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User: Bob+535604

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Comments · 26

  1. Re:Slashdot on Why Do We Name Servers the Way We Do? · · Score: 1

    Or as a former Comp Sci teacher would have said:

    huh-tt-pah intestine virgule virgule...

  2. Re:A BLack hat attendee hacked? on Point-and-Click Gmail Hacking Shown at Black Hat · · Score: 1

    Hah, no kidding. If I were at a black hat conference, I know I would be tunneling ALL my traffic somewhere safe first, in addition to using HTTPS.
    Also, gmail only uses https if you tell it to. Last time I checked, it uses http by default.
    And lastly, I don't think facebook has any info on there that I wouldn't want made public anyways, so it's probably not necessary for them.

  3. Re:Could be fixed easily by Google. Shame. on Point-and-Click Gmail Hacking Shown at Black Hat · · Score: 5, Informative

    I fail to see how the average person, as usual, being lax about their security is in any way Google's fault. This was something I found immediately, just because I won't check my email without a secure connection.
    A lot of people wouldn't know about this or even look for it and you know it. Google could make https the default or even mandatory, and it would completely kill this entire issue.
  4. Re:Correct me if I'm wrong but on Point-and-Click Gmail Hacking Shown at Black Hat · · Score: 1

    I suppose they could be, but aren't in my experience. I never have to log into my gmail account, and my ip address changes often as I take my laptop to work and back. Of course, I use https, but the cookie doesn't seem to care about my ip address.

  5. Re:What happens if you buy it from a gas station on NC Man Fined For Using Vegetable Oil As Fuel · · Score: 1

    Perhaps his bumper sticker that said "Powered by 100% vegetable oil"?

  6. Re:Even Apple would have been better on Professor Sells Lectures Online · · Score: 1

    I go to NCSU and read this in the paper today. The article explains that $1.50 goes to ind-music.com, where it's hosted, and he only gets $1.00 per sale. Seems like not a bad price for covering his time/effort of recording each lecture and uploading them every class.
    Of course, most professors put their lecture notes online for free, which isn't too far off from an mp3 file in terms of what you get out of it, so maybe it's not that great of a deal. Personally, I'd just go to class.

  7. Re:on the other hand on Linus Speaks Out On GPLv3 · · Score: 1

    Exactly. It would be great if all hardware manufacturers would let anyone put custom software on their platforms, but putting these restrictions on the GPL isn't going to suddenly cause all the manufacturers to migrate en masse to GPL software...if anything they would avoid it.
    The only way to encourage companies to do this is by supporting companies that already do this.

  8. Re:From ze smallest divot to ze largest canyon... on The Backhoe, The Internet's Natural Enemy · · Score: 1

    "Did you know the hole's only natural enemy is the pile?"

    You knew it was comming!

  9. Re:Pr0n Stars on New Device to Detect Skin Cancer From A Picture? · · Score: 1

    now I can detect which porn stars have cancer

    For some reason, I had to re-read this several times before I came up with a non-astronomy explination for this phrase.

  10. Re:EICAR on GMail Adds Virus Protection · · Score: 1

    I just tried it and it wouldn't even let me send it.
    Perhaps you typed it wrong, or sent it in the body of the message as opposed to an attachment?

  11. Re:VOIP to landline not new? on Microsoft to Launch "Skype Killer" · · Score: 1

    dialpad.com I believe used to be free a while back. Haven't looked at them in a long time, but I believe they charge for the service now.

  12. Dang on Yahoo! Launches Audio Search Beta · · Score: 1

    I thought it would be an audio search where you upload a clip and it tells you where it's from. I've got some unlabled clips that I want to know more about.
    THAT would be amazing, I think a service like that was/is offered for cell-phones to identify a song in the background...or something.

  13. Re:A Question on Opera to Stop Spoofing User Agent as IE · · Score: 1

    If I may answer my own question:
    from http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14. html#sec14.43
    [The User-Agent header] is for statistical purposes, the tracing of protocol violations, and automated recognition of user agents for the sake of tailoring responses to avoid particular user agent limitations.
    So there you have it, it should be used to tailor a page for a specific browser, but I think a lot of sites have taken that too far. Blocking out a web page because they think it doesn't work isn't right, and most of the time it works fine anyways.

