* Posts by elaar

364 publicly visible posts • joined 12 Sep 2011

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SQLite maximum database size increased to 281TB – but will anyone need one that big?

elaar

"but often get used far far out of their designed goals."

It's easy and common to say such a thing, but have you actually got any statistical evidence to back that up?

Personally I've yet to see such an example of it.

Just like when you 'game over' two seconds into a new level... Facebook launches Gaming app without games on iOS

elaar

You describe it in a way where Apple's main focus is to help the independent game maker, and a by-product of that is that they receive more cash from direct app payments.

Surely it's the other way round, what huge and very rich corporate company would have that mentality?

Cambridge student rebuilds Polish Enigma-code-breaking box that paved the way for Turing ... and Victory!

elaar

"without having to be in the same political pot-pourri."

Of course we have the same political pot-pourri, the difference being it's controlled in one direction only and concealed from the public.

Brexit will not bring our "sovereignty" back.

Bad news: Your Cisco switch is a fake and an update borked it. Good news: It wasn't designed to spy on you

elaar

Re: Impressed?

As far back as the early 80's, certain people invested huge amounts of time reversing the security protections on arcade game pcbs with only the use of fairly primitive electronic tools, creating replacements/workarounds for custom ICs etc. To then redesign and manufacture them in a few short months.

I have to admire their skillset, it would have required some very clever people indeed.

Analogue radio given 10-year stay of execution as the UK U-turns on DAB digital future

elaar

Yes, they really messed up with DAB. It had the potential to have far superior sound quality to FM, and yet they decided to carve it up as much as possible for financial gain and actually make it absolute shite.

TikTok boom: Brits spent a quarter of their waking hours in lockdown online – Ofcom

elaar

You lost me at left-wing nasty mobs.

There are DDoS attacks, then there's this 809 million packet-per-second tsunami Akamai says it just caught

elaar

Re: And the next step...

"as someone else has posted, its totally possible to send tcp & udp packets with false source ip addresses."

On what ISP does that work? I'm not aware of any now.

Talktalk would be fully aware of what their customers did or didn't do. To suggest talktalk would route packets with an invalid source address and still have no idea is absurd.

With the fake source IP address, what would you use as the df gateway? What routing protocol would forward it and under what circumstance? Why would BGP forward it?

elaar

Re: Solution, Billing = $

"What happens when I find out your IP, decide I don't like you and regularly flood Akamai with UDP packets with the source address being yours so that you get billed?"

Maybe 30 years ago those sorts of packets would route through an ISP, but certainly not through the one I work for or all others I'd imagine..... Even the most basic of routing protocols configured properly prevent this.

It wasn't just a few credit cards: Entire travel itineraries were stolen by hackers, Easyjet now tells victims

elaar

To be fair, most of the Easyjet flights to europe are a similar price to BA these days, and Ryanair often works out more expensive, from Stansted anyway.

Far-right leader walks free from court after conviction for refusing to hand his phone passcode over to police

elaar

What's a left-wing extremist these days?

elaar

Re: Would never have happened in my day

"Just ask Tommy Robinson, to whom if we had only listened, we might have prevented the torture and rape of thousands of children by rape gangs in the UK"

He almost derailed the trial, thus actually helping the gang. I'm not sure how listening to him at a late stage would have prevented the actions of people 15 years ago?

All we need to know about him is his previous actions, which is how you can fairly judge people. Multiple counts of fraud,violence and hatred.

Sure, he's most certainly being unfairly picked on isn't he! I can't think why he decided to change his name.

Car crash: Uber axes another 3,000 jobs, closes 45 offices as punters snub app during coronavirus lockdown

elaar

So Uber was expecting $100billion at the IPO last year, even though it had never made any money and relied completely on the gig economy and typically less than acceptable labour conditions.

And down they now go after just 3 months of issues, 30% off their actual IPO price. Perhaps companies shouldn't rely on vast amounts of debt and VC funding to carry out stupidly insane expansion goals.

Was it really worth using all that money to fight countries/states/capitals in court? They could have just expanded slower, been a bit nicer, and people may have had more respect for them.

elaar

Re: Every job loss is sad

"Yes, evil practices like providing cheap, safe cabs in which rapes of drunk female passengers are no longer commonplace"

Cheap - Because they're not licensed or regulated, and their drivers aren't actual employees (hence the huge number of drivers now on universal credit)

Safe - Nope, actually much less safe than licensed cabs according to actual real statistics.

Their drivers are now screwed due to their business model.

What world do you live on?

