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Comment Re:Good to Know (Score 2) 365

Wine's safe. And everything else associated with it.

Wine is just a single piece of software that is safe. This would have been huge if it had gone the other way. It could have been using all the way up to the point of processor instruction sets being illegal to use unless you paid a license fee.

Comment Re:Clearly a very serious issue, but (Score 4, Insightful) 474

I think I'm quite comfortable in saying that any cultural viewpoint that includes mental & physical abuse / poisoning / torture / death on those that seek knowledge, should be criticized at any and every opportunity. They can keep whatever culture they want, but the moment you start denying basic human dignities to any group of humans, is the moment you label yourself as having lost your humanity. A targeted group of people being poisoned is not in any way about acceptance of diversity and multiculturalism.

I think I just responded to a troll...

Comment Re:Cool tech, but (Score 1) 333

The only thing I can think of is that if it has an alternate output (HDMI) that it would save some resources to only output at the one resolution for everything... but even that seems to be at best, a poor implementation. Otherwise, it seems like it might be a marketing tool to show people with extra cash to waste that this product is even better than "insert alt. brand with lesser resolution". Because in market speak, bigger numbers are always better.

Comment Re:Clearly a very serious issue, but (Score 1) 474

...filtering out the really negative posters.

I agree with everything you say except this aspect. To do that would be to embrace censorship. We already have a moderation system that I believe is one of the better on the internet, but nothing is perfect. It is truly unfortunate that those who appear to be the most vitriol often have the most time to post. To that end I've had to stop myself from reading almost any /. comments on politics and climate change (excuse me, I do think I repeated myself) for a great many years now. But I do not think this is strictly a problem with /., indeed it seems to become ever more pervasive on all fronts of civilization the older I get.

As the saying goes, "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

Comment Re:Besides the name and the Desktop... (Score 2, Interesting) 141

What about BTRFS as boot device support? Any word on that?

Considering I was able to in Fedora 16, I would assume so.

mount | grep btrfs
/dev/sda4 on / type btrfs (rw,relatime,seclabel,nospace_cache)
/dev/sda2 on /boot type btrfs (rw,relatime,seclabel,nospace_cache)
/dev/sda5 on /home type btrfs (rw,relatime,seclabel,nospace_cache)

Comment Re:I keep reading but... (Score 1) 116

Haven't got to the article yet, but in the summary I keep reading...

Then you reboot the software controlling the machines, and out come the parts for the drive train system in a tank.

I still don't get what a reboot has to do with this. Is it running Windows?

I imagine it would be something similar in practice to re-kickstart'ing a server with a different and highly specialized OS and packages. Want to build tanks this week, reboot all the controller nodes and have them boot the custom tank settings. Heli blades, reboot them into the custom helicopter setting. If you want to make sure that all your nodes are all running the exact same thing, this approach is the way to go.

Comment Re:More capacity, but what about I/O? (Score 1) 293

You just have to make your platform able to handle file replications to N + 1 nodes (or any of the other plethora of ways you can slice it). Then go with a RAID 5 or whatever strategy you want, to give individual nodes the likelihood of higher availability. If you need to handle higher IOPS you can go with a distributed filesystem that can handle metadata/journalling on discrete nodes and load it up with SSD's / Fusion IO, whatever fits your bill. Then you can have banks of slow disks without much concern of the general IO as the metadata/journal nodes will have blazing IO and will act like a buffer to disk.

On the USB 3 front, I suspect that will be the case as almost everyone has a USB port. Additionally, the bandwidth available for USB 3 far exceeds the transfer rates of any spinning disk, so I don't think it is really much of a concern.

Comment Re:FAH.... (Score 1) 683

More like News for Nerds, because now I know exactly how far someone can push a criminally liable (but only every so slightly) network of web(spy) cams. I think most people wouldn't blink and eye at a month in jail if they thought they could get some really, really good material to blackmail someone, if/when the opportunity arises. Sure, some people are generally ethical and would never do this, but we all know a significant percentage are not.

See, webcams, technology, and the laws pertaining to those who value the freedom to collect 'information' on others, /. material all around.

Comment Re:Everyone should be outraged. Even RIAA employee (Score 4, Insightful) 420

Why can't you afford college? It's about $60,000 per kid at a state school, or $180,000 for all three. I was able to save $180,000 in just 4 years. No reason you can't do the same over 20.

In terms of cars $180,000 == 9 cars. So stop buying cars every 3-4 years and stash that money away in the bank. Then cancel your cable TV (it's trash) and your unlimited cellphone calling (luxury not necessity). That's $2000 saved per year, or $40,000 from baby kid to college-aged kid.

Cut corners other places like buying the smaller home for $150,000 instead of $250,000. Buy a $350 refrigerator instead of the $1500 stainless steel beauty, and same with washers and dryers and other appliances. And on and on.

As someone earning $60k a year before taxes (which I understand to be an above median amount), I've never owned a new car, I don't have cable TV, I'm still using the first cell phone I ever purchased, and my home was $120k. You are suggesting saving (assuming a biweekly paycheck) $1730 a paycheck, I think after taxes and everything I'm clearing just a few more dollars than that. I just had my first kid and the amount I can save has gone down to $50 a paycheck now. I cannot imagine how much extra 2 more kids would cost me. I think you may have a bit of a disconnect on the average persons earning power.

Comment Re:What's the point? (Score 1) 120

You would need a small handful of servers, and a couple people who could do some admin work (developers aren't often the best admin's, but it isn't rocket science to show the basics to someone with a clue), and if you offer it as a torrent, once it is seeded, the base servers can fall offline for maintenance / outages, and not have it impact the accessibility of the installer / latest patch, and your bandwidth costs are much more accessible. For things like a forum or authentication, the cloud is easily the best solution, especially for a funded Kickstarter project. By the time it starts to get expensive you are making enough money to increase staff, get beefier in-house hardware, etc, as your needs and capabilities allow.

Comment Re:enhanced interrogation techniques (Score 1) 573

Yeah, torture (your stupid euphemisms don't change what it actually is) doesn't actually work. As has been explained to your ilk ad nauseam, people will tell their torturers what they want to hear in order to end the torture, even if it's entirely untrue.

That is true, unless the person legitimately has something to hide. And even then torture does not work.

https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol48no1/article06.html

Comment Re:We've probably gone farther (Score 2) 238

We are the music makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;—
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems.

- Arthur O'Shaughnessy, Ode, 1874

That all seems strangely apropos.

Comment Re:Your mileage is not my mileage (Score 1) 301

I'm completely in agreement with you, 1000 Gbps is not normal anywhere, but their are faster interconnects to be had than 10Gbit/s. Look into InfiniBand. It is challenging to even begin to saturate anything but a single link once you are playing with the modern ones like FDR 4X aggregate (unless you are driving traffic from a very large number of nodes, in most work loads I deal with the disk IO is very much the limiting factor, it still takes time to read from disk into memory, process, transmit, write, etc. The transmit is just a fraction of the time compared to disk IO).

Comment Re:But... (Score 1) 238

The *FACT* is, that nobody actually ordering said popcorn really cares.

The way you capitalize really sells your point well...

Some people own things like the the kill-o-watt wall meter because they want to know things. The establishment could post on something saying what the given nutritional values were, it isn't like they don't have the most insane markup of any nontraditional food court. Like the parent said it would not be difficult or expensive. Plus some people are generally swayed by raw empiricism. Finding out how horrible the toppings are, and how small the serving size really is, may just be enough to allow someone to make a more informed opinion.

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