* Posts by big_D

6779 publicly visible posts • joined 27 Nov 2009

Chinese tech titans' share prices slump after THAT Super Micro story

big_D Silver badge

Other Chinese companies?

The report sent the stock market value of Super Micro down by 50 per cent, and though the share price recovered to a degree, it is still down by more than 40 per cent at the time of writing. Apple and Amazon shares fell by a couple of per cent and remain in that ballpark.

However, other Chinese vendors unconnected to the bombshell also saw their market cap shrink today

The last time I looked, Amazon was a US based company in Seattle, Apple and SuperMicro are both surfer dudes from sunny Califormia...

The secret history of Apple's Stacks

big_D Silver badge

OCD

I must be OCD, because the only icon on my desktop is usually the rubbish bin.

Day two – and Windows 10 October 2018 Update trips over Intel audio

big_D Silver badge

I upgradged a Skylake and Coffee Lake laptops and a Ryzen 1700 desktop. No issues so far, although I did get new Intel drivers pushed at me by the manufacturers over the last couple of weeks.

Apple macOS Mojave: There's goth mode but developers will have to wait for the juicy stuff

big_D Silver badge

News App

Is it just me, or does that look like a mid-90s website design disaster?

The "Goth" mode on the other hand doesn't look too bad.

Windows 10 1809: Now arriving on a desktop near you (if you want it)

big_D Silver badge

RP? I thought it was RTM

But as it doesn't need to be pressed on DVDs any more, I guess the manufacturing falls away.

I prefer Mary Jo's version of RTM - Release To Muggles.

big_D Silver badge

Re: Hmmmm

All my privacy settings remain correctly set (i.e. don't provide any information).

Interestingly, when you start Edge after the update (Firefox was still my default browser), it appologised that the 3rd party cookie tracking option was leaky prior to the update, but it is all okay now.

big_D Silver badge

@bombastic bob agreed, dual booting is usually a waste fo time, you end up rarely using it and it is a real pain. Unless you have some sort of technical need (games, old hardware that "hits the metal" (which is unlikely with Windows 10)), there is rarely a need to dual-boot these days.

I do it the other was round, I have a Windows 10 PC with half a dozen different Linux VMs running under Hyper-V. But using Xen or KVM on Linux would be my preferred way of going forward, or at the outside, shudder, VirtualBox.

big_D Silver badge

I upated 3 machines yesterday, a Skylake HP Spectre x360, a Ryzen 7 desktop and a Lenovo Thinkpad T480. The installation runs in the background and didn't affect my use of the machine, that took about 40 minutes for preparing, downloading and installing. The restart took around 10 minutes on each.

US and UK Amazon workers get a wage hike – maybe they'll go to the movies, by themselves

big_D Silver badge

Re: I honestly don't know...

The UK is the second most-welcoming country in Europe for refugees (after Germany), even without Brussels attempts to dole out quotas.

Since when? The last quote from UK.gov I heard was that they had agreed to take on as many refugees over 2 years as the German state of Baden-Württemburg was taking on in a month!

Screwed SAP salesman scores $660,000 jury award

big_D Silver badge

Re: One of these for dogged persistence

SAP likes to take its customers to the cleaners as well.

Building an external web portal that accesses logistics information in SAP means you need a license for every visitor to your website, according to SAP.

Rookie almost wipes customer's entire inventory – unbeknownst to sysadmin

big_D Silver badge

Re: .cobol

I totally agree, the resultant code was better than what I had previously written, because some of the mistakes and assumptions I'd made the first time round and worked around didn't make it into the new code.

big_D Silver badge

@cortland, I remember working at a place, where we had just gone from VAX to MicroVAX and hat a box the size of a desk drawer unit, which was a VAX with 4GB storage, a huge amount in those days.

We then got a contract to run an IBM installation for another customer and their hardware started to arrive, there was a huge (6' high, 2' - 3' wide and the same deep). I asked what that was, the IBM op said "a DASD", I was impressed, if my desktop had a 120MB drive and the MicroVAX had 4GB, then this must have had a HUGE capacity. When I pointed at the MicroVAX and said, well that has 4GB, what capacity does this thing have, being at least 12 times the size of MicroVAX and just being the drive? He turned a little red and mumbled 500MB.

big_D Silver badge

Re: @Martin an gof

Main Dealers can be a pain... Or downright dangerous.

