I'm not sure much has changed other than degree of problem. Bought a Dell Inspiron laptop. It started to overheat toward the end of the extended warranty (2yrs). You guess it. Bad caps somewhere on MB (couldn't get any more info than this). Sent it back to Dell for repair. Was fine for a few months (until the warranty expired), then started to overheat again. Gee, I wonder what the problem was. Dell does not guarantee the quality of its repairs. I'm out of luck and will never buy another Dell.
Bought a Samsung LCD HD TV a few years ago from Best Buy (hey, they price matched!). Luckily, I also bought the extended warranty. LCD TV started to crap out at about the 3yr mark. Geek Squad guy came out yesterday, popped off the back. Bam, 4 bad caps!
Interesting tidbit was that Geek Squad replaced the bad caps with better quality caps. Repair guy claimed the original caps were rated for 10V and he replaced them with 25V. According to repair guy, the 10V caps regularly fail and that the problem is not limited to Samsung.
Probably not news to many, but... It's pretty clear. Laptop, LCD TV, other manufacturers cheap out on the device components, which leads to failure in an unacceptably short period of time. This requires that consumers purchase expensive extended warranty plans or resign themselves to replace every few years. Shady man. Should be a special, dedicated level in Hell for these dishonest electronic device manufacturers.
Screw satellites. Sharks with frickin' laser beams attached to their head!...Ah, would you remind me what I pay you people for, honestly? Throw me a bone here!
Crap! Soon we'll get T.V.s that know that their being watched, who is watching, and exactly what viewers are looking at....Coming soon to a T.V. near you.
Viewer: (thinking to himself) Oh great, a commercial. Time for a potty break. la, la, la (walks away from T.V.)
T.V.: (in loud voice) Alert, Alert, Alert. Viewer, you have been away from the television for 2 minutes and 30 seconds. You now risk violating your television and cable provider's ULA and risk violating section 5, paragraph 10, subsection a of the 2010 DMCA redux and expansion act.
Viewer: Coming, coming...just have to give a quick shake....O.K., I'm here. Whew, that was close.
T.V.: Alert, Alert, Alert!!
Viewer: Wha!, I'm here. I'm watching again for God's sake.
T.V.: Viewer, you twice failed to take visual notice of the coke can product placement in this episode of Friends. You have now violated your television and cable provider's ULA and thus also violated the aforementioned DCMA act. Please place your hands on your head and wait for the authorities to arrive....a little higher please...there you go.
This topic highlights why nerds don't have friends. Normal people are tolerant of others. Nerds use knowledge as a weapon. I suppose it's a coping mechanism or some such thing.
Computer smart, cool people understand that non-tech smart people are generally insecure about to their total lack of l33tn355. The illiterate are generally just trying to inch their way through life.
Thanks! I tend to be most creative whilst I am procrastinating. Instead of reading/posting to/., I should have been working on a final project that is already over-due and required for me to graduate next week. As a matter of fact, I shouldn't even be typing this email...crap, gotta go!
For this to work you would also have to change your wireless interface's Ethernet MAC (hardware) address.
(Yes, it's paranoid, but so is the original question.)
No, none of this security "voodoo" is required at all. It's nothing but paranoid delusional compulsion driven obsessiveness.
Really, who is going to be watch 'YOU?' You are nothing, a tiny insignificant electron fart on the massive, anonymous Internet freeway. There is no way that anyone could possibly track such a posting back to you even if you sent it from the comfort of your West Virginia trailer park, wood panelled double-wide. By the way, the cat is scratching at the door. Please let her in. The noise is driving me nuts.
...anyway. Like I was saying, the level of grandiosity required to believe that jack-booted, neo-conservative thugs with brush cuts and small testicles are following the every movement of this document and your friend Herb's handling of it is just beyond the bounds of all sane thought processes.
