Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Yeah how (Score 1) 39

This makes me wonder about having a new form factor for a serial cable. Something like the RJ11 serial cable Cisco routers use, or maybe using RS232 over USB-C. This way, someone can configure a security sensitive device on a wire or using a cable before it ever sees the network.

What you're talking about is YOST.

https://yost.com/computers/RJ4...

The problem with it isn't the signaling at the port, it's getting the serial part to work on the host PC or other device being used. Almost nothing has RS-232 DE-9 port anymore, and even USB-A is becoming less common. Plus the FTDI scandal with cloned chips and nonfunctional drivers is another major problem.

Comment Re:And nothing will happen (Score 3, Interesting) 140

I've had MRSA in my forties. I was lucky, my primary care provider caught it before it had gotten bad enough to require hospitalization, strong, STRONG antibiotics took care of it. When I had it, it manifested in a fashion that I thought was allergies, mostly localized swelling. I ended up trying to treat with antihistamines but that didn't accomplish anything. As it got worse I went in and was immediately sampled for testing and started on both oral and topical antibiotics.

So yeah, it can happen naturally to someone that's otherwise healthy and doesn't have a history of this sort of infection. The trouble is, it's not especially common either, so when the second whistleblower dies during a short span of months once investigators are actually paying attention, it's not something that should be ignored. Unfortunately given the budget that Boeing and its rich execs and board members have, it would probably be trivial to find a way to pay an assailant to do something to whistleblowers that doesn't easily tie back to them so long as they're not stupid about how they transfer funds.

Comment Re:Bandwidth (Score 1) 217

I might buy that when SoC is required due to how goddamn small the device is for things like phones, but laptops are orders of magnitude bigger than phones.

It's a little wrong to comment that XPS were upgradable, my XPS-13 is not upgradable. So I bought the max RAM when I purchased it so that I wouldn't have as much of a problem with inadequate memory later. I wish it was upgradable but it was my experience shopping for small computers that vendors simply weren't doing that unfortunately.

Comment Rooftops? (Score 1) 79

And why again are we unable as a species to organize to put solar on our rooftops in a way that is beneficial to the property owners rather than breaking new ground?

Hell, even farmers are experimenting with solar panels as fencing, and they're finding that east-west orientation for panels that can generate electricity from either side are working out well. Seems like there's a whole lot of infill possibilities available to us without tearing up a bunch of pristine (as in untouched) land in the process.

Wind, yeah, that's going to likely require breaking ground, since most people don't want the risk of living near a wind turbine given the occasional RUD.

Comment Re:Yeah how (Score 4, Interesting) 39

My guess is that manufacturers will just add an initial-setup subroutine that won't allow setup to proceed until the default password is changed by the person doing the work.

One issue with requiring each and every bit of hardware to have a unique password will be more e-waste if these devices are less useful on the secondary market. A common technique to work with old hardware is to perform a factory reset on the bench before reconfiguring it for one's own purposes.

Then again, since most devices, even cheap devices, have their MAC addresses printed on them, it wouldn't be all that difficult to populate the same table used for that with the factory unique password in the printing system, and to then include that unique password on the label. It would still be a good idea to force the user to change the password, but if they don't then it would at least require someone to have gained physical access to the device in order to get that password. I suppose a dictionary attack could be used if the vendor password list leaked to the Internet as well, but that's a whole new level of failure.

Comment Re:Separate components (Score 1) 29

Heh. I was in the cablemodem pilot neighborhood in the mid-nineties, and somehow managed to convince Dad to sign up for it. A few months later COX called trying to upsell, they got down as low as something like $1.50 more per month for cable TV on top of our Internet service and he still said no.

It was probably a good thing really, we already watched too much TV and that would have only compounded the problem, but I couldn't help but be amazed at how cheap he was being at that particular moment.

Comment Separate components (Score 3, Interesting) 29

I've always believed in using separate components for my home entertainment system to the greatest extent possible, and while not specifically for this particular scenario I still maintain that it makes sense to keep the system modular.

If nothing else, it means that if one part of the modular system becomes obsolete, only that module has to be replaced. And with the heightened pace of obsolescence of cloud-connected personal electronics these days it even makes sense from an e-waste perspective. It's a lot less wasteful to dispose of something the size of a Roku box or a Fire TV stick than to dispose of a whole TV. Plus it means from a security point of view that if one does need to protect one's accounts, even physically destroying the small object is a lot less wasteful or polluting.

Comment Re:Losing money anyway (Score 1) 211

Past discussion has stated that basically every large PRC Chinese company operates under a charter that allows the government to basically influence or take over the company at will.

Stop thinking of China as a Communist state. Start thinking of it as one giant company where the Politburo is the board of directors and the Inner Party are shareholders, and all of the people in China vary somewhere between employee and liability.

Comment Sanctions and penalties... (Score 3, Insightful) 32

...need to be brought against both the principal studios and against the subcontractors. They're not supposed to allow this to occur. If their own supply-chains are so poorly documented that this occurs on any sort of large scale then it's reasonable to pursue penalties on even if on simple negligence.

Comment Re:8GB is only to claim lower starting price... (Score 1) 465

My guess is that the rise of the cell phone has helped a bit, it has meant that developers were getting used to writing for lower-powered devices again and not everything was simple bloatware.

I still have sitting on a shelf a first-generation 64 bit AMD laptop running Windows XP Media Center Edition with a beautiful screen and keyboard, that has only 1.5GB RAM because that is all that it supports at the chipset level. I had 1.5GB RAM on a desktop computer first in 1999 or so and that the first 64 bit intel-compatible units couldn't do more than that was an insult, but I needed a new laptop when I bought it and it didn't occur to me that it was going to be a problem only a short time later. Oh well.

Slashdot Top Deals

fortune: cpu time/usefulness ratio too high -- core dumped.

Working...