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User: Chad+Stansbury

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  1. Re:Good News for Authors on The Kindle is Getting Support For HTML5 · · Score: 1

    [plug]You might want to try using Scriptito instead of Google docs, as it can directly export to EPUB and Kindle/MOBI format... and it's free.[/plug]

  2. Re:You know... there is life without cable. on The Cable Industry's a La Carte Bait and Switch · · Score: 1

    We turned off cable 1.5 years ago, and while we underwent some initial withdrawal, we soon figured out what to do with our newly-discovered "free time" and have not missed it since. Possible activities instead of watching TV:
    - Go outside, throw a football/kick a soccer ball/shoot some basketball, etc. with friends and/or children.
    - Go walking/hiking/running/biking.
    - Meet your neighbors, invite 'em over for a beer.
    - Rediscover your community center/health club/park. Play tennis, basketball, racquetball. Work out, swim, etc.
    - Rediscover "crafts". Build paper mache stuff w/ your kids (free, and the kids love it). Build models.
    - Play board games.
    These are some of the many things that I used to do as a kid (except for the beer), and looking back now it's depressing to see how we let TV take their place.

  3. Just the continuation of a trend on Does Syfy Really Love Sci-Fi? · · Score: 1

    The trend towards fantasy started long ago. I remember reading an article in Time about it in 2002 (http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101021202/amfantasy.html), and even then, the trend was not new. There was so much excitement and "looking forward" to the future in the 50s, 60s, and even the 70s, but that has largely died out. I believe the main reason has to do with the fact that no matter how amazingly advanced we become, the "reality" of advanced technology is infinitely more mundane than the "promise". The most exciting tech lately has all centered around consumption. Is consuming audio/video on a tablet really all that better than a TV or laptop?

  4. Re:Wait, what? on Chrome OS Doesn't Trust Apps Or Users · · Score: 1

    While ChromeOS may not have any means for you to directly store stuff on it, by virtue of it being an HTML5-compliant* browser it *will* allow any web application that you may use to store things locally (using the offline and local storage features new to HTML5). So even if you're offline on an airplane, some of the apps you have may still work..

    Even if they don't implement offline features, web apps may still work on airplanes as the flight that I was just on (Delta) had Internet connectivity... and I suspect that in a couple years, connectivity will be so pervasive that offline mode will be rendered moot for 99% of the population.

    *compliant is, as I understand, still a moving target.

  5. Re:Wonderful... on AT-ATs Coming to a Forest Near You · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, logging roads have turned out to be very beneficial for fire fighting here in the West. Turns out that fire crews would have a much more difficult times getting to the remote (and as is the case here in Denver, not so remote) burns. Not only do logging roads help get the equipment to the burn site, but they also provide a good fire break.

    Just goes to show that nothing comes free in this world.

  6. There's a lack of *skilled* IT workers on No More Suits; IT Worker Shortage Will End Soon · · Score: 5

    While I agree that there is not a lack of IT workers out there, I would have to say that the percentage of *skilled* IT workers is very small. I can't tell you how many times that I've talked to a highly-paid consultant about how I made some algorithm faster, get into big-O notation, and see his/her eyes start to glaze over. Unfortunately for someone like myself, who cares about the efficiency of their algorithms, the huge advances in processor speed have rendered such details unnecessary in most business applications. 90% of the code I review nowadays is just total cr*p, and it's due to the attitude that everything can be fixed by throwing more hardware at the problem. I'm beginning to feel like an old man (remember the old days...) and I'm only 29...