Slashdot Mirror


User: itsphilip

itsphilip's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
59
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 59

  1. The least evil organization has already agreed to on WikiLeaks Won't Tell Tech Companies How To Patch CIA Zero-Days Until Demands Are Met (fortune.com) · · Score: 2

    It's clear that the terms aren't unreasonable and likely for the common good if the only not-for-profit (Mozilla) has already agreed to the conditions

  2. Re: DNC? on RSA Conference Attendees Get Hacked (esecurityplanet.com) · · Score: 1

    There's a Russian puppet in the White House?

  3. Typical KDE on KDE Bug Fixed After 13 Years (kate-editor.org) · · Score: 1

    Typical KDE

  4. With all of the Samsung critical security bugs on Obama Finally Ditches BlackBerry, Switches To Samsung Galaxy S4 (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 0

    I'm really surprised he didn't switch to an iPhone

  5. Any worth on Ethernet yet?

  6. Re: What the hell are AT&T's customers paying on AT&T Wants $100 Million From California Taxpayers For Aging DSL (dslreports.com) · · Score: 1

    It's not just the Republicans

  7. Cue the die-hard Linux users who act like a package/kernel upgrade has never broken all of the dependencies on the whole system and rendered it useless or uninstalled a bunch of packages or broken GRUB

  8. Re: Sounds too good to be true on Electric-Car Startup Faraday Future Building a $1 Billion Factory In California (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 2

    All of them are in the pockets of big oil, democrats just lie and pretend that they're not. Are you naive enough to think that the largest companies on earth don't hedge their bets? Trust me, they donate to both parties.

  9. Re: Sounds too good to be true on Electric-Car Startup Faraday Future Building a $1 Billion Factory In California (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 2

    The first gasoline cars were reserved for rich people too. Their range was limited and there was poor infrastructure to support them. Over time that changed. Apple is very good at commoditizing quality products; don't count them out until we've seen what they built. Oil will run out or become prohibitively expensive to extract. I, for one, am glad that someone is working on the problem.

  10. Android on SteamOS Has Dropped Support For Suspend · · Score: 1

    Then how does Android work so well?

  11. Re: Hackers Are Pampered on In North Korea, Hackers Are a Handpicked, Pampered Elite · · Score: 1

    Again, relative

  12. Re:Not as simple as teaching how to ... on Former Police Officer Indicted For Teaching How To Pass a Polygraph Test · · Score: 2

    One time I was falsely accused of a crime (I really didn't commit the actual CRIME, but it was legally dubious) and I arranged with my council to take a private polygraph during the investigation to present to the detective. I can tell you as a regular, untrained citizen, that the polygraph test was accurate, at least in my case. It really could detect when I was telling a lie and telling the truth. It even knew if I was hesitant to tell the truth. At the end of the polygraph, the examiner asked me "Which question were you really unsure about when you answered?" I told him the question that I wasn't sure about and sure enough, it matched his results. Just my experience; I thought it was super interesting.

  13. Re: Yeah, right... on Black IT Pros On (Lack Of) Racial Diversity In Tech · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Because he doesn't believe there's systemic racism he's a troll? Most middle and upper middle class (read: educated) white folks really aren't racist at all. At this point, maybe blacks are still looking for excuses why they can't broadly succeed. As an employer, I try to hire the most qualified candidate whenever possible, but also the best cultural fit. Often times, black dudes are the coolest, funnest, nicest people you can hire and are far less political and catty than their white counterparts. In my experience, they don't fan flames or get in office politics or tell on people or try to strategically fuck their coworkers just to get a minor advantage. Just my opinion.

  14. Re: In other words... on Consumer Reports: New iPhones Not As Bendy As Believed · · Score: 1

    I'm a big iPhone fan (also, for what it's worth, an engineer) but I also carry an Android device -- a Sony Xperia Z Ultra along with my iPhone 6. I can tell you that when I buy a $900 device, "good enough" doesn't cut it.

  15. Well if they go all Microsoft on China Bans iPad, MacBook Pro, Other Apple Products For Government Use · · Score: 1

    It should be way easier for the US to conduct electronic espionage

  16. Linux Audio on Ask Slashdot: An Open Source PC Music Studio? · · Score: 1

    Doesn't Linux still have problems with low-latency audio?

  17. Re:1963: JFK says on NSA Collects 200 Million Text Messages Per Day · · Score: 1

    You must be white

  18. Re: Current PCs are good enough. on PC Shipments In 2013 See the Worst Yearly Decline In History · · Score: 1

    Reality

  19. Re:What's good for the goose on Counterpoint: Why Edward Snowden May Not Deserve Clemency · · Score: 1

    Sometimes I think that too but I realize that there hasn't been a full-on war in the continental US since the Civil War

  20. Re:NSA security policies on Reuters: RSA Weakened Encryption For $10M From NSA · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I'm not a Windows fanboy or anything (Full disclosure: I use it my media center and gaming PC, everything else is Mac (laptop and desktop), BSD (NAS box, FreeNAS and pfSense at my house) and Linux (my web hosting and ssh access to my house without exposing a PC with a bunch of data on it to the open Internet). That said, other than blind allegiance to FOSS, there is little indication that with regular updates and proper policies and procedures that later versions of Windows Server (2008, 2008 R2, 2012) are somehow defective by design or less secure than their OSS alternatives. Granted, we can't see the source code WHICH IS A MAJOR PROBLEM. However, I've used it plenty in the enterprise and it's just fine. In fact, our Linux boxes were targeted and successfully rooted (remote attacks) in my mixed-tenant datacenter more frequently than the Windows boxes, hands down. In fact I can't recall a single remote Windows attack post-2008. Lots and lots and lots of wordpress/apache/LAMP etc. exploits however.

  21. XBMC Controller on Datawind Not Blowing Smoke: $38 Tablet Coming To the US · · Score: 1

    I could see this as a good XBMC remote or alarm clock that shows weather when you get up or news if you made a nice stand for it. Maybe something to use in the bathtub or on the toilet to read stuff or the kitchen for recipes. Places where if it gets dirty or ruined who cares.

  22. It's true on Where Does America's Fear Come From? · · Score: 1

    This is a really nice, eloquent way of legitimizing a bunch of conspiracy theories which, it turns out, are often true

  23. Re:I don't know how to feel about this. on EPA Makes Most Wood Stoves Illegal · · Score: 1

    they can just die for all the government cares

  24. Re:Stallman ain't gonna be happy on Torvalds: SteamOS Will 'Really Help' Linux On the Desktop · · Score: 1

    That's fine he always gets worked up about stuff like this and that's a good thing. He raises awareness by being fringe and, as a corollary, making a spectacle of himself. And whether or not he's happy about this, it's good that the platform becomes more well-developed and accessible to consumers. I'm actually cautiously optimistic about Ubuntu of all things... Imagine with Mir, better toolkits and some of the other improvements it becomes as polished as OS X AND is open-source. Far more trustworthy OS IMO in a day in age when we can't trust much of anything. Open source is really the only development model that is fully trustworthy, GPL or otherwise.

  25. I feel way less bad about playing game "backups" on my Wii