* Posts by A-nonCoward

130 publicly visible posts • joined 15 Aug 2017

Put a stop to these damn robocalls! Dozens of US state attorneys general fire rocket up FCC's ass

A-nonCoward

AI in 2019 is a joke, and robocalls are the proof

it takes a RIDICULOUS low level of any "artificial intelligence" to figure out robocalling and stop it dead, or at least do grievous injury to it, make it expensive.

A normal user cannot physically make more than N calls per day, and most legitimate calls do get an answer.

Your software notices spikes of calls that either do not get answered (they're calling random numbers), or get cut after a few seconds (most people hang up).

Moreover, that phone number was activated just a few days ago.

I mean, those geniuses that say AI is good for something, is it that hard?

Also, a simpler means to report robocalls. It takes 15-20 minutes to do it in the FCC website. And you have to put a lot of personal information, with the only goal to make the process unpleasant, as supposedly your anonymity is assured and you are not going to be called to testify, etc,. Of course that should limit prank reports, but since even the legitimate reports are not paid attention...

OK, the robocaller can start using hundreds, thousands of lines to make himself invisible.

Firefox armagg-add-on: Lapsed security cert kills all browser extensions, from website password managers to ad blockers

A-nonCoward
Boffin

Opera?

I had forgotten good old Opera. Just installed it. I also have Chrome for some websites that simply will not run even if I enable all their nonsense scripts. Had that issue last night trying to reserve a campsite.

Don't all eggs same basket etc.

https://www.opera.com

It's May 2. Know what that means? Yep, it's the PR orgy that is World Password Day... again

A-nonCoward

if the system is any good, it should be impossible to find out what password is actually used.

HTTPS should encrypt that in the way in, and then hashed or whatever when it arrives to compared with a hashed stored thing - how to make "password" be hashed differently probably connected with the email address used, thusly there should be NO duplicate hashed salted or whatever in the database, and no way to figure out how many of one given kind there are. No way to rescue your password - if lost, you make a new one.

That's how *I* would do it, and probably Real Coders could make it even better.

sorry.

A-nonCoward
Childcatcher

Can a grownup, please...?

put in some reasonable evidence regarding funny characters as being any better, instead of a password 30 characters or longer?

With all due respect, I find it rather silly that password requirements are happy if I use upper and lower case plus a number plus some symbol, the whole being 8 characters, but, if I use batteryHorseStaplerChernobylAaaalfa, nope, that is not good. Even stupidier if I have to change my impossible-to-remember 8-character password every three months.

That said, I am ignorant, so, perhaps someone could say something educational, please?

thank you.

icon, because us ignorants are the problem, right?

'Lightweight' UPS-style flywheels to power naval laser zappers

A-nonCoward
Headmaster

a giroscope!

Wow, let's make the flywheel bigger, and use it to make a ship where you can play pool!

I guess their flywheel is in a multi-axis floating gantry, or else it won't be too happy, rough seas, you know

icon because laws of physics alert.

Out-of-office email ping-pong fills server after server over festive break

A-nonCoward
Happy

Thank you, everybody - y'all touched a nerve

At times I feel myself unemployable, and I haven't really needed to think about it until recently, being sort of happy enough with a few months work each year from a client where I am really respected as the cat's meow - but where they can't afford me full time, and they're struggling more and more to keep their business. Made for a smallish but acceptable income, going down the last few years, action is needed, and my own business (non IT) is not yet going well enough.

