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Submission + - A $5 trillion asteroid passed by Earth (examiner.com)

MarkWhittington writes: It’s not every day that over $5 trillion passes by, just of reach. But that is exactly what happened Sunday night, according to Forbes. An asteroid with the innocuous name of 2011 UW158 passed the Earth at a distance of 1.5 million miles before moving back out into deep space. The reason the rock is so valuable is that it has a 90 million ton core of platinum group metals. If someone had managed to divert it into a safe orbit around the Earth and had started to mine it, that person would have become the richest in human history, with access to wealth greater than most nations.

Comment That rebuild though! (Score 2) 75

I say this as someone that runs ZFS on his backup/file server; if you do have to restore or resilver it can take a long while! A single slow drive in a vdev will limit the entire pool's IO (the extent of which is entirely dependent on topology, but the weakest link always crushes you in ZFS). After a handful of TB of data, even with a pool of mirrored vdevs and a flash cache device, the resilver for a single drive can take a day unless you've got some serious spindle count at high RPMs. Even SAS drives don't provide that many IOPS.

Comment Re:Look for other users of the S/W for advice (Score 1) 150

Agreed. I'd like to see the look on their face when they realize they have enough power for racks of servers but not nearly enough cooling. We've actually got a staging area at work where all of the power comes into the building, but it's only got enough cooling for a couple of racks (and not dense racks, at that) full time and then a couple of racks meant for short tests. Running everything full for any lengthy amount of time probably wouldn't fly even in the Minnesota winter with the receiving garage door open. To be fair, the room wasn't created for racks of full time servers on purpose.

Comment Re:It's not the H1B - it's something else... (Score 2) 305

My family is Swedish on my father's side (I'm American, about three generations removed). As I think about it, I'm not even sure what exactly Sweden exports. If I remember correctly your military even imports most of their equipment.

Anyways, you guys have a pretty direct democracy, couldn't you vote this down? Or is this a consequence of "too much democracy" and this is what the Swedes, as a whole, want?

Comment Re:Can someone answer me this? (Score 2) 164

I disagree with half the stuff you say, but I value your comments and still find great bits of insight in a lot of them. For instance, whenever you rant on Linux I usually read the entire post. Usually I agree with about a quarter of it, disagree with the rest and find things to think about on both accounts. I believe that you have a reasonable take even on things you don't necessarily like and usually avoid descending into 'troll' territory even when arguing. That's the kind of stuff I've only been able to find on Slashdot and why I keep coming back.

BTW, have you run your yearly "try Linux again" experiment recently? If not, don't bother with Fedora 22 - as a developer and avid Linux user/committer I can tell you it's pure crap driven by UX dorks. Very nearly completely unusable. Try a SUSE Linux build next time around. They haven't completely jumped the shark yet and still provide a reasonable, user friendly, stable build.

Submission + - NSA releases open source security tool for Linux (itnews.com.au)

Earthquake Retrofit writes: NSA's systems integrity management platform — SIMP — was released to the code repository GitHub https://github.com/nationalsec... over the weekend.
NSA said it released the tool to avoid duplication after US government departments and other groups tried to replicate the product in order to meet compliance requirements set by US Defence and intelligence bodies.

Submission + - Pawn Storm group makes Trend Micro IP address a C&C server (thestack.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Following Trend Micro's disclosure [http://it.slashdot.org/story/15/07/13/1040257/first-java-0-day-in-2-years-exploited-by-pawn-storm-hackers] of Russian hacking group Pawn Storm's 7-year campaign against military-industrial targets in and related to the United States, the security company has today announced [http://blog.trendmicro.com/trendlabs-security-intelligence/pawn-storm-cc-redirects-to-trend-micro-ip-address/] that one of the IP addresses it owns has been 'designated' by the hackers as a C&C server for their spear-phishing scenario. The intent of the DNS record redirection, according to the company's best guesses, is likely to be to convince others that it has been hacked (which it hasn't), or else to push one of its IP addresses into administrative blacklists.

Comment Re:I'm mostly qualified (for low bars on 'qualifie (Score 1) 337

Australians accept lira, or do I have to convert to Foster's beer for payment?

You do know that no Australians actually drink Foster's, right? That's the stuff we flog to foreigners.

You drive a hard bargain. I'll send you a six pack of beer we don't drink and beer we flog to foreigners. One six pack of Foster's and one six pack of Bud Light.

Drink the Bud first and then use the Foster's simultaneously wash away the taste of the Bud, drink something that resembles a beer, and be both humbled and amazed by the fact we can make a beer so crappy it makes you enjoy the crappy beer you guys produce. Then be thankful that I didn't send over Bud Light Lime. Yes, that's a thing and it probably tastes as bad as it sounds.

Comment I'm mostly qualified (for low bars on 'qualified') (Score 1) 337

I'm American and I could probably get about 15 million lira together if you give me a few days and will take a check.

On second thought, I'm not very well traveled so I'd appreciate it if someone could help me with the monetary conversion. Australians accept lira, or do I have to convert to Foster's beer for payment? If so, I'll let them keep the change and just give them the entire six pack.

That's the kind of rich I am, ladies, and there's more where that came from.

Submission + - Comcast Unveils Pricing for its 2 Gigabit Fiber Service (geekinspector.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Comcast have announced the release of its Gigabit Pro service which offers speeds up to 2 gigabits per second on the same day that its announced that its doubling the speeds of existing customers internet plans at no additional cost. The new service is only available in the Jacksonville, Florida area, Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties within Florida.

Submission + - Minneapolis, Sausalito and others show financial transparency

dkatana writes: People are no longer willing to pay more taxes or see their services reduced without full accountability. That is why cities need to empower residents with tools to monitor where the money goes.

"As citizens become more informed and critical about how their taxes are used, local governments need to implement accounting and transparency tools to show residents where every penny goes." says Cities of the Future.

Several cities in the US and Canada are using tools developed for Open Government to demonstrate transparency, enable city officials to monitor budgets to checkbook level, and citizens to see how their taxes are being spent.

Sausalito, Palo Alto, Minneapolis and Thousand Oaks are examples of cities giving the public full access to their financials.

Submission + - Undersea Cable Break Disrupts Life in Northern Mariana Islands (guampdn.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands experienced a devastating undersea cable break on Wednesday, with phone, Internet, SMS, banking services, the National Weather Service office, and airliners all being affected. The US territory depends on a single undersea fiber optic connection with Guam for its connectivity to the outside world (except for a backup microwave link, which was itself damaged during a recent storm). While services are in the process of being restored, this may be a prime example of the need for reliable backup systems in our "always connected" mindset.

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