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User: jedidiah

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Comments · 20,933

  1. Re: Surprise? on Munich Reverses Course, May Ditch Linux For Microsoft · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...none of which is remotely relevant in an enterprise corporate environment where you DON'T WANT your end users their PCs or the rest of the network and where even Windows setup is managed by specialists from another department.

    When our department moved. there was a lot of fun getting the network printer to work with people's WinDOS desktops. An entire department full of programmers had problems getting a mundane Dell printer to work with their Win7 desktops.

    Most of them had to be rescued by IT.

  2. Re:Stupidity on Ebola Quarantine Center In Liberia Looted · · Score: 1

    Plus, that part of the body that gets cut off itself tends to harbor infections.

    That is why that "horrible superstitious religious practice" became a common medical practice once society realized that you should sterilize surgical instruments.

  3. Re:I don't see it on Machine Vision Reveals Previously Unknown Influences Between Great Artists · · Score: 2

    Just like with evolution, two similar things don't have to be parent and child. They can be siblings or cousins sharing a common origin.

    Rockwell and Bazille likely share common influences including the general culture at large.

    This is the sort of thing that should be obvious to anyone that's ever been in any serious kind of art museum. Art documents the culture that created it. You can easily see how that changes over time.

    A number of these cultural transitions are really quite dramatic.

  4. Re:Real people just don't like dealing with Hipste on Companies That Don't Understand Engineers Don't Respect Engineers · · Score: 1

    Suits are expense, expensive and hard to maintain, and easy to destroy. They are also uncomfortable and restrictive. They represent a degree of overhead that's completely unecessary for the task at hand.

    It's little wonder that an engineer might object to being forced into a suit for anything short of a presentation for a client.

  5. Re:Real people just don't like dealing with Hipste on Companies That Don't Understand Engineers Don't Respect Engineers · · Score: 0

    > Wait, are you really saying that C++ isn't a proven technology? Pretty much everything important and widely used is written in it.

    You lost it right there.

    That assertion hasn't been true for at least 10 years. Can you possibly be that stale while still being employed or are you retired already?

    What a dinosaur...

  6. Re:That is not a business decision. on Companies That Don't Understand Engineers Don't Respect Engineers · · Score: 2

    The problem with equating "engineer" with "software engineer" is that there's more to computing than being a code monkey. A lot of companies won't even have any code monkeys but will still have computing professionals to manage their computing infastructure.

    By making the false equivalency you are making the entire thesis less clear.

  7. Re:Database? on Companies That Don't Understand Engineers Don't Respect Engineers · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    > So... who gives a shit?

    Clearly some butthurt slashbots do. Otherwise they wouldn't be objecting to the idea so fiercely.

    If you don't have to sign your name to it and take personal responsibility for it when it breaks, you simply aren't a professional engineer. You're just a wannabe trying to pretend you're more respectable than you really are.

    Software is Max Max territory compared to any real engineering discipline.

  8. Re:you must not have done well in math class on Figuring Out Where To Live Using Math · · Score: 1

    The food? Anything you can buy from someone else, I can probably do better. That's the flip side of not living in some closet in an overhyped urban center.

    The "lawn" also comes with fresh fruits,vegetables and herbs.

  9. Re:you must not have done well in math class on Figuring Out Where To Live Using Math · · Score: 1

    You don't sound like someone that's ever had to live in a place where drive by shootings are problem. Clearly you are not because you don't acknowledge the problem of violent crime in general. You clearly have no clue what else people in poor violent neighborhoods have to deal with.

    It's not just the guns.

    You think you can be smug because "there are no guns" but the guns really have nothing to do with it.

    The real reason you can be smug is that you don't live in some festering ghetto. Your silver spoon protects you from harm. Repressive gun laws really have squat to do with it.

  10. Re:you must not have done well in math class on Figuring Out Where To Live Using Math · · Score: 1

    > Mandatory validation of sexual preference

    Nope. Not forced "validation", just "forced" tolerance. That is a manifestation of our founding ideals regarding religion. We are simply not a Sharia Law nation. Even our devout founding fathers knew the dangers of mixing church and state.

    Religious wars and repression weren't such a distant memory for them.

    If you can't handle all of this, I suggest moving to Iran where you will find like minded people.

  11. Re:you must not have done well in math class on Figuring Out Where To Live Using Math · · Score: 1

    It's not small minded. It actually makes a remarkable amount of sense. Foreign nationals that like to lecture anyone else are like the GOP crowd that thought they could mold Iraq into a western style democracy while ignoring the fact that the Iraqis are a distinct people with their own history and characteristics.

    Bleeding heart liberals and Eurotrash that think that they can just impose foreign ideas on the US are just like that.

    Take a good long look in the mirror. The face that should be looking back at you should be George Bush the younger because you are EXACTLY like him and a moron for the same reasons.

    Even in Europe neighboring countries have wildly divergent cultures and trying to impose the same regime on all of them is problematic. So trying to impose a European style nanny state in the US might run into problems.

    The US is pretty much made up of all the people that rejected the European way of doing things at one time or another. That's still very much reflected in our politics. A US solution needs to be something blindly transplanted from somewhere else and imposed upon us Bush+Iraq style.

    Plus there's the obvious scaling issue. The US is just bigger.

    Is there a successful beaurocracy of any kind that covers the entire EU?

