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User: Geeky

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  1. Re:Stick Shift transmissions. on Ask Slashdot: What Old Technology Can't You Give Up? · · Score: 1

    My old 1971 Beetle didn't have a manual choke, instead relying on a bi-metal strip to control the fuel mix. Didn't work. Spent winters braking with my heel on the throttle to stop it cutting out until it had fully warmed up. I don't think I'd go back to that, but I'd never have an automatic. They're not that common in the UK, and I wouldn't want to pay the premium and get out of the habit of driving a manual.

  2. Re:If systemd is deemed going against unix philoso on Choose Your Side On the Linux Divide · · Score: 1

    At least SMF doesn't, if I recall, do more than slightly more sophisticated startup script management. Init scripts still work, and you can, if you want, handcraft the XML wrappers. In fact, underneath all the automation there's basically an old style script.

  3. Re:Working from home on Calif. Court Rules Businesses Must Reimburse Cell Phone Bills · · Score: 1

    I suppose the logic is that the internet is now on a par with basics like power for being essential and ubiquitous, and you presumably don't get reimbursed a portion of your electricity bill for working from home.

    I don't think that's good logic - I know people who only have 3G access because it's less hassle than setting up a fixed line and ADSL if you're young, renting and move often.

    Where I work, working from home is seen as a benefit, so you take the trade off - it's still cheaper for me to work from home than spend the fuel on commuting.

  4. Re:hum on Red Hat CEO: Open Source Goes Mainstream In 2014 · · Score: 1

    And I could grow my own food, too...

    Most people don't have the skills to change OSS code. I enjoy photography and, like many photographers, use Photoshop. For most of the photographers I know, just using Photoshop is enough of a technical challenge - suggesting they make code changes to the Gimp to make it do what they need would be like telling them to design and build a car from scratch rather than buy one from Ford.

    I am a programmer, and I daresay if I really, really wanted to I could contribute, but to do so I'd be spending most of my free time on getting tools to work rather than using tools I've bought to do the things I actually want to do.

  5. Re:Nerd Blackface on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    Up to a point, and see my reply to retchdog about circumstances. However, there are people living with chronic pain and disability who don't choose suicide. There has to be a trigger somewhere that makes some people suicidal in those circumstances and others not.

    And yes, not everyone's pain is physical, but pain is pain - if we understood the workings of the mind better, we might be able to help those in any kind of pain.

    Where it gets more complicated for me is that I do actually support assisted dying, with appropriate safeguards. So I suppose I see that it can be rational in some circumstances - for the terminally ill, for example, or those diagnosed with alzheimers. I'm equally aware that seems to contradict my view that suicide is a symptom of a potentially treatable mental illness.

    It's a difficult and nuanced subject. Ideal for discussion on Slashdot, where open minded discussion is to be expected! No, I'm really not new here ;)

    That wasn't a dig at your response, btw, in case it wasn't obvious.

  6. Re:Nerd Blackface on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    It's difficult because we understand so little about the mind that we can't really tell what falls within normal bounds and what is potentially damaging to the individual. particularly with regard to suicide. An analogy is blood pressure - we have what we call a normal range, and offer medication to individuals with abnormally high or low blood pressure. There is no well understood equivalent for behaviour. My belief, based on what I read, is that the trend in the USA has been to over medicate and smooth out behaviours that fall within normal boundaries, but as I say, that's based on media perception.

    Circumstances can certainly be a trigger, in the same way that underlying physical conditions, or some cancers, can be triggered. Not everyone who smokes will get lung cancer, but it increases the risk. Bullying may be similar for mental health problems. Anecdotally, I lost most of my hearing in one ear and now have constant tinnitus on that side. At the hospital, I was offered counselling as apparently the tinnitus can drive some sufferers to suicide. I'm lucky - I experience it as an inconvenience and can live with it.