So I went through two revisions of my CV this last month, as two very different jobs came up as possible. One of my problems is that, by now, as a consultant and etc., I've simply done too many things, so it's hard to focus on what is relevant, cover reasonable options of what I know and can do, yet stay within two pages. Nobody cares for a "generalist", right? The other problem, you guessed it, I'm self taught. So give me some stupid test where you want some official classwork definitions, it won't do. However, if yours is a real world problem that you need solving, you will not be the first that set me aside at first as an also-ran, but then give me a phone call a couple weeks later because your expert certified degreed wonders couldn't actually find their behind with both hands. For crying out loud, when I was a kid I built a LOGO programming environment within the 16K of a ZX81, because I didn't know such things were supposed to be difficult, etc. Created an inter-office messaging system using a Windows 98 IIS (had to reboot the server often, would fill with crud). At some moment later, was hired to develop a University's coursework for Mechatronics, because their previous teams couldn't get the job done - I learned later that my proposal has been implemented and is the current coursework. Was doing IoT years before that expression became popular, with encrypted communications, natch! (C, of course) Nowadays building an app to directly handle data within a database, right now taking a break a few minutes 'cause tired.

Who knows, 5% by now? of my current useful "knowledge", besides a lot of trivia, comes indirectly from ElReg, ideas I've picked up here, mistakes to avoid, etc. For example, today I learned about cybra.it right here in this comments section. I need to really work on my resume, straighten up my genius with a bit of boring "normalcy", because I need to figure out how the 2019 Christmas presents will be paid, and so far my CV is essentially unbelievable, employers must think it's blown up beyond any reality and/or they think I'm overqualified?

Also, here in the comments section I find people who can run circles around me "genius", and that feels good, I'm tired to be the only one that knows the right thing, and has to struggle in convincing others, or just move on because they'll never get it. I just want to be coding, peacefully, hopefully within a decent healthy team, hopefully not for a Facebook or Google or Microsoft (the later quite unlikely, I know I'm blacklisted there). I've coded myself out of a job too many times, and it just looks weird in my CV... Oh well.

Ok, back to my coding. Once I finish this, in a week or so, will need to find something else, sigh.

A-nonCoward

The relevant mandatory XKCD is today's

Disk Usage

Surface Studio 2: The Vulture rakes a talon over Microsoft's latest box of desktop delight

A-nonCoward

uh, the problem is not "feeding" on real artists, those with an income attaced to rightfully using that title.

Problem is the wannabees that put Apple or this kind of kit on Mum's credit card. And I have a bit of a hard time feeling sorry for them.

I do most of my "creative" on a touchscreen EliteBook 2740p, I believe 9 years old or so by now, bought on Ebay for parts adding to less than $180. 8Gb, SSD, FOSS all over. Of course I have 4-screen rig for some projects, but it's even older actually.

A-nonCoward

curious Re: Hmmmmm!

I'm curious about how much memory is needed for that kind of i-tax software

not that I would touch Autodesk or any Adobe with the the longest 10-foot pole I could find, but even my Firefox needs 3+ Gb by itself, and a decent size image in GIMP also eats some memory. Why am I reading about MS stuff? Saturday, no vulture news...

Roses are red, this is sublime: We fed OpenAI's latest chat bot a classic Reg headline

A-nonCoward

It's learning...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7ozaFbqg00

From Red Planet to deep into the red: Suicidal extrovert magnet Mars One finally implodes

A-nonCoward
Pint

Well played,sir Re: EIther way

I knew they would fail when they binned my application.

More obviously, when I didn't apply. Sad, i'nnit?

Only plebs use Office 2019 over Office 365, says Microsoft's weird new ad campaign

A-nonCoward
Linux

Re: LOL->malware

In software, if you make a good-enough product, you deprive yourself of the chance to sell later versions. People won't pay to move away from what works without a very good reason.

That's why malware.

"I think i need to upgrade to the newer Windows. My computer at home is running slow lately", heard from my secretary a few years ago. By that time I had learned it was unwise to predicate Linux at work - just use it, in my work computer, and at home.

LibreOffice 6.2 is here: Running up a Tab at the NotebookBar? You can turn it all off if you want

A-nonCoward
Coat

Real editors use LaTeX

Techie finds himself telling caller there is no safe depth of water for operating computers

A-nonCoward

Re Elite HP Re: "...it's a ticking time bomb"

allow me to confirm that fact, writing from my often hacked and reassembled EliteBook 2740p, finally with finger touch.

