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  1. Re:it may not be available on Ask Slashdot: Managing Device-Upgrade Bandwidth Use? · · Score: 1

    And their backhaul is 5Mbps, from which they have sold 1.5Mb links to 1500 people....

  2. Re:3Mbps?!?? on Ask Slashdot: Managing Device-Upgrade Bandwidth Use? · · Score: 1, Troll

    I quit unpacking updates to prevent aneurism by rage when I started seeing this. "Hmm.. 128Mb patch, lots of useless crap attached, duplication of DLL's with the same size/signature.. about 600k of new data. Now I want to break something."

  3. Re:3Mbps?!?? on Ask Slashdot: Managing Device-Upgrade Bandwidth Use? · · Score: 1, Troll

    Wall Street loves to forgo $10 tomorrow to make $1 today. We see companies trashed constantly by short sighted profit gains. HP went from a blue chip tech stock standard to a common stock overnight when Carly took over and reigned in all their long-term profit goals in favor of short term gains at a fraction of the profit. (I was inside watching this one happen. It made me ragequit, eventually.)

  4. Re: Hmm. on Protesters Block Apple and Google Buses In California · · Score: 1

    A lot of hate headed toward this, but it is the simple truth. Anyone that plans on renting in a neighborhood for a long time is planning for failure. If you are going to live there that long, buy. Buy a condo or a townhome, whatever fits your lifestyle. Analogy- renting a car, then spending the weekend detailing it, polishing it, and making it beautiful. You have no room to complain when you can't afford to rent it anymore because you made it more desirable.

  5. Big rigs have been working on this for a long time on Ford Engineers Test 'Predictive Logic' To Improve Cruise Control · · Score: 1

    Cruise control helps with the biggest expense in trucking- fuel. However, such a heavy vehicle behaves very differently in hills, and cruise is a detriment there. As far back as 2000, Freightliner and International have been working on predictive cruise control that can adjust engine speed, gear (in automatics) and such to the load of the truck and the grade it faces. likewise it will select the best gear to descend that hill safely and lock in to it. The last case I saw on it was trying to integrate GPS and Magellan maps into the computer control to accomplish this. thus far, nothing has come of it- technology changes/improves before they have a stable prototype so they keep starting over.

  6. Re:It's probably necessary on Ford Rolls the Dice With Breakthrough F-150 Aluminum Pickup Truck · · Score: 1

    My father was a metallurgist and head of a large technical organization within the DOD that had responsibility for the materials used by the US Army in all of it's equipment

    you left out "in 1958". Composites and alloys are in widespread use now, and have been for a couple decades. And are well loved. You offer a sheet of steel to an airframes guy and he will punch you in the schnoz for your heresy.

  7. Re:It's probably necessary on Ford Rolls the Dice With Breakthrough F-150 Aluminum Pickup Truck · · Score: 1
  8. Re:Weight-saving on Ford Rolls the Dice With Breakthrough F-150 Aluminum Pickup Truck · · Score: 1

    I have a pickup, and I need it (relative, I guess- I need it for my hobby). My main commuter/driver is a Jeep in winter and a motorcycle in summer (mountain living makes 4x4 and clearance a necessity, a Wrangler is about as light and efficient as you can get.). The pickup is used to retrieve parts and haul new project cars into my shop, and sometimes materials for the honey-do list from Home Depot. The rest of the time it sits in the garage. Perhaps a better way to put it is people that drive them daily seldom can justify doing so. Many who have a pickup drive it when needed, and something much more appropriate otherwise.

  9. Re:Let me be 1 of the 1st here on Utility Sets IT Department On Path To Self-destruction · · Score: 1

    firewall- swap the connections on next reboot.

  10. Re:Just a moment! on Utility Sets IT Department On Path To Self-destruction · · Score: 1

    Some states require notice before a layoff of X number of people. I believe California is one of them. I know there are others.

  11. Re:Just a moment! on Utility Sets IT Department On Path To Self-destruction · · Score: 1

    Boycott plans like this never work. No matter how dedicated YOU are to it, I may take the contract and it's sweet sweet paycheck. Or vice versa. Even if 90% stick to the plan, 10% will just have lots of work and lots of pay.

