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User: wanion

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  1. Re:Babies are the problem on Designer Babies · · Score: 1

    Yep, it used to be better documented, but it does remove your moderation if you post to a discussion.

    http://science.slashdot.org/faq/com-mod.shtml#cm1800

  2. Re:Interesting on Mapping the Blogosphere · · Score: 1

    It's pretty much showing that the US has the highest density of active blogs.

    How is it showing that? The image in the article isn't based on geographical information.

    Not that I disagree about the amount of rubbish on blogs.

  3. Re:Nope. Not going to work on Wikipedia on Gracenote Founder Rewriting History At Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    And now even removed from the history as libel. Magical.

  4. Re:Woot! on Ban On Louisiana Video Game Law Now Permanent · · Score: 1

    Realistically, this is already the case. Children don't earn money, they are given it, usually by their parents.

    You could argue that other people could give the children money, but if you're going to go there then other people could just give them the games you're restricting in that case as well.

    Parents should have to take some responsibility for educating their children about what they believe is suitable for them. The idea that the government to take such a direct role in raising your children through legislation seems bizarre to me.

  5. Re:SlickEdit on What is the Ultimate Linux Development Environment? · · Score: 2, Informative
    I suppose I could get work to pay, but that doesn't help me at home (no, I don't illegally copy software).

    I suspect that's why they provide a named user option, where the license is tied to the specific user and you can use it on multiple computers so long as only one copy is used at any given time.

  6. Re:Just out of curiousity on A Good Filesystem for Storing Large Binaries? · · Score: 1
    I always liked this comment by the VirtualDub author (quoting only part):

    It's fairly well known that the NT file system (NTFS) is very bad at avoiding fragmentation, partly due to its allocation strategy of intentionally placing tiny gaps between files -- which is good if those files expand, but bad if they don't. Today, I see this in a fragmentation analysis report of my hard drive:

    Fragments 111
    File Size 444KB
    Name WINDOWS\$NtServicePackUninstall$

    The cluster size of the hard drive partition is 4K. This means that NTFS has successfully managed to create a huge directory in which not a single pair of clusters are sequential. I used to think that the Amiga standard file system was bad, but this takes the cake.

  7. Re:Fake license plates... on Britain to log all vehicle movement · · Score: 2, Informative
    Bzzt! Wrong, some fool who doesn't understand what the term yield means pulls in front and cannot reach appropriate road speed, would be at fault not the person doing the lawful speed limit.

    Perhaps this would be the case where you live. Here, you're expected to watch for hazards in front of you, and though they may be driving dangerously, the only real evidence of what happened will be the damage to the back of their car/front of your car. If you failed to notice what might happen and take action (i.e. slow down) then you'd be responsible.

    Hell, I know one guy who was on a motorcycle in the outside lane on the motorway, and a guy on the inside lane decided he needed to take the offramp, so he swerved across, knocked the guy off the bike, and drove off. The police did track him down eventually. Then what? They charged the guy on the motorcycle for reckless driving because the only damage they could see was to the back of the other guy's vehicle.

  8. Re:Yahoo returns dupes... on NCSA Compares Google and Yahoo Index Numbers · · Score: 1

    From google.com:
    Results 21 - 28 of 28 for blogorank. (0.05 seconds)

    Admittedly, there's only 14 results with dupes off.

  9. Re:Laserjets are worthless for photos. on HP Invents A New Way To Print · · Score: 1
    Where I worked we had two colour laser printers - a Xerox DocuColor 1250 and a Konica Minolta 8050. I'm not sure what the Xerox cost, but I know the Konica was a little over $100,000 USD. It does acceptable - but not great - photo printing. I just thought I'd comment on what a higher end laser was capable of. It isn't the quality I'd want for archival.

    For better quality, things were usually printed on our Epson Stylus 9600 (similar model) which was an ink jet (7 colour, I think, one of which was called "light black" - maybe Epson hasn't heard of "grey"?), a printer which was only a fraction of the price of the colour lasers ($5000). I think it had the photographic rather than UltraChrome inks you mentioned, but they seem to have done away with the distinction now.

    Mind you, it was much, much slower as well, so the colour lasers definitely are good for speed. Though not particulary fast either. Offset press still seems a much faster option for anything that isn't variable (and cheaper, assuming you're doing enough of the same thing). Completely losing the plot though, aren't I? Most people printing a few photos aren't going to need super speed.

