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Comment Re:You all presumably know why. (Score 1) 359

sysvinit was decrepit and unsuitable for modern systems,

This is complete bullshit. My (modern) computer worked perfectly fine before systemd. There was zero improvement after my preferred distro replaced init with systemd. Maybe it booted up 2 seconds faster? I don't know, it's linux, I don't ever fucking reboot it. The only change in my life was how much time I had to spend learning systemd bullshit that added ZERO VALUE to my use of linux on my pc. So you better get a LOT more specific as to which system was "unsuited" for sysvinit before you start making blanket statements like that or people are going to continue to call you out on your bullshit.

A server under heavy load takes an unpredictable amount of time to shut down. Shell scripts have found no sensible way to make restart work reliably. Systemd helps there with management of process groups.

The Military

FOIA'd Documents Give Tour of Minuteman Missile National Historic Site (muckrock.com) 85

v3rgEz writes: In the 1990s, during our nuclear disarmament initiative, the Congress preserved two intercontinental ballistic missile silos as historic sites. The Minuteman Missile National Historic Site is one of them, and MuckRock used FOIA to take a tour of what's publicly on display, including a Domino's Themed Blast Door and probing questions guides are told to ask visitors, including, 'Could you turn they key?'

Comment Old computer, three big displays (Score 1) 558

I do programming and systems administration, both mostly in Perl.
This computer is more than five years old, a Gigabyte GA-EP45 motherboard, an Intel Core 2 quad CPU at 2.66GHz
maxed out at 8GB RAM, swap often used little; currently, less than 1%.
2 1TB disks in software RAID 1
Has never run any OS but Fedora, now F22.
XFCE desktop.
Three monitors: two 27" Kogan 2560x1440 displays, one Samsung 2443 1920x1200
AMD HD5450 with heatsink only, no fan, for reliability. DisplayPort, DVI, VGA outputs drive each monitor.
Government

Tech Credited With Reducing Nigerian Election Death Toll 58

jfruh writes: Dozens died in the runup to Nigeria's most recent election — a shocking statistic to many Westerners, but a relief in comparison to the much more serious violence that plagued earlier elections. Observers are crediting technology with making the election safer: the use of biometric IDs gave voters more confidence in the results, and social media gave people a chance to blow of anger that might've otherwise results in street brawls.
Open Source

Ask Slashdot: Parental Content Control For Free OSs? 260

m.alessandrini writes Children grow up, and inevitably they will start using internet and social networks, both for educational and recreational purposes. And it won't take long to them to learn to be autonomous, especially with all the smartphones and tablets around and your limited time. Unlike the years of my youth, when internet started to enter our lives gradually, now I'm afraid of the amount of inappropriate contents a child can be exposed to unprepared: porn, scammers, cyberbullies or worse, are just a click away.

For Windows many solutions claim to exist, usually in form of massive antivirus suites. What about GNU/Linux? Or Android? Several solutions rely on setting up a proxy with a whitelist of sites, or similar, but I'm afraid this approach can make internet unusable, or otherwise be easy to bypass. Have you any experiences or suggestions? Do you think software solutions are only a part of the solution, provided children can learn hacking tricks better than us, and if so, what other 'human' techniques are most effective?

Comment She might be chubby, but she's fit! (Score 1) 192

but Perl is that slightly chubby girl with the wry smile that is always reliable and willing to go to the dance with you.

Perl still runs fast.

And, before running, detects typing mistakes in variables when you "use strict;" (which, of course, your editor automatically inserts). Python has this little problem that such mistypings are still a run-time error. When the code that uses them executes. Oh the horror.

Comment Good luck with that, Duke. Another case study. (Score 1) 320

I worked in a computing department in a college that had a lecturer from a particular university co-located, sitting close to my desk. I was interested in plagiarism management, and was using the Moss system from Berkeley together with code I had written to manage plagiarism in an unofficial way in my programming classes.

Official paths were blocked at my college by a rule requiring expulsion and exclusion for a minimum of two years, so plagiarism "did not happen" there due to this "death penalty", so I was on my own.

The lecturer from that university told me about efforts to clamp down on plagiarism exceeding two-thirds of first year computer science students at his university. The head of the school at his university announced the initiative to punish those that were identified as guilty. The students demanded each have a proper hearing, and students from the law faculty offered to help in the representation of these hundreds of students. In the hearings, students were demanding compensation from the university for loss of their intellectual property due to the "obvious lack of security" of the assignment submission system. There were other, more complex and more imaginative defences. There were few lecturers and staff to represent the school, and unending numbers of students, each requiring a minimum of a 45 minute hearing, with appeals and other procedures demanded in addition. The lecturer told me that the head of school backed down, admitting defeat.

Let's hope Duke has a more positive outcome.

Data Storage

Ask Slashdot: How Best To Synchronize Projects Between Shared Drive and PCs? 238

Koookiemonster writes "Our company has many projects, each one with a folder on a Samba drive (Z:\). Our problem is syncing only the programmers' current projects (~30 at any time) between Z:\ and their C:\Projects\-folder on five Windows 7 laptops. If we sync the whole Z:\-drive, our projects folders would be filled with too many subfolders, making it difficult to navigate. The folders contain OpenPCS projects (PLC) and related files (Word, Excel, PDF documents); a common project folder is 50 MB. Is there any easy to use, low-budget sync software with scripting, so that we could e.g. only sync folders that exist locally?" (Read more details, below, of what Koookiemonster is looking for.)

Comment What Keeps You Off Windows in 2013? Freedom! (Score 1) 1215

Windows comes pre-installed with loads of crapware to make money for the OEM.

I hate that.

Linux comes unencumbered with Digital Restrictions Management, without the need to paff around with anti-virus software.

All the software on my Linux system comes with source code. I can change that. I can fix it when it breaks for me. I can share my changes with any one else. I'm not stuck with hanging on the phone sending the vendor data I know they won't need to solve the problem. I love all that freedom.

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