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Comment Re:Fucking Lawyers (Score 2) 181

Fucking lawyers just never stop.
Google illegally copied Oracle's shit. Deal with it.

The 13 words in your post are currently under copyright protection and owned by me.
(As symbols required for interaction are now copyrightable, aka APIs, aka all words in a language)

You can paypal my $10000 per word usage licensing fee and I will refrain from opening a lawsuit against you.

As you say, pay up and deal with it.

Comment Re:What Wu does not write: (Score 1) 133

Your faith in humanity is commendable, but misplaced. Your argument is that companies that abuse their users and the trust those users place into it will lose them.

For what it's worth, it was exactly that which drove me away from yahoo search and onto google search back in 98-99.

And I never did mind that yahoo search had links at the top to yahoo maps and yahoo games and such, nor do I mind google doing the same.

It was actually the 20+ ads on the main yahoo page (top, left, right, and center) that drove the last nail in. At least on that one aspect, google continues to win by a landslide to this day.

Yes it was mildly annoying when google changed their sponsored ads from having a nice different color background from the search results, but even now there is still a nice and noticeable yellow "Ad" icon next to those results that serves the same purpose.

It sounds like your opinion on where the threshold for abuse falls differs from mine, but for me personally google still hasn't crossed it.
It's just surprising and saddening that no one else seems to believe me regarding my opinion, saying I must be wrong or worse a stupid idiot for making an informed conscious choice in the matter...

Comment Re:Backing up user data on Linux (Score 1) 517

Linux is great in many respects, but with most popular Linux distros, having a clean filesystem structure and code/config/data set-up are not among them. Maintaining most real world Linux-based systems is absurdly complicated as a direct result.

The only part I've found complex is finding out where and how various apps actually store their data, particularly when I don't really have much interest in the app.

Apart from that however, system restoration is pretty trivial.

For example, let's say a basic Apache webserver.
Apache stores it's master website in /var/www and personal websites under a users homedir.

So you have a pre-backup script (or just a cronjob) that runs:
dpkg --get-selections >/root/current-packages.txt

Backups should always consist of /root , /home , and /etc no matter what.
As mentioned with Apache, we need to add /var/www to that mix.

Now to do a restore, you install from the debian disc, then restore your directories from backup.
Then run:
apt-get update && dpkg --set-selections /root/current-packages.txt && apt-get install

At that point all your software and dependencies are back from the listing in /root , and services started up from your own configs in /etc , and in this case Apache is happily again serving from /var/www and homedirs.

That's it. One CD boot, one reboot into the live OS, and a few commands to restore all data/software/apps/libraries/dependencies which get started after install and run from your edited configs just as before.

Again, the only real trick is not missing any application data. Especially from a sysadmin point of view.
A user of the machine asks for WierdSQL. What do I care about learning a new SQL server? I just want to make sure I can make consistent and regular backups of its data.
I don't want to hear someone say "Oh the raw DBs are in /var/blah/blah" which are always in use and always changing.
I want to hear "Use this command to backup the data to date/time stamped .bak files where ever, then go backup that whereever dir - and here are the commands to restore .bak files into a fresh install"

For servers I setup for myself, it's pretty guaranteed I either know the software already and can answer all of the above questions, or I'm just learning it and so there is no risk or useful data to be lost and it doesn't matter.
But for servers I run for others, yes it can be a lot more work to learn those things, and is certainly not nearly as fun as the former.

Comment Re:Mob Programming, huh? (Score 1) 126

(What is the average throughput of a spoken conversation, anyway? Maybe 1200 baud on a good day?)

1200 baud is actually a pretty accurate guestimation.

75 and 300 baud was way slower than my reading speed.

1200 baud was the point that certain cases (say transferring an ascii text file) was pretty much equal or just slightly faster than reading speed, only balanced out by the relatively slower ANSI "box" characters being added to the mix and/or ANSI color codes that took more bytes to send.

2400 baud was the point things were beyond reading speed by a large enough amount that most all "baud frustrations" disappeared.

Granted this was all reading speed and not verbal communication, of which the latter is possibly faster.
But even then I would still only say "1200-2400 baud" as a good range for generic spoken communication, and only faster than that when both parties know the terms and higher level ideas being conveyed ahead of time.

