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Comment: Re:??? Weird wording in OP. (Score 1) 123

by Jane Q. Public (#43808443) Attached to: Ethernet Turns 40

"I score this as a correct usage of the word."

I don't know what dictionary you used, but the first definition at dictionary.com was the one I wrote above.

While it might be an "acceptable" use, it is still an abandonment of the word's etymology and historical meaning, which was literally to "put the lie to", not just something that was deceptive. Acceptable? Maybe. But it's a definite distortion of the word's actual connotations. Remember that words have not just denotations but also connotations, and that ain't it.

Comment: Re:??? Weird wording in OP. (Score 1) 123

by Jane Q. Public (#43808351) Attached to: Ethernet Turns 40
The problem however was that the ARCNET daisy chain had a fairly short maximum physical length before you got signal degradation. And repeaters usually only handled a few lines unless you wanted to spend a boatload of money, so it was common to extend your daisychains as long as you could before resorting to a hub or bridge.

The reliability was good but moving machines (which happened a lot at the time there) was a pain in the butt.

I, for one, welcomed Ethernet when it became affordable. I had become so tired of crawling through ceilings and fishing down walls whenever someone moved to a different office. When the company moved to a new building, I had them run Cat 4 cable to each office (this was early 90s), and I put a big Ethernet hub in a rack in the new "comm closet", and a big patch panel on the wall. My life became SO much easier after that. I could actually take a Sunday off once in a while.

Comment: Re:Graphics cards (Score 1) 136

by Jane Q. Public (#43808301) Attached to: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Offers 2,304 Cores For $650

"The costs in chip production are not in manufacturing alone - else taiwanese would have won the chipmaking competition long ago. Design costs are very significant, as are the costs of setting up the production process."

And that is 100% irrelevant to the point I was making. Just as with Intel, the "disabled" chips only became available well after the full-featured chips. The design didn't happen until the manufacturer decided to create a branch of the product line from the existing branch.

Do you not remember the customer revolt over Intel doing this? I was systems manager when it happened. And believe me, people were pissed off.

Comment: Re:W.C Fields was an optimist (Score 1) 316

"My skepticism is limited to Rossi, whose behavior is that of a classic con man."

Ahah. Maybe so, BUT... you have to keep in mind that his behavior is ALSO the classic behavior of an inventor who is very suspicious that others might steal his invention before he can profit from it.

This is hardly unusual. The Wright Brothers did exactly the same thing. For a number of years they staged demonstrations only in foreign countries, and didn't let people get close or examine the equipment.

Their behavior was so "paranoid" that Scientific American did not believe their claims, and persisted in giving the credit for sustained powered flight to someone else. It wasn't until something like 6 years later that they decided the preponderance of the evidence was actually in the Wrights' favor.

So don't misunderstand me. I don't disagree that his behavior is suspicious. But there actually exist legitimate reasons for his behavior to be suspicious, and legitimate inventors of the past have behaved the same way. Look at the Wrights. Look at Tesla. (Who had every reason to be paranoid... people really were out to steal his inventions, and succeeded more than once.)

It's a bit premature to say which is which.

Comment: ??? Weird wording in OP. (Score 2) 123

by Jane Q. Public (#43805689) Attached to: Ethernet Turns 40

"For many people Ethernet is merely the RJ45 jack on the back of a laptop, but its relative ubiquity and simplicity belie what Ethernet has done for the networking industry and in turn for consumers and enterprises."

This is one of the strangest sentences I have encountered in quite a while.

First, "belie" is very definitely the wrong word to use here. It means "to show to be false". And second, Ethernet is ubiquitous largely because of its simplicity... there is nothing surprising about that.

Comment: Re:W.C Fields was an optimist (Score 0) 316

"There's far more than one sucker born every minute."

I don't have an opinion about Rossi's device, and skepticism is warranted. But outright rejection is not reasonable, for a number of reasons.

In the decades since the Pons-Fleischman debacle back in 1989, there has been a huge amount of evidence that the phenomenon they described is real. The problem is just that it has been grossly unpredictable. Lots of people have replicated their results, just not reliably.

