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User: RobDude

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  1. Re:Better link on 1 MW Cold Fusion Plant Supposedly To Come Online · · Score: 1

    I've seen similar behaviour in others and find myself wondering if I'm just as guilty. I've noticed a trend where, as people around me get older, they become more and more sure of their beliefs.

    It really does seem like people have a world-view they want to maintain and will seek out information that supports it while dismissing information that goes against it. If someone is racist, they'll notice all of the stories about a particular race and disregard the rest; reinforcing the idea that some race is worse than some others. And if someone is not racist, they'll disregard all the notion that one race even *could* be better or worse than another, and will instead take to heart only the evidence that supports that view.

    That and we tend to surround ourselves with others who share our world views....

    The end result is that as people get older, they've got 40 years of life experience that tells them their world-view is correct and they end up being completely closed to the idea that it could be wrong.

    I see this and I wonder if it's happening to me. Certainly, these people don't do any of this intentionally. And, sadly, with most of the hot-topic issues, people who are set in their worldview are busy pushing their own agenda making objective, non-biased, information really hard to come by (even if one looks).

  2. Re:CS is part of IT on Ask Slashdot: CS Grads Taking IT Jobs? · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if this is what you are talking about or not; but I have had recruiters suggest changes or, in one case, change my resume details before passing it on to a company. These changes were in direct contradiction with reality.

    Oddly enough, I just got a phone call about a job interview for this Friday. Keep in mind, I'm interested in any software development position. I'd even prefer something web-based or not .NET if I could get it without a huge pay cut. I posted my accurate information on my resume. All of the calls and emails I get are for .NET only. Some of them are for ASP.NET because I'm blurry about how little professional ASP.NET I have. Most of them are uninterested when they ask for clarification and I don't lie.

    So, of all the hundreds of jobs that are open in my city; the only one that I have an interview for is one that happens to be in the exact .NET language I used at my last job, and happens to be a Winforms application, exactly like my last three jobs. I'm currently desperate for a job (because, without work sponsorship I'll be an illegal immigrant or have to leave my wife in a foreign country)...so I'll jump at it if I can.

    I'm still fairly early in my career (I'm 28) and once I finish my masters and get a job that let's me stay in this country; I'll work really hard in my spare-time to get out of my narrow little box. But man, it is easy to get pigeon-holed.

  3. Re:Frankly, that's cool on A Few Million Virtual Monkeys Randomly Recreate Shakespeare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't even understand it.....

    He randomly generates 9 characters until he gets the 9 characters he wants. Then he repeats until he has the Shakespeare book he wanted? That's not how 'random' works. Why 9 characters? Why not 1?

    I will have my computer randomly guess letters until an A comes up. Then until a B comes up. And then, at the end I'll have the ABCs! RANDOMLY!

    Am I being retarded? Did I miss why this is cool?

  4. Re:CS is part of IT on Ask Slashdot: CS Grads Taking IT Jobs? · · Score: 1

    Except EVERYONE gets MUCH, MUCH MORE specific than that.

    I'm a software developer. I graduated with a B.S. about five years ago, I've been working full time as a .Net developer. I've recently moved and I'm looking for a new job.

    Nobody wants to hire a 'good developer'. They want specific, narrow, concrete classifications of a 'good developer'. When I was in school I did some C, some C++, some COBOL, some mainframe ASM and, in my spare time, some .Net. My first job out of school happened to be a .NET company.

    That made me a '.NET Developer'.

    As soon as you go past the college-grad/entry level positions; even '.NET Developer' is too generalized. My first job did *winForms* development. So now I'm a .NET Winforms developer. I've read books on ASP.NET, I've made some pretty cool side-projects with ASP.NET and Javascript and CSS - but nobody cares. The recruiter who understands none of it say, 'Oh, so how many years of professional ASP.NET development would you say that is? 0? Oh well, this client requires 4'.

    C# and VB.NET are all but identical. I can do either, equally well. And I would content that any competent developer knowing one language can smoothly and effortlessly transition to the other. But employers don't care. It's SO DAMN similar; but it's like talking to a brick wall. 'I see your resume says you did VB.NET? How many years of professional C# would you say you've got? Sorry - this client requires 3 years of professional C# development'.

