Slashdot Mirror


User: fuzzyfuzzyfungus

fuzzyfuzzyfungus's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
15,204
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 15,204

  1. Re: Data analytics... what is it...? on Master of Analytics Program Admission Rates Falling To Single Digits · · Score: 1

    The difference is that code monkeying, while much of it is pretty banal, can actually be honest work. Advertising, not so much.

  2. Re:How granular is power company metering currentl on Google's Business Plan For Nest: Selling Your Data To Utility Companies · · Score: 1

    I bet traditional power company metering could already tell what hours of the day and which days of the week I am usually at home. What could Nest tell them that they don't already know?

    I assume that they have some interest in how much of your use is heating/cooling related vs associated with other purposes. Thermal management, especially cooling, tends to be both a big item, and the one that shows nasty seasonal and sometimes just unpredictable variations. It's also the one that probably has the most 'slack', either in providing people with some incentive to relax their targets by a few degrees or to include various thermal energy storage mechanisms in new builds and renovations of existing HVAC systems that can be used for peak shaving.

    People don't much like brownouts; but they are suspected of being more tolerant of modest thermal excursions, given sufficient motivation, so getting the breakdown would be of use. I'm surprised that it's $40/year worth of use, though.

  3. Re:Does Nest Automatically Report In? on Google's Business Plan For Nest: Selling Your Data To Utility Companies · · Score: 1

    Or is there a way to prevent it from phoning home? I'm interested in getting one, I just don't feel like feeding more information to Google than I have to.

    You can run one without configuring its wifi link, and it will perform functions that don't require network access.

    If you do connect, though, get ready to sign up for a Nest Account (probably soon to be merged with Google+...) and access your device through the excitement of the cloud. None of that scary, technical, "No, I'll just type in my own home IP myself and leave your man-in-the-middle out of it." nonsense.

    So, not a total brick; but you'd better really like the 'learning' features to spend $250 on an offline thermostat.

  4. I take it that this is going to be a beta test and that as soon (or sooner) than we eventually GTFO of that sand-trap, the same vendors will pop up with a variety of exciting new biometric homeland security and law enforcement solutions?

  5. Re:Mislabeled? on Master of Analytics Program Admission Rates Falling To Single Digits · · Score: 1

    It's hard to tell with just what TFA provides: is capacity low because of logistical constraints at the university? (even hiring helotized adjuncts isn't an instant process, and building a really top notch faculty, especially in an area where they can go get jobs in the private sector with the same skills, can be a long-term project) Is the number of seats limited because 90% of the applicants are pure chaff, grossly unsuitable, and the acceptance rate among people who, say, actually read the course requirements is more like 50%? (I've never done admissions; but we've done some hiring were the first step is weeding out the greater-than-half of the applicant pool who appear to have applied for some other job entirely and ended up in our box by some mistake. Those might 'count' for statistical purposes if you wanted to know our 'acceptance rate'; but they are really a rather different category, and mostly irrelevant.)

  6. Re: Data analytics... what is it...? on Master of Analytics Program Admission Rates Falling To Single Digits · · Score: 4, Interesting

    To coninue. So if it is statistical analysis, why not hire statisticians ? I feel like Data Analytics is another made up science degree , similar to "cyber security", in which student that have no background in CS, write papers on cyber attacks.

    Based on the purposes it seems to end up being put to, "Data Analytics" is the synonym for "I completed reasonably advanced studies in statistics and/or computer science and then I went into advertising" that you can say without feeling the strong urge to end your miserable life.

  7. Re:Friendly Advice from HR! on Apple, Google Agree To Settle Lawsuit Alleging Hiring Conspiracy · · Score: 1

    Maybe this just reflects a cultural distaste for lawyers; but "Yeah, I shot a guy once, in self defense" might actually play better than "Yeah, I sued an employer once, in self defense", even if both statements are equally true.

  8. Re: So? on Panel Says U.S. Not Ready For Inevitable Arctic Oil Spill · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Canadian here. Keep your donation.

    Unpleasantly enough, gathering crude oil from floating slicks and contaminated beaches might actually be less destructive than extracting it from tar sands... Luckily, with the Harper Regime's war on science going better than most wars on abstract concepts, we should be spared the knowledge of whether or not that's true.

  9. Friendly Advice from HR! on Apple, Google Agree To Settle Lawsuit Alleging Hiring Conspiracy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just, um, incidentally, all those checks are uniquely serialized and anyone who cashes one really isn't showing themselves to be a team player or a good fit with company culture, now are they?

  10. Re:Same old cause on Panel Says U.S. Not Ready For Inevitable Arctic Oil Spill · · Score: 1

    Too many humans. Cut it down to 1-2 billion and a lot of problems just disappear.

    Are you one of the ones whose selection criteria for the great cull are poorly defined, or one of the ones whose selection criteria are jaw-droppingly tasteless? They come in both flavors.

  11. Re:So? on Panel Says U.S. Not Ready For Inevitable Arctic Oil Spill · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's not an 'oil spill' it's 'petrochemical philanthropy'. In fact, BP should be allowed to write off the value of the crude they selflessly gave to gulf coast residents just as they would any other charitable donation.

