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Comment US Presidents can't be locked away (Score 5, Insightful) 221

Presidents are politicians. They must keep in contact with the voters to get re-elected, and the accessibility of the current president has been welcome. It helps defuse concerns about his level of education separating him from ordinary citizens, or forgetting what it's like to be black.

Assessing the strange "what if he'd been carrying a weapon of mass destruction" concerns:

                        1) The simplest pony yield atom bombs have to weigh at least 40 pounds for the nuclear material alone, based on rough guidelines for U-235 critical mass published in various magazines during my career. Jumping the fence and sprinting across the White House lawn, carrying something that heavy is difficult and _will_ give the Secret Service personnel more time. Such a device would be more effective _outside_ the White House during a semi-public event where the President is outdoors, such as an inauguration.
                      2) Chemical attacks have similar problems. An aerosol or chemical poison would have to basically flood the air of the White House, which has quite good climate control inside. That means getting past the ventilation system, which would be a _very_ good place to put the sensors and stop the air flow if there were such an attack.
                    3) Bacteriological weapons would, again, have to get from the attacker's entry to the President. Such a biological agent would be more effectively spread by leaking it during a White House tour, not by a run across the White House lawn.

The Secret Service reacted well, with measured restraint. Better staffed guard posts might be useful, but they are _expensive_. If you estimate the presence of 20 more patrolling guards, 24x7, at roughly $100,000/guard/shift covered, that's roughly $6,000,000/year. Which federal budget shall we strip for that funding?

Comment Re:Sorry, but... (Score 1) 334

It's often difficult to solve the "social engineering" problem if they're overwhelmed by immediate issues. Reducing the first problem to manageable levels helps establish confidence in your advice, and helps provide time for the retraining. And there's often a lot of "low hanging fruit", relatively simple changes that will help a great deal.

The "we can't fix the whole problem, so we'll just ignore you" approach is one that's all too common among frustrated support personnel. Their frustration is understandable, but doesn't actually help the people who pay their salaries. I've spent quite a lot of time with such personnel helping them get those "low hanging fruit" in place so that they can concentrate better on the remaining issues.

Comment Re:Cuba? (Score 1) 334

If it's Cuba, I suspect that the KGB also left behind a lot of monitoring assets. The military and espionage history of Cuba is fascinating material, and I'd bet it would be a fascinating junk yard visit to see what the Soviets left behind, even if they mostly withdrew in the early 1990's. With Cuba's shortage of international cash, and excellent location for monitoring US and Latin American radio and satellite communications, I'd suspect the KGB maintains some significant monitoring assets.

Personally, I'd _love_ to see how Cuban technical people see the open source and freeware software movements, and how they manage network operations on a shoe string, especially with the security issues they face.

Comment Re:Helps explain a few things ... (Score 1) 222

> Once a local maximum is reached, further generations have no impact.

Except when they do, of course. Cross breeding can profoundly remix different 'local maxima' and even produce new breeds. Environmental changes, or changes in other species, can also interact profoundly with inherited characteristics, and some genes are even activated or de-activated by environment. And canine behavior isn't merely genetic, it's trained by the limited culture in dog families, and by the humans they interact with.

Dogs are likely to have a _different_ set of criteria for judging people. And people are under enormous personal and evolutionary pressure to lie effectively, espefcially to other people. So I'm unsurprised when a colleague's dog has a very different sense of whom they like when visiting the office. I have noticed that the dog's opinions about new hires seem to match my long term opinions, and it's not even my dog.

Comment Re:5 Ridiculous Myths You Probably Believe (Score 1) 222

> There is no cure for cancer, heart disease, athsma, arthritis, or even the common cold.

Your definition of "cure" seems quite odd. "cancer" can include quite modest, benign lymphomas, easily and safely excised. Some types of heart disease, such as pericarditis, are very effectively cured with antibiotics. "asthma" can include environmental asthma, easily handled by getting _out_ of cities and moving to a beach can handle it quite effectively. Many cases of mild Type 2 diabetes are effectively cured by weight loss, exercise, and diet. Arthritis is harder, but the common cold is any of hunderds or thousands of minor infections, and almost all of those are cured by supportive care and time.

