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Comment Offsite data backup + insure your hardware (Score 2) 408

Data. Use an offsite backup service or do like me and set up an offsite backup with rsync over ssh to a remote location under your control. All my drives or home folders are encrypted so even if the boxes do get stolen I won't have to worry as much. As long as my data is safe who cares about hardware that insurance will pay to replace?

This strategy also protects you from floods, fires, etc. Not just theft.

Comment Re:Journalistic Style (Score 3, Interesting) 234

[Unfortunately?] No. Though I can't think of any post soviet ally that has actually benefitted or gotten ahead from having debt written off. It also occurs to me that many of those states with debt were basically given the debt - Russia gave them things like gas and lumber at particularly low rates but didn't take payment or only took partial payment. So once the debt built up they'd use it as sort of a threat to not go against them. Case in point: Ukraine just got a huge gas bill from Russia http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c211... .

Comment Re:Japan wants to shoot down NK missiles every tim (Score 2) 107

The policy has been to shoot down any missiles that had a trajectory indicating they could hit somewhere on land. Up until now no missile launch has really done that. There was one that came extremely close about last year and since then the discussion has been weather or not to start shooting them down reguardless of trajectory or broaden the "acceptable" limits and start shooting down missiles that look like they could come close.

The actual defense systems in place are some of the most advanced anti-missile defense systems available, save for perhaps Iron Dome in Israel.

Medicine

Jimmy Wales To 'Holistic Healers': Prove Your Claims the Old-Fashioned Way 517

Barence (1228440) writes with this excerpt from PC Pro: "Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales has issued a sharp response to petitioners calling for his site to "allow for true scientific discourse" on holistic healing. The petition, currently running on the Change.org site, claims that much of the information on Wikipedia relating to holistic approaches to healing is "biased, misleading, out of date, or just plain wrong". It has attracted almost 8,000 supporters at the time of publication. Wales's response to the petition, posted on the same page, is far from conciliatory: 'No, you have to be kidding me,' he writes. 'Every single person who signed this petition needs to go back to check their premises and think harder about what it means to be honest, factual, truthful. What we won't do is pretend that the work of lunatic charlatans is the equivalent of 'true scientific discourse'. It isn't.'"

Comment Good...? (Score 5, Insightful) 279

I think it's good Shuttleworth was able to suck up his pride and go along with this decision to prevent fragmentation. I do however call the original decision slightly into question, but that's only because I've gotten sort of used to upstart. Hopefully anything good that was implemented in upstart but was not in systemd will make its way over.

Comment Re:Pollution from China (Score 1) 259

Ah! RoHS completely skipped my mind. Why would the US have even complained about that?

It does remind me of something I heard once though. Apparently an American ordered colored plastic rulers from China. The rulers that arrived had lead in the plastic. Because of the lead content they couldn't be sold [to children], so the American freaked out at the Chinese suppler and asked "what if children were to stick these in their mouths and suck on them". The Chinese supplier, confused, asked "why would children smart enough to use rulers be stupid enough to stick them in their mouths and suck on them?".

Comment Re:Pollution from China (Score 5, Interesting) 259

Very well put. The only catch is politicians from China will freak out if the US tries to put in such restrictions, and politicians from the US will freak out once the EU tries to put in such restrictions. It's a shame governments tend to look out for national profit rather than global welfare.

Actually, what ever happened to the Kyoto Protocol? That seemed like something that could work and I remember hearing it did have a positive effect, but you don't seem to hear about it or anything like it lately.

Comment Re:The key to success. (Score 1) 365

Yeah but you took ASM too and I seriously doubt you would call yourself a capable ASM developer unless you happen to be doing a lot of embedded code. Just because you've done some labs doesn't make you a pro. I've done FPGA dev using Verilog as well, and I've done enough to understand what it is and how to do it. I've also done enough to know if I wanted to make an efficient ASIC for a production application I'd shell out some cash to hire a pro rather than just assuming I could do it well myself without any professional experience or analysis.

Comment Re:Why don't they know? (Score 1) 365

The electronics manufacturer must have assumed they had some concept of how to design ASICs if they were even calling. This is the equivilent of somebody painting a picture of a house, then calling a carpenter and saying "I've designed a house, I'd like you to build it". Both a painting and drafted design documents are images of a house, just one gives you technical information like how much wood and how many nails you will need and the other does not.

I imagine the electronics manufacturer must have asked the question and was dumbfounded when they couldn't give any sort of answer.

Comment Re:Holy crap (Score 1) 365

Absolutely agreed. Just the fact the author didn't mention anything about an FPGA surprised me. I imagine the chip manufacturer must have been taken aback when they couldn't even give him a ballpark range.

dryriver, you are doing it wrong. I question your motives for this if you haven't done it on a GPU or DSP as mentioned above, and compared to your current base implementation to that. If you are so convinced this absolutely needs to be done in hardware start looking for someone who knows what they are doing. I've only done enough FPGA development to know it's something that takes experience to do well and quite a bit of knowlege just to set up properly. Verilog and the like may look simple but consider how much time you spend valgrinding - you'll be doing that in hardware using a language which does not compile to something in any way you are used to, with no real conception or grasp of what to do to make things run better or even how to gauge performance. Save money by saving time by hiring a pro.

Comment Re:Easy (Score 1) 165

Interesting!

I wouldn't consider setting up the SSH reverse proxy difficult either. I forget what I used to mask the traffic as HTTP but it was something that was bundled with SSH to begin with.

How do you do this VPN setup? I've never used VPN extensively so I'm acutally not sure where one would start. If you have a link to a howto on the tools you are using I'd be quite interested.

Comment Re:Easy (Score 1) 165

As much as I would love to disagree with that I honestly can't. TeamViewer has a lot of advantages over VNC. Though I'm not sure it would be easier if you had a really restricted network like in a locked down office. I've run VNC over an SSH reverse tunnel disguised as HTTP traffic on a closed network with a proxy server that only allowed HTTP and only outgoing connections. Since the tunnel was already established VNC was trivial to run. But as long as you don't have any super-locked-down proxy setups designed specifically to defeat remote access *cough* TeamViewer is just dead easy and surprisingly reliable.

Comment Too specific (Score 1) 262

So for me the answer is no. The whole thing reminds me of doing ARM assembler with thumb code mixed in. If you have a very specific usage for it then yes, it would certianly be useful - but it's going to be up to the people who need it to actually use and improve it. Everyone else has no need to care and the average developer shouldn't *need* to care or even be aware of it.

Comment Re:When you have a bad driver ... (Score 1) 961

Oh! There was a miscommunication my dear pastafarian friend! Please accept my appologies.

You are absolutely correct in that the S660 is an MR, and in stylish compact package! I don't actually know of a good resource in English but there is plenty of informatino available in Japanese. Basically it's a re-birth of the Beat with some S series touches. The car itself is a compact, just like the Beat. I haven't seen any info on the actual engine but the "S" series naming hints at something nice. What worries me about it from the concept is the center console:
http://o.aolcdn.com/dims-global/dims3/GLOB/resize/600x400/http://www.blogcdn.com/slideshows/images/slides/159/441/3/S1594413/slug/l/p1160526-1.jpg
This looks dangerously like there may be no real manual option and, even if there is, there isn't much space to shift without feeling up your passenger.

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