FYI: Your browser can pick up ultrasonic signals you can't hear, and that sounds like a privacy nightmare to some

elaar

"if a TV advert, for example, emits a sneaky inaudible signal"

This is assuming the cheap and small driver in the TV is even capable of creating that inaudible frequency, and that there's no active/passive low/high pass filtering at the op-amp/amp stages (unlikely).

UK enters almost-lockdown: Brits urged to keep calm and carry on – as long as it doesn't involve leaving the house

elaar

Re: "One form of exercise a day"

"If your job really isn't necessary, then report your employer to the police, who will have a nice chat with them to find out what they are playing at."

According to Gove this morning on Radio4, building sites are allowed to remain open even though they cannot garauntee 2m distances. Are those jobs necessary? Who deems what's necessary or not?

Gove stated that anything essential to public services is also included, e.g plumbers, electricians, boiler repairers etc.

In the predicament we're in, how many employees do you think really want to get involved in a stand-off with HR, or call the police in (which seems a bit of a waste of police resources)? There should be VERY CLEAR guidelines for employers, so that employees aren't put in difficult positions.

That's all we want.

elaar

Re: "One form of exercise a day"

"Stay in your f*cking house, unless you need to get something you need to keep you alive, like food and medicine."

Except that isn't a summary of what he said. There's a lot of ambiguity. What if your employer deems your work to be "absolutely necessary" (like mine)? The same goes for the self employed.

"Travelling to and from work​, but only where this absolutely cannot be done from home."

That's the official quote from the government guidelines, it doesn't quite match your summary....

Netflix starts 30-day video data diet at EU's request to ensure network availability during coronavirus crisis

elaar

Re: Money back

"who are paying for HD but getting only SD quality."

So how do you and they define HD vs SD? Resolution, bitrate, bandwidth?

You can have SD with a higher bitrate with quality that surpasses HD.

Similarly, they could still deliver UHD, resolution wise, but with a bitrate that would be so low it would look worse than HD, but they would still be delivering on their UHD service according to the resolution.

Get in the C: Raspberry Pi 4 can handle a wider range of USB adapters thanks to revised design's silent arrival

elaar

Re: Forget the 'Osborne Effect':focus on the "Upton Effect".

Wow, a little over the top. It's a cheap hobby board in it's infancy....

elaar

How many GPIO does the NUC have?

Depending on what you're using it for, it's a bad comparison.

elaar

Re: Power to the Pi-ple

" and a USB cable is often easier to find than an arbitrary barrel adapter,"

Well it's not that easy though is it? Firstly it needs to be @3A psu, when most that you'll already have that come with USB are 2A, then there's the fact it has to now be USB-C. So how many people have USB-C leads with 3A PSUs lying around? It's not *that* convenient a power interface at the present time.

Don't tell us to go Huawei, Chinese ambassadors tell UK and France

elaar

Re: Can I setup a news agency or search engine in China and report freely about Tibet, Taiwan, etc?

If you think we should break the free market and/or embark on protectionism simply because you disagree with a country's government/political makeup, then that's a lot of trade we'd have to stop.

Similarly, should other countries put an embargo on our goods because we're part of the largest spy network in the world, or they don't like us selling arms to the Saudis and countless other unethical actions?

Windows 7 will not go gentle into that good night: Ageing OS refuses to shut down

elaar

Re: "Operating systems don't just rot or break by themselves ffs"

My windows 7 machine has been on for 193 days and is running fine.

We used to have thousands of windows servers running VBAK back in the day, and they would have uptimes of years and run fine.

I suppose it may be different for home PCs, where users are running many instances of different programs, increasing the chances that one of those is going to misbehave at some point, or a driver leaking memory etc.

Come to Five Guys, where the software is as fresh as the burgers... or maybe not

elaar

Re: I'm sure they can afford support

"the burger is better than anything Byron, McDs, BK, Honest, GBK or any other burger joint rustles up"

It's a beef pattie for god sake, it's not rocket science to make. Five guys seem to fool people into thinking their food is nice by putting a days RDA of salt into a meal, 2000calories+, and 50% fat.

Definitely better than McD/BK, but that's hardly a fair comparison.

elaar

Re: upstart?

They're only very good compared to cheap fast food places.

They're no better than a burger made at home, or one on the bbq.

Their regular fries are 1000calories alone, which is pretty scary. It's never going to taste awful when a normal meal from there comes in at 2500calories

Contractors welcome Lords inquiry into IR35 before tax reforms hit private sector but fear it's 'too little, too late'

elaar

Re: Indeed...

