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User: BlueScreenOfTOM

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  1. Re:Shelves - Android on Ask Slashdot: High-Tech Ways To Manage a Home Library? · · Score: 1

    I'd like to take a moment to plug a competing Android app, mostly 'cuz I wrote it :-)

    It's called My Media Catalog, and it is also capable of cataloging all kinds of media. The interface isn't quite as pretty as some competitors, but I took a lot of time incorporating multiple barcode lookup databases into the service, so my users tend to find barcode/ISBN scanning to be much more accurate. I also try to be very available to customers to answer questions and feature requests; there are many users that mention this in the feedback. Definitely worth a shot, especially if you have lots of rare books/media, or stuff from other countries.

    My Media Catalog at Google Play

  2. Re:Slashdot: News for Turds on Gut Bacteria Cocktail May End Need for Fecal Transplants · · Score: 5, Funny

    News for Turds
    Stuff that Splatters

  3. I'm confused... on Samsung Galaxy Ad Misleads With Fake Interviews · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So wait... I'm confused, who do we hate again? The Galaxy Tab runs Android, and Android is open source, so they are good, right? But Android is created and managed by Google, who is hoarding our personal data and undoubtedly invading our privacy rights, so they are bad, right? But the Galaxy Tab's main competitor is Apple's iPad, and the iPad's OS is a walled garden that prevents me from doing what I want with a device I purchased outright, so competition against that is good right? But Apple's walled garden keeps bad things out and good things in, so paying a premium for it is totally worth it and justified, so Android is bad, right?

    I'm so confused.

  4. Since when? on How AT&T Totally Flubbed 4G · · Score: 1

    Since when is Verizon the only one with "real" 4G? Tell that to my EVO that just pulled 12.47 mbps over WiMAX.

  5. Interesting choice of words... on The Gaping Holes In the UAE's Net Firewall · · Score: 1

    "Gaping Holes in the UAE's Net Firewall"

    I like how the title describes both the problem with the UAE's firewall as well as the content that is likely passing through due to the problem...

  6. They're probably just pulling an Apple on Bill Gates Doesn't Work At Microsoft Anymore · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'll bet they're trying to copy Apple again. They're in Step 2. 1. Get Gates to leave for a few years 2. Turn into a brand that can be described as mediocre at best, always playing a game of catch-up 3. Bring back Gates and simultaneously introduce a new "revolutionary product". Give Gates the credit for "inventing" said product 4. Paint Gates as a messiah that will pull Microsoft up out of the ruins and guide all of mankind to better computing 5. Profit!

  7. Re:CDMA on All GSM Phones Open To Attack, Tracking · · Score: 0

    While CDMA has it's own set of problems for sure, I've always preferred CDMA call quality over GSM. I also like that CDMA handsets don't make any speaker within a 5ft radius go crazy. It is kind of a shame that it is losing out and we will be seeing less of it in the future. From a security standpoint, I wonder if it is more or less secure...

  8. Microfilm lasts 500 years... on Avoiding a Digital Dark Age · · Score: 1

    Last I checked, Microfilm (and Microfiche) was guaranteed to last 500 years by Kodak. Unlike JPEGs, you can read Microfilm with a magnifying glass, and speaking from experience both writing and reading, the quality isn't bad. It's also not horrendously expensive once you have the writer (I believe a Kodak i9600 Series Archive Writer sells for somewhere around 35-40k, depending on the model you get).

    I wouldn't fool myself into thinking Microfilm is some magic solution to our digital storage problems, but it does go to show that there are ways we can save really important data. Given current technology, we could make something similar to Microfilm that didn't require professional development...

  9. Re:Money Money Money on 2010 — the Year AACS and HDMI Kill Off HD Component Video · · Score: 1, Funny

    What, you mean the gold plated HDMI cables don't make any difference in picture and sound quality? No way! Monster, Denon, and Belkin wouldn't lie to me! Why would they!? Next thing I know you'll be telling me my $500 ethernet cable was a waste of money too! Don't be ridiculous!!!

