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User: mattsday

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  1. Academic Freedom on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With University Firewalls? · · Score: 1
    Universities should be havens for academic freedom and research, not a narrow corridor where IT can arbitrarily set policy.

    Fortunately most universities I know (at least in the UK) respect this. They might hate having to deal with student residences (the wild west), but they prefer to generally treat students as adults and respect that the internet is far too useful as a tool to have some guy lock it down in the misguided name of security.

  2. Re:Religious groups on Two Porn Companies Take ICANN and .xxx Registrar To Court · · Score: 2

    Which government? The internet is a global entity. What constitutes porn in one country shouldn't suddenly apply universally.

  3. Re:Global menu not the problem as much as MMN on Ask Slashdot: Unity/Gnome 3/Win8/iOS — Do We Really Hate All New GUIs? · · Score: 1

    It makes sense on a mac because the operating system decouples applications and windows. In other words, you can still manipulate an application even if it has no visible windows. Close and Quit are distinct functions.

    I quite like this method as well as it provides a (relatively) consistent place to aim the mouse and the expectation that all programs will behave the same way. Windows confuses me these days. Some applications have no menu bar, others have lots of icons and so on. On a mac, you can click "Help" and type what you want to do and it's there - for every application.

  4. Happy Birthday! on Vim Turns 20 · · Score: 1

    'd not heard of this vim before, so thought I'd give it a go on its birthday - I'm even using it to write this message!

    Happy birthday!

    ^C^C^C^Dquit

  5. Lousy reinforcement model on World of Warcraft Finally Loses Subscribers · · Score: 1

    I quit about 4 months ago after about 4 years of playing the same class/role (warrior tank). The driving factor for me was that the game had massively shifted from being huge and exciting, with a real sense of achievement, to inevitable victories and reinforcement pellets.

    I used to love playing with my girlfriend, levelling and exploring the new content. We felt skillful completing raids with a group of people. We were never the best, but we worked hard and achieved our goals. Even when Wrath of the Lich King came out, it still felt epic and there was a lot of new content to explore and play.

    However, now it's just a Skinner box. See here and here for great articles on this.

    So, no new content, a lazy achievements system and uninspired story telling made me quit. This time, I don't think I'll ever go back.

  6. Mileage may vary on Tens of Thousands Flee From BT and Virgin · · Score: 1

    I have the Virgin 50/5 cable service and am very happy with it.

    OK, I pay well over the standard rate (£44.99 a month - ~$70 USD) but I get a genuine 48Mbit/s down and 4.5Mbit/s up. I've found their technical support to be excellent and when I used to play WoW I'd have a consistent 30-40ms latency. I run my home office via a Cisco IPSec VPN tunnel and use HD video and voice all the time with almost no issues.

    When I contrast this to my BT DSL service in my old place, I was lucky to sync in at 1Mbit/s down and 500Kbit/s up. Whole weekends of sparse connectivity weren't a surprise and I got used to having to go in to the office to work on my regular "no internet" days. All over a "super fast ADSL2+ line". My experience isn't unique, anyone living in an area with ancient cables far from the exchange is stuck in this situation.

    So for me at least, Virgin can take my money. It works great, I have had almost no issues and when they say 50Mbit/s I'm pretty much getting it. I'm looking at moving house next year and a genuine criteria is decent internet. Virgin cable will be a good sign for me.

  7. Re:I like my Turbo Diesel on CEO Confirms Chevy To Sell Diesel Cruze In US · · Score: 1

    The economies of scale exist elsewhere - e.g. Europe where more than half of cars are Diesel I bet.

    One of the biggest downers - and the reason I haven't got one - is the noise. First thing on a cold morning they sound just awful.

  8. Impact Level 3 on UK Government To Share Restricted Files In the Cloud · · Score: 1

    It's worth noting that IL3 isn't exactly top secret - patient records (such as xray scans) are also classified as IL3.

    Really top secret stuff is IL6 which has a very different set of security requirements. Whether this makes it more secure is a different matter, but don't expect diplomatic cables, submarine designs and MI6 café menus on this system.

  9. Re:They can't kill FM any time soon on Why UK FM Needn't Be Killed For Broadband · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Exactly this. I have a DAB (Digital) Radio in my car. However, I find myself using FM (or even AM) about 20-30% of the time just to get a good signal.

