Exactly, Ken.
Posts by jake
26710 publicly visible posts • joined 7 Jun 2007
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Job interview descended into sweary shouting match, candidate got the gig anyway
Re: Similar experience
That technique (two people at opposite ends of a table) is a technique they used to teach in Business Management 101. Another is three or four 'interviewers", each fluent in a different discipline, taking turns rapid-firing unrelated questions at you. I've found that both of them are deployed by companies that are more interested in playing mind-games than actually putting together a smoothly running business, and as such I generally recommend the interviewee fire the company immediately.
Font security 'still a Helvetica of a problem' says Australian graphics outfit Canva
Re: Truetype fonts were (are?) .DLLs
We were discussing TheOldDays, youngster.
Joe W remembered a fairly common error in the Windows world of 25 or 30 years ago, that being "A TrueType font has caused a general protection failure in module setup.exe".
"But how can a TTF cause a GPF?", you ask. Good question. It turns out that the internal file format of TTFs on Windows is (was?[0]) a .DLL. Really. And because of this, corrupt fonts could stomp all over memory and cause GPFs. Worse, carefully crafted .TTF files could be used to compromise a system. There were kernel exploits based on this back in the day.
Dr. Dobbs Journal had a rather in-depth article on how it all worked back in the early '90s, and I believe Byte touched on it, too. Sadly, with today's fucking useless "AI" generated web pages clogging up tehintarwebtubes I can't easily find info to point you in the general direction of ... but I've given you enough to go on should you wish to pursue it.
[0] I honestly don't know if this is still the case or not ... Windows is no longer something I feel a need to spend time with.
Olympic-level server tossing contest seeks entrants – warranty voiding guaranteed
My current record is about 220 feet (67m).
But that was straight down.
VAX 6000[0] ... off the top floor of 525 University in Palo Alto.
We had to get it out of the building by close of business to beat a performance clause in the contract. The heavy-goods lift was down, and building rules insisted "no equipment in the passenger elevators!".
So rather than lug the thing down all those flights, my buddy and I hauled it onto to the Boss's private balcony. It took about 5 minutes to remove enough of the barrier to put the thing on the edge. He went downstairs to shoo potential targets out of the drop zone, and I pushed with the help of a crowbar and a block of wood. Sadly, in the days before so-called "smart" phones, we didn't think to videotape it.
[0] All you VAX lovers out there can chill ... we stripped it of anything useful before the defenestration. The chassis probably still weighed well over 500 pounds (225kilos). At the time, you could buy a VAX 6000 chassis at less than scrap value from places like Wierdstuff Warehouse. Risking life and limb getting the thing down ~12 flights wasn't worth it.
Linus Torvalds declares Linux 6.8 is probably back on track for a regular release cycle
Re: On yet another hand
Probably not a Watson quote. There is no evidence to suggest he ever said that.
However, Howard Aiken (the engineer who was in charge of building IBM's Harvard Mark I) once said Originally one thought that if there were a half dozen large computers in this country, hidden away in research laboratories, this would take care of all requirements we had throughout the country. ... It is thought that this is the origin of the Watson misquote.
Re: I totally agree with Microsoft on this one.
"Still, you would think that being able to have names of more than one character for your volumes would be helpful in remembering what’s on them."
Volume labels were allowed to be up to 11 characters going back to FAT12. (FAT8, if I remember correctly, was only 9 characters, but I only ran across that once or twice in the wild. so I might be misremembering.).
Re: One Thing Microsoft Still Clearly Believes ...
"... is that “26 drive letters ought to be enough for anybody”."
I totally agree with Microsoft on this one. What kind of idiot would want even 10 drives on a Microsoft system? There are now (and always have been) far more robust ways of storing files than anything that Microsoft has ever built.
This has been true since I was placed in charge of half a dozen Pilot build IBM PCs running the DOS 0.96 Beta.
The supposed "640K limit" was an IBM hardware limit, not an MS software limit. The IBM hardware spec was already firmly in place before Gates even heard about the project. Even if he had made the comment (which is extremely doubtful ... nobody has ever documented it), he would have just been agreeing with IBM's spec. And it wasn't really 640K, it was more like 704K, if you knew what you were doing. I find it absolutely amazing that this piece of incorrect trivia is still being parroted as fact after all these years ...
OTOH, I personally remember Steve Jobs saying that "128K ought to be more than enough for home users". It was at a meeting of the Homebrew Computer Club in late 1983, as he was demonstrating the original Macintosh, just before the public unveiling. At the time, he had a point ... people were running flight simulators in 64K.
On the gripping hand, none of this matters any more. It's all just an accident of history.
Anthropic unlocks Claude 3, claims it's better than ChatGPT and Gemini
Re: Here's my test for AI
"Feed it a page of search results and ask it to remove the crap."
Seeing as it seems that these days almost all search results (at least when looking for information) appear to be shit-pages created by a 'bot, it would have to remove itself. Are they programmed for virtual suicide? Would anybody care?
