* Posts by bombastic bob

10507 publicly visible posts • joined 1 May 2015

Headsup for those managing Windows 10 boxen: Microsoft has tweaked patching rules

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

Da Whu... ?

I'm even more confused than I was when 7 came out with all of those 'flavors'.

Why can't the market-droids JUST STOP IT with the BUZZ-SPEAK and Three Letter Acronyms (TLAs)???

Screw that. I'm sticking with Linux and FreeBSD.

Microsoft Windows 10 'Burger King' build 1903: Have it your way... and it may still leave a nasty taste in your mouth

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

Re: Tells us a lot....attitude

'uninstallable' = "can be uninstalled". That is a *HUGE* gripe that I have with the built-ins. GETTING RID OF THEM is damn-near impossible. Well, maybe not now.

But here's the thing: Micro-shaft took away NEARLY EVERYTHING GOOD (particularly customization) from the users, replaced it with "uber alles what MS wants", and THEN let the dust settle. NOW, they're "slowly giving back our freedom" it seems, like some kind of sick/twisted perestroika.

Is this an OVERALL STRATEGY? You know, like a GAMBIT - 2 steps forward, one step back [in the direction Micro-shaft wants, of course]. MS wants to take over AND maintain control, and after taking too much, loosen's the reins a little so that the "stockholm syndrome" (end users liking their evil overlords for "giving them back something" after taking it all away) will work properly, boiling the frogs slowly instead of tossing them into the pot like lobsters.

Win-10-nic is STILL "doing it wrong", the lipstick might be on the OINKY end now, but it's still a BOAR, and it's still JUST LIPSTICK.

let us not forget:

a) 2D FLATASS FLATSO FLUGLY McFLATFACE

b) "Settings" vs Control Panel

c) ADWARE and SPYWARE _BUILT_ _IN_

d) "The Store"

e) "Start Thing" with TILES and cumbersome UI to UN-DO the @#$% thing

f) Forced Updates - no longer 'forced' they say...

g) Phone-like GUI on a DESKTOP

h) "The Metro" in general, UWP and 'all that' *EXCREMENT*

i) ONLY PAID CERT SIGNING for driver developers [even open source]

j) Embrace Extend Extinguish - their somewhat pathetic Linux on Windows attempt (have you seen Cygwin? It's been around for YEARS)

the list is longer but I think that's "a good start". There are always things I forget to mention, so many of them it's hard to keep track of them all...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

I get the ones that have more meat in them.

Bug-hunter reveals another 'make me admin' Windows 10 zero-day – and vows: 'There's more where that came from'

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

60k can be earned in better ways

someone with the security know-how to spot bugs like that COULD _EASILY_ earn more than this amount in an annual salary by being a Linux admin or security professional consulting with businesses, etc..

The criminal mindset, however, precludes making this wiser [and less risky with respect to legality] choice.

I think I'd get a salary that's TWICE the 60k, every year, doing a legit IT admin position, with everything else that comes with it. You know, like the BOFH. Despite the occasional problems with management, users, consultants, sales-droids, and so on, there's a nice 2nd floor window...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: Wouldn't it be fun

"The advent of Google DocsLibre/Open Office, among other things, means that small businesses no longer have to have Windows on their machines"

more relevancy, though acknowledged "among other things" as including that...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Megaphone

"the main problem in the West are greedy people who just want to get rich, and don't care about anyone else"

WRONG. You are merely pandering to the "bourgeois vs proletariat" (i.e. communist manifesto) perception of "us vs them" and if you believe that, you're circulating your misconceptions amongst those who agree with you, and it proves NOTHING.

If you want to get down to it, the problem is the same one that's been there as long as there have been humans: A small group of elitists MANIPULATE PEOPLE and seek to CONTROL THEM, usually for nefarious purposes. Usually you find them in GOVERNMENT. People in BUSINESS, on the other hand, generally see everyone else as CUSTOMERS and, if they're smart, treat them accordingly.

A good customer is like gold pressed latinum. yeah even the Ferengi would agree.