  7. Compare with sports on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    Entertainers get paid according to the market value of the entertainment they provide. Full stop. Personally I'm happier seeing them get it for making me laugh than to see someone make more than that kicking a football / hitting a golf ball / swinging a tennis racket (etc). Top footballers (soccer...) earn silly money, and I'm sure it's the same with American football, baseball, basketball etc...

    If people stopped paying to watch them, stopped spending a fortune on the satellite and cable packages, the rewards would come down. That they don't is simply market forces. I don't begrudge them personally, but it makes me a bit sad that the world values their skills so highly.

  8. Re:Yawn on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    To quote Norm from Cheers: "Women. Can't live with 'em. Pass the beer nuts".

  9. Re:Nerd Blackface on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    My view is that suicide is a result of a mental illness. People go through all sorts of traumas, from bullying to severe medical conditions to grinding poverty and don't kill themselves. Those that do are ill, and I would consider suicide to be on a par with dying of a disease. Just my view - I believe it takes more than circumstances alone.

  10. Re:Redefine on The XBMC Project Will Now Be Called Kodi · · Score: 1

    Or perhaps someone got involved in the project who'd had some experience with BMC software, and he said "guys, change the name, you don't want to get confused with that archaic steaming pile of bloatware"

  11. Re:Fucking anti-social Millennials on Hotel Chain Plans Phone-Based Check-in and Room Access · · Score: 1

    It's slower because it has to register each item on the scale before you can scan the next one (at least, that's how they're set up here). That means I can't use both hands - scan, bag while the other hand is scanning the next item. The cashiers can do it faster because the system lets them do it faster.

  12. Re:Sorry to tell you... on Lots Of People Really Want Slideout-Keyboard Phones: Where Are They? · · Score: 1

    My comment was more on the behaviour of people emailing me - in that their emails are always short to the point of losing clarity when they've composed them on their phones. When I'm emailing from my phone I will sometimes point that out and say I'll reply in more detail later. To be fair, it's not just the keyboard - it's easier to compose a longer email on a larger screen.

  13. Re:Sorry to tell you... on Lots Of People Really Want Slideout-Keyboard Phones: Where Are They? · · Score: 1

    It is on a phone... and that's the problem.

    I can always tell when someone's emailed me from their phone rather than a PC, because the message will be terse to the point of ambiguity.

  14. Re:Couldn't Agree More on Lots Of People Really Want Slideout-Keyboard Phones: Where Are They? · · Score: 1

    I agree, the first smartphone I had was a Palm Pre and it was great. The keyboard was really usable, and I could type quicker than I can on any phone I've had since. I could hold that and type with both thumbs, but for some reason I just can't do it with an onscreen keyboard. Don't know why. Mind you, when I see younger people typing on their iphones, I figure it's just me getting older and less able to adapt

    The other benefit of a physical keyboard is that you don't lose screen real estate to it, so you can see more of what you're typing.

  15. The choice on Popular Android Apps Full of Bugs: Researchers Blame Recycling of Code · · Score: 1

    The choice seems to be between the flexibility of Android vs. the (arguably?) better security on iOS.

    I'd like to be able to install Android apps without having to accept all of the permissions they require, but without rooting my phone that's impossible. As a result, there are many apps I just won't install (it took me ages to find a torch app that didn't need anything beyond access to the camera, for example).

    On the other hand, I love widgets - quick access to information and actions from the desktop is really useful and the iOS 8 version doesn't look like it'll be as flexible.

    Ultimately though I'll be looking very closely at the iPhone 6 when it comes out because Android just won't address the concerns around security.

  16. Re:Best Wishes ! on Microsoft's CEO Says He Wants to Unify Windows · · Score: 2

    On the server side, yes. On the desktop I believe Apple make a pretty unix variant :)

  17. Re:Real Address? on Domain Registry of America Suspended By ICANN · · Score: 2

    In the UK you can request your details are hidden from whois for any .co.uk domain if you're a personal user rather than a business. It shows up as follows:

    Registrant's address: The registrant is a non-trading individual who has opted to have their address omitted from the WHOIS service.

