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Comment Real world (Score 3, Insightful) 120

- We have the source code. We donâ€(TM)t have a version of the compiler that will work on that source code and no one knows which version is needed.
- We have the source code. We think that the compiled version we are is different than the source code we have though.
- We have the source code but itâ€(TM)s uncommented. Itâ€(TM)s also on paper. Weâ€(TM)re not sure we have all the pages.
- We have the main source code. Thereâ€(TM)s some support programs that were written in Algol and ibm 370 assembler that we lost the code and compilers for.
  - We have the source code. Itâ€(TM)s in these boxes of 9 track tapes.
- We have the source code. The compiler is refusing to run because itâ€(TM)s missing a license code tied to the cpu version. The compiler company went away 30 years ago.
- We have the source code. The compiler refuses to compile the source code and weâ€(TM)re not sure why.

Comment Re:Weird Al yankovic (Score 1) 45

You're assuming that the government would be a fair referee. Looking at the current government where all decisions are politically based is not encouraging. Rewarding political allies and punishing others are the way all decisions are made. Government already has an outsized influence on business today by passing laws to favor lobbyists. Yes, let's let that cancer spread by giving government total control over all business decisions.

Can we think of other governments which also control their country's businesses to determine if that's a good idea? Like China, Russia, North Korea... Yeah, those economies appear to be working A-OK. Lets do it!

Comment Re:At this point (Score 1) 83

I'm not a microsoft apologist, quite the opposite, but Excel and it's imitators (google sheets) are fiendishly useful tools. Excel in particular can be used to do a number of things that you don't expect from a spreadsheet (live feed dashboards, remember the flight simulator built into excel?). With the addition of python support, I suspect we'll see it being used even more by the high-end computing/scientific communities. While their may be better tools to do a thing, if you know excel and can use it, more power to you.

Using a DB to share large files is just as silly as using excel.

Comment Nuke from orbit. Only way to be sure. (Score 4, Interesting) 168

One of the companies I worked for would purchase (large expensive) used drives/arrays. Occasionally we would find financial or medical information stored on them. I'm surprised at some the large names that apparently skipped the sanitizing step. I wonder if some unusual event happened in those cases that caused the company skip that step. Did the Omaha branch office closed after firing all staff and bean counter rushed to sell everything off without telling IT department?

Bill: "Hey Bob the Beancounter - those Omaha racks with servers on them that you sold last week... who did you find to clean them?"
Bob: "Um, what do you mean by cleaned?"

Comment Re:Uh... zoning. (Score 1) 273

> We have this little thing called taxi medallions..

Those medallions are indeed now very little... as in worth very little compared to what they were previously worth. WFH and Uber/Lyft effectively made Taxis an endangered species.

In Chicago, about a decade ago (pre-uber), a medallion was worth north of $350,000. People used them as an investment vehicle (see what I did there?). Drivers bought them with plan to eventually sell and retire. They were rare, no more were being made, and you could buy and sell them on the open market. And whoever had one could use them to operate a taxi to generate even more money. A vehicle with a medallion was run 24/7 by three different drivers/shifts to maximize the medallion's profit.

Now Chicago medallions are worth about $11,000.

Comment Re: Interesting... didn't want his business... (Score 1) 106

The customer is â€oenot profitable â€oe for John Deere. However if heâ€(TM)s seeking warranty service, John Deere is reimbursing the dealer for parts and labor. Possibly at lower than standard rates, but the dealer is still likely making a profit for the repair work. The fact that the dealer no longer wants this customer speaks to the character of the customer, not that he is not profitable.

Comment Re:Use as an ipecac (Score 1) 36

Napster ceased to be interesting the moment they were shutdown. It's another corpse on the side of the information superhighway. Trying to revive it and turn it into the walking dead rarely ends well. These jargon laden press releases cannot be aimed at mere mortals. I think they're trying to find more investors to fleece.

