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User: sandytaru

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Comments · 1,676

  1. Re:do you want exodus? on Attention, Rockstar Developers: Get a Talent Agent · · Score: 1

    I agree, the best guys I've met are at best 2x-3x. We've worked with a few pickups from a local consulting firm when we're short a developer. There were two guys known as the "rock stars" from that company. My company eventually poached one as a permanent hire, and the other guy became their senior architect and a VP. The other guys we've worked with are good, but by no means rock stars. They're average 1X coders. For most work, that's good enough.

  2. Turns out agencies don't really work like that on Attention, Rockstar Developers: Get a Talent Agent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're trying to hire an agent, at least in other areas of creative space like acting or writing novels, the agent themselves has to believe you're worth the effort. So if this really does become a thing where a hotshot developer wants to find an agent to represent him, you can be damn sure that agency is going to be a hundred times harsher about testing skills before agreeing to represent the talent than an interviewer would be.

  3. Krikkit on What If We Lost the Sky? · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that the planet Krikkit had no sky because they were in a nebula and could not see any other stars. And as soon as they learned about other worlds, the first thought they had was they'd have to destroy everything. And then the killer robots came for us all.

  4. Did they ask if they could look it up? on Ask Slashdot: What Portion of Developers Are Bad At What They Do? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You don't need to hire experts right off the bat. What you want to hire is someone who recognizes that they don't know the answer, and tells you that, and then immediately says they'd go research it to find out. "Can I Google that?" is a perfectly valid answer sometimes. If you hire a person who knows how to learn whatever it is you need them to become an expert in, you'll have a new employee who is not only going to be a valuable asset for where you're hiring them, but also has the flexibility to expand to other areas when necessary.

    TL;DR: Stop looking for purple unicorns, and start looking for fast learners.

  5. Re:Steam User Score beats traditional scores on Are Review Scores Pointless? · · Score: 1

    In the case of Goat Simulator, it was designed to be bad and super low budget on purpose (it WAS just an April Fool's joke originally.) I don't know about Mount Your Friends.

  6. Re: Censorship at /., HN, Reddit. on An Argument For Not Taking Down Horrific Videos · · Score: 1

    How much are you paying Reddit for the privilege for them to post your comments? They're a privately owned organization. They have no obligation to post anything they don't want.

  7. Re:Unauthorized Suspicous-Looking Art in Public Pl on Georgia State Univ. Art Project Causes 2nd Evacuation & Bomb Squad Call · · Score: 1

    And where should these students place them if they live in the dorms? Not everyone lives in a house with a back yard when they're in college.

  8. Re:They brought it on themselves on Confirmed: FCC Will Try To Regulate Internet Under Title II · · Score: 1

    I believe it was the FCC that granted them exemptions in the first place, so the FCC has the rights to take them away.

  9. Re:30% ? on Too Much Exercise May Not Be Better Than a Sedentary Lifestyle · · Score: 1

    Generally that statistic refers to "at any given age, averaged out." You're 30% more likely to die at age 60 if you don't exercise, compared to if you do. Conversely, you're 30% more likely to die at age 60 if you exercise too intensely, compared to those who exercise in moderation. Most of those weighted averages also stop around age 90 or so, depending on their methodology, since few people live that long and those that do are quite unlikely to be jogging multiple miles every day.

  10. Re:A solution to a non-problem. on British MPs Approve 3-Parent Babies · · Score: 1

    That's what I did. But I'm also allergic to children, so it was a reasonable decision.

  11. Re:Two things... on Art Project Causes Atlanta Police To Close Highway and Call Bomb Squad · · Score: 1

    Ah, thanks for the clarification. Both schools are merely "things I drive past going to the airport."

  12. Re:Two things... on Art Project Causes Atlanta Police To Close Highway and Call Bomb Squad · · Score: 2

    If I'm envisioning the location of this bridge properly, it's adjacent to the school. I-75/85 is basically the east side border of their campus. They don't think of it as public infrastructure, they think of it as the boundary.

  13. I hope they get an A for this project on Art Project Causes Atlanta Police To Close Highway and Call Bomb Squad · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's not every art student who gets to say their project brought in a bomb squad! (I'd say that's normally the domain of freshman chemistry students.)

  14. Re:Bound to happen on Google, Amazon, Microsoft Reportedly Paid AdBlock Plus To Unblock · · Score: 1

    I whitelist specific sites that I believe deserve my revenue. For example, webcomics, if the artist asks me nicely. Or I pay the website that offers a premium, ad-free experience the fee they want me to pay to justify their content creation or my bandwith usage (I pay for digital FM premium just to shut the ads up, since they are all audio.)

