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User: Darinbob

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Comments · 21,765

  1. Re:Photos being separated on Google+ Divided Into Photos and Streams, With New Boss · · Score: 1

    I want to divorce myself from Youtube, a horrible service for horrible people, but Google wants to tie my social service to it.
    Now if you seem to be insulted by my saying thing, think how the Google+ users feel insulted by what you say.

  2. Re:Photos being separated on Google+ Divided Into Photos and Streams, With New Boss · · Score: 2

    I don't really understand. Why would anyone sane want to comment on a Youtube video? The comments are the worst part of the service, dominated overwhelmingly by trolls.

  3. Re:Photos being separated on Google+ Divided Into Photos and Streams, With New Boss · · Score: 1

    Not if you're blocking cookies and using noscript. I *do* want a google+ account, but I don't want Picassa or Youtube. I'm sick of people treating Google+ as the bad buy here, point fingers at Google instead.

  4. Re:Photos being separated on Google+ Divided Into Photos and Streams, With New Boss · · Score: 1

    The annoying part is that they forced that idiotic Youtube crap on Google+ users.

  5. Re:Photos being separated on Google+ Divided Into Photos and Streams, With New Boss · · Score: 2

    I'm not on Facebook. I may never be on Facebook. But I have lots of friends, real life ones, on LinkedIn and Google+.

  6. Re:Easy life on Research Suggests That Saunas Help You Live Longer · · Score: 4, Funny

    A sauna is like exercising, in that it's hot, uncomfortable, and you sweat too much. But the advantage is that you get to sit down and do nothing.

  7. Re:Easy life on Research Suggests That Saunas Help You Live Longer · · Score: 2

    These aren't spas. In Finland, people have them in their homes, sometimes at work, I even had one in a hotel room. Even for a commercial sauna the cost is very low.

  8. Re:cant lie on As Big As Net Neutrality? FCC Kills State-Imposed Internet Monopolies · · Score: 1

    Now we can go back to worrying about the bankers in charge of banking regulations.

  9. Re:One Word ... on As Big As Net Neutrality? FCC Kills State-Imposed Internet Monopolies · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Municipal electric utilities have sprung up for some time, but they're still relatively uncommon despite the benefits. I suspect it will be similar for internet utilities.

    And of course, if Comcast charges $75/month and the city charges only $25, some people will still whine about it because it's the evil government charging the $25.

  10. Re:One Word ... on As Big As Net Neutrality? FCC Kills State-Imposed Internet Monopolies · · Score: 2

    It's hard to say though. There's enough of a libertarian leading in the party now that I don't think the pro-corporate faction could get away with it. They're essentially a minority in the party, with enough clout to stop or delay bureaucrats but not enough to add their own regulations (ie, barring municipal utilities is adding regulation, while allowing them is more hands-off, and the hypocrisy would be obvious even to factions who normally only care about social issues).

  11. Re:Well done FCC on As Big As Net Neutrality? FCC Kills State-Imposed Internet Monopolies · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's a slippery slope, soon the railroad barons will have to allow anyone to transport on their tracks!

  12. Re:Verizon's 'Throwback Thursday' move... on Verizon Posts Message In Morse Code To Mock FCC's Net Neutrality Ruling · · Score: 1

    640 kilobit is enough for anyone!

  13. Re:Just damn on Leonard Nimoy Dies At 83 · · Score: 1

    Just yesterday was watching him in Mission: Impossible.

  14. Re:Just damn on Leonard Nimoy Dies At 83 · · Score: 1

    True. However tobacco companies did some marketing to try and overcome that stigma, and it worked pretty well from the 40s through 60s. Remember the television doctors who'd be smoking while talking to patients, stuff like that.

  15. Re:About time... on Invented-Here Syndrome · · Score: 1

    Most non-open source for embedded systems still comes with source code. It's almost mandatory because you will have to fix it eventually, and they sometimes won't supply object files in a format you can use.

  16. Re:About time... on Invented-Here Syndrome · · Score: 1

    No, probably 6 months to a year before they tell you that they can't reproduce it and close your ticket.

  17. Re: About time... on Invented-Here Syndrome · · Score: 1

    Third party code can be harder to maintain. The third party often will not help you out, even if you do have an active support contract the support that you get is substandard. If you're Cisco they might help you out, if you're a tiny company with 50 people they'll ignore you and put minimal resources into resolving your problem.

    I swear I am not making this up, but I called support once for one component and told them about the bug and details of the fix I came up with for it. They told me that if I already had a fix then why was I calling them.

