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User: Tony+Isaac

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Comments · 1,552

  1. Re:Google screwed up badly on the enterprise on Peak Google: The Company's Time At the Top May Be Nearing Its End · · Score: 1

    Maybe Google is late to the enterprise game, but they certainly have started pursuing it. Apparently, a lot of corporations are switching to Google for Work, mine included.

    http://www.winbeta.org/news/go...

  2. Re:news ? on Swatting 19-Year-Old Arrested in Las Vegas · · Score: 1

    Have you watched the news lately? If you haven't noticed, that's about all the news is these days...unless you want to include the steamy lives of celebrities.

  3. Good for him! on How a Hardware Designer Was Saved By His Own Creation · · Score: 1

    People who invent things that save lives...SHOULD be rewarded. It's nice to see somebody get the benefit of their own contribution to humanity. Kudos!

  4. Clickbait on The Man Squatting On Millions of Dollars Worth of Domain Names · · Score: 1

    HE'S the guy that puts up all those web sites that have nothing on them except links that are designed to get unsuspecting people to click on them, for the ad revenue.

  5. Conservation of matter and energy on The Search For Neutrons That Leak Into Our World From Other Universes · · Score: 1

    If this leakage is really happening, it would seem to violate the law of conservation of matter and energy, at least as it could be observed in this universe. Once these neutrons "leak" out of our universe, they would no longer be "here." Even if the law is technically preserved because they are now in another universe, this is a really big pill to swallow.

  6. Re:I'm sorry - but if you're going to Walmart on Major Retailers Accused of Selling Fraudulent Herbal Supplements · · Score: 1

    Yes, and if you're going to GNC to improve your health, you are also very confused. The entire homeopathic remedy industry has been full of quacks since...snake oil. And it hasn't gotten any better since.

  7. 100,000? on Massive Layoff Underway At IBM · · Score: 1

    The article says only 5,000 have been laid off, but "the rest are being laid off without being laid off." That sounds like hand-waving to me. I suspect the truth is somewhere in between the two numbers.

  8. It looks fragile on The "Cool Brick" Can Cool Off an Entire Room Using Nothing But Water · · Score: 1

    ...for a building block.

  9. Re:Farewell, TRS-80 on RadioShack Near Deal To Sell Half of Its Stores, Close the Rest · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You hit the nail on the head about being early to the game.

    The problem was, then they just sat there. They became a toy store, then a cell phone store. Nowadays, you can't even get special-purpose adapters, just the common ones. You know, like 90-degree USB connectors, or S-Video to HDMI.

    If Radio Shack had stuck to its mission, they would be the place to go for 3-D printers, Arduino, HDMI computers, and A/C network adapters.

    The fact is, they forgot about us tinkerers, and tried to become mainstream. It may cost them their very existence.

  10. This is only a partial solution on Police Stations Increasingly Offer Safe Haven For Craigslist Transactions · · Score: 1

    It at least protects the parties from possible physical harm. But it's still quite possible to get taken for a ride--in a police station.

    Even when doing business with someone you don't know, it's possible to look for, and read, clues as to the kind of person you are dealing with. Do they call back when promised? Do you notice any "little lies"? Does the story change over time?

    I've bought personal vehicles on Craigslist for years, and there are a lot of good clues. For example, when you ask whether the car is still for sale, and they answer "Which one?" you know you're talking to a dealer, not an individual. Ask lots of questions, then mention that you will be pulling the CarFax report, and watch what happens. If they start changing the story, walk away! Clues as simple as how the person dresses can tell you a lot about what kind of person they are.

    No system is perfect, but it's important to do your homework, even if you are meeting in a police station.

  11. Re:It's Not Just Craiglist on Police Stations Increasingly Offer Safe Haven For Craigslist Transactions · · Score: 1

    How sad that this is needed!

  12. There will always be stupid lawsuits on Why We Still Can't Really Put Anything In the Public Domain · · Score: 1

    Some people will sue McDonalds when they spill hot coffee on themselves. Some people will sue a building owner when they trip and fall. Some people will sue to try to get back their IP that they clearly gave away to the public domain. We can't stop stupid people from being stupid.

    Only a (stupid) lawyer could love a copyright loophole like the one described in the article. But we can't live in fear of these people. If somebody dedicates their work to the public domain, we have to trust that they will keep their word. Sometimes they don't, but sometimes people don't honor legally binding contracts, either.

  13. Ecosystem on Ask Slashdot: Is Pascal Underrated? · · Score: 2

    It's not the language, it's the ecosystem.

    The fact is, I don't want to write every function and class from scratch. With JavaScript, C#, C++, or Java, there are tons of source code snips, classes, and libraries out there to do just about anything you could imagine doing on a computer. This lets me (mostly) focus on what I'm trying to get done, rather than focusing on how to make the tools to get my job done.