  12. Re:you must not have done well in math class on Figuring Out Where To Live Using Math · · Score: 1

    > Up here in Canada guns are severely restricted. As a result, it's unlikely in the extreme that you'll ever have one pointed at you.

    It's not the guns. It's the people. If you aren't comfortable walking in their 'hood at night then it doesn't matter if they are armed or not. They can kill you just as easily by beating you to death.

    Do you regularly flaunt your whiteness in the wrong neighborhood?

    If you're really too frightened to try then you're just blithering idiot and hypocrite ignoring the real issues here.

    I don't care if my neighbors are armed or not because I don't live in some shithole. I don't feel the need to meddle in their business or take away their stuff or anything else that's ultimately anti-social. I don't need to be afraid of the guy next door.

  13. Re: Check your arithmatic on Figuring Out Where To Live Using Math · · Score: 1

    It's a commonly held American myth that living in a "real city" magically eliminates the daily commute. It does not. It just makes the commute different. It will likely be just as long and might even be even more miserable.

    Being jam packed into some subway or bus isn't a real improvement. This is even with giving mass transit the best possible advantages in the comparison (good European systems versus nightmarish American ones).

  14. Re:https is useless on Watch a Cat Video, Get Hacked: the Death of Clear-Text · · Score: 2

    Security is fine if you are no one of interest. It doesn't matter if it's physical security or computer security. Once you are important enough for anyone to be interested in, most security measures are completely meaningless. This is just the harsh reality.

    For most of us, security measures just dissuade the opportunitistic idiot trying for an easy score with no particular interest in you as an individual.

    Once you've managed to attract unwanted attention, you will have to engage more serious security measures (in general).

  15. Re:Not this again. on Ask Slashdot: "Real" Computer Scientists vs. Modern Curriculum? · · Score: 1

    It is most certainly bullshit if your cavalier attitude towards my resources causes my application to grind to a halt because you are too greedy and there simply isn't enough to go around.

  16. Re:Why do CS grads become lowly programmers? on Ask Slashdot: "Real" Computer Scientists vs. Modern Curriculum? · · Score: 1

    Engineers study the sciences, and math. Why should it be any different for computing professionals? They should be exposed to the same kinds of "fundementals" you would associate with other "serious STEM" programs.

  17. Re:They are the rich on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 2

    You never know. He might have and those are just pay stubs. It all could just be a colossal misunderstanding on this part.

    A fictional character can be as much of a dufus as the rest of us.

  18. Re:Contributors start with documentation on Ask Slashdot: What To Do About the Sorry State of FOSS Documentation? · · Score: 1

    ...or better yet. People that like to whine about documentation actually contribute to that documentation once they have gone to the trouble to sort themselves out.

    You determine your own level of involvement with project mayhem.

  19. Re:Explains the explosion of leftists on Slashdot on Ancient Skulls Show Civilization Rose As Testosterone Fell · · Score: 1

    Government paying for birth control? I thought that was about corporations being "forced" to pay for birth control. Although that was all about corporations being "forced" to allow the employees to spend the money in question.

    The government paying for birth control in general is not such a bad idea. The poor ones might actually use it and breed less poverty.

    You would think that Republicans would be all about shrinking the welfare rolls and doing pretty much anything to do it, even kicking fundies to the curb in the process.

  20. Re:This naming trend has to stop on The XBMC Project Will Now Be Called Kodi · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has the benefit of being a market abusing behemoth with a large legal department. They get to play by a different set of rules than the rest of us. That's why Microsoft gets to get away with using trademarks that never should have been allowed.

    Smaller organizations actually have to obey the rules.

  21. Re:Mod parent DOWN on Jesse Jackson: Tech Diversity Is Next Civil Rights Step · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not racism to point out the fact that most H1B scab labor in IT is Indian. It's also not racist to point out that "lowering the bar" is bogus.

    If Jesse wants to wage the next race war, he should start by getting more black kids interested in STEM and education in general. He can fight against the pervasive drug and gang culture that keeps black kids away from any means to better themselves.

    Perhaps he could even get a bunch of athletes and rappers to just read to kids.

  22. Re:USB Import on Ford, GM Sued Over Vehicles' Ability To Rip CD Music To Hard Drive · · Score: 1

    > Who uses a flash drive anymore...it's all about the cloud...get with the times grandpa.

    It's an automobile.

    It goes where the cloud doesn't.

    You don't even have to try that hard really.

  23. Re:The Alliance of Artists should lose this suit on Ford, GM Sued Over Vehicles' Ability To Rip CD Music To Hard Drive · · Score: 2

    > You bought a license to play that music

    No. That is total corporate-felating bullshit.

    There's 100 year old case law that contradicts this nonsense. Corporations already tried to pull this shit and got slapped down by the courts.

    There is no "implicit license" on a copy of a creative work, just standard copyright law.

  24. Re:Radicalization on Gaza's Only Power Plant Knocked Offline · · Score: 1

    One whole seat?

    Do you think Blacks would be dancing in the street if they were entitled to one whole "reserved" seat in Congress? Latinos? Asians?

    Talk about tokenism.

  25. Re:Radicalization on Gaza's Only Power Plant Knocked Offline · · Score: 1

    > Not that I approve of Israel's bombing of their own citizens

    Israel is not bombing it's own citizens. Although Hamas is.

    Israel is bombing an enemy belligerent. Collateral damage and casualties within your own forces are just a part of that.