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Comment Re:FUD (Score 1) 19

I confess, AC, I don't even know who voted their comment up.

I did note the 'increasingly' bit in the summary. That's because, as you know, this isn't new. Malicious actors have been doing this for a long time. They use these IPs for things like spamming, DDoS attacks, hiding traditional hacking at scale, and things like that.

They're just doing this more often because finding reliable hosts to provide them with compromised addresses. Then again, those hosts were already using hacked residential IP addresses.

And, yes, it's more difficult these days. I've been trying to find a reputable company (at a reasonable price) to just do a simple DDoS for me.

No, not for anything illegal. I just want to test some of my own infrastructure. It has gone through a DDoS attack a couple of times and has been just fine. But, those were short-lived (under an hour) and not very impressive as far as the numbers go. I'd like to find the breaking point so that I can work on that.

Comment Re:Beige? (Score 1) 51

I've been doing some retro-computing stuff. It hasn't reached the point of 'serious hobby'. I just already had some old stuff and wanted to experience some stuff Id' missed back in the day. Like, I never owned an Amiga.

But, I think it might be interesting to get an SGI to play with. I'd like to see what it'll run today but, and this is something some folks overlook, it'll still do the tasks it was designed to do in the era it was meant to do so.

That or it seems like a good case to fit a modern computer.

You were quite fortunate, I should think, to have used one of those SGI workstations at the time. Though, it must have made your home computer seem pretty slow.

Then again, if that was your home computer, you were doing quite well.

Comment Re:Beige? (Score 1) 51

You're right. Those are interesting.

For reasons, namely that they helped sponsor my research in grad school by providing hardware, we had a lot of DEC gear back then.

Then, there was the writing on the wall and you could see the demise of DEC coming, so we had a lot of Sun gear after that. At the time, depending on your position in the company, you could use a Unix or Windows. Even if you chose Windows, you could install X (X11) to access the server in a graphical way.

We did have people with beefy workstations but none of those were SGI. My company modeled traffic which was really only graphically heavy when we needed to present something to a client. Then, we'd have large scale simulations that would let you zoom into a very narrow focus. This was useful to show things like our predictions that depended on the traffic decisions they made.

I did employ traffic engineers but that was a service add-on and for in-house expertise. We mainly modeled outcomes, eventually even modeling pedestrian traffic and doing things like optimizing fleet traffic. (For example, watch a UPS truck carefully as it moves through its daily deliveries. One of the first things you'll notice is that they'll go out of their way to avoid taking a left into traffic - especially in congested areaas.)

Hmm... I'm rambling mindlessly, at this point.

But, we did sometimes need to render some pretty heavy graphics - even animated graphics with a great degree of fidelity.

Something like SGI workstations would have been great for that. We rendered the graphics on 'big iron' for the longest time.

Comment Re: Why is Apple so afraid? (Score 1) 96

I'd wager very damned few apps are ever distributed via sideloading. meta makes Facebook and Messenger available via sideloading, mainly to get around some locked-down non-Alphabet Android devices, but for the vast majority of users, if it's not on the default app store on their device, it might as well not exist.

Comment Re:A better measure of Google's efficiency (Score 2) 38

Google is absolutely collecting your personal information.

They aren't really selling it, however. You can't go to Google and say, "Here's ten bucks. Let me see KGIII's information."

They're selling access to your metrics, however. You're profiled and assigned a market segment with pretty good accuracy. They know who you are, what your interests are, what your interests really are, all the pages you've gone to, etc.. (Royal you, not you specifically.)

The people paying Google are paying them to target people in X, Y, and Z categories for the purpose of promotion. They don't actually sell your personal information - at least not from what I can tell (and I have purchased ads before). They weren't very good ads. I wasn't even selling anything. I just wanted to see what buying ads did. (It did very little. My case should probably not be considered as data.)

I guess you could say that they sell access to a person's predicted behavior and not their actual information.

But, from behind the curtain, I didn't see any magic box to search for KGIII's data and then an option to buy said data. They sell that information in aggregate, seemingly keeping it pretty well protected. My own government has lost control of my data. Google appears to have not done so. It's kind of weird that way.

Comment Re:Sure (Score 1) 167

Yeah, it can be a pretty fun debate topic. I'm not sure that I'm willing to invest the energy into doing so, as there's no real benefit.

Even if we reached a point of agreement, or even enlightenment, there'd be little benefit. Few people are willing to change a firmly held belief, even when faced with conflicting information. It happens but we're rationalizing beings instead of rational beings.

