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Comment Re:No "unforced error" whatsoever (Score 1) 50

This is VERY different from the Solar Winds

Actually it is not, FireEye is a Solar Winds customer and they are the ones that discovered the malware that was implanted in the Solar Winds Orion product when investigating this breach.

It turns out that Solar Winds was compromised and the malware implanted in the Orion product back in 2019. So all the customers using Orion product were vulnerable to a supply chain attack when they installed subsequent patches from Solar Winds.

What would be interesting to know is how Solar Winds missed the trojaned DLL in their product for so long.

Comment Re:Terraforming is Premature (Score 0) 228

But an elevator on the Moon should be much simpler.

Actually due to the low rotation rate of the moon (tidally locked), a space elevator on the moon as some have proposed for earth and mars would be impossible. To have the center of mass at a geocentric point in space the elevator would hit the earth.

However with no atmosphere to contend with, you could consider a railgun type launching system for non fragile cargo.

Comment Re:Pay Scales (Score 1) 149

Actually, Vice Admiral is an O-9. Based on his bio, he has over 34 years of service, so base pay alone is $16.4K/month. Probably lives in base housing, so with BAS and sub pay it totals close to $17K/month.

If found guilty in the investigation, he will probably be retired at a lower rank. In addition to whatever civilian penalties are incurred. Assuming that there are no instances of military misconduct found, otherwise all bets are off.

Comment Re:Destabilization (Score 5, Interesting) 191

That's what I was thinking. They claim that a Google win would devastate the industry, I claim an Oracle win would do the same. Do they have any idea how much of the world's technology is built on common API's? Their own included?

Couldn't agree more. Wouldn't be ironic if MS' support for Oracle helps them win the appeal. Then Oracle turns around and sues MS by claiming the original .NET implementation violated the Java API copyright.

The only way Oracle should deserve to win this copyright case is if they had shown Google copied large parts of the actual Java implementation into their software. The API claim they are making is almost as bad as a musician claiming copyright over all songs written in the key of C.

Comment Re:further reason for a popular vote (Score 5, Insightful) 642

That one favors the GOP so it's evil. No really, the wonkish left has been in a panic recently over a proposal to do just that in a few of the swing states (Pennsylvania and Ohio, I think).

Actually the reason it favors the GOP is that the proposal is just to do it in states that went Democratic that happen to have Republican governors. The Republicans certainly weren't proposing splitting up the electoral vote in Texas, Georgia, and North Carolina. Just the states they lost.

Then you tie in the rampant gerrymandering that passes for redistricting these days, there would only be a few places worth campaigning.

Comment Insurance (Score 5, Informative) 249

As someone who has moved overseas and back four times; you are worried about the trivial details. Take a good hard look at the shipping contract concerning damage coverage. The contract may also prohibit certain hazardous materials like lead acid batteries and cleaning products.

Have your property packed out by a company experienced in shipping belongings overseas. No amount of silica packages will protect your stuff if the container is lost at sea or gets sea water inside.

Document the condition of your belongings before they are packed up. Also make backups of important data and papers and keep them separate from your shipment. So that in the event that the worst happens, it's just a matter of getting reimbursed for damages and buying replacements. While that can be time consuming and annoying, it is better than losing irreplaceable photos or legal records.

Good luck and enjoy your new country.

Comment Re:It's well deserved. (Score 2) 296

Why is it that it's always company intranets that break with new browsers?

Because company intranets/portals contain lots of links to third party apps and are limited by what those vendors support. When you have major software companies like SAP which have products that only added IE 9 support in major upgrades provided in the last two months, it is no surprise that lots of corporations aren't on the leading edge of supported browsers. Support for Chrome or recent Firefox (including extended support release 10) is virtually non-existent among lots of enterprise software, so those aren't options either.

Comment Re:Eco fraud (Score 1) 1181

Just a quick application of logic shows this to be a straw-man argument. The depth of some ice deposits has absolutely no relationship to the volume of ice overall, or when it was deposited.

Not sure why I'm debating with someone who just makes claims without any facts, but here is some more information for you to consider.

Average Ice Depth In Antarctica
Basically, Antarctica is a snow and ice "factory" with ice depths on the Polar Plateau reaching 15,000 feet (the continent's average ice thickness is 7,000 feet). Thus, one of Antarctica's most important resources is its ice. It is said that Antarctica's ice accounts for 70% of the world's fresh water.

Now when you consider that Antarctica is essentially a desert that only averages two inches of snow a year, think about how long it takes to build up 7000 feet of ice.

Comment Re:Eco fraud (Score 1) 1181

Most of the antarctic and arctic ice is recent ice as in less than 10,000 years old.

Where did you get that idea from?

Just a quick search finds obvious differences from that concept:
Ice cores:
The length of the record depends on the depth of the ice core and varies from a few years up to 800 kyr (800,000 years) for the EPICA core.

Lake Vostok:
Lake Vostok is the largest of more than 140 sub-glacial lakes and was recently drilled into by Russian scientists. The overlying ice provides a continuous paleoclimatic record of 400,000 years, although the lake water itself may have been isolated for 15[3][4] to 25 million years.[5]

Now Arctic Ice (as in the Arctic Ocean), is sea ice, so yes it is relatively young. But please get a better set of sources before you try to pass stuff off as facts.

Comment Re:Ron Paul (Score 2, Insightful) 565

Feingold was part of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform act, which I would say makes him a limiter of free speech.

I would argue that you are falling into the same mistake the Supreme Court has made repeatedly, equating money with free speech. Money is not speech, money is power. Misuse of this monetary power is what has seriously corrupted the US political process.

While McCain-Feingold may not have been perfect, it was a step in the right direction to limit the influence of money on the US political system. It is one of the great ironies in that international election observers would consider the US campaign contribution system highly corrupt if it were replicated in any election they were monitoring.

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