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Comment Re:Scientific Linux 6 (Score 1) 201

Thanks for that. I've been using CENTOS and been quite happy with it. For what I do, I don't need to be (and will never really be) up to the minute with versions anyway -aside from keeping up with security patches to the extent I can. Are there good reasons, other than speed of the release cycle, to move from CENTOS to SL?

Comment The site has some valueable information. (Score 1) 285

It is useful for me to be able to tell my clients, who generally insist on web sites supporting IE6 and above, as well as Firefox and Safari -- that according MICROSOFT, this is a bad idea.

Further, it is useful in helping me make the case to not have to support IE6; because the site shows only 12% of browsers are IE6 and something like half of those are in China (who my customers aren't generally targeting). In fact, In the USA it is now less than 1% of browsers.

Armed with this cart from Microsoft, I can say to my client "Ok, it's going to cost you 30% more for me to build your web site if I have to support IE6 and it will only help you with something like 1/2 of 1 percent of potential browsers. (BTW: I totally just make up that 30% more number to make the point, but I think that might be a fair place to start if I had to put a number on it).

Comment I was at a live pre-run a couple of weeks ago. (Score 3, Interesting) 293

At IBM "Lotusphere" event, the closing general session was a preview match. It was done as close the the same was as an actual jeopardy show but with contestants picked from a small mini-tournament of attendees, and a comedian as host instead of Alex T.

Having been present at this (and getting my picture taken next to the Watson "icon/screen") and then watching the Nova episode, I can say for sure that the Nova show was a very well done description of what happens; as well as Watson's strengths and weaknesses.

I'm not sure if they'll show it on the live TV show taping, but in the run through we saw, they showed Watson's top 3 picks with a level of confidence on each. It was as interesting to see the second and third choices as it was to see what it actually came up with for an answer.

A couple of things were updated from when they must have taped the Nova show. First, Watson was far more strategic when it came time to place bets than it had been shown on Nova. Second, it was far better at understanding weird language in the categories.

I'm looking forward to the show.

Comment So, let me get this straight... (Score 5, Insightful) 525

RAM is cheap.
High speed uplink is not cheap.
Peering agreements are manipulative, expensive, and sometimes extortionate.

So...

The poorly designed, poorly peered, under allocated back haul links can't handle the traffic that routers want to push through them -- but since RAM is cheap, operators just add RAM to the buffers so that when those back-haul lines slow down for a second the packets can get pushed through.

And we're blaming the buffer for the problem?

Comment Retailers take note: (Score 1) 464

As a CUSTOMER, I strongly prefer a single-queue system. The few stores I know where this is in place feel far more efficient to me at the checkout line than those who do not.

As to the self-checkout lanes; I don't mind them at the grocery store where most of them items fit in bags and the UPC codes are well managed. Where I hate them is places like big-box hardware stores. I once heard an interview with a big wig at Home Depot, where I claimed that the self-check lanes would allow them to put more people on the floor to help customers. It was so much bull that I couldn't believe it he'd said it. There are no more people there and the ones that are are no more helpful. The self check lanes have one purpose - saving money. Less employees means less benefits. A hardware store is the last place (other than a plan nursery I guess) where I'd expect self-service scanners to be at all useful. Also, in a place like that, how hard would be it be to play the "weighs the same as" game? Find a couple of items with similar weights and sizes but vastly different prices, buy one of the cheap ones and take it home. Make self stick on labels with the UPC code of that cheap item. Use the stickers to cover the upc code of the expensive item. Scan, pay, profit. A human cashier would probably catch that.

Comment Damn. It's all downhill for now. (Score 2, Interesting) 177

You start with something small and fast.

Soon you're all about embedding this and that and everything else. Now you're all about bloat.

See, I use foxit. I like foxit. I don't install the embedded reader because I don't like it to be embedded. That's my choice. You may not agree, but that's cool because that's what choice means.

Now, Chrome embeds its own viewer. There goes my choice. There goes the lightweight browser. Hello monoculture software. Hello exploits.

bah.