People act according to THEIR OWN SELF INTEREST. period. I guarantee you there is NOBODY out there so altruistic (except maybe Jesus) to put EVERYONE ELSE ahead of himself and be self-sacrificing, etc. etc. etc.. Even those who jump on grenades have a self-interest in mind, such as "do it for the Corps/Country/friends". It may even be a matter of PRIDE. And this is _NOT_ a BAD thing... it is a GOOD thing!

So if you assume people act according to their own best interests, those in business WILL make money [because losing money loses the business, duh] and they will pay their investors, who ONLY invest to earn money, and their employees, who ONLY work to earn money, and so on. Then when the free market determines the proper return for investments and what wages the work is worth [and not gummints, special interests, unions, etc.] then we're ALL better off, because it works _WITH_ human nature and not AGAINST it.

SO if you you're looking for a SOURCE of "the problem", start with GUMMINTS, then ORGANIZED CRIME (almost the same as 'gummints' in many cases), then SOCIALIST ORGANIZATIONS and those who donate to them [i.e. Soros], as well as WHINY ACTIVIST JUDGES (and their l[aw]yer buddies) who ENABLE much of this.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Pirate

It's more fun to dump the bug data/details and watch the chaos unfold...

Let adware be treated as malware, Canuck boffins declare after breaking open Wajam ad injector

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

Re: So...

javascript is pure evil anyway. it should be off by default, and ONLY used to support features that are impossible with style sheets [and only then, when ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY].

But the JQuery cult seems to have taken over web development. Ass-hats.

Giga-hurts radio: Terrorists build Wi-Fi bombs to dodge cops' cellphone jammers

bombastic bob Silver badge
Coat

Re: Diretional antenna

just tell her that if you wait a few hours and try again, it'll go WAY longer...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

Re: Diretional antenna

you're right in that a directional antenna will greatly increase range. think radar dishes and old-style TV antennas. but it also reduces the chance of a signal being jammed by an omnidirectional jammer.

and wifi isn't the only wireless system out there [it's just cheaper and more available].

jamming RF isn't going to fix the problem. Too many places in the world literally CODDLE these terrorists and even ENABLE them. Indonesia might have to re-examine its own domestic policies, and controlling EVERYONE isn't the solution, because laws only stop LAW ABIDING CITIZENS from having their freedom - criminals (and terrorists) simply do not care about laws and will do whatever they want, anyway.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

Re: WiFi Routers can be anywhere; cell towers are generally in fixed locations

shhh... dion't give them ideas.

It's 50 years to the day since Apollo 10 blasted off: America's lunar landing 'dress rehearsal'

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: Stunning -- the US at its best

you make a good point about the Russians beating the USA into space... that was COMPETITION, which drove the space race!

So when the gummint behaves like CAPITALISTS, i.e. investing in R&D and new tech to COMPETE and succeed through INNOVATION, then it works! THAT is they way things OUTGHT to be, ya know?

But under normal circumstances, gummint is like a black hole into which money is thrown, and more demanded.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

Re: 50 years since men first landed on the moon

"And all we've done is doubled our population, and basically fucked our planet."

No. just no. We have _NOT_ 'fucked' our planet. Humans do not have that kind of ability, even with atomic weapons. A volcano blowing up does MORE damage than SEVERAL (typical) nuclear weapons, combined. Think 'Mt St Helens' in Washington (state) a couple o' decades ago, which was estimated at around 25 megatons (there has only been a single bomb recorded as having been larger, and none exist today). Nature is THAT powerful, and it recovers. Humans, not so powerful.

The whole 'population bomb' and 'fucking the planet' mentality _IS_ the problem!!! For if whiny socialists weren't busy trying to "fix" non-existent problems, we'd BE ON THE MOON ALREADY, and probably COLONIZING MARS AS WELL. Yet, politicians and the elitists that ENABLE them would rather have their power/control and SOCIALISM is the vehicle they have chosen to GET and MAINTAIN it. And they DEPRESS economies and keep people out of work as a MEANS TO AN END.

If you buy rockets, you get rockets and the observable technological breakthroughs and economic benefits that come with it.