  12. Re:Don't be so complacent on Utility Sets IT Department On Path To Self-destruction · · Score: 1

    Most of the sweatshop outsourcing hire new grads on the cheap. They are getting their first real world experience, and have no competent experienced mentors to help. What we see is exactly what we would see if a US company did this. Turnover is high as they learn enough to move on to the well respected outsourcing, or go into business for themselves.

  13. Re:Just a moment! on Utility Sets IT Department On Path To Self-destruction · · Score: 1

    Key: your business is not their only customer. Have a pool of 50 competent IT workers, gain 5 or 10 contracts and assign workload dynamicly based on need.

  14. Re:what on Ask Slashdot: How Have You Handled Illegal Interview Topics? · · Score: 1

    Best I've seen was a guy sitting back from the road a bit with a big sign: "Bet you can't hit me with a quarter."

  15. Re:Close the door. on Ask Slashdot: What Are Your Tips For Working From Home? · · Score: 1

    Adults have ADD too. If I do not occupy the idle parts of my brain, they begin to demand attention. Music does this well. Xm comedy channels work nicely too, but can draw my main attention sometimes. The other end of the spectrum is, when I do get my focus on an important or interesting project, all outside sources are ignored. We had a tornado tearing through the neighborhood a couple years ago, and my screaming wife had to hit me to get my attention away from what I was doing to get me in the basement... THAT kind of concentration.

  16. Re:Close the door. on Ask Slashdot: What Are Your Tips For Working From Home? · · Score: 1

    Similar, except I used nail polish to make the mute a bright red for easy locating.

  17. Re:Close the door. on Ask Slashdot: What Are Your Tips For Working From Home? · · Score: 1

    Everyone has their own issues, I guess. I no longer work from home, but I did for 4 years, supporting HPUX servers for a government contract. I set up an office in the dining room, which we never used. It had no door, but was a separate space. I could have easily installed a door, but didn't need to. I sat the family down when the job was offered and asked them if they could respect my workspace if I worked from home. 8yo said yes, but wanted to know how to tell if I was just playing or working. Good question, so I hung a sign by the door. Green on one side and red on the other. Took some getting in the habit to turn it, but it worked well. 3mo gurgled happily and drooled. I took this as agreeing to my terms. The wife said yes. What she meant was "yes, unless it is an emergency." And by emergency, she meant anything that wandered across her mind at any given point. So after the first week, we sat down again. I thanked the 8yo for his efforts in watching the sign and respecting work time. Then I asked him if he can help mommy learn how to do this. The temperature in the room dropped noticeably, but my point was taken. She quit bothering me. In fact, for about 3 days, I thought she had lost her voice, but she got over it. The youngest, once toddling, was more of an issue, but a baby fence and some teaching solved that after a month or so. At the end of the year I spent a couple weeks vacation time building an office, bathroom, guest room, and home theater in the unfinished basement I had ignored for years. I wound up working in the dining room often, it was easier to interact with the family during downtime.

  18. Re:Genius. on Campaign Urges People To Send MPAA and RIAA Copied Currency · · Score: 1

    Add to this, I DESPISE WITH A BURNING RED PASSION when they refuse to let me skip forward over their god damn ads. Seriously, if I hit Menu, then I should get a menu, not an icon telling me to quit hitting buttons. I copy every DVD I have, and strip out that shit. The FBI warning hasn't changed since 1974, I con;t care to stare at it for 10 minuets every time I insert the DVD. And Disney, with your 30 previews before I can play the movie: Kill yourself. Painfully if possible. Fire will do. This is the primary reason I may become a serial killer of marketing people. Fucking brain dead morons, the world would be a better place without them. But, that's just my humble opinion.