Comment Decide what you want. (Score 3, Insightful) 897

          If you want to be another common fish in a huge ocean, learn C# and sharepoint development. If you want to be hip and cool, but are willing to compete with low price coders from developing countries, go with LAMP development. If you want to be a big fish in a small pond and can self promote and communicate well enough to pull it off, pick something painful but useful to corporations ( Rational / Websphere / Oracle / Siebel / SAP development ).

I do most of my client based work using Lotus Domino as a back end server and data platform. The development IDE is freaking horrible compared to visual studio or pure eclipse. The documentation is poor at best. There are a lot of workarounds you have to know. In many respects, it's a terrible thing to have to learn. HOWEVER, I've been doing it for a long time and am very very good at it. I'm never short of work, and I can accomplish things with it for my clients in less time and at less cost than any other platform I've ever found. I also use visual studio to build desktop applications, c++ to write custom modules for my Asterisk servers, javascript for web front end stuff, bash shell scripts for linux back end stuff, etc etc etc.... Right tool for the job and all that.

              I know by writing that I'll draw a bunch of crap from cool kids that hate the platform I use to make a living, but I'm willing to bet most of them would trade annual incomes with me in a heartbeat if I gave them the chance. I've managed to have my own business for close to 18 years by focusing on what works rather than what's cool -- and by never letting myself be just another commodity programmer among a giant pool of people with similar (and frankly better) skills.

Comment Could be far more important. (Score 1) 145

This could mean a breakthrough!

This single rabbit could actually be one of the ORIGINAL rabbits used for testing, who happened to have that singular genetic mutation which allows it to live on indefinitely (with the exception of accident and predation of course). Having captured the rabbit, they'll now be able to figure out what mutation occurred and suddenly immortality for humans is just around the corner.....bwahahahahaha

Or maybe it just ate something. Whatever.

Comment Re:MacBook Air (Score 1) 104

Could be, but core i3, core i5 both should draw less power and produce less heat. Not sure how wildly different the pinout, voltages, and chipsets are though. I think with the newer core i3 and core i5 they got rid of the external memory controller -- so probably that means it falls into the category of major PIA for a do it at home job -- but a new motherboard should be able to be made to fit that machine.

Comment Re:Trucrypt (Score 1) 1155

There are lots of good reasons to encrypt your drive that don't include hidden partitions. The laptop I'm using is encrypted exactly that way. Why? I travel, there's a real chance it could be stolen or lost, and I have confidential data on it. Nothing the CIA or NSA would give a crap about, but my clients wouldn't really like it very much if their stuff got shared around.

Comment Trucrypt (Score 3, Informative) 1155

The very best drive encryption out there (IMCO) is Tru-Crypt and is both open source and free.

For the truly security crazed, you can set up a hidden operating system that you use for only your most secure stuff and use a DIFFERENT but valid password to get at it. Use your regular password for day to day stuff and only log in with the really secure one to get into the alternate OS.

The whole purpose of that is so if someone has a gun to your head (or a court order, or a $5 pipe wrench) you can give them your perfectly valid password and they can access all your perfectly normal files --and never even know the alternate data is there (it can be hidden across thousands of normal looking data and executable files in the normal OS).

Seriously cool stuff.

In security, there are only two levels of paranoia. Absolute, and insufficient.

Comment yeah, that one we watch for.... (Score 1) 334

Airbags are everywhere now.

First thing we do in a powered extrication is secure the battery cables. After 60 seconds the airbags at least shouldn't deploy as a result of a broken or shorted sensor wire. That doesn't completely make them safe - those charges can still be dangerous as hell if you cut into them. When we can take the time (and usually we can) we have reference material available for most cars, otherwise, we count on our padded gear, hardhats, eye protection, and good karma.

At the end of the day, it's just not a safe thing to do. If I forget, I just have to look at the inside pocket of my turnout gear. On it, a patch says quite clearly "Firefighting is an inherently dangerous activity and cannot be made safe."

We have a saying in the fire service....God hates cowards.

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