Miracle WM, a new tiling window manager built on Mir
Health system network turned out to be a house of cards – Cisco cards, that is
They call me 'Growler'. I don't like you. Let's discuss your pay cut
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
"One thing Anheuser-Busch mention in the US but not outside is how their "beers" are filtered over activated charcoal."
You are confused. It's Jack Danial's that filters through charcoal. They use freshly made sugar maple charcoal, not activated charcoal. Note that "filtering" in this case means "slowly dripped through", not "removes contaminants". Far from removing flavo(u)r, this a way of adding flavo(u)r (and colo(u)r) to the finished product.
Budweiser's advertising shtick is "beechwood aged", essentially they secondary their brew over beechwood chips that naturally trap yeast during secondary fermentation, thus clearing the beer without adding finings.
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
How to tell us you've never even tried it without telling us you've never even tried it.
Seriously, dude, it's just a German-style lager. Try it once, you might be surprised.
Life's too short to have that kind of childish attitude about a simple beer ... Are you going to hold your breath and threaten to be sick next?
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
"Apparently yeast will create certain histamines in the fermentation process only with rice that is known to cause allergic-like reactions in humans."
Oreally. Which "histamines" are those, pray tell?
Last time I checked, histamine is one very specific molecule, C5H9N3, or 2-(1H-Imidazol-4-yl)ethanamine, if you like ... and all beers contain between 20 and 300mg/l. Budweiser is, in fact, on the low end of this, specifically because they use rice as an adjunct to their grain bill. Quite simply, rice doesn't produce as much histamine as barley or wheat in the fermentation process.
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
"How on earth did this recipe come to be 'developed'? I can't fathom the thought process of anyone thinking that a freshly run over cock would improve the taste of beer* !"
Kitchen accident. Someone boiled a bunch of chicken parts wrapped in cheesecloth (for ease of removal) to make a stock. Stick the bag into a handy bucket to be disposed of later, not knowing it was a freshly sanitized bucked for beer. The household brewer decants a freshly brewed ale out of the primary onto the top of the bag, and then stashes the secondary away in the cellar for aging. Naturally, the kid who dropped the bag wouldn't have said anything, so the bag of bird parts wouldn't have come to light until the ale was ready to be either bottled or imbibed. In our modern society, once discovered they would have tossed the lot ... but back then, nothing was wasted. It still smelled OK, so they drank it ... and probably marveled at the mouthfeel and the clarity of the stuff. The cloves & raisins etc. were added later, probably by charlatans selling it as "medicine".
"* Leaving out the obvious cheep shot about (internationally available) American 'beers'"
British beers, you mean. The recipe originated in England, and was a crowd favorite by the late 1500s. America didn't exist back then. William III is said to have preferred Cock Ale over the finest French wines, and wouldn't drink any other beer... which probably says a lot about the state of the British brewing industry in the late 1600s. (Of course the British and French were at loggerheads back then, so claiming not to like French wine may have been political.)
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
The cheap American Lagers are really a tribute to modern industrial manufacturing capability. When consumed young and unmolested, and properly stored, they have no off-flavo(u)rs, and taste the same all over the world, regardless of which plant they were made in. They also aren't exactly water, even Bud Light is 4.2% (Bud is 5%).
Trying to re-create such a thing at home is a serious test of a home-brewer's skill. Don't believe me? Try it. Water, barley, rice, yeast & hops ... how hard can it be?
With that said, give me a real ale any day of the week.
Why is ElReg's "beer" icon clearly a glass of Bud?
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
Stories about one branch or another being able to drink the other branch under the table (or country vs. country, etc.) have been part of military lore since Sumer and Elam were at odds 4,700 years ago or thereabouts.
They have all been lies, regardless of origin. Pure, unadulterated bravado and nothing more.
And my dad can beat up your dad!
Re: Depends on your definition of growler I guess.
I've made Cock Ale, it's actually drinkable ... Translating the recipe into more modern terms: First you brew a strong ale (your choice), to make ten gallons. Next, boil a cock (old rooster works well for this!). Bust the boiled bird up with a mortar and pestle (food processor), bones & all. Stick the result into a fine cheesecloth bag with some mace (I use three or four flakes) and cloves (I use 8), and some mashed dates and raisins, about 8oz each. Soak the lot in a couple quarts of fortified wine (I use a young (cheap) version of Oloroso), until the ale is ready to come out of the primary. Discard the bird+spice bag, and decant the fortified wine into the secondary with the ale, discarding the sediment. Allow to sit and clarify for a couple weeks/month(s) before bottling. It's ready to drink after 6 or 8 months in the botttle at cellar temperature (42F (5.5C), plus or minus).
The added sugar from the raisins & dates makes for a bit more fermentation in the secondary. The gelatin from the bird seems to work as finings to clarify the brew. You can't taste the chicken in the final product, but the head is affected (more protein) (the head is minimal, but there). You can leave out the mace and clove (recommended, except for history's sake).