    So I was a tech at a pre-press/print shop...

  10. Re:How it 'works' on Testing didtheyreadit.com's Mail-Tracking Claims · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't know about there, but here in New Zealand if someone redirected your call to a $9.95/min number then they would be paying for the cost of that call. Is it different where you are? I just can't see the advantage of costing yourself that much money over this.

  11. Re:Windows on Mac Trojan Horse Disguised as Word 2004 · · Score: 1

    Oh, I agree it's a better situation than with Windows, and I did say only admin accounts could do it. My real point was in the situation of an installer any normal Mac user is going to expect to have to enter their password, so chances are the trojan will easily be able to get full access. If you ever want to trick a user into entering their password on MacOS X, I'd have to say an installer is probably the method that'd arouse the least suspicion.

  12. Re:Windows on Mac Trojan Horse Disguised as Word 2004 · · Score: 1

    Though, to be fair to Windows, all admin accounts on MacOS X can sudo and a common behaviour for an installer is to ask for your password so it can actually do the install before doing anything. So, add an extra step to this malware of pretending to be a real installer long enough to ask for your password and it could do a lot more damage.

  13. Re:It's not that surprising . . . on Netsky Worm Variant Attacks P2P Services · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    sigh... Didn't mean to post AC.

  14. Re:No, no, no, no on DVD Authoring Under Linux? · · Score: 5, Funny

    #152037 +(940)- [X]

    <dm> I discovered that you'd never get an answer to a problem from Linux Gurus by asking. You have to troll in order for someone to help you with a Linux problem.
    <dm> For example, I didn't know how to find files by contents and the man pages were way too confusing. What did I do? I knew from experience that if I just asked, I'd be told to read the man pages even though it was too hard for me.
    <dm> Instead, I did what works. Trolling. By stating that Linux sucked because it was so hard to find a file compared to Windows, I got every self-described Linux Guru around the world coming to my aid. They gave me examples after examples of different ways to do it. All this in order to prove to everyone that Linux was better.
    * ion has quit IRC (Ping timeout)
    <dm> brings a tear to my eye... :') so true..
    <dm> So if you're starting out Linux, I advise you to use the same method as I did to get help. Start the sentence with "Linux is gay because it can't do XXX like Windows can". You will have PhDs running to tell you how to solve your problems.
    <dm> this person must be a kindred spirit of mine

  15. Re:Spoiler Alert! on Footage From Star Wars: Episode III · · Score: 1

    > (c=

    What's this? A poor replica of the old Commodore logo?

  16. Re:The cat on Quantum Cryptography Systems Commercially Launched · · Score: 3, Informative

    Or perhaps try the wikipedia entry here.

  17. Re:Peoplesoft...quality software? HA on Free Software As Nigerian Scam · · Score: 1

    I've been working with PeopleSoft asset management at my university for a year now. It's an absolute nightmare trying to do asset stocktaking (the software for this crashes (was using a symbol palm-based scanner), and also sometimes can't find items that were listed present in a room a minute ago, which oddly reappear when you leave the room to go scan barcodes elsewhere).

    I really can't imagine the rest of their software is much better. I've discovered on the staff HR self-service portion of my uni's web site that you can view payslips for any employee if you just fiddle the system a little. It requires a legitimate staff login, but doesn't care which staff id you supply to the script.

    All I can say is that at least PeopleSoft 8 (doesn't appear, so far, at least) to be as slow as PeopleSoft 7 was. Yeah, not as slow, that's a worthwhile feature.

  18. Re:My Mac sucks on Ban On Internet Sales Tax Ends Saturday · · Score: 1

    This whole thing appears to be false, as they're claiming to run Safari on a machine that doesn't even supported MacOS X (10.2 being required for Safari). I can't even be bothered reading the rest of it.

    Oh, admittedly the last time I used MacOS X it was sort of slow, but I haven't used it enough to say either way if it's that slow. I somehow doubt it.

  19. Re:Nothing is wrong with the paper ballot! on E-Voting Companies Answer Critics With ... Spin · · Score: 1

    Doesn't this just mean under such a system if someone wants to tamper then all they need to do is edit the electronic record and invalidate the paper votes which disagreed?

