Slashdot Mirror


User: wdef

wdef's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
522
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 522

  1. Re:Really Quite Disgusting on Jury Decides Artist's Gory Images On Website Are Art · · Score: 2

    Mmm. You may have been watching too many movies. Just a thought, but in terms of classical psychoanalysis, couldn't de-repressing these sort of fantasies in the form of art actually be a safety valve, just as horror movies allow the public to safely blow off their unconscious sadosexual fantasies? In other words, he might be less likely to act on them than some severely repressed, puritanical accountant who one day pops his cork ....?

  2. Re:Multiple missions, people seem to forget that. on NSA Targeting Domestic Computer Systems · · Score: 1

    Because it's not like we have a hundred other agencies already watching over us to make sure we're not doing anything illegal. (Cough, HackNSA FBI CIA TSA CTU cough hack)

    Not only illegal. J Edgar Hoover knew that all data is power. Agencies have blackmailed each other in the past with embarrassing information about senior figures.

  3. Re:Imperfect citizens on NSA Targeting Domestic Computer Systems · · Score: 1

    De-sensitizing children to violence leads to cold-blooded adults.

    This is why the Khmer Rouge used to train kids to torture and kill animals, graduating to killing people.

  4. Re:peopel who get in based on know they kown or on NSA Targeting Domestic Computer Systems · · Score: 1

    peopel who get in based on know they kown or who can make the biggest pay off.

    That is not intelligible.

  5. Re:Why does C++ matter? on GNU Grep and Sed Maintainer Quits: RMS and FSF Harming GNU Project · · Score: 1

    Operator overloading can be a nightmare, it's a bad idea and it's needless: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=559976

  6. Re:You're screwed on Ask Slashdot: How To Gently Keep Management From Wrecking a Project? · · Score: 1

    Right, support the PM at every turn or he may not support you. He doesn't have to have deep knowledge of the technology or the code. But you do! Brief him, explain how things work, and win his trust.

    If he has been put in that role, presumably he has the experience or the potential (as management see him) to get the milestones landed, which is the primary mission of any PM. He also probably has much more influence upstairs than he appears to at first glance, since management have entrusted him with delivering, so if you piss him off you might find him talking to your supervisor about fucking you to death.

  7. Re:Users don't want options on After 12 years of Development, E17 Is Out · · Score: 1

    To explain further: all users are idiots and we force-feed our crippled interfaces onto them for their own damn good. Really, like it or lump it.

    Your Truly,

    GNOME3 and Windows 8 interface design teams (for once we agree)

  8. Goes nowhere unless it's default in (eg) Ubuntu on After 12 years of Development, E17 Is Out · · Score: 1

    Thank God at least some desktop developers and interaction designers are against the crippling, dumbing down, sluggishness and configuration-hiding of the unfortunately moronic Gnome3. I tried E17 years ago and was extremely impressed with its lightness and speed, even going so far as to recommend its use in the core of a commercial project in which I was involved. (I don't know what E17 is like now). Unfortunately, a senior person with deep connections in the Gnome world poured shit all over it and Rasterman (" ... that's just gtk anyway, isn't it? ...") and convinced the CEO otherwise. I know I was right; they all were wrong. Small satisfaction.

    The E17 people can only blame themselves if it has no profile and no-one knows what it is. Twelve years in getting a stable release? Give me a break. OTOH the timing might be right in that Gnome3 has alienated much of the Gnome user base and many are ready to give it the flick forever.

    The solution is to get e17 into one or two major distributions as the default UI environment. One would be enough if that distro is Ubuntu or Mint.

  9. Re:Business Is Messy on Real World Code Sucks · · Score: 1

    Right, the constantly shifting sands of new requirements quickly cover up the original good code design and you end up with quickie kludge after quickie kludge after kludge. You breath a sigh of relief when the code actually runs, as much by luck as by skill, even though you can barely read it anymore, am I right? The eternal struggle between developers and product/marketing teams goes on ....!

  10. IQ: keeping the unwashed down? on IQ 'a Myth,' Study Says · · Score: 1

    The more I think about so-called "objective" scales that pigeon-hole people, the more I think these are there to protect the elite, whatever the ostensible function. Johnny takes a test and now he is certifiably dumb/smart/average. The rest of Johnny's future income and influence could now be determined by a self-fulfilling prophesy.

    When I was very small, a shrink told my mother I was a "genius" but (a) this was not a boon because people like me had difficult lives, and (b) I would not perform until work was sufficiently challenging to engage me. While there was some truth in both a and b, what a stupid label to place on the shoulders of a 3yo! My mother did not have the education or skills to challenge him for a better label, such as something less prejudicial. A plain "he's very intelligent" without the editorializing would have done. These days they'd say "gifted" but that still carries expectations like "genius" did. Absurd. Just encourage and help kids be who they are while avoiding stupid labels as far as possible.