If you buy SOCIAL PROGRAMS, you get MORE DEPENDENCY, which means MORE VOTES for those that hand out other people's money to BUY those votes. Until Peter can't be robbed any more to pay Paul. Then Paul stops getting paid, when Peter says "who is John Galt".

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

Re: 50 years since men first landed on the moon

"And America has not been able to replicate it since 1972."

you know what _I_ blame, right?

bombastic bob Silver badge
Coat

Re: '13 Minutes to the Moon'

10 minute mail oughta get you "13 minutes to the Moon"

ok bad PUN-ishment... (where's my coat?)

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

Re: Species angst

it's the lack of what is now thought of as "toxic masculinity", that USED to drive us (as a species) to greatness instead of mediocrity...

When you "educate" (read: indoctrinate) 2 generations of younguns into believing in political correctness and getting participation trophies and "safe spaces" and "just talk it out with the bullies" all of their young lives, you get "what we have now" instead of IRON FACED MEN that TAKE RISKS and SUCCEED in the FACE of ADVERSITY!

The lessons of WW2 (and 100,000 years of human evolution) have been lost...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

"In the same year - 1969 - the USSR was running around 200 bar in their vastly superior <snip> NK33"

Whoopee twiddle. They didn't get to the moon, though, did they?

obligatory reference to Arthur C. Clarke's "Superiority"

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: From the dictionary definition

"the engineer's dream is that nominal is normal"

and yet, 'normal' from a statistics point of view, would include a lot of crash/burn and explosions...

So 'nominal' is compared to what is expected to happen. 'normal' is compared to the average. or something like it. We want 'nominal' not 'normal' for the abovementioned reason.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Facepalm

Re: Dumb, dumber, or dumbest ?

"Just how naive are you?"

Apparently, not naive enough to believe the "apollo denier" theories. And neither am I.

I watched every live coverage of every Apollo launch. I nearly missed one because I had to go to school, but the teacher left it on with a large TV (ok 25" black & white on a wheelie cart but still it was 1970'ish) in the classroom and the volume turned down. "History" after all.

I doubt, SERIOUSLY doubt, that any of it was made up. The tech was just SO obviously working, the science was good, and the entire WORLD was watching. Literally.

If you weren't actually THERE to remember it, you shouldn't be trying to pawn this theory off on people who WERE.

icon, because facepalm

bombastic bob Silver badge
Boffin

Re: I'm terribly sorry (not really) that I have to be the one to pee in your crazy punch again

http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a16/AS16-106-17393HR.jpg

I say it's the core of a former comet. LOTS of 'weathering' there, right? A few million years of solar winds and comet tail oughta make it like that, ya think?

bombastic bob Silver badge
Alien

Re: I'm terribly sorry (not really) that I have to be the one to pee in your crazy punch again

what the HELL was THAT supposed to be, anyway?

no doubt green-screen'd in at some point.

*yawn* - should've made it a grey alien instead. Then more people would believe it.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Megaphone

Re: beancounters at the top

"Do NOT blame NASA for the failings of Congress."

I DO blame NASA, in some respects, for spending too much time going after politically-correct "science" projects... which isn't happening right now, thankfully. Politics drives them, it seems. I blame them for going along with it TOO WILLINGLY.

However, what Con-GRAB wants to do may be a whole lot WORSE. They'll spend money on agendas and political favors in the form of gummint contracts and NASA projects, like they have done somewhat recently.

Think of it this way: Con-GRAB will spend the people's money to BUY VOTES. It's "the establishment" that is behind it, regardless of which political party. It's ugly, dirty, corrupt, and evil. Knowing that, I vote for the lesser of evils whenever I have a choice.

