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Comment Price gouging? YOU should have been prepared. (Score 3, Interesting) 303

So you never bothered with DDoS prevention services for what is apparently a critical company web site, which would allow the provider to work pro-actively on protecting your assets. Then when your assets come under attack you expect your provider will just drop everything and tend to your immediate emergency without additional costs? Sounds like car insurance after the accident, or health insurance after you develop cancer.

It's 2012. DDoS are a real and credible threat today. 10 years ago, perhaps a passing thing, but today... do you not read the news?

Stipulating that your lack of preparedness is not your fault and over-sight, I want to address RackSpace's mitigation fees and perhaps defend your position at least a little. Being that it is 2012 and DDoS are a real and credible threat, depending on the costs of such protection, perhaps RackSpace (or another provider, free market thingie and all) could provide these mitigation services as standard for a bumped-up cost. Perhaps 400% mark-up is a little steep for immediate service when 200-300% might cover the costs of getting someone involved.

Nonetheless, my inclination is to side with RackSpace. When you work proactively, your provider can have technology in place and ready to go so that a DDoS doesn't affect you. But calling in when it's going on: first off, they have to deal with the increase in bandwidth, the abuse of the server, virtual service, or multi-hosted box you occupy and hence affects on other customers, getting someone or a team of someones involved to start the mitigation process and move your incoming traffic to the systems which perform this protection, amongst other issues.

No, you need to bite the bullet on this one and count it as a learning experience. And call your local and/or state authorities and start an investigation, since your costs will most likely be well over the threshold of damages necessary to start such an investigation.

Comment "Constitutional separation of church and state..." (Score 2) 1152

Can't find that in my copies of the Constitution. Just that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. Black was very much anti-Catholic and disrespectfully invoked Jefferson for his ruling.

http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2006/06/the-mythical-wall-of-separation-how-a-misused-metaphor-changed-church-state-law-policy-and-discourse

Comment Re:Makes good points (Score 1, Informative) 866

It's not necessarily about "useful" information, but more about turning enough basic information into knowledge and thinking skills for the child to elicit an interest in the subject or thought process at hand. My high school physics class was enormous fun an I learned quite a bit which laid a foundation for my college physics classes. Not that high school prepared me to pass a college physics test, but rather gave me some underlying principles to which I could refer in class with an, "oh yeah, I remember how this works" notion.

Same with chemistry to chemistry, Earth science to atmosphere and geology, social studies to Western civilization, and so on. High school offers a number of electives which may more interest students and put them on a path toward their college degree. But then again, I know of a large number of students, myself included, whose major wound up not reflecting their high school elective curriculum because we changed our minds or found we were more interested in one subject and less in another than we originally thought.

I wanted to be a fireman. Then a train engineer. Then I thought I'd do computer programming. Even though all of those are great interests of mine (I like to write programs that set trains on fire,) I am instead a criminologist who finds that those boring Western civilization and similar classes had some useful information for me. Oh, as did chemistry and physics for the investigative aspect.

I didn't excel at all of my classes, even the ones I found interesting. Sometimes I excelled at classes I didn't like. In any case, at the end of the day I remember a ton of stuff to which I have been exposed and it makes me a more rounded person with better heuristic and critical thinking abilities. Or, if you prefer, I already possessed these innate abilities and the material to which I was exposed helped to better develop them. Much like playing sports did not for me but did for others.

Had I only taken classes in subjects which interested me, there's a likelihood that I wouldn't be where I am today. I feel pretty lucky as I know several older adults who are only now getting exposed to materials in which they truly excel versus a previous career in which they had moderate interests and lack-luster productivity as a result. (I must also admit a tinge of jealousy toward some of the electives offered to kids in high school today: SharePoint administration and design, Cisco networking, network administration, network security, CSS in web design, database management, and the like. Some of these kids graduate high school ready to pass CCNA and MCSE exams.)

As much as our public school system is being shredded by pervasive bureaucracy and unending political intrusion, it still is one of the best venues for a wide-breadth of exposure to subjects and at least semi-competent people to foster learning of those subjects.

The author addresses a number of my points above, rather dismisses them off-hand with exaggerated examples, with the end result of turning high school into "speed dating" for education. High school is four years, grades nine through 12, with each year offering six to seven classes depending upon the school, for a total of 24 to 28 classes. If you consider a baseline each year of a science, English (reading and writing,) and math, that leaves 12 to 16 classes available. These classes may then be used for self-discovery and other requirements, such as two years of a second language, two years of social studies, two years of civics and history, etc. Not to mention the availability of "dual enrollment" allowing advanced students to enroll in college classes while still in high school.

He speaks of "opportunity costs" of one choice over another, but at the same time fails to address what may lead to those decisions. In his example of selling tomatoes versus cucumbers, consider if said grocer chose to only learn about and ultimately sell tomatoes because he was attracted to the red color, dismissing the opportunity to learn about cucumbers. If said grocer was exposed to all manner of vegetable during his coming of age, he may well have learned to overcome the surface attractiveness of tomatoes and instead chosen cucumbers.

To his specific abhorrence for chemistry: Sure, I don't know off the top of my head how many elements are in the periodic table (I remember around 108 when I was in school and I am certain there are more today) but thanks to chemistry I know that some metals are poisonous, some gases are inert while others are reactive, some gases are deadly and can be given off by innocently mixing cleaning products, that oxygen is required for fire, amongst other things. Can I balance a dual-substitution reaction or do so in my daily life? Certainly not readily, but that does not make the overall course any less valuable to me.