Damn it Frank, let that frikin' cat in already. Put down the JVC multi-function remote. Holy crap, man. You DVR'ed the mud wrestling match last night while your aunt Emma was over for dinner. It's not like you can't pause the damn show. Don't you know that Princess is very sensitive to heat and humidity? Maybe you won't have to take her to the vet 20 times this summer (like you had to last year) if you leave her in air conditioning for a change.
So, have we learned anything? No one is watching you. The government doesn't care what you do with that damn document that Herb wants you to host for him. No need to take ANY type of security/privacy countermeasure!
We... I mean, the government is not watching anything you do. Really. This is the voice of reason speaking to you.
You're young. Follow your dreams. Build what you want, how you want, when you want. Screw the money. When you're older with real responsibilities, you will not be able to afford to follow you dreams in an unfettered way. Youth == idealism. Pragmatism comes in time.
"Incidentally, it also means we consider non-state cyber-attackers to be illegal enemy combatants, which means we can do all kinds of nasty stuff to them."
the hacker thinks to himself...hmmmm, if I hack the military, they might
1. stick me in a cold, dark, room.
2. feed me old, stale food.
3. keep me away from friends, family, and girls.
4. keep me awake all night.
...(pause), ALRIGHT! Woohooo!. I wonder if I get to play WoW too!/p?
I, the evil doctor doofensmirtz, have invented the most eeeevil computer program. It takes complete control over computers and prevents them subverting my will. I haaaaate freedom!
Perry, the platypus, what are you doing here and who is that penguin you are with?
Evil overseeing, please inspect all activity on user's computer and approve or disapprove the following:
1. downloading of the digital media content file from the host computer system to a user's media content device.
2. adding to the list any digital media content files that the user purchases from any of the plurality of sources for purchasing digital media content files.
3. sending of email to granddaughter about not listening to that crap music pushed on her by the lame music conglomerate seeking to resurrect Paula Abdul's singing career with new techno-voice-warblator.
How insane is the music industry? This is a patent for a product that would give the music industry control over the inner workings of a user's computer. It has very little to do with an "electronic network," as most people would think of it.
Honey, look at this cool 5ft x 5ft x 5ft mouse pad that I just bought for our laptop!
Interesting from a tech, nerd perspective I suppose. However, a web cam and a computer vision gesture control app can produce the same effect much more efficiently.
Heh...tell that to Google. They arrived late in the search engine scene, but simply did it better and with less intrusive ads. Better algorithm + better delivery.
+better run company. Seems that ongoing, insane innovation in a number of areas such as Google docs, chat, email, etc. was what pushed Google over the top. Google provided a plethora of cool products for free that attracted throngs of adoring fans to its shores. I'd argue that improvements in search algorithms helped, but were not the driving forces behind companies ongoing successes.
Given the pittpatt founders come from CMU, I'm sure they are brilliant and will find more creative and interesting ways to turn pattern recog into $$.
However, is this tech really new/cutting edge? Facial recog has been around for a while. Heck, I had to write similar software as projects in grad school. Sounds like pittpatt founders might have developed faster, more accurate/reliable algorithms (far better than I could do). However, is this really enough to support a new company? Maybe the interesting details just haven't been made available. If not, then this may be a premature slashdotting.
Comp vision, pattern recognition, and machine learning are all popular courses at top comp sci grad schools. Hence, I expect to see hordes of new companies and lots of competition for these folks in the not too distant future. Having a better algorithm is not nearly as good as having a great, new, innovative product.
No, man. Total rip off of the UPS ads where some goobert draws on a white board.
"...linux is so free and simple, I can sell it to you with retard squiggly sketches on a white board and a Ricardo Montalban (Mr. Roarke) voice-over. Oh yeah, go use UPS."
You mentioned a couple times that you are unsure how grad school works.
I'm finishing up my MS in Computer Science from a really good/competitive school, my 2nd MS degree. Grad school at a good, research focused university is an opportunity to delve into topics that you are interested in and to build proficiency in those areas. Going into such a program, you should be focused on personal development, not career development. As such, you should be thinking about what your interests are, what floats your boat.