    I'm even seeing things like 'Must have experience with ASP.NET MVC2' in job descriptions. Naturally, the language has to match too. So if you are a VB.Net Developer who works in ASP.NET; they don't want to even consider you for a position unless you work with ASP.NET MVC2.

    It's crazy.

    That's all within the .NET world of things. Since I started working full-time I've started work on a Masters program. I've been learning a lot about POSIX systems, running Linux, writing code in C and Java. It's funny, in college, the kids who were at the top of their C class, go on to be at the top of the COBOL class, and the Java class. Because the language isn't that important. But once you leave college, nobody seems to believe or remember that.

    It's very hard to transition roles from one similar programming discipline to another. Going from years of IT experience (running/maintaining/configuring servers) to writing software is going to be much harder than going from college to writing software. If you have 3-4 years of IT experience and are good at your job, you'll earn a lot more than a college grad. Most companies hiring developers will put $0 values on your IT experience and want to offer you entry-level pay. At which point, they'll consider you over-qualified and a high-turnover risk. After all, why not just hire a college kid who will be grateful and easier to mold into the employee they want?

  5. Re:Doubling the value! on Netflix Announces Streaming Only Plans and Higher Prices for DVDs · · Score: 1

    I'd heard (could be BS) that the problem with Quantum Leap had to do with them being unable to secure the rights to certain songs that appeared in those episodes.

    I won't lie - I ended up pirating the whole thing. It was much easier than paying for it and better quality than netflix streaming. I don't like pirating, but...eh...I guess I don't dislike it that much.

  6. Re:Doubling the value! on Netflix Announces Streaming Only Plans and Higher Prices for DVDs · · Score: 1

    You may or may not be correct. But I know I just cancelled my plan after logging into Netflix to verify the increase was real.

    I can go to Redbox and get a movie for $1. And it's already at places I go frequently (grocery store, McDonald's). It's *slightly* less work to have Netflix mail me the DVD than stop at the store; but I don't watch more than 2-3 movies per month. Truthfully, I probably average closer to one DVD per month.

    I will sometimes stream an old TV show. I'm currently watching Quantum Leap. I still had to pirate a few episodes because I couldn't watch them with Netflix.

    All in all, at $10 per month, I was a happy customer. But at $17.99 or whatever it will be; I can't justify it. I'll rent a few movies from Redbox ($2 per month) and stream TV shows from other (free) sources.

  7. Re:Slap in the face. on It's Not a New Ballmer Microsoft Needs; It's a New Gates · · Score: 1

    I don't think so. I think it's an entirely different thing.

    MS hires a lot of great developers. But the fact that they (presumably) finished college and looked for a job shows they are walking down an entirely different path than Bill Gates ever did. There is a big difference in skills/mindsets between someone who starts a company doing X and being someone who does X full-time.

  8. Re:MS hate on Microsoft's SkyDrive Drops Silverlight · · Score: 1

    Silverlight *doesn't* suck.

    It's actually pretty awesome. The biggest complaints I've heard about Silverlight is that doesn't run on everything (but neither does Flash) and it doesn't have a big enough install base (but that's the same with HTML5).

    Flash isn't so awesome, in a lot of ways. But it gets the job done. And it was around when there wasn't much else to pick from. It is popular. It was also buggy and insecure, but it become the dominate force. Flash isn't 'open' and it doesn't run everywhere (just like Silverlight).

    When Silverlight was introduced and in it's early years, there was no HTML 5. Microsoft didn't create HTML5. Remove HTML5 from the equation and you are left with Flash Vs. Silverlight Vs. Java Applets. I'd pick Silverlight, even if it goes less places than Java Applets.

