Slashback: AMD/ATI, Tokamak Fusion, Laptop Privacy 171
An inside look at the AMD/ATI merger. Spinnerbait writes "HotHardware spent some sit-down time with a few folks close to the AMD and ATI merger, asked some probing questions and received a few insightful answers in return. They dug in deep with AMD Execs, learned all there is to know currently and even got a hint of what the future might hold for the dynamic duo (no pun intended), now joined as one. A tighter coupling of the CPU and GPU is in our future perhaps?"
School admins back down on cell phone invasion policy. Reverberant writes "In a follow up to earlier coverage about school admins wanting access to students' cellphones, Framingham officials have decided to hold off on the policy for now because they need school committee approval. The head of the school policy committee has 'no interest in bringing it up.'"
New launch date for Scotty's ashes. wolfdvh writes "The BBC reports that Star Trek actor James Doohan, who played the engineer Scotty in the original TV series, will now have his remains blasted into space in October. The actor's ashes were supposed to be sent into orbit last year, but the flight was delayed as tests were carried out on the rocket."
Second test for China's Tokamak fusion device. Haxx writes "The first plasma discharge from China's experimental advanced superconducting research center dubbed 'artificial sun' is set to occur next month. The discharge, expected about Aug. 15, will be conducted at Science Island in Hefei, in east China's Anhui Province. The experiment will test the world's first Tokamak fusion device of this kind. The new device will be an upgrade of China`s first superconducting Tokamak device. The plasma discharge will draw international attention since some scientists are concerned with risks involved in such a process"
Forbe's missed the mark on IBM destruction of evidence. An anonymous reader writes "It turns out that Forbes.com was wrong and, based on analysis of Pacer no motion has been filed against IBM for destruction of evidence. Shortly following from a major collapse in SCO's share price, a recent article Slashdot reported Forbes.com's claim that a motion had been filed against IBM for destruction of evidence. In fact, Groklaw, the main site covering the SCO vs. IBM lawsuit, now reports that SCO has filed no motions of this type whatsoever in March."
Skype for Mac 1.5 released. Billy C writes "A few weeks after warez versions made the rounds on the Internet, the official Skype for Mac with video is here." While still only a preview version, brave users can now give it a shot.
Courts rule customs can rifle through your laptop. monstermagnet writes "On Monday, a unanimous three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the files of a person's laptop may be searched at U.S. borders [PDF] without probable cause or even reasonable suspicion."
Cyrix (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cyrix (Score:2)
Re:Cyrix (Score:2)
was shoddy- and, in that, I don't mean the chip itself, I mean things like a 33 MHz Front-Side bus
really, really hamstrung it. In reality, AMD's still flogging the next generation version of this
design with many, but not all the implementational flaws removed from it- you're probably familiar
with the Geode GX and LX CPU options from AMD. If you've seen a design with one of those, you've
seen the MediaGX in i
Re:Cyrix (Score:2)
Re:Cyrix (Score:2)
ATI + AMD != Linux driver? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ATI + AMD != Linux driver? (Score:2)
$ lspci | grep -i vga
01:05.0 VGA compatible controller: ATI Technologies Inc RC410 [Radeon Xpress 200M]
$
$ fglrxinfo
display:
OpenGL vendor string: ATI Technologies Inc.
OpenGL renderer string: RADEON XPRESS 200M Series Generic
OpenGL version string: 2.0.5879 (8.26.18)
Seems to be working already, as far as I can tell. This is on an IBM R51e laptop. What's the problem?
Yeah, it "works", but... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, it "works", but... (Score:2)
Well, that's exactly what you SHOULD be seeing. The Radeon Xpress 200 is exactly half as powerful as the 9600.
9600: 4 pipelines, 2 vertex units, 325 MHz core speed.
Xpress 200: 2 pipelines, 1 (limited) vertex unit, 333 MHz core speed.
Maybe if you did some research [wikipedia.org], you would waste less time whining about your non-exis
Re:ATI + AMD != Linux driver? (Score:2)
I've no idea if the driver works with suspend to ram. I've never bothered to get suspend to ram working, since it's in a fairly high state of flux within the linux kernel.