Some rules of thumb for you:
1. Don't bother getting a MS from a non-competitive diploma mill. Also, don't bother getting a MS from a school of continuing education (these are essentially diploma mills), even if it is in a good university. Choosing such a program tells an potential employer several things. You probably gained very little from your degree. You are probably not terribly motivated. You are not very good.
2. Only go to grad school if you have identified a topic that really interests you. Grad school at a good university is a lot of work. You will do very little of anything else while you are there. You better like what you are doing.
3. Once you have identified a topic of interest, find a good university that has a robust research program in that field. This is huge in that research drives funding and funding drives the hiring of good faculty. This might not apply so much to you since you want to stay where you are.
4. Go deep instead of broad. In grad school, I think that there is very little benefit from trying to be a jack of all trades, especially in a field such as comp sci. You want to come out the other end as a specialist in your field of interest. In the world of comp sci, this might be security, AI, comp vision, networking, etc.
As to your quandary with respect to becoming an IT-guy, an MBA suit, etc. First step to answering this is to decide if you want to be a tech guy or a manager. Most people have a strong preference one way or the other. Holy crap, man. Being a manager would be the equivalent of getting my nuts cut off with a dull knife, shoved up my anus, and then sucked out my nostrils (in terms of pain and suffering). That's just me, though. Assuming you decide that you want to stay technical, then I'd say go as tech as possible. That is not IT. It's a field full of good, smart people. However, really good IT people end up being managers anyway.
Whatever you decide, think before you act. Let your actions be driven by goals. Set your goals based on your interests. Don't be a schmo-loser who tries to live his life according to other people's opinions.
Talk about timing. I'm considering building a gesture control system for my TV as a project in a comp vision class.
The image recognition from a vid camera is fairly straight forward. However, I'm not certain what HW I will need to take in digital TV signal (assuming Haup TV card) and that export pic/sound to my TV via HDMI cable after processing. I want to enable image pause/zoom/draw menus, buttons/etc., which is why I need to intercept pic.
Anyway, processing time and resulting latency would seem to make this approach infeasible for gaming. Also, the users looked horribly uncomfortable in the video.
The lag could just be due to the use of poorly designed algorithms, but I'm not certain since I haven't yet delved into my project.
Also, I'd suggest not being so literal with the hand gestures used for various things. Comfort is key to a good interface.
This guy is not only selling his house, but his friends, job, etc. as well. Once sold, he says that he'll leave them all behind.
They must really suck. Not much of an endorsement...
I'm sure someone will happily correct me if I an wrong here.
However, seems to me that just about any wireless enabled linux box + same toolkits = wireless hacking tool.
Nothing to see here folks, just move along please;)
Hey, and let's make laws that compel the phone companies to install deep conversation inspection equipment just in case all these criminals start talking about file sharing...
The below comes from experience. I did liberal arts schools for undergrad and high-power tech schools for my Masters degrees. I was totally blown away when I first attended the Masters programs. I was underwhelmed and bitter at the the liberal arts schools.
Career in CS: There is no doubt that the tech school is the far better choice. A good CS education is one that allows you to get involved in creative, cutting edge research. CS is not programming. However, to really learn and understand CS issues, you HAVE to know how to program. You have to program in C to mess about in the linux kernel, work with most micro-kernels, do most networking stuff of interest. Java is useful for implementing algorithms and application level issues.
YOU SHOULD BECOME A GOOD PROGRAMMER ASAP IF YOU WANT TO DO WELL IN THE CS FIELD!!!!! Theory is important but practical hands-on research is a hell of a lot better!
Hands-on research/learning also requires that you have profs who are tops in their fields. This requires that you attend the tech school that can attract such profs. Liberal arts schools often have to rely on Masters level instructors to teach CS topics. Such instruction will not get you far. It will not spark your imagination nor expose you to cutting edge research. It will set you on the path of mediocrity.