  11. Install start menu app. Done. on Microsoft Has Been Watching, and It Says You're Getting Used To Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    The first thing I did on Win 8 to make it useable was install one of the 3rd party start menus (Classic Explorer) and then move the desktop card to the top left hand corner of the sodomizing (q.v. above) and irrelevant (for non-touchscreen devices) Metro. Then you get something like the Windows 7 desktop back on boot and will never have to look at Metro again, unless it's on a tablet.

    What an idiotic business decision it was to try to fuse these two very different use cases, shove it down the consumer's throat with a rolled up newspaper, and then totally omit the option to have a traditional start menu. Seniors will not cope but who cares about them, eh? MS are banking on kids just taking to Metro and then never learning what a start menu is.

    Also strange that MS are duplicating the mistakes of numerous smaller companies who have worked hard to build something rather like Metro and then dismally failed in the marketplace. Stop force-feeding consumers what you think they have to have! I am dumbfounded at the stupidity of that decision.

    I think the desktop metaphor is as optimum as it gets for usability on traditional boxes/laptops. Apple know that; they have had the brains to keep the desktop on OS X. MS doesn't know it or chooses not to. There is simply nothing better around for a non-touchscreen device with a keyboard. If there is, where is it? 'Coz it ain't Metro. It's all just about trying to move to the iOS walled garden model and shut down our choices and freedom as usual.

  12. Re:Skyfall 2012 TS XViD UNiQUE on Anthropologist Spends Three Years Living With Hackers · · Score: 1

    I saw that movie. Fell asleep. Boring, cliched "action" (a fight on top of a speeding train? Seriously?). Endless sequences of people walking or standing in a room. No sexual tension. Stereotypes like Judy Denche's very boring 'M' rendition. Only a little dry humor, and tackling Bond's mid-aged crisis and ageism issues, is not enough to save this movie.

  13. Geek culture has changed, so /. changes on Anthropologist Spends Three Years Living With Hackers · · Score: 1

    Isn't the "app revolution" producing profound changes in geek culture? A democratization of app building tools and platforms so it's pretty easy to learn to build an app and a lot of motivation to hit the big time with one? So we are getting a big influx of app builders who may not come from traditional programming soil at all, are fully self-taught, and know very little about the underlying system. Compare using one of the high level easy SDKs now with first learning C/C++/Perl/Assembler to be taken seriously for a job. These are different times.

  14. Re:Only 3 years? Are you kidding? on Anthropologist Spends Three Years Living With Hackers · · Score: 1

    Right. Debian to me sounds like a suboptimal choice for getting any insight into the black hat subculture. Since Debian prides itself on being the most stable and dependable distribution (that's its brand, and it's a good one), I would have thought the only fondness they'd have for black hats would be as penetration/hardness testers. It's almost as if that choice was made without understanding that there is no relationship whatsoever between the press's definition of 'hacker' and the vague industry use of that term as interchangeable with 'programmer'. Black hats are supposed to be called "crackers" but that's gone right out of usage thanks to the media changing the meaning of "hacker".

    I'll bet there's a huge diversity of people involved in Debian, from stereotypical Aspie-afflicted geeks that require careful handling through to smooth corporate IT types. After all you don't need to know coding to maintain a .deb package, help write documentation or do any number of other vital tasks that are the bricks and mortar of a distribution.

    It's important to take the so-called anthropological method - and all qualitative research methodology - with a large grain of salt. This is not to discount it out of hand. As far as I am concerned, these methods are very useful for getting perspectives on a complex subject (by gathering so-called "rich data") and for extracting themes and developing hypotheses out of that data which might be quantitatively testable. But it's not scientific method by itself at all, these should be regarded as techniques that attempt to provide a preamble to doing scientific method. Pissed off by their exclusion from "science" and especially its funding, humanities and social sciences have inappropriately elevated qualitative methods to something mysterious and magical as part of a postmodern backlash against hard science. And of course the media has no idea what the difference is between qualitative and quantitative methods and just write things like "The study showed that ....".

  15. Re:The Bill is an Internet insecurity bill. on US Congressman Wants To Ban New Internet Laws · · Score: 1

    The government has the right to secure the internet. The intelligence community has the right to monitor the internet.
    There should be no secrets kept hidden from the US military on the internet because that would empower terrorists to plan their attacks on the enemy against US troops.

    Stock retort but good: so you would have no objection then to the government placing surveillance cameras in your bedroom and bathroom? After all, didn't you say that the secrets of you and your family should not be hidden from the government? Private emails to a loved one, to name one example, are every bit as personal as toilet and sexual habits as far as I am concerned.

