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Comment: Re:The original 0xOmar post on pastebin (Score 1) 422

instead of punishing the banks for somehow fucking up so badly that the information was leaked online and calling for their heads (figuratively) they're more interested in calling for the heads (literally) of the people who exposed just how fucked up securing that data was--an act that is ultimately self-defeating if it were meant to protect those random people who are hurt .. instead of using the opportunity for a very public, open expose on the issues with the banking system as a justification to fix those problems

Terry Gillam's Brazil comes to mind. Everything that's called "Terrorism" in that movie is just "Central Services" screwing up and passing the buck. The worst terrorist of all is a heating repair man.

Comment: Ob. Lebowski (Score 1) 142

by MrEd (#31438480) Attached to: Google's Computing Power Refines Translation

Good times.

"But sometimes, there's a man – and I'm talking about the Dude here – sometimes, there's a man, well, he's the man for his time and place. He fits right in there. And that's the Dude. In Los Angeles."

"But sometimes, man - you can go anywhere - even in some cases, men, men of his time and place. He is the right fit. Order. In Los Angeles."

Comment: Re:toposhaba - mods are wrong (Score 1) 792

by MrEd (#29433815) Attached to: Congress Mulls Research Into a Vehicle Mileage Tax

"cyclists (who pay nothing) have more rights on the road than drivers who's taxes and fees actually pay for the roads"

As others have pointed out, you don't know what you're talking about. "92% of the funds for local roads come from property, income, and sales taxes". Your gas taxes pay for highways, but even they are subsidized by general tax funds.

Comment: How the computer made it worse (Score 1) 403

by MrEd (#28515017) Attached to: Investigators Suspect Computers Doomed Air France Jet

You forgot some steps:

A330:

1. Computer in control every flight for months
2. Pilots' skills and awareness degrade.
3. Sensors fail
4. Computer: "sorry dudes, you're on your own"
5. Rusty, out-of-the-loop pilots thrown into control
6. Pilots: "Fuck, I'd better troubleshoot the computers"

Here's the same for a B767:

1. Pilots in control, maintaining their skills, developing aircraft and weather awareness
2. Sensors fail
3. Seasoned pilots: "Fuck, it's a good thing I can fly this thing in my sleep"

Comment: Re:Because the Feds are in the way (Score 1) 563

by MrEd (#26417877) Attached to: Obama Proposes Digital Health Records

Bingo. You nailed it. Electronic medical records are visible to all sorts of people who aren't working to help patients get better. Medical staff realize the potential for lawsuits, etc. and are responding by using unofficial paper medical records to record the real juicy information that helps them do their jobs.

Now this isn't necessarily bad, your penicillin allergy won't be 'off-the-record' on a post-it note, but the parallel 'shadow medical records' are a real phenomenon that EMR designers will have to contend with. A more complicated hospital visit will likely leave two sets of records, a dry sanitized version for the accountants and lawyers, and the one that really documents all the ugly, embarrassing, CONFIDENTIAL stuff that went into making you better.

Hospital diagnosis is a messy, hugely complex problem, and the communication and documentation reflects this. Trying to tidy medical records can destroy what makes them useful.

Comment: Re:Lego Mindstorm (Score 1) 962

by MrEd (#26081633) Attached to: Best Introduction To Programming For Bright 11-14-Year-Olds?

Education also works well when you're doing something competitive! That's why I spent so much time learning to program in RoboWar back in elementary school. You built a robot, then program it, then set it loose in an arena against other robots. Competition winners from 1992-2003 are available for download, so there's lots of examples. It's open source, and has a Windows version...

Data Storage

Ext4 Advances As Interim Step To Btrfs 510

Posted by kdawson
from the butter-is-better dept.
Heise.de's Kernel Log has a look at the ext4 filesystem as Linus Torvalds has integrated a large collection of patches for it into the kernel main branch. "This signals that with the next kernel version 2.6.28, the successor to ext3 will finally leave behind its 'hot' development phase." The article notes that ext4 developer Theodore Ts'o (tytso) is in favor of ultimately moving Linux to a modern, "next-generation" file system. His preferred choice is btrfs, and Heise notes an email Ts'o sent to the Linux Kernel Mailing List a week back positioning ext4 as a bridge to btrfs.
The Internet

Canadian ISP Hijacking DNS Lookup Errors 225

Posted by Soulskill
from the both-hands-in-the-cookie-jar dept.
Freshly Exhumed tips us to news that Canadian ISP Rogers Cable appears to be redirecting invalid DNS requests to their own search and advertising page. Roadrunner got caught doing the same thing earlier this year. According to the article, "The hijacking appears to be an attempt by Rogers to use its Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) technology to cash in on the mistakes of its users." Freshly Exhumed also reminds us, "As IOActive security researcher Dan Kaminsky has warned in the past, this presents a very serious security problem."

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