Can I start more than one X server simultaneously? Again, something that I never use. Apparantly it can though, according to this: http://www2.ati.com/drivers/linux/linux_8.25.18.ht ml#180566 [ati.com]
For my uses, the latest drivers works fine. Don't get me wrong,
A convo that I just had about this... (Score:3, Funny)
(23:25:03) parasonic: hahahaha
(23:25:08) parasonic: where did you figure that one out?
(23:25:18) Uncle_C: i'm kinda drunk, i'm jsut loking at it adn thats what it said
Re:ATI + AMD != Linux driver? (Score:2)
Re:ATI + AMD != Linux driver? (Score:2)
Scotty (Score:1, Insightful)
Where ever you go Scotty, I hope it's GREEN.
Enterprise CVAN 65 that is...
Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:3, Informative)
TrueCrypt for Windows or Linux. Check it out.
--saint
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
a) They'll detain you indefinitely (up to three months if I remember correctly) for suspicious behavior.
b) They'll not allow you in the country, ship you back to your home country, and likely prevent you from ever entering again.
Trust me, I've had experience with these people. They're like the police force only with more power.
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
Of course, I'd be the first to argue against that, but it is fairly likely.
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
However, Customs has a job to do. They need to keep things out that aren't suposed to be here. If you stash Cuban cigars in your pants, you might get caught. If you stash kiddie pr0n on your laptop, you might get caught.
I'm surprised to see this from the 9th, but it really is a "lawful" rulling.
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
I just ran this on my iBook which has a small (by today's standards) 30GB drive
In Windows I expect the numbers to be fairly large as well. So what files are they going to look at ? Will they be looking at (sorry using the Unix directories, not familiar with the Windows equivalents from the top of my head) /var ? at /usr/local/tmp ? at the other /home directories ? at /root ? at /etc/rc4.d
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
What, you think they'll actually train Customs officers to scan a hard drive?
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
The lesson here: If you're taking a laptop across the border, make sure it runs Linux!
Yeah, TrueCrypt !! (Score:4, Insightful)
If they were smart enough to find the encrypted partition and demand the pass phrase, you give up the normal partition phrase and they never even know about the hidden partition. It can also run off a USB device. As usual this will snare hundreds of stupid people.
Not that I don't think it's totally retarded you have to go to those lengths to keep the government from spying on your laptop. Ah, what do you expect from Republicans?
TrueCrypt Scepticism (Score:2)
I guess it's time for me to check out TrueCrypt and see how it works, because I just can't figure out how such a thing could possibly work. And while that is of course non-conclusive, it leads me to believe that it probably doesn't work.
The problem, in my head, is that you can't have undetectable storage, while simultaneously limiting allocation so that the hidden storage won't be overwritten. It's either alloca
Re:TrueCrypt Scepticism (Score:2)
Re:TrueCrypt Scepticism (Score:2)
Step one: Cover the free space on the disk with random garbage.
Step two: The system reads the normal disk File Allocation Table (FAT). Enter a password to create a new encrypted partition. This partition is scattered randomly across the unallocated space, as determined by the normal disk FAT. Store a new additional encrypted FAT for that partition in that previously free space, start storing your encrypted data in that partition, but only record th
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
Ha! It will be fun to watch.
Re:Thank heavens for crypto. (Score:2)
Courts rule customs can rifle through your laptop (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:5, Funny)
I've actually had a customs agent at Gatwick Airport (London, UK) ask me if I had any porn on my laptop. I told him no, if I wanted any I'd just get some local stuff as it seemed plentiful. Fortunately the British pride themselves on having a sense of humor. He offered suggestions on where to get it...
-Charles
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:2)
Sure sounds like protectionism to me. Don't want any of that damn cheap imported porn ruining the domestic industry....
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:3, Informative)
Has it? I live in the UK and have travelled all over Europe, and I've never had anybody ask to see what's on my laptop.
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:2)
Apart from that I too have been all over Europe more times than I care to count and nobody ever looked at the data I was carrying (good luck anyway between the Unix laptop, encrypted stuff on the PDA and media player).
