Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Data Breach (Score 1) 385

I can see your point, but that is the way the warranty tends to work. In other news, any software I've ever seen which actually comes with a warranty always covers only the cost of the software not the damage it failing might cost you.

We pay a small extra charge on the Dell kit we buy to be able to keep any failed HDD rather than return it if a drive is replaced under warranty. We have the old ones destroyed on site using one of these: http://www.edrsolutions.com/europe/solution.asp

Really, the cost of HDDs (even with post Thailand flood increases) is as nothing to the value of data on them.

On my home machines I don't bother. The bulk of MY storage for photographs, video, music, etc is hardly top secret and the relatively small proportion with my financial records etc are stored on an encrypted partition.

Comment Re:I'm not changing to IPv6 on a specific date... (Score 1) 463

See companies like Hurricane Electric, a large part of their current success has been IPv6 support. That story alone shows that it really is possible to make more money because you do support v6 while others don't. Now soon, customers will soon start to run away if you don't have v6. That day might well be the next 6th of June!

My personal hope is that after switching on IPv6 for google.com, Google then announce that as of a date a few months in the future sites which are available via v6 in addition to v4 would get a boost in search ranking. It would only take a small boost in Google juice to spur adoption and ensure that web hosting outfits provided IPv6 pretty quickly to avoid losing custom. Once the vast majority of the services are available on IPv6, v6 on the client becomes much easier.

Comment Re:i'll do my own tests (Score 1) 297

I don't do much to manage them; it's more due to neglect than anything else.

They were in about eight browser windows spread across 2 displays and several virtual workspaces, on a work machine. It has ample RAM for development and running VMs so space wasn't an issue. The tabs were the usual mixture of issue tracker tickets, related wiki pages, google searches, relevant mail-list posts or blog pages, and things to read "when I have a spare minute". I just opened tabs far more often than I sorted through or closed them, and after a few months they'd collected.

Finding tabs wasn't particularly hard, thanks mostly to the fact that the so called "awsome bar" autocompletes on open tabs (in fact with the % shortcut it completes against just open tabs). Performance didn't seem particularly poor either. Maybe slightly less snappy, but not noticeably so.

I only realised how many tabs I had when an add-on started leaking memory in large amounts. While tracing down what was causing the leak, I was copying the info from about:memory and using the "copy tab URLs" extension to export lists of what was open. I was rather surprised, but very impressed with firefox, when I ran it through wc. Though I did then spent a whole afternoon reading/closing/bookmarking until I brought the count down to double figures.

I have seen some discussion by firefox devs on blurring the line between tabs and history. Once the (already planned functionality) to evict non-recently-used tabs from memory is in place, the distinction between tabs and history item becomes mostly a matter of UI anyway. I think that rather fits my disorganised browser usage.

Comment Re:i'll do my own tests (Score 1) 297

I've been running recent firefoxen on 64 bit Ubuntu with over 340 open tabs. It used over 1.5Gb RAM, but that seemed reasonable in the circumstances. Chromium failed entirely with a fraction of the tabs.

On the other hand, I did find a firefox extension a couple of months ago which managed to leak over 1Gb/day (I'm afraid I can't which it was).

Comment Re:LibreOffice? (Score 2) 129

The tragedy is not that no-one is using OpenOffice, it's that millions of Windows and Mac users who downloaded it directly from the OOo website still are.

The Linux users are fine, their distros will either transition them to LibreOffice or provide security patches to OpenOffice, but the vast majority of OOo users were not slashdot readers who follow the twists and turns of OpenSource politics, they're people who don't know that Oracle bought Sun (nor care about such details); they just downloaded a free office suite. They are not getting any security updates, even as vulnerabilities are fixed in LibreOffice. They are not even getting any good information that they're being given a vulnerable, unsupported product. The OpenOffice website still has all the same download links, and the same security information, including a Security Bulletin with no mention of vulnerabilities beyond 2010.

I really think Apache and any ASF members should be ashamed. Whatever you think of having separate code-bases and a whole new incubator project, treating OOo users like this (especially when a maintained fork exists) is awful and detrimental to the standing of OSS in general.

Comment Re:In short (Score 1) 219

No, no, no -- it's most definitely not java. Google are being sued by Oracle over their use of Java in Android, don't you know. Any new language from Google is not java, not at all. Any superficial similarity you think you see is a mistake, so don't you go mentioning it Larry Ellison.

Comment Re:A few... (Score 1) 314

A couple of more recent examples, now in wide use:

* LLVM (University of Illinois)
* Xen hypervisor (University of Cambridge)

In general, if a University project becomes widely used it will either have been spun off into a commercial operation or become an open source project which gains outside contributors.

Hardware

Is ARM Ever Coming To the Desktop? 332

First time accepted submitter bingbangboom writes "Where are the ARM powered desktops? I finally see some desktop models however they are relegated to "developer" models with USD200+ price tags (trimslice, etc). Raspberry Pi seems to be the only thing that will be priced correctly, have the right amount of features, and may actually be released. Is the software side holding ARM desktops back? Everyone seems to be foaming at the mouth about anything with a touch interface, even on the Linux side. Or are manufacturers not wanting to bring the 'netbook effect' to their desktop sales? Are ARM powered desktops destined to join the mythical smartbook?"