  12. Re:One simple reason for this on iPad Fever Is Officially Cooling · · Score: 1

    That certainly seems logical for music and movies and the like; but it seems like Apple is playing close to the limits with software: you want your complements to be cheap, if you have any say over the matter; but you don't really want them to feel cheap; because they are still a part of using your product.

    The distinctly flea-market atmosphere of the app store leaves a bit of a smell on the overall quality of using iOS. Arguably, the same issue is becoming apparent on the hardware side for Microsoft and Intel. MS didn't design and release the 'Surface' just because they though that their OEMs were doing a wonderful job in selling their OS in the tablet market, and Intel basically started their whole 'Ultrabook' thing as a "Damn it guys, why can't you release a competent macbook air?" shove to the PC market.

    To the degree that they can do so without changing the feel, Apple is better off with cheaper complements (particularly for things like music and movies that are already made and released for other platforms and it's mostly a fight over the third party's margins on ITMS, not the overall production values); but you can only push your complements so far before they start to suck more.

  13. Re:One simple reason for this on iPad Fever Is Officially Cooling · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh, I have no interest in defending Apple's status as good value for money(sometimes they are, sometimes they aren't, if your desires don't match their preferred configurations, they are very unlikely to be). Aside from that being a tedious argument (and my being one of the people who Apple isn't interested in serving), it's orthogonal to my intended observation:

    In the PC hardware market, and now in the 'app store', it is very easy to buy less product than you actually need/want, especially if you don't have a clear idea of what that is, or you want something that happens to be early on the chopping block when it's cost-cutting time. This makes people who aren't clear on what they want, or who suffer from excessive time discounting and fall for low introductory pricing (see also, 'No money down!' and 'free with 2 year contract!'), unhappy. If it gets especially severe, even people who are clear on what they want can suffer, because the features they want suffer a vicious cycle of reduced marketshare, increased prices because of lower economies of scale, and further reduced marketshare (seen many 16:10 monitors recently?).

    It's interesting to see this happen in Apple's precious little 'App Store', since they have very tight control over its terms(they could, say, have refused to add in-app purchases) and only jailbroken devices and developers can even execute software they don't approve, so there are no commercially relevant 3rd party channels. Even in the face of substantial pressure, they've always been aggressively against it in hardware, and yet they sit and watch it happen under their very noses in their own walled garden on the software side.

    It's also somewhat interesting in comparison with their handling of books, music, and video. Set up an illegal cartel with all major book publishers in order to fix a higher sale price; but voluntarily set the minimum price for software at free or 99 cents, rather than higher? It's a curious difference.

  14. Re:Game theory in action on Microsoft, Google, Others Join To Fund Open Source Infrastructure Upgrades · · Score: 1

    My impression (given that they also dedicate a certain amount of time and trouble to hunting bot-herders and assorted similar types) is that Microsoft takes an interest in things that facilitate malware distribution, since their customers often take the hit (not necessarily because of an MS zero day; lots of systems running well behind on patches and users clicking on trojans and merrily executing them, along with anything Adobe or Java related).

    An issue that causes lots of accounts to be compromised on various popular social networking and email type sites? That will mean tons of particularly convincing malware links getting sent out to people's entire contact lists.

  15. Re:Ah industry initiatives. on Microsoft, Google, Others Join To Fund Open Source Infrastructure Upgrades · · Score: 2

    It's conceivable that it's just a fit of temper (team OpenBSD certainly did not sound happy about what team OpenSSL had been up to); but it's also quite likely that they are doing it this way because they want it to happen. You can contribute something; but if the maintainers don't accept it, it just sits there. If you and the maintainers disagree on some important points, or they have a strong NIH attitude, this condition may continue indefinitely. If you fork, it's your problem now; but you do get to accept your own preferred solution.

  16. Re:Short sighted hindsight on Microsoft, Google, Others Join To Fund Open Source Infrastructure Upgrades · · Score: 2

    Most likely because their motivation is the (belated; but logical) recognition that it's cheaper to support OSS projects that you use than it is to bear the risk of having them fail or maintain a full in-house fork all by yourself. It's not really a fund dedicated to 'more and better OSS generally'; but an attempt to share (to some degree) the cost of improving and maintaining the stuff that they already use or already depend on in some way.

  17. Re:One simple reason for this on iPad Fever Is Officially Cooling · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apps are becoming progressively worse, not better, over time. In the early days there were a lot of cool apps written by people who just wanted to write cool apps for a cool new tool.

    Now with the preverse incentives of the app market, the app store is saturated by apps trying to squeeze a maximum amount of money for a dwindling amount of useful application.

    Ironically, that's basically the same squeeze that Apple has traditionally profited by avoiding in the hardware market:

    The customers says "I want a cheap computer!".

    Apple says "No, you want a low price tag; but the computer you want actually costs $1000, no less."

    HP/Dell/Acer/etc. says "We got the price down to $300! 1366x768 is 'HD', right, even on a 15 inch screen?"