The worst problem I ever had with customs/security
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, there *are* situations where the most efficient way to transmit data is by shipping physical media around - but they all involve huge amounts of data or places with little infrastructure. It's hard to come up with a scenario where it makes sense to illegally transfer data from one city with an international airport to another by putting it on a hard drive in a consumer laptop and flying people around with it.
A professional pornographer isn't going to bother carrying the product around with them. They'll set up shop somewhere, pay for a decent network connection and a bunch of dvd blanks, and bring it in electronically and then manufacture it on site. Or they'll bring in ten thousand pressed dvd's in a cargo crate labeled "bananas."
Likewise, someone carrying *really* bad stuff isn't going to just leave it lying around in an unencrypted folder on a laptop. Hell, I wouldn't think of leaving my perfectly legal vanilla porn unencrypted on a laptop in my house, much less one I'd take across international borders.
In countries where anyone can ssh to anywhere in the world and pull in whatever they want, this is just silly. You might occasionally catch really stupid consumers of illegal material, but that's all.
On a tangent, if I were going to try to get some really bad data across the border into a place with no network, I'd probably stick it on encrypted flash drives, disassemble them as much as possible to remove cases and excess hardware, and then screw or cement the boards into place in the bodies of consumer electronics gear. Add an equal number of identical but unmodified drives loaded with holiday photos to use for reassembly parts, and buy the screwdrivers and soldering station at a shop when you arrive. The illegal material in my laptop, if I had any, would be on the pc board hot-glued to the underside of the mainboar - not on the hard drive. (If you really want to do it right, you design pc boards that fit into the cases perfectly and come with standoff and mounting hardware designed to fit the flash drive boards, so that it would pass even a casual inspection by a knowledgeable person. Hide any identifying bits under globs of black epoxy, or place them upside down. Extra points if you manage to route the connectors on the flash board to accessible headers and connect to the drives without even reassembling them.)
Re: Hiding Flash (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Purchase a 1 Gb flash drive. Stick a label on it so the size isn't advertised.
2. Partition it 512 Mb FAT-32 / 512 Mb Ext-2
3. Put innocuous stuff all on the FAT partition -- anything hidden gets encrypted and put on the Ext-2
Any one that sticks the flash drive into a Windows box will automount the first partitions. Nothing to see there -- move along. The Ext-2 won't show up unless they look at it with a partitioning tool.
I've never had anyone look twice. Of course, I've never been under close scrutiny, but it certainly passed casual inspection.
The 1 Gb PQI Intellistick is so small it easily fits between credit cards in my wallet without being seen. It doesn't trigger metal detectors, so I leave my wallet in my pocket when going thru those in airports. I don't let it get x-rayed and it just never shows up. The card costs like $45.
Re: Hiding Flash (Score:2)
I imagine if authorities seriously suspected that you had something nasty hidden away somewhere they'd discover the extra partition, but it's certainly likely to get past most people, like customs agents and thieves. Using something like partition-backed loop-aes on the second partition wouldn't hurt either, just in case someone does take a closer look at the drive.
If you want to really go all out, buy two drives from the same manufacturer with a factor of two difference in size and swap
Re: Hiding Flash (Score:2)
Not that I could see anybody doing this - or even checking a usb disk at all.
Re: Hiding Flash (Score:2)
No, it would report the size of the partition being viewed. Without a partition tool, they wouldn't even know the other partition existed, let alone be able to view it.
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:3, Funny)
I dunno, it sounds to me like he was just asking to see your collection, in case there was anything there he wanted to copy for himself.
Re:Courts rule customs can rifle through your lapt (Score:2)
I mean, it has the word "freedom" in it. Shouldnt it be blocked?
Probable Cause (Score:4, Interesting)
the files of a person's laptop may be searched at U.S. borders without probable cause or even reasonable suspicion.
Elliotte Rusty Harold recently had a good blog post about probable cause [elharo.com]. His point is that probable cause isn't just to protect the innocent from abuse; it's also to keep the police effective by forcing them to focus on people who have a high probability of actual wrongdoing. Without that constraint, they're free to go after anyone, and end up wasting their time & effort on wild goose chases.