Comment Re:Irony? (Score 1) 40

If I ran a business I would love to have refurbish an old Barn and turn it into an open office design. A tech company based in a turn of the 20th century barn. Would that have any more irony?

That reminds me of a guy I knew a little over 20 years ago back in the BBS era.

I was a wide-eyed youth at 15-16 years of age, and met another sysop from in town who prior I only knew as the guy with a massive 48 node BBS that put a lot of our setups to shame.

While I was still fighting with the phone company to have a third POTS line run to my apartment so I could finally add a Second BBS node (ofc it was really my moms apartment, and line #1 was the house phone line), many of us wondered just what sort of business this 48 node BBS guy was running to make the kind of money needed for such a setup.

Turns out he did exactly as you said, he moved into a barn to live in cheaply and spent his excess real-job money on his hobby.

Although that part did seem a bit out of the ordinary, I must admit I was at the time way more interested in learning about PRIs over POTS, Ascend Max dialup concentrators over serial based modems, and this multitasking many DOS BBS apps under OS/2 over dedicating one PC per BBS node.

Being one of the many huge technology learning experiences as a teen that lead me down the path I am on today is the core reason I remember him still.

But I forgot all about the financial side of things and him being "the sysop that lives in a barn" until now, which is also quite interesting despite me not appreciating that fact at the time.

Comment Enterprise users (Score 1) 23

When the new operating system comes out, Windows Update will feed in fixes continuously, and if you're not a business customer those updates are going to be coming over the wires constantly. Enterprise users get Windows Update for Business, which allows them to choose when to patch, presumably after the plebs have beta-tested them.

I saw the entry "Windows 10 and later upgrades and service drivers" show up under the products & classifications options on our WSUS server a good 3-4 months ago.

Interesting wording I thought, since all other entries under the "Windows OS" group are named specific to a major windows version, and as far as I remember have never said "and later".

It looks like Microsoft is really serious about copying Apple versions now, with the "10" not really being part of the version string but just being there, and using the minor version section as the new major version number.

Yeay for needless confusion!

But at least it still isn't as bad as Nintendo product naming I guess.

Comment Re:Can we go back to R/C Planes? (Score 3, Insightful) 268

Can we stop calling them drones. They're remote controlled (hobby) airplanes. Drones makes it sound like it's a weaponized, autonomous craft weighing hundreds of pounds.

The only problem with that request is that today a percentage of hobbyist drones ARE autonomous craft in the 100+ pound class.

Limiting our discussion to one subset of aircraft (the small RC planes) would not allow for fully addressing the actual problem at hand, in that any/all unauthorized aircraft should NOT be in no-fly zones, and most certainly should not be in obviously dangerous areas such as over a forest fire where there is no justification or excuse for not assuming it would be a no-fly zone at that point in time.

And while no they are not specifically weaponized, in the sense of adding specific payloads to drop.
But similar to controlling a 2000+ pound car in and of itself can be used as a weapon, so too can the medium to heavier drones.
The point being that even non-weaponized doesn't necessarily mean the device can't still be used in a dangerous manor.

Comment Re:This problem needs a technical solution (Score 1) 268

I remember reading stories and comments on slashdot referencing the British version of the US FCC, where they utilize vans/trucks of RF tracking equipment to triangulate locations of both unlicensed transmitters as well as unlicensed receivers.

As I recall they do this due to a mandatory "TV tax" type of thing on the receiver side, but more akin to preventing interference on the transmitting side very much in line with our FCC rules already.

Perhaps such methods and technology could be used to track down the drone operators and fix the problem at the source.

Of course this wouldn't necessarily at all help against autonomous drones or a coordinated attack situation like you described, but so far as the "toy drone" operators being assholes I think it would be quite effective.

I'm less familiar with the methods used to track down a receiver (I must admit I wouldn't have thought that even possible) but if that works as implied too it may also be helpful as one additional method to locate drones already out in the area.

As someone mentioned jamming the RF bands toy drones used would work well in keeping out drones that weren't already in the no-fly zone, tracking their receivers would fill in the other side of that problem for drones already there.

