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Comment Re:what i would say (Score 1) 494

First, they probably don't have your work phone. Second, if they call work, you inform the boss what is going on. Provide the paperwork that has been supplied to you - the boss most likely knows that you weren't in Micronesia during that time, because you were WORKING for him. Third - get the boss to threaten legal action against the "creditors" for interfering with his place of business. It's almost certain the mere threat will scare them away - if not, get a lawyer to summon their asses to court in your home state. When they fail to show, the judge finds against them, and suddenly they owe YOU AND YOUR BOSS!!

This sounds like easier money than patent trolling. Think I'll switch my SSN to 000-oh-baby

Comment Re:That's odd - I think games are boring (Score 1) 439

Actually, the summary says the opposite... That certain people turned to gaming as a 'coping mechanism' to relieve their depression.

The last bit at the end is confusing because it says 'on the flip side', but it's actually the same side. The coping mechanism is good for your mental health. Well duh! It wouldn't be a very good coping mechanism if it made you MORE depressed!

Comment Re:An easy work around (Score 1) 225

Nope. From the LAN side, only the LAN address works. From the WAN side, only the WAN address works, and then only if the router is set up to expose the management GUI to the outside.

The WAN address does work from the LAN side as well, whether remote management is enabled or not. A quick test confirms this, on both the old and new firmwares.

KDE

Linus Switches From KDE To Gnome 869

An anonymous reader writes "In a recent Computerworld interview, Linus revealed that he's switched to Gnome — this despite launching a heavily critical broadside against Gnome just a few years ago. His reason? He thinks KDE 4 is a 'disaster.' Although it's improved recently, he'll find many who agree with this prognosis, and KDE 4 can be painful to use." There's quite a bit of interesting stuff in this interview, besides, regarding the current state of Linux development.

Comment Re:Ban Pop-ups (Score 2, Interesting) 232

Javascript alerts would be fine, as long as they would stay only with their own content and not interrupt other tabs/windows or other programs on the system.

There is a very long-standing bugzilla bug about this for Mozilla, you can read:

https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59314
  Bug 59314 - Alerts should be content-modal, not window-modal

(comment #39 describes a security problem that sounds similar to the problem here)

Lots of good ideas in that page about how alerts could be handled differently. I like the one where the alert becomes an infobar. If you aren't on that tab when the alert happens, you won't be forced to see it, and it can't interrupt anything else you're doing.

In the meantime, closing all open browser windows before you visit your bank site is still the safest thing to do.

The Internet

How Can the Stimulus Plan Help the Internet? 154

Wired is running an article raising the question of how a US economic stimulus plan could best help broadband adoption and the internet in general. We discussed President-elect Obama's statements about his plan, which would include investments in such areas, but Wired asks how we can avoid the equivalent of the New Deal's "ditches to nowhere" without more data about where the money would actually make a difference. Quoting: "... the problem is that no one knows the best way to make the internet more resilient, accessible and secure, since there's no just no public data. The ISP and backbone internet providers don't tell anyone anything. For instance, the government doesn't know how many people actually have broadband or what they pay for it. ... In September, the FCC found that its data collection on internet broadband was incomplete and thus ruled that AT&T, Qwest and Verizon could stop filing some reports — because the requirements did not extend to cable companies, too."

Comment Re:Good and Bad TV Advertisements (Score 0, Flamebait) 123

I've noticed lately that a lot more TV ads are venturing into extremely obnoxious territory. Many of the ads are so annoying that I never want to see them again, so I mute that ad as soon as I clue in that it's coming. For the most part, I'm talking about ads that scream to get your attention. I dislike people screaming at me anyway, and if they are screaming to get my attention so they can siphon money from my wallet, they get on my mute first list.

Shit, that must be a real chore to keep up with.

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