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My Own Personal Take On Libertarianism

Posted by MichaelDavidCrawford on Thursday November 15 2018, @06:06PM (#3672)
89 Comments
Digital Liberty

Just two things really sums it up:

When a man tells me he is a Sovereign Citizen, I give him a cookie.

Also, it is my understanding that Libertarians were diapers made of hemp, as that is what the Constitution is printed on.

What is your own personal take on Libertarianism?

New York Parents Are Turning to Reiki Healers for Their Kids

Posted by takyon on Thursday November 15 2018, @01:34PM (#3671)
6 Comments

LOL: I Accidentally Disabled My LiteCoin Mining Rig

Posted by MichaelDavidCrawford on Wednesday November 14 2018, @09:14PM (#3669)
9 Comments
Hardware

I cancelled my Comcast Internet over the weekend because money is tight. I'm able to use my iPhone's personal hotspot which kinda sorta works most of the time. Strangely, the Personal Hotspot does not work as well at home as it does on the bus or train.

When I did that, I also cancelled my Antminer L3+'s Internet connection.

Well at least I'll get some quiet for once. LiteCoin is at forty or so; my Comcast was fifty so for mining alone it's not worth it.

However if you feel that cryptocurrencies aren't going to collapse anytime soon, it would be a good time to buy some.

Biggest computer war in the history of computers is tomorrow

Posted by Snow on Wednesday November 14 2018, @05:18PM (#3668)
18 Comments
Security

Tomorrow, November 15 @ 04:40UTC, the biggest computer battle that has ever happened will take place.

The Bitcoin Cash network is secured by about 5EH of compting power (5,000,000,000,000,000,000 dSHA256 hashes/second). At the moment, a malicious actor, Craig Wright, is controlling about 75% of that power. He intends to cause a hard fork on November 15 and make BitcoinSV the leading Bitcoin Cash implementation.

His goal appears to be to destroy Bitcoin Cash. His twitter feed (seriously, check this out) has become crazy over the last few weeks. He appears to want to take away the permissionless aspect of Bitcoin Cash. Transactions that use 'non-allowed' op codes would become recoverable by miners (of which, he is conveniently, the majority miner). He also talks of recovering funds from addresses that have been inactive for a long time. I believe that the end goal is to recover Satoshi's coins.

In just under 24 hours, the war will start. It is likely that hashrate will be diverted from BTC to defend this attack. This will result in lower hash rate for BTC, slower block times, and likely transaction congestion.

During this time, block reorgs on the bitcoin cash network are likely. Transactions may be undone during the attack. It is also possible that only empty blocks will be mined, preventing any transactions from occurring.

There is also speculation that 'poison blocks' will be used as part of the attack. The new SV client allows upto 128MB blocks. However, the current software only has a throughput of ~22MB before other limits come into play. It is speculated that Craig Wright will use malicious pre-computed blocks to 'poision' the network. These blocks would take a long time to validate on honest nodes giving CW an advantage.

This is going to be an epic battle. It's the most expensive computer attack to ever be launched and is going to be a critical moment for the future of all cryptocurrencies, not just Bitcoin Cash.

It's going to be interesting... information during the attack can be found here: https://reddit.com/r/btc and here: https://cash.coin.dance/

EDIT: Ars just picked it up.

In Canada, They Call It "Remembrance Day"

Posted by MichaelDavidCrawford on Monday November 12 2018, @07:41AM (#3665)
10 Comments
Career & Education

(Reposted from my email to a cast of thousands.)

In Europe, they call November 11th Armistice Day, as World War I ended at 11:00 AM on November 11th, 1918.

I ask that you honor our veterans in quite a grim manner: please read "All Quiet On The Western Front" by Erich Maria Remarque. "Western" because Remarque was a German soldier - but it's been long enough that we should not hang on to our anger anymore.