To his apparent admiration of vast stores of information on the Internet, having a reference around is great and handy, but knowing where to find information is no replacement for having knowledge immediately on-hand. Looking up how many elements are in the period chart on Google is a great thing for trivial information, but knowing what it means and how to use that information is knowledge.

This notwithstanding, many students during high school are still learning about themselves and unable to make a number of decisions which will have long-term effect. The more we as parents and educators abdicate our responsibility to parent and educate, and instead attribute long-term decisions which are above the level of experience, knowledge, and maturity of our children, the more we open them and our society up to failure rather than success. Eliminating a base-line of educational requirements and basic skills is the foundation of a societal monoculture which births little to no innovation nor progress.

Comment What about... (Score 2) 897

Would anyone have cared if the token was 0xB16BA115? I've heard (and I've done it myself) people refer to well-spec'd out machines as "ballsy." Not exactly professional, but a recognized colloquialism none-the-less.

Maybe it's just time for some people to grow up and not be so offended by little things. Save your outrage for the big stuff.

Comment Re:Non-Tokyo drift (Score 1) 230

Notice I said "hardware." I don't have that level access to all of the hardware I run without "rooting" or otherwise hacking the firmware. My Solaris boxes are one thing, and Windows handles time-skew fairly well. But it's "black box" hardware which is different. None my WAPs or routers crashed over the weekend.

Comment Re:ex-Amiga fan (Score 1) 202

You'll probably get a few different answers, but IMO if you want to experience the Amiga gaming platform on a real Amiga machine, you'll want to start with an Amiga 1200. It's AGA (the last generation Amiga video chipset,) 2MB Chip RAM, hard drive capable, and a PCMCIA port. There are a fair number of AGA games which will run on this setup stock. Pair it with an inexpensive 68030 accelerator and you can play older games which require the older chipsets using WHDLoad (http://whdload.de). As well, you can install a CF card on-the-cheap and have a low-power, low-noise hard drive-like system with PLENTY of storage space. (http://alan2.rateliff.us/a1200flash). Mind you, vendors like AmigaKit (http://amigakit.com) have all-in-one packages ready to go.

I encourage you to check out the various Amiga forums, starting with Amiga.org (http://amiga.org) and the English Amiga Board (http://eab.abime.net).

Good luck and welcome aboard!

Comment Re:ex-Amiga fan (Score 2) 202

I'm running USB2 in my 4000D with OS3.9. With this, I have a multi-card reader, 10/100 Ethernet adapter, and wireless keyboard and mouse. It can also handle USB wireless adapters and I connect USB flash drives and hard drives frequently. Not bad for a dead system. And, yes, it's a hobby and it's fun. I can't explain it any more than anyone can explain why it's fun to tinker with old cars, planes, stamps, etc.

Comment Re:Good riddance (Score 3, Interesting) 53

Working for a home-builder using Motorola iDEN phones was a blast. Like OP, we played with the data in the field quite a bit, and ISTR it did require a DUN connection to work but it was rock-solid. Sprint screwed up our billing so badly after taking over Nextel that we wound up with two accounts -- one Nextel and one Sprint -- no longer with shared minutes or services even though we were promised that everything would remain under one account. The situation was so frustrating that the operations manager asked me to work on the issue. I wound up having several meetings with various carrier business sales teams, including the regional Sprint/Nextel reps who promised that within "a few more months" everything Sprint and Nextel would be fully combined, including plans and billing. I ended the Sprint/Nextel meeting within a few minutes and kicked them out of the office (diplomatically, of course) as I had told them we wanted to move to Exchange-compatible phones (ActiveSync) NOT BlackBerry (my exact words before the meeting were "If you come with just Blackberries, don't come at all") and they showed up with nothing but BlackBerry and another promise that we'd be able to get non-BlackBerry phones within "a few more months." (None of their promises ever amounted to anything for us.)

We couldn't wait "a few more months" so we moved people who didn't need PTT over to AT&T and just kept the Nextel service for builders in the field and their in-office managers who used the hell out of PTT. Within the year following that move we brought the builders over as well as our new building management system required Palms, while Sprint/Nextel continued to make promises of "a few more months."

The short, Sprint bungled the whole thing with Nextel so badly that we halved our account with them within four months (about 180 phones) then were completely moved off within 18 months. I have a similar story about Alltel and Verizon, but I'll save that for a "bad Verizon" story.

Comment Re:That'll go well. (Score 1) 322

Also . . . I can get EVERYTHING via my iPhone, as long as it doesn't use flash. This isn't 2001, when phones required customized web-content to display it properly. This is just a giant hand-out -- to some buddy, no doubt. Bush had Haliburton to hand sweet deals to and Obama has... whoever.

I recall that the EBS is to be retired from TV and radio, which are ubiquitous technologies, to cell phone communications, which are not. If that does happen then cell phones will become a safety necessity and more phones will have to be given out (subsidized.) More than likely, these won't be Android phones or iPhones but rather feature phones (which still exist in 2012 and still hold a large part of the market) which do not have full browsers built-in. To accommodate those phones and provide essential gubment services to the masses, the websites will have to offer mobile versions.

Then the masses will have quick access to features such as flag@whitehouse.gov and so on.

Comment No love for DSL or 3/4G? (Score 1) 648

That's fine. I have no love for cable TV or Internet service, let alone ComCast. I haven't had cable services for almost a half-decade and I don't miss them a bit. If Hulu adopts this measure I will just stop consuming content altogether, since Hulu is my exclusive source.

Hey, content-producer-tards! And especially ComCrap! You want people to pirate your shows and movies, you keep losing money and make more and more people hate you because of your carpet-bomb infringement lawsuits? Keep this shit up.

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