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Comment Re:If they approve allowing calls on planes... (Score 1) 128

I flew recently, on 2 occasions. They clearly ask people to disable cellular functionality on their phones at all times, and leave the phone in Airplane mode. As of now, Airplane mode still disables not just cellular reception, but Wi-Fi and Bluetooth as well. So it's misleading to claim that despite FAA rulings, things have not changed. The reason things have not changed is that the airlines have not transmitted that decision, but have kept it at status quo - allowing only Airplane mode.

One of the flights I was in had an in-flight Wi-Fi. I think it's time that the OSs - iOS, Android, Blackberry OS and Windows Phone - all changed Airplane mode to leave Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on, but disable cellular. That would be the most workable solution.

Comment On a bunch of UnixStations... (Score 1) 204

that's where I first saw X. at DEC we had DECwindows on ultrix (bsd like unix) and vax/vmx.

motif was the toolkit we developed guis in. and we used UIL to describe the UI, which was data that was read in and could change the look/feel of the widgets or their layout without rebuilding from source.

instead of node:1 for a display it was node::1 for the display (double colon meant decnet instead of that newfangled thing called IP)

In 1992, when I entered the University, I managed to see a variety of Unix workstations in different labs. Our Computer Science labs were exclusively Sun workstations - at the time, SunOS, not even Solaris. We had some DECstations (the ones based on MIPS 3k, not Alpha) in our VLSI lab, running DECwindows on Ultrix. In our Parallel Computing lab, we had some RS/6000 workstations running AIX and Motif (remember that?) There was one term when we had a Real Time computing class, which involved running HP/RT - a real time version of HP/UX on the PA-RISC. Elsewhere, I saw SGI Indigo workstations in the Graphics lab of the CS department.

At that time, I was new to UNIX, so none of these were easy to use, so having X on them didn't really help me. What revolutionized my computer use were the NeXTstations in our computer center. Our computer center had NeXTs, IBM mainframes, Vaxes and Suns. The NeXTs were somewhat painful to use, being diskless workstations, but they drew their data from the Sun servers. It was there that I became a fast typist, and learnt to use quite a few applications, like NewsReader (for USENET), Improv (for spreadsheets) and Frame. After I graduated and NeXT got bought by Apple, I missed them.

The thing I miss about those days is not X, which never impressed me, but the fact that most of those RISC beauties are out to pasture: even having Windows NT on some of them, like Alpha or MIPS, could not save them ;-(

Comment Re:China's 'hostile' neighborhood (Score 1) 398

My post pretty much showed how none of the powers bordering China are a threat to China. Only threat is the stateless Uyghur movement, which is trying to carve out a good portion of Xinxiang out of China. Other than that, it's China that's the hostile neighbor of all those countries - South Korea, Taiwan, India and Japan.

Comment Re:Logical Consequences (Score 1) 398

In Ukraine, Russia smuggled in Russian militias into Russian populated areas, such as the Crimea and Donbatz. Since the unrest in Ukraine was started by native Ukrainians - albeit ethnic Russians - the Russians had a major advantage here.

There is no way that the Chinese could pull that off in Japan. For starters, Japan has the most stringent immigration policies, and is so ethnically pure that it's impossible for foreigners to 'become' Japanese, the way people become Americans or Europeans. So that sort of stunt couldn't even begin to work there. Then also, the Japanese have a small ethnic Korean population, but not Chinese. Hence, territorially, they are safe.

As a result, the only way China could threaten Japan was either directly invade, or let client states like North Korea fly rockets over Japan and land east of Tokyo. In fact, the last time Pyongyang did that, Charles Krauthammer suggested that the one thing the US could do could be to signal Japan to officially go nuclear. Nothing else would scare China, who still have WWII memories of Nanjing and other such events. So do that, and China would do everything to make Japan happy.

Even more interesting would be if the US let Taiwan go nuclear: it would be funny to watch Beijing's reaction

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