Slashdot Mirror


User: Venik

Venik's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
375
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 375

  1. Re:How patently stupid. on Stem Cell Patent Halts Hospital's Collection · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So the only people the current patent system helps, are the big companies and the courts.

    Perhaps, but it would appear that the real problem is the incompetent assgobblins holed up in the US Patent and Trademark Orifice. I think a good first step would be to introduce compulsory IQ testing at the USPTO and lay off employees scoring below seventy, confiscating all of their square pegs and round holes. The remaining six patent analysts should be offered early retirement with full benefits and a conciliatory "years of service" plaque.

  2. Re:FP on Penn. AG Corbett Subpoenas Twitter For Bloggers' Names · · Score: 1

    Congrats, you are an idiot.

  3. Re:Okay from RTFA. on Russian Anti-Spam Advisor Accused of Spamming · · Score: 1

    In Russia, mostly the corruption is not just in the system.

    If I was Russia's prime minister, I would hire a recent comp sci grad as my anti-spam adviser. You know, somebody fresh out of college, unburdened with superfluous knowledge; somebody who once read a book about spamming. This way my reputation as a thrifty and ethical bureaucrat would be safe with the Russian tabloids.

  4. Re:Seagate reliability on Seagate Confirms 3TB Hard Drive · · Score: 1

    One of the HP Linux clusters I support has an odd mix of WD and Seagate SATA drives. The system is about a year old. The drives are arranged into hardware RAID sets of four usually with one Seagate and three WDs in the mix. When one disk fails and the red LED doesn't come on, figuring out which disk went bad is a real drag. I am lazy, so I assume its a Seagate and just replace it with a spare. I would say four out of five times it is the Seagate that fails.

  5. Re:Fight them on California Moves To Block Texas' Textbook Changes · · Score: 1

    Texas won its independence from Mexico

    The word "won" has a positive connotation not appropriate in this particular case.

  6. Re:Cure? on Cheap Cancer Drug Finally Tested In Humans · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yet time and time again, the half-spoken, implicit, veiled theory appears: drug companies don't want to cure diseases, they intentionally avoid developing cures, because that would lose them money. Why?

    Probably because it makes sense. Most pharmaceutical companies are publicly traded and their primary obligation is to the shareholders and not to the customers. If you can charge a customer fifty grand for one course of chemo treatment for the rest of his life, then what is the incentive to find a cure? It's the process that makes them money, not the end result.

    A tearful story usually follows comments like mine: what about all those wonderfully dedicated researchers working for the pharmaceutical companies day and night searching for the cure? Well, I follow the news, so I am sure I will hear if they actually cure cancer.

  7. Re:Hypocrisy on Rockstar Ships Max Payne 2 Cracked By Pirates · · Score: 1

    If you steal your own wallet back from a pickpocket, you're not going to jail.

    As you know, when it comes to intellectual property rights, common logic rarely applies. Stranger things have happened.

  8. Re:How long... on Scientist Uses Nanodots To Create 4Tb Storage Chip · · Score: 1

    1) new (ish)

    I hope they are newer than the Quantum ESP5000 SSD that has been attached to my Sparc 10 for the past fifteen years.

  9. Re:File a complaint, don't just talk on Sony Sued Over PS3 "Other OS" Removal · · Score: 4, Funny

    Obviously, he wasn't addressing the twelve-year-olds. So you may go back to your your FF XIII

  10. Re:Abuse of Restaurant Workers on The Sopranos Meet H-1B In New Jersey · · Score: 1

    I find this American concern for the well-being of Vietnamese women rather touching.

  11. Re:Schools vs. Killing brown people on Chicago Mayor Calls For "Brainiac High" · · Score: 1

    Except that his message is to throw more money at schools as if that will fix the problem.

    I actually read the linked article and it would seem that the mayor's suggestion is in fact to throw more money but not at schools in general but at the most gifted students. Unlike the current populist approach to education, this simple idea recognizes the fact that most children have no talent, will not complete college education, and, despite what their parents may hope for, will never amount to anything in a any way remarkable. If there is a limited amount of money to be spent on education, one should spend it on students that can take full advantage of extra tutoring. This would not address America's retarded education system, but at least it will allow the country to keep its head above water in science and technology without relying quite as much on the imported brains.

  12. Re:I feel sorry on Solaris No Longer Free As In Beer · · Score: 1

    Actually, this brings me to the other point of comparison between commercial Unix and commercial Linux: quality of support. What happened when I ran into an OS problem with Solaris? I would run the explorer script, send output to Sun support and they would send me a patch to install or some other fix. Opening support cases with Novell or RH is pointless. First thing they tell you is to install the current service pack of the OS. They have no idea what the problem is or if one of the patches contained in the service pack would fix the problem. But they are perfectly willing to let you take the risk. Don't get me wrong, Sun's quality support is a thing of the past and Oracle is not to blame for this. These days when you call Solaris support it seems you get the same Novell morons on the line as when you call for SLES support. Sometimes I wish I could just reach out throught the phone line is beat that curry chicken they had for lunch out of them. On the other hand I feel sorry for them because Linux' debugging facilities quite frankly suck, despite the impressive number of logs it keeps. Kernel panics and non-trivial hardware problems are all a great mystery to Linux syslogd.

