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User: EmperorOfCanada

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  1. The fools on 'Hidden From Google' Remembers the Sites Google Is Forced To Forget · · Score: 1

    Don't these bureaucratic fools realize that they are not able to control the internet, and that the relative lack of bureaucrats is what makes the internet strong? Yes they can control a company like Google through threats but the moment they create a distortion in the market by pushing the internet one way, there will be an opposite and equal reaction in the exact opposite way.

    So the NSA pushes things like NIST one way and the result is that the hard core crypto world will now move away from NIST. If youtube is forced to censor then 100 uncensored video sites will show up.

    People are told they can't get netflix so proxy companies pop up to sell what was otherwise a fairly speciality service. I mean how many people were buying international proxy services 5 years ago?

    I am willing to bet that in some countries where the government censors are at war with the internet that it is a national sport to get around them.

    On a side note, I can tell you that if my local government (Nova Scotia, Canada) ran the Internet that you would be paying $200/month for a 256k ISDN and that domain name "approvals" would take years. My government being typically bad it is great that the internet is fundamentally structured so as to make it difficult for governments to truly harm it. They can harm some companies within their reach, but they can't really grasp the slippery concept of the internet itself.

  2. Bloatware can kill it in a heartbeat on Slashdot Asks: Do You Want a Smart Watch? · · Score: 1

    Basically I want a smartwatch that will free up my momentary pulling my phone out. So time, changing songs, checking messages, simple navigation, seeing who is calling/called, etc. I really don't want a whole lot more than that. So any attempt at fitness/appstores/games/etc that are best left on my phone then yuk. Any bloaty things that are best left on the phone MUST be left on the phone. Any slipshod half assed crap that don't work well will just waste menu space memory, capacity, and even the time that the company should be using to make the rest of the phone better.

    The other key is that customization will be key. If I don't want messages, then I want messages clean off the phone.

    But I have little hope that the first few rounds of smartwatches are even going to come close. They will load up the features which will result in abysmal battery lives. They will have complicated menus so that if you want to see a recent message you will have to scroll through 30 screens. But worst of all the MBA types will say, "Hey we have some valuable realestate on these fools' wrists that we can sell. So they will have all kinds of stupid things that sell sell sell such as music stores, app stores, and overlarge reminders that you have a Samsung product or some crap.

    My prediction is that in the end there will be two winners. Eventually Apple will come out with something and unless it is total crap they will sell zillions for a huge profit. But some other Timex (maybe even timex) will come out with the simplest and dumbest smartwatch out there for a reasonable price. But it will be small, tough, cheap, and do exactly what it needs to do and not one transistor more.

    In the super long term the watch will end up being so smart that it will replace the phone but not for a long while. For now it must be Robin to the Phone's Batman. "Batman the bat phone is ringing..."

  3. I have a daughter born in 1999. I suspect that in the years 2200+ that she will encounter problems (assuming a long life) with the 256bit operating systems of the next century when an int could easily encompass every millisecond since the big bang, yet they will still use two digit numbers. With most programmers being very young I don't think that many can think of a whole century as being something a computer must deal with.

  4. Re:Non-competes should not make you unemployable on Amazon Sues After Ex-Worker Takes Google Job · · Score: 1

    So (and I am not completely joking) maybe to get your P Eng you have to work a month as a New York cab driver and you don't graduate unless you get into the top 25% of driver complaints for aggressive driving and abuse of pedestrians.

    Basically some sort of assertiveness training. Where the moment an MBA says, yes lets split this bonus evenly 90/10 that the engineer will basically dangle his career over the balcony until the MBA signs over the entirety of the bonus.

  5. Yes and no on Employees Staying Away From Internal Corporate Social Networks · · Score: 1

    Almost every social network offered by companies that I have seen were stupid, so oddly enough they failed. There would be "messages from the president" or tripe from HR reminding employees not to grope each other along with other passive aggressive crap about someone not following the rules that some asshole thought they could enforce about trash can etiquette. What these sites tend to have in common is either they are ego driven or they are very complicated.