    The point is that it's MY choice to pay for the reduced advertising experience, thanks to AdBlock.

  15. Re:Who's going to know? on Major Retailers Accused of Selling Fraudulent Herbal Supplements · · Score: 1

    If they can devise a process to artificially create the effective compounds, they can patent that. But that only works when there is an identifiable effective compound.

  16. Re:devoid of stated ingredients/purpose = homeopat on Major Retailers Accused of Selling Fraudulent Herbal Supplements · · Score: 1

    There's Tamiflu, which can lessen flu symptoms. So there's that.

  17. Re:slippery slope on Major Retailers Accused of Selling Fraudulent Herbal Supplements · · Score: 1

    No, I think it's perfectly fine to require a company to have to prove that their product does what they say it does, or at the least, require that they provide refunds when it doesn't. If I buy a PS4, I expect it to play PS4 games, and if it doesn't, I have 30 days to return it. If I buy a case of beer that says variety pack but it turns out to only contain brown ale, the store is going to let me return it.

    Many of these supplement companies do have a money back guarantee, but they make it such a hassle to return the product that most people chalk it up as a loss. I don't mind them being allowed to make whatever claims they want about efficacy as long as they're required to take it back when it doesn't work.

  18. Re:So what? on Major Retailers Accused of Selling Fraudulent Herbal Supplements · · Score: 1

    And in that case, they deserve to get actual St John's Wort and not rice powder with carrot coloring.

  19. HPV can also cause oral cancer. The odds of transmission in any other vector besides oral sex are low, since it requires skin to skin contact, but unless you're as celibate as a nun and never plan to kiss anyone either, it's probably not a bad idea.

    For that matter, the HPV shot is not recommended for adults, since most of us have probably already been exposed (unless, again, you're a nun.) It's only recommended for pre-adolescents, under the likely true assumption that the majority of them will NOT be celibate. No one says that you, presumably an adult, has to get the HPV shot.

  20. Re:Misunderstanding of Higher Education Economics on What Happens When the "Sharing Economy" Meets Higher Education · · Score: 1

    Correction: Full time, already tenured professors who have been teaching for a few decades might hit close to six figures. Tenure-track, or just-tenured professors are usually in the 50K-60K range. Still better than the adjuncts, but still not as much, adjusted for inflation, as my father made processing medical records in the '80s. (Source: I'm married to a tenured professor. I sure wish he was making close to six figures....)

  21. Re:pardon, but on Scientists 3D-Printing Cartilage For Medical Implants · · Score: 1

    Seems like Harvard Apparatus uses bone marrow stem cells and not cartilage cells to seed the scaffolding. Extracting stem cells from bone marrow is incredibly time consuming and expensive. Cartilage, on the other hand, can be nicked off someone's ear.

  22. Re:Ah, no. on Scientists 3D-Printing Cartilage For Medical Implants · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, they are. It's a 3D printed trachea. They 3D print the plastic scaffolding, and then they 3D print some incubated cells on top of the scaffolding, which they then incubate some more until it's ready to implant. They have a whole paragraph devoted to the "bio ink" made from cartilage cells.

    To me the most fascinating tidbit was that they build the parts for the incubator itself with the MakerBot, saving many thousands of dollars.

  23. Re:I prefer a tablet for some things to a smart ph on The iPad Is 5 Years Old This Week, But You Still Don't Need One · · Score: 1

    I'm still using my Kindle Fire original for much the same reason. The 7" size is not too much bigger than trade paperback size, and it's small enough to tuck into my purse. Amazon keeps my book appetite easily stuffed, too, and it's honestly a good deal for authors who publish via Amazon. A friend of mine who is a novelist said she cleared $40K in three months after the release of her last book. And the royalty checks keep coming regularly, unlike all her traditionally published books where she's lucky to get a check once a year.

  24. Re:So what is an answer? on FCC Prohibits Blocking of Personal Wi-Fi Hotspots · · Score: 1

    These days it's the opposite for me. Many hotels I stay in have removed their wired connections, and wireless is the only option.

  25. Re:IP Subnetting on UK Computing Teachers Concerned That Pupils Know More Than Them · · Score: 1

    Very few people know subnetting inside and out unless they're an old school network admin and have been dealing with it for decades.