I have something I put into a demotivational once. With a picture of the nearly complete space station from the movie "2001 a Space Odyssey", the caption reads"The Great Society" "If it hadn't been for LBJ and those whiny socialist liberals, we'd be colonizing Mars by now".

it's what happens when you divert money from BUYING ROCKETS (which boost the economy, cause technology to improve faster, and have far reaching economic benefits, as a Keynesian economist would LOVE this part), as compared to BUYING PEOPLE WHO DO NOT WORK by giving them "subsistence" for sitting on their ASSES [and taking drugs, and breeding, and protesting against America, and so on]. Yeah it's the truth, deal with it. So you get what you're PAYING FOR, ok? Gummint paying for ROCKETS gets rockets, heroes, great accomplishments worthy of news headlines and the people's adoration, and a better world and better economy and jobs and so on. Paying for WELFARE gets you WELFARE RECIPIENTS, lifelong dependents on handouts who DEMAND MORE, and vote for those who GIVE it to them.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: beancounters at the top

"if there is a viable business case to be had for being on the Moon"

1. space tourism

2. jumping-off spot for other places [we'll need moon bases for that] "Flight 404 leaving for Saturn at gate 12"

3. astronomy [telescopes, etc.] especially on the non-earth side

4. low gravity therapy (for people who can afford it)

5. "it's a frontier" (mining being one good possibility)

And so on. If I could, I'd go there. I'd probably want to set up a mining operation. The first people there will be able to get to the surface stuff, major lodes, and whatnot.

Also, it would be easier to allow people to mull around at 1/6 gravity, rather than zero gravity, between flights. Less vomiting, for one thing. And you could have large tanks of fuel and whatnot standing by for fueling up space ships, and they wouldn't need atmospheric accomodations, nor enough fuel to break away from the earth [just enough fuel to leave the moon's gravity, a LOT less].

I would also expect that shuttles to the moon would be more practical if you could fill them up with people for multiple destinations, like taking a short hop to a major hub (say LAX) for international flights.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: beancounters at the top

"21st century NASA, Boeing and the ULA seem to be top-heavy with people who are more interested in pay and politics than in getting the job done on time and without killing people"

Quite possible. Yet, look at Boeing's reputation taking a BIG hit over what they did with the newer 737's, and the resulting crashes, and what they're gonna have to do to fix it before the planes go in the air [are they STILL grounded? I haven't heard much].

If the FAA does its job correctly they should also manage space-related flight. And if it's UNSAFE, it gets GROUNDED, and the company responsible must fix it at no charge. That is actually good motivation to get safety and human life to the top of the priority list...

(and the same goes for space-liners around the world - no more 737 MAX fiascos)

Worthy of reminder when there's a crash anywhere in the world the FAA is going to want to analyze it to prevent it from happening again, and since many of those planes are built in the USA, they'll stick their noses in whenever they wanna, for good reason. It's one of the things gummint does _RIGHT_.

Anyway those bean counters that actually think bottom line comes before safety oughta fear losing their jobs the next time something like the 737MAX fiasco happens.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Megaphone

Re: Those were the days

"a private company that puts its reputation on the line is a much better guarantee of safety."

I think so as well, at least in the CURRENT environment. [at least one lost space shuttle may have been due to environmental 'concerns', changing the glue that held the insulation on the fuel tank to a more 'environmentally friendly' one, which allowed it to break loose and damage the shuttle's wing, etc., because as we all know, "the environment" is more important than safety and human life... to THEM, anyway - it's their "god". But I digress...)

'Back in the day' the U.S. gummint was more interested in getting technological superiority over their 'behind the iron curtain' equivalents in the USSR, for several reasons, not the least of which WW2 was an ACTUAL MEMORY and nobody wanted to repeat it with the Soviet Union on the other side. And Kruschev was threatening everyone, banging his shoe, etc..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikita_Khrushchev

If the threat was not real, he made it SOUND real, for whatever reason.

So NASA was highly motivated to succeed. And JFK was as well. Presidents back then (both D and R) were ANTI-communists, and had memories of WW2, and so on. And so did the people, and the people love heros and want the world to be a safe place, and space became IMPORTANT, and so the motivation to succeed, and take the risks to get there [and pay for it].

I wish it were still that way, because I'd rather buy rockets and fire them into space than give money away for nothing. But I digress...

But now, private industries compete against one another the way the USA and USSR competed against one another. So the motivation is there to "beat Boeing" or "beat SpaceX" etc. and Amazon is in the mix now, and Virgin Air is in there someplace...

So yeah, company reputation and safety records and getting there first. THAT is the motivation!