That same spirit of forgiveness is evidenced by Aircrew Remembered. My dear friend Stefan Pietrzak Youngs works on it with his brother Kelvin, who started this invaluable historical archive to honor their father, a Polish fighter pilot who perished in a training accident shortly after the end of the war. Here's one of Sgt. Aleksander Pietrzak's pages there:

When Sergeant Pietrzak perished, Stefan was only three months old.

In his book, Remarque mentions just one war atrocity that was committed by American soldiers: when fresh German troops arrived, the battle-seasoned soldiers advised them to file the saw teeth off their bayonets lest they be captured by the Americans then disemboweled with their own bayonets.

My own father served in Vietnam, a Missile Fire Control Officer aboard the USS Providence and the Wilson. The Fire Control Officers were the ones who pressed the buttons that actually launched the missiles; had my father not been so quick on the draw, hundreds of men - including him - would have gone to Davy Jones' Locker were a North Vietnamese MIG fighter to have sunk their ship with its own missile.

Dad never told us that the Talos Naval Anti-Aircraft Missiles could be fitted with nuclear warheads, but that fact was later declassified. An Air Force fighter pilot who was scrambled during the Cuban Missile Crisis regarded the nuclear anti-aircraft missile as "the stupidest weapon ever invented". When I mentioned the Talos' nuclear capability at Hacker News, someone replied that "The first Taloses had poor accuracy, and that was at a time" - the 1950s - "that atomic bombs seemed like a good idea for everything".

Grandpa Speelmon was a surgeon and a Captain in the US Army Air Forces Medical Corps in San Antonio, Texas. I don't know much about my grandfather - Estel Rex Speelmon, he went by his middle name - but reading Wikipedia suggests that he served in the School of Aviation Medicine at Randolph Field, now Randolph Air Force Base.

Grandpa Crawford was a Carpenter's Mate in the Seabees - the US Naval Construction Battalions - in the New Hebrides, in the South Pacific. He later served in the Aleutian Islands during Korea.

I actually had two maternal grandfathers as Grandpa Speelmon died in 1948. Grandpa Swope was my grandmother Florence's second husband. He and I were very close. When he told me that he was a Police Officer in Los Angeles during World War II, I pointed out that he didn't seem like the kind of guy that would make a good cop:

"In those days," Grandpa explained, "You did what you were told".

One of Grandpa Speelmon's older brothers, Ray Bruce Speelmon, died in Flanders about three weeks before the Armistice. My mother once went there, to lay flowers on Great Uncle Ray's grave. Someday I shall lay flowers there too.

Mom and Dad understandably tried to hide the horrors of war from my sister and I. This led to me having the impression that the only time Dad ever fired a gun was when he came home from work - at the Concord Naval Weapons Station, in the San Francisco East Bay - to proudly boast that he shot the head off a match at fifty feet with a pistol.

Dad's take on Gun Safety: "Never point a gun at someone unless you intend to shoot them. Never shoot someone unless you intend to kill them".

I read "All Quiet On The Western Front" during the Summer of '79, when I was fifteen.

Dad passed away during peacetime, in 2003 at the age of sixty-eight. His mortal remains lay for eternity in Willamette National Cemetery in South Portland, Oregon.

I will leave you with a happy story:

In Concord, Dad worked at a very small, very secure facility where they assembled and tested Terrier and Talos missiles. The Terrier was a single-stage solid-fueled rocket, the Talos two stages, the first if I understand correctly was solid-fueled, the upper stage an liquid fueled air-breathing ramjet.

One day Dad brought home a piece of the Terrier's solid fuel that was about the size of his thumb. That solid fuel looked just like automobile tire rubber because that's just what it was made of.

After advising me and Jeannie to stand well away from it, Dad placed the piece of fuel in the middle of our concrete back deck, stood well away himself, leaned out then stretched out his arm to light the fuel with his cigarette lighter.

That automobile tire rubber burnt just like the head of a match!

        "Nitroglycerin."

Never Forget Those Who Gave Their Lives For Us.