Bought a Samsung LCD HD TV a few years ago from Best Buy (hey, they price matched!). Luckily, I also bought the extended warranty. LCD TV started to crap out at about the 3yr mark. Geek Squad guy came out yesterday, popped off the back. Bam, 4 bad caps!
Interesting tidbit was that Geek Squad replaced the bad caps with better quality caps. Repair guy claimed the original caps were rated for 10V and he replaced them with 25V. According to repair guy, the 10V caps regularly fail and that the problem is not limited to Samsung.
Probably not news to many, but ... It's pretty clear. Laptop, LCD TV, other manufacturers cheap out on the device components, which leads to failure in an unacceptably short period of time. This requires that consumers purchase expensive extended warranty plans or resign themselves to replace every few years. Shady man. Should be a special, dedicated level in Hell for these dishonest electronic device manufacturers.
Screw satellites. Sharks with frickin' laser beams attached to their head! ...Ah, would you remind me what I pay you people for, honestly? Throw me a bone here!
Security is: 386 dx 40 (my first computer), BSD kernel, and Lynx non-graphical web browser. Only down side.... ascii-art porn (sigh).
Viewer: (thinking to himself) Oh great, a commercial. Time for a potty break. la, la, la (walks away from T.V.)
T.V.: (in loud voice) Alert, Alert, Alert. Viewer, you have been away from the television for 2 minutes and 30 seconds. You now risk violating your television and cable provider's ULA and risk violating section 5, paragraph 10, subsection a of the 2010 DMCA redux and expansion act.
Viewer: Coming, coming...just have to give a quick shake....O.K., I'm here. Whew, that was close.
T.V.: Alert, Alert, Alert!!
Viewer: Wha!, I'm here. I'm watching again for God's sake.
T.V.: Viewer, you twice failed to take visual notice of the coke can product placement in this episode of Friends. You have now violated your television and cable provider's ULA and thus also violated the aforementioned DCMA act. Please place your hands on your head and wait for the authorities to arrive....a little higher please...there you go.
This topic highlights why nerds don't have friends. Normal people are tolerant of others. Nerds use knowledge as a weapon. I suppose it's a coping mechanism or some such thing.
Computer smart, cool people understand that non-tech smart people are generally insecure about to their total lack of l33tn355. The illiterate are generally just trying to inch their way through life.
Please, in the future, be kind
Thanks! I tend to be most creative whilst I am procrastinating. Instead of reading/posting to /., I should have been working on a final project that is already over-due and required for me to graduate next week. As a matter of fact, I shouldn't even be typing this email...crap, gotta go!
For this to work you would also have to change your wireless interface's Ethernet MAC (hardware) address.
(Yes, it's paranoid, but so is the original question.)
No, none of this security "voodoo" is required at all. It's nothing but paranoid delusional compulsion driven obsessiveness.
Really, who is going to be watch 'YOU?' You are nothing, a tiny insignificant electron fart on the massive, anonymous Internet freeway. There is no way that anyone could possibly track such a posting back to you even if you sent it from the comfort of your West Virginia trailer park, wood panelled double-wide. By the way, the cat is scratching at the door. Please let her in. The noise is driving me nuts.
...anyway. Like I was saying, the level of grandiosity required to believe that jack-booted, neo-conservative thugs with brush cuts and small testicles are following the every movement of this document and your friend Herb's handling of it is just beyond the bounds of all sane thought processes.
Damn it Frank, let that frikin' cat in already. Put down the JVC multi-function remote. Holy crap, man. You DVR'ed the mud wrestling match last night while your aunt Emma was over for dinner. It's not like you can't pause the damn show. Don't you know that Princess is very sensitive to heat and humidity? Maybe you won't have to take her to the vet 20 times this summer (like you had to last year) if you leave her in air conditioning for a change.