I had a Toyota and the dealer did the first service... Forgot to put the oil cap back on afterwards, by the time I got half way home, the engine bay was covered in oil and it was bellowing smoke.

Then, the next time, they bled the brakes and forgot to reseal the lines! That was a scary ride home!

The third time, they left a pair of pliers under the hood.

big_D Silver badge

Re: .cobol

He knew about it 6 months in advance. I'd told him 4 months in advance not to leave it to the last minute... He said he had everything under control.

big_D Silver badge

Re: .cobol

On a Samba share? No. No trashcan, no VSS.

big_D Silver badge

Re: .cobol

Yep, one of the many reasons I don't work there any more.

big_D Silver badge

Re: And then billed 3 extra hours?

Was it IBM or ICL that "upgraded" to a faster machine by removing a resistor board?

big_D Silver badge

.cobol

I had been working on a major change to some code on a COBOL system. For safety, I copied the original files to from *.COB to *.COBOL. I then spent 3 days working out the changes needed, and testing them.

I got it all working and error free, so I went to delete the original files, but I only got as far as "del *.COB" befiore hitting return. WAH! I copied the .COBOL back to .COB and started over again. As I knew what I wanted to do this time, it only took about a day to re-do what I had deleted.

Another time, I had been working late on a presentation for my boss and I went to rename it, right click, select Rename from the menu, hand slip, click, file gone! Delete is right above Rename in the bloody menu! Luckily, I had sent a copy to someone to start checking over about 20 minutes earlier, so I had a recent backup to work with! But that is what happens, when the boss comes in at 5:30 in the evening and says he has a presentation at 10am at CeBIT the next day and needs 40 slides...

Microsoft liberates ancient MS-DOS source from the museum and sticks it in GitHub

big_D Silver badge

Re: "a bunch of engineers in some US uni"

@jake yeah, the number of times I've had to debug code, especially HTML/CSS, because things don't appear as expected, only to realise that Amis can't spell colour!

big_D Silver badge

Re: To some MSDOS was an major leap forward.

I worked on an Olivetti 286 based Xenix system as well, with a 20 port COM board sticking out the back and a dozen or so dumb terminals connected to it.

big_D Silver badge

Re: Wake me up

Given they were one of the biggest single contributors to the Linux Kernel in recent years, what exactly are you looking for?

big_D Silver badge

Re: Another shot of Code

Take a look at SpinRite from GRC sometime, the .exe is 170KB and that includes the 1,4MB of compressed FreeDOS needed to create a bootable ISO!

There are still some people around who take won't waste a byte in their code.

He also wrote the Inspectre tool for seeing if the processor is susceptible to Spectre and Meltdown. The original version was around 112KB, and Steve moaned that 96KB of that was the damned desktop icon!

big_D Silver badge

German keyboards also don't have {} or [] on a dedicated key, \ and | also need a compose (AltGr) keypress, as do ~ and @.

The worst are the Apple keyboards, those "special" symbols are on different keys to normal / Windows keyboards, but, and here is the best bit, with the exception of @, which moves from Q to L, none of them are actually marked on the keyboard! You have to "guess" where they are.

But at least we get the ° symbol as a "normal" keypress (shift + ^, on the left side, under the Escape key).

Nearly all modern programming languages are hostile.

big_D Silver badge

Re: To some MSDOS was an major leap forward.

I saved up my pocket money and bought a ZX81 kit, my mother paid half of the cost. I then taught myself BASIC and machine code.

At home I was stuck with the cassette deck, but I had a weekend job working for a liquidator, repairing and refurbishing the computers they got in. A lot of Apple IIs, but also a lot of CP/M and a Z80 based UNIX box! :-O

The best thing I had to "play" with was a Shelton Signet with a 2 or 5MB hard drive! It also had Collosal Cave on it.

The ink's not dry on California'a new net neutrality law and the US govt is already suing

big_D Silver badge

Re: The future doesn't need Net Neutrality

The problem is, without net neutrality, you won't get new services or be able to select the service you want, you will be stuck with the services your provider can strike the most profitable deal with.

I'd rather stick with a cheap 10GB open plan and chose which services I want to use, rather than have a 2GB plan, but "unlimited" streaming of services I am not interested in.