In addition, researchers for the U.S. Navy and other laboratories have been investigating the exact same Nickel-to-Copper LENR reaction for many years, saying that it shows great promise.

Don't confuse outright rejection with skepticism. They aren't the same things. I am skeptical of Rossi's claims too, but until more evidence comes in I am keeping an open mind. Even if Rossi turns out not to be the one who has made this work, there is every reason to believe there is something to this technology.

Comment: Re:Graphics cards (Score 1) 136

by Jane Q. Public (#43805525) Attached to: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Offers 2,304 Cores For $650

"Im a little surprised at people snivelling over 1000.00 video cards."

Here's the problem: they're pulling the same blunder that got Intel in hot water back in the 90s.

People aren't stupid (although many of them act that way sometimes). If you can take a part that sells for $1,000, disable some of the functionality, and sell it for $650... then you can sell the whole unit for $650. It's a ripoff and people know it.

Now, if it's a matter of disabling cores that don't pass testing anyway, that might be an effective way to dump "defective" parts on the market and still profit from them. But it's pretty hard -- for very good reasons -- to convince people that it doesn't actually cost you MORE money to disable only those that don't pass tests... meaning you still could have sold those better parts for the lower amount.

Comment: Re:Impossible? (Score 1) 175

by Jane Q. Public (#43805391) Attached to: One-Time Pad From Caltech Offers Uncrackable Cryptography

"The issue, of course, is that one-time pads aren't exactly practical, because, by definition, they're one-use-and-then-destroy."

First off, the kind of OTP situation discussed in TFA isn't even a very common concern: using forensic tech to recover the key from memory. Either you'd have to have some kind of computer with virtually no garbage collection of free memory, or the computer would have to be seized immediately after having sent the message. Just not something that is going to happen every day.

But to address your own comment: you must keep in mind that almost ALL modern encryption has the problem that a key must be generated and distributed. Public-key or asymmetrical cryptography is great for certain things, but even that relies on keeping a key secret (although the secret key does not have to be distributed).

The point is: as long as your OTP key remains secret (if the key is pretty random and of course if it is used only once), then it is inviolable. There are many extremely practical uses for such technology.

For example: you can dispense with the "one time only" requirement if you simply want little more than a "keeping the kid sister's prying eyes off my email" level of security. You can dispense with the key distribution requirement if you have agreed upon a common external changing key source. And so on.

The "not very practical" designation simply means you haven't been using your imagination. common kind of OTP, nor is it a very practical one. The subset they describe is made by adding characters to a message from a random source to obscure the message.

Comment: Re:Movies are real! (Score 1) 743

by Jane Q. Public (#43800773) Attached to: House Bill Would Mandate Smart Gun Tech By U.S. Manufacturers

"Here's the problem with your argument: You're demanding absolute reliability, which is an impossible standard even for the guns that exist today."

That's only "a problem with my argument" if you assume I am an idiot. Of course I meant reliability in comparison to existing modern firearms, which are pretty darned reliable.

"And that's where you went horribly wrong in your line of thinking: You didn't stop and consider that the goal wasn't perfection, and impossible goal even with futuristic technology from the year 2999."

Of course I considered it. You are trying to insert my comments into some kind of weird context that doesn't exist.

"Let's say out of 1000 times an officer draws his or her weapon, they have it taken from them by force 20 times and used against them."

2%??? Um... no. Let's not. Let's stick with more realistic figures. For example, in 2011, according to the FBI's "Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted", out of the many thousands of times officers drew their guns, 3 were killed with those guns. The actual figure is far closer to 0.01%, probably even less.

Now does that "99.99%" figure I gave start to make a little more sense to you?

If you're going to make an argument based on statistics, you should at least take the trouble to find out what those statistics are.

Comment: Re:Movies are real! (Score 2) 743

"Biometric identification isn't the only way of securing a weapon."

It's not even a good one.