I assume that there's no legal obligation for you to give US Customs your password. I also assume that they're under no obligation to let you into the country. If you're clearing customs while you're in the US, there's probably no obligation for them to return your laptop to you either.
Re:Probable Cause (Score:1)
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
Re:Probable Cause (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Probable Cause (Score:5, Insightful)
Meanwhile, someone who is *actually* smuggling in illicit data simply has to:
1) Encrypt/obfuscate the data, so it's not obvious what that data is.
2) Make it look mundane... hide it in the windows swap file maybe?
3) Gladly offer up full access to the laptop when asked. Customs will probably not bother with a deep search, since it's "obvious" that the smuggler has nothing to hide. They're too busy trying to get figure what to do with the other guy who won't give up the BIOS password to his laptop anyway.
Re:Probable Cause (Score:3, Insightful)
Drop it into a throwaway webmail account from overseas, then retrieve it from that account after returning to the US. A bit of warwalking to unsecured APs keeps the process untraceable.
If I carried the laptop I used for the purpose with me, its drive would have been wiped and it would have a nice clean install, with l3m0nparty wallpaper for Customs enjoyment.
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
Why make life hard?
Re:Probable Cause (Score:3, Informative)
But with TrueCrypt that's not the case. It works like this:
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
Doesn't really matter. They can ensure that there is no hidden filesystem by overwriting all the unused parts of the disk with random data. Truecrypt may give you plausible deniability in court, but it's no good for smuggling data.
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
If you're smuggling illegal data, losing the data ain't even half as bad as having the data discovered. Losing them just means that that single smuggling-attempt was in vain, you'll have to try again. It's unlikely to be your only copy of the data anyway.
Secondly, you could just store the TrueCrypt volume on a DVD-R or similar. That way there's no way of overwriting the "unused" space in the filesystem.
Seriously, there's no way of stopping this other than making it illegal to carry *any* da
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
Yeah, my company's health care plan does this to me, too.
I think that must be why my doctor has to encrypt the results of my checkup exams.
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
If customs wants to search the laptop, and they can't, the easiest thing they can do is send you back home.
Re:Probable Cause (Score:3, Informative)
Customs is treasury department border guards.
They're not accusing you of a crime. They're just checking that your taxes are paid and you're not bringing in prohibited items.
They don't need a warrant. They don't need probable cause. They get to check without suspicion.
And if they happen to find evidence of a crime during their search, they get to file charges, just like any other official who happened to see evidence of a crime while performing thei
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
Re:Probable Cause (Score:2)
If you're a US citizen or permanent resident, they do indeed have a legal obligation to admit you to the United States. Otherwise, no.
Re:Probable Cause: being told it was there. (Score:2)
In other words, even if the judge had found that they needed probable cause, they had it. The judge rulled, however, that probable cause wasn't needed. I can understand that, to a point, since people crossing the border can be coming from places where there are no limits on access to really nasty contraband, and even if there are, the country I'm coming from may not be in a m
Romm's lawyer dropped the ball (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Romm's lawyer dropped the ball (Score:3, Informative)
You can't bring up new issues on appeal.
The appeals process is almost solely focused on arguing over the facts, arguments and legal manuevers that were presented at trial.
Smith v. Marsh is a very oft quoted precedent which establishes this rule.
Re:Romm's lawyer dropped the ball (Score:2)
No, this is a degradation of your rights. (Score:2)
Routine is trumped by " reasonable" From the decision:
Instead, searches made at the border . . . are reasonable simply by virtue of the fact that they occur at the border. United States v. Flores-Montano, 541 U.S. 149, 152-53 (2004) (quoting United States v. Ramsey, 431 U.S. 606, 616 (1977)). Thus, the routine border search of Romms laptop was reasonable, regardless whether Romm obtained foreign contraband in Canada or was under official restraint.