    But HTML5 is gaining support. A lot of big names are on board. It's generally recognized as the 'future'. But the future isn't here. HTML5 isn't even finalized, support on the PC is pretty good assuming you've got the latest and greatest browser. But if you don't (how many people still run IE6?) or if you have a portable device odds are you don't have HTML5 support. And, HTML5 brings back a lot of problems that Silverlight, Flash, and Java attempted to solve. If a browser doesn't implement HTML5 correctly, you can see different behavior in different browsers. Even it is considered a 'bug', it's a possibility. A lot of browsers don't have FULL HTML5 support, which is, again, a problem. Things like 'I want to play this video' is a difficult task in HTML5. Different formats are supported by different browsers.

    Also, maybe I'm biased, but I like the benefits a compiler gives me. I also feel like JavaScript sure makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot.

    Still, don't think MS didn't want Silverlight to become the next big thing. Also, I'm quite sure any Silverlight application you've written will continue to work for the foreseeable future. I really believe that if you've created some compelling content worth seeing, users will click on the 'Install Silverlight' button. It's pretty effortless. Certainly less effort than getting your user to upgrade to a new web browser.

    I understand the frustration Silverlight developers might feel, knowing that the web is going in the direction of HTML5. But that is beyond MS's control. It's probably the exact same feeling Flash developers are going through. But I can't fault MS for adopting HTML5 for a new website they are making. I don't see how that is 'stabbing' someone in the back. I've written some things in Silverlight and I never paid a single penny to do it. I think it's pretty ridiculous the level of entitlement some people have.

    "Hey - here is this cool thing we spent years developing. You can use it. It's free. Also, here is some software that also took years to develop that you can use to create things for that first thing we were talking about. It's also free. And here are all sorts of examples and documentation we put together. It's yours - free! You can use it, or not, it's up to you."

    Five years later....

    "OMG! What a bunch of jerks. First they BEGGED ME to write apps in Silverlight. Now, some new technology is in the spotlight and my existing code works exactly like it always has but BOY AM I ANGRY! Microsoft Sucks!"

  9. Re:Why is this still news? on Bittorrent and uTorrent Sued For Patent Violations · · Score: 1

    I'm not trying to argue so much as I'm legitimately asking....it's possible that, being an American, I'm surrounded by American software and don't realize what else is out there. But, virtually all of the major software I'm familiar with comes from American companies.

    The only exception that jumps to mind is Japan. For years (and, depending on who you talk to, even now) they've dominated the video game market. But, from what I understand Japan has similar laws that allow software patents.

    Also, for the record, I'm not saying that I support software patents in their current form. There is plenty of ridiculous crap out there.

  10. Re:In High School, we beat the shit out of them. on Best Buy Flexes Legal Muscles Over "Geek" · · Score: 2

    I don't know where you went to high school or where you work; but I've found this to, largely, be incorrect. Most of the 'geeks' I knew in high school are software developers or system admins or something similar. Even some of the really, really smart geeks I knew, the one who worked at Google and then Plantir (while I'm sure he's rich by normal standards) isn't 'running' things.

    I'd bet money there are more CEOs in the US who were former jocks/popular kids than former geeks. I might be wrong, I don't have any real data on this, but my gut and personal experience support it. There are a few notable exceptions, specifically tech companies that were started by one geek that grew.

  11. Re:Why is this still news? on Bittorrent and uTorrent Sued For Patent Violations · · Score: 0

    I've been told (perhaps incorrectly) that the countries that are willing to forgo laws that protect intellectual property are the ones that benefit most from allowing it's citizens to copy/steal/imitate others.

    Are there any countries that don't allow software patents that have a history of regularly introducing ground-breaking/game-changing software (at the global scale)?

  12. Re:TrueCrypt on Open Source Alternative To Dropbox? · · Score: 1

    Is it really worth the hassle of using DropBox for something you access once a year? I thought the big selling point of DropBox was that it seamlessly synced files on all of your devices with each other in (near) real-time.

    But if you've got a small, encrypted file you access once a year; what's the benefit of having it on all of your devices and updated and synced all the time? What makes DropBox better than emailing an encrypted file to your Gmail account? Heck, Gmail gives you more storage than DropBox does the last time I checked and I can't imagine Google being more likely to lose your data.

    Just curious. For the record, I have the exact same setup as you (TrueCrypt with important tax files on my DropBox) but I never really thought about WHY that makes sense. Just that I could do it.

