Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Analogy not strong enough (Score 1) 14

>"Judge Robert Pitman wrote that the statute "is akin to a law that would require every bookstore to verify the age of every customer at the door"

No, it is much worse. Because it isn't just a store, this is much broader than that. It is more akin to having a mall, and requiring every person to show an ID at the entrance, AND THAT DATA IS RECORDED, and stored, and linked, and shared, and later stolen and abused. AND you have someone follow you around everywhere you go there and take notes.

If you want to protect your children in the mall, YOU GO WITH YOUR CHILDREN and supervise what they have access to. It is not the job of the mall to parent your kids.

I don't want to live in a world where adults have to ID themselves to gain access to websites or app stores. I DO want to live in a world where parents (and their agents) do not allow their children to have unsupervised access to unrestricted, internet-connected devices. Give parents better lockdown and whitelist tools AND promote a new social norm that you can't just give a stock connected phone/tablet/computer to a child and walk away.

Comment In-office work is a necessity for some (Score 2) 71

If you've ever worked retail, in service jobs, in most offices - pretty much anywhere except in tech - supervision is a necessity. Techies forget that there are a LOT of jobs where you can get away this doing literally nothing unless someone is monitoring you. Thera are also a LOT of people will gravitate to the least effort necessary to draw a paycheck.
 
I get that our industry chafes at 40 hours in the office, and for us it's stupid and counterproductive, but tens of millions of people need someone keeping an eye on them to get anything done.

Comment RT is responsible (Score 2) 39

Turn off the RT and the performance would be more than fine. Ultra settings often deliver very little uplift over high as is, but ray tracing is so little of an upgrade for the performance cost that the only reason to run it at all is to justify paying $2000+ for a GPU. I think rat tracing is generally pointless for most games as well. The performance cost is not worth the marginally better visuals and most games don't want hyper realistic lighting because it gets in the way of design and game play. No game can truly be designed for it until the technology creeps down into the mainstream and low-end of the market and we're several hardware generations away from that still.

Comment Re:The Right Thing (Score 1) 22

Ryanair wouldn't care about third parties selling tickets for them if they weren't involved in some kind of fuckery of their own. If they want to subsidize certain routes, etc. to draw in customers that's their own business, but Turing around and getting upset at someone else for trying to take advantage of that subsidy isn't any of their business either. While I don't think they're at all obligated to make it easy or possible for any third party to do that, they could solve the problem completely by not engaging in the sort of behavior that attracts these kind of middlemen in the first place. They can have their cake, but that shouldn't act surprised when someone else tries to eat it too.

Comment Re:Hinting at Hardware Dominance. (Score 1) 25

Let me clairify once again, to dispel that whole most corporate machines have integrated graphics problem. The Xbox hardware, with great graphics and plenty of power, BECOMES the corporate machine.

Ummmmmm no. You did not "dispel” anything. The facts are corporate desktops and laptops come with integrated graphics. Today. You speculating a future that has not happened is still speculation. But let’s look at your speculation: Why would any business buy Xbox machines for enterprise computers from Microsoft instead from Dell, Lenovo, or HP? From what we can tell MS is trying to exit the hardware business. Your speculation makes no sense.

For any large business that does not want Microsoft products today, they often do not have a choice.

My original comment was referring to Microsoft as the anti-trust experts. It was a tongue-in-cheek reference to their history. And their known power and dominance within the corporate space. Point is if they wanted to try and force "Professional" versions of their OS onto some specific hardware (which they happen to currently be all tooled up to make and do,) it sure as shit wouldn't be coming from an unknown place of profit (cough, Apple). And it would eliminate most problems of hardware compatibility and make IT easier with a single platform.

Would they piss off a lot of 3rd party hardware vendors? Sure. But there's always the Home market for them.

And as GenZ's name becomes more "Boss" and "Sir", we'll see what the break room morphs into. The LAN party might be the new smoke break.

Do you actually work in a corporate job because where I work, Macs are becoming more common even among more technical developers. I was offered my choice of a Mac or Dell on the last hardware refresh. I chose Dell because at the time, some specific software required Windows. That is not longer the case as some software has been replaced and some software offer a Mac version now.

I chose a Mac over Windows in 2008 regardless of my Windows needs at the time. Because virtualization. Yeah. I'm well aware of the 5% of fringe cases in business.

Comment Re:Hinting at Hardware Dominance. (Score 1) 25

Businesses do not want it and they generally control what software is installed on Enterprise Windows. And again, most corporate machines use integrated graphics which will perform poorly for games. I am not sure why you are trying so hard to get Xbox gaming on corporate machines.

Let me clairify once again, to dispel that whole most corporate machines have integrated graphics problem. The Xbox hardware, with great graphics and plenty of power, BECOMES the corporate machine. Running Win12 Professional. For those that wish to be called Professionals at work running an AD instead of those non-professional losers stuck over there in a Workgroup. (Not unlike the “Home” versions before.)

For any large business that does not want Microsoft products today, they often do not have a choice. Microsoft wouldn’t give a choice here either. You want Win12 Pro capable of joining an Active Directory? You’ll buy the hardware with it. Which happens to be, an Xbox. Or technically, you’ll probably lease it.

Comment Re:Sure. (Score 1) 218

Dealt with NIST mandates for years. My users accepted it a lot better when we had a passphrase day. The day we make up a crazy passphrase they can easily remember. Do it over breakfast or a pizza lunch. Everyone appreciates it and it turns it into a fun thing to do every few months.

New NIST standards tend to hint at passphrases anyway. Might as well make it a little easier.

Comment Re:Sure. (Score 1) 218

Take a large code base that works fine now, with the occasional memory overrun, and make massive changes to it. "Works fine" will become a distant memory.

There are two reasons why the 1980s thought process of "change your passwords frequently" is no longer advised: 1} Users will revolt and end up doing stuff like "password1", "password2", or writing it on a sticky note. 2} If a password is compromised, it should be changed immediately, not in 90 days, and if it's not compromised it shouldn't be changed, because of #1. Rewriting the entire codebase when the vast, vast, vast majority of it has an insane number of people-hours testing it and vetting it is insane. This has got to be a marketing ploy so they can say "we re-wrote every product you use using our AI, so you should give us lots of money and use our AI for everything!"

Passwords, are dead thinking. Pass-phrases are much easier to convey, much less likely to be compromised, and enable less frequent changes. Otherwise, you’re doing a lot of assuming and babysitting to ensure Password1 hasn't been compromised. Because it sure as shit won’t get changed unless you force it.

Slashdot Top Deals

It is impossible to travel faster than light, and certainly not desirable, as one's hat keeps blowing off. -- Woody Allen

Working...