Swift wrote:GJ, nothing against you or Sigma, but I've gotten to the point of despising computer people. They are rapidly approaching my feelings about Congress. Every time I turn around there is some new hacking disaster, or bug, or data breach. Fix the fucking system already. I'm close to the point of tossing all the computers in the trash and going back to rolling pennies, writing paper checks, shopping at real stores, and hiding my money in the mattress.
Swift wrote:GJ, nothing against you or Sigma, but I've gotten to the point of despising computer people. They are rapidly approaching my feelings about Congress. Every time I turn around there is some new hacking disaster, or bug, or data breach. Fix the fucking system already. I'm close to the point of tossing all the computers in the trash and going back to rolling pennies, writing paper checks, shopping at real stores, and hiding my money in the mattress.
Gullible Jones wrote:swift, I'll just offer you a famous quote in this field...
"If civil engineers designed buildings the way software engineers design programs, civilization would crumble when the first woodpecker showed up."
That is not an exaggeration.
Swift wrote:Gullible Jones wrote:swift, I'll just offer you a famous quote in this field...
"If civil engineers designed buildings the way software engineers design programs, civilization would crumble when the first woodpecker showed up."
That is not an exaggeration.
Gosh, I feel so much better now.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Swift wrote:Gullible Jones wrote:swift, I'll just offer you a famous quote in this field...
"If civil engineers designed buildings the way software engineers design programs, civilization would crumble when the first woodpecker showed up."
That is not an exaggeration.
Gosh, I feel so much better now.
Just to make you feel even better: That saying is at least from the 70s
Swift wrote:GJ, nothing against you or Sigma, but I've gotten to the point of despising computer people. They are rapidly approaching my feelings about Congress. Every time I turn around there is some new hacking disaster, or bug, or data breach. Fix the fucking system already. I'm close to the point of tossing all the computers in the trash and going back to rolling pennies, writing paper checks, shopping at real stores, and hiding my money in the mattress.
squ1d wrote:As the only person here that actually makes a living from designing software, let me clear up a few things.
squ1d wrote:Almost everything is controlled by software these days, so if that quote were true in any way whatsoever, civilization would have already crumbled. The fact that shit applications exist is no need to point fingers at an entire profession. "That is not an exaggeration" ... oh yes it is. And what exactly do you know about how we design programs? That quote from the 70's .. when Voyager was launched. That thing what has the codes in it.
squ1d wrote:In this case, a computer scientist with a PHD introduced a bug in 2011 while patching the heartbeat code in OpenSSL. Dadoy.
It's a serious bug as far as these things go, but security paranoia has reached ridiculous levels, and the "don't use the internet for a few days" advice just made me laugh hysterically.
"Chances are some crook has your passwords" -- I don't know how you calculate chance, but obviously not the same way I do.
Nobody has ever stolen my identity or money from me, or blackmailed me, or set me on fire, because of buffer underruns on my internets, so forgive me for not buying into the panic.
FZR1KG wrote:Sure squid, but just you wait until year 3000 when the trimellenium bug hits and all flying cars just crash to the ground because they couldn't work out what day it is...
I agree with you squid. It's like when electronics first came out. They said it was unreliable, sissy stuff that can't be used in real applications like cars etc. It's not the technology that's bad it's those in it who aren't up to the required level of expertise.
A classic example was a gas heater controller a friend had issues with producing that was designed by a guy who know electronics to work with stuff but little about design. He attempted to design a RC timer to control a relay but what he achieved was a timer controlled by the drop out voltage of the relay. Naturally it varied and no one could work it out for years. The circuit looked like it should work but it was set to common collector rather than common emitter and that was enough to totally change the characteristics. To make things worse, I showed them the fault, told them how to change it and fix the problem permanently making it safer and more reliable but the cost of retesting for gas compliance was over $5000 so no one wanted to do it.
Net result is a faulty design that passed testing by under skilled testers, designed by an unskilled designer and not fixed by a greedy company owner.
These are one of the top selling gas controllers for imitation wood heaters in the USA.
If people aren't going to fix a gas device on a major selling item what chance is there of organising a software rewrite of someone's faulty code.
For the record I suggested a total redesign using a CPU and software control. It's more reliable and has far less development time than a discrete design. When done properly. The answer was that software requires different certification for gas devices...yeah, because you all know how to test simple electronics so well.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:Welp. I just saw a list of affected sites... LastPass is one of them. Morrolan - you need to change your password there immediately.
And I don't think I'll be using that particular password management service.
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