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Comment Re:Missing the point (Score 2, Informative) 489

And besides, the alien seemed to me to be a Lovecraft reference (Cthulhu anyone?) -- which, if you've read any of League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Alan Moore is fond of. I was a bit annoyed that they changed the ending for that reason, but oh well. It worked as well as it could have. I loved the movie personally.

Comment Re:Netbooks and Linux (Score 3, Informative) 230

The rt2x00 project has to a certain degree solved Ralink chipset problems. I access the internet with a Linksys WUSB54GC USB adaptor which runs the RT73 chipset, and I use rt2x00's legacy rt73 driver since rt73usb in the mainline kernel is 1) lacking in features and 2) not as stable IMHO.

That said, I don't know how Ralink's chipsets work on netbooks. I have a Dell Inspiron 1525n with that Intel wireless chipset mentioned above (no problems there, either). If you're having problems with the Ralink drivers on a netbook such as the Eee PC, though, I'd look into the rt2x00 project for some possible answers.

Comment Re:FAO Editors (Score 1) 341

Well, if you want to know the real reason, it goes back to Latin.

concilium is a public meeting or gathering, or a council.
consilium (note the s) is a plan, advice, policy, or ... you guessed it, counsel.

Wow... maybe that was too much even for Slashdot? Oh well. My point was that the British (and us Americans in turn) inherited that small distinction directly from the Romans.

Comment Slackware, then Ubuntu. (Score 1) 238

Slackware in 1996 for me was my first experience. Tried dual-booting with Windows 95, but managed to nuke the DOS partition with some careless use of fdisk whilst in Slack. No more Linux for me...

...until I started using Ubuntu in Sep 2007. Installed it after I backed up and wiped my XP installation; I'm quite happy with it and have no regrets.

Comment Re:A "graduated response"? (Score 1) 360

Apparently there was a grow op going on in my parents' neighbourhood last year or so. They said they heard the SWAT teams going in at 6am one morning and arresting people right and left. Now the issue of the criminality of marijuana is a different one entirely, but yeah...

As an AT&T subscriber, this makes me rather annoyed with them, that they would capitulate to such thugs as the RIAA. We left Comcast, among other things, since AT&T had better service and didn't act like bastards... but it looks like that's changing.

Oh well, guess I'd better be more careful with my torrent activity.

Comment Re:Define "Standby" (Score 1) 222

I used to be one of those people who never turned off my computer, and had to have it on. Now I just shutdown every night and restart in the morning. It took a little getting used to, but it's worked out well -- for my desktop at least. Certainly cuts down on the noise at night if nothing else. My laptop is always in hibernate when I'm not using it, until I need to reboot it.

This sounds like a good idea... every little bit helps, or every watt, in this case.

Comment Re:Open source has been "looked at" (Score 1) 306

I'm sure Slackware is better these days, but I had no fucking idea what I was doing, so I suppose it served me right. Try explaining to parents barely used to DOS and Windows that all their files are gone, and oh, what's this "LILO" on boot, they asked?

Didn't touch Linux for about eleven years after that as I said, but thankfully Ubuntu's been a much better experience thus far. I'm sure the other distros are great too, lest anyone call me a Ubuntu fanboy -- but this works for me and that's what matters really.

Comment Re:Open source has been "looked at" (Score 1) 306

Surprisingly, my Dell Inspiron 1525n works perfectly with suspend/hibernate and resume with no issues on 8.10. Not so on 8.04 -- I had to shutdown and restart the computer all the time -- but once 8.10 was installed, I haven't had any problems at all with it.

It's getting better on the desktop; it's certainly not perfect but getting better. It's a far cry from my wide-eyed and naive attempt to dual-boot Slackware and Windows in 1996, which worked for awhile -- until I managed to destroy the DOS partition by misusing fdisk on the Slackware side.

I hope Obama embraces OSS, though. It would certainly help visibility if nothing else, and it might even save some money.

Comment Smells like FUD... (Score 1) 1654

Great, another story propagating FUD about Linux. I'm not taking issue with it being posted on Slashdot -- it's heartening to see so much discussion about it here -- but the linked article is ridiculous, both in its ignorance and bias against Linux.

I own one of the Inspiron 1525n Dells with Ubuntu preinstalled, and it's worked perfectly for me. I hope her experience from now on is better with Ubuntu, but I wish she wouldn't have caused such a bad publicity stir with the news about it.
Earth

Antarctica Once Abutted Death Valley 182

Science News has a story of strange bedfellows. It seems that Antarctica was once adjacent to what is now the American Southwest, some 800 million years ago. Earth's continents then formed a supercontinent called Rodinia, predating Pangaea by some 550 million years. "...the ratios of neodymium isotopes in the ancient sediments in the Transantarctic Mountains are the same as those in what was then Laurentia, says Goodge. Also, the hafnium isotope ratios in the 1.44-billion-year-old zircons found in East Antarctica match those of the zircons found in the distinctive granites now found primarily in North America. Finally, the researchers note, the ratios of various isotopes and elements in a basketball-sized chunk of granite found in East Antarctica — a chunk ripped by a glacier from bedrock now smothered by thick ice, the team speculates — match those of granite found only in what was southwestern Laurentia, which today is the American Southwest."
Communications

Cablecos, Telcos Working To Strengthen the Duopoly 113

The LA Times is running a piece on cooperation among cable companies and telcos. No, not cablecos cooperating with telcos; rather, both industries working on industry-wide initiatives aimed at getting a leg up on the other. AT&T, Verizon, and Qwest have been working on a site, Moveroo.com, aimed at easing the pain of people moving within the US — by making it easier for them to hook up with the incumbent telco at their destination, for instance. Odd that there is no mention of which cable services might be available where they are heading. The cablecos are cooperating on a more ambitious initiative to standardize targeted advertising nationwide, using data gathered from the set-top boxes used by Time Warner, Cox, Comcast, Cablevision, Charter, and Bright House Networks. The article quotes a spokesman from a utility consumers' action group: " [The spokesman] said these moves by the telecom and cable industries may be good for the respective businesses, but they almost surely won't be good for consumers. 'All they're doing is creating obstacles to each other's industry from gaining an advantage,' he said. 'That's not competition.' Well, it is. But not the kind that benefits customers."

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