Profit is good. (Ferengi rules of acquisition, heh). But without profit, there would be no investors, and therefore no 'bucks', and therefore, no "Buck Rogers". You can't be a wasteful black hole of expenses into which money is thrown, if you are a private industry. Take THAT anti-capitalists!

Oracle AI's Eurovision horror show: How bad can it be? Yep. Badder

bombastic bob Silver badge
Trollface

Re: you're hired

yeah, reminds me of the "70's disco hit" I wrote in 10 minutes. It repeated the same 2 measure riff with the constant 4 on the floor and "funky bass line" and "horn hits" over and over and over and over... (same chord, too).

And the words (not sung, but spoken, badly): "Yowza boogie down to my dance fever baby." I think I got all of the 70's disco words in there in one go.

I wrote it and completed the recording in around 10 minutes, maybe 15 at the most, no kidding. I was making a point. 70's disco was plastic formulaic CRAP, so I created some equivalent CRAP to lampoon it. But I did it in the 90's...

Apparently this AI thing went to a whole lot of trouble to do the same thing for the 'Eurovision' stuff, heh.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

Re: you're hired

well it makes the case that this style of music (like 70's disco, which was a WHOLE LOT WORSE) is "formulaic". You plug in the parameters to an AI and it *excretes* a "hit".

Without paying attention to lyrics the song would be mildly entertaining, as it DOES use familiar chord progressions in a way that's patterned after other "hit" songs. When you DO pay attention to the lyrics, it's like it was poorly translated from another language where it might've made sense. Even the worst bad-English embedded into southeast asian pop music is more sensible and congruent than THAT. (and I do like southeast asian pop music, which I consider to be better than most of what RIAA crams into our ears in order to market it to us until we like it).

Today i was working on a song of my own. yesterday I threw in a possible synth lead to it, but today it sounded like CRAP to me, not evoking a "cool!" reaction, and actually kinda lame (or perhaps formulaic), so I erased it, create a new song file without it. Strangely, _THIS_ song reminds me of what I threw away...

It's been a lean month for Microsoft's Visual Studio Code, but look! Remote Development

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

And also never leave the warm embrace of VS Code.

do my fingers STILL have to leave 'home row' on the keyboard to mousie-clickie a bunch of CRAP way too often? or has THAT encumberance FINALLY been fixed properly to the way it was in DevStudio '98 where there were HOT KEYS for just about EVERYTHING because properties were REAL DIALOG BOXES with accelerators!!! Oh yeah, I did that, it worked, it was fast and efficient, and 2 years later MICRO-SHAFT WENT THE WAY OF THE VB INTERFACE, excreated C-pound and ".Not", and it's been INFERIOR ever since...

VS Code written in NODE JS is like the WORST thing they could have done...

Warm Embrace = squicky kisses and the coils of a constrictor snake. I think I'll vomit, now.

Freed whistleblower Chelsea Manning back in jail for refusing to testify before secret grand jury

bombastic bob Silver badge
FAIL

You live by political correctness/favoritism, you die by the LACK of it

just saying Pvt Manning would have been treated COMPLETELY DIFFERENT (by the press, in particular) had the sex change NOT happened...

Pvt Manning, enjoy your stay at the IRON BAR HOTEL!

And next time, show up and plead the 5th or something. You can be compelled to APPEAR, and go to jail for FAILING to appear, yet you can STILL remain silent when you DO finally appear, and "plead the 5th".

So STOP TRYING TO MANIPULATE PEOPLE (in particular SJWs) INTO FEELING SORRY FOR YOU. It's a SICKENING display...

You're on a Huawei to Hell, China tells US: We'll fight import tariffs, trade war to bitter end

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

yes, suppliers for the U.S. (in China) might have to face competition from other countries where the wages aren't quite slave-wages, and the the local gummint does NOT own the businesses [and grant special favors/breaks/whatever for the oligarch that owns/runs it].

The USA (and probably most of the rest of the world) will see a minor hiccup in their economy, if anything at all. Some prices will go up a bit. Suppliers and manufacturing in "other than China" will pick up the slack and get contracts China companies WOULD have had. That's pretty much what will happen, yeah. Looking forward to it! I know all too well what they're doing over there [having seen an example of a violated copyright/patent product made from stuff being made their under contract for a U.S. company, and that "4th shift" component that looks as if it were made from a plan created using X rays on the finished product, complete with the company logo etched into it - an OBVIOUS plagiarized clone!]