  13. Re:To ask the question: on Programming Is Heading Back To School · · Score: 2

    I'm not really sure if it's fair to assume other people would have your experience.

    I'm sure there is some rich, successful business man who has many millions of dollars who started his first lawn care business when he was 8. That doesn't mean the key to future generation's financial success is to make them all cut grass all day. There are plenty of entrepreneurial types who do what you've done, in other areas than computer software. And there are lots of people who study computer science and never make anything worth having.

    There are plenty of people who never had to work a single day in their life because of their ability to play football or basketball. That doesn't mean we should emphasis sports in elementary school. There is only so much we can teach in schools if we add something we have to lose something. If we have 'x' hours in the day which material will be the most beneficial for the most students. Maybe CS should be included. Maybe it shouldn't be.

  14. Re:To ask the question: on Programming Is Heading Back To School · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hear this argument a lot. X isn't just about X, it's about all this other stuff that it sorta kinda addresses too.

    I think the question really needs to become, 'Does X teach other important stuff *better* than all of these other things we could cover?' I'm sure there are Shop teachers that would argue building a bird house or fixing a car teaches problem solving.

    You can learn a lot playing Monopoly or Checkers or Chess or Dungeons and Dragons or watching TV or studying math or programming or working in a factory. I'm not sure that programming really does a better job of teaching 'problem solving' than many other things. Procedural programming, particularly at an introductory level, doesn't seem like it would do a good job. Algorithmic programming, sure, but to get to that point you need to cover the basics and then, most of the time, I think you could have the same educational experience focusing on the problem and math to solve it.

  15. Re:I am a Silverlight Developer on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Yeah - if there is one thing Linux users are known for, it's being at and even pushing the very cutting edge of rich user experience!

    I mean, when I think of an OS with the most robust, visually stunning, user experience, that works across the board, without any compatibility problems....LINUX just jumps to the top of the list.

    Now, if I just replace 'visually stunning' with 'text only' and robust with 'neck-beard'; now Linux seems to fit the bill. Linux is great. But let's be realistic here.

  16. Re:I am a Silverlight Developer on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    People joke, but I really think the user experience would be better if MS bundled more things.

    Of course, one of the big Linux pros I keep hearing is how your distro includes X and Y and Z. But when MS included X and Y and Z it was illegal because they were a monopoly.

    If I'm an end-user who knows nothing about computers; I'd rather buy a computer and have websites work. I don't even want to hear the word Silverlight or .Net. I just want it to work. Bundling it would make that happen.

  17. Re:I am a Silverlight Developer on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    It's not *entirely* syntax differences. There are some things you can't do in one language but can do in the other. There are also some pieces of code that appear to do the same thing, but don't.

    Most of the time, sure, it's the same thing.

  18. Re:Maybe we should take them at their word on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    As a developer - sure. It wouldn't be that hard to pick up an entirely new language/technology stack. They really aren't that different. I'm also pretty sure most Silverlight devs could pretty seamlessly transition to .Net devs.

    As a company/product - it gets harder. Imagine if you (and/or your company) spent the last two years developing *The Next Big Thing* and you did it all in Silverlight. You might be concerned that, if MS stops continuing with Silverlight support and development, your two years and countless $$$ will be wasted.

  19. Re:I am a Silverlight Developer on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Can you elaborate? Why is VB.Net inferior to C#?

    I get where you are coming from with the rest of your post; but having used both languages I mostly just go 'meh' at the differences.

  20. Re:Evil overlord's minions demand more evil. on Silverlight Developers Rally Against Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Shameless plug....

    I wrote my Resignation Letter in Silverlight.
    (http://robdude.weebly.com/cci.html)

  21. Re:New plan on Malware Gangs Run Ads To Hire New Coders · · Score: 1

    Yes - but I'm saying with all of the information you've collected by pretending to be a fake employer and the copy of the transcript you had them give you; you could re-request the transcripts and whatever else you need.

    Believe it or not, I actually had to do this yesterday.

