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User: Crilen007

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Comments · 45

  1. Re:Serves that satellite right on India Brings Back Orbiting Satellite to Earth · · Score: 1

    We've all seen the picture of the Camel and the Hammer.

  2. Wow on UK Police Implement Roadside Fingerprinting Tools · · Score: 1

    Guilty until proven innocent!

  3. Re:Duke Nukem on NASA Playing With Unreal Engine For Virtual World · · Score: 1

    You have too much faith.

  4. Re:This story is useless without pictures on London Police Equipped With 360-Degree Cams · · Score: 1

    Ah fuck, I noticed the brian remark a bit too late.

    And yes, I realize the irony. Just fuck off =P

  5. Re:This story is useless without pictures on London Police Equipped With 360-Degree Cams · · Score: 1

    Hopefully there is still room for a brian in those helmets.

  6. Re:Half Life 2 on Smart Cameras Detect Crime, Erode Privacy · · Score: 1

    Yea I'm sure they will open source it..... Just like Diebold should be open sourced, it won't happen. (I don't want to get political, just saying that its a major player in someting that should be open source)

  7. Re:I know how Warcraft doesn't have to wreck lives on How Warcraft Doesn't Have To Wreck Lives · · Score: 1

    Man I remember when this game was new. Then Warcraft two, and then Starcraft.. that game took a lot of time time when I was a kid.

  8. Re:Thanks for the root Sony on Canadian Sony Rootkit Settlement Stirs Controversy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Customers do need to stand up.. however most customers don't know what DRM is, and this is where the problem resides.

    What customers need is to educate themselves, or be educated about such things so they can make an educated decision.

  9. So uhh on Official WoW Expansion Talent Information · · Score: 1

    Is there a strategy guide out yet?

  10. Re:Benefit of Strategy Guides on How Strategy Guides Affected Gaming · · Score: 1

    An example of a game that a guide is good to use?

    Wind Waker.

    Who wants to go island to island every step of the way to get new clues each time?

    Would have taken me forever to beat it doing that.

    I did do all the dungeons without help however.

  11. Re:Why not just use regular batteries? on Battery Recalls A Blow to Sony's Recovery · · Score: 1

    I thought it was obvious enough.

    They want to cut costs.

  12. Re:TV? Television? on Google Targets TV Advertising · · Score: 1

    Not if they do targetted ad's. They should beable to cleanup that market. More people have more TV's than they do computers.

  13. Kinda made me laugh on US Releasing 9/11 Flight 77 Pentagon Crash Tape · · Score: 1

    "The documentary fails to address the fact that no one tried to expose these plans beforehand. If the U.S. gov't tried to do something like this, thousands of people would of have to known about it." And we still don't know the price of the Wii. People can do things secretly you know. You only find out about leaked plans because they were leaked.

  14. Re:Transitions.... on Why Windows is Slow · · Score: 1

    Aren't the MAC OS releases ports?

  15. Re:wow... on How Open Source is Faring in Retail · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hi. Mac.

    Nuff said.

  16. Re:I wonder... on One REALLY Long Runway for Rent · · Score: 1

    Car + Rocket + 15,000 foot runway = Mythbusters show of the year.

  17. Patent Link on eBay in 'Buy It Now' Patent Dispute · · Score: 4, Informative
  18. No Humans eh? on Yet Another Violent Games Ban · · Score: 1

    "an image of a human being"

    Just change all the things you kill to animals/monsters for any games released there.

    Although it would have a rather Disney feel to it, atleast you can kill the talking animals.

  19. Re:Tip of the iceberg on Google Agrees to Pay $90mln on Click Fraud Lawsuit · · Score: 1

    "The fact that many many people accidentally click on ads. Don't believe me? Try clicking *anywhere* on the blue ad box that shows up over results. Notice that a click even way on the right of it counts."

    Still brings them a customer. That's the point. Accident or not, they still go to that site.

  20. Re:gotta love it on U.S. Investigating Sale of Snort as Security Risk · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Snort® open source intrusion prevention and detection technology was created in 1998 by Martin Roesch, the founder of Sourcefire. With its unprecedented speed, power and performance, Snort quickly gained momentum to become the single most widely deployed intrusion prevention and detection technology in the world. In fact, Gartner recognized the mainstream acceptance of Snort in their "Gartner Hype Cycle for Open-Source Technologies" citing Snort as "Widely available. Used by mainstream companies and supported by many vendors." The wide availability of open source brings many advantages. Since the code is open and non-proprietary, open source development occurs at a markedly accelerated pace compared to proprietary models, thanks to a vast community of security experts continually analyzing and improving code. Simply, users in the open source security community worldwide can detect and respond to bugs and other security threats faster and more efficiently than in a "closed" environment. Now, with more than 2 million downloads, the Snort open source community has a well-earned reputation for extraordinary organization and dedication. Literally hundreds of thousands of security engineers and specialists the world over contribute Snort rules to new and evolving threats every hour of the day, often in record time. Today: The Best of Both Worlds Today, Sourcefire combines the very best of open source with the best of the commercial world. Leveraging the power and reach of the open source Snort rules-based detection engine, Sourcefire adds a critical layer of asset and behavioral profiling. Sourcefire's RNA (Real-time Network Awareness) maintains a persistent profile of a network and its assets. Using passive discovery methods, RNA adds a new level of visibility and intelligence. Sourcefire products are easy to use, out of the box, tuned and fully loaded, plug-n-protect appliances, with pre-optimized hardware and OS. Building on the proven, time-tested Snort intrusion prevention and detection engine, Sourcefire brings a new generation of the first ever unified intrusion and vulnerability management technologies to enterprises from manufacturing to the military. These include Sourcefire Intrusion Agents(TM) for Snort, commercial appliance versions based on Snort code, designed to make it easy for open source Snort users to fully capitalize on their investment in all open source Snort deployments. In addition, the Sourcefire Vulnerability Research Team (VRT), joined by the eyes and ears of the vast open source Snort community put the largest brain trust in network security at work for every Sourcefire customer. As part of an ongoing dedication and active involvement in the community, Sourcefire continues to enhance Snort. For example, the Sourcefire Security Education Program is a comprehensive certified training program. Delivered direct from the creators of Snort, users will learn the latest real world tools and techniques for optimizing Snort technology and all Sourcefire products. Sourcefire will continue to enhance open source as well as commercial versions. The result is a win-win for bringing truly effective network security for the real world. Source: http://www.sourcefire.com/snort.html

  21. Re:obligatory comments on The World's Fastest Image Processor · · Score: 0

    The sad part is, it's true.

  22. Re:It's that Damn Llama's Fault on Spyware Tunnels in on Winamp Flaw · · Score: 0

    Did you see the LITE version? It doesn't play vids, it doesnt have modern skin support. Its the basic version.

  23. Re:Nothing is for certain... on The Backhoe, The Internet's Natural Enemy · · Score: 0

    One thing is for certain... nothing is for certain. Wait..?

  24. What I don't and never have understood is.. on Sony RootKit Still A Problem? · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Who are they affecting?

    People who download music won't be affected, because they are downloading (IE Not buying the infected CD's)

    So, just who are they trying to spy on? The customers who are giving them money and doing what they want?

    It's so... 180 degrees out...

  25. Re:Didn't Google on AOL Buys Video Search Firm · · Score: 0

    I find that the google video search isnt very effective.
    I always find that video game awards thing on there. Or tons of funny movies, which is found everywhere.
    I'd like to beable to find videos without having to go through a hoard of garbage first.