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Submission + - tag based storage and retrieval

oxygen_deprived writes: I am a c/c++ guy who has , as a side project, been asked to assist with creating and maintaining data on a panel of interviewers in our company. The domains that these panel members are expert in would vary widely, will have overlap . So , I am looking for a tag based storage and retrieval system which would let me
Add a person as a member of the panel and fill in some information about him/her
Enter a bunch of tags that describe his/her areas of expertise
Pull out a list of possible interviewers (based on tags) given a positions requirements
This should be something similar to /. 's tagging feature.

I know I can put together something of this sort fairly quickly, but that will take me some effort, and it would be a custom solution
If you folks can suggest something that works out of the box kind of, with a little customization, that would be helpful.

Comment Re:Worth every penny ... (Score 1) 377

I think you mean on access scanner, and not on demand scanner. On demand will scan only those files that you ask it to, and when you ask it to. On access scan will have a kernel hook that will intercept I/O and do a scan If you have a traffic check point on the highway where each and every passing vehicle is stopped and checked completely, then the traffic *will* slow down. There is no escaping that.
BTW , McAfee is not just anti virus. There is a hell lot more going on there.
Any IT admins around here who use ePO ? Can you speak up please ?

Comment Re:Pleasepleaseplease (Score 1) 162

Nope. We probably dont need to burn our money that way.We pass a retro effective law in our country criminalizing all your biz houses that operate here.If pepsi/coke/p&g/levis/GM/whoever were to be thrown out, or have their stuff seized here in India, it could get us far greater mileage. With the absolute majority that the ruling party enjoys currently, there probably wont even be a parliamentary debate on it.

Comment In another news (Score 1) 410

a dummy with slashdot id of oxygen_deprived claims that he can guarantee breaking 256 bit AES in 3 seconds given the following
a. A piece of known plaintext
b. A piece of cipher text corresponding to the known plaintext
c. An external encryptocomparer (yeah , I made that up, also, patent pending in some country ) that can generate , compute and compare 2^256 keys per second

Comment Re:H-1B is a Fraud (Score 1) 605

It's the kind of fraud that Indians have ingrained in to their culture and Americans seem to get better at every day.

What a sweeping generalization.Its one thing to disparage a few dollar dreamer ,racism tolerating H1 B Indians, quite another to disparage billion plus peoples' nation and a few millenia worth of culture
Speaking of fraud, greed , the underlying motivation for fraud, is not the prerogative of any particular nation of culture.
Please sir, get your head out of the sand. Blaming others for your own failures will not get you anywhere.
And speaking of fraud, as an Indian, let me assure you that fraud is not ingrained in Indian culture. Many of the people in this land are honest hardworking people, who dream of getting their kids a good education,and whose primary goal in life is NOT a house and a car on borrowed money.

Comment Re:Boost? (Score 1) 310

I second that.While I am not on embedded, my product does linux, osx, hpux, aix, solaris and windows. We started shifting to boost ( threads, serialization ,filesystem ) about 3 years ago in bits and pieces. The code is so much cleaner, easier to understand, and reliable. You may have some work to do to move to your platform (embedded is a different animal AFAIU ). The downside would be the app footprint and maybe a bit of performance hit (may be noticeable on low spec devices )

Comment Re: Licensed books (Score 1) 488

In case you arent aware Gandhi (not Ghandi) and Washington were playing against the same opponent. Lookie here ... American beat british with musket and bayonet...american is a hero... lookie here...half clothed asian drive out the same british...the brits were sissies... Gandhi was not a man. He was a movement.And your civil rights chapter would have read differently but for Gandhi inspired King. If pulling the trigger could solve problems of the world then it would have been quite an easy solution. your own guys screw you in your own courts using the laws made by your own representatives in your own legislatures, and thats freedom. Congrats.

Comment Re:Larsen != Larson (Score 1) 210

Out of curiosity, without scurrying off to wikipedia, could you differentiate a Punjabi name (130 million) from a Bengali (230 million) name?

The only last names common between a bengali and a punjabi are Dutt and Singh, and in its phonetic form, they are indistinguishable. To get around that the bengalis accent Dutt as Dutta/Datta, and Punjabis dont. Bengalis use Sinha for Singh, and pujabis stick to Singh.

Comment India, sitting in B'lore and optimistic (Score 4, Insightful) 132

You are one of the privileged few who generate enough income to be above the threshold to pay taxes.Not the entire population of India has a PAN number or a ration card or any form of id whatsoever. The central idea of the national id is NOT to track citizens. Its main aim is to counter the major malpractices that thwart the efficacy of public welfare programs, where government provided benefits are usurped fraudulently by intermediate crooks (some of whom are a part of the govt machinery) Its the pessimism of the likes of you that holds us back.The kickbacks and under the table aspects are one of the major reasons why this has been entrusted to Nilekani. Get your facts right. After a long long time we have a government that is trying to sincerely uplift the masses. If you cant support them, at least dont hinder them.