  20. Re:Yes, but does the law equate intelligence with. on AI Sues for Its Life in Mock Trial · · Score: 1

    and by your reasoning, birds, bats, and flying insects are more intelligent than humans.

    This is sometimes true.

  21. Re: Naming reference on Hard Drive Capacity Confusion, Lucidly Explained · · Score: 1

    I'm even starting to like "virii".

    I don't know. Perhaps it's time we had a standard for naming the plural form of virus. I hearby propose the suitably stupid sounding "virusen".

  22. Re:Huh? on ICANN Asks VeriSign To Stop DNS Wildcarding · · Score: 1

    Probably your ISP. Mine's too slack to block it, so if you want to see the page, here's where it redirects you: http://sitefinder.verisign.com/lpc?url=notarealadd ressatall2323.com&host=notarealaddressatall2323.co m

  23. Re:Blacklist Verisign's IPs on VeriSign Sued Over SiteFinder Service · · Score: 1

    You're going to blacklist all the gTLD servers? You really don't like DNS, do you?

  24. Re:Huh? on Spammer Ducks For Cover · · Score: 1

    [Copied from news.admin.net-abuse.email]

    For immediate release - 15 August 2003

    INTERNETNZ LODGES COMPLAINTS AGAINST SPAMMER

    InternetNZ is lodging complaints against Christchurch
    spammer Shane Atkinson with three different regulatory
    bodies.

    Atkinson has been identified in the media as being
    responsible for the sending of up to 100 million spam
    e-mails a day to promote his penis enlargement pills.

    InternetNZ Vice-President, David Farrar, said that
    complaints are being lodged with:
    - The Commerce Commission for breach of Section 10 of the
    Fair Trading Act 1986, relating to misleading conduct in
    relation to goods.
    - The Ministry of Health for breach of the Medicines Act
    1981
    - The Privacy Commissioner for breach of the Privacy Act
    1993

    "Mr Atkinson is an unrepentant spammer who believes that
    those who don't want to receive spam should not connect to
    the Internet. InternetNZ disagrees that connecting to the
    Internet is a license for Mr Atkinson to promote his penis
    enlargement pills to every man, woman and child's e-mail
    address he can find" said Mr Farrar.

    InternetNZ has been considering investigating the
    possibility of advocating for NZ legislation to combat spam.

    "If nothing is done to stem the tide of spam, we will start
    to lose Internet users as they become overloaded with junk
    mail. It is estimated that just over 50% of all email
    travelling the Internet is now spam". said Keith Davidson,
    InternetNZ President

    =93If spammers believe there is nothing wrong with spamming,
    then legislation will become a definitive requirement in New
    Zealand. Many other countries have passed or intend to pass
    anti-spam legislation. While New Zealand has been able to
    rely on industry self regulation and a high degree of
    co-operation between ISP's in the fight against spam, it is
    becoming apparent that further steps towards legislation may
    be desirable if attitudes like those of Mr Atkinson
    exist.=94 according to Mr Davidson

    InternetNZ urges the appropriate regulatory authorities to
    prosecute Mr Atkinson to the maximum extent permissible
    under current laws." concluded InternetNZ Vice-President
    David Farrar

    ENDS

    For further information please contact:
    David Farrar
    Vice-President and Chair of Legal & Regulatory, InternetNZ
    david@farrar.com
    027 447 0216

    Keith Davidson
    President, InternetNZ
    president@internetnz.net.nz
    027 430 3317

  25. Re:Craziness! on CD Copy Stopper · · Score: 1

    It does seem like soemthing that Mircosoft would put on a $279 CD of MS Office, to stop IT staff from making a few extra copies or to stop employees from making a personal copy at home.

    I haven't a clue if you've ever used the corporate install media for Office, but Microsoft tend to make it as easy as possible to copy the actual media. It's designed so you can back it up to another CD or copy it to a server as a "network install point". The 'protection' is in the 'Product Key' and, more recently, 'Product Activation' (not present in business versions, as of yet, that I'm aware).

    So, yeah, perhaps they might do it on home copies? But I don't see this affecting your example of IT staff.

    *sigh* I don't even like MS, and I think product activation is highly aggravating, but I doubt they'd ever use something this stupid until it becomes as simple as their idea of product activation seems to them (a sort of 'one off' thing).