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User: Wolfrider

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  1. Re:We are the geeks, we are not tools for non-geek on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 1

    --Gordon Ramsay has HIGH STANDARDS - that's why he excoriates people who settle for mediocre/unseasoned/not done well. Watch him in some other stuff besides Hell's Kitchen - he's actually a pretty cool guy.

  2. Re:Digital Assistant software on Microsoft: Start Menu Returns, Windows Free For Small Device OEMs, Cortana Beta · · Score: 1

    --I'm with you 99%. A real-life Cortana with Jen as the voice would be a great thing to see... But it prolly still wouldn't inspire me to use it.

  3. Re:Auto play audio? on The Inside Story of Gmail On Its Tenth Anniversary · · Score: 1

    --I'm with you 99%. Autoplay audio on /. is hella annoying.

    / ponies!

  4. Re:At an affordable price on WSJ: Prepare To Hang Up the Phone — Forever · · Score: 1

    > The *HAM radio enthusiast community* has helped keep communications going for disaster areas ...FTFY. YW. HAND.

  5. Re:Zombies? on Researchers: Rats Didn't Spread Black Death, Humans Did · · Score: 1

    --Yah, srsly - these geniuses never watched "Demolition Man"?

    / ratburger FTW

  6. Re:With blackjack and hookers! on Yahoo May Build Its Own YouTube · · Score: 1

    --Forced to agree. Longtime yahoo email user (over 10 years) and they have f*cked it up so bad that now I have to switch. Shame, too - I really liked them up until they took Tabs out of their email. Between google and yahoo, I no longer trust yahoo.

  7. Re:Not next gen on Facebook To Begin Deploying Btrfs · · Score: 1

    --You sound like a Luddite. Sure, in a blue-sky world ALL filesystems could have ZFS capabilities. But the ZFS implementors decided to get past all the cruft and implement it from scratch, and for the most part they've done a fantastic job. Quit complaining and being bitter and try FUNDING CODE DEVELOPMENT on the dev mapper subsystem if you want to see it happen in the next 5-10 years, or it likely never will - it's easier right now to keep those features at the FS level. LVM(+RAID) on Linux is a *horrible* hack in comparison to ZFS.

    --Btrfs is playing catch-up tho; realistically I prolly wouldn't trust it entirely for the next 1.5 - 2 years, but it does have some things that ZFS lacks (more flexibility, and supposedly stable on 32-bit systems.) Once it matures it will be a fine alternative/complement to ZFS, and *damn* the layering violations - as long as it Just Works.

  8. Re:The obvious answer on Are DVDs Inconvenient On Purpose? · · Score: 1

    --I wish I had mod points; I'd mod you up in a heartbeat for saying exactly what I wanted to say to the OP idiot ;-)

  9. Re:Who'll spit on my burger?! on Job Automation and the Minimum Wage Debate · · Score: 1

    --Call me old fashioned, but my 1st job was literally bagging groceries - so I like having someone else bag them when I shop. I *hate* self-checkout stations - I flat-out refuse to use them.

    --When I go into a fast-food restaurant, I like being able to tell a person what my order is. It gives them a job to do (and income, even if it's not really enough to live on by itself), and some human interaction for me. I have no desire to punch a possibly complex, 1-off order into a limited touchscreen interface if I'm feeling like getting something different today - that's their job.

    --Try and take that away, and workers should rise up en masse and demand protection from the law - because *millions* would be put out of work if we tried to automate all the Mcdonalds. We have so many people out of work as it is, why would you want to make it worse? That's why the tax laws haven't been reformed BTW - you can't put all the H&R Block, etc tax preparers out in the cold with nothing to fall back on.

    --Our best bet is expanding into SPACE - we need a new Frontier.

    --America was arguably at its best as a country when we were expanding into the West. After WWII (and especially Vietnam), we started the long slide downhill. 'Murika is becoming East Germany with all this spying bullshit anymore - give us a new planet to build on already. The Moon is right there and not being exploited yet - that would be a good start. After that, the asteroids. And after that, we can terraform Mars. Give us a dream!

  10. Re:nitpicking nomenclature on Goodyear's New State-of-the-Art Airship Makes Its First Flight · · Score: 1

    --As long as it has Goodyear on it and resembles the old ship, it will always be the Goodyear Blimp. Just like we always refer to the Sears Tower, Marshall Fields, and Wrigley Field. Nostalgia has intertia.