  19. Baen Books on Publishers Warned On Ebook Prices · · Score: 1

    Looks like Baen has it right. http://www.baen.com/library/intro.asp

  20. Re:Not sued, but "contacted. on Ask Slashdot: Who Has Been Sued By the RIAA? · · Score: 1

    Like many, I would appear to be a golden catch for the RIAA if they ever came after me.
    1) I have a large collection of MP3 music. Not the largest, but about 1Tb or so of music alone. I also have several external drives full of movies. Enough that I have external drives named "Comedy" "Action" "Documentary" etc...
    2) I will not cooperate with letters or demands. They will have to seize my computer.
    3) Said laptop is encrypted with TrueCrypt to a decent (but not maximum) level. I will not cooperate on the pass phrase. yes, phrase.

    4) and most importantly... I own every song or movie I have. Either ripped from CD/DVD or purchased online legitimately.

    I do run torrents for a variety of things, I am no innocent. Mainly to try a game and see if I want to buy it. If I like it, I go buy it. If not, I don't. Yes, that is piracy by definition, and I accept that. But RIAA/MPAA has no authority on games. All that effort they would spend on getting mys system, breaking in or getting a court to force me to let them in, then identifying the "pirated" content will result in me showing proof of ownership for it ALL, and a counter-suit for harrassment, pshych damages, damage to reputation, trauma on my kids, loss of work, and anything else I can throw at them at prices I get to deem appropriate ($7000 a song sounds reasonable to them, so why not me?) I will assrape them and use sand for lube.
    I have the perfect lawyer in mind. Ruthless, and would eat his way through a bussload of nuns to get to his goal. just the kind of lawyer every person hates, but secretly wants on their side in the courtroom.

  21. Intimidate a 12 year old girl? on School District Sued By ACLU Over Student's Free Speech Rights · · Score: 1

    Not all children are created equal. Attempts by anyone to intimidate my 12 year old girl are met with a stubborn streak comparable to Jason Bourne... She has asthma. Her PE teacher apparently does not believe asthma is a real disease. He told her as much and ordered her to run with the rest of the class. She refused, and when he threatened to have her punished, she pulled out her phone, and while standing there in front of him turned it on (phones required to be off at this school) and called me. Stared him in the eye while she asked me to come take care of this fascist pig. I came to visit with her, principal, and the PE teacher. He was apparently set to intimidate me as well, but as soon as he stepped close to me I asked him politely to step away, as my USMC training and war experiences make me unpredictable when threatened. Mr tall, dark, and pudgy decided to re-think his tactics. I did have to discuss the fascist remark with her. Really, know what a word means before using it in an insult.... He's clearly a despot wannabe. the principal is the fascist. The principal took her out of PE, something she swore was not possible at the beginning of the year, state requirements prohibit it. I took my daughter out to dinner of her choice and we discussed how she was right to stand up against an authority figure in the wrong. Pride flowed from me in copious amounts.

  22. Re:A Matter of Perception on Human Rights Groups Push To Save Condemned Programmer In Iran · · Score: 1

    The difference between Christianity and Islam: Islam has been more successful in controlling the law of the land. Had Christianity succeeded in many of it's attempts at making the law (or succeeded longer-see Puritan law) then they would be no different. ANY religion, given the reigns of power, inevitably steers toward totalitarian control and intolerance of any but their own. And, usually, strained tolerance of their own.

  23. Re:what does waiting have to do with anything? on Heartland Institute Threatens To Sue Anyone Who Comments On Leaked Documents · · Score: 1

    If their position is that the document in question is a forgery that never existed... what are you going to subpoena? You: "I demand the original document!" Them: "Take that up with whoever created it." Judge: "They can't produce what did not exist. Since their check cleared, overruled."

  24. Re:My comments on these documents: on Heartland Institute Threatens To Sue Anyone Who Comments On Leaked Documents · · Score: 1

    Look up SLAPP and the various laws against it. It's already illegal... it just doesn't phase them.

  25. The raging ironoy of it all on Heartland Institute Threatens To Sue Anyone Who Comments On Leaked Documents · · Score: 1

    I find it highly amusing that people are questioning the data based on minor irrelevant circumstantial data when the subject is an organization that makes sweeping generalizations denying proof based on minor irrelevant circumstantial data.