Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Steam Support (Score 1) 96

My only concern with distros going this route is support for Steam. I've successfully played a number of games just fine under Fedora by flipping from Wayland back to the standard Xorg, but if the Wayland-only strategy is going to accelerate, the folks at Steam really need to get their stuff together, or alienate a significant (and growing) portion of the gaming community.

Comment Baggage Tracking Caveat (Score 1) 74

"You can try the feature on your next Delta flight by grabbing the app from Google Play and the App Store."

However, the technology will not yet support tracking your baggage while it's in the plane, even when the plane is delayed and sitting on the tarmac for 2-6 hours, with you and your luggage trapped inside. Delta plans to roll this out as a premium feature later next year.

Comment Small Form Factor PC With Quad Port NICs? (Score 1) 384

Setting aside all the negativity (most of it relatively justifiable, even if absurd sounding, and most of it also relatively work-around-able):
  - Bricking all the pumps at once (I assume this is being done before/after hours, and there IS a recovery procedure)
  - Networking creating sparks that blow the place up (How is hooking up 2 cables to 2 pumps different than hooking up 1 cable to 1 pump)
  - Interrupting customers (Again, before/after business hours, or during non-peak hours, and only doing a few at a time)
  - Simultaneous hacking exposure (Connecting device doesn't have to be internet-connected, and in that case, how is connecting to one a time different than connecting to all of them)
  - Automating yourself out of a job/hourly pay (Nothing wrong with working smarter, rather than harder; applies to just about every career, even with an hourly wage) .. I'd look at something like a small form factor PC (yeah, not as convenient as a laptop) with a couple of quad port NICs.

Run your virtualization hypervisor of choice (VMware ESXi or VMware Workstation, VirtualBox, whatever), and install your vendor's preferred OS and software application as a VM. Clone it many, many times (as many times as you have NIC ports). Give each one of them a single dedicated NIC. Run cables to each pump, and start your engines (that's about as close as I can come to making a gas station pun).

It's a fairly simple solution in that it doesn't require any fancy networking knowledge (VLANs, iptables, NATting, etc), and you're using a very straightforward virtualization configuration that most vendors will agree is supportable (their preferred OS, a single network port, etc).

If you can find a way to setup a couple of quad port NICs on your laptop, you could probably use that as well. In fact, many laptops have the option of purchasing a "docking station" that often have PCIe slots. If that's the case, maybe that's all you need to make the above solution work.

I think that being able to do "4 or 8 at a time", using a solution like this one, would be a huge improvement over doing 8 or 16 of them "one at a time".

Comment All these years.. (Score 1) 93

And here I thought my solution of attaching matching pretzels to each cup, and then tying the string to the pretzels, ensured our communication was private. The only difficult part was trying to add a third party after you had already eaten the bag of pretzels, as finding a third matching pretzel at that point was sometimes quite difficult.

Comment Re:What the hell (Score 2) 168

Overall, I was quite pleased at the presentation my children's school gave to the parents that attended "technology night". Privacy concerns, including advertising data, were among the many topics discussed, and the district and school representatives who were involved in the deployment had just about all the answers we needed. In our particular case, it turns out that all of the tracking data is restricted to authorized district personnel, and can be/is destroyed on-demand (after a student leaves the school, etc).

As I'm not directly involved (just a parent of a couple of students), I can't say what has been implemented thus far, but I don't believe they're doing any AD-to-Google SSO; from what I can tell, they are managed independently. Unfortunately, I can't help in this regard.

Overall, for those concerned about privacy around student accounts, I encourage you to reach out to your school and ask for a copy of their "terms of service", both for the students using the accounts, as well as for the school/district usage of Google's services. From what I've seen of the local implementation here, I'd say they have kids' privacy (at least from an advertising perspective) at the forefront of their policies.

