Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Video Game Inspired? (Score 1) 98

> But "video game inspired" is still correct.

Except the weapon in the game wasn't called a Gauss Rifle and the one in Traveller was. So it tells me the guy knew exactly where his idea actually came from but wanted the increased pageviews from a videogame tie in. Sometimes it helps to read the article. :)

Comment The real lesson (Score 5, Interesting) 526

And this is why all centralized power is dangerous. Eventually an idiot WILL be put in charge. If it were one hospital, insurance provider, pharma company, whatever it is bad but survivable. But when it is a government with a virtual monopoly on something important like medicine and a real monopoly on the use of force to back it up, shit gets serious.

Comment Re:mormons (Score 0) 608

Hmm. Do we want a puppet of the Mormon Church or do we keep the puppet of Bill Ayers and George Soros we have now. Considering that if Obama were hellbent on destroying the country his actions would be indistinguishable from his current policies I'll roll the dice. Romneybot 2.0 wasn't my first choice in the primaries. Hell, he was pretty much at the bottom but above Laup Nor. I'd have taken Cain over Romney and Cain is f*ckin' nuts. (Ok, I'd probably take Romney over Bachman but she was never a viable candidate anyway.) But my side lost that fight and now the only choices are Obama, Romney or wasting a vote on a third party candidate who will e lucky to break 1/2% in the general.

In the end Mormons don't really scare me all that much because I just can't see em getting a large enough blok to wield much power outside Utah. Communists on the other hand have proven very dangerous throughout the 20th Century, and this mofo has to go.

Comment Re:Well that cinches it for me (Score 0) 608

Seriously, go grab a copy of the book I referenced above. It is one of those rare life changing books, after you read it nothing is quite the same anymore. Stuff you assumed was so all your life suddenly ain't so anymore and you end up wondering just how much else you take for granted as true is also bunk. The winners wrote the history books and since they still control the 'commanding heights of the culture' they still keep most people from questioning their official version. But there really isn't much doubt left that it is bunk. Seriously, if they can cover this sort of thing up ya start wondering if they really could cover up a dead f*cking alien or some crap like that.

Most folks never even knew the Senate threw all of the records under a fifty year seal and fewer still even noticed when it expired. Wouldn't you think that event would have received a little press coverage, even if just to flog the ghost of McCarthy and do a standard issue rerun of the ritiual flogging of all Republicans as 'McCarthyites? But nope, went unremarked except for a few who did notice the date and quietly went to the archives and looked at the original source documents that were behind the whole mess. His targets were almost all actual commies. What he didn't have the imagination to realize was just how many more there were, even higher up he chain of command, including the Senate itself. Sons of bitches nearly won without firing a shot.

Comment Re:Well that cinches it for me (Score 3, Informative) 608

Um, I know it doesn't fit your narrative and all, but you did know that we know the truth of the McCarthy matter now and his only real sin was not realizing just how far the rabbit hole actually went, right? Or perhaps you don't know and don't want to know.

But if you are actually curious you might want to put yourself some knowledge on. The fifty year seal on the Senate records is expired and combined with the opening of the Verona decrypts and the access some scholars got to the old Soviet records the truth ain't pretty for the standard version of those events. Might I suggest skipping Ann Coulter's polemic, which while it does get most of the basic historical facts right is in the end an Ann Coulter book, and go for the much more scholarly work by M. Stanton Evans entitled _Blacklisted by History: The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America's Enemies_. Instead of just references and footnotes (which it also has in quantity) it has reproductions of many original source documents and leaves little doubt as to just how bad things were in that era.

Comment Re:Leave you phone^W lojack at home. (Score 2) 306

Ok, then the moderation rules seem to have changed from what they were in past years. After making a plummet from excellent to terrible in a single afternoon things changed; or the plummet was because things had changed. Now if I have excellent karma it seems one downmod drops it to good and it doesn't take many more to get to negative, while it takes a lot of +5 comments to get it back up again. Perhaps I have simply become a lightning rod and am attracting the dedicated attention of a few downmodders but looking at the posting history doesn't support that explantion. At the end of a day more posts can be modded up than down and karma status can be worse than the morning, which was why I formed the theory that I had been placed into a status where downmods were counting off more than upmods were.

But as long as it is still a halfway fair fight I'll stay in the fight and help 'yall generate the all important page views. :)

Comment Re:Well that cinches it for me (Score 1) 608

I wouldn't say that. The party machinery was darn sure trying to ram Romney down our throats but we almost stopped them. A few more grass roots objectors could have swung the primary. Of course the fact most of the other candidates were about as flawed as RomneyBot 2.0 didn't help. But expecting perfect candidates isn't realistic. Lets just say my preferred candidate didn't win the primary and no, it wasn't Laup Nor, it was somebody who actually had a snowball's chance in hell.