I studied hard, I trained for years. Yay, now I'm an astronaut in space. Argggh, leukemia!

A-nonCoward
Mushroom

Re: Turn an asteroid into a craft ?

The wife used to be a total NASA enthusiast.

I took her to Houston for her birthday, and, devil hands know no rest, I idly shared with her the nonsense about the expense (16,000 employees?) when anybody who knew any "Science" already was aware quite a while back that a trip to Mars was not practical, ever, due to the simple concept of the cost of lugging up enough shielding, thereabouts twice the amount of everything that has been sent to space to date. (My own fav is water - useful by itself, but why not an asteroid, if we are going for silly - hundreds of meters of rock, d'you know how much beyond calculable it would cost to power that mass into a controllable orbit? Still, cheaper than an artificial magnetosphere)

Wife wasn't pleased to have her NASA views messed up, as she got to research, and, alas, find out that this time hubby was right, even though it was obvious that these basic principles and facts were far from being published among "official" mainline "Mars Mission" websites. Giving her a vacuum as a birthday gift might have been better (a recent El Reg comment thread). The AirBNB was a disaster also, no NASA fault, that.

Of course, the pearl of the visit was watching that Russian (renter of NASA facilities?) riding with a young girl passenger one of those zillion-dollar all-wheel-control vehicles at top speed in a parking lot. How much fun. How much Science. NASA. Yay!

A-nonCoward
Mushroom

the obligatory Global Warming angle

The researchers are unsure why old-timers – one participant had spent a whopping 340 days in space – had stronger immune systems compared to first-timers in space.

if I get this right, "something" up there is different, worse now than it used to be in the past. Hmmm. Global warming increasing due to some space something?

A-nonCoward
Headmaster

viri?

viri, "men" is plural of vir.

Virus is Greek; plural is virus, or, in politically correct speech, viruses.

Is your kid looking at GCSE in computer science? It's exam-only from 2022 – Ofqual

A-nonCoward
Linux

Learn something useful in school?

I've spent most of today hunting down some old versions of a spreadsheet with certain data, that my day job has been using over many years.

I do that on a Dell laptop, VPNd, Windows 10, a couple years old. Destroys a battery per year

slow. Certainly no match for my personal Fedora machine, 8 years old.

So. Turns out that the precious creatures, 1) defecate their name-brand-spreadsheet file pretty much anywhere, 2) put the most significant data (language, version) of the file name at the very end of 40 to 60 characters of redundant nonsense that replicates the client name, year, project, purpose, that any sane individual would already find in the folder tree anyway. Yes, because the folder tree has no logic, that data is actually useful. 3) show unnatural creativity in saving a few characters. Japanese might be JP, jap, Japan... 4) older Windows let you do a search, and refine inside that search. Not any longer. Because files are all over the shared drive, "Search" over VPN is even slower than anything else.

Now, if these people, all of them with a degree, having had some kind of Comp Sci in high school, could at the very least name their files in a sane way; follow some kind of logic within their folders, or at least follow the "Best Practices" that we supposedly have for this.

I know it would be way too much to convince the company to use a real production-level operating system. Even Windows 7 was not this lame.

We don't need no educashon, right?

right

I am grateful I have at least this part-time job, and that I am given some real challenges to play with, otherwise life is so boring.

Computing boffins strip the fun out of satirical headlines

A-nonCoward
Holmes

uh?

this is silly. I just read the title, as to the article, tl;dr.

Very simple, sophomoric: anything with the word spill is some attempt at a joke or satire. There are words like that. Doesn't require any AI to figure.

OK, let's assume it's a tree-hugger article. "We need to prevent oil spills". Then, perhaps it's as complicated as word-pairs: oil spill prevent good, resume, bad.

"Resume" is Good when together with positive events: study, work, effort to save the turtles.

etc. AI. Did that in the '90s. Ain't better since.