Using this as a basis, it looks like customs can do a
Re:No, this is a degradation of your rights. (Score:2)
but he wasn't the only one (Score:2)
The most overturned court in the country, they are.
Fusion power (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Fusion power (Score:3, Funny)
Hopefully they were joking, but it's awfully scary sometimes to think that they were serious...
Re:Fusion power (Score:2)
Scientist have long ago created a fusion reactor, however fusion requires a great deal of energy to initiate and a great deal to keep going. The reactors created so far have created a substantial amount more energy than is needed to create the reaction. That is why we dont have a fusion power plant - exactly because the excess energy created is
Obligatory Crypto Post (Score:4, Interesting)
Just a thought.
Doh! (Score:5, Interesting)
Forbes defaming linux? In an article written by Daniel Lyons? Who would have thunk it?
The guy has a well established reputation for being wrong that you can pretty trust anything he writes about linux to be exactly 180-degrees out of sync with reality.
Ordinarily I would want some of whatever he's been smoking, but it sure seems to make you mean and spiteful as a side-effect.
It wasn't Forbes. (Score:3, Insightful)
Technically, it wasn't Forbes making a claim; it was SCO. I noticed that neither Groklaw nor Slashdot linked to the original article [forbes.com]. If they had, it can be seen that Lyons refers to the SCO suit as "ever more desperate--and ever more weird." He also asked IBM for their side of the story but they -- true to form -- declined to comment. Gone are the insults and gratuitous references to "Linux zealots" which graced earlier ar [forbes.com]
Who the hell is Forbe? (Score:5, Funny)
It's not Forbe's, it's Forbes.
Re:Who the hell is Forbe? (Score:2)
Ah yes (Score:2)
He who controls the agenda, controls policy.
You can't vote on something if the head doesn't put it on the agenda.
/It's kindof a bastard/obstructionist move. Better than a filibuster.
Re:Ah yes (Score:3, Insightful)
If you agree to go to a private school, you effectively sign away the Bill of Rights as a condition of admission. The school doesn't *have* to let you do anything - all of your rights are actually courtesies.
Most administrators know the difference between reasonable and unreasonable, but it's a fine distinction that too easily lends itself to broad rules and sweeping determinations.
Paedo-hysteria (Score:5, Insightful)
If you are wondering why the court decided to ignore the constitution, it's probably because they were Thinking of the Children. I quote:
Apart from the absurdity of valuing locking away a single paedophile over the basic rights granted to everybody by the constitution, what the hell is going on with the sentence? Fifteen years for looking at forty-odd photos that he deleted afterwards? Some of them were just thumbnails too! What the hell?
I'm not condoning paedophilia (and I think it's fucking stupid that I have to add disclaimers like this), but something is seriously fucked up if looking at a few pictures means you are such a threat to society that you need to be locked up for the best part of two decades. In fact, I'd go so far as to say that over-the-top punishment like this is a worse crime than looking at the pictures in the first place. The kids aren't even going to be aware that he committed this crime, and yet the state is forcibly taking away a huge chunk of his life. The harm of the punishment is clearly out of all proportion to the harm caused by the crime.
Apparently, the excuse they used was a precedent set by an older case:
Er, what? A border search is reasonable because it's a border search? Last time I checked, the constitution didn't say:
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2, Insightful)
And, on that note, I think it is sad that a nonviolent offend
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2, Informative)
Unfortunately in many states you would get a shorter sentence for molesting a child. There are many organizations trying to get the laws changed to carry a stiffer sentence. In fact in Nebraska if you are
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2)
Unless I'm mistaken, porn depicting people under the age of 21 is considered to be child porn in several states. So there's little evidence that he's a pedophile at all.
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:4, Informative)
Yep, it's part of the ability of a sovereign nation to defend its borders. This is a very narrow exception though, as warrantless searches just within the border, past the fixed entry point, are not allowed.
In case you are wondering whether this is some modern Republico-fascist policy, these searches were authorized by the first Congress. The precedent over this includes the authority of Customs to inspect incoming container ships.