  10. Re:Overtime? on Time Bomb May Have Destroyed 800 Norfolk City PCs' Data · · Score: 1

    Sure, assuming the IT group was competent. Given that said IT group immediately re-imaged the machine distributing the "malware" after they discovered it instead of unplugging it and leaving it be for further analysis, I don't feel comfortable jumping to that conclusion.

  11. Re:Overtime? on Time Bomb May Have Destroyed 800 Norfolk City PCs' Data · · Score: 1

    I don't think the point was the downtime or the effort to get the machines back up -- it was how much data was lost, and how important the data was.

  12. Any places like this in the DC/Baltimore area? on Silicon Valley's Island of Misfit Tech · · Score: 1

    I'm sad that my recent trip to Silicon Valley did not include a trip to this place, although I know I could not have carried much back with me. There's always a next time. Anyways, anyone know of any places like this in the Washington, DC - Baltimore MD areas?

  13. Meanwhile at Microsoft... on Windows Patch Leaves Many XP Users With Blue Screens · · Score: 1

    Upon hearing the news of the botched update problem, Steve Ballmer pulled out his trusty Netbook while on the road to begin sending denial responses to the many complaints about the issue that had made their way to his mailbox. Naturally, his Netbook was set to the Windows XP default of "Download and install updates automatically" because his own trusted baby Microsoft told him it was best. Little did he know, before his last shutdown, the botched updated had downloaded and installed, and Mr. Ballmer was greeted with the famed Blue Screen he was just preparing to deny.

    158 men, women and children died that day. They were found scattered through the halls of Ballmer's hotel, with but a single bloody chair wedged into a corner wall.

  14. Pen & Paper is less distracting... on Pen Still Mightier Than the Laptop For Notetaking? · · Score: 1

    For me, I found that I was much less distracted when I was taking notes on paper. I had one particular class (it was a CS class) that was pretty difficult. The first half of the semester I would bring my laptop to class every day, and attempt to follow along with the Powerpoint slides and take notes on each one. By the time the midterm came up, I realized I was taking almost no notes and was spending most of my time during class on Slashdot and other distracting sites instead of paying attention. My grade on the midterm exam reflected this. To solve the predicament I found myself in, I decided to go the pen-and-paper route for the rest of the semester. Not only did my grades come back up for the final, but I can definitely say I learned a lot more in the second half of the course.

    If you've got wireless internet, you've got a distraction waiting to happen. If you really need to concentrate on the lecture material, I suggest leaving the laptop at home/dorm/apartment and coming to class with a pen and some paper.

  15. Re:3g? How about just some signal, period? on Nexus One Owners Report Spotty 3G Signals On T-Mobile · · Score: 1

    This is why I refuse to switch off Verizon regardless of what awesome deals T-Mobile comes to the table with. I hate everything about Verizon except the fact their coverage can't be beat. I have a Blackberry on AT&T provided by my company, and I will admit it gets similar connectivity in most places I go around cities. But once I go down into the Metro, or anywhere 30 miles+ away from a city, my Blackberry goes dead while my Verizon phone continues to pick up enough of a signal to make a call.

    I think people neglect to decide what is really important for them when they choose which mobile carrier to go with these days. Is coverage most important to you? Verizon. Is the iPhone most important to you? AT&T. Is price and openness most important to you? T-Mobile or Sprint. Is push-to-talk most important to you? Sprint/Nextel.

  16. Re:Duh on Chevrolet Volt In a Gasoline-Only Scenario · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have to admit, that's got to be the best use of YMMV I've seen yet.

  17. I wrote one... on Best Tool For Remembering Passwords? · · Score: 1

    For what it's worth, I wrote a password keeper app for myself a while back. I offer it on my website here if anyone is interested (first link). It's just a simple .NET winforms app, but I use the built-in support for AES to store the data using AES 256 bit encryption. Probably better tools out there, but I felt like this is some pretty heavy data to trust to a random app I found on the internet, and I didn't want to have to sift through a bunch of code in a FOSS app to make sure my password file wasn't getting periodically sent to Russia. Of course by that logic you shouldn't trust me either, which is fine too :-)

  18. Re:T-Mobile Doesn't Even Work on A Mobile Phone Mesh That Can Survive Carrier Network Failure · · Score: 1

    Virgin phone ... has an annoying hole

    There's your problem right there.