  13. Re:Eheh on Solaris No Longer Free As In Beer · · Score: -1, Troll

    And, yet, here I am holding down the same job for the past twelve years, denying some Indian CompTIA Linux+ laureate an honest living. You are running Ubuntu? Obviously, your servers are not nearly as critical as you think they are, since the user's edition of Linux satisfies your customers' requirements.

  14. Re:I feel sorry on Solaris No Longer Free As In Beer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Clearly, very few people here have any enterprise-level Solaris experience. In terms of stability and performance I compare Linux to Solaris like you compare Windows to Linux. Well, this may be too harsh but this is mostly addresses to the fat dorks on Slashdot screaming "death to Solaris". The biggest file server guys like that had to support is the one sitting under their desk with all the porn on it.

    When I transitioned from Solaris and AIX to supporting RH and SuSE several years ago, I experienced somewhat of a shock: servers hanging on shutdown, lousy NFS performance, Samba slowing down to a crawl under moderately heavy load and a crapload of other issues I never thought a unixoid OS can suffer from. All these problems coupled with consumer-grade hardware and what you get is one big, never-ending downtime. Something is always down or barely limping along.

    There were times when all our servers were running Solaris, AIX or HP-UX. I could come to work, drink my coffee, read the news, space out for a couple hours, then break for lunch, work a couple hours on some project and go home. As more and more real servers are being replaced by cheap HPs and Dells running the blasted RHEL or, worse yet, SLES, all this free time I used to have is a distant memory.

  15. Re:Is there realy a problem? on Do Car Safety Problems Come From Outer Space? · · Score: 1

    Some science is definitely behind this. The question is: how far behind? Physicists discussing software problems are not nearly as hopeless as programmers discussing physics. This is exactly how one gets gamma radiation from outer space appear in the same sentence with cell phones and microwave ovens as a possible cause for malfunctioning electronic circuits and sloppy coding.

  16. Kill off ereaders on Here Come the Linux iPad Clones · · Score: 1

    I predict with absolute faith that the iPad and its clones are going to kill off single purpose devices like dedicated eReaders such as Amazon's Kindle and GPS devices within the next three years. How can it not work out this way? For the same price as a high-end dedicated device you can get a tablet that will do everything they can do and far more.

    How, you ask? The same way clock radios replaced neither clocks nor radios. Swiss cheese, for example, successfully combines cheese and holes and, yet, makers of hole-less cheese as well as manufacturers of holes are still very much in business. While combining many functions into one product may seem as a fun way to pass the time, sometimes you just want to enjoy good cheese without any holes.

  17. Re:Survey says.... on Losing Google Would Hit Chinese Science Hard · · Score: 1

    Nevermind the "voting" thing. Without Google China may find itself without scientists. Just as India without Google may find itself out of IT specialists.

  18. Re:This will be one of the shorter X-Prize contest on Next X-Prize — $10M For a Brain-Computer Interface · · Score: 1

    I agree. Especially since most slashdoters already have their DIY lobotomy kits.

  19. Re:uh.. on Slime Mold Could Lead To Better Tech · · Score: 1

    Tokyo's subway map has always reminded me of Japanese scat videos. Maybe they were high on that? Anyway, there is plenty of slime and mold in our datacenter. No better technology though, so this theory is busted.

  20. Re:My favorite part on Judge Lowers Jammie Thomas' Damages to $54,000 · · Score: 1

    Here's where you can get the MEDIAN home price of Brainerd, Minnesota...

    I don't see where he said that you can buy a median home with fifty-four grand. He just said that you could buy a home in her neighborhood for that amount. This is a fact and no reason to pitch a conniption.

  21. Re:International "Commerce" on IsoHunt Guilty of Inducing Infringement · · Score: 1

    Anyway, it'll all be moot in the next couple of decades, as it gets to the point where software-generated 3d movies and pro-quality music will be able to be generated by anyone in their own home with consumer-grade hardware and software.

    In the future there will be robots.

  22. Re:Huh? on IsoHunt Guilty of Inducing Infringement · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The name "ISO Hunt" does not have that many non-infringing connotations

    Apparently, you are not a Linux user.

  23. Re:Throw money at it... on Synchronize Data Between Linux, OS X, and Windows? · · Score: 1

    They raped all of their servers. I am in the process of moving my site to another hosting provider. Bluehost stretched its resources well beyond breaking point.

  24. First impression on 2 Companies Win NASA's Moon-Landing Prize Money · · Score: 1

    When I saw the title of the post, I thought the companies would be Industrial Light & Magic and Apogee.

  25. Re:Niggerdick on Feds Bust Cable Modem Hacker · · Score: 1

    I love poetry!