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User: rubycodez

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  1. I'm sure we'll figure out what "style" even makes it into a binary. Whom do they think they're messing with here?

  2. Re:Don't cherry pick on Microsoft Has Your Encryption Key If You Use Windows 10 (theintercept.com) · · Score: 1

    and no one I know uses SELinux because it is bolt-on garbage. I've decades of experience in financial and healthcare systems, there are better ways to do things

  3. Re:Copy Skylab on NASA Uncertain How To Proceed In Developing Deep Space Module (examiner.com) · · Score: 1

    more importantly is something that can be spun to produce a 1-g force, bone loss in free fall is huge problem. A human would die after couple years with the 1 to 2 percent loss per month

  4. Re:Nobody is seriously planning to go to Mars soon on NASA Uncertain How To Proceed In Developing Deep Space Module (examiner.com) · · Score: 1

    eh, tremendous advances in rocket propulsion have been made! Hybrid rockets are one. geez, you're not into that topic at all are you?

  5. Re:Linux distros do the same on Microsoft Has Your Encryption Key If You Use Windows 10 (theintercept.com) · · Score: 1

    nonsense, instead use a distro (or other open source operating system for that matter) that is actually built for privacy and security as a prime consideration. There are Linux distros like that, and there is a BSD that is extremely like that

  6. Re:Don't cherry pick on Microsoft Has Your Encryption Key If You Use Windows 10 (theintercept.com) · · Score: 0

    You have links to the code committed by the NSA to Linux kernel? No? Your just blathering about the phobias and fears that only exist between your ears? Yes, we thought so

  7. Re:Obligatory XKCD on Fixing JavaScript's Broken Random Number Generator (hackaday.com) · · Score: 1

    he's a fucking cartoonist; who cares what he thinks? enjoy the fucking cartoons

  8. Re: This is the future Republicans... on ProxyBack Malware Turns Infected Computers into Internet Proxies (softpedia.com) · · Score: 1

    Republicans like Bill Gates? 8D

  9. Re:If you don't know why they're doing this... on Sweden's Cash-Free Future Looms -- and Not Everyone Is Happy About It · · Score: 1

    in my country the government is in the pockets of large corporations, the largest being the banking cartel. my country is also one quarter of the world's economy. no not china, the other one

  10. wouldn't a company that knew its ass from a hole in the wall have figured out mobile was important say 15 years ago? WTF?

  11. Re:If you don't know why they're doing this... on Sweden's Cash-Free Future Looms -- and Not Everyone Is Happy About It · · Score: 5, Informative

    you left out the best part.

    track and control and TAX every aspect. Just like the mafia, they want a piece of all the action

  12. dang, it's expensive now on Before Google There Was the Chemical Rubber Company (hackaday.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    $153 for the dead tree and $135 for the e-book version??!! then again, for most people a version a couple years old is just as good and those are under $50

    my 1983 one is very cheap I see, under $8

  13. Re:Tactics of a different time on Cold War Nuclear Target Lists Declassified For First Time (gwu.edu) · · Score: 2

    But we were expecting the soviets to target cities in late 50s with bombers and missiles, hence the Nike Hercules program

  14. Re:Weather modeling exposed... on Cold War Nuclear Target Lists Declassified For First Time (gwu.edu) · · Score: 1

    no Soviets (or Russians now) would be using nukes on our civilian targets because we'd be doing the same to them, evil on both sides

    not news that ground bursts make fallout, look at projections made in 80s and 90s of the high and heavy rad areas from silo busting. plenty of big cities killed, to say nothing of most our farmland rendered useless for a while

  15. Re:Weather modeling exposed... on Cold War Nuclear Target Lists Declassified For First Time (gwu.edu) · · Score: 1

    look it up, minuteman missile silos for example had explosive charges to horizontally move the door away before launch

  16. Re:How will this be viewed outside the US on ORNL Restores US Capability To Produce Plutonium-238 (ornl.gov) · · Score: 1

    oh, and what of reprocessing of commercial nuclear fuel to make MOX in United Kingdom, France, Russia, India and Japan?

  17. Re:How will this be viewed outside the US on ORNL Restores US Capability To Produce Plutonium-238 (ornl.gov) · · Score: 1

    two thirds the pu in commercial "spent fuel" is pu-239 and it IS recoverable

  18. Re:Chilling? More like "obvious" on Cold War Nuclear Target Lists Declassified For First Time (gwu.edu) · · Score: 1

    indeed that includes the buried telecom switching hubs the major cities have; cities will not only be targeted with air bursts but have ground bursts to take out certain buried infrastructure like generators, water distribution, aforementioned telecom.

    All out nuclear war isn't pretty folks, there is no notion of "naughty things we won't do because we're more humane now"! HA!

  19. Re:Weather modeling exposed... on Cold War Nuclear Target Lists Declassified For First Time (gwu.edu) · · Score: 3, Informative

    not a concern since the cities will be targeted anyway (laughing at some rose-colored glasses wearers here to think that is still not doctrine for all out war)

    You do know in warfare the silo doors are blasted open with explosives, not mechanically opened?

  20. Re:Tactics of a different time on Cold War Nuclear Target Lists Declassified For First Time (gwu.edu) · · Score: 0

    You spew nonsense, of course cities would be targeted in all out nuclear war, they have to be to take out underground telecom for example. Unbelievable your level of naivety.

  21. my children get a lot of bad things in water supply because of pollution. the question is what level? my town publishes independent analysis of its water supply, yours may as well.

  22. Re:Translation: PCI is now meaningless rubber stam on Deadline for Better Encryption on Payment Systems Pushed Back Two Years (pcisecuritystandards.org) · · Score: 1

    I do work in the industry, and your statement is nonsense. Plenty of vendors already are at non-vulnerable portions of TLS 1.1 and/or 1.2

  23. Re:This is getting tiresome on A Proposal For Dealing With Terrorist Videos On the Internet (vortex.com) · · Score: 1

    guess again, U.S. government can label you a terrorist if it deems advice you give on your website aids terrorism

      title 18 of the United States Code, sections 2339A and 2339B

  24. Re:You mean on Cisco Systems Will Be Auditing Their Code For Backdoors (cisco.com) · · Score: 1

    You are the idiot, you yourself mentioned one alternative to Cisco and there is more than Juniper

      plenty of remote exploits, non-management interface, have existed. google it and look at the massive volume of pages returned.

  25. Re:Convoluted process to convert existing 237Np on ORNL Restores US Capability To Produce Plutonium-238 (ornl.gov) · · Score: 1

    there is use for Np-237 in reactor core dosimetry and U.S. DOE labs supply it for that purpose. It is separated from normal spent fuel, about 1 part Np 237 per thousand parts plutonium is made