That said, I think many people might (if properly coaxed) agree that we, from a view of pragmatism, should 'cull the herd'. The big difference will be who it is making those decisions. I'm not sure that I'd agree with that viewpoint when there are adequate resources. (We currently have adequate resources, they're just poorly distributed for so many complex reasons that can be summed up as 'we humans are kinda shitty'.)

In the long view, I'd not be even a wee bit surprised if we caused our own extinction. I also think it's hubris to believe that we're the evolutionary end-game and the true apex.

Man... I now kind of want to eat a bunch of mushrooms and then mull this one over for a bit.

Comment Re:Beige? (Score 1) 51

That sounds right. They worked for a very famous studio at the time, perhaps even a couple of them, doing things like CGI.

Said machine was a beast in its day. The specs and specifics have long been forgotten but I recall that performance levels were quite high. They worked on some pretty famous movies and were good enough that they did so via remote work even back then. He did have high speed internet to his home but I think it was just a T1 or maybe some ISDN line. I don't think he had a full T3 but he might have. It's not like he was paying for it out of his pocket. We're talking 25 years ago, or something like that. So, the details are quite fuzzy.

I've never been into video manipulation or creating graphics but he was quite skilled and worked on movies I'm sure you're familiar with. I guess it's not doxxing him to point out that he worked for Pixar for quite a while. So, whatever Pixar used might be what he was using. I haven't heard from him in decades. He would sometimes talk about making his nest egg and getting out. He may have done that.

Yeah, as I think about it, SGI sounds right to me. The case was blue-ish but I'm partially colorblind.

Comment Re: Sure (Score 1) 167

Yeah, not so many of those 'space race tech' things were really all that relative. We like to imagine so. People like to say so.

Here's NPR being optimistic and trying to explain all the great things that came from the Apollo missions:

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.npr.org%2F2019%2F07%2F20...

There really isn't that much. For some reason, we remember history differently. We look at the grand accomplishment (which it was) and seem to have to believe that it had some great benefits for mankind as a whole. Maybe that's how we justify it for ourselves?

Once upon a time, I too believed that we'd gained much from the Apollo mission specifically. Then, many years ago, it was someone right here on this site who took their time to be pedantic and argumentative. They were correct, however. They were correct enough for me to change my views. (I'm not against changing my mind when learning new things. I also like a good grammar nazi.)

Comment Re:Sure (Score 1) 167

Why do humans deserveto [sic] die?

This can be a fun debate topic, and I've been a fan of formal debate for years. However, I'm not so sure that the person you're responding to is very good at it, and I'm not really going to do that whole formal debate thing.

The question you ask can be easily reversed. Why do humans deserve to live?

This can get pretty into the weeds with topics like assuming we're the peak of evolution and shit like that.

We can also point to history (and our ongoing treatment of other humans) as an example of why we should be stuck in our gravity well. We can't even treat our own environment with any level of responsibility.

I'm not sure that we should infest the universe with humans. Any other life we find that's less advanced than us will be killed, fucked, eaten, or fucked killed and then eaten. Any life that's more advanced than us should treat us like the invasive species we are and exterminate us on sight.

(I kid... I kid...)

Well, I mostly kid. We really are quite horrible as a whole. We can't even consistently treat other humans with respect, dignity, and kindness. I'm an optimist, however. This won't change much more in my lifetime, but it may someday change for the better.

Comment Re:Over-zealous legislation again.... dislike! (Score 1) 157

The *real* problem is with people who aren't skilled enough at operating a motor vehicle

That is where your sentence should have ended. There is a large majority of people who do not know how to drive a motor vehicle. Braking at green lights, not turning right on red, braking going down the most insignificant hill rather than coasting, not accelerating when the light turns green, not yielding when entering a roadway, driving below the speed limit, making a turn from the middle of the lane rather than the edge, etc.

If I had a dime for every person I've been around who has done any one of the above, I'd never have to work again.

Comment Re:Beige? (Score 1) 51

For a while, we had some choice, depending on one's definition of PC. As I recall, the Micro, ZX Spectrum, and Amstrad were all black.

If we only include IBM and clones, IBM had some models dressed in black from fairly early on.

But, yes You're still correct. I'm just remarking because they did exist, but were not so great in number. It was a sea of beige and the age of the cubical.

A video-editing friend of mine had some fancy computer dressed in blue. I forget the make/model and I guess it'd be a PC but was more like a workstation. I think that predated Apple's jump to offering a variety of colors.

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