Comment Crossing a line.. (Score 1) 224

Honestly, I think you're crossing a line that's probably best not crossed. Becoming an employee of a company, and licensing your own IP to that same company (whether or not it was premeditated), is creating a conflict of interest. Rather than going the employee route, you should market yourself as a consultant, charge whatever fees are necessary for implementation and the associated licenses/royalties, and then move on. This doesn't offer you any long-term employment benefits, but it completely avoids the potential conflict of interest you're talking about, which if not handled extremely carefully, could haunt you for a long time to come (in the form of legal disputes over pay surrounding your IP).

My 2 cents.

Also, IANAL.

Comment To expand a bit.. (Score 1) 62

.. For those who didn't click-thru and read:

"An assessment by The UPS Store and the IT security firm revealed the presence of this malware on computer systems at 51 locations in 24 states (about 1%) of 4,470 franchised center locations throughout the United States." .. so it's not super wide-spread. Only 1% of their locations? I think it would be interesting to pick ANY national retail operation and see if malware could be found on LESS than 1% of their systems.

It also only impacts particular The UPS Store locations:

"Does this impact UPS corporate or other The UPS Store center locations?
No. Each The UPS Store location is individually-owned and runs an independent private network. The malware was isolated to those locations."

Not cool? Definitely.

The super wide-spread impact of the Target breach? No.

Disclaimer: I am a local customer of The UPS Store, but the location I frequent was not impacted.

Comment OpenOffice + MySQL (Score 3, Interesting) 281

While I never did get around to implementing it (or really needing it), I was always intrigued by the fact that the OpenOffice "Base" application can connect to a MySQL database (and has been able to for many, many years). You may want to consider investigating that, as it may provide a fairly "user friendly" and "easily supported" interface to a solid database backend.

Sci-Fi

Why Hollywood's Best Robot Stories Are About Slavery 150

malachiorion writes: "On the occasion of Almost Human's cancellation (and the box office flopping of Transcendence), I tried to suss out what makes for a great, and timeless Hollywood robot story. The common thread seems to be slavery, or stories that use robots and AI as completely blatant allegories for the discrimination and dehumanization that's allowed slavery to happen, and might again. 'In the broadest sense, the value of these stories is the same as any discussion of slavery. They confront human ugliness, however obliquely. They're also a hell of a lot more interesting than movies and TV shows that present machine threats as empty vessels, or vague symbols of unchecked technological progress.' The article includes a defense (up to a point!) of HAL 9000's murder spree."

Comment Meanwhile.. (Score 2) 54

Meanwhile, the "IUPAPC" was still operating under their very literal name, International Union of Pure and Applied Physics and Chemistry. They have applied with the Advanced Center Reportedly Of Naming Your Movement (ACRONYM), however the application is still pending certification.

Comment Engraving (Score 1) 250

It's been about 20 years since I did this, but back-in-the-day, I worked for a school district that hand-engraved every single piece of equipment that it purchased. I was responsible for deploying a few hundred PCs, from receiving from our vendor to physical setup and software installation. Somewhere early in the process, I had to write down a serial number, assign and put on an asset tag sticker, and then use a Dremel to "neatly" (as good as I could do at 15 years old) engrave the school district's initials into the chassis somewhere (usually the underside or rear). Looking back on it now, I probably could have saved myself a lot of headache if I had engraved every single device in a similar fashion at all of my employers since then. Yeah, removing small chunks of plastic or metal may not be the ideal solution, but it certainly is one of the more permanent solutions. I haven't looked at laser engraving, perhaps that's a bit "neater".

Now I have a sudden urge to carve my initials into my belongings..

Comment Would it not be easier.. (Score 5, Insightful) 144

Would it not be easier to just install traffic monitoring devices along roadways, and let your car's on-board navigation system interface with those? That way you don't need the traffic scouting drone, and the inherent risks that come with trying to operate one while driving.

I could see it now.. inattentive drivers/operaters causing the traffic scouting drones to collide with other traffic scouting drones, creating drone "road kill". What a mess.. No, this is a Bad Idea(TM) all around.

Slashdot Top Deals

"Roman Polanski makes his own blood. He's smart -- that's why his movies work." -- A brilliant director at "Frank's Place"

Working...