  16. Re:so completely true on Silicon Valley's Dirty Little Secret: Age Bias · · Score: 1

    How true. So many coding "innovations" turn out to be no more than marketing coats of a different color and that's true in many other life endeavors as well. One example is all the hype that accompanied the introduction of OoP: it was supposed to solve everything, provide world peace, provide ponies etc. Surprise! Studies suggest it has not delivered but OoP is now so entrenched in common apis (eg Gtk+) and industry coding practices that it has become quite unavoidable, loathe it or love it.

    Amazing how young people buy so deeply into trends. I know I did myself at their age. I viewed it as a form of social intelligence to be up with trends. I really think human youths are biologically hard-wired to follow trends and fashions as part of 'socialization' or 'maturation' (with the political effect of processing or acculturation of the young so they become good little citizen-worker-consumers). That is the reason you love music from your youth always. There's some sort of imprinting going on.

  17. Re:This again? on Silicon Valley's Dirty Little Secret: Age Bias · · Score: 1

    I'm not complaining about the repetition here though. It's an issue that clearly needs more exposure since nothing is done about it.

  18. Re:Age discrimination, Google does it too on Silicon Valley's Dirty Little Secret: Age Bias · · Score: 1

    The coverall internal jargon would be something like: "we are a youthful company and they are a poor cultural fit". Or more of the fallacy that only young grads could possibly be "up with the latest" or "on top of trends".

    Those two 50yo+ talents that you mention will probably move into consulting companies (I hope).

  19. Re:Being risk-averse on Silicon Valley's Dirty Little Secret: Age Bias · · Score: 1

    Biologically, humans get more risk-averse as they get older. Given that a large percentage of Silicon are basically gambling with ideas, doesn't it seem natural that the risk-averse are shunned.

    I think a similar argument can hold for why there are less women in that industry. Less testestorone.

    Funny, I seem to get *less* risk averse over the last 10 years. More confidence and I'm better at appraising complex situations I think.

  20. Re:It's well known on Silicon Valley's Dirty Little Secret: Age Bias · · Score: 1

    Almost no one age 50 or older works at Intel. And Intel isn't alone.

    That may explain some of their dumb crap. The Poulsbo GPA driver (losing that term loosely since it barely worked) comes to mind as one example.

  21. Re:Old needs to be special on Silicon Valley's Dirty Little Secret: Age Bias · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately that means the industry doesn't appreciate the value of experienced generalists who, unlike the pups, have very broad perspective and years of experience. Studies have shown that experience beats education alone: graduates are very green. For the industry not to get this is absurd, especially when the average age of the US workforce is probably increasing. More experienced oldies should actually be a *boost* to the industry. By all means, fill up the design and product development departments with cool kiddies but make sure an old fart is looking over the partition to ensure they don't wreck the company.

    Cf some other engineering disciplines where experience generalists are actually respected. Management itself is a generalist (multidisciplinary) activity that pretends to be specialist. Field managers are often engineers who have moved sideways out of their original speciality. In a major company I worked for, senior site engineers would rotate over different disciplines with each new project. A civil engineer was expected to understand what the EEs were doing in broad strokes for example. That meant they all got tons of experience in tightly interconnected facets of the work and could step into each others shoes at short notice. Even specialists would get redeployed on occasion and put on site to take on a more general engineering management role - mainly tracking contractor work quality and negotiating solutions. When building a real product of some kind, you need generalists to manage the specialists.

  22. Re:It's math on Study Finds Similar Structures In the Universe, Internet, and Brain · · Score: 1

    Sorry I was confusing two different posts.

  23. Re:It's math on Study Finds Similar Structures In the Universe, Internet, and Brain · · Score: 1

    Then show me a strictly non-mathematical, testable model of any real system that provides novel insight into the workings of that system and that has predictive power. Doesn't exist.

    That is not to confuse all of perceived reality with a single mathematical model. There is no single mathematical model of reality (a GUT) that does not fail at some point as yet. But we're not talking about reality, we're talking about modeling reality as closely as we can get, an enterprise which is called physics.

  24. Re:It's math on Study Finds Similar Structures In the Universe, Internet, and Brain · · Score: 1

    Yes that's all good mathematics but it may or may not have applications in physics. A mathematics built from an alternative logic system may not be of any use to a physicist since unless it works. But unusual mathematical structures have turned out to be useful in physics before.

  25. Re:It's math on Study Finds Similar Structures In the Universe, Internet, and Brain · · Score: 1

    The whole point of using symbols is to remove the ambiguity and inefficiency that english entails.