So, have we learned anything? No one is watching you. The government doesn't care what you do with that damn document that Herb wants you to host for him. No need to take ANY type of security/privacy countermeasure!
We ... I mean, the government is not watching anything you do. Really. This is the voice of reason speaking to you.
You're young. Follow your dreams. Build what you want, how you want, when you want. Screw the money. When you're older with real responsibilities, you will not be able to afford to follow you dreams in an unfettered way. Youth == idealism. Pragmatism comes in time.
"Incidentally, it also means we consider non-state cyber-attackers to be illegal enemy combatants, which means we can do all kinds of nasty stuff to them."
the hacker thinks to himself ...hmmmm, if I hack the military, they might
1. stick me in a cold, dark, room.
2. feed me old, stale food.
3. keep me away from friends, family, and girls.
4. keep me awake all night.
...(pause), ALRIGHT! Woohooo!. I wonder if I get to play WoW too!/p?
Good to see at least one other parent of a 5 to 9 yo in the /.-torium.
I, the evil doctor doofensmirtz, have invented the most eeeevil computer program. It takes complete control over computers and prevents them subverting my will. I haaaaate freedom!
Perry, the platypus, what are you doing here and who is that penguin you are with?
Evil overseeing, please inspect all activity on user's computer and approve or disapprove the following:
1. downloading of the digital media content file from the host computer system to a user's media content device.
2. adding to the list any digital media content files that the user purchases from any of the plurality of sources for purchasing digital media content files.
3. sending of email to granddaughter about not listening to that crap music pushed on her by the lame music conglomerate seeking to resurrect Paula Abdul's singing career with new techno-voice-warblator.
How insane is the music industry? This is a patent for a product that would give the music industry control over the inner workings of a user's computer. It has very little to do with an "electronic network," as most people would think of it.
Interesting from a tech, nerd perspective I suppose. However, a web cam and a computer vision gesture control app can produce the same effect much more efficiently.
Heh...tell that to Google. They arrived late in the search engine scene, but simply did it better and with less intrusive ads. Better algorithm + better delivery.
+better run company. Seems that ongoing, insane innovation in a number of areas such as Google docs, chat, email, etc. was what pushed Google over the top. Google provided a plethora of cool products for free that attracted throngs of adoring fans to its shores. I'd argue that improvements in search algorithms helped, but were not the driving forces behind companies ongoing successes.
Given the pittpatt founders come from CMU, I'm sure they are brilliant and will find more creative and interesting ways to turn pattern recog into $$. However, is this tech really new/cutting edge? Facial recog has been around for a while. Heck, I had to write similar software as projects in grad school. Sounds like pittpatt founders might have developed faster, more accurate/reliable algorithms (far better than I could do). However, is this really enough to support a new company? Maybe the interesting details just haven't been made available. If not, then this may be a premature slashdotting. Comp vision, pattern recognition, and machine learning are all popular courses at top comp sci grad schools. Hence, I expect to see hordes of new companies and lots of competition for these folks in the not too distant future. Having a better algorithm is not nearly as good as having a great, new, innovative product.
I don't know... Seems to me like another reason not to cut 18 cables and not know how to hide your identity.
should've known how to 'cut' modern browsers out of his master plan. ...Lynx
No, man. Total rip off of the UPS ads where some goobert draws on a white board. "...linux is so free and simple, I can sell it to you with retard squiggly sketches on a white board and a Ricardo Montalban (Mr. Roarke) voice-over. Oh yeah, go use UPS."
I'm finishing up my MS in Computer Science from a really good/competitive school, my 2nd MS degree. Grad school at a good, research focused university is an opportunity to delve into topics that you are interested in and to build proficiency in those areas. Going into such a program, you should be focused on personal development, not career development. As such, you should be thinking about what your interests are, what floats your boat.
Some rules of thumb for you:
1. Don't bother getting a MS from a non-competitive diploma mill. Also, don't bother getting a MS from a school of continuing education (these are essentially diploma mills), even if it is in a good university. Choosing such a program tells an potential employer several things. You probably gained very little from your degree. You are probably not terribly motivated. You are not very good.