Oregon can't stop people from calling themselves engineers, judge rules in Traffic-Light-Math-Gate

A-nonCoward
Headmaster

Directors - nor Profesors

Argentina also requires most users of professional titles to have the corresponding degree - not necessary to be registered, just to have received it from a degree-granting institution. "Profesor" is someone who has the degree of High School Education Teacher, or teaches High School or University. (Elementary School teachers are "Maestros") (and registration is required to actually work in many profession, example architects, lawyers, of course med doctors)

Now, "Profesor Something" is a favourite title among fortunetellers and astrologer. Alas, hava no degree, you cannot call yourself that, and police will come visit if you do

Thusly, Argentinian classifieds are full of ads by "Director Something", "Director" being a school principal, and thence obviously even better than just a lowly professor... :-)

(I know all this because I am a Profesor, a title I use to advantage in Europe because there it's supposed to be a big deal, especially Russia, Germany, while back home I'm just a worthless school teach...)

BTW, Argentina has other funky interesting control-the-idiots laws. For example, a list for what is allowed for naming a child. These lists vary by Province, so you have a tiny bit of leeway. However, if the name could be valid for either a boy or a girl, you are required to add a second name that makes it clear what gender the pup is[2]. Mexico prohibits "denigrating names", the state of Sonora includes "Harry Potter", or "Robocop" among those[3]

Argentinians wanting to go "beyond", often travel to Uruguay to spawn[4]. Which also frees a male pup from military conscription, Uruguay having been the only sane country in South America in that respect.

Icon for the nice professorial garb

[1]http://registrocivilonline.cba.gov.ar/Paginas/Listado%20de%20Nombres%20permitidos.pdf

[2]http://buenosaires.gob.ar/areas/registrocivil/nombres/busqueda/buscador_nombres.php?menu_id=16082

[3] https://www.animalpolitico.com/2014/02/aqui-la-lista-completa-de-nombres-prohibidos-en-sonora-en-reino-unido-reclaman-por-harry-potter/

[4]https://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/22083-Uruguay%2C-uno-de-pa%C3%ADses-con-costumbre-de-poner-nombres-raros-a-hijos

AI snaps business titan jaywalking

A-nonCoward
Big Brother

I, for one

welcome our Intelifusin DeepEye overlords

Seeing as Bitcoin is going so, so well, Ohio becomes first US state to take biz taxes in BTC

A-nonCoward

Re: Nothing says "we are a high tech state where you should base your online business"

Idiot tax they call it, uh, different company, right?

A-nonCoward

Not a good idea, Ohio

If Bitcoin and its ilk are seen as genuine business investments, instead of the hobby that they obviously are, then you don't only get to tax them: you also have to allow people to reduce their taxes by claiming a business loss, and expenses, depreciation on servers, and a lot of that kind of nonsense that makes the super rich pay no taxes at all.

Soon in a state near you: someone will set up a BitChurch to claim to be tax-exempt.

A little phishing knowledge may be a dangerous thing

A-nonCoward

"Self-reported"

OF COURSE we know that is the standard way, "We made no attempt to measure how accurately and honestly subjects filled out their demographic surveys."

Which is sad... Social numbers

It would not have been that hard to have people go directly to a survey, right from the phishing link :-)

Also, more details on the response? how long did it take those who reported to do so?

obligatory XKCD https://www.xkcd.com/435/

A-nonCoward
Coat

Re: C'mon .. it's 2018 - where do you find students with "no knowledge of phishing" today?

A multiple answer for "what is DNS spoofing" or such terms might help winnow the "I know everything" kiddies away from those who actually have some idea. Alas, expecting good methodology in phrasing research is like expecting Uni students are safe in networks (or anywhere else, really)

Good form in contemporary academic publication would share the content of the actual survey, right?

like, for replicability?