    But at the same time I have seen some awesome simple sites that worked really well. One company that I visited had a site with basically 3 sections. One was the useless section from HR. The second section was a discussion group as to how to make the company better (and had reddit style up down voting). And the last section was an internal craigslist buy, sell, and trade thing. Needless to say the HR drivel was 100% ignored with zero comments except from HR. The improving the company section had animated discussions that were very detailed and I was told resulted in many changes from an ink recycling program that saved millions to moving a light pole that more than halved the time to park a truck in their loading bay. But the spectacular success was the buy and sell. Quite simply people seem to prefer to deal with people they know so the deals were almost non-stop.

    On a side note one other company(very large) that I recently visited basically had their own Linkedin which was just a giant circle jerk of people posting their accomplishments "Most TPS reports filed in 1 week." And that was it. I very much doubt that the company or the employees derived any value from it making it a net loss for the company after all the time and money that would be wasted on it.

    The single best corporate social network that I have recently heard of is an app where you can rate your co-workers. I presume that it is going to be an eye opener for some ego-maniacal bosses who find out that they are reviled. But more importantly it will allow companies to identify their most controversial employees who need further investigation. "Doug in accounting smells really foul and leers at all the women. Bert in the warehouse lives way to well on his tiny salary, does that explain the stuff that is always missing? Susan thinks she is sexy but isn't and needs to stop hitting on the interns. Ralph is a hidden gem, I wonder if the higher ups know his boss takes credit for all his work? I wonder if Ralph knows that his boss assigns him all the blame for his own screw ups?"

  6. Broke the rule before anyway on FAA's Ruling On Smartphones During Takeoff Has Had Little Impact · · Score: 1

    I always broke the rule before anyway. I listened to lectures and audiobooks starting on my ride to the airport, through the airport, an interruption at security, then in the gate, then boarding the plane, taxiing the plane, take off, flight, landing, taxiing, arrival, and the drive to my destination.

    So nothing is really going to change. Maybe, just maybe I might have a video based lecture that I will watch starting before take off. So now I can do that.

    I suspect that I wasn't alone, in that many people probably listened to at least music. So the number of devices active during take off and landing was probably already quite high.

  7. Re:Do they own him? on Amazon Sues After Ex-Worker Takes Google Job · · Score: 1

    Yes I suspect that it prevents a massive blindside. But seeing that proper notice is very short, it would be wildly different than the years that some companies tried to demand.

  8. Re:Non-competes should not make you unemployable on Amazon Sues After Ex-Worker Takes Google Job · · Score: 1

    I find that under modern management structures there is a near hatred of highly skilled technical employees. Over and over I see MBA types desperately eliminate the fantastic programmers by replacing them with a room full of mediocre programmers. Then when the project ends up smashed on the rocks, the same MBAs will baulk at paying a top notch programmer a multiple of what the mediocre programmers would get.

    My favorite personal experience was years ago I had a ready to go solution for a finance company but I demanded some serious coin for it. The MBA in charge of the recently failed project walked into the next room and said, (when he thought I was out of earshot) "I won't pay any nerd more than someone who went to business school. So they said, no, and did the Indian outsourcing thing. Then around a year later, after it blew up, they offered me exactly, to the penny, half of what I asked. I said, no. Then they slowly worked their way up, halving all the way up to my original price. When I said no even at that price they got angry. That is when I told them that a week after they turned me down a year earlier, that I had exclusively sold the system for about triple what I had asked them for and had it up and running at one of their competitors in under a week. The funny thing was that they laughed and said, "Well your system can't be that good if it only took a week to get it running."

    Two other funny things were that they sent a letter from a lawyer demanding that I tell them which competitor was using the system (keep in mind I had never signed anything with them at any point ever) and they then did a Russian outsourcing that royally blew up about a year after that. So here was a company full of MBAs who spent more than 3 years without a system that was fairly critical to their business simply because they refused to give a non MBA real money.