Tangled in .NET: Will 5.0 really unify Microsoft's development stack?

bombastic bob Silver badge
Megaphone

Re: .net to java converter ?

C (not micro-shaft's version) does not *NEED* exceptions. People who *KNOW* *HOW* *TO* *CODE* do NOT rely on exceptions, and test parameters so that they would NEVER HAPPEN in the FIRST place. Only the SLOPPIEST coders ever need to catch them, except for maybe bugs in the OS [which I've had to deal with from time to time]. But only if it's Windows...

Yeah C++ is great, too, when you do NOT use exception handling. Who's FEELING "brilliant" idea was it in the FIRST place to put THAT CRAP into the lingo in the FIRST place? I sentence YOU to 100 strikes with a CLUE BAT!

That's right - REAL coders do NOT use exceptions! When you code for the kernel, an exception usually causes data loss, a system crash, etc.. A _REAL_ programmer understands this, and writes BULLET PROOF CODE.

bombastic bob Silver badge
Trollface

Re: The most divisive issue remains...

indent at 2, spaces only [no tabs]. And Allman style. And the worst thing I ever see in anyone's code is the construct "} else {" which should be punished by 50 lashes with a cat 5 o' nine tails...

There. I said it. The argument is NOW completed, and shall not be debated again. Heh.

(troll icon because obvious)

bombastic bob Silver badge
Flame

Re: Glad that Blazor is getting the official nod

Javascript as an application language, and I'm talking SPECIFICALLY about NodeJS, is an ELDRITCH ABOMINATION of the WORST variety, and needs to be *EXTERMINATED* just like a cockroach, for the exact same reasons.

If they'll survive a nukular fire, perhaps they'll DIE in a REGULAR one...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

Re: what a mess

"Microsoft's platforms used to be quite simple - BEFORE they had .NET"

Fixed it for ya

(everything post .Not has been a continuous stream of "and then it went horribly, horribly, WRONG"

bombastic bob Silver badge
Thumb Up

Re: With apologies to Tolkein

If I gave you 2 additional thumbs up, right NOW, it'd be at 42

Your FREE end-of-the-world guide: What happens when a sun like ours runs out of fuel

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

yeah let's dump nukular waste into the sun and make it go 'critical', that'll speed it up!

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: It's worse than you think

you sure about mercury leaving orbit? I would expect it to crash into the sun before that would happen... due to very slow orbital decay from solar wind, if for no other reason.

so that's something to ponder I guess, if mercury's orbit is affected more by constant mass loss from the sun [energy from fusion as well as solar wind], or by the solar wind itself creating friction and orbital decay.

As mass of the sun goes down, mercury's escape velocity would ALSO go down, but very very slowly. Similarly, the slow orbital decay. Maybe they balance each other out?

bombastic bob Silver badge
Trollface

Re: I am Jack's complete lack of surprise...

don't worry, some wackos will claim it's human activity causing the sun to die, and come up with charts and graphs and modeling and legislation to curb our personal freedoms and screw us up economically in order to "solve" it.... and accuse EVERYONE who doesn't buy into this nonsense of being "deniers"...

(troll icon, naturally)

Japan on track to start testing Alfa-X, fastest train in the world with top speed of 400kph

bombastic bob Silver badge
Unhappy

Re: Wishful thinking in the UK

and the thing about trains is usually NOT the train... it's the part about getting to the station, the scheduling, the parking [or lack of it], how to get to/from your (assume work) destination once you reach it, and all of that.

Public transportation in the USA is generally DISMAL, especially in Cali-Fornicate-You, where gummint types INSIST we use it, but then constantly screw it up and charge more for even lousier service year after year... [I think they just don't want people to have freedom of movement but that's another topic]

And how about environmental stupidity getting in the way of laying track? Look at the *HORRIBLE* *CLUSTER-FEEL* that the Cali-Fornicate-You "Crazy Train" has gone through? It's outright CRIMINAL what they've done with voter-approved funds for THAT one.

