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Comment Re:Taxpayers Pay For and Own The School (Score 1) 1010

To haters over this comment, you should understand there are reasonable and unreasonable expectations of service here. Water fountains, toilets, toilet paper, soap, paper towels, hand dryers, etc are public useable in schools so long as the person using them has a legitimate reason to be at the school. They won't yell if you plug in your phone where I'm from, I doubt they'd care about a car.

Don't bring private property such as your/my house into this debate - it doesn't belong here, as a school is PUBLIC PROPERTY. Different rules apply.

Stealing a school bus or breaking into the school to hold your own function without permission/paying for the space rental is one thing, but using the utilities there when you're there for whatever legitimate reason is fine.

I see people use the playgrounds all the time during the off hours - should we arrest them for depreciating and breaking down public property? This police state crap is awful.

Submission + - The Second OS Hiding in Every Mobile Phone (osnews.com)

ilikenwf writes: While any given phone can be running a number of OSes, many if not all of them have RTOS firmware made by one of two manufacturers. The RTOS in both Qualcomm and Infinieon chips have been found to implicitly trust all commands they receive over the air. There are numerous potential exploits, including remote code execution with a 73 byte message. Considering law enforcement and hackers alike can spoof cell towers, there is a potential disaster.

Comment Do Not Want (Score 1) 115

I'm a power user and while I use google products, I certainly don't trust them. That said, I understand planned obsolescence, but I really just want to see some ARM systems put out that are comparable to modern x86 machines in terms of specs.

If anything this should have an HD display, 4-8 core processor, and 8GB ram for me to even care about it.

Likewise, on the non-mobile front, I wish Cubie and these other manufacturers would produce something that'd fit in a standard case, accept standard RAM modules up to 32 or 64gb, not have limitations on the gigabit ethernet controller, and have more than one SATA port. I want a real computer, only with the ARM architecture and power savings.

I nag the manufacturers and they just brush it off.

Comment Why? $200 = Better Atom Board+RAM on Newegg (Score 5, Interesting) 84

If I wanted a freaking atom board, I'd buy one for $100 and load it up with another $100 worth of RAM.

I'm going to keep complaining about the fact that there's not a low power, low cost ARM platform out there ($200 or less) with hardware SATA RAID support. While the cubieboard is the best ATM and supports port multipliers, it's really too bad that the thing can't use both devices attached to the multiplier at the same time. All I want is a hybrid NAS and home server that has 2-4 cores and 2-4gb RAM. Size isn't really a factor but power usage is...

Anyone know of a platform I've not looked at?

Comment Contribute it To Mainline (Score 2) 510

Whatever improvements they make will hopefully be sent as patches and pull requests to the open source projects they're likley building upon...I don't want to run a commercially run distro, or at least one that's more restrictive like Ubuntu, etc....

I run Arch for a reason.

Comment Tiny ARM Asic Chips (Score 1) 128

Such as the ones used in the wifi SDCards by Transcend and PQI SD cards.

Imagine a bunch of tiny cheap linux boxes to act as meshes, dead drops, micro servers, etc...and imagine how long they'd run on a battery, or even a battery with solar!

https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=45820
http://www.keyasic.com/keyasic_sub.php?type=information&inid=24
http://hackaday.com/2013/09/19/advanced-transcend-wifi-sd-hacking-custom-kernels-x-and-firefox/

Submission + - Former Lockeed Martin Skunworks Engineer Selling Prototype "Spy Rock" on eBay (ebay.com)

ilikenwf writes: For a cool $10,000,000.00, the prototype of a surveillance rock full of spy gadgets could be yours! More importantly, server backups from the gentleman's time at Lockheed are included, being the real valuable in this auction, as it contains schematics and such. The seller seems to think that the current xBee radio products are actually based on his work with Lockeed. The proceeds will go towards legal action the seller is apparently taking against his former employer.

Comment Re:This is A Distraction From the NSA Scandal (Score 1) 491

The journalists and wikileaks do not have the responsibility in respect to Manning's freedom, though. Seeing as he was personally invested in this effort to blow a whistle, even though it could potentially jail him for life, he should have gone through and cleaned the documents as best he could in an attempt to keep himself from being blamed for ...well, the things he is now going to jail for. I feel he's imprisoned more because he was sloppy, and because of the repercussions of his actions, and less because of "treason" as he wasn't attempting to aid enemies.

Comment Re:This is A Distraction From the NSA Scandal (Score 0) 491

The US entered the Vietnam war under false pretenses - the bombing at the Gulf of Tonkin of the USS Maddox was likely not all it appeared to be, if it happened at all. Just like Afghanistan and Egypt in the past and now, the US had no real business being in there - we only went to war in Vietnam to make Lyndon Johnson look tough and get him reelected.

Regarding the sentencing - the judge decides when to release that, being a fed, he likely has been colluded with to shape the news landscape.

I'm not insulting - I'm a twentysomething hacker type myself. I didn't say all of us were that way, but MANY of us are, and those are the ones who will blindly follow Assange or Anonymous all the way over the cliff.

Submission + - NSA Confirmed to Monitor 75% of Domestic Internet Traffic, Store Domestic Emails (nbcnews.com)

ilikenwf writes: Today it has been confirmed that the NSA, contrary to their own word, has the capability to monitor 75% of domestic internet traffic, and stores all domestic emails. So much for their cyber spying programs being limited to suspects and foreign nationals — does this mean they consider every U.S. citizen a criminal? Heap in the fact they're working on a real time facial recognition system to use live with security camera feeds, and you have a situation that makes George Orwell spin in his grave.

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