    I went to the old school's website and clicked the 'Request transcript link'. I needed to provide either my old student ID number or my SSN (if I were running this scam, I'd know the SSN to enter). I also needed my name and date of birth. Again, both of which are collected by employers. I needed to include the dates attended, but it said 'Estimated dates of attendance' so there is some room for error, and again, I'd have the copy of their transcript to ensure I put down the right information.

    In the past, with a different school, I had to also print, sign, fax a form back to the school before they'd release the transcripts. In my experience *nobody* ever actually checks signatures anymore. Still, while my experience of faking signatures only goes back to signing my Mom's name in elementary school; I'd at least be able to see what the victim's signature looks like (because, I'll have it on the forms I asked them to fill out). I'd be tempted to scan it, crop the signature, paste it onto the required form, print it and fax it. I think that would work. Truthfully I think scribbling a line of crap would work too.

    The Mater's program I'm doing required an application/application fee of $60, three letters of recommendation, and a copy of all post-high school transcripts. I haven't had to show up, ever; or provide any information an employer with a copy of my transcripts couldn't provide. Yeah, I'd have to fill out papers and pay the application fees and fill out the FAFSA forms and even enroll in classes; but it really seems very doable to me.

  22. Re:Remote sysadmin option on Malware Gangs Run Ads To Hire New Coders · · Score: 1

    That's certainly something to keep in mind. My first job after college was more of an administrator type role than a development role; but I'm afraid I'm a bit under-qualified. I've got two (mostly worthless) MCP exams for Windows Server Admin from years back.

    Don't get me wrong, I think I'd be able to do a pretty good job, given the chance. But I think it'll be hard to get my foot in the door, so to speak. I done it just yet, but I'll start to 'network' with some of my friends/ex-coworkers and see if anything turns up.

  23. Re:What are the requirements??? on Malware Gangs Run Ads To Hire New Coders · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the advice. I've been looking into a few of those sites and am planning on giving it a go. I've been doing a lot of desktop development in recent years so I'm currently brushing up on the web side of things to try and make myself more marketable.

  24. Re:New plan on Malware Gangs Run Ads To Hire New Coders · · Score: 2

    Even in the US - 5k a month is good money. Without benefits it's not great; but I know entry level developers who make less. And, if you live outside of a big city, tech jobs tend to pay less anyway.

  25. Re:New plan on Malware Gangs Run Ads To Hire New Coders · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually - I've often wondered why we don't hear about more low tech cases of identify theft/credit card fraud. Maybe it's just so easy to do it with malware nobody cares.

    Post real positions on Criagslist and others for legitimate sounding work. Be selective, post realistic requirements and pay, do a phone interview. I'd even explain that, 'Hey, since this is a work from home job/telecommute job - we're going to need your college transcripts'. That makes it seem more legit. Of course, a legit job needs your SSN. I've done real work from home (software development) and they need my SSN. It was a real company, and they paid me.

    Not only would you get all of their SSN and personal info....the transcript would be worth a lot of money too. Yeah, you can open some credit cards and what not with the SSN; but have you seen how easy it is to get money for school these days? My wife barely makes over minimum wage and she was approved for SEVENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS for her first year of school. Stop and read that again. Now, granted, say half of that is tuition. That still leaves THIRTY FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS. And it's pretty easy to get into a lot of graduate programs.....I'm doing my Master's right now and they didn't even need my GRE scores (they did require transcripts though). With relative ease and someone's information, I could apply on their behalf to a school, get accepted, get student loans, and get a LOT OF MONEY.

    Maybe there is more about this I don't know; but it seems like it would work. In this economy, I'm sure you'd get a lot of bites from your job post; for a start date 2 months in the future. After you get the info you wait, and keep collecting it from others. At the end of the two months, you apologize to everyone and say the economic downturn has caused the project to be cancelled. You have the info but haven't done anything illegal yet. Repeat 4-5 times with different information.

    Then, move, and start with the identify theft. Cha-ching. Do it in the order you collected the info; so by the time you open your first CC card, it's been 9-12 months before you got their info. They'd have a lot of trouble tracking you down. And, if the student loan thing worked out - oh man - that's a lot of money.

    Just don't get caught.