s/warning/pink slip/g
Posts by Oninoshiko
1937 publicly visible posts • joined 6 Oct 2008
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Snoopy Fujitsu tech KNOWS you'll click that link – before YOU do
Seagate's spinning rust most likely to crash, claims backup biz
Re: Seagate 3TB Consummer Drive Failures
you should always be running in a RAID, and have backups if your data and uptime is of any importance.
From what I have seen the Barracuda line does have a much higher failure rate then the Constellations.
The batch of WDs we got failed, then the replacements failed.
YMMV
Beam me up, Scotty, And VAPORIZE me in the process
Lies, damn lies and Wikipedia: Murder suspect NOT a Plaxo founder – ex-staffer
Facebook is MORE IMPORTANT to humanity than PORTUGAL
Just WHY is the FBI so sure North Korea hacked Sony? NSA: *BLUSH*
EU copyright law: Is the Pirate Party's MEP in FAVOUR of it?
Re: Double edged sword
'So everyone should sell at the lowest possible price and then we can all live on $1.50 a day like the people in the rest of the world. Sounds fair enough of course it will put paid to the products that are developed in rich countries as they cannot to recruit people at $1.50 per day for some reason.'
That assumes perfectly efficient markets, which we don't have. In a perfectly efficient market (in theory, not even the stock markets where nothing physical changes hands is perfectly efficient), there would be no arbitrage. There would be no need, therefor no money to be made in it, and therefor no one doing it. There is a certain amount of inefficiency that the market will support, but in a free market it's counter-balanced by arbitrage. That's what keeps markets from getting TOO inefficient.
"There will always be an imbalance between the cost of goods in under developed economies and those in developed economies, not least because of the exchange fluctuations that exist between economies, £1 in the UK is equal to Euro 1.3 today but maybe only Euro 1 tomorrow."
If allowed to work, arbitrage would keep the cost of the goods fairly close (how close depends on market efficiency for the market in question)
"Economic control also drives up the price. The luxury good markets love China and other countries where the use of money is controlled by fixed exchange rates and limitations on peoples ability to travel. They are the countries where luxury goods sell for the full price whereas in the developed economies they sell below that price because people can go elsewhere to find it cheaper."
That's because controlled markets are artificially inefficient. Also, I wouldn't say "sell for the full price," as that implies the price is set in renminbi (CNY) and lowered to get euros, pounds, and dollars.
Re: Double edged sword
I don't think you understand what a free market is.
In a free market, if I don't like the price locally, I can go to where the price is cheaper and buy it, maybe even buy a lot of it and sell it in the more expensive market. This is an arbitrage transaction, and is part of every free market.
Elon Musk: Wanna see a multimillion-dollar rocket EXPLODE? WATCH THIS
Apple wants your fingerprints in the cloud
Hash vs. Actual prints
This actually doesn't help. All they have to do is use the same algorithm to generate a hash and run the comparison against the hashes apple has.
While this means someone at Apple can't reconstruct your fingerprint from the hash, the FBI/CIA/NSA/GCHQ/WTF Ever can use it to verify your fingerprint.
New York side-eyes California's hack attack laws: I'll have what she's having
CIA exonerates CIA of all wrongdoing in Senate hacking probe
Top EU court: Ryanair data barrel must be left unscraped
"I wonder if this would not be the way for newspapers to prevent Google News from scraping (and Huffpost, for that matter)"
Irrelevant. Newspapers don't want to stop google news. In every case they where given the opportunity to, publishers have showed an opposition to actually using the rights.
Kim Jong-Un shoot-em-up Glorious Leader! yanked
AMD plugs firmware holes that allowed command injection
Adults-only Chrome add-on grabs you by the Googlies
Dot-word domains 'a shakedown, designed to get money out of people'
Google v Oracle: US Supreme Court turns to Obama in Java copyright war
'American soldiers, we are coming...' US CENTCOM military in Twitter hijack shame
Latest NORKS Linux and Android distros leak
So: Will we get net neutrality? El Reg decodes FCC boss Tom Wheeler
I've still not heard a compelling argument
,,,that Wheeler can selectively apply parts of Title 2. If he tries to, we're going to be back here again.
I acknowledge he can declare something covered or not, but it's either completely covered or not at all. Anything else is outside his remit, as it is the purview of congress.
Broadband isn't broadband unless it's 25Mbps, mulls FCC boss
Re: Remove the monopoly first
The US needs to <del>remove the monopoly the phone companies have</del> keep the streets ripped up conenuously.
FTFY
Seriously, phones are a natural monopoly because of the cost and inconvenience of building networks. what they should do is split services and network maintenance into two companies, and allow anyone who wants to offer different services to use the network at the same price.