    That's one reason I think that the most popular libraries are probably safest, because others are more likely to find the problems before you do.

  18. Re: About time... on Invented-Here Syndrome · · Score: 2

    I think there's a form of superstition out there to never write any code that's not glue code. Some of this is from a phobia about reinventing the wheel, so that people will waste time in order to avoid wasting time. But some also comes from thinking that third party code will be correct and so increase overall reliability (no matter how much flimsy duck tape is required to attach it).

    I see managers with this thinking, it's as if they are assuming their own staff are a bunch of morons so it's safer to rely on a third party. The worst is when the boss spends a lot of money on a third party library that you could have written yourself, and which you end up spending most of your time fixing it yourself instead.

  19. Re:Is that really a lot? on Drones Cost $28,000 Per Arrest, On Average · · Score: 1

    Crime prevention includes several aspects. Crime deterrance for example; when people see the highway patrol on the side of the road, they slow down, and giving out a small number of tickets does affect the behavior of people without ticket. Similarly, arresting people for burglary discourages some (not all) from doing the same crime, and sometimes causes the person convicted from not committing the crime again in the future.

    For the border patrol, seeing the vehicles going up and down near the fence causes people to try to cross somewhere else. An area with a few apprehensions also causes people to try somewhere else. Ie, prevention.

  20. Re:Predicting the future is hard on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    This only works though if a new task A can be compared to older task B. That so rarely happens to me. It might be common in some other areas though, as in "add a new web page with a different customers name up top". But when last month I worked on improving a crypto engine and this month I'm fixing the network MAC layer, and next month I'll do board bring up, then the evidence just doesn't accrue very fast. Then there's a problem that the amount of outside interference is not a constant, some months I can get lots done and in other months I barely have time for my real tasks.

  21. Re:Is this really a problem unique to devs?? on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    But there are so many managers up the chain that take all these estimates as the truth. Before the project starts, before any data sheets have even been read, we're asked to come up with all tasks we think will be needed, then give an estimate for each task. This all gets put on a chart and managers stare at it. Then you'll be asked what percentage of time you can work on each one, and you'll say 50% maybe because they get really mad at you if you are honest and say 10%. Then the chart gets printed and put up on some walls.

    The problem then is that the chart is not updated. The developers are too busy to figure out some goofy planning software so that they can budge their estimate and the managers don't always do it. Along the way half those tasks you thought were needed either vanish or are replaced by something else and some new ones are added (because now you have some datasheets and requirements, you thought of something you forget, etc). We open and close tickets that aren't on any project plan. The planning and actual work just don't coincide, they're done by different groups of people with completely different sets of motiviations.

    I have been at one place though that managed to estimate things well and had some good planning. I honestly don't know how they did it, except that they moved slooowly. They weren't developing a brand new product from scratch (like I am now) but just adding incremental features, lots of time spent planning before starting by people who are engineers and not managers, a set of bug-fix releases were pre-planned, and there was a multi month back end for QA. They spent more time on documentation than some entire projects I've been on. And it was waterfall. But that was only for two years of my career.

  22. Re:Estimates are for planning - not penalizing on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    In the real world though, there's a whole lot of penalizing that gets done. Thus a whole lot of stress.

  23. Re:either Fred Brooks on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    A soft voice says "plugh".

  24. Re:ignorant hypocrites on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    Most managers are completely awful at management. Of course, most programmers are pretty mediocre at programming too. But bad management can hurt a lot more because there are fewer of them and they wield much more power. Sometimes these bad managers used to be the mediocre programmers who were promoted to where someone thought they'd do less damage.

    But sometimes managers are good. The difference is whether the employees are expected to be helping the manager look good or if the manager is trying to make the employees look good instead.

    And most of my job is actually jumping into shark infested waters carrying a book entitled "shark training made easy".

  25. Re:ignorant hypocrites on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 2

    I am absolutely an expert. Sometimes a lot of of my time is wasted by people needing me to help them out, delaying me from getting my own work done. And I can't estimate. Sometimes because I'm not good at telling people to go away and leave me alone, but usually because unexpected things happen, or I'm being shuffled around between two many projects and can't multitask well, or I'm doing something new I've never done before (but that's ok, people know I'm smart and assume I'll get it all figured out).

    And yet, someone will hand me a coredump then ask me how long it will be until I know now to fix the bug is. That's ridiculous, they may as well hand me a sealed envelope and ask me how long to solve the math problem that's inside it.

    Even though you're Anonymous Coward, I suspect you're really a pointy haired boss sneaking into a nerd site to spy on us.