I currently get 10GB LTE data for 30€, including unlimited calls and SMS. It is a little expensive, I'm shopping around for a better deal, but that is the 10GB I can chose what I want to use it for.

big_D Silver badge

You mean, they are unable to see past the noses (and brown envelopes) of their corporate sugar daddies.

New Zealand border cops warn travelers that without handing over electronic passwords 'You shall not pass!'

big_D Silver badge

Re: An app opportunity

I'd go one further, don't take a device with you, buy a burner device there, destroy it before the return flight.

big_D Silver badge

Re: Australia has more draconian laws

I don't use Facebook, Instagram etc. and if I travel now, I will probably leave my phone at home.

The question is, in the USA, if you say you don't have a Facebook, Instagram etc. account, do they believe you?

With each passing day, Qualityland and The Circle seem to be becoming more and more real, how long until Facebook has a legal, government mandate to create a profile for everybody without an account and for every newborn?

Location, location, location... technologies under the microscope

big_D Silver badge

That is why I have all my cards in a blocker wallet.

big_D Silver badge

Re: BlueTooth? No Thanks

Amazon seems to be the worst, they bombard me with ads for products I've already bought or similar products.

If I just bought a smartphone, in all likelihood, I am not going to buy another one the next day, week, month or year. Yet I get almost daily mails from them offering me another smartphone and when I go to the site, they are the first thing that is offered.

The same when I bought a NAS recently, since then the most highly recommended items are other NAS devices!

big_D Silver badge

@LeeD with the app, they can track you and they also know what you have bought in the past. Therefore, they won't offer you a discount on the ketchup, but they will try and promote, say HP sauce or Tabasco sauce or something you don't usually buy, to try and get you to spend more.

That is the point, to get you to put more into your shopping cart than you would normally, by giving you the "special offers".

AI-powered IT security seems cool – until you clock miscreants wielding it too

big_D Silver badge

William Gibson

Isn't this what William Gibson wrote about in Neuromancer? AI security and deck jockeys using AI generated ICE to break into systems?

It is funny, I would have thought more tech aware leaders would be more wary of AI, they should have a better understanding of what can go wrong with it, for a start.

One Project to rule them all: Microsoft plots end to Project Online while nervous Server looks on

big_D Silver badge

Or at least make the viewing tools and time booking part of Office / Office 365. Not everybody needs full project.

Attempt to clean up tech area has shocking effect on kit

big_D Silver badge

Re: Electrifying

Bah, the earth prongs in the socket!!!

big_D Silver badge

Electrifying

I had a problem at a previous company. I work in Germany and the plugs, like the UK, have the Earth connect before positive and negative. The difference being, the Earth prongs in the plug are exposed, which is also good if you need to earth anything / yourself...

Anyway, I was standing in my office one day, leaning against the window, looking at my whiteboard and thinking. Running under the window sill was trunking with about 9 power sockets. I leaned forward and lost my balance and reached instinctively behind me and my fingers went into the power sockets and I gripped the window sill and the inside of the socket to hold myself.

BANG!

I got an electrical jolt up my right arm and down my back. I let go and staggered forward.

I then limped down the corridor to the techs and told them. They said, nah, impossible, but I was white as a ghost and was in pain, so they came back with me and tested the sockets. All, but one, were fine. The electrician who had wired them up had somehow managed to swap phase and earth on one socket. The one socket that nobody had used since the buildings renovation 10 years earlier. The one socket I managed to stick my finger in when I lost my balance!

After about an hour, my arm had recovered enough that I could continue working and the techs had re-wired the socket, properly this time!

big_D Silver badge
Coat

It started off good, but ran out of steam. I appreciated the attempt anyway.

You can't beat the sound of S&G in the morning, well, maybe the sound of silence... Oops, landing in an infinite loop there.

Mine's the one with the S&G collection in the pocket.

Former Apple engineer fights iPhone giant for patent credit and denied cash, says Steve Jobs loved his 'killer ideas'

big_D Silver badge

Re: How should patents work?

Normally, you get listed on the patent, but you don't get royalties, because any ideas and patents created during your employment at the company are the property of the company. It is in most employment contracts I've seen over the years.

That said, the rest of the case has merit, if what he alleges is true.

Your specialist subject? The bleedin' obvious... Feds warn of RDP woe

big_D Silver badge

Re: Useful advice that won't help

I had one CEO, he decided RDP from outside was dangerous, but he worked from home with a thin client, so VPN was out. Ah, yes, just the thing: move RDP to another port, nobody would be able to work that out! Yes, that will do the job! GAH!