Science, do you know anything about how to do it, [1-5]

Mything the point: The AI renaissance is simply expensive hardware and PR thrown at an old idea

A-nonCoward

Re: Bravo

"With enough variables you fit an elephant".

in the 1500s we called those "epicycles".

Yup, particle physics: if something behaves differently than predicted, there "must" be a new particle. Circles on circles, seen that.

A-nonCoward

Hear hear!

I was into AI as part of a dot-com in the '90s.

Every time I have a conversation with current devotees, it sounds like the same stuff, nothing really new. Actually, we had better, ginormously more efficient code, these kids nowadays cannot do anything low level, it seems. Makes me think on how making a cup of tea can kill the biggest processor ever - just make enough layers of interpretated code, voilà.

A-nonCoward
Alien

AI proves Creationism

If there really is any "creativity" here, it is the creativity of DeepMind researchers who devise and manage the processes that train the systems.

Yup, my point exactly. There has to be an Architect (or a pony) somewhere

DBA drifts into legend after inventive server convo leaves colleagues fearing for their lives

A-nonCoward

Michigan Re: But can I get F1 on my BT account

Ha! memories... My wife tells on how when she was 13 years old she helped her mom (a professor in Ann Arbor) navigate that. Eventually became quite adept, except for her tolerance for Windows.

Science: Broke brats glued to the web while silk-stocking scions have better things to do

A-nonCoward

Re: Buzzwords...

... "was a huge disappointment."

evidence: every new generation of kids, for a very long time, has placed their energy into supporting some kind of music that drew their parents, and the previous generation, totally insane with pain. Charleston, Swing, Rock, Pop (I'm jumping a few, but you get my point). What have we got, for already way too long? Rap. Techno is not it, sorry. Rap. Nothing worse has replaced it.

It's the end of times, I tell you.

(doesn't mean we all die. Well, not physically, but what's coming for us is perhaps almost worse than death. I was walking the dog the other day past a retirement home, guess what music the staff were playing? I hear that rendition operatives use Country to break down prisoners. Hmmm, those old folks there? they wish they were in an interrogation hut, I bet.)

A-nonCoward

Re: Buzzwords...

No need.

After Generation Z, it's over.

Pull request accepted: You want to buy GitHub, Microsoft? Go for it – EU

A-nonCoward
FAIL

Reaaaaaally...

“if Microsoft screws this up, we will lose the trust of developers for a generation”

Microsoft "screw ups" are totally by design.

Real developers know that, otherwise, that "trust" (?) would have been lost a couple generations ago (am I that old? yes).

As the accountant at the school I used to work at said, "my computer is getting more and more slow, maybe I need the new version of Windows."

From dank memes to Krispy Kremes: British uni eggheads claim viral lol pics make kids fat

A-nonCoward
Facepalm

Re: Remember the good old days?

guess who it was that didn't pay attention to the salt and vinegar advice...

there's wisdom in them playgrounds

The mysterious life of Luc Esape, bug fixer extraordinaire. His big secret? He's not human

A-nonCoward
FAIL

oh, so that's what's going on

Youtube dead. ha!

Revealed in detail: World powers stuff spyware kit, how-to guides in dodgy nations' pockets

A-nonCoward

US taxman wants AI to do the security checks it seemingly can't do itself

A-nonCoward
Childcatcher

Re: @ James 51

Uh, politician pork money would go to schools, also.

Because schools are a fabulous business, plenty, plenty profit to be made, just ask Apple, Dell, Pearson...

School administrators are generally ignorant of the Real World, and wouldn't survive were they to do something productive, they will buy any nonsense with ease. Most teachers chose that profession as it gives them essentially unlimited power to control and mess with people weaker than they. Between one thing and another, plenty room for profit, reminds me of some BOFH stories. Universities are even worse. Maybe not as much as Google, but being in the educational provisioning field has great margins, and is big, big business.

A-nonCoward
FAIL

It would be nice...

if I would not get any more "the IRS has filed a lawsuit against you" phone calls.