Comment The other side of the coin (Score 1) 612

A sizable chunk of H1B are Indians.Indians, who , after getting the best education ( for example at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Institutes_of_Technology ) at government's ( and tax payer's ) expense, thought not about the society that enabled them, but about the 45 times multiplier ( 1 USD == 45 Indian rupees), and moved to the US.To contribute to a society that didnt invest a penny in them, to a state that is not interested in their welfare, not even in context of basic right to earn a living. Any guesses on where our sympathies lie ?

Its indeed unfortunate for those H1B who lose their shirt.But it is also a stark reminder that irrespective of the progress a society makes, and the freedom and equality it preaches, a migrant will never be on par with a citizen.Gandhi was a victim of discrimination in South Africa, today his children are victims of a different from of discrimination. The world hasnt changed much after al

Bad times dont last for ever. When the recession ebbs, and the economy picks up, maybe the US economy can get a punk rocker citizen to write code.

I am oh so glad I didnt give in to the temptation of pursuing an MS in an US university ( and sell off my ancestral home to pay for it ), getting a job there , only to be sacked thanklessly. I wish some of my brethren had the same foresight and commitment to their own societies that they owe their existence to

Comment Re:Let's check the sympathy meter (Score 3, Interesting) 158

And that the auditors were a local subsidiary of PwC, well outside of US jurisdiction.

AFAIK, a US firm is responsible for ethical conduct irrespective of the country it operates in. For example, if your US firm's subsidiary bribes an Indian official , US courts have jurisdiction over the parent company in the matter

If something goes south we can take them to court, but short of that I can drive over to their office and find out for myself what's going on. Not so easy to do if your vendor is in Bangladore, now is it?

Outsourcing is a skill. You cant outsource work to the first tom dick or harry that quotes the lowest. You need to do your homework.Its challenging, and those from your side of the pond who have lived upto the challenge have saved millions of dollars in labor costs.

I have zero sympathy...and the meter readings to prove it

I have zero sympathy too. I and countless others lost our investments overnight as Satyam plummedted 80% within hours.

We can fix our regulatory environment and I frankly don't give a crap what happens in yours.

Unfortunately, the days , when people/comapnies/nations could island themselves economically and didnt give a crap what happened elsewhere, are over.You cannot stay unaffected, and sooner or later, you will be splashing in the very same crap.

Maybe stick to managing your own problems, that might be a good start.

Actually thats exactly what I was doing. I work for a shared project team half of which works in US and half is in Bangalore. Your very own US guy coded a deadlock in a "single writer multiple reader", and yours truly, the cheap coder fixes it.

Comment Re:Let's check the sympathy meter (Score 5, Insightful) 158

"Let's see, companies ship thousands of jobs to places that don't have the reporting and oversight capabilities we have here (or at least used to have) and are outside the jurisdiction of US courts in order to save a few bucks at the expense of several thousand local employees"

-------
Yeah sure. Enron was an Indian firm. So was Lehmann. How exactly did the US jurisdictions and having the reporting and oversight prevent them from happening ?

Then said companies get taken to the cleaners because they can't audit their operations on that side of the world properly.

-------
In case you missed the TFA, PwC is from your side of the world, and are complicit in the fraud. Here in India, we have a proverb, which roughly translates to "When you point a finger at someone, 3 of your fingers point to you"

Operating Systems

How the LSB Keeps Linux One Big Happy Family 171

blackbearnh writes "The Linux Standard Base is the grand attempt to create a binary-level interface that application developers can use to create software which will run on any distribution of Linux. Theodore Tso, who helps maintain the LSB, talked recently with O'Reilly News about what the LSB does behind the scenes, how it benefits ISVs and end users, and what the greatest challenges left on the plate are. 'One of the most vexing problems has been on the desktop where the Open Source community has been developing new desktop libraries faster than we can standardize them. And also ISVs want to use those latest desktop libraries even though they may not be stable yet and in some ways that's sort of us being a victim of our own success. The LSB desktop has been getting better and better and despite all the jokes that for every year since I don't know probably five years ago, every year has been promoted as the year of the Linux desktop. The fact of the matter is the Linux desktop has been making gains very, very quickly but sometimes as a result of that some of the bleeding edge interfaces for the Linux desktop haven't been as stable as say the C library. And so it's been challenging for ISVs because they want to actually ship products that will work across a wide range of Linux distributions and this is one of the places where the Linux upstream sources haven't stabilized themselves.'"
Security

Submission + - Turning the tables on a phisher (blogspot.com)

oxygen_deprived writes: The blog at http://anerobic.blogspot.com/ has an interesting take on how one may get even with a phisher.Though the idea is nothing new, what is good here is that it includes a blow by blow account of how, with some simple and free tools, one may peek under the hood of a phish, and for the more technically inclined, provides hints on any next steps one may want to take against the phisher.
Made a good read.

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