Hell, I'm willing to say nationalize the network and allow different companies to use it to deliver different services, and I'm normally a free-market nutter.
Sphere 3D: Our pop-out 2TB disk product? Of COURSE it's rugged
CES 2015: The good, the mad and the POINTLESS
Lollipop licked: KitKat still king in Android land
Meru Networks ready to DECIMATE its workforce
No cellphones in cells, you slag! UK.gov moots prison mobe zap law
Elite:Dangerous goes TITSUP
Re: Did this also affect...
I have a list of games a long as my arm, those are not among them. Titanfall looked interesting, but it's a bit overpriced for a game which only offers MOBA play. Destiny, by all accounts (even the supportive ones) is grindy. I've never liked GTA or Battlefield. Frankly, racing games are a dime a dozen. All of these have one thing going for them that ED didn't, they where honest and TOLD the buyer that being online would be a requirement.
David Braben said ED wouldn't be, but David lied. It puts real perspective on Ian Bell's comment that the one thing he would do differently is not trust David.
Hey look! Microsoft's workforce isn't all white men
Re: @oninochinko
Prarents start with the "boys things" vs. "girls things" before a child is old enough to show a preference. From the mobiles above the pram to to pram itself. Is there some influence of genetics? Sure, but I've known enough "geek girls" to conclude that a Y chromosome does not make you a maths hating princess.
@h4rm0ny
None of it makes any sense at all. US or EU version. We're all human, the race and gender divides people insist on creating are just bullshit.
As to the gender disparity, it starts long before school. It starts in the home, with the parents who get their sons lego and their daughters barbie.
Sony hackers dump more hunks of stolen data, promise another 'Christmas gift'
Zuckerberg asks the public to tell him where to go in 2015
SCREW YOU, Russia! NASA lobs $6.8bn at Boeing AND SpaceX to run space station taxis
Kim Dotcom vows to KILL SKYPE with encrypted MegaChat
No, what they are saying is:
There are fundamental flaws with how people use things in the real world that this implementation treats naively. Going some other way forces the user to use it properly, and therefore in practice, is far more secure.
That's a completely reasonable claim, in fact I find it to be one of the things security researchers SHOULD be talking about, but often don't.
Good Job, security researchers!
Metrics house hails Apple DOMINANCE of X-Mas phone 'n' slab sales
That's a good question. I THINK it means activating a cell plan, but am not certain.
I'm sure it does affect the apple family as well (I did the same thing with my iPad 2 this replaced), but is the ratio the same? How what is the ratios for unactivated tablets? I don't know, but without actually looking at this, these numbers are hard to trust.
As someone who bought a tablet (nVidia's, if you must know) and hasn't bothered to activate it, I wonder how many are like me? WiFi is so ubiquitous, even where I am, there's no reason to pay for a plan. Even where it isn't, I can just turn my phone into an access point.
I'm not sure that activations tell the whole story.
Buses? PAH. Begone with your filthy peasant-wagons
Q*bert: The Escher-inspired platform puzzler from 1982
Re: There was a lot of originality back then
I think much of the originality that seems to be gone now, comes from the constraints about what you couldn't do. Now things seem so limitless, you can do anything so (relatively) easily we don't have the limitations that help us define the game. I really thing a large part of creativity is those limitation, seeing what we can do within them, seeing what we can do to hide them.
Makers of Snowden movie Citizenfour sued by ex-oil exec
Frustration with Elite:Dangerous boils over into 'Refund Quest'
Split could force NetMundial Initiative back to the drawing board
Space Commanders lock missiles on Elite's Frontier Devs
Kickstarter requires a good-faith effort be made on the part of the project to fulfill their promises. Here's what DB had to say about what lead up to dropping offline:
"So we were looking into different ways of handling that and, to be honest, we pushed back development of the offline mode. We needed to replicate some of the work locally that was being done on the server. It was one of those things where we could do it, but the amount of work involved increased over time. The emptiness would be a real factor as well."
You tell me, does that sound like a good-faith effort to fulfill your promises or the second half of a bait-and-switch?
You have a 'simple question'? Well, the answer is NO
Google sues Mississippi Attorney General 'for doing MPAA's dirty work'
Re: Mississippi voters are entitled to vote
Except that you didn't bother to read from that article HOW they where identifying those sites. They didn't say "this is a pirate site" they said "this has had priacy complaints, so we'll move the whole site down." That makes the MPAA (et. al.) judge, jury, and executioner. This is the same MPAA that has be caught, multiple times, sending take down requests for things they didn't own the copyrights on!
So, NO Google DIDN'T prove they can identify sites.