    / ask a Chicagoan

  11. Re:Correct me if I'm wrong... on Iran Builds Mock-up of Nimitz-Class Aircraft Carrier · · Score: 1

    > OTOH, the US is very sensitive to the loss of their manpower. If too many US soldiers die in a war half a globe away, the general sentiment towards the war can very quickly change. This ain't WW2 anymore where something like that could work. Vietnam already showed that it's easy to lose support at home if too many of our boys die in what is then deemed a "pointless war". Drones work beautifully here because nobody gets hurt.

    --And at that point, war becomes a video game. $Side1 sends our robots against $Side2, few to no human beings are in danger, and the war never stops.

    --I remember that I had to register for the draft when I came of age. Using Human fighters and human-controlled battle engines keeps the proper perspective - war is hell, and there really needs to be a damn good reason for it. There's no good reason to let robot armies demolish each other just to keep being replenished, or have one side's robot army deploy against (fairly) defenseless/underarmed humans.

    --Science fiction has gone over this extensively - looks like some people need to read up and learn from it.

    / I ain't no fortunate son, etc

  12. Re: Ridiculous. on Time Dilation Drug Could Let Heinous Criminals Serve 1,000 Year Sentences · · Score: 1

    --Now THAT is an interesting idea. +2, would advocate more research into this.

    --Personally, the rare times when I have an awesome dream, I want to go back to sleep and resume right where I left off...

  13. Re:Star Trek DS9 on Time Dilation Drug Could Let Heinous Criminals Serve 1,000 Year Sentences · · Score: 1

    --Thanks for that. I remembered something along that line when I saw this article but couldn't recall it exactly.

    http://en.memory-alpha.org/wik...

    " Never build a prison that you wouldn't like to live in yourself "
    / Havelock (Lord) Vetinari, Ankh-Morpork

  14. Re:No respect for the HIG on Firefox 29 Beta Arrives With UI Overhaul And CSS3 Variables · · Score: 1

    > When I was jumping between stations every few days, I was irritated that the Ubuntu FIrefox felt Ubuntu-y (Edit > Preferences?) and not like the Firefox I used on Windows (Tools > Options).

    --That is a huge pet peeve for me, too. I wish they would make the Linux/etc versions just use Tools\Options, because it makes more sense. Edit menu is for copypasta text, and Find.

  15. Re:New UI? on Firefox 29 Beta Arrives With UI Overhaul And CSS3 Variables · · Score: 1

    --Running behind a proxy can help. Try the Squid VM to start with:

    https://communities.vmware.com...

  16. Re:tm abbrevs mk it hrd 2 rd. on OpenSUSE 13.2 To Use Btrfs By Default · · Score: 2

    --A fairly accurate summation. I would only amend it thusly:

    EXT4 = most current open journaling filesystem in widespread use on Linux systems; Successor to ext3 and generally faster

    btrfs = journaling filesystem with more bells and whistles than ext4; Functionally designed to compete with (and mostly equivalent to) ZFS, and may have more features for home/average non-Enterprise users

    frontend to YaST = graphical utility to command line versions of various Linux setup/configuration tools

  17. Re:This what Elio is doing on Elon Musk Addresses New Jersey's Tesla Store Ban · · Score: 1

    --Say, thanks for that - I hadn't heard of Elio and didn't know they had a dealership in my town. Might be my next trike, and WAY cheaper than what I had been saving up for!

  18. Re:How is $99 prime? on Amazon Hikes Prime Membership Fee · · Score: 1

    --You obviously have no idea. I subscribe to both Netflix and Amazon Prime, and Netflix consistently has *way* more title availability. I have something like 470 titles in my DVD queue - Amazon has no such thing. Streaming is NOT all that and a bag of chips; however, it is nice to have while I'm waiting for the next set of DVDs to arrive in the mail.

    --Amazon also charged me extra $ to watch "The Raven" with Vincent Price, even tho I have Prime. Honestly, if it weren't for the discounted shipping, I wouldn't bother with Prime. However, since I'm already paying for it I've been ordering a lot more from Amazon (instead of newegg and tigerdirect.)

  19. Re:Don't they have to fly that thing around? on What If the Next Presidential Limo Was a Tesla? · · Score: 1

    --Dude, he's the 1st black POTUS. You have NO IDEA what kind of stress he's under. Think you can do a better job? Then feel free, go ahead and run for office. I would rather have him be able to de-stress and be able to think with a clear(er) head.