"even though I don't so a job similar to anyone else in that organisation (which is why they hired a specialist contractor in the first place) nor am I subject to "control" in terms of the execution of my works"

Is that the only reason you feel you should be classed as a contractor?

I work for an ISP, and yet we have bought out so many companies over the years we have a vast array of employee skillsets.

I found out the other day we have a couple of home-based guys that repair/replace ancient pcbs from old nuclear power stations. A small office that produces parts for Navy submarines. A few guys specialising in old mainframes for a particular large university.

It doesn't really fit in with the roles of the rest of the company, where we specialise in Storage, MPLS, Cloud based ISP type stuff, and yet they're all classed as employees.

Will Asimov fix my doorbell? There should be a law about this

elaar

Re: You are confusing EU with Europe

"I think 25 years of trying showed that that's never going to happen."

In what way did we try exactly? What did Tory/UKIP MEPs do that constitutes "trying"?

I think it's fair to say that the EU will be a better place without our representatives.

BT: UK.gov ruling on Huawei will cost us half a billion pounds over next 5 years

elaar

5G is getting all the headlines, but no one seems to mind that BT uses Huawei equipment for FTTC and FTTP, and that the majority of the new HSCN rollout is being done with Huawei CE's (it's only our private medical data).

Of course it's multi-vendor and secure, but people don't seem to understand that.

The Tories also haven't been too concerned about the Chinese owning/having unfluence over our water companies, major bridges and power stations.

EU declares it'll Make USB-C Great Again™. You hear that, Apple?

elaar

USB A

A good few years ago, a friend that designed and built a new modern house took great delight in showing me the ~ 50 power sockets with USB-A connectors, so he could charge "everything". No doubt they're rated for about 1amp, it won't be long until he ends up changing all of those.

elaar

Cables always win.

elaar

You're comparing bandwidth with ampage.

RJ45 has gone from utilising 2 pairs to 4 as well.

elaar

I believe the plan is to use the cable with devices with similar voltage requirements, rather than the 20v x 5amp (100w) capability, which would obviously result in the destruction of a lot of devices.

Realistically, all that's required is a PSU of ~ 3amp+, and that would charge 99% of phones/tablets/SOCs/Controllers/Headphones/Gadgets etc etc.

Squirrel away a little IT budget for likely Brexit uncertainty, CIOs warned

elaar

Re: Opportunites, we don't need no steenkin' opportunities!

" and more freedom with the rest of the world."

This is incorrect I'm afraid. More "perceived" freedom, but in reality we won't.

We'll create trading relationships out of desperation (there's very good reasons why the EU/US don't have a proper free trade agreement after MANY years of negotiations).

Brexiters will then realise that when we create trade deals, we will have to take on different rules/regulations to harmonise sectors to enable free and fair trade. In the exact same way we did with the EU and Brexiters argued we were being ruled by the EU.

There's no question that the US has lower food safety standards and animal welfare, do we match that? If so that prevents us trading with the EU and other areas.

We will have very little freedom.

US hands UK 'dossier' on Huawei: Really! Still using their kit? That's just... one... step... beyond

elaar

Indeed.

The NHS is full of Huawei kit, with most CCGs opting for Huawei routers for the new HSCN (up to 1/3rd of the price of the equivalent Cisco model).

BT exchanges similarly full of the kit for FTTC/FTTP etc.

Of course it's all part of a multi-vendor design, and presents no security risks.

LG announces bold new plan for financial salvation: Trying to actually make phones people want to buy

elaar

Privacy concerns

LG need to sort out their harvesting of private data before I'll ever buy one of their products again (phones and TVs).

Beset by lawsuits over poor security protections, Ring rolls out 'privacy dashboard' for its creepy surveillance cams, immediately takes heat

elaar

Re: The Big Question:

I was pondering this earlier today, when I saw that my neighbour has recently had one installed.

I couldn't think of a single occasion where my life had been negatively impacted by not being home when someone rang my door bell.

Most delivery people hide packages around my property (or throw them over the fence if it's Hermes), unless it requires a signature, which I can't do remotely through an e-doorbell anyway.

So all I'm missing out on is the cold-callers and the religious folk, shame.

Security wise, if you live in such a bad area that you need to video your doorstep, wouldn't a cctv camera covering the whole of the front of your house, with better quality video be a better option?

elaar

Re: At WhitePines...

"and as long as I wired it correctly and put the correct fuse in"

But even with those safety standards you mention, it still required some level of intelligence on your part and a degree of skill/knowledge to use that "safe plug" in a safe way.