Comment Re:Well that cinches it for me (Score 1) 608

There were more than two choices. That is why we have primaries. In this case there wasn't a serious contest for the Democratic Party's Presidential nomination but the Republican one was fairly hotly contested and down ticket there has been a fair amount of competition across the board. No, if you are an ignorant 'don't care about politics' sort you don't get much choice by the general, but don't convince yourself you didn't screw up by failing to get involved where you could have made a difference.

Comment Re:Well that cinches it for me (Score 5, Insightful) 608

Kinda doubt that Romney wants a theocracy. Unless you think he is an idiot you don't really believe that either. Mormons are a distinct minority with a history of persecution, on religious grounds. So unless he thinks his election will suddenly result in millions and millions of conversions it would be kinda daft to want to make a religious state that would, if history is a guide, have his people on the short list of those who go against the wall first. The fact they might go after the godless commies would be scant consolation.

Please try to think before mindlessly parroting the standard talking points. Sometimes they don't apply. Sometimes they don't apply in such a screamingly obvious way that it just makes you look like a total idiot.

Comment Re:Leave it at home? (Score 1) 306

So is the N900. Removing the module only breaks the link between the bigger CPU running Linux and the smaller master controller running the radio. Airline mode is the only sure way to silence one while leaving it powered up. Airline mode will typically turn off the local oscilator to prevent it from leaking any RF so it won't even be receiving, meaning the men in black can't send it a secret signal to switch back on. Remember, the FAA is serious about no meaning no when it comes to RF emissions on planes.

Comment Re:Leave it at home? (Score 2) 306

> You sure?

Don't know about the guy you were replying to but of course I'm sure. And if you knew anything about how this tech you depend upon daily actually worked you would be sure as well. There isn't a spot in an IP frame for the MAC, only in the lower level ethernet frames. If you aren't on the same subnet you don't see the mac address. If a wireless access point has node isolation turned on the different clients attached don't even see them. Of course DHCP servers do log them so if the access point isn't purely a consumer device that forgets that sort of thing as fast as the lease expires there is some trackability. If 'they' want to really go digging for it.

Comment Re:Yeah right. (Score 2, Insightful) 306

You do realize that for all of human history up until the late 1990's most of the world lived perfectly happy, fulfilled lives without a cell phone, right? You really don't need to be connected to everyone else all of the time. Try silencing the damned thing once in a while and connect with the meatsacks around you at the moment.

> living in the basement, and having no contact with society.

Just the opposite, depending on all this tech too much is what makes you a virtual hermit with no real contact with humans.

Comment Re:Not just your phone! (Score 0) 306

> see who accesses those shiny Tor gateways too.

Yup. People always seem to forget the utility of traffic analysis. Use Tor, encrypt everything, doesn't matter. Just using Tor is going to put you on the short list of people who bear additional attention. Either an paranoid, anarchist or pedo. Odds are more than one of those three. And while the libertarian side of me screams the coldly rational side does have to admit to the reality that it is also true. If I were a cop I'd be making that exact assumption and be right far more often than I was wrong. Playing those odds would lead to a high arrest rate and a promotion.

So how do we fix that problem. Hell, we can't even get more than a percent to even sign email yet with only a little effort from the few developers we could be encrypting most email by default. Default and entirely transparent are the keys to a more secure Internet. Wouldn't even matter a lot if the key management for those 'normals' wasn't perfect. Just getting to a point where most email traffic flowed from server to server unreadable would help. But yes my above observation about traffic analysis would still apply. That could be tackled once we had enough encrypted traffic we could hide things in the stream.

Comment Re:Leave you phone^W lojack at home. (Score 3, Interesting) 306

> Meanwhile I have good karma with a default score of 2 for being a complete tool.

Hey, I posted at +3 (Karma + subscriber) unbroken for pretty much the entire time the current slashdot model existed until a couple of months ago when I pissed off an admin or they totally redesigned the moderation system. Since there hasn't been widespread complaining I assume it is just me that is getting the special treatment. Mods can't really hurt you unless you are a totally usless user who never says anything worthwhile. The downmods get cancelled out by upmods on the good stuff and it all works out.

Comment Re:Leave it at home? (Score 3, Informative) 306

Not unless someone is doing something they shouldn't. Each device is assigned a unique 48bit MAC address at time of manufacture. Each one.

You buy a 24 bit prefix from IEEE (I think) and are then supposed to do your own accounting on the lower 24 bits to be sure you don't duplicate one. If you have ever looked up a MAC to see who made the device, that is how it works. The owner of the prefix is a published record.

Slashdot Top Deals

Ya'll hear about the geometer who went to the beach to catch some rays and became a tangent ?

Working...