    BTW during the original negotiations they tried every which way to rip me off. They tried to make offers where they would cut me in for a percentage of profits, they tried to "lease" the software including source code with the option to terminate with a weeks notice, they tried to have their people do a "code review" before they bought. All this after I was able to run the system right in front of them doing exactly what they wanted. The company that did buy it had economists not MBAs running it and the only complication with their contract was the faster I installed it the more money I made and they wanted the source code in escrow (after the offer they made I gave them the source, which ended up being a win as their internal programmer loved my code so much they got me to do other things).

    So that is my long winded way of saying, that trained economists are able to analyse value and thus have a high chance of recognizing value. But MBAs are trained to extract/exploit value, so if they think they can work an angle they will try to work an angle even though in the long run all that sleaze will generally end up biting them in the long run. But I think the MBA mentality is similar to a casino addict. They point to their stupendous wins and say, "Look at me, I am the man." But in the case of MBAs the are at the casino playing with other people's money. Whereas economists look at the casino and say, "Unless we are the ones running the casino the math is terrible."

  9. Re:Non-competes should not make you unemployable on Amazon Sues After Ex-Worker Takes Google Job · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Actually in Canada there was a recent Supreme court decision where they said that you could even contact former customers as long as it was reasonable for you to have naturally remembered their contact information. So I couldn't leave with a list of 100,000 contacts, but 40-100 would potentially be reasonable.

    Basically how this broke down was that it was against the charter to tell you where you can and can't work. Also it was against the charter to tell you who you can and can't contact. Thus any contract clauses that violate the charter are void.

    I was blown away with the contacting former customers being allowed. Oh and this particular decision also cleared pillaging former employees.

  10. Do they own him? on Amazon Sues After Ex-Worker Takes Google Job · · Score: 2

    I love how this makes sense to the corporate minds at Amazon. This guy worked for them and thus they can now control his life? Employees leaving is a part of life. Oddly enough a specialist in such an industry is going to go to a competitor. Any contract that somehow demands that they get to control you after you quit is absurd and should be thrown out with extreme prejudice. And before anyone says, "Well he signed it." Can you list 4 consecutive words from the terms and conditions of Slashdot? Did you know that Clause 18 section B allows slashdot to demand that you donate any or all compatible organs if they need a transplant for any of the executive?

    If you look at a recent Supreme court decision in Canada involving RBC, you will find that they basically struck down most of the concept of an employment non-compete as violating a charter right to live and work where you chose. While this might seem irrelevant to the US courts, I went to a talk given by a supreme court justice who said, that due to the nature of many western countries having a British based legal system that they do look at the thinking of the highest courts in other former British colonies. Not only to see what they were thinking at the time but to see if there were unintended consequences to similar decisions.

  11. Re:Corporate interests on The New 501(c)(3) and the Future of Open Source In the US · · Score: 1

    The money has to come out of politics. What is your suggestion?

    PS I am not being sarcastic. Short of going back in time and asking for a few changes to the constitution, I am not sure what would work as money in politics seems to be a one way street.

  12. Corporate interests on The New 501(c)(3) and the Future of Open Source In the US · · Score: 1

    Hmmmmm.... would this benefit corporate interests? When the government makes any decision that is the only question that needs to be asked. The only time the answer is in doubt is if there are no corporate interests or the corporate interests are exactly balanced.

    So while I agree with the sentiment about this being deeply unfair, this is not thereal issue. If anyone wants to be upset about this issue and is willing to do something about it then join the movement to get corporate money out of politics; full stop.