Frankly, while the end result is usually quite drinkable, I don't find it to be worth the effort ... I make it once in a while (nine times in 35 years) just to blow people's minds.
[edit] Do not add salt & pepper, veggies, etc. to the boiled rooster. Make soup with the stock from boiling the bird.
Bank boss hated IT, loved the beach, was clueless about ports and politeness
It's that most wonderful time of the year when tech cannot handle the date
"It just comes to show that there are far too many "programmers" around these days that might know about all the latest paradigms and other fluff in programming, but have lost all connection to real world problems..."
Well, what do you expect when Management in the Corporate World is firing old programmers and hiring wet-behind-the-ears new graduates[0] with absolutely zero street smarts? Throw in so-called "DevOps" and its insistence that QA can be dispensed with (as a money saving measure, don'tchaknow) along with Marketing's attitude of "just ship it, we don't care if it's useful to anybody, some schmuck will buy it!" and Bob's your Auntie.
The proverbial thinking man can probably see that it's only going to get worse before it gets better ... and a techie with an entrepreneurial bent can undoubtedly figure out how to profit from this shortsightedness on the part of marketing and management.
[0] Round about 2000 I started interviewing "programmers" fresh out of school who didn't know what the heap and the stack are (much less how the compiler uses them) on a fairly regular basis. Nowadays it's normal for the youngsters to have many gaps of that nature in their education. I fear we are losing something very important that is going to prove to be almost impossible to get back.
Re: First they came for the leap seconds, then they came for the leap days...
"There are two reasonable time systems"
There is a difference between "time", the dimension, and "what time is it?", clock/calendar time.
I run on three major clocks, and one minor one.
The first is TheWife's monthly cycle. If you are married to a woman, you'll grok.
The second is the seasonal clock handily provided by the Solar Year & the Earth's axial tilt with respect to its orbit. It is totally out of my control, but I plant my fields & breed my critters by it, as humans have since time immemorial. Trying to change this is a fool's errand.
The third is the clock provided by the Master clock on my network, which syncs up to an atomic clock once per day (ntp.org works for most purposes ... I use something else), which all of my machines adhere to. This is for computer record keeping more than anything else.
Context is key. There is no "SingleTimeStandard[tm]", and never will be. With the exception of The Wife's, of course.
The minor fourth clock is my dive watch. I wear it when appropriate. It's kinda important ... but it could be completely out of sync with the three major clocks in my life and it wouldn't matter at all.
As a side-note, I don't wear a wristwatch day-to-day ... and haven't in nearly half a century (since my HP-01, back in 1977). In my mind, they are completely pointless. Everywhere you look these days you can see something giving you a pretty good approximation of "local time". Humans living life to the second or minute (or even ten minutes!) is counter productive. Even when baking bread ten minutes either way won't kill you, or the loaf ... Relax, be patient, learn to make cheese, cure meat and brew beer.
The planting calendar is one of the most important tools hung on the wall of the seed barn.
I have a stack of them going back to the late 1800s. When combined with the farm journals, I have a pretty good idea of what I need to plant, when, this Spring (which looks to be wetter than normal, but not outside historical data).
Re: why we benefit from changing the clocks for summer time
Alarm? The cows queuing up outside the milking parlor let us know the day is starting. (Some people swear by roosters, personally I swear at them ... so there are none on the Ranch.)
The clock has no bearing on day-to-day life around here. It's all tied to the sun and weather. No amount of the Government dicking around with what the clock says will ever change that. Even the Vet, Farrier and various delivery folks use time no more precise than morning, noonish, afternoon or evening.
Re: 1999 cause I can't spell Millenium
"Don't know why I missed it."
In the 2 years leading up to 2000, I got paid an awful lot of money re-certifying stuff that I had already certified to be Y2K compliant some 10-20 years earlier. Same for the embedded guys & gals. By the time 2000 came around, most of the hard work was had been done a decade or more in the past ... the re-certification was pure management bullshit, so they could be seen as doing something ... anything! ... useful during the beginning of the dot-bomb bubble.
Look for similar bullshit/misdirection leading up to 2038 ... despite the fact that all of the important systems that would be affected either already have been, or can easily be modified, making to so-called"problem" non-existent. (Certain hardware that was stupidly hard-coded being the exception, but most of that will probably be landfill by then anyway.)
Re: Temporary temporal problem
You need to post 100 times in the past year to get Bronze.
On top of that, you'll need 2,000 upvotes to get Silver.
You already have the 2,000 upvotes, so I suspect that if you "test" post 100 times to a junk thread over in the user forums, you'll be silver again. Well, 99 times ... you've already posted once. The user forums are kind of hard to find these days, so here ya go:
https://forums.theregister.com/section/user/
Welcome back. Have a beer :-)
The batteries on Odysseus, the hero private Moon lander, have run out
Please stop pouring the wrong radioactive water into the sea, Fukushima operator told
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