There's no "apply this medicine and it is gone" for most of them, but for some, well defined treatment can cure many cases.

Comment Re:Kudos! (Score 1) 67

Tied to a video display, which would take much more sophisticated development, it might be easier. It's a fascinating idea for people like Stephen Hawking, or as a fall back device for people whose more sophisticated tools may need repair.

I hope that this youngster talks to Lady Ada, over at http://www.adafruit.com/, about publishing a do-it-yourself kit for this.

Comment Anaconda's base supports all? (Score 3, Insightful) 170

The only reason that "anaconda's base supports all" is because anaconda, and kickstart tools, have the ability to support '%pre" scripts that allow manual use of hte command line partitioning tools to tune the partitioning as desired, and completely skip anaconda partition. Anaconda has never, and from all signes will never, be able to support all disk management and partitioning tools.

Since it's a Python based wrapper for the actual system tools used, features can be added. But there will be inevitable mismatches between configurations manageable through anaconda, and configurations manageable through command line tools for new disk and filesystem tools. And anaconda's use in system critical critical tools like kickstart mean that it _must_ be thoroughly tested before updates. This will slow feature addition in a way that gparted, or other tools, need not support.

Comment Re:how about .... (Score 2) 131

> The sane choice of course would be for the facebook app to limit mobile data usage by culling data-heavy features as video autoplay

Don't you mean "The sane choice would be to drop FaceBook" ? The service, and its encouragement of careless video and image uploading, is extraordinarily and unnecessarily bandwidth heavy, especially with the constant pre-caching of both advertising and facebook poster content one has no _intention_ of ever actually selecting, but which winds up pre-cached because you opened someone's web page to read their post or check a social announcement.

Comment Re:What's wrong with Windows Server? (Score 1) 613

> Uh, tell me how to adjust an init.d script such that:
> 1. You add support for running the daemon with an ionice level which was missing from the original script.
AND
> 2. The next distro upgrade won't blow your changes away, and you won't have to manually re-combine your changes with their new init script which adds some new feature yours lacks?

Usualy, you make such changes in /etc/sysconfig/[daemon]. If you need to completely rewrite the daemon init script, you turn off the old script, write a new script with a new name such as 'daemon-ionice', make sure it has a 'Provides: daemon' line, and use that for init options. This is also the common approach if you need to run multiple copies of the same daemon, running on alternative configurations, such as SSH or Tomcat.

Comment Re: What's wrong with Windows Server? (Score 0) 613

I'm afaid it is _exactly_ how X works. The X "server" needs to reside on your local host to see remote X applications displayed locally.

The X 'server' does not need to reside on the remote machine, but the components for X are so interwoven on most remote host environments that it's quite risky to pick and choose components.

Comment Re:it's a great idea with one major flaw (Score 1) 174

> Can you provide an alternative service that is "focused on end-to-end user security"?

No. That's partly because the barrier to entry is so high, which I did mention. So services like a Skype replacement, or full blown custmer-privacy-centered services, are quite difficult to get started. And services like Dropbox admit, themselves, that they are not immune from subpoenas. (See https://www.dropbox.com/transp... for what little they're permitted to publish about search warrants or subpoenas.)

I may have been unclear. "Good luck with that" getting a good quality, genuinely effective customer privacy ensuring technology and service off the ground.

Comment Re:it's a great idea with one major flaw (Score 1) 174

> I don't need luck because it already works fine with services like DropBox and Skydrive

Neither of these are focused on end-to-end user security. The centralized password management for both systems, and presence of most deposited contents unencrypted, are profound price savings and software simplifications for those companies. But it puts both systems at risk of precisely the sort of overseas, strong-arm warrant or subpoena that Microsoft is facing right now from US courts for email stored in Ireland.

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