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Software

Journal Journal: Legally Download of Commercial Ware

In the age of MAFIAA accusing people of pirating software, I want to report that there are still chances for people to legally downloading commercial softwares

From time to time, commercial software vendors does offer special incentives.

Oh no, don't get me wrong. I do not work for commercial software vendors and I do not endorse their software. I merely want to point out that there are still places, at times, that you can download the commercial software perfectly legal.

Like below:

http://www.daz3d.com/i/0/0/-/

Note to Slashdot editors: If what I did above is wrong, please remove this journal, thank you !

Bug

Journal Journal: I found a bug ! 1

Apology to the Slashdot editors, I do not know where to file a bug report, but I need to tell you guys that I've found a bug in Slashdot

I think it could be a database bug

Here's how I found the bug

On this Slashdot story - http://apple.slashdot.org/story/12/02/15/0036242/unauthorized-ios-apps-leak-private-data-less-than-approved-ones - I posted a comment ( http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2671805&cid=39041681 )

When I am on Slashdot without logging into my Slashdot "Taco Cowboy" account, I can see my comment, and the replies to my comment, among the list of comments to the Slashdot story above

However, if I log into my Slashdot "Taco Cowboy" account, my comment, along with the other comments under it, are gone !

I can duplicate this on the following browsers: Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari, Microsoft IE, Google Chrome, K-Meleon

BTW, this has happened not only to the above Slashdot stories.

I have found that this phenomena happen whenever my comments got modded up.

If my comment had not been modded up, then I can see my comment among the other comments without any problem

User Journal

Journal Journal: The changing landscape of Slashdot 1

Writing this journal only makes me feel very old, but then, what I have to do, I have to do

Back when Internet was still sparking new, we old-timers didn't exactly have a lot of "places of interest" to go, but fortunately for us, even then we had some marvelous places to hang-out, Slashdot was one of those

The first time I visited Slashdot was on its 2nd day of existence - I read about Slashdot in a day-old article on another site - and I registered for this account couple of weeks later

The reason I did not register on Slashdot then and there on my first visit because, at that time, I had yet to have an email address - I didn't even have an Internet access account at that time ( Long stale story, but the short version was, the country I was residing back then just only introduced dial-up service to the Internet and it took weeks - even months - for the authority to process our applications )

Don't get me wrong, I am not stressing my "seniority" on Slashdot or anything just because I have a 4-digit UID - and as I mentioned in the beginning of this journal, talking about this only makes me feel old, very very old ( relatively, in Internet time frame, of course )

Back then, Slashdot was filled with vigor. Geeks from all places came and share information just like the geeks are doing today, but with a marked difference - most of those "ancient Geeks" were open-minded and being very acceptance and very seldom they would criticize others for being "different", unlike many Slashdot visitors today

Most of us who flocked to Slashdot back then also frequented the many usenet newsgroups - if not because of the uncontrollable spam in the usenet newsgroups many would have still stay there - and in Slashdot, we carried on our conversations we had in the Usenet newsgroups, but time took its toll

Of course, there were jerks, even back then, but they are few and far between. Today, however, the jerk-index seemed to have risen quite a bit - from insensitive racist comments to those who come with the "I know everything bow down to me now" attitude

I can't speak for all the old-timers, I know, but generally speaking, most of us old-timers know that we do not know enough. That is why we still ask question and we are not shy to let others know that we don't know

Not the young-ones, however.

To them, asking questions is like exposing your own weaknesses to the world.

What is wrong with asking question? Even when the question is very basic - like the one I asked in this thread ( http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2655637&cid=38940481 ) - the main point is still that I did not know the answer that was why I asked the question.

Another incident that brings about this Journal is this --- http://yro.slashdot.org/story/10/05/17/1235204/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-has-passport-confiscated

I read about what happened to Julian Assange, I sensed something was about to happen, I submitted the article, CmdrTaco, aka Rob Malta approved it, and we had this kind of response --- http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1654714&cid=32236268

Perhaps the incident on passport confiscation of Julian Assange was a complete non-story, but perhaps it wasn't. No matter how you look at that incident, the passport thing was the prelude of what was to come.

It's the mindset of the newcomers that Slashdot is attracting today that has changed Slashdot. I don't know if it's for the good or for the bad, suffice to say that Slashdot of today no longer feels like the Slashdot that I first visited, not that long ago

Do I feel sad? Nope. I just feel different

I can't speak for CmdrTaco either, maybe he left Slashdot for the same reason - that the Slashdot he created is no longer the Slashdot he envisoned

Chrome

Journal Journal: Journal: Unscientific testing of browsers 1

Yesterday I did a totally unscientific test on several Window-based browsers.

I came across a page ( http://pastehtml.com/view/bmp0uzp8a.html ) set up by some Ukrainian hackers asking ppl to ddos some Ukrainian government websites in protest of the dns deletion of a Ukrainian file sharing site, or something like that

I used an old Pentium Duo-Core machine, with 4GB of RAM, running WinXP SP3 to test the following browsers:

Google Chrome
Apple Safari
Mozilla Firefox
Opera
Internet Explorer
K-Meleon

Before I ran the test I updated all the above browsers to the latest official version - for IE, I used version 8, which is the last version that XP can run.

For each browser I only ran one tab, with the above page on it, and nothing else.

Before I clicked on the button I used Process Hacker ( http://processhacker.sourceforge.net/ ) to set all the browsers to Realtime Priority â" and for Google Chrome I set all 3 instances of Google Chrome to "Realtime"

Here are the totally unofficial results so far:

Internet Explorer did not permit me to access the page. It told me that that page is dangerous or something.

Opera ran in slow motion. It updated the count once every 20 to 30 seconds, or so

Safari ran slower than Opera, and in about 8 hours Safari froze up.

K-Meleon ran smoothly at first, almost as fast as Mozilla Firefox, but slowed down significantly after 20 hours.

The fastest of the bunch is Mozilla Firefox, about twice the speed of Google Chrome, which came second.

In fact, Mozilla Firefox runs the page so effortlessly that I opened up 3 tabs all running the same thing, they still ran without any hiccup.

Finally, the memory usage, which I checked with Process Hacker -

For Google Chrome, the 3 instances occupied 135 MB of RAM, 80 MB of RAM and 64 MB of RAM respectively.

Mozilla Firefox has only one instance in memory and it used 156 MB of RAM.

User Journal

Journal Journal: What happens to those processors? 1

Server farms and data centers routinely upgrade their servers. But unlike us, their mostly upgrade their processors instead of the whole system.

Hundreds of thousands of perfectly working processors are being replaced by newer version and faster processors every year.

I wonder what happen to those processors?

It would be wonderful if those replaced processors can be re-used instead of just thrown into the landfills.

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