2. Only go to grad school if you have identified a topic that really interests you. Grad school at a good university is a lot of work. You will do very little of anything else while you are there. You better like what you are doing.
3. Once you have identified a topic of interest, find a good university that has a robust research program in that field. This is huge in that research drives funding and funding drives the hiring of good faculty. This might not apply so much to you since you want to stay where you are.
4. Go deep instead of broad. In grad school, I think that there is very little benefit from trying to be a jack of all trades, especially in a field such as comp sci. You want to come out the other end as a specialist in your field of interest. In the world of comp sci, this might be security, AI, comp vision, networking, etc.
As to your quandary with respect to becoming an IT-guy, an MBA suit, etc. First step to answering this is to decide if you want to be a tech guy or a manager. Most people have a strong preference one way or the other. Holy crap, man. Being a manager would be the equivalent of getting my nuts cut off with a dull knife, shoved up my anus, and then sucked out my nostrils (in terms of pain and suffering). That's just me, though. Assuming you decide that you want to stay technical, then I'd say go as tech as possible. That is not IT. It's a field full of good, smart people. However, really good IT people end up being managers anyway.
Whatever you decide, think before you act. Let your actions be driven by goals. Set your goals based on your interests. Don't be a schmo-loser who tries to live his life according to other people's opinions.
I'm not sure the TV would've respond well to the gestures I was making at that particular point in time.
Talk about timing. I'm considering building a gesture control system for my TV as a project in a comp vision class. The image recognition from a vid camera is fairly straight forward. However, I'm not certain what HW I will need to take in digital TV signal (assuming Haup TV card) and that export pic/sound to my TV via HDMI cable after processing. I want to enable image pause/zoom/draw menus, buttons/etc., which is why I need to intercept pic. Anyway, processing time and resulting latency would seem to make this approach infeasible for gaming. Also, the users looked horribly uncomfortable in the video. The lag could just be due to the use of poorly designed algorithms, but I'm not certain since I haven't yet delved into my project. Also, I'd suggest not being so literal with the hand gestures used for various things. Comfort is key to a good interface.
This guy is not only selling his house, but his friends, job, etc. as well. Once sold, he says that he'll leave them all behind. They must really suck. Not much of an endorsement...
I'm sure someone will happily correct me if I an wrong here. However, seems to me that just about any wireless enabled linux box + same toolkits = wireless hacking tool. Nothing to see here folks, just move along please ;)
Hey, and let's make laws that compel the phone companies to install deep conversation inspection equipment just in case all these criminals start talking about file sharing ...
2. Leave late.
3. Kick ass on anything you are asked to do regardless of how small and unimportant it might be.
I've found that this works great in research as well as real jobs especially if one is a new, lowly grunt.
The below comes from experience. I did liberal arts schools for undergrad and high-power tech schools for my Masters degrees. I was totally blown away when I first attended the Masters programs. I was underwhelmed and bitter at the the liberal arts schools.
Career in CS: There is no doubt that the tech school is the far better choice. A good CS education is one that allows you to get involved in creative, cutting edge research. CS is not programming. However, to really learn and understand CS issues, you HAVE to know how to program. You have to program in C to mess about in the linux kernel, work with most micro-kernels, do most networking stuff of interest. Java is useful for implementing algorithms and application level issues.
YOU SHOULD BECOME A GOOD PROGRAMMER ASAP IF YOU WANT TO DO WELL IN THE CS FIELD!!!!! Theory is important but practical hands-on research is a hell of a lot better!
Hands-on research/learning also requires that you have profs who are tops in their fields. This requires that you attend the tech school that can attract such profs. Liberal arts schools often have to rely on Masters level instructors to teach CS topics. Such instruction will not get you far. It will not spark your imagination nor expose you to cutting edge research. It will set you on the path of mediocrity.