Comment Re: Well, the GSA could start firing the contracto (Score 1) 124
You're right - advocates of privitization have always claimed that no private person will ever screw up. Wait, no. So, better to hire somebody who cannot be fired
You're right - advocates of privitization have always claimed that no private person will ever screw up. Wait, no. So, better to hire somebody who cannot be fired
If there are many paths to a node their system should be choosing the fastest path.Verizon obviously is not doing that and deliberately allowing congestion.
And Netflix would happily give them OpenConnect appliances too, to avoid _their_ bandwidth costs as well. But Netflix competes with Verizon's VoD services - this isn't hard to figure out.
There are at least three underlying problems for the congestion issue - one is the DMCA and related copyright laws that prevent any sort of sane caching, the general fear of multicast that everybody on the Internet still seems to have (half a million unicast streams of the same show is insane - where are the global warming people on this?), and the grants of monopolies and/or prohibitions on competition that prevent local competition.
Label me shocked if the Netflix app on mobile devices does not have a P2P mode working in the lab right now, as a workaround for us running a sub-par Internet.
The SLS is not a deep space vehicle. It's a vehicle to divert tax payer money into the pocket of private enterprises that give a share to politicians. Assuming it ever takes off, it'll be an outdated overpriced piece of shit.
Understanding this provides predictive capability - that there's basically zero chance that the project will be canceled or defunded, for the reasons you stated.
What a junk article - no explanation of what's actually going on and no link to a standard.
It sounds like what they're inferring is that you need server.example.com, not server.local or server.somemadeupcrap.
I think most of us cleaned up that cruft when BIND 9 came out with views support.
This shouldn't impact anybody who hasn't been dragging their heels on fixing their infrastructure for more than a decade.
Looking into this, this ip address has been vandalising Wikipedia for over 4 years now...
C'mon, we're working hard enough to undo the "an IP address is a person" myth, to keep the government from smashing people who have shared wifi/tor exits/etc., without perpetuating it ourselves.
You'll notice a few helpful edits from staffers too - only most of them on Capitol Hill are psychopaths, not all of them. Probably the good editors already have accounts, though.
But amazon has been telling "screw you" to investors ever since it went public in 1998. How long is their long term plan? The only reason investors are tolerating this is because the stock price has gone up as apparently there is no shortage of people who think that huge profits are just around the corner.
It's not quite that simple - there are profits at Amazon - they are just in certain divisions that are then funding the money-losing divisions.
Amazon takes a profitable business (remember when they sold BOOKS?) and makes it profitable, but takes those profits to invest in something crazy (like NOT BOOKS, or Kindle, or Prime) and then those divisions get profitable and the cycle repeats.
If Amazon ever wanted to stop growing as a company it could kill off the non-profitable divisions and show a dividend in short order. This is why the stock has value. Perhaps too much, but the entire market is in a bubble, so it's hard to dice which part of the stock price is which. In some ways stock prices are relative with an absurd floor.
Investors who have no appetite for such companies can -
unless you really though insurance costs would not skyrocket for the new services they provide
Competition lowers costs, not monopolies.
I cite every hellhole third world country in the world as my reference, where this is exactly what happens, with few exceptions
You're citing examples of corrupt governments as reasons why we need to have corrupt governments.
You have an extremely poor understanding of how power works.
See above.
If you truly believe this is the problem, then you clearly have never tried to run a business in that market.
Incorrect assumption. Been there, done that, got the business cards of half the executive branch.
The story I read before this one was about a malaria vaccine that was developed in the early 90's, was known to be effective by '97, and has been awaiting approval since then, while ten million people died from the disease.
Really, though, it was only ten million families who had to lose their loved ones - that's a small price to pay for the paperwork being in order.
Who was the sad f*ck who decided to make up a confusing three letter acronym for Ebola?
But "ebola" has three syllables and "EVD" only has three.
Yeah, uh, because all "cloud" services aren't inherently ridiculous for anyone to consider secure or anything...
Trust the math, not the people.
They tried that with FX-32 on Alpha (NT4). It wasn't worth it.
I think Nadella is talking about a unified codebase, like Apple with OSX/iOS and Linux/*BSD, heck even Solaris (a few poor saps are still using that - those with Stockholm Syndrome might even comment here). It's really unlikely that Microsoft will drop the ARM arch - there are too many opportunities there.
Say what you want, but Nadella seems to be making decisions like an engineer, not a fat marketing stooge or a conniving aspie beancounter.
If you want to bring three hundred people half way around the world, don't try to do it on your bicycle.
If you enjoy bicycling far more than piloting a jumbo jet, then you should be in bicycling, not commercial aviation.
What, you don't like jumbo jets and nobody wants to pay you to ride a bicycle? Maybe you should invent the hyperloop or manage a B&B instead.
I always wanted a backdoor in my browser.
I really did try searching for how this plugin retrieval works but must not have use the right search terms.
To stay license compliant *AND* safe, Mozilla should sign the modules as they become available, and Firefox should only download them if both Mozilla's and Cisco's signatures verify.
That being done, there's very little difference between Mozilla shipping the code to you as part of a Firefox update and having the browser fetch it afterwards.
But if Mozilla is _only_ trusting Cisco's signature, then, yeah, wow, holy cow, back a truck into it.
Links welcome.
Mystics always hope that science will some day overtake them. -- Booth Tarkington