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Comment Re:No password WiFi == unsecured (Score 1) 161

Yes, but if we're going to parse the words that closely, I'll jump in on the side of the OP. Perhaps it's true to say, strictly speaking, that the WAP itself is "unsecured". But if the WAP is unsecured by design (i.e. the design of the *network*), than I'd say it's inaccurate to say that "the network is unsecured".

I leave my AP open to the public on purpose. I have no less fear of an attack on one of the machines hosted on that network through the wireless interface on the router than I do through the WAN interface. The only part of the network that would be "unsecured" due to the AP being open would be a box (ahem, windows) that was connected to it without my knowledge and is listening for connections.

Oh, what? MitM attacks? Puh-lease. Again, the network is no less secure through the open WAP than it is through the WAN interface.

Comment The cost of not writing software (Score 1) 181

As a sysadmin, the points about maintenance and downtime really resonate with me. And then there's crap like having a team of 10 to 20 staff (many of them very senior) standing around scratching themselves due to some bug or shortcoming (often just in the UI) that would've taken an hour or two to implement. The cost of *not* writing software can be astronomical. As a more concrete example, I worked in a shop that used LDAP to authenticate a myriad of services (desktop signon, shared volumes, shell access, web applications, mail, etc.), but there were some "glitches" in the LDAP schema and the clients weren't always properly configured to use them anyway. Fixing the issue completely would've taken maybe 30 hours. Writing our own web app to create/modify accounts with a step-by-step set of screens that implemented our business logic for new accounts might've taken 150 hours. But doing something like that would be too costly. Better to eat up an average of 5 hours per week of sysadmins time diagnosing trouble with sign-in to individual services, another 5 hours of the staff's time who were trying to sign in, and the occasional 5-10 hour patch of yak shaving when someone stumbled into the thicket accidentally once a month. And on top of *that* are all the dirty little secrets of employee behaviour to work around the shortcomings of the system.

Comment Re:WTF is wrong with you people? (Score 1) 606

Actually, I voted never for a combination of reasons, but more for political than technical ones. I do believe, as others stated, that the economic thermodynamic equation is against this, and I don't believe that's going to change. The thing with people who believe in cheap fusion is, they think that figuring out how to *generate* the energy is the hard part. They haven't thought of the fact that all energy dissipates as heat eventually. The real trick with using massive amounts of energy within the earth's atmosphere is figuring out what to do with it after you've done the work you wanted to do.

But, the bigger reason is political: Because the question contained the word "we". Scientists may indeed make an airborne vehicle for personal / small group use. But *I* won't be part of this "we" that gets to use it. It will be affordable only the world's richest. I don't see how they will have any reason to ensure the rest of us have the ability to travel long distances so quickly. Consider that the automobile and the airplane have been around for roughly the same amount of time. Why don't we all have our own private jets?

Comment Re:And? Care factor zero (Score 2, Insightful) 194

Hmmm... maybe we should ask Mr. Gathered Mass why he keeps changing his mind. Oh, what's that? You're talking about millions of *different* people holding *different* opinions? Wow, who would've thought! I think you've found the real story in all of this: apparently, not everybody feels the exact same way about different, although similar, events. Thanks for sharing this insight - you just blew my mind.

Comment Re:IIS and ASP.NET can’t compete with Wordpr (Score 1) 145

Hey Mods! I'm getting modded funny here, but I'm not kidding - I still can't check my email and this is frustrating, not funny at all. I didn't feel like gogling this for my original post, but to make this one worthwhile, I present Exhibit A: http://www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/project.cfm?id=392

Comment Re:IIS and ASP.NET can’t compete with Wordpr (Score 2, Funny) 145

Ironically, I came to read the comments here while waiting for my webmail to load. By the time I finished reading these comments, the spinner on my other tab had stopped. The result?

Request Timed Out. ...
Version Information: Microsoft .NET Framework Version:2.0.50727.3607; ASP.NET Version:2.0.50727.3614

The parent is right. I try not to get involved in platform wars, but the same hardware running windows + mssql + iis + asp.net simply cannot keep up with any *nix + mysql + apache + php stack. Not to mention the security vulnerabilities. The only reason msft products are as popular as they are is because msft spent decades perfecting a business model that involved cultivating relationships with consultants and resellers who would do *whatever it takes* to convince their customer to buy a msft solution. Second biggest reason for their success was enterprise purchasing policies whereby the company would rather buy the crap they knew than take a risk on an unknown. Third was msft purchasing products that actually were well-made (and eventually turning them into pulp - even Excel is starting to go that way).

Comment Re:Sounds like... (Score 2, Interesting) 184

During that same time, a New Zealand engineer developed a home-made cruise missile using off-the-shelf parts, a Scottish rocket club built a flying waverider airframe, the Swedish navy were designing stealth ships that were invisible to Radar and nuclear weapons research continued unabated in the Indian subcontinent.

Wow, to hear you tell the story, I'd say ITAR is doing a great job at driving innovation. I say keep it in place! Of course, I'm not american, either.

All kidding aside, I think it would be helpful to americans if they could distinguish between what helps their country and what helps certain powerful interests in their country. I don't see much evidence that many of you folk can.

Comment Re:Logo (Score 1) 462

As a member of my school's logo team from grades 5 through 7, I wanted to thank you for bringing back some really fond memories. They only taught it for one week in class, but for those of us who kept playing with it outside the classroom, it taught so many skills - and things like geo-spatial visualization are valuable outside of strict IT.

Even if they updated the code, though, I don't think many computers these days have a cassette deck for loading the program anyway. :P

Comment Programmers Humour (Score 3, Interesting) 265

I have to wonder if the founders of google have spent most of the last decade having laughing fits over their motto, which makes a promise through negation of a subjective term.

Do no evil.

What does that even mean? Oh, they're going to thump their chests toward China? (admittedly, that's more than most western governments are willing to do these days, but I digress...)

What about the company's mission statement:

To organize the world's information.

Well, it would be difficult to argue the case that this is, in and of itself, evil, but when you consider what "the world's information" encompases, and what controlling that means, it's hard to think otherwise.

Now, a little more on topic, it's clear that google's amassed an army of lawyers and PR Flacks to rival their army of programmers. Makes me wonder whether their business model / management style is just to ensure they are the employer for all the world's language masters - be it natural or artificial. But, hey - free webmail!

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