Michael David Crawford, Navy Brat

Here's the Problem I've Got With AC

Posted by MichaelDavidCrawford on Monday November 12 2018, @12:54AM (#3664)
27 Comments
Career & Education

Specifically, the AC who claims that all job posts are works of fiction and that Soggy Jobs is a fraud.

It is specifically for people like him that I built it. I want to facilitate the employment of those who find it difficult to find work.

However, I am forced to concede that I'm stymied by this particular AC. I expect he has some manner of mental illness whose paranoia leads him to be completely convinced that _nobody_ actually works as a coder.

The booming Portland economy is centered around the Pearl District and its Downtown. Locate your startup there and you'll get VC like there's no tomorrow.

But you won't hire any coders.

Have you any advice as to how I can help him? Help me out here, I'm begging you!

4 Gallon Kimchi Ferment

Posted by takyon on Sunday November 11 2018, @03:04PM (#3663)
13 Comments
/dev/random

4 green cabbages
4 lbs carrots
2 bunches of green onions (about 10-11 oz total)
1 lb radishes

Sauce contains:

8 tbsp soy sauce
8 tbsp sugar
1 cup canned crushed pineapple
12 tbsp ginger paste
3 heads garlic
2 onions
1/2 cup red pepper flakes
Some MSG

I'll put in some store bought kimchi to use as a starter.

1 cabbage makes about a gallon, so I'm using a 5 gallon food grade bucket. I bought these silicone grommets. Drilled a 9/16" hole in the bucket lid, popped it in. Airlock fits great. I'll put some vodka in it to ward off bugs (they probably won't get in, but could drown in the airlock).

Google Made Its Careers Portal Difficult For Soggy Jobs

Posted by MichaelDavidCrawford on Sunday November 11 2018, @12:35AM (#3662)
22 Comments
Career & Education

I at first intended to list the openings at each of Google's locations, on the city pages for those locations. That is, on my London page I would link to Google's London listings.

That no longer seems possible.

Possibly I am wrong so I'll screw around with Google's job board some other day, but I was hoping to while away my afternoon doing something totally mindless. Listing all of Google's locations would have fit the bill.

I'm going to make spaghetti for supper tonight, but I'm not going to make my usual mountain of the stuff.

Later tonight I'll take the significant step of taking two busses to North Portland so I can visit a close friend who is a waitress at Shari's Restaurant And Pies, a 24-hour restaurant chain. I haven't visited her at work for a while because I've been busted flat. She always likes it when I do visit.

I've spent the entire night at that particular Shari's a great many times. During my homelessness they were completely cool with me doing that provided I buy just one coffee. I didn't even have to leave a tip.

I wrote quite a lot of The Frog there.

One time I was sitting at the counter while talking on the phone to a cop in Santa Cruz, California. He got all pissed off then told me he would trace my call - from his patrol car, leading me to believe that _all_ cops can do this:

"The Northwest.. Oregon..."

"I'm sitting at the counter at Shari's Restaurant And Pies just off Exit 306 off I-5 near the bridge over the Columbia River. Care to elucidate?"

Strangely, Santa Cruz' Finest didn't appreciate my kind assistance.

How's it hangin?

Posted by Runaway1956 on Saturday November 10 2018, @03:41PM (#3661)
17 Comments
Topics

It's an old cliché, right? And, you don't talk about it in mixed company, or polite company, amirite? It's just something we all live with. Ehhhh - keep reading, maybe you'll learn something, as I did. Dude has done the research for us, and compares 8 different brands of men's underwear, highlighting their strengths, and shortcomings.

https://snarkynomad.com/the-best-mens-underwear-for-every-guy-out-there/

The best men’s underwear for every guy out there
December 12, 2016 - by SnarkyNomad
Welcome, friends and loved ones, to what is going to be the most detailed discussion I have ever produced. And that’s saying something.