I like trains. They're big pieces of engine-driven steel on steel tracks that any overgrown boy would LOVE to have as his personal train set. I've done daily rides on them, too, which is why I know how FEEL'd UP the transportation to/from train stations is. When it got to the point where the trip to/from the station [on both ends] totalled MORE than the commute time, minus the hour train ride [with stops and slow windy sections], guess what _I_ did? That's right, I _DROVE_. And I hated it. And a year later I quit because the commute "drove me nuts". But taking 3 times as long every day JUST to take the train? That's just *RIDICULOUS* !

Hopefully Japan has solved these problems on both ends of their new bullet train...

FCC promises, yet again, to tackle robocalls. Translation: Expect six more months of waiting

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: Limited block lists?

right, the callir ID spoofing problem must be fixed FIRST. This should actually fix 99% of it. Once you know for sure who these ASSHATS are, and can complain about them ACCURATELY, it'll be possible to go after them. But as long as they're hiding by caller ID spoofing, and they do NOT identify themselves, you can't do a damn thing... except maybe VOODOO!

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

Re: SHAKEN/STIR Caller ID Authentication

"SHAKEN/STIR sends the caller ID using TLS. This isn't rocket surgery."

Did you hear the term 'Rocket Surgery' from a radio host named 'LaDonna' ? I'm pretty sure she originated it...

yeah the article already pointed out that phone companies make money by connecting calls, and lose money when they don't. The general idea here is to STOP THE SPOOFING, rather than blocking things. once THAT happens, the blockage and complaints can be managed by ordinary citizens, more or less, who will accurately identify these BOTTOM FEEDING HYPER-TURDS that robo-call people [scams or otherwise, both are equally irritating] regardless of whatever excuse they rectally extrapolate.

At some point a STICK will be required, rather than a series of "Carrots" in the form of summits where everyone sits around "harumphing" about it. I think that time, for a BIG STICK, is NOW.

Apple won't be appy: US Supremes give green light to massive lawsuit over App Store prices

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: Are you sure about that?

there's this "gold brick" web UX designer contracting for a company I'm also doing a contract with. You can have him. I haven't gone so far as to show him the view out of the 2nd floor window yet, but I may be close. So if you wanna get a "gold brick"...

bombastic bob Silver badge
Meh

"The monopoly revolves around there being no competition allowed."

Correct. In a bit more detail:

a) you can't run an application on your phone [without jailbreaking] that is NOT from "the store";

b) you cannot publish an application not THROUGH "the store"

c) Apple regularly REJECTS applications they don't like from "the store."

Therefore, it's a monopoly if you have an iDevice.

In Google's case (for Android), none of this is true. With an extra hoop to jump through on the client side, you CAN just load any old APK from anywhere. And jailbreaking is really only needed if you want super-user access to the Linux OS.

So, technically, Android "the Store" isn't quite in the same boat. Not quite...

NPM today stands for Now Paging Microsoft: GitHub just launched its own software registry

bombastic bob Silver badge
Mushroom

there's something wrong with the entire premise

the idea that all of these script libraries should be teetering on the brink of crushing the house of cards they're all built on, of which NodeJS and that 'NPM' thing were MAJOR players a short while back (including the TRIVIALITY of the "withdrawn" code whut dun it) tells me that it's time to move AWAY from such things before yet another "centralized" thing crushes half of what depends upon it ,for whater random reason.

eggs.. one basket... sounded ok until they ALL BROKE. It's kinda like NOT doing backups, or relying on a single supplier, or one of many OTHER _BAD_ ideas that people end up going with anyway, because they *FELT* and did not THINK it through.

And saying that programming is *SOCIAL* - *urp* I need more pink liquid

does anyone NOT remember DLL Hell? Does anyone NOT remember that MS's "solution" for it was ".NET" ??? And now, FORCED UPDATES so that EVERYTHING updates at the same time? Is *EVERYONE* ready for "that" kind of "solution" to one trivial package breaking EVERY DAMNED EGG in the FORNICATING BASKET again, no matter WHAT that "package system" is called?