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2)
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2)
If I used javascript to preload an image without displaying it, or if I hid a 640x480 image as a 1x1 pixel on a webpage, wouldn't that image end up in the browser cache? Is it really even technically accurate to believe that anything that is in the browser cache has indeed been intentionally viewed by the user doing the browsing?
Say you run a website and you want people to stop linking to your images from offsite, so you have any off-site requests f
Re:Paedo-hysteria (Score:2)
But we Must Protect The Children!
Which reminds me of a news segment I saw recently. Some idiot state passed a law making it a criminal offence for any ex-con sex offender to live in a residence within 1500 feet of a church, school, park,
Customs (Score:4, Informative)
Feel The Burn Baby (Score:5, Informative)
Evidently this isn't just aiming to achieve "break-even" but an actual "fusion burn" lasting 1000 seconds or approximately 16 minutes. I can't help but wonder that if they reach this goal whether it will massively accelerate the arrival of commercial fusion energy. The difference between break-even and burn is that break-even merely releases more energy than input, whereas burn requires self sustained reaction without additional input of energy.
Many people think controlled fusion is "undoable" so such a demonstration would go a long way towards getting rid of the "30 years away and always will be" assumption.
We only have to wait until Mid-August to find out.
Re:Feel The Burn Baby (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Feel The Burn Baby (Score:4, Interesting)
To see a burning plasma, I think most of us are going to have to wait for ITER.
Not to steal EAST's thunder - it's a pretty amazing machine, and from what I hear, it only cost a couple tens of millions (like 40-50). If we tried to build something like that in the US it would have cost over 1 billion. yay for cheap labor.
Re:Feel The Burn Baby (Score:5, Informative)
But I don't think they are going for break even. They'd have to put tritium in it, and if that does happen, it won't happen for a bunch of years. You might read about them claiming break even based on a DD shot they did and extrapolating what the fusion output would have been if was a DT reaction... But its not quite the same.
Why Scotty's ashes are being sent up late... (Score:5, Funny)
LaForge: "Yeah, well I told the captain I'd have this analysis done in an hour."
Scott: "How long would it really take?"
LaForge: "An hour!"
Scott: "Oh, you didn't tell him how long it would *really* take, did you?"
LaForge: "Well of course I did."
Scott: "Oh, laddie, you've got a lot to learn if you want people to think of you as a miracle worker!"
what risks? (Score:3)
The plasma discharge will draw international attention since some scientists are concerned with risks involved in such a process. But Chinese researchers involved in the project say any radiation will cease once the test is completed.
So...I don't get it. They probably have a good guess as to how much radiation will be generated and everyone camps out at a safe distance.
What's everyone so worried about?
how "open" is AMD? (Score:2)
Re:how "open" is AMD? (Score:2)
I have a set of x86-64 books I ordered from AMD for free a few years ago. AMD also backed the effort to get GCC building code for the new architecture, as well as providing a simulator to get Linux booting on it. They also funded (was it SUSE?) some people to make sure it actually happened. Linux was the only 64bit OS that ran on those chips when they first became available. OTOH, if they had not been so helpful there wouldn't
Scotty's ashes delayed... (Score:3, Funny)
Searches and client records (Score:2)
Yes, in most cases agents wouldn't bother with this, but all it takes is once.
"The power of the Sun in the palm of my hands!" (Score:2)
Re:"The power of the Sun in the palm of my hands!" (Score:2)
Re:"The power of the Sun in the palm of my hands!" (Score:2)
Fourth Amendment - Search and Seizure (Score:2)
Yeah Slashback (but Boo Backslash) (Score:2)
Backslash posts however seem to be bloated rehashes of comments. If there were no comment moderations it would be useful, but we do, so it isn't.
Re:Yeah Slashback (but Boo Backslash) (Score:2)
I quite like BackSlash, it often gives a good summary of stuff without having to go back to each article to check that a particularly good discussion didn't break out. Obviously if one is interested and has a lot of spare time one can monitor the threads, but that's not always an option, and I quite like having the little summaries posted when good stuff has emerged in comments.
If you're not one of the ones who'd appreciate BackSlash, though, you can remove it from your homepage using the "Homepage" subsec