    / not a fanboi, just being realistic - POTUS is a job I would never want. Turns your hair gray.

  20. Re:reduce the amount on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    > RAIDZ can be dynamically expanded

    --To the best of my knowledge, not so much. You can create a pool of mirrors and expand that, but expanding a RAIDZ (ideally) should be done with the same number (and capacity) of drives that was in the original RAIDZ - for balancing purposes. Otherwise you get weird errors and possible performance impact. Building asymmetrical pools is fine in a VM, but on bare-metal you kinda have to start to question what to do if there's data loss.

    http://serverfault.com/questio...

    --You can expand the underlying disks in a pool, but it's a PITA and requires repetitive resilvers.

    http://jsosic.wordpress.com/20...

    http://www.itsacon.net/compute...

    --Honestly, adding a 4-port SATA card to an existing system and using all-new drives is probably the best bet for expanding existing storage. You can buy 2-4TB drives depending on budget, copy the data over, and repurpose the existing pool of old/smaller drives until the HW starts failing.

    PROTIP: With newer drives (4k sectors) you're better off setting the ASHIFT to 12 on your ZFS pool right off the bat. Will save you trouble later -- I speak from experience.

    https://www.icts.uiowa.edu/con...

    / Btrfs has some promising features, but practically I would give it another ~2 years to get to production-ready as of this writing. Just my $2.02

  21. Re:Hmmm... on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    --I agree with you that clay or stone tablets stand the test of time. The problem becomes: how much data can you reliably store on such a thing, how thick should the stone be, how small should the bits be, where do you store it, and how conveniently can it be restored?

    --M-discs are promising. They are basically stone-based Blu-ray DVD discs. Last I heard, they will have a 25GB version shipping as of March 20, 2014. I plan to get a set of 3 and burn the stuff that I've filed under NEVERLOSE - which really isn't all that much, it fits under 25GB. (I have multiple TB of JBODs at home but it's mostly VMs and a few movies.)

    --The thing to do that most people don't think about, is PARE THE DATA DOWN. Does one average human being REALLY need 20TB of music, or pictures, or anything? Doubtless there are quite a bit of things in that pile that aren't in the top 25% of what you really enjoy the most.

    --How do you even keep track of all that in your head? If you put all that music on random play, it would most likely go for more than a week or two. And I guarantee there would be songs in there that you wouldn't enjoy listening to that much - most albums are not 100% great.

    --Separate out the stuff you enjoy less than ~65-75% of the time. Put it on secondary storage. Now you have less to back up.

    --The only thing with current Blu-ray drives is that they're slow reading the data back. Linux is actually faster than Win7 when it comes to reading UDF discs on the same equipment, in my experience. Play around a bit, and get the data separated out so you can restore what you need the MOST in a certain period of time. YMMV.

  22. Re:Quick change needed [Re:Stop] on Crowdsourcing Confirms: Websites Inaccessible on Comcast · · Score: 1

    --Squid proxy server is your friend; you can specify DNS servers in the config file, and change them at will with a simple ' squid -kreconfigure '. Try setting one up on a cloud VM and access it over SSH with compression enabled and using the arcfour cipher - it's well worth the time to setup and provides secure, filtered and logged comms.

    --Last time I checked, you can get a Digitalocean VM for $5-10/month with a static IP. No affiliation, just (mostly) satisfied customer.

  23. Re:People's Republic of New Jersey Strikes Again on New Jersey Auto Dealers Don't Want to Face Tesla · · Score: 1

    --You may have something there. If politicians can show "attack ads" during elections, Tesla should be able to air commercials detailing EXACTLY what is going on - and encourage people to buy their cars in !Jersey. More than one way to skin a cat, so to speak.

  24. Re:What are these shiny discs you speak of? on Sony & Panasonic Next-Gen Optical Discs Moving Forward · · Score: 1

    --I do see what you're saying, but pretty sure if I buy another 360 I can transfer the thumbdrive over. Might be mistaken tho. Anyone know for sure?

  25. Re:What are these shiny discs you speak of? on Sony & Panasonic Next-Gen Optical Discs Moving Forward · · Score: 1

    > You can't buy games from XBOX Live, only a limited time license to use them.

    --Umm, bzzzt - wrong. I bought Streets of Rage and Soul Calibur on 360 and they're living on my USB 16GB stick. Not a limited license.