Comment Re:programming (Score 1) 194

I saw one playing back full screen H.264 just this afternoon, and if not full games the GPU can certainly handle quake 3. Apparently the broadcom chip it's based around was targeted at set top boxes so it certainly pays back video.

Of course this means that more than $1 of its $25 price goes on H.264 and AAC licenses. Whether that's appropriate is a separate discussion...

Comment Re:Not to be insensitive or pedantic... (Score 1) 71

Now I've never been to Arkansas, but I believe it is some way from the UK -- the subject of the original article. Here in Britain we elected (well more we ended up with, since we didn't give any party a majority) a coalition government which promised significant budget cuts to limit the deficit (I think you know about these arguments).

One of the ways they promised to square the circle of a population that didn't like budget deficits, but neither cares for the removal of services, was to promise that there are services which can be delivered more cheaply by moving online. This then leaves them open to attack about those households who are not online, and the rural areas where there is little provision.

Now none of our country is as sparsely populated as the rural midwest, so the problem's not so hard as in the US, but the £400m that they have promised to spend on rural broadband still won't go very far. Depending on your political point of view, you can see this as welcome deregulation which will allow private sector innovation to step in and solve the problem, or a political fig leaf which won't make any real difference but gives the current government the chance to say they're doing stuff.

Comment Re:There are always tradeoffs (Score 1) 141

Imagine that you are visiting slashdot, wouldn't it be better to use SSL than en-clair if the site supports it? Wouldn't it be better to have encryption with a duff cert than no encryption at all?

Why do you think it would be better to use SSL with a 'duff' cert than an unencrypted transport? What does it protect against, most of those in a position to read your traffic would be in a position to mount a MITM attack?

Comment Re:Rapid Release - a Tradeoff (Score 1) 415

Maybe it was too pessimistic a view. I certainly wasn't suggesting that Firefox should be preserved in aspic. I'm glad to see the progress: features such as canvas and usable typography are revolutionising web sites. I can see that in a year or so's time there might be all the features to replace flash. I want that progress; I just don't see the need to have 10 releases to get there rather than 2.

There's a continuum in release speed between Microsoft in the IE6 days, and Chrome. If Firefox want's to be different from IE and Chrome, I don't think it should be at either extreme.

Comment Re:Rapid Release - a Tradeoff (Score 1) 415

Now, I agree with you 100%, but I don't think its a big enough niche to survive in. It appeals to slashdot readers (and only a subset of them) not the wider world.

I don't think there is no possible niche, just that what you've moved further away from it over the last 6 months as you become more Chrome-like than Chrome (and it's possible it's now too late to change course).

In one of my work roles I develop web apps and for many years Firefox was our recommended browser. It's cross platform, with good standards compliance etc. Chrome, when it came along, we didn't recommend; it seemed too much of a moving target. It was pretty standards compliant so likely everything would work; we'd collect bug reports and aim to fix them if possible, but not offer user support or claim it was tested. Now FF has made the decision to go with continuous roll out of new versions, it makes it hard for us to test and valid. And what's the point if by the time it's in users hands that version is obsolete. Once our tools are in use, just getting the funding agreement to make updates would typically take longer than a Firefox cycle. Now, as you remove version numbers from the users, even getting them to report issues to us becomes more complicated. You've become harder to support than Chrome. You've gone from the recommended option to below Chrome.

We're not alone. My bank roles out changes to their site a couple of times a year. Currently FF 3.6 is what they claim to support. I wonder what they're going to do. I do actually appreciate the fact that they're cautious about updates and have testing and validation, no doubt slowed down by management and oversight, before they release changes.

Not everyone appreciates change. In fact the majority don't. My partner, my parents, her parents, all use Firefox. They don't do so to get more features, faster and more often. They use it for security, and a trustworthy reputation, and in part to have the same browser on multiple platforms. They don't like change -- when I've been in the room and thing have changed due to upgrades they complain to me as the nearest tech. Asa says websites change without user's permission or knowledge, so why shouldn't browsers. I think that's a spectacularly bad argument since people around me don't like it when google or facebook make changes to their interfaces either. Users are totally unempowered to prevent changes to public web services at the whim of large corporations, that's no argument for taking it from them in their browser.

What I read in the mozilla blog is all "Drive the Web Forward", "faster and easier". What many want is something they can trust to be there nice and stable. I think that ties well with Mozilla's open aims, more than continual upgrades, more than spending your hard-won trust capital on releases that break users' add-ons.

I guess, I think there was a greater niche to compete as more of a cross platform, open source, extensible and customisable alternative to IE, than as a direct competitor to Chrome. I appreciate that's a bit less coo, but while I take you point about Mozilla being beyond the Silicon Valley bubble, I do think you're overly interested in the tech vanguard and it may well come home to roost.

For now I continue to use Firefox (either beta or aurora), but I foresee a steady decline as Mozilla devs spend the diminishing Google Ad money on their increasingly irrelevant tech interests. On a brighter note, there's a reasonable future for said devs; Firefox will look great on their CV and no doubt the remaining megaCorps left to control the browser market will snap them up. It's us supporters of a free independent browser who'll lose out in the end.

Slashdot Top Deals

God doesn't play dice. -- Albert Einstein

Working...