* Posts by heyrick

6629 publicly visible posts • joined 20 Dec 2009

Big data: Study suggests even a moderate gambling habit is linked to increased mortality and other bad stuff

heyrick Silver badge

I play Euromillions. I don't smoke, drink, take drugs (except the stuff in tea and sugar), so I can justify a lottery ticket as a possibility of better. I'm quite well aware that money usually goes in one direction and the odds of winning are BIGNUM to 1, however some people do win so it's a (far flung) possibility.

I'd rather like to win France's "MyMillion" because that seems like a reasonably sane amount of money. Get the house fixed up nice, retire, enjoy myself without going crazy. The draw tonight is a mere €130,000,000. Not sure what the hell I'd do if I won that, it's kind of a stupid amount of money to be honest. I guess the most likely reaction would be a heart attack which would amply demonstrate the point of this article...

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Happy

Bet you a tenner this SpaceX rocket will blow up spectacu...urg...ugh...argh... <plonk>

See? Proof. Gambling kills.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: "the study is silent on these factors"

Prostitutes, no. But there may well be multimillionaire pimps making donations...

UK internet providers told to mind their MANRS and start following Border Gateway Protocol best practices

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though nobody noticed because they were IPv6

That says it all, really, doesn't it?

Musk see: Watch SpaceX's latest Starship rocket explode while trying to touch down

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Mushroom

As I said to my oncologist when my mother died...

The failures are every bit as important as the successes. You need to know not only what does work, but what does not. And, hopefully, why.

SpaceX might have a reputation for crowd pleasing explosions, but every single one will be providing masses of data and telemetry, good examples of what didn't work in order to make better things in the future.

Icon, because I watched the video...

Momentum builds behind campaign to fire Nominet CEO, board – though success still far from certain

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Re: think GoDaddy or Fasthosts

I suggest taking a shower first...

heyrick Silver badge

Re: Alternatively.

Take that quote, and compare it with this:

to fund unrelated and unsuccessful business ventures while at the same time paying large executive bonuses and slashing the amount of money provided to good causes

Forget staff morale (what, no more gravy train? diddums) and realise that something is very rotten and change needs to happen.

Remember life on Venus? One of the telescopes had 'an undesirable side effect' that could kill off the whole idea

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Re: What a shame

"Venus is pretty good at digesting and recycling the molecules"

If you want to survive Venus, you need protomolecule...

heyrick Silver badge

What a shame

It was amazing to think that something passing for life could actually survive in the atmosphere of that planet.

There's a reason our probes don't send back much data - Venus is pretty good at digesting and recycling the molecules that said probes are made from.

Open the door, get on the floor, everybody walk the dinosaur: Expect an ad, get a bork

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The "Chrome" dinosaur?

FFS.

That's either Mozilla or a rip-off of it. It, a kaiju, was the mascot of Netscape before Google ever existed. Maybe even when Larry Page was still in high school.

Enter about:mozilla into Firefox for a quotation from The Book of Mozilla.

GitLab removes its 'starter' tier: Users must either pay 5x more or lose features

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Re: Everybody is doing it

They are keeping the free tier for now.

heyrick Silver badge

Never tried cancelling Netflix (my current "stuff to watch" list is likely longer than my remaining lifespan), but at least Netflix don't bug you to subscribe to them every time you look for a video in Google... Which is sort of the equivalent of how much Amazon bugs you to join Prime (I have, and from time to time they still bug me about the benefits of Prime membership...dunces).

heyrick Silver badge

Everybody is doing it

Not making enough cash? Bump up the price.

I recently read that Netflix is upping its price too, and you'd have thought that with the many various lockdowns they'd be having their "best year ever".

Can't help but think it's short term greed because nobody is interested in the long game these days.

Europe considers making it law that your boss can’t bug you outside of office hours

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Re: Am I on the clock? No? Then go away.

"electromagnetic flux interference from solar flares causing signal degredation in the upper ionosphere. Oh, and Klingons off the starboard bow."

Having chewed your way through the first sentence, I rather suspect their eyes will be so glazed over that you could say the second sentence with a completely straight face and they'd just nod.

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They're playing catch up to France

https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droit_%C3%A0_la_d%C3%A9connexion

Since January 2017, when you go home (company with more than 50 employees), you can turn the phone off and stop reading emails. If you're going to be called at 2am then you're supposed to be accordingly paid for being "on call" unless there are mitigating circumstances (example - here at work if the freezer fails, the temperature sensor gizmo will start calling a list of management types in a loop until it gets an affirmative response from somebody).