I’ve written about men’s underwear before, specifically regarding how incredibly difficult it is finding something that works. So many designs out there are total garbage that most guys don’t bother sifting through the selection to find something good, and end up just living with whatever’s cheap, because the fancy ones don’t work either. Add to this the fact that underwear is incredibly polarizing, with some people liking a loose boxer fit, while others prefer a boxer brief, along with all kinds of other preferences that are more divisive than a heated political debate. And I think I finally know why.

Yes, ladies and gentlemen––but mostly gentlemen––I think I’ve actually figured out why some people like one design instead of another, and I also think I can articulate this problem without resorting to obscene diagrams. It’s all going to start making perfect sense, and by the end of all this, I think you’ll be able to find something that’ll work for you, without having to spend $30 on something that fits horribly and gets thrown in the garbage by the end of the day.

So go ahead and get comfortable, because this is going to be as thorough as a nuclear submarine technical manual.

How men’s underwear discussions tend to miss the point
I will begin by saying that everything you’ve been told about men’s underwear is wrong.

Everyone talks about “support,” claiming that one pair of underwear has good “support,” while another does not. But this doesn’t make any sense. “Support” is what happens when you’re lifted up from underneath. But what good is that?

The constant readjustment problem that plagues every guy all day long has nothing to do with a lack of “support.” It has to do with a lack of containment. Walking around for a while will dislodge whatever you intend to hold in place up front, and it’ll start migrating into various positions and start chafing against the leg and ruin your whole day. This is why underwear with good “support” isn’t going to do you any good.

As I say, he did all the research, and he notes within his blog that these brands start at about $5.00 per pair, and get very pricey from there. I don't suppose that many of us can justify a $50 pair of undies - I know that I can't. I started with the lowest price available, and experimented.

https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/men/innerwear-and-socks/boxers-and-boxer-briefs

People, you won't believe it until you try it. Some of those higher priced garments could possibly be better, but I don't know how. The ONLY thing that I don't really like, is the fabric. I've spent a lifetime wearing 100% cotton, in the thickness and texture found in Hanes, Fruit of the Loom, and other common brands. Very thin, smooth, moisture wicking cotton - certainly not silk, but it does have some silky qualities. My initial impression of the fabric was, "These are kind of effeminate, aren't they?" But - I've gotten used to them.

Blurb here about that cotton: https://authenticity50.com/pages/supima-cotton

WHAT IS SUPIMA COTTON?
"Extra-long staple Supima cotton is the crème de la crème in the cotton world" -GEAR PATROL

There’s a reason the American-grown Supima® cotton we use costs more than 2x the price of regular cotton, and it shows in the product. It's finer and more expensive than Egyptian Cotton and traditional Pima cotton. Its extra-long staples allows us to spin an extremely fine yet durable single-ply thread, which results in a softer, more breathable, and longer lasting bed sheet.

EXTRA-LONG STAPLE
In fact, Supima® is 35% longer than regular cotton, which makes the fiber 45% stronger and considerably softer. Supima® accounts for less than 3% of the cotton grown in the United States, and comes fully certified by the Supima® association.

Imagine that - high tech underwear, that doesn't even plug into a computer!! All you need is a connection to milennia old Pima Indian cultivated cotton!

G.Skill and ZADAK Double Height 32 GB DRAM Modules

Posted by takyon on Saturday November 10 2018, @01:58PM (#3660)
0 Comments
Hardware

In The Lab: Double Capacity 2x32GB DDR4 from G.Skill and ZADAK

One of the interesting things to come out of the news in recent weeks is the march to double capacity memory. In today’s market, memory modules for consumer grade computers have a maximum of 16GB per module. This is unbuffered memory, and the standard for home computers and laptops. However recently there have been two major announcements causing that number to double from 16GB to 32GB: Samsung has developed double capacity ICs to drive up to 32GB per module with the same number of chips, but also a couple of DRAM vendors have found a way to put two times as many ICs on a 16GB module to make it up to 32GB. Both G.Skill and ZADAK fall into that latter category, and now we have both of these kits in the lab for review.

Related: HP Footnote Leads Intel to Confirm Support for 128 GB of DRAM for 9th-Generation Processors