It's all WAY too overrated, and _WILL_ bite people in the ass, MULTIPLE times, before it's properly REPLACED with something different, something _LESS_ centralized, like having your OWN copy of a lib you need and maintaining it LOCALLY! And having enough QUALITY CONTROL to get the job done RIGHT the FIRST time, and not '42 updates later'.

Freaky photo flingers face fat fines for flagrant phallus flashing fun

bombastic bob Silver badge
Coat

Re: Genitalia...

left paren, dot, Y, dot, right paren

heh

bombastic bob Silver badge
Thumb Down

Re: Potentially a good idea.

NO. not a good idea. SHOULD NEVER HAPPEN: criminalizing speech/freedom.

It's one of the things that's gone HORRIBLY WRONG with even a "benevolent" dictatorship (like Singapore).

In Singapore, these things are illegal:

a) chewing gum

b) carrying a pocket knife of any size

c) feeding pigeons

d) public singing of 'naughty songs'

e) not flushing the toilet

f) walking around naked in your own home

g) same-sex relationships https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_rights_in_Singapore

And a bunch of other things, most likely. Its "nanny state" policies are well documented.

"unwanted pron" can be deemed as 'harassment' and that's always illegal [this would require that you prove you were being harassed, regardless of how]. One thing that is NOT needed is "yet another nanny law" that criminalizes any form of porn. I would guess that people sometimes exchange this sort of thing thinking the other person MIGHT want to see it, and if the other person says "do not send me this ever again" and you do NOT, there's no JAIL involved, just irritation and need to apologize.

That would be NORMAL human relationships [excluding harassment, already mentioned]

But THIS would CRIMINALIZE someone saying "I did not want that", and now you do jail?

There's something to be said about gummints NOT being in every aspect of people's lives, ya know?

Timely Trump tariffs tax tech totally: 25 per cent levy on modems, fiber optics, networking gear, semiconductors…

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

Re: Diplomacy Speech

there are manufacturers inside the USA, by the way. And watch Trump rip up the WTO if it gets in the way. Wouldn't be the first time (NAFTA being a good example). "We need a new trade deal". etc.

Seems to be working well, in my opinion. The USA should not subject itself to any legal entity other than our own Constitution. And that's just the way things ought to be. [same for every other country, really]

Treaties and trade deals are agreements, not laws.

bombastic bob Silver badge
FAIL

Re: What is it with Trump and Taxes?

OK - want to make someone's tax records public? YOU first! Then we'll treat YOU the same, with an army of accountants and activists using a microscope to find a missing dot on an 'i', or a missing cross on a 't', or just simply criticize your life choices by putting whatever horrible spin is possible to put on them and then flaming you all over every media outlet and blog site that exists.

We just got done with ONE witch hunt. But I know that Trump-haters want it all to CONTINUE in order to put as many roadblocks in the President's way as possible.

Ask yourself this: WHAT would have happened if Republicans had treated Obama "that way" ???

Hypocrisy, much?

bombastic bob Silver badge
Thumb Down

Re: Man's a fool

NO, we did not "know" something that is BLATANTLY FALSE. This "we know" technique is often employed by the left, similar to the use of 'leading questions', and is part of the "fake news".

bombastic bob Silver badge
Devil

@whitepines - some of what you say is true, but your conclusions are wrong.

you assume that lead times "that long" are on common parts. Usually it's high-dollar stuff, and inventories CAN be moved... and it's likely that high-dollar inventories will be depleted while there's a tariff if it applies to that [while finding a competing source].

Again, keep in mind that China has deliberately set up a system [which is actually quite smart] where the component makers are in the same city as the component consumers, and by using "just in time" delivery the inventory levels are extremely LOW. For high dollar items (like CPUs) that are likely NOT made in China, you'll still have lead times, and maybe you can just tell the makers to "ship 'em here instead". the other stuff really isn't that significant, and is probably ALSO made in Taiwan, P.I., Singapore, S. Korea, ...

sure I'll expect one or two exceptions to be mentioned, maybe touch screens and other "generates a lot of pollution" items, where China doesn't care about polluting and so it's cheaper to make there.