    This is to comply with UK data protection laws. I don't think it applies to international domains registered within the UK though. Obviously your registrar still has the details on record.

  18. Amazon are a bit different on Ask Slashdot: How Many Employees Does Microsoft Really Need? · · Score: 2

    I'm not sure including Amazon in the list is a reasonable comparison. Their numbers will be boosted by all the shelf pickers. Same with Apple and their retail stores - it's a different kind of business (OK, perhaps MS have some stores, but I doubt anything like as many). Some tasks are just more labour intensive (at least until Amazon perfects their robot pickers!)

  19. Re:Dumb dumb dumb advice... on Selectively Reusing Bad Passwords Is Not a Bad Idea, Researchers Say · · Score: 2

    I use KeePass and synchronise the file so I have access to it on all my devices including my phone. There are clients for just about every platform.

  20. Another Feedly user on Google Reader: One Year Later · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm happy with the way it works, for the most part. Bit of a shame it has to use external authentication, but I use a secondary account for that anyway. The fact that some features are pay to use is a bit irritating, and I haven't yet decided whether they're worth it. I am willing to pay for services that provide value for me - they're a business, and I understand their need to make money to provide the service - but there isn't much compelling in the pro feature set for me. Possibly Evernote integration, but it's not that much hassle to click through to the website and clip it from there.

    Bottom line, though, is that it's better to be a paying customer - at least you know the business has a vested interest in the product. Same with Evernote vs. free options. They make their money from users who get value from their products.

    I was also reasonably impressed with Feedly's transparency over the recent DDOS attacks they (and Evernote) suffered.

  21. Re:Well, fuck you very much on Microsoft Takes Down No-IP.com Domains · · Score: 1

    I'm on the free option, so it's mostly inconvenience at the moment. I'm not on the list, as I'd expect - all I'm running is port forwarding on 443 only to a centos box.

    I'll see how it pans out over the next 24 hours or so before I do anything.

  22. Re:They're not kidding (I've seen it 1st hand)... on Microsoft Takes Down No-IP.com Domains · · Score: 1

    BT in the UK.

    My IP address changes every week or so, and I'm not rebooting my modem.

  23. Re:Well, fuck you very much on Microsoft Takes Down No-IP.com Domains · · Score: 2

    Me too, in the UK. Figured it was a random glitch until I read this.

    I use no-ip to provide an address back to a home server running ZoneMinder for a couple of security cameras. So as it stands I can't access my security system. Great. I went to no-ip because my ISP doesn't offer fixed IP addresses and for no good reason changes my IP address every few days. I also have it on a self-signed SSL cert, and if I access it via IP I have to add another exception to the browser every time it changes.

    If it wasn't for the SSL aspect, I'd have a script on my home box identify the external IP address and email me when it changes.

  24. Re:Question... -- ? on Exploiting Wildcards On Linux/Unix · · Score: 1

    This. See manual sections. You might have a system call with the same name as a command, and the man pages will be in different sections.

  25. Re:Governments are main Reason on Teaching College Is No Longer a Middle Class Job · · Score: 1

    Absolutely. I also went through uni when fees were paid and grants were available (late 80s/early 90s). Student loans were only just coming in when I left.

    The big difference then was that it was possible to get a good job with "just" A levels. Even professions such as accountancy were possible without a degree, and many of my equally capable peers left after college or sixth form and have done just as well as I have. It wasn't a default decision for me, but I'm glad I went mostly for the social side and first experience of living alone in a relatively safe and easy environment. I don't think it particularly helped my career.

    The company I work for now only takes on graduates for all but the most trivial roles, but when I started we took on people with any level of formal education who showed the right ability and aptitude. I don't think the quality of applicants has improved. Companies that used to look for degrees twenty years ago now looks for applicants with masters or higher. It is an escalation, and I don't think it does anyone any favours.