    In a great many cases, Apple has been correct: users shop for price; but getting the price they want also involves getting a product that dissatisfies them, often in a series of unpleasant surprises over time. They do give up serving some customers by refusing to hit lower price points(oh, you wanted to get an i3 rather than an i5 or i7 and spend the savings on a better GPU? That's too bad.); but they force their customers to buy what they suspect is the product they actually want, rather than the price they actually want.

    In the app store, of course, you have the same knife-fight-in-a-telephone-booth margins, and this has led to exactly the same gnawing, incremental, suck. Sure, everything is Free! or Only 99 cents!; but the amount of sheer crap and apps that spring a series of disappointments and annoyances and nickle-and-dime attempts on you is really grating.

    As with hardware, this ultimately makes people less happy. The demands of 'app' pricing are such that it's very hard to actually move units if you just let the user pay once, upfront, and then live happily ever after; but a dollar worth of software isn't going to be pretty unless it either sells a zillion units(since copying is more or less free, though support isn't), or it actually has a hidden higher price tag, which is a dirty and unpleasant game even if you would have been willing to just pay that much upfront.

    It would be interesting to know how the story went inside Apple HQ as they added things like in-app purchases, set minimum prices/price increments/etc. for the store, and so on. Did they fail to foresee the problem? Saw it coming but figured that so long as their platform and hardware remained nicer it wouldn't hurt them since it would happen to the competition as well? Felt forced into it? (if so, by Android? by online/partially online stuff that got money out of users on the desktop/browser side and offered free mobile clients? by concern over some other potential competitor?)

  18. Re:Well... on iPad Fever Is Officially Cooling · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect that attrition is markedly higher on phones, given how much more time they spend being incautiously handled while out and about, that has to help. The cell-contract-upgrade churn probably doesn't hurt either.

  19. Re:I never thought I'd live to see the day... on iPad Fever Is Officially Cooling · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...when the public is calling for larger cell phones.

    A wise man once said "The greatest thing about smartphones is that you don't have to use them for phone calls." Once you start down that path, you really wish they had a proper screen.

  20. Re:I kinda like it on Band Releases Album As Linux Kernel Module · · Score: 1

    I'd argue that cassette deserved to die; but for the same reason that it previously deserved to live:

    Cassette tape was always the shitty compromise format; but that meant that it had to have compensating virtues: vastly more compact and cheap than reel-to-reel, substantially more compact and portable than vinyl(and a lot more writable, on nearly anything capable of playing it, notably unlike vinyl or even CDs until burners became cheap substantially later); and cheaper, more widely available, and better adopted than any of the minidisc flavors. The fidelity was pretty dreadful, rewinding was a nuisance, and unwinding damaged tape trapped inside the playback mechanism was worse; but if you wanted something writable and portable, there wasn't too much else to be had.

    Now, of course, We Have The Technology, and you can get all of tape's virtues with none of its vices(a $10 mystery-brand "MP4 Player" with an eccentric and poorly localized interface will probably treat you better...), so I have no idea whatsoever why anybody would touch one, except to get something on it into a saner format before it rots; definitely not a medium that inspires nostalgia; but 'cheap, convenient, awful' is exactly the sort of technology that keeps the world running, and tape once was that. Now it's not.

  21. Re:GPL? on Band Releases Album As Linux Kernel Module · · Score: 1

    The GPL only applies to distribution. AFAIK you can install any software of any license of your liking in your computer.

    Kernel tainting isn't a legal thing, it's one of the kernel sysctls(the 'tainted' section). One of the ways to cause nonzero taint is with a non-GPL kernel module; but various other categories of "If you are doing one of these things, we don't want to hear your damn bug report because it is likely to be hopeless and/or not our problem" also have taint codes.

    You are still free to do things that taint the kernel; but if something has a taint code, there is a strong suggestion of 'not recommended, on your own head be it'.

  22. Re:At least it wasn't goatse on NYPD's Twitter Campaign Backfires · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...well, there were batons.

    Justin Volpe, formerly of the NYPD, already has that one covered. So egregiously that he even went to jail, in an atypical twist.

  23. Re:not really far fetched at all on Mobile Game Attempts To Diagnose Alzheimer's · · Score: 1

    A simple matter.

    You simply affix an xbox headset to the subject. If they look vaguely confused, you use the general population baselines. If they start reflexively screaming obscenities and accusing the diagnostic team of cheating, you use the gamer baselines.

  24. Re:Too good to be true? on OnePlus One Revealed: a CyanogenMod Smartphone · · Score: 1

    Oh, I'd certainly be in favor of such a feature, and I'm a little surprised that none of the 'throw things at the wall until some of them stick' Android vendors seem to have tried it; but I'm just not wildly optimistic. On the low end, they just use junk, on the high end they love that SKU tiering ability, and none of the mobile OS vendors seem particularly enthusiastic about the fact that local storage even exists, since it inconveniences their assorted 'cloud' nonsense and sometimes adds little slots to the otherwise sleek-looking handsets.

  25. Re:Some of these are overreaction on NYPD's Twitter Campaign Backfires · · Score: 1

    I'd recommend getting a job playing campus cop at some California state school instead. Much nicer weather.