    After using dozens of languages in my career, I'm pretty language-agnostic. Most of them can do the job. But the ones that make me the most productive, are the ones that are thriving on Stack Overflow and Code Project.

  14. Re:Wrong direction on FCC May Permit Robocalls To Cell Phones -- If They Are Calling a Wrong Number · · Score: 1

    I mostly agree. But there are some kinds of robocalls that are actually helpful. Our kids' school, for example, uses a robo-call system to let parents know when school is canceled due to weather or other reasons.

  15. Re:Time to abandon normal phones? on FCC May Permit Robocalls To Cell Phones -- If They Are Calling a Wrong Number · · Score: 1

    Right. Maybe we should all switch to Skype, or Facebook, or email, for all our communication. The telemarketers would never find us there!

  16. Belief? on Study: Belief That Some Fields Require "Brilliance" May Keep Women Out · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The summary, and article, are predicated on the notion that it can't be true that certain occupations require inborn ability.

    The truth is, people are born with certain talents and abilities. Some are good at art, some are good at science,, some are good at teaching. Why do we keep trying to force everyone to be equally good at everything?

  17. There is no sure way to delete on The Importance of Deleting Old Stuff · · Score: 1

    Once you type words into a computer, whether as email text or documents, you have to assume they will be retrievable by someone at any point in the future. Even if your company has automated retention policies, somebody could easily forward or save whatever you write, an email server somewhere could retain what you sent, a backup system could archive it.

    Document retention policies are like school zero-tolerance rules. They are stupid to begin with, and they don't achieve the desired result.

  18. You've got mail! on Ask Slashdot: Sounds We Don't Hear Any More? · · Score: 1

    Once upon a time, AOL was king.

  19. Poker isn't really about math on Researchers "Solve" Texas Hold'Em, Create Perfect Robotic Player · · Score: 1

    It's about psychology: guessing what your opponents hold, whether you can beat what you think they hold, or whether you can bluff them into folding.

    I'm betting that a good human player could pretty quickly learn how this bot plays, and learn how to react to various scenarios to defeat it...regardless of the math.

  20. Advertisers on The Missing Piece of the Smart Home Revolution: The Operating System · · Score: 1

    The only people who want a "smart home revolution" are advertisers. They would love to be able to show you advertisements on your refrigerator, stove, thermostat, and everywhere else.

  21. Programming is NOT helped by isolation on If the Programmer Won't Go To Silicon Valley, Should SV Go To the Programmer? · · Score: 0

    Programming is a creative activity that is greatly enhanced by teams of programmers being present together in one place. Team members feed off each other, and perform far better than they could in isolation. Sure, programming CAN be done remotely, but not at the same level.

    This is true not only at the individual level, but at the corporate level. There is a reason software companies congregate in Silicon Valley, why oil companies congregate in Houston, and entertainment companies congregate in Hollywood. The talent pools for these industries has been built up over a long period of time, and establishing similar talent pools elsewhere is no easy task.

    It works both ways: a software company in Silicon Valley has a much easier time finding good programmers than software companies elsewhere, and programmers in Silicon Valley have a much easier time finding good jobs there, than elsewhere.

  22. Why not use it, if it works? on Anthropomorphism and Object Oriented Programming · · Score: 1

    If programming were strictly about efficiently providing instructions to computers, then anthropomorphism would be wasteful and counter-productive. Think about all of the code and processor cycles devoted to displaying data as windows, folders, icons, or just plain aesthetics. Those metaphors are highly wasteful of computer processing power.

    But the point is, computers are, above all, a tool for people. So why not make them function in a way that is understandable to people? If anthropomorphism helps programmers understand the interconnections of complex software, then by all means, we should use it! If the metaphors break down, fix the metaphor, or use a different one. It's how we think. It's OK if it's not perfect, as long as it gets the job done.

  23. Multifocal contact lenses on Ask Slashdot: Are Progressive Glasses a Mistake For Computer Users? · · Score: 1

    I don't like progressive glasses, or any glasses for that matter. I love my multifocal contact lenses, Typical multifocals have five focal lengths, and you can't even see where each ring is, your eyes just naturally move to where the text is clear. There is no going back to glasses for me!

  24. iBooks on How Amazon's Ebook Subscriptions Are Changing the Writing Industry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is just iTunes, but for books. The book industry was just a little slower to go digital. They will go, kicking and screaming, but they will go. And the result will be a win for consumers, and even a win for authors (maybe except for the few who are household names).

  25. I knew a guy in college that would have liked this on Glowing Hobbit Sword Helps You Find Unsecured Wi-Fi · · Score: 1

    At the time, he was always running around in a ninja outfit. But this idea would have been just enough to get him to change costumes. Hint: If you're older than 12, you might want to consider wearing this getup strictly in your own house!