed-source crap that I basically have no interest in for a good 15 minutes after booting (often just to produce another forced reboot). I replaced the thing with ubuntu - just to be able to work (have booted ubuntu twice in 6 months). Linux works for me as I do mostly coding. But for a home computer I don't really code so I use a Mac because what I do at home is listening to music, watching pictures (arhem..), editing home movies, surfing the intertubes, record some music. Sure I could use linux for that - but that would suck up a lot of time I could be spending on my primary activities.

  14. slashdot?! on Google Hacked, May Pull Out of China · · Score: 1

    How long till they hax0r /. ???

  15. Automate automate automate on How Do IT Guys Get Respect and Not Become BOFHs? · · Score: 1

    Put up good scripts that simplify managing user accounts. Put up good scripts for restarting databases and other services. Put up good logon-scripts run remote jobs on their machines while they are un. Implement "always on" clients. Cut their local admin privileges. Set up a PXE-server so you do not have to install operating systems manually. Try to implement some sort of system for automatically distributing software updates. This frees up time for taking the users seriously..

    Draw a list of applications you support. Refuse to help with applications not on that list. Then try to make a list of what problems the users have. If a majority of the users problems are related to VPN - you attack that by buying a new system. If the problems are related to printers - you try to find a solution (cut back on the number of printers or put the ones you have on the network). Virtualize your servers and put up virtual application clients that the users can access remotely.

    Remember that you work with machines. Machines can be programmed to do most of "the machine work". The more of your time you can free up for thinking - the more perfect the automatic solutions will be. Automation is the only way to go. If that means coding for a couple of evenings - so be it - it will pay for it self after a pretty short time. That free time can then be invested in freeing up even more time. You go like that until the shop almost runs itself. If the users - by this point - starts bugging you - delete every single script - destroy the backups and then *get a new job*. ;)

  16. Re:Houses with tails? on Houses With Tails · · Score: 1

    tried tagging the story with !brothel

  17. To just check whether there is unread stuff there: on Is There a Linux Client Solution for Exchange 2007? · · Score: 1

    wget --user=UNAME --password=PWORD https://webmail./ ORGANIZATION .com/exchange/FULL.NAME/Inbox/?Cmd=contents -O mail --quiet
    MAILCOUNT=`cat mail | grep -i -o "icon-msg-unread.gif"|wc -l`
    echo "You got $MAILCOUNT new messages"; rm mail

    Works like a charm

  18. I had the same problem on Is There a Linux Client Solution for Exchange 2007? · · Score: 3, Informative

    but I realized that the webmail was actually better than virtualizing a box or trying in vain to hack the evolution-plugins. I ended up with the following solution:
    I have a terminal-window that runs a bash-script that uses wget (or curl, don't really remember) to pull down the webmail-main-page and actually grep for the "boldness" of the new messages. When ever there is a bold line somewhere in the main view it makes a noise and flashes a tcl/tk-window saying that there are new stuff on the web-mail. I tab to the correct place in the firefox, refresh and there you go.
    I know the solution is a little weird, but it works and it does what I need, so I really do not care to try out something else (except advocating OSS in my work place).

  19. WHY?! on Apple Rejects iPhone App As Competitive To iTunes · · Score: 1

    WHY APPLE, WHY?!
    Maybe it is a ploy to make the iphone a little crappier. It was too good. They think they need to bring it down a little..
    I just "upgraded" my phone today and had to spend the next two hours restoring the phone due to a crash in the upgrade.
    now this?!

  20. Re:countdown on Ghostbusters Is First Film Released On USB Key · · Score: 0

    dd if=/dev/usbThingy of=theMovie.movieFormatExtension && file movieFormatExtension
    done! - before you could count to three. ;)

  21. The mind matters that matter matters on Are IT Security Professionals Less Happy? · · Score: 0

    if you just keep your mind focused on one mantra: this is a computer system - not a living entity. Money is an illusion. Importance is a frame of mind not a fact of life. I like breaking things to see what happens because I really do not care if something breaks (unless it is done properly in the first place and finding out why it failed is a bitch) so why should you or anybody else? Is not it better for you to find out that something is breakable than for some lunatic bastard? You should just not take everything so seriously. Importance is in the eye of the beholder. If you just chill out things will get better. And ... I know this is /. but seriously - have more sex (not to your self though). ;)

  22. Trains, US? on Transportation Bill Sets Aside $45 Million For MagLev Train · · Score: 5, Funny

    Trains in the US & A? Can this really be true?
    Surely this must involve burning of insane amounts of petroleum somehow! Maybe the magnets are powered by petroleum?

  23. AT LAST! on Sun Developing Open Media Stack · · Score: 0

    I have been wondering when this could happen. I didn't hold my breath exactly, but I was hoping for someone to make some kind of initiative that could unite people in the (relativly) simple task of writing a new video standard. Video is probably the most sought after media-content on the web right now but there is a really big gap between what the users want and what kind of initiatives that are being put forth.. Good going Sun!

    I only hope it can run on a beowulf cluster of princess amidalas in soviet russia ;)

  24. Most people are just on Dealing With an IT Bully · · Score: 0

    plain stupid. IT-guy and the PEBCAK. What is more annoying than PEBCAK-cases when you could spend your time on "not reinventing the wheel". What is more annoying than a pissed off arrogant guy when you just need to solve something technically annoying to accomplish a relevant task. Same fu**ing sh*t, different fu**ing angles. Take a chill pill and try thinking of something a little more interesting to post.

  25. Imagine... on Toshiba Uses Cell Chip In Consumer Laptop · · Score: -1, Redundant

    ...a beowulf-cluster of these :)