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typodupeerror

Comment Re:Things change at large scale (Score 2) 525

It's actually even worse than this. Using your example, your TCP stack ramps up to 25mbps, overflows the buffer, and loses a lot of packets at once, rather than just one or a few packets that would be lost with a sane buffer. Lots of lost packets at once leads to a RTO timeout rather than a Fast Retransmit and Fast Recovery, and essentially you're starting over from zero instead of reducing your speed a little and continuing.

Comment Re: But, but.... (Score 1) 431

I'm part of teh evil content industry. If one of my games wrecks your PC, you can sue me. You can track me down easily from my registered company name and bring court proceedings for damages

I can certainly bring proceedings, but I will probably lose, seeing as the EULA I agreed to when I installed your game specifically indemnifies you from damages, and doesn't 'warrant merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose'.

The Internet

Submission + - A campaign to block Firefox users (whyfirefoxisblocked.com) 5

rarwes writes: A website is aiming at blocking Firefox users. This because a fraction of the Firefox users installed an Ad Blocker and thus stealing money from website owners that use ads. They recommend using IE, Opera or IE tab. From the site: Demographics have shown that not only are FireFox users a somewhat small percentage of the internet, they actually are even smaller in terms of online spending, therefore blocking FireFox seems to have only minimal financial drawbacks, whereas ending resource theft has tremendous financial rewards for honest, hard-working website owners and developers.
Biotech

Submission + - Scientists discover how to erase memories (pressesc.com) 1

amigoro writes: "Neuroscientists have discovered that long-term memories are not etched in a "clay tablet"-like stable form as once thought, but the process is much more dynamic, involving a miniature molecular machine that must run constantly to keep memories going, jamming the machine briefly can erase long-term memories."
Java

Submission + - Sun lowers barriers to open-source Java

Shyane writes: Sun Microsystems is making it easier for open-source programmers to ensure their Java versions meet the company's compatibility requirements, but the deal extends only to those involved in Sun's own open-source Java project. The program grants access to its Java Technology Compatibility Kit to anyone with an open-source Java project that is based substantially on Sun's open-source Java software and governed by the GPL. Programmers need access to the test kit to prove that a project is in compliance with the Java specification. Projects that pass Sun's compatibility kit tests also can use the official Java logos for free, said Rich Sands, OpenJDK community marketing manager at Sun.
Handhelds

Submission + - China copies iPhone; makes it even better (popsci.com)

An anonymous reader writes: China duplicates a lot of well know products; now they are duplicating the iPhone. Yet apparently they are making it better. From the article "The miniOne looked just like Apple's iPhone, down to the slick no-button interface. But it was more. It ran popular mobile software that the iPhone wouldn't. It worked with nearly every worldwide cellphone carrier, not just AT&T, and not only in the U.S. It promised to cost half as much as the iPhone and be available to 10 times as many consumers." The cloned iPhone uses a Linux-based system. "The cloners hire a team of between 20 and 40 engineers to begin decoding the circuit boards. At the same time, coders start to develop an operating system for the phone with a similar feature set. (The typical cloner either uses off-the-shelf code, writes something entirely new, or modifies a publicly available Linux-based system.) "

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