Also as someone who is a "toy drone" operator that isn't an asshole, I too would rather see the assholes in question be dealt with directly without having to force the issue of regulation.
Obviously a regulation like "don't fly in the fire fighters no-fly zone" (which we already have) are fine.
But past experience implies any new regulations will be even more restrictive than is needed, and is likely to put extra and needless burden on all of us non-asshole drone operators.

This is exactly why we can't have nice things. And fuck these people for ruining things for the rest of us.

That's why tracking down the asshole operators would be the better option of the two.
A fine to cover the $10000 in damages plus enough extra to make them think twice about their asshole ways is completely justified.

It is also only a matter of time before one of these assholes ends up resulting in the loss of human life.
Of course manslaughter charges and jail time are perfectly fitting as an after-the-fact response, but it would obviously be much preferred to not have that situation in the first place.

Comment Re: This will do WONDERS for Yahoo's image! (Score 2) 328

One thing I did that helped was push out a program called UnChecky (Google it, or just add dot com for their site) to our domain.

They maintain a list of installers that do the default-on bullshit options, and when one of those installers is run it uses UI automation calls to turn off all the bundled offers.

I think it is/was more targeted at end-users that hammer the OK/next buttons until things go away, but with the event of updater software silently installing bundled crap it is easy for even a seasoned vet to fall into this trap since there is little to no indication of what the installer is doing.

May be an option to look into adding to ye ole toolbox.

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 529

By your logic, the robber politely asking you to hand over your wallet while pointing a gun at you is not using "force" unless they touch you. I disagree with your assessment of "force".

Not at all. Once you point the gun at someone, that is force.
NOT pointing a gun at someone and doing the same would be implied force, which still qualifies.

Asking the town hall to make a new law, to which the town hall says NO, and no one comes to any bodily harm nor has a gun pointed at them afterwards however - is not force.

Are you claiming these 40 new arrivals are pointing guns at people or the equivalent?
Are they even threatening violence?

I saw nothing even close to that in the article. No threats implied or otherwise were reported on. No guns were reported to be in use.
Nothing but the normal town hall processes that is democracy.

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 529

At best, it's a waste of other people's time, money, and energy. They have better things to do than to listen to repeated requests made on an unfounded basis.

Fair enough, I too agree it is a waste of time, but unfortunately short of some mass population cleansing or something equally terrifying, I feel this is still one of the better ways of handling things.

Far from claiming the government works [adjective not needed], it at least seems to be serving its purpose.
Listen to the minority, judge any basis for harm or loss, and act accordingly - even if that action is to reject their claims.

Unless you think there's a problem with the electrosensitivity trials which have happened so far?

Oh no, far from. I agree these people are at best hypochondriacs that are full of shit, and at worse real-life trolls full of shit.

I'd even go so far to say that putting up with the needs of the many over the few is simply one of the prices to pay for living in a civilized society.
That puts the onus on them to change their life style as they want it.

Shy of any real forcing their will on others I may be missing here, my take on the article was they are kinda doing just that.

Don't want to believe there is EM radiation around you? They believe an EM blackout zone such as the one around the observatory makes them happier? Then move to the blackout zone (which they did)

They want to believe florescent lights give them problems? Them replacing their own lights to avoid such perceived problems is the right thing to do.

I'll even grant going so far as requesting others do the same for their benefit isn't at all out of line.
So long as it is a willing and voluntary change that isn't being forced upon them (which is how I read the article) then I see no problem.

It all comes down to voluntary requesting vs forcing upon others.

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 529

Yes, that is the moral of the story. But the motherfuckers in question won't leave other people alone: they're trying to force people to do stupid shit for no reason.

I already posted a similar reply to someone else, but basically what I said was:

I saw nothing mentioned except the new arrivals requesting things at a town hall meeting, and ultimately being ignored.

I would be surprised if 25% of a population was enough to force anything on anyone via voting or passing new laws. If I am incorrect on that fact then I admit I would revise my previous statements, as well as call bullshit on such a situation.

But so far as The Guardian article linked in the slashdot summary, I didn't see anything more than the new arrivals asking for things and the existing population saying 'no'.
And I don't see any problems with asking.

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