Comment Re:Thanks (Score 4, Insightful) 779
It's a straw man argument intended to degrade anyone who identifies themselves as "Liberal".
There's no content or intelligence in it.
It's a straw man argument intended to degrade anyone who identifies themselves as "Liberal".
There's no content or intelligence in it.
Some people never run Windows so they haven't noticed that Windows has been pretty solid for the past 15 years.
Win 10 looks like it's going to be very interesting.
The 11" Macbook is 11.8" wide x 7.6" deep. This Dell is 12" x 7.9"...
If I could get a 13" retina display on a 11" Macbook, I would be very happy.
"...realize that trying to maintain this luxury image will kill them."
They just recorded the largest public corprorate profit... in history.
You do know what a coffee shop is for?
"Don't let businesses run homeless people off who are trying to get out of the cold"
Damn right. Screw those bourguois minimum wage kids trying to make it through school cleaning vomit and filth out of bathrooms by people who view the coffee shop where they warmed up as the enemy!
Can't reason with crazy.
"while they step over the clinging-desperately-to-life 'problem' all around them."
The *most* pathetic looking and in-your-face are conmen and criminals. Giving money is a transaction where they sell you a show where you can feel like you've done something good. In reality, you've just encouraged a beggar who fought for that premium corner.
Many of the people with real problems are quieter, and some of them don't even live on the streets. But hey, entitlement comes with believing that being on the street gives you some kind of credibility.
Mental illness is the real problem, and for those who can't fit into the mold of alcoholism, drug abuse, depression or schizophrenia, defiantly homeless should be considered a mental illness. It's certainly not making you or the people around you happy.
Few countries are equipped to deal with mental illness, so people live hard and die on the streets, and that's horrible.
"PHP is a bit so-so. It does its job, but doesn't really offer anything new or innovative language wise"
Prior to PHP, people were writing CGIs. Language-wise doesn't really matter, there was no interpreted inline-C-for HTML html preprocessor without smashable stacks by default.
Coming from the embedded world and C/C++, I think you're forgetting how much discipline you need to write in C or C++. Most people can't do it without a serious learning curve coming from PHP or Javascript.
I'm from New York. Nobody in New York call diesel gas you stupid moron.
you stupid moron.
Die in a fire moron.
It would be easy to get that fire started if you poured on a little diesel gas first
It's funny to read this thread in a New York accent.
Port it to minecraft. There seems to be some good 1970's CS work happening there.
Fair point, the article seems to be missing the key point of running a hidden service to hide yourself from traffic analysis:
You run a relay node to create cover traffic. You use the hidden service to blend in with the cover traffic.
It's discussed in the article under "Traffic analysis resistance"
Not that I agree with the method...
"...of course - forgot all the social constrains of a new technology"
This has been the biggest cryptocurrency experiment in history. Successful beyond most people's dreams.
"...at least in the given example, neither current grid power nor wind power is capable of doing the stated job..."
Not sure where you live, the grid is very reliable where I am.
Gas, coal and nuclear are today's technology for meeting demand.
If you take out nuclear, you're not helping fossil fuel emissions.
Depends on the company. They can also disappear leaving you without support, decide to abandon the product as non-strategic, or ask you to upgrade when you don't need to.
Which FOSS project you adopt is equally important. A while ago I was looking for a simple FOSS file upload utility, I found one, installed it, read through the sourceforge site, used it for a good year. Then when somebody was looking for a similar utility, I searched for the utility and found a 5 year old CVE which allowed arbitrary files to be overwritten. The project was still being actively downloaded and there was no mention of it in the forum. I tested my site, found myself vulnerable, and notified the maintainer... no response.
In hindsight, the vulnerability in the code was glaringly obvious. I *assumed* that a popular project would use basic input validation, or would update the code when a CVE is released... but no.
Just because there are no patches, negative comments in the forums, and it's a popular project doesn't mean that here's not a major, *glaring*, well-known vulnerability.
Same applies for closed source I suppose, but if the company is active, there's an incentive to disclose major vulnerabilities to subscribed customers, else they could be sued out of existence.
UNIX is hot. It's more than hot. It's steaming. It's quicksilver lightning with a laserbeam kicker. -- Michael Jay Tucker