Bombing raids during WWII sent out shockwaves powerful enough to alter the Earth's ionosphere

big_D Silver badge

Re: Approx

50.5 miles per US Gallon, 60.1 miles real gallon

big_D Silver badge

Re: Duke Nukem

After the wrong picture, that was my second thought on the article.

big_D Silver badge

Re: Approx

1,000KM is about what my Nissan achieves, before I have to start looking for a fuel station to re-fill the tank (47 litres).

big_D Silver badge

Re: C'mon, we're all anoraks round here

That was my first thought as well. What do old DC3s, or rather C47 Skytrains, have to do with WWII bombing raids?

'This is insane!' FCC commissioner tears into colleagues over failure to stop robocalls

big_D Silver badge

Re: "Is this a US only problem or is it also happening in other countries?"

@LDS yes, it is mainly spam calls from call centers here, fully automated calls are next to non-existent, because it is illegal.

My bad in my post above, it is the call centers that get blocked.

What is interesting is, we went through a spate of Indian call centers rining up and claiming to be Microsoft, but the only spoke English, not German. Basically, any overseas call is ignored by my wife, as is any number that doesn't appear in our phonebook.

big_D Silver badge

Re: France

I get it here in Germany, but only on the landline. I put the numbers into the blacklist in my router.

Sneaky phone apps just about obey the law, still have no trouble guzzling your data, says Which?

big_D Silver badge

Re: Not using Apps? Its no longer optional anymore

Given that with a FitBit, I can "run" a marathon without getting off the sofa, the use of such devices is spurious as best.

big_D Silver badge

WhatsApp is the problem in that statement!

That is one of the worst GDPR offenders. Many companies are banning its use on company devices, the biggest one so far Continental / Conti.

Open-source software supply chain vulns have doubled in 12 months

big_D Silver badge

Re: Software supply chain attacks?

The problem isn't open source per se, it is that the code gets fixed, published, people can look at it and work out easily where the problems were and quickly exploit them. With closed source, they need to reverse engineer or get lucky. Once the fix is published, with closed source, they have a heads up where to look, which also shortens the exploit time there.

Add in that, as said, a lot of security updates never get centrally reported, as stated in the article, just in the daily check-ins and release notes, which most people only read if they are actualy installing an update, if at all. That means most users never even know there are security patches available.

But a lot of open source is installed and forgotten about, because it is "open source" and not Microsoft / IBM / SAP, it often sits unloved on a server somewhere in the metaphorical corner and doesn't get updated, because it isn't "core" to the company's LoB.

That gives a lot more scope for exploiting open source software, not because it is worse than closed source, but because the information is easily accessible by hackers, down to which lines of code have been modified, and the users often aren't informed in time that there are patches available, unless it is a major issue. The dozens of minor issues that the devs discover themselves and patch quietly in the check-in logs are still available to the hackers, but which user pours over the daily check-in logs of every bit of software they have installed?

Facebook sued for exposing content moderators to Facebook

big_D Silver badge

Re: I'm sorry, but snowflakes....

@Giovani, I agree. the whole approach does seem very callous and I should think it takes a very special sort of person to watch this sort of thing all day and not be affected by it.

But if you know that going in, it is a bit rich to complain sue the company, unless they didn't fulfill their part of the bargain, with training, support and councelling.

big_D Silver badge

Re: I'm sorry, but snowflakes....

I sort of agree. If you get forcibly moved into a new department and have to moderate violent content, that is one thing.

If you take a contract, where you are informed beforehand that you will be watching disturbing content, you know, more or less, what you are letting yourself in for. It seems like part of the story is missing here.

The question is, did she take advantage of the benefits? Did she know before hand, that she was going to be in that department? Did she receive the training and still carry on with the contract, knowing what she had let herself in for?

Did Facebook not offer the support it says it offers such staff?

A lot of missing information, which makes it impossible to draw a conclusion on whether she is a snowflake or whether she has a genuine case.

Amid Trump-China tariff tiff, Cisco kit prices to resellers soar up to 25%

big_D Silver badge

At the end of the day, it is the customer that ends up paying. The companies can only absorb so much, the share holders want their returns, so the customer will have to pay for the price rise.