"Hey, I found this exciting web3 space that's developing a thesis and building enduring value!"
Mere mortal Bob: "What the f* are you even saying?"
Rich Tech Bro: "Sh*t! I gotta get in on this - I can't remember the last time someone tried to develop a thesis! Web3 - I don't even know what web2 is and this is newer! This gonna be huge."

Comment Re: Evoloution (Score 1) 247

Whales, dolphins, seals are all part of certain culture's source of protein. All of these are essentially unchanged over thousands of years.

"No food that you eat was around a few hundred years ago". I may not have eaten dolphins, but I have eaten crabs, lobsters, clams, frogs, gator, venison, and have eaten a large share of wild berries, mushrooms, and have eaten (as I suspect many of us have as "allowable" byproduct) insects.

Bats may not be part of my culture, but as covid has proven, they are part of other culture's protein plan.
--
We came, we saw, we kicked its ass!

Comment Re: Evoloution (Score 3, Informative) 247

There are some. Wild caught fish such as salmon, cod. Ocean mammals such as whales, dolphins, seals. Crustaceans (lobster), frogs, alligators, clams. Wild game such as deer, wild turkeys, quail, bats. Mushrooms, wild berries. Countless other undomesticated animals. Insects.

Some of the above exist in both farmed and wild varieties(eg turkeys). The wild versions of the above are largely the same for easily thousands of years and are still widely eaten.

Submission + - Biden to allow Trump impposed H1B visa restrictions to lapse (bloomberg.com)

thunderclees writes: In a big win for big tech and others who make use of imported labor President Biden has allowed restrictions placed on H1B visas by the Trump administration to lapse. The Trump administration had tightened restrictions on the number of visas available by narrowing the definition of "specialty occupation" over concerns that the visas were being used to replace US workers. The visa restrictions were allowed to sunset as of March 31st.

Submission + - 'Pause' on Johnson & Johnson Vaccine Reveals Systemic Flaw Plaguing the FDA (fee.org)

schwit1 writes: Maybe Americans will finally realize the extent to which federal bureaucracy routinely stops potentially life-saving innovation in its tracks.

Today FDA and @CDCgov issued a statement regarding the Johnson & Johnson #COVID19 vaccine. We are recommending a pause in the use of this vaccine out of an abundance of caution.

As of 4/12, 6.8m+ doses of the J&J vaccine have been administered in the U.S. CDC & FDA are reviewing data involving 6 reported U.S. cases of a rare & severe type of blood clot in individuals after receiving the vaccine. Right now, these adverse events appear to be extremely rare.

Setting the Johnson & Johnson vaccine aside, even for just a few weeks, could have serious consequences. More COVID-19 spread will occur than if vaccination was allowed to proceed, and it’s likely that some individuals who could have been protected will die in the interim.

“The benefits [of the vaccine] right now still outweigh potential risks because we have already lost over half a million people to coronavirus,”

Comment Re:This sword cuts both ways... (Score 5, Informative) 86

There's a difference between "production" and "development". Neutering root is very useful on a business "production" system. It's also useful for general staff in an office setting. Staff who deal with the public and exchange spreadsheet with the outside and have to be aware of spearfishing ... or drive-by downloads. For IT staff who are (in theory) trained professionals the ability is there to disable the option. This is needed when people, who know what they're doing, are trying to Get-Work-Done.

Our production machines no longer allow access to the root account. This is quickly becoming the standard for prod machines.

Of course the problem comes when companies try to remove the ability to turn off protections. And then your IT staff spends time trying to work around or bypass arbitrary roadblocks.

Submission + - SPAM: Shadow Brokers the reason why Kaspersky Lab is in the US doghouse

troublemaker_23 writes: At times, it does not pay to be the brightest kid on the block. But Kaspersky Lab, which has been in forefront of A-V research for some time, would have got away even with this, had it not been for a catastrophic leak of Windows vulnerabilities crafted by the NSA via a group that has called itself the Shadow Brokers.
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