    Problems I've had:

    • No graceful degradation of quality. There are three modes - good, awful and "no signal". By 'awful' think a poorly encoded MP3 from a scratched CD downloaded in ASCII mode.
    • Semi-frequent drop-outs. I read that most people listen to the radio in their cars these days. However, even sticking to the UK Motorway system, I end up with "No Signal" quite frequently, even along major routes.
    • Time lag - DAB lags more than a couple of seconds behind FM, so when I'm using the 'pips' to set my watch it's off by a long way (minor grudge I guess)

    In short, I'm someone who went and bought in to the DAB idea and I like some features (e.g. having 5 live and Absolute Radio available in most places not counting the above). However, I think DAB needs some serious re-thinks before it can fully replace FM. Unless you can drive the length of the country and experience the same reception and quality as FM then it shouldn't be replaced.

  10. Re:For what reason? on Posting AC - a Thing of the Past? · · Score: 1

    Any credible organisation wouldn't take too much stock on anonymous information posted on the internet. We run basic checks on potential employees and forum trolling is at the bottom of our cares.

  11. Why do we even bother commuting? on How Europe Will Lower Emissions — Self Driving Cars · · Score: 1

    We place too much emphasis on getting places in society. What is the actual benefit of so many people travelling to work every day? A better fix is to give tax incentives for home working and focus on technologies like better broadband, telepresence and so on. Sure, face-to-face contact will never go away and some segments of society will always have to travel to work, but I bet half the commuters on the roads in the mornings could be equally as productive at home.

  12. Re:colour on Reverse Engineering Doctor Who Into Color · · Score: 1

    English is almost entirely made up of foreign meddling - it's a peasants combination of many languages that adapts and changes with time. Very few words (except modern technical terms) have no root in a foreign language.

  13. Re:"masses of bandwidth"? on OnLive Latency Tested · · Score: 1

    Agree here - I'm on the 50mbps service and usually see 40-45mbps without many issues.

  14. Computer Science != Programming on Exam Board Deletes C and PHP From CompSci A-Levels · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the common interpretation of Computer Science is extremely misleading. It's not about programming stuff, that's more of an IT application of computers. Instead, it's about understanding the science behind computers, for example to understand the mathematical principals of computing, operational effeciency and move it on as a tool for scientific endevour.

    To this end, the choice of programming language really doesn't matter - it's a tool that the subject uses either as a proof of concept or a learning point. C is fairly good for this as it exposes a lot of the inner workings of a computer, whilst being high enough level to be more or less consistent across platforms at a university level. However, that doesn't mean that knocking up a quick proof of concept in python or perl is less valid - or even visual basic if it helps understand the science behind the problem.

    In other words, I see no real worry here. If they stopped putting mathematics in a CS course or made it in to a programming degree I'd be concerned. If it's about using various tools for the job then I'm all for it. Hell, I wrote a pascal compiler in pascal as part of my degree - it wasn't about the programming language, it was about understanding the fundamentals of compiler design and implementation.

  15. Time to get an Always-On VPN Service on Digital Economy Bill Passed In the UK · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My employer offers a home VPN service whereby I am always connected to our VPN and egress at various points around Europe. They don't particularly monitor this traffic and even provide on-net mirrors to most GNU/Linux distributions and run internal bittorrent trackers for legitimate internal filesharing.

    I think I'm going to use that.

    It's becoming quite sad when I'll trust my employer more than I will my ISP to keep me safe. Years gone by the idea of letting my connection filter through the corporation was horrifying. Now it's almost liberating.

    It's a sad day for the UK.

  16. Re:The wise user will wait on Microsoft Announces Windows 7 SP1 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why? I think Ultimate is a fair comparison if we're looking at features offered by the two operating systems.

    Exchange support, Full Media Centre, Encryption, Unix support, Domain Joining, etc. I'm not seeing many features for Windows Ultimate that aren't in OS X 'normal edition'...

  17. Re:Perhaps another Sudoku app... on Apple Bans Sexy Apps, Developers Upset · · Score: 3, Interesting

    or apple could put in a quick checkbox "I want to see adult content" that you're presented with somewhere. Default it to off even, but give people the damned choice.

  18. Re:Seems fairly intelligent... on EU Privacy Chief Says ACTA Violates European Law · · Score: 1

    That's great. How do you propose we go about it? Just sitting around in a Facebook group bitching won't accomplish anything.