The problem is not that such identification technology is impossible. The problem is that it is impossible to make it that reliable with today's technology, while still being able to perform its security function (keeping the bad guys from using the gun). You can have one, or you can have the other, but so far -- despite several products that have been hyped -- nobody has come even close to doing both. You have to have both or it's worse than useless, because it will get good people killed.

"A police officer could be issued a gun with a RF component in it that operated around 800 MHz or so. At this frequency, the signal clings to a person's skin and clothing. A low-power, short-range transmitter, perhaps embedded in the officer's radio, could complete the circuit. Thus if the officer was not in physical contact with the gun, it wouldn't fire."

If it were that simple, it would be done already. For one thing, RF is FAR too easy to foil. People have been experimenting with that kind of technology for many years now, and not one has come even close to putting one on the market. Again, the main reason is maintaining reliability and security at the same time. One or the other is relatively easy. Both are not.

"... nothing in what I've said is either for or against whatever political cause or position you're advocating. t is simply, and purely, an engineering analysis. "

It's not even a good one.

Sorry to have to say that, but in good conscience I have to say that. You ignored some rather gaping holes in the problem domain. But don't feel bad; even the makers of safes and other security equipment famously suffer from tunnel vision in that regard. For example: in recent years not one but many manufacturers of safes with electronic combination locks focused on the security of the electronic lock but paid little attention to the physcial locking mechanism. As a result, one security researcher produced a YouTube video of his 4-year-old, with no knowledge of the combination, opening some of them with ease.

Security vulnerabilities surround everything we do. It behooves one to step back and look at the larger picture. We are not yet even close to the technology required to put reliable and secure "lockout" mechanisms on guns. At the moment it's still science fiction. Biometric identification is not the problem. The problem is making it absolutely reliable, while ALSO rejecting the unauthorized.

Comment: Re:Genius! (Score 4, Interesting) 246

"Do you know any off-hand or can you find one or two?"

I don't have case citations at hand but you can look them up. In particular, find copyright cases surrounding player piano rolls, in which the courts ruled that it made absolutely no difference whether copyrighted works were used to control a machine.

John Philip Sousa was famously involved in some of those suits.

Comment: Re:Try to do something right (Score 1) 120

"Sometimes the evidence itself is more important than the source. In the particular case, it sounds like the evidence was strong enough that it wouldn't matter which source it came from."

Fortunately there have been a few judges lately who have an actual head on their shoulders, and who have ruled that simply telling somebody their fly is open is not the same as rape.

But these B.S. laws, like CFAA and DMCA, need to disappear. They were ill-conceived and we KNOW that they cause problems. Not little problems, big ones.

I would keep the safe-harbor provisions of DMCA, and scrap all the rest of it. Same with CFAA.

Comment: Re:Genius! (Score 4, Informative) 246

"I'm just saying that a favorable ruling here would insta kill windows, especially on the business side of things where things are inter-dependent and integrated to a degree that sometimes involves licensing."

F*cking clueless judges. There is precedent going back well over 100 years that software is irrelevant to the nature of the machine. Examples: different cards in a Jacquard loom do not make it a "different" loom. Different player piano rolls do not make it a "different" piano. Etc. There are actual court decisions to this effect.

Not to mention that it is also common sense.

Comment: Fail (Score 4, Interesting) 512

by Jane Q. Public (#43756411) Attached to: Review: <em>Star Trek: Into Darkness</em>

"It's a movie with all the same strengths and weaknesses of its predecessor, and if it worked before, it'll work again."

It is nothing of the sort. They went a long way toward throwing away the tremendous gains of the 2009 "new" Start Trek movie.

The first movie took great pains to give them a brand NEW Star Trek world with all the possibilities that implies. It breaks all necessary ties with the past, and gave them a new start.

So what did they do? They made the second movie a blatant derivative of "The Wrath of Khan".

With all that possibility, they came close to throwing it all away. As it is, it was WAY too similar to that other Khan movie.

Pardon me, but I go to movies to see new things. This wasn't it. My rating: FAIL.

I don't make the rules, Gil, I only play the game. -- Cash McCall

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