Comment brb (Score 1) 22
changing my password to 2048 char
Comment Baskerville (Score 1) 151
Will always prefer Baskerville.
Comment Re:Still no recession though. (Score 1) 26
Dunning-Kruger ensures that there will be countless people who suddenly have a background in macroeconomics and public finance.
Comment Pro Audio Devices (Score 1) 69
Windows11 anecdotally has some distinct glitches on systems that run multiples of certain types of pro audio devices. Because pro audio is the single application for which I use Windows, and in fact the only reason I've *ever* used Windows at all, this is of enormous concern for me. The only truly annoying thing I've noticed is that as a side-docker, I can't handle the fixed location of the taskbar. But as strictly a single application user I really don't want a desktop environment at all, just a host OS for my application and maybe a terminal console for file management and administration.
I've never run Windows for anything else real. Linux was either my 4th or 5th Unix, depending on whether Coherent counts. I went straight from the minicomputer world of the 80s to the Unixes of the 90s and was an early adopter of Linux, which works for absolutely everything I do except pro audio. I know Apple is a thing. I know Linux audio is a thing, I've had a hand in developing it. I don't even hate Windows, but I dislike forced platform changes.
Comment Bottom line, Angular Sucks (Score 1) 97
We hate Angular more than we hate Drupal. Survey results seem accurate based on that alone.
Comment Re: Narcotics Laws in India (Score 1) 41
The first cannabis prohibition in the US was a law passed in 1910.
Comment It's illegal? (Score 1) 41
Stories like these remind me that marijuana is still illegal in some places.
Comment Re:legal (Score 1) 958
The media does not determine who is president.
You're saying that they shouldn't report on election results? Or are you wishing they would use some other source of information other than the actual election results?
Submission + - No Fortran? No data science in R and Python! (walkingrandomly.com)
Submission + - SPAM: How to get root on Ubuntu 20.04 by pretending nobody's /home exploit 2
Although certain conditions are necessary, the bug is easy to exploit. The process involves running a few simple commands in the terminal and modifying general system settings that do not require increased rights.
[spam URL stripped]...
Link to Original Source
Comment Re: Lucky you! (Score 1) 213
"The CRA" didn't take a side. You had a court judgment? Or a civil court declined to grant you a hearing?
Comment Re:I wil pay my fair share (Score 4, Informative) 161
The only problem with your plan is that failure to pay taxes is criminal not civil. For all your strong words, when you are looking at a decade in jail you will settle just like everyone else does.
And if you are famous or will get newspaper articles written about your prediciment you will still go to jail, just ask Wesley Snipes. He followed the advice of one of those tax crackpots and he went to jail for 3 years, even after buckling under to the government and paying back everything he owed plus the interest and penalties. The guy that convinced him to do it? 17 Years in jail. The IRS has their own courts and you are guilty in those courts unless you can prove otherwise.
Messing with the IRS is very foolish.
Comment Solar midlife crisis (Score 1) 342
Our solar system has a foot in the grave anyway. Why should we care about anything?
Comment Re: Why? (Score 1) 92
Many situations require the encryption of SSL without necessarily requiring the authentication of SSL. This is the case when the risk is more from something like accidentally or casually disclosing sensitive information and there is little or no risk of intentional attack, but where there are liabilities for routine exposure. This scenario isn't really a job for SSL, but what else do we have to work with?