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Comment Re:You pray if you like (Score 2) 147

There are scenarios where exile is the best decision.

One example from these parts: When Norway was invaded by the Nazis, the King of Norway fled to London to help lead the Resistance in cooperation with the rest of the legal government in exile in London.

The King refused to stay in a country where he might be exploited or forced to legitimize the Nazi administration.

His actions have to my knowledge never been criticized in Norway, in what remains an uncommonly popular royal family.

Comment Re:Sam Kinison said it kinda first; but here's min (Score 1) 143

Because when the town was originally built, the topography was ideal for hydroelectric power generation.

Since this was a good while before the social democrats and organized labour gained any real power, keeping the workers in literal (and not just figurative) darkness was not considered an issue.

(The higher classes were literally so, and did not live in the shade.)

Comment Fun facts about Rjukan... (Score 4, Interesting) 143

Rjukan is also the site of the museum of industrial labour, which is located in Vemork. In addition to being a very early heavy water plant which was sabotaged by the Resistance during the second world war to hinder the Nazi nuclear bomb project, it also currently hosts an exhibit of what is probably the world's only remaining Univac 1108 mainframe.

Comment Re:Better idea: (Score 1) 564

You aren't doing a degree in engineering to learn about "history, religion, literature, psychology", so yes if it takes away from your engineering subjects it is a bad thing.

That's an absurd notion, and very close to the archetype of what the guy in TFA was arguing against. History, religion, literature and psychology are integral and indispensible areas of knowledge if you want to take responsibility for your society by participating in it as a thinking person, rather than isolating yourself in the cubicle and leaving decision-making to someone else.

Education is supposed to be more than teaching you your job. It's also supposed to be basic training in democracy.

Comment Re:RIP VMS (Score 1) 238

The 11/730 was mostly made for small software developer houses who couldn't afford either an 11/750 or an 11/780, but needed access to VMS and the fairly comprehensive, 32-bit architecture of the VAX. It really was a terribly slow machine, but a neat hack.

Comment Re:How enthusiastic is our support for UNIX? (Score 1) 238

The point was genuinely a good one at that time. There were a lot of facilities in VMS that made some really elegant transaction processing, for instance, available with even a relatively few lines of code. Besides - keep in mind, Unix was seriously fragmented at the time. BSD/SysV and a ton of varieties of those. All immature and inefficient. Unix in the days of VAX and PDP-11 is nothing like Unix in the last two decades.

Comment Re:no (Score 1) 238

VMS had quite a few customers, but much like z/OS, they tend to be in use with systems that you don't notice until they fail - which means, you very rarely notice them. Banks, stock exchanges, power utilities, that sort of thing.

Comment RIP VMS (Score 5, Interesting) 238

There were few operating systems that handled loose-clustered networking as elegantly as VMS. Want to centralize user credentials? Easy, just place SYSUAF.DAT on a shared volume. And since the files could have structure, you could lock individual user records for editing rather than the whole file.

Another great feature was the concept of "quorum". Quorum, as in the organizational term of the number of people present at a meeting necessary for it to be an official meeting of an organization, was the number of reachable hosts necessary to conduct business. Say you had a redundant banking site - and the link between them would go down. If they are a redundant configuration, they would continue to process transactions - with their database quickly diverging. Using quorum nodes, you could set up three hosts on three sites - two major server setups and a simple workstation somewhere central - and voila, no single point of failure.

Besides, there is a magnificent book, "OpenVMS Internals and Data Structures", which so elegantly and wonderfully describes operating system design.

I really, really hope that OpenVMS could be open-sourced and this codebase might serve as the base for a community-written x86 port.

Comment Re:And... it's gone (Score 1) 636

Speaking as a social democrat living in Norway, a country which (like most socialized health care systems) beats the hell out of the US and most privatized health care systems, I have to say that granting everyone "the exact same level of care, regardless of ability to pay" - is a goddamned feature, not a bug.

Believing in market forces does not mean having to abandon belief in human dignity, for goodness' sake.

Comprehensive health care should be just as much a fundamental human right as the comprehensive justice care afforded by the legal system.

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