Similarly, adults should be aware of the VERY simple and frequently discussed fact that passwords for anything connected to the internet should be reasonably complex, for reasons so obvious that those that aren't aware of it are the reason why we have "do not drink" labels on Bleach bottles.

Whilst companies should do everything in their power to protect you, in reality they won't.

Long-term Linux Mint: 19.3 release unchains the Gimp, adds HiDPI, is kind to your older, less-beefy kit

elaar

Re: My old Dell Latitude D630 laptop

I updated from 17.3 to 19.3 with the help of an online guide, and the process was seamless and completed in an hour.

Hold my Bose, we can do premium: Sennheiser chucks pricey wireless cans at travellers

elaar

Re: oh no!

"proven - to - be - unreliable connector,"

It's not unreliable at all. The recepticles on the market are typically rated for 10k cycles.

If you buy £1 cables, or fill the connector with crud then that's not the fault of the standard/connector.

GlaxoSmithKline ditches IR35 contractors: Go PAYE or go home

elaar

Re: Killing the Goose that lays the Golden Eggs

My personal view is that if you have 3 years worth of work with a company, that should make you a permanent employee.

"I wasn't doing the same job as a permanent employee"

What does that even mean? A permanent employee isn't inherently restricted to certain jobs/work/hours/projects etc.

China fires up 'Great Cannon' denial-of-service blaster, points it toward Hong Kong

elaar

Re: Anyone surprised

"demanding greater democracy" - No they're not, they're protesting to ensure democracy isn't bit-by-bit taken from them.

There were 2million protesters, are they all like you suggest are you making a massive generalisation there?

Did they make up being attacked by mobs as well?

Remember the Dutch kid who stuck his finger in a dam to save the village? Here's the IT equivalent

elaar

It's a common issue apparently, I replaced mine with a rocker switch just a few months ago. Great monitors.

elaar

Working in Datacentres at a fairly young age, where the on-call rota often mean't I'd be rudely called in the early hours of the morning whilst slightly intoxicated in Fabric/Turnmills, it meant that strangely I made a number of mistakes.

Those that spring to mind involve accidently pressing the "Argon Release" button instead of the "Door Release", (why were they next to each other and the same god damn shape?). And once putting an SFP into a switch upside down, on a particular Cisco model that didn't prevent you from doing so, which shorted something and took down ~ 50 customers.

elaar

Re: Wrong Buttons...

I once had a 350mile round trip because someone in our support department clicked "shutdown" instead of "reboot" on a windows server on a customer site. They of course lied to me and told me there was a power issue, assuming I wouldn't check the logs and see a shutdown was requested, because they knew I'd insist that person make the (much longer for them) trip themselves.

That's Microsoft price: Now you can enjoy a BSOD from the comfort of your driving seat

elaar

Re: "Proper embedded devices fail a lot less often than windows."

The Pi design suffers due to Sdcard reliability. But with a properly designed embedded system you would use a design similar to Tiny Core where it runs from RAM. Apart from that, I've yet to meet anyone that has come across a proper Rpi hardware failure.....

High-resolution display output or Wi-Fi: It seems you can only choose one on Raspberry Pi 4

elaar

Re: The RPi 4 is a complete fail

To be fair, Arduinos and Rpi's are very different things.

We are absolutely, definitively, completely and utterly out of IPv4 addresses, warns RIPE

elaar

Re: The internet will be privatised

Recently I've been doing some work for a charity organisation in the UK that has a /8, and in the 10 years they've been a customer of ours, they've used just 4 addresses from that pool. Crazy.

Bad news: 'Unblockable' web trackers emerge. Good news: Firefox with uBlock Origin can stop it. Chrome, not so much

elaar

Their website is written by the typical bunch of marketing morons.

Talking about adblockers - "In response to this climate of mistrust but also to the growing importance of user data protection and the pressure of the European institutions (GDPR)"

Their response to this mistrust is - "using subdomains....increase in the amount of data collected and, therefore, a much more real and accurate view of what is happening"

That will sort out the mistrust!

elaar

Perhaps a silly question, but if I select "Do not track" in my browser, and yet companies do track me regardless of the method used, doesn't that break GDPR?

'Literally a paperweight': Bose users fume at firmware update that 'doesn't fix issues'

elaar

Re: How many decent products and companies....

I sold my QC35s. The noise cancellation was fantastic, but the drop in audio quality compared to Non-NC open-backed/baffle headphones I've owned was very noticeable.

It was what I've come to expect from Bose, good tech, but losing focus on the main aspect, the sound.

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