    It influenced the Christmas Number 1 in the UK massively.

  19. Re:Space exploration is conservative. on Obama's Space Plan — a Conservative Argument · · Score: 1

    Nixon was probably the last liberal President. Every one since then has shifted increasingly more conservative.

  20. Re:Maybe Businesses Don't Want Macs on Why Apple Doesn't Market Squarely To Businesses · · Score: 1

    Another Cisco Mac user here - been using one for more than 4 years. I don't even have a Windows VM any more and make do with the pain that is Entourage.

    Cisco is moving its business to not depend on any particular platform and we run community supported Ubuntu, SuSE, CentOS, OS X, Windows 7 and more builds internally, as well as instructional wiki's and mirrors. In addition, you can always fall back to the IT supported Windows XP images.

    It works really well and it's incredibly empowering to just run whatever tools you want to get your job done - this isn't an exclusive club either - this is everyone from sales guys, SE's, coders and more. At our frequent tech meetings I'm betting at least a quarter the users are not running Windows in the room (most using OS X these days).

    Really, Cisco should be seen as a model for other companies to mirror their (very large scale) IT ideology from. I'm convinced that the productivity and employee satisfaction from being able to use a Mac or a non-IT Windows platform pays for itself tenfold.

  21. Re:Oh, no... on Students Failing Because of Poor Grammar · · Score: 1

    Funny thing is as a dyslexic student they spent ages correcting my basic English. Hours doing they're, their, there etc.

    After a while I learned how to overcome my dyslexia and amazingly can now out-spell and out-grammar the vast majority of my peers at work. The reason? Because I was dyslexic I got corrected and cared for.

    The kids who weren't? Well they were 'normal' and no one bothered. Yeah, I still have trouble spelling necessary (which is what spell checkers are for), but I understand the basics of English and have high spelling and grammar competence.

  22. Re:Excellent. on Vimeo Also Introduces HTML5 Video Player · · Score: 1

    What's wrong with using, say, DirectShow/Quicktime/FFMPEG/etc on various platforms provided those libraries exist and using a built-in theora for basic compatibility?

    I understand the patent dispute and it does make sense, but why not pass the buck on the most popular platforms and get a different library to render the video?

  23. Re:True story.... on Facebook Master Password Was "Chuck Norris" · · Score: 1

    The pub is just a central point of British culture.

    Try getting directions from a Brit without them referring to various pubs along the route.

    Ask a Brit to meet you in town and see if they don't involve a pub in it somehow.

    The pub to the Brit is like a café to your continental European. It's not just to go and get sloshed, it's just a major social area.

    As for having a pint at lunch time, what's wrong with that? A good pint of ale with some lunch is hardly a sign of alcholism and anyone who says otherwise is over-exciting the issue.

  24. Re:Maybe he'll make Chrome OS useful! on ChromeOS Zero Released · · Score: 1

    I run my own private SMTP (postfix) and IMAP (courier) server to handle my mail across my various domains. I then use getmail to pull my ISP stuff down too and amavis + spamassassin to reduce my spam.

    However, this all gets pulled down in to my gmail account where pretty much every email I've ever had is archived in a fast, easy to search archive with more than ten years of email backfilled, tagged and searchable. Gmail also picks up about 100 extra spam mails a week that my own filtering misses.

    The web interface is great for me, as I find most dedicated clients to be clunky, especially when handling gigabytes of mail (and this is mostly pure mail, not attachments). Even Mutt when opening a Maildir/ of this size takes some time for me (if you know how to speed this up, get in touch!). I can also access my mail from pretty much anywhere and the interface works great on my iPhone and corporate Nokia.

    So... show me a client that can pull that volume of mail, store it in a non-fragile format and search it instantly without me having to spend a very long time sorting it in to folders and I might agree I don't have the brains... However, I suspect there isn't a good solution out there for all that, so I'm sticking with Gmail for the time being.

  25. Re:Are you serious, or just killing time? on Powerful Linux ISP Router Distribution? · · Score: 2, Informative
    The RFCs may be in the public domain, but it's companies like Cisco that champion them. some examples of common RFCs Cisco has been involved with.

    Thus, these guys are setting most of the major network standards, as well as implementing them.