  13. Re:See also Dr. David Goodstein on the Big Crunch on Teaching College Is No Longer a Middle Class Job · · Score: 1

    I think to sum up your comment I'll say, "Yup"
    It it one of those things that puzzle me (like why politicians who have a good heart and a public mandate go straight into office and immediately forget who elected them). But the arguments for having boatloads of impractical and practical science research go on and on with zillions of examples of how letting scientists free along with other variations such as grand prizes for specific technologies have resulted in massive benefits. Yet politicians love to point to money being wasted studying goat sex or some such as an excuse to cut all science. (Even with historical evidence that the benefits from even stupid sounding science can prove fruitful)

    The other thing that bothers me is that the remaining science is more and more bureaucratic. It seems that a well stocked modern lab would have 3 salesmen, 2 PR people, 2 lawyers, 2 MBAs and maybe 1 scientist or maybe an accountant would be better. Then there are the strange educational requirements. I was recently talking to a Dean of Medicine who was bragging that the new BS medical sciences degree applicants(at the same uni as his medical school) had a HS average of 98%. I asked him if he had a 98% leaving HS? If I were picking doctors I would much prefer people who had a proven interest in medicine with fairly good marks as opposed to kids who just wanted to be able to say they were in med school and had a combination of studying way too hard and easy marking teachers (I say that as I had a few teachers who thought that anything over 90% could only come from extraordinary effort basically precluding a 98% average)

    Then the last bit is that when I was in Uni there wasn't a whole lot of science going on. There was exactly one professor who was doing what I would call real research with real money and he came to the university with that money. The difference between him and the rest of the science professors was night and day. It was amazing. The rest were paper pushers that were one step above highschool teachers and he was something completely different. When you walked into the other professor's offices the conversations were about football or politics. But the one real professor would be having a discussion where they were wailing away on the 5 whiteboards in his office.

    Another university that I visited had a working cyclotron, working in that it would work if anyone knew how to work it. But nobody in the living memory of the staff had operated it. Not that a cyclotron is going to allow you to replicate a higgs boson experiment, it was that the students and staff weren't sufficiently nerdy to want to spool it up.

    But the worst of them all was that I attended an 3rd year electrical engineering robot competition. The robots had to negotiate a simple maze (maybe 9 turns to success); not only did nobody succeed but basically all the robots did one of two things, they ran straight into the first obstacle or they made one turn and ran into a wall. The most successful robots had the engineers who gave up on their sensors and simply programmed their robots to run the motors as a series of timed on off cycles to follow a probable path. But these were big dirty old DC motors so they don't respond identically to any given series of power cycles so within a few turns the robots were off course and would quickly get stuck. I am fairly certain my 12 year old nephews could have done better with that lego kit. BTW the PIC microcontroller was a capable little thing along with fairly good sensors so they should not have had much of a problem. Needless to say that engineering school isn't entering any Darpa challenges soon. But somehow the bar is so low that they don't even seem to realize (through youtube videos) that this is unacceptable.

    So you are correct. This is not the space race, Richard Feynman and his gang seem to have taken much of the zest with them to their graves. But my simple question is why? I have a few guesses. One is that science/technical universities should be kept separa

  14. Re:Another disturbing theory on Ninety-Nine Percent of the Ocean's Plastic Is Missing · · Score: 1

    I suspect that if a bacteria managed to create an enzyme or whatnot that could break down one kind of plastic that it might not be too many mutations away from similar types of plastic. And if bacteria could figure out one they could probably figure out them all.

  15. Another disturbing theory on Ninety-Nine Percent of the Ocean's Plastic Is Missing · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Plastic has lots of energy (try burning it) and thus could be a food source in and of itself. Thus there could be a bacteria that is eating it. Where this is disturbing is that we like to put useful plastic things into the water such as fibreglass boats. Could there be a bacteria evolving that will start corroding our plastics?

    Also the fish that eat it may now have a gut bacteria that will break it down.

    Whatever the truth turns out to be I suspect it will be fascinating!

  16. Exposure on Is K-12 CS Education the Next Common Core? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think that there should be more exposure to CS, CE, EE, CE, ME, etc. But not full on long term courses for any but a few faithful. It takes a certain mindset to enjoy computers and engineering; many people don't have this mindset so foisting it upon them is probably bad news. But for those who like it they like it a lot. I would have loved way more time in the computer lab during my youth.