They're getting so cheeky, they even leave that as a recorded message, with a return phone number. (yes, I know that caller ID is easy to tamper with, no, to make sure of "catching" you, they leave a call back number as part of the voice message). It would be all too easy to track back this kind of calls to the perpetrators, etc. if you wanted to. Ergo, the pooh-bahs don't... Shame.

Google weeps as its home state of California passes its own GDPR

A-nonCoward
Headmaster

2020 !!!

uh, ain't there yet:

"This bill would enact the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018. Beginning January 1, 2020, the bill would grant a consumer a right to request a business to disclose the categories and specific pieces of personal information that it collects about the consumer, the categories of sources from which that information is collected, the business purposes for collecting or selling the information, and the categories of 3rd parties with which the information is shared. "

A-nonCoward
Big Brother

Wow!

just wow!

GDPR forgive us, it's been one month since you were enforced…

A-nonCoward
Facepalm

Re: Blocked by the Register ...

they use Flash . You still sure you want to be allowed to open their website?

Unbreakable smart lock devastated to discover screwdrivers exist

A-nonCoward

low temperature alloy

says "It isn't very strong, it melts at high temperatures and it is quite brittle. "

You surely mean "(Zamak) melts at low temperatures"

Yes, indeed quite brittle

Calm your conspiracy theories, latest glimpse reveals Planet Nine may just be a pipe dream

A-nonCoward

Gee required quote

https://grisebouille.net/planete-9/

Measure for measure: Why network surveys don't count what counts

A-nonCoward

now I get it

why in the US cellphone ads are all about "speed" and streaming...

and voice calls sound like a tin box...

AI boffins rebel against closed-access academic journal that wants to have its cake and eat it

A-nonCoward
Childcatcher

weaklings, all and one, I say!

Hey, universities are funded by taxes and by making little kids get in debt for life. That's the way it has to be. Then, research is taken over by companies, as good Cthulhu made it be. Pharma, better seeds, chemistry.

Why should AI guys be free from the long reaching arm of greed? how unAmerican of them! Shame!

Leave it to Beaver: Unity is long gone and you're on your GNOME

A-nonCoward
Go

Unity gone? good. Might come back to Ubuntu

was tired to jump hoops to get the "classic" look during the Unity nonsense era, went Fedora, I'm generally happy, might get the desktop running again (which I haven't turned on at least a year, the four screens make for a good place to drop my coat)

There's just one month left 'til the big day: May 25... but don't panic!

A-nonCoward
Mushroom

Poetry Contest, in Finnish...

"the first and oldest ongoing bad poetry night on Towel Day"

Vogons, you got it too easy, you.

Exposed: Lazy Android mobe makers couldn't care less about security

A-nonCoward
Mushroom

Moto E second generation

Update level: October 2016 "your system is up to date"

quote from Lenovo website (Didn't know Lenovo had slurped Motorola?)

Security updates

This device will remain on Android 5.1 Lollipop.

This product will no longer receive security updates.

https://mobilesupport.lenovo.com/us/en/softwareupgrade

@alain williams<br>yup, no ROI on keeping us simple fellows happy.

Go away, kid, you bother me: Apple, Google, Microsoft, Mozilla kick W3C nerds to the curb

A-nonCoward
Angel

Mandatory XKCD

https://m.xkcd.com/927/

Virgin spaceplane makes maiden rocket-powered flight

A-nonCoward
Go

flight tracker of the N202VG Virgin Galactic rocket plane

https://www.flightradar24.com/data/aircraft/n202vg/#10f11692

User asked why CTRL-ALT-DEL restarted PC instead of opening apps

A-nonCoward

cannot remember whether the first IBM PCs had the same facility or not

yes, sort of, somewhat to slow beyond some very basic stuff.

What I loved was the realization that I could peek/poke the video memory, manipulate things and load to video memory direct