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User: miro+f

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  1. Re:Golf balls? That's pretty much just grapeshot on Air Cannon Ties Pirates In Knots · · Score: 1

    you wouldn't want to be seasick on that vessel

  2. Re:Harpoons on Air Cannon Ties Pirates In Knots · · Score: 1

    conversely, your 1000ft boat is much larger than a barn.

  3. Re:I'm still not even at this step yet on Brazilian Breaks Secrecy of Brazil's E-Voting Machines With Van Eck Phreaking · · Score: 1

    in Australia we number the candidates from 1 to x (where x is the number of candidates). The ballot papers are then counted manually into piles, and then once they've all been counted the smallest pile is broken up and split amongst the remaining piles, until someone has the majority.

  4. Re:No technology will prevent that on Brazilian Breaks Secrecy of Brazil's E-Voting Machines With Van Eck Phreaking · · Score: 1

    in some countries voting is compulsory, so you can't stop people voting.

    the preferred solution is to adjust the boundaries of the voting district and move people who typically vote for your opposition from marginal seats to safe seats, and vice versa.

  5. Re:Found it... on Go, Google's New Open Source Programming Language · · Score: 1

    except, of course, for those exceptions that don't have to be specifically declared (Array/StringIndexOutOfBounds, FileNotFound, etc etc)

  6. Re:Not actually safe on Go, Google's New Open Source Programming Language · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Integer operations such as additions are incredibly quick, however you're going to be slowing your code down dramatically if you check for integer overflows with every single integer operation (unless you implement the check in hardware)

  7. Re:Do *not* optimize for readability (do a tradeof on Go, Google's New Open Source Programming Language · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I find that if you shorten long words arbitrarily, it actually increases the writing time.

    I could write ConnectionManager pretty quickly just due to typing experience in English. The words just flow from my brain onto the keys without even thinking about the individual letters. But if you shortened to CnnctnMgr then you have to think about it every time you type it out, what letters have I taken out again?

    It gets more difficult when you're working off someone else's code. If you shorten long words but not short words then later on when you're looking at new code it takes much longer to get used to variable names. If you stick to a convention and don't shorten any words, you sometimes don't even need to see the variable being used to know what it's called, and can use them without thought.

    ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException is clearly a poor joke, however. I always hated that one.

  8. Re:Impossible to detect, so forget it (not!) on Sloppy Linux Admins Enable Slow Brute-Force Attacks · · Score: 2, Informative

    I will add to this that any decently secured system will log all activities to an external machine through a logging service which does not allow for said machine to remove any logged events. That way two machines will need to be compromised to hide the fact.

    This also protects against your legit admins doing some dodgy work and then deleting the evidence.

  9. Re:It's a start on Sony Prototype Sends Electricity Through the Air · · Score: 1

    it's ok, the informative post was modded funny and the funny post was modded insightful
    slashdot is fixing it for you!

  10. Re:Makes you wonder... on Google Brings Chrome Renderer, Speedy Javascript To IE · · Score: 1

    The unpaid salaries from fired employees is now paid towards the outsourced contractors required to cover all the functions that are no longer being performed by all the employees that have just been fired. Contractors who are all employed by the same company that provided the consultants who made the recommendation that these employees be fired in the first place.

    Of course, work done by contractors is more expensive, so the gap has to also be covered by getting the people who are still employed to work 12 hour days for the same pay.

    The only time justice is done is when the fired employees are hired by the external consulting firm to perform the exact same function for the exact same company as they were performing before at twice the salary, on top of the nice redundancy package they just received.

    Not that I'm cynical or anything...

  11. Re:Seriously? on A Geek Funeral · · Score: 1

    I haven't built a computer with a floppy drive for at least 6 years and have never felt the loss.

    The last time I tried to use a floppy drive I discovered the only floppy drive I had in the house (attached to a PC approximately 8 years old) was never actually plugged in to the motherboard. It didn't even work when I plugged it in. I had never used it.

    The fact that Windows required a floppy to install on new hardware is a design fault of the Windows installer, as floppy drives are ridiculously outdated hardware.

    However, I did specifically say the mention of the floppy drive "tipped me off", as I realise that a floppy drive does not strictly imply an outdated computer, however it does increase the probability and give the impression.

  12. Re:Seriously? on A Geek Funeral · · Score: 1

    I know nothing about SPARCstations and even I realised it was infinitely outdated.

    Mentioning a floppy drive in the description tipped me off and if that wasn't enough seeing the beige boxy case and design confirmed it.

  13. Re:Finished standards like SVG? on Google Brings Chrome Renderer, Speedy Javascript To IE · · Score: 2, Informative

    I didn't say it supports all finished standards. That would be a bold claim. That's a fair criticism. I am simply saying that IE generally doesn't support not-yet-standardized "standards" features.

    you mean like the <marquee> element?

  14. Re:Makes you wonder... on Google Brings Chrome Renderer, Speedy Javascript To IE · · Score: 2, Funny

    Actually I find that often the solution is decided to be "less management". Hundreds of managers get fired.

    But somehow in the end, we end up with more management, even though we have less managers.

  15. Re:Hi I'm Linux on Forkable Linux Radio Ad Now On the Air In Texas · · Score: 1

    I prefer this one from IBM actually:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmxPfZtV6w0
    although it's not really an ad for linux...

  16. Re:Hi I'm Linux on Forkable Linux Radio Ad Now On the Air In Texas · · Score: 1

    you realise that fullscreen flash works perfectly on linux, right?
    right?
    come on slashdot, you're supposed to be nerds!

  17. Re:Turbo Boost technology? on Intel Core i7 For Laptops — First Benchmarks · · Score: 1

    I suppose no one would buy a PC with a "slow down" button on the front...

  18. Re:really? on Most Detailed Photos of an Atom Yet · · Score: 1

    considering the word photograph comes from the greek word phos (light), bouncing anything other than photons off an object cannot be called a photograph.

    Electrograph is probably more accurate

  19. Re:But still... on Panasonic's New LED Bulbs Shine For 19 Years · · Score: 1

    ahh but the energy you use to run the heater comes from coal, which produces CO2, which traps the heat from the heater (as well as other heat sources), heating up your house ever so slightly.

    In fact you could say your electric heater is more than 100% efficient.

  20. Re:Did he update his status? on Burglar Logs Into Facebook On Victim's Computer · · Score: 1

    anybody want a peanut?

  21. Re:But still... on Panasonic's New LED Bulbs Shine For 19 Years · · Score: 1

    you're looking at it the wrong way, all heaters are 100% efficient! eventually...

  22. Re:Unscaled photo link on Most Detailed Photos of an Atom Yet · · Score: 4, Funny

    I have embedded the unscaled photos in this post.

    Millions of them

  23. Re:really? on Most Detailed Photos of an Atom Yet · · Score: 4, Funny

    can't really call it a photograph if it was taken with electrons rather than light.
    I wonder how they can tell the electron is blue?

  24. Re:No no no! on IE8 Beats Other Browsers In Laptop Battery Life · · Score: 1

    pfft, he didn't even read the title

  25. Re:Sign me up... on Microsoft Attacks Linux With Retail-Training Talking Points · · Score: 1

    more often not an open source app. They release a windows exe and a tar.gz binary + libraries. Some release .debs, but the issue from the vendor's side is how much effort has to be made to support everyone (you need a redhat rpm, a suse rpm, a fedora rpm, a debian deb, an ubuntu deb. And you might need more for legacy apps). It must be a nightmare to maintain.