    What I would have much preferred instead of a rigorous course that actually might have put me off CS; especially if taught by a bad teacher or two; Would have been a computer club/technology lab where we would be given the tools and tutorials to better understand what we liked and could do.

    Then when kids go to university and are learning fairly abstract concepts they would be able to regularly have "ah ha" moments where they could realize that this abstract knowledge could have solved problems they had back in the lab.

    Now I would like to see a bit more tech ed as (hard to understand for slashdotters) but there is a huge percentage of the population that simply has no idea what happens to make a light switch turn the lights on and off; let alone how the hell a 3 way light switch works.

    For instance in my children's schools they have chemistry labs that look like they were awesome 30 years ago. But now they are art rooms because of the great sinks and the fume hood is good for stinky art. So again nothing outside of a textbook(other than me) has ever shown my daughters how soap works.

    So before schools should make some foolish large attempt to impose their interpretation of CS they should look at the entire sci-tech teaching issue.

  17. Hands down, Simplicity of dependencies on Why Software Builds Fail · · Score: 1

    Simplicity of dependencies are the only way I survive C++ development. For instance I was just playing with OgreSDK, and it depended on my having a specific version of CMake installed in a specific way, in a specific directory. That's fine, oddly enough I can live with that. But how long before I combine Ogre with something that requires something different about the CMake installation?

    So, for instance I like the Crypto++ library because I can cheat and just slam it into my multi-platform codebase without worrying about keeping it separate. And seeing that over 50% of my code needs to run on 4 platforms I have become very sensitive to this kind of crap. I consider a platform specific #ifdef's to be a personal failure (even though they are lightly sprinkled through my code).

    I somewhat like boost with its mostly header only stuff but that is not without some consequences. POCO is cool but I find that having a single codebase that is multiplatform is an IDE configuration nightmare.

    So what is my favourite solution? I would say that libraries have many virtues but that in the end any fights with them can be horrific. So I am going to go with my present favourite for multiplatform dependency goodness; and that is Cocos2d-x; it isn't perfect but the nice combination of it being a library and part of your code base results in some of the fewest compilation problems that I have ever had.

    I would say that its primary cost is when you go to upgrade to a much newer version of the library. Basically you have a fight on your hands. But that fight is once in a blue moon. Whereas I find some other libraries are a non-stop fight, sometimes with no resolution.

  18. Not a good sign on Wikipedia Editors Hit With $10 Million Defamation Suit · · Score: 2

    It generally isn't a positive indication of how wholesome and wonderful a person you are when you sue one of the greatest achievements of the internet. If twitter, facebook, yelp, and even slashdot went away, there would be a loss but the loss of Wikipedia would be an epic loss for the internet.

    Also it is not the threat of a win that is a problem but Wikipedia's budget could be trashed by even just fighting a suit like this. So I hope that this guy gets horrifically Barbara Streisand'd to show that the cost to his reputation for suing Wikipedia will far exceed whatever gains he hopes to have.

  19. Re:Perjury anyone? on Emails Show Feds Asking Florida Cops To Deceive Judges About Surveillance Tech · · Score: 1

    If you have ever met a lawyer who works with cops you will have met a very frustrated lawyer. Some cops understand and can apply the rules. Many others do not have a clue and couldn't apply them anyway.

    I know one lawyer who was telling about their many years of working with cops and what was interesting was that they much preferred the local cops as they knew the routines way way better. But the grander more respected police force was borderline useless when it came to i dotting and t crossing. Plus this lawyer would do their damnedest to keep the latter off the stand unless there was no alternative at all.

    So I suspect that with this technology that some may have bent the rules and will get away with it. But I suspect that others didn't even know which rules shouldn't be broken and are so guilty that they are more guilty than the people they were trying to catch. Hopefully through the abuses of these people that the whole program is shut down.

  20. It can work well if done