  19. I don't get it... on America's 10 Most-Wanted Botnets · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why, in this day and age, this shit is still happening. I can think of at least 3 free antivirus applications that anyone with a Windows PC can download and use at no cost, with little or no effort required. Most COTS PCs come with some kind of antivirus software (usually the dreaded Norton, which totally blows but is better than nothing for most average users). Is the problem that people don't know that there are free solutions out there? Is it that people are willingly not installing antivirus? Are these viruses particularly good at avoiding detection? It boggles my mind that that many machines are still being infected.

  20. DTN is ok, I've been testing it for a year now... on ISS Launches First Permanent Node of "Interplanetary Internet" · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that MDU Communications has volunteered our condo building to test DTN for the last year or so. I guess they figure since they have an exclusive contract with our building and we don't have any other choice of ISP (besides dial-up and capped 3G cellular), we'd be perfect. I can report that Slashdot is working this morning, although Google is not. Maybe once the system is deployed to ISS, they'll stop injecting delays and disruptions!

  21. Not just directions, but POI's too... on Is Sat-Nav Destroying Local Knowledge? · · Score: 1

    In a semi-related note, one of the things I miss about the pre-GPS (and even pre-Internet days) was the adventure of driving around a new place and stumbling on hidden gems. I'd love to do that in this day and age, but my girlfriend absolutely refuses to go to any resturants (for example) without doing some kind of online/zagat research first. Her rationale is "why should we waste our time going to some crappy restaurant when the Internet could have told us it was crappy before we even went?" While I sort of agree, sometimes I love restaurants that many online reviewers don't, and vice-versa. When we moved to a more upscale neighborhood, the only restaurants getting good reviews were ones that cost $75+ for a couple, and now she doesn't want to go anywhere!

    I know I know, sounds like a personal problem. Still, I see a lot of public perceptions changing based on information available online and in GPS units.

  22. Re:MQ on Guaranteed Transmission Protocols For Windows? · · Score: 1

    Seconded. We use MQ extensively at work, and it is an enormous pain in the ass, but once it is set up properly, it does what it advertises. Basically a transaction-based message queue that promises to "never lose a message".

  23. Re:"with astronomical amounts of energy" on Introducing the Warpship · · Score: 1
  24. As a .NET developer & a Linux user on Mono Squeezed Into Debian Default Installation · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...I'm very excited by this. I've been using Mono in Linux and OS X for a long time now and it has been working great. I'm not sure what Microsoft will think of this, but from what I've read thus far (which is admittedly not a ton) they haven't been getting in Mono's way... in fact, I believe that they gave information to help the Mono project so that it could be leveraged for Silverlight.

    Who knows what Microsoft is going to do in the future, but for now I'm excited for Mono.

  25. Latency? on Using WiMAX To Replace a Phone? · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm surprised I'm seeing not a lot of comments here about latency issues. I live in Baltimore and I also happen to live in an area where we're stuck with a single provider for broadband internet (a condo with an exclusive contract to a horrible, horrible ISP. No, not Comcast or Verizon... MDU Communications). Before WiMAX came along, I had no option but to stick with the horrible ISP or deal with dial up. When I found out WiMAX was available where I live, I was excited. I went to one of their booths at a mall and played with it, but I was a little concerned with the latency. I was pinging google and wasn't getting a response for ~250ms. This isn't horrible for such a service, but even MDU gives me less than half that for most sites.

    You might want to stop by a WiMAX booth in a mall like I did and try and make a few calls and make sure everything works as expected. They let me do pretty much whatever I wanted (in fact, the sales guy pretty much left me alone).