  14. Re:A Question on Opera to Stop Spoofing User Agent as IE · · Score: 1

    I've often wondered that if so many people are against using the user-agent to serve different content, what is the user-agent useful for? I agree with the standards, and am a big fan of making web pages render in all browsers equally, but then why have a user-agent header at all? For usage stats?
    Where can we draw the line? Can we serve a different page to a moble phone? Everyone didn't agree with opening the .mobi tld, so that's not a solution...user-agent checking is apparently out.
    As the parent points out, we are going to have browsers that support differnet features, like it or not. If every browser supports the exact same set of features, why have any more than one browser?
    I believe we should be able to use the user-agent string to determine if the browser supports optional features, and enable them, not disable the entire page for browsers that don't support them (cvs.com).

  15. Re:My Tinfoil hat protects my eyes from Cell Phone on Can Cell Phones Damage Our Eyes? · · Score: 1

    If you just want protection for your eyes, try tinfoil contacts!

  16. Re:Google uses blending, Terraserver used cuts on Apple Campus Missing From MSN Earth · · Score: 2, Funny

    In both cases it's obviously something automated, look at these links:
    A person would have caught these
    http://virtualearth.msn.com/default.aspx?cp=36.056 665%7C-79.131897&style=h&lvl=16&v=1
    http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=36.054650,-79.13237 6&spn=0.011717,0.020792&t=k&hl=en

    I think they're funny

  17. Expiration Date? on Net Marketers Worried as Cookies Lose Effectiveness · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Maybe if advertisers would stop setting ridiculous expiration dates. The thought that advertisers think they can have a small peice of my hard drive until 2069 sickens me.

    Mozilla (and firefox) makes it easy, set network.cookie.lifetimePolicy to 3 and then set network.cookie.lifetime.days to the maximum number of days a cookie can stay.

    I have mine set to 2, if I visit a site and don't come back within 2 days, I think it's safe I won't miss anything by having them remember me.

  18. Re:Maybe try reading your contract next time, Lee on Microsoft Sues Google For Hiring MS Exec · · Score: 1

    I think parent has a point. Microsoft makes and sells operating systems, game consoles, and some other software. Google provides a search engine. It's not easy to see the part where they are directly competing for the same money.

    Seems like all the services they provide in the same field, use of the search engines, web mail, are given away for free anyways. The only money being thrown around is for ads.

  19. Re:Yeah, so? on Linux Chess Supercomputer Overpowers Grandmaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    everybody knows a pound of muscle weighs more than a pound of brains.

    What? They both weigh a pound! How can muscle be heavier?

  20. What About Futurama on Greatest Beams In Movie History · · Score: 1

    "Give us McNeal or we will lay waste to your cities with our anti-monument laser."

    This should have been a poll

  21. Lifetime on Marketers Back "Cookies Are Good For You" Campaign · · Score: 1

    I don't mind cookies so much as I mind sites setting the expiration to 30 years in the future. It just bugs me that they think they own a small peice of my hard drive for that long, are they really going to get anything useful out of it if I visit the site once and then come back in 30 years?
    Firefox is helpful with this, you can set the maximum lifetime of a cookie with the network.cookie.lifetime.* settings, see http://www.mozilla.org/projects/netlib/cookies/coo kie-prefs.html
    I have mine set to two days. If I visit a site and don't come back in that long, I don't want the cookie hanging around.

  22. Ob Futurama on $100,000 Poker Bot Tournament · · Score: 1

    My cheating unit malfunctioned! You gotta give me a do-over!

    Sorry, the house limit is three do-overs.

  23. Re:Why must they compete with EVERYONE? on MSN Virtual Earth to Take on Google · · Score: 1

    I've wondered the same thing myself. How is google taking money away from microsoft? Google doesn't make an operating system...seems to me that microsoft is just jealous of google's success and wants to give them a hard time or something.

  24. Re:Copyright on MPAA Blames BitTorrent for Star Wars Distribution · · Score: 1

    Additionally, Bittorrent is a protocol, not a network. There's no central network ready to 'steal' movies as soon as they come out, it's a protocol that lets people download it from other people.

  25. Re:Once again... on MPAA Blames BitTorrent for Star Wars Distribution · · Score: 1

    I'd say a more apt analogy would be a highway having a high-speed 'emergency' lane. Sure it can be used for firetrucks or for pregnant women speeding to the hospital, but more often than not it gets used for high speed chases.