Comment Re:Not new (Score 1) 296
You will get no argument from me, but I also believe very strongly in attacking problems on as many fronts as you can manage.
You will get no argument from me, but I also believe very strongly in attacking problems on as many fronts as you can manage.
If the NSA does not already have access to Cisco's obfuscated address system, then they are not doing their job.
Perhaps, but I believe it is incumbent upon us as American citizens to make their job as difficult as possible. The more steps they have to take to get at our information, the better. The ultimate aim should be to make their data collection so difficult that they have to ration their efforts.
Renewables are coming online now. They have a carbon footprint but it shrinks as the energy used in their production is amortized over their useful lifetime.
This is actually a very big concession for the renewable energy advocates to make, and the reason I say this is that carbon-fueled devices have a portion of their carbon footprint tied up in construction costs as well, and, as with renewables, that portion of the footprint is amortized over useful life.
An alternative that might not leave too bad of a taste in anybody's mouth would be to create a system of grants and loans to spur the formation of competitors in the local loop market.
Another option might be to separate the local loop from the IP space. This would get us to a position similar to what existed in the dialup days, in that we could choose from a wide range of ISPs. The only reason that model died was that the existing local loops were, at their very best, limited to ~53 kbit/sec, which is 2-3 orders of magnitude too slow for today's world.
I'd ask where you would have it go, exactly, but I don't expect responses from ACs
As for where it did go, radio goes everywhere. It's a powerfully expressive medium with a low cost to be a listener.
Now, the cost of transmitting . . . that's another matter. I've been an activist in this area since the 90's, and one of the things that such activism has run is the opening up of low-power FM slots across the country. These slots are strictly reserved for community-run, short-range stations.
If anything, radio needs a bit more regulation with respect to concentration of ownership. Right now, a company called "I heart radio" controls what is, in my opinion, too much spectrum. Lest you think I only pick on commercial, though, there is also, in my area, an NPR station that, by itself, is simulcasting from no fewer than 27 separate stations in upstate New York, Vermont and Massachusetts, all from one central location in Albany. This type of coverage would be better served by a single, medium to large AM station.
It might help, I suppose. The discs should be manufactured on different assembly lines with materials from different sources from each other.
We're starting to get kind of complex, though. Even though we could assume that computational power of 2065-2115 will be light years ahead of what we have today, and probably be right, as we get more complex with our solution to this problem, we end up needing somehow to ensure that there is an expert on hand who knows how to work the "older tech".
To invoke the ever-popular car analogy: do you know how to drive a Model T? Can you find someone who knows, even just in principle, how to do it (besides me)? Hint: it's almost nothing like driving a contemporary car.
Blues are especially hosed. The fact that someone can say the phrase "twelve-bar blues" and be immediately understood almost to the note, just demonstrates that this is the musical equivalent of a design pattern.
Even more hosed is anyone who dares to write a four-chord song. For those not familiar, Canon in D by Johann Pachelbel is the start of one such design pattern. Some songs that use it are: Forever Young by Alphaville, Let It Be by the Beatles, With or Without You by U2, Don't Stop Believin' by Journey, Barbie by Aqua, Down Under by Men At Work . . . the list goes on and on and on. If you want to see a better example than I can cite here in print, google for "Axis of Awesome Four Chord Song" and watch the videos that come back.
However, in all of those cases, along with the case of Ghostbusters copying I Want A New Drug and of Ice Ice Baby copying Under Pressure etc., there are actual notes copied.
This, on the other hand, is the "Look and Feel" case of the music industry.
This is not limited to recordable media, either. I have at least two CDs that I bought in the 90's that deteriorated. The reflective layer turned black in spots big enough to render playback pretty much impossible. I have also seen one CD delaminate. I wouldn't cast my lot with optical disc.
They were broke, but when Bill left office, there was a budget surplus, for the third year in a row. Aside from that, the budget hadn't had three consecutive years of surplus (or even three years under one administration) since Harry Truman was president.
It fits the typical US strategy . . . it was, after all, how our government responded to 9/11.
Maybe you could set a good example by identifying yourself? I doubt it, though.
Is there a deb based derivative of slack?
Um . . . . . No.
Slackware is kind of . . . manual. In fact, the only distro I can think of that is more manual is Gentoo. Even Gentoo is capable of resolving dependencies automatically, though, which Slack is not. This is actually why Slack is such a good distro for learning the guts -- if you have an unresolved dependency, it is up to you to figure out how to resolve it.
I used to run my systems as a very bare-bones Slack (or Slamd64 before Slack finally went to 64-bit) and then install whatever else I wanted from source. It was loads of fun to tinker on because it never tried to second-guess you. Good times!
Bingo! Immerman gets it.
To a point, yes, but are we going to arrest Canadians in Canada for smoking Cuban cigars, which can be legally bought and smoked there? I think not.
The suggestion about sex tourists involves crimes committed at least partially on our shores: the sex tourist bought his ticket and made his plans here. He is a citizen here, and subject to our laws for that reason. He lives here. He works here. He went on that vacation with the express purpose of committing acts that are illegal here.
Skylarov's presence in the US had nothing to do with his offenses. It was never done expressly to thwart US law.
Sure. I'll cop to being a tad imprecise with my language.
No amount of careful planning will ever replace dumb luck.