I was targeted by North Korean 0-day hackers using a Visual Studio project, vuln hunter tells El Reg

heyrick Silver badge

Re: White space on pages

"because you're blocking an ad

After every nearly single comment? https://forums.theregister.com/forum/all/2021/01/26/apple_ios_zero_days/ has four comments. The first three have large gaps, seemingly within the comment.

(not reported to @ therg because I am using an ad blocker)

You would expect a qualified electrician to wire a building to spec, right? Trust... but verify

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Re: You would expect a qualified electrician to wire a building to spec, right?

My first job when I was much younger was doing part time cleaning of new build homes. Our boss supplied us with one of those little plug tester things and said we had to use it every single time we wanted to plug in the vacuum cleaner (a Henry!). I did so, and it didn't take long to discover a socket with live wired to the top pin.

As if that wasn't bad enough, when it was reported up to the site manager, he just shrugged and said he doesn't have time for stuff like that, especially since we'd already made four reports that day... FFS...

Fedora's Chromium maintainer suggests switching to Firefox as Google yanks features in favour of Chrome

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Re: Chromium is doomed.

"But Mozilla needs to go back to"

They need to do more than that. I got a new tablet, put on the latest Firefox for Android and was horrified (horrified, I tell you) to see that the official list of add-ons amounted to a party eleven things. The older stuff? Didn't want to work because long complicated internal changes.

Since the latest didn't do what I wanted it to do, I pulled an earlier (pre-broken) version from my phone and installed all the add-ons I use (noting that the official site told me repeatedly, incorrectly, that they wouldn't work).

So, what (Android) browser has a decent set of anti tracking, content blocking, and cookie munching options that isn't broken?

Reg reader's XXXbox oddity: The BBC4 topless thumbnail trauma whodunnit

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Re: "Sweaty masses"

Scunthorpe.

Windows Product Activation – or just how many numbers we could get a user to tell us down the telephone

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"I never could understand why punishing your paying customers and treating them like criminals seemed like a good idea"

You'd think so, wouldn't you?

YOU WOULDN'T STEAL A CAR.

YOU WOULDN'T STEAL A HANDBAG...

And for the cherry on top of the cake? It will play every single bloody time and you can't skip or fast forward it. So the people who coughed up cash for the DVD get reminded over and over that piracy is a crime! while those who simply went and downloaded the thing don't get any such guilt trip because they never see the rubbish.

heyrick Silver badge

"the many reasons I eventually refused to help non family members"

There's also the danger that if somebody should get caught with a pirate copy, they might turn around and point at you and say "I had no idea, he did it".

If I clocked that a copy of XP (in the days when I helped out) was not legit or had no antivirus, I just walked away. Not touching that for the price of tea and biscuits, uh uh, nope.

Over long US weekend, GitHub HR boss quit after firing Jewish staffer who warned Nazis were at the Capitol

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Re: I'm confused

Thank you. I hadn't considered changing to a non specific gender. That does make sense.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: I'm confused

While we're on the discussion of the use of "their", why do so many transgender people seem to want to be referred to in the third person plural (they/their) instead of simply he or she as appropriate?

Hollywood drone pilot admits he crashed gizmo into cop chopper, triggering emergency landing

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Re: Helicopter danger

"Risking civilian lives for trivial police fishing exercises is immoral."

If we're going to go down that street... MPs risking civilian lives because they think they know more than actual scientists is immoral.

Remind me, what's the death toll from helicopters falling out of the sky in the past 12 months, versus Covid?

[in other words, helicopters cost a shittonne to maintain and deploy, so I doubt they'd do it without having some semblance of reason]

heyrick Silver badge

Re: Helicopter danger

"and too many people read it to ignore it"

Too many people pay attention to Fox News, but anybody with a modicum of self-respect would avoid it.

I get Daily Mail stories in my News app feed. Just reading the headlines and seeing their take on things. Just a little earlier, some shoutiness about a direct link between vaccines and people dying. (which I read as meaning: let's stir up some anti-vaccination sentiment). Yes, some (usually rare) react badly to medications and it might prove fatal. That being said, the virus itself has killed how many so far?

Your best bet is to ditch the DM, read a paper that at least attempts some measure of integrity, and the fact that a lot of people read the DM just means a lot of people are either very gullible or derive some perverse pleasure from being trolled.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: Not just the US

"because of the visual reference condition"

As a part time low end hobbyist pilot (as in the type that uses WiFi and literally can't go much further than 40m in any direction; and only flies for about eight minutes at a time), it's actually pretty hard to keep the thing pointing in the right direction when you can see it. I've not flown at night with the drone more than a couple of metres away. I wouldn't want to try. Sure, moonlight shots are nice, but far too many trees around...

I can imagine things would be better with a good FPV setup to see what the drone sees, but on the flip side, if you're looking at what the drone sees you're not looking at the drone itself, making it easy to miss certain things like the bloody big helicopter just abo...oh crap...

heyrick Silver badge

Re: Not really the brightest bulb, was he?

"there's a large amount of kinetic energy in a rotor blade and when it hits a drone moving much slower."

Exactly. Even if the blade survives unharmed, you're suddenly going to have a lot of high velocity shrapnel (drone bits) flying who knows where.

It's been a day or so and nope, we still can't wrap our head around why GitHub would fire someone for saying Nazis were storming the US Capitol

heyrick Silver badge

Re: Opportunistic?

More like a snowflake with connections whinged about how it was wrong for a person to call an insurrectionist a Nazi (even if one of them was wearing a Camp Auschwitz shirt) so HRs response was to come up with some vague bollocks to justify getting rid of somebody who didn't quite fit in.

UK network Three hikes pay-as-you-go rates by 400% to push punters to buy 'bundles'

heyrick Silver badge
WTF?

How do they justify the costs of SMS?

1048576 bytes of data, 5p.

140 bytes of SMS, 10p.

Cost of a megabytes worth of data at SMS rates - £749...

That's it. It's over. It's really over. From today, Adobe Flash Player no longer works. We're free. We can just leave

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I would have been inclined to add that you'd be holding them liable for any problems arising from the necessity of installing and using something known to be a huge security risk.

Seriously, needing Flash in 2020, WTF?

heyrick Silver badge

hoping no one ever creates software as insecure as that ever again

Way too late.

I have an IPcam with a borked version of the GoAhead server. A fat fingered moment in writing some code had me making an http request without the leading '/'.

The camera's response? To serve up the file requested, completely bypassing all of the password stuff.

I suspect a lot of IoT tat is similarly crap.

Boffins store text message inside E coli bacteria using electromagnetic signal – and you'll never guess what it says

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Re: Domestos* - kills 99% of all known computer bugs ;o)

I have visions of Audrey 2... and that's the server.

After all, the thing about living cells is that eventually they evolve.

Waterloo! Windows defeated, your sign is screwed. Waterloo! Promise to bork you forevermore

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Coffee/keyboard

Re: Very apt description

I'm on my lunch break. Icon, because bleurk....

Linux developers get ready to wield the secateurs against elderly microprocessors

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Re: Damnit!

So, your ARM M0 can emulate a 6502 which emulates an ARM which can emulate a 6502 which...

...I wonder how deep this can be nested before it gets ridiculously slow?

heyrick Silver badge

Re: what is linux good for?

Upvote for a good detailed explanation.

For those of us that grew up a little later when lower case exists, it is more useful that "mydoc.txt" opens the expected file without worrying if that's MYDOC or MyDoc or Mydoc or whatever.

As for whose case takes precedence, that's part of the eternal question of character handling. Just like does the file "Ångstrom.txt" appear following Z, or before B? Both are valid depending upon how you interpret the first letter.

And, of course, this is complications with Latin based characters. Throw in Chinese, Arabic, etc and it gets really messy...

heyrick Silver badge
Happy

Re: Damnit!

Whoa, wait... So his idea to get around the need of an MMU was to write an ARM emulator to run on his eight bit processor, and run Linux on that?

Oh man, that's devious.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: People still make these older CPUs last I checked...

Also worth mentioning that in the case of the ARM (not familiar with others), there are twice as many registers in the 64 bit world, so while you may lose a little in the memory requirements, you ought to gain a good amount in the speed department, especially with a load/store architecture like ARM where more registers is a good thing.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: People still make these older CPUs last I checked...

These days we have the Raspberry Pi family. No need for big cumbersome 486s.

I have a 486 board around someplace, a DX66 if I remember correctly. Big slab of brown ceramic (is it ceramic? never been brave enough to drop it to see what happens) that's maybe 2/3rds of the size of the entire Pi board, and that's just the processor.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: what is linux good for?

I don't like Linux much - it's mostly the asinine case sensitive filesystem that irks me. So, my choice, I don't run Linux on any of my computers.

Yet, oddly enough, I have more copies of Linux running in the house than everything else added together.

Let's see. The broadband router. A WiFi media sharer gizmo. The backup router. The manageable hub. My PVR. Two different IPcams. My tablet, and mobile phone. And frankly I wouldn't be surprised if the printer (WiFi, built in web server, blah blah) didn't run it as well.

Tablet and phone are Android. PVR is a stripped down Debian (from the dark ages). Most of the rest are the standard combo of very minimal Linux and Busybox.

So, we're all still waiting for the year of Linux on the desktop, meanwhile it has quietly taken over pretty much everything else that has a little more processing oomph than your average washing machine... Where it sits, peacefully, and just gets shit done without all the drama.

That's what Linux is good for.

UK's AI fairy tale sets out on its yellow-brick roadmap

heyrick Silver badge

Re: at a democratic decision

"If so whose votes were suppressed?"

Try any British citizen who has been living in the EU for long enough that the arbitrary "you no longer count" rule kicks in. The one that successive PMs say they'll get rid of, yet never manage to do.

Why don't we count? Because apparently the whole issue of the UK's relationship with the EU simply has nothing to do with UK citizens living in the EU. Huh? That argument doesn't hold air, never mind water.

Or, another way to look at it, a clever yet slimy way to discount the people who took benefit of their EU rights and are thus more likely to vote in favour of the EU because they actually understand what it means.

And that's not even getting into the shit that the Brexiteers pulled around and especially following the referendum, as detailed above.

heyrick Silver badge
Megaphone

at a democratic decision

When all British citizens of majority age have the right and ability to vote, it is democratic.

When you start cherry picking who can and cannot vote, for whatever reason, it's no longer democratic.

The referendum was the latter, not the former. Repeating the "democratic vote" mantra does not make it so, any more than the orange idiot over the way saying the election was "stolen" makes it so.

Buggy code, fragile legacy systems, ill-conceived projects cost US businesses $2 trillion in 2020

heyrick Silver badge

Re: The reason I'm only a geek in my private time

Sadly, not permitted without the permission of the person, their family, and the nursing home (plus the legal people). Talking to somebody is one thing. Recording that person...instant quagmire of red tape.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: Praise Where and When Praise is Due.

He writes "realise" with an 's'. That's not leftpondian.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: I'm a coder

To be fair, though, the average modern operating system won't fit in a 16K ROM, or a hundred pages of fanfold paper.

It's just a shame that modern fast connectivity has so quickly been translated into a "push it out the door and fix the problems later" method of software development.

heyrick Silver badge
Mushroom

The reason I'm only a geek in my private time

The icon is appropriate.

Many many years ago, I wrote code. A specification was written for us by somebody who sort of understood the problem, but nothing about the application of that to a computer. That was supposed to be our job, to take the spec and make it code.

Only, it wasn't. Our job, it transpires, was to take the spec extremely literally and make it code. An example I remember was a set of values that were multiplied by powers of two. I forget the reason, index offset maybe? But it was basically a calculation that the sixteen bit processor could do as a simple arithmetic shift. But no. The spec said that the value had to be multiplied, so a costly multiplication routine needed to be invoked. But we couldn't write one because we already had an even costlier multiplication routine that worked with fixed point numbers. So, yes, we took a value and converted it to fixed point and multiplied it and converted it back. Hundreds of machine cycles for something that ought to have been one instruction.

Why? Because the spec said so and some asshole manager wasn't going to accept any deviation from the spec. NONE.

The project was full of stuff like that, and arguments between the programmers (I was just a junior keyboard monkey) and the manglement were common. And since the higher ups understood their sycophants and not us, we were overruled every single time. I left before the project was anywhere near finished (and already late) and it was an utter piece of shit. Bloated, slow, horrific. Nobody wanted to put their name to it. But, alas, it completely followed the spec. The spec written by somebody barely competent to use a pocket calculator.

Suffice to say, I took a completely different career path. Pays less than a developer, sure, but less stress and I got to meet some interesting people. Best discussion I ever had with somebody was working as a carer in a nursing home with this excited old lady jumping up and down about as much as possible in a wheelchair. Why? Official secrets was up, she helped bust the Enigma and had been waiting a lifetime to talk about it. And she did. Utterly fascinating how it worked and the methods used to reverse engineer something just by looking at the encoded messages.

I don't regret my decision, but I do regret that once upon a time people were valued for their skills. Writing code, running an effective ward (in a hospital), being a blacksmith... and somewhere along the line we all accepted these total and utter losers to come along, call themselves fancy titles, tell us all what to do. They don't have a bloody clue. I bet you could randomly fire at least half the management from any company and when the shock settles down, you'd realise that they weren't actually that necessary and maybe just maybe the workers would be more effective by not having people that don't understand their job telling them how to do their job, and of course (especially in high concentration jobs like programming) not having to stop everything mid morning for yet another stupid fucking "update" meeting where everybody is brought together to say where they are different to yesterday, or the day before that. It doesn't help the programmers, it doesn't help the other workers, it's only done in order to make the management feel like they are important.

They are the reason we're all screwed. People worship the guy with the big desk and the company car.

And the people that can actually do the work? Diminishing, mostly due to the actions of the aforementioned parasites.

Loser Trump is no longer useful to Twitter, entire account deleted over fears he'll whip up more mayhem

heyrick Silver badge

Re: An elephant in the room

Ideas of insurrection isn't the point.

It's ideas of insurrection egged on by the outgoing President who refuses to accept the result of a properly held election.

Note the part in italics and especially the part in bold. Any idiot can have delusions of ousting a government they see as corrupt and illegitimate (and they will, of course, fail). That the guy currently in charge is the ringleader makes it an entirely different situation.

Entirely.

Different.

heyrick Silver badge

Re: An elephant in the room

"Note how much Bezos net worth has increased during this tragic outbreak"

Could that possibly be because his empire mails out stuff, which is kind of useful when places are on lockdown and most of the shops are shut?

There are two sectors that really ought to be doing spectacularly right now - internet mail order, and video conferencing.

Brick and mortar shops? Not so much. I think here (France) the restaurants that don't support takeaway have been closed more than open in the past year. We never had an "eat out to help out" policy because even the dimmest politician understood that stuffing a lot of people into enclosed spaces for lengthy durations (the average restaurant meal is what, an hour?) during an ongoing pandemic was a really dumb idea. Still, I do wonder how many will reopen when the dust settles and we can put the chaos behind us.

"What folks don't agree on is the science behind masks"

Personal sample of one here, but I've been out and about as sparingly as possible and worn a mask in all public places, plus the hand washing. Not only have I not contracted the virus (thankfully), I have also not had the winter flu or any cold. Usually the flu gets me for about a week and I have two or three rounds of cold. So, I'm not complaining about wearing a mask, nor others doing likewise.

As for the utility of masks, try an official source and not whatever shit turns up on social media: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/cloth-face-cover-guidance.html

"lockdowns and other draconian measures supported by politicians"

I doubt that politicians would trash their own country's economies, risk huge unemployment, and likely make their party unelectable for decades without a damn good reason behind it. Here in France we came out of second lockdown into a country wide curfew (was 8pm-6am, is now 6pm-6am in parts over in the east) because it was obvious that the full liberation after the first lockdown meant that the infection rates, that were under control, shot right back up again. So they're trying something different to try to keep things contained without diving straight into another lockdown. In this way we can all attempt to have some semblance of a life while this problem continues.

Of course, it isn't helped by fuckwits having a booze filled rave, or the devout deciding to defy proximity restrictions and pack themselves into churches...

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Thumb Up

Re: An elephant in the room

Mockery has made it to the other side of the ocean, burnt the boat it took to get there, has opened up a thriving McDonald franchise and has claimed political asylum.

So well put. :-)

United States Congress stormed by violent followers of defeated president, Biden win confirmation halted

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Re: Careful. Slow down and THINK.

"The dumb-asses will be processed, and dealt with according to law."

Yes, so very helpful of Elijah Schaffer to not only say what he was doing with his name attached, but also provide photographic evidence...

Bug? No, Telegram exposing its users' precise location is a feature working as 'expected'

heyrick Silver badge

a huge printed directory of local names, addresses, and telephone numbers

While that is true, there's a big difference between "here's a book with twenty thousand people indexed by name, good luck"...

...and "This young brunette is Jessica, she's out for her morning run, this is her route. She lives at 6 Skylark Lane. She's single, has two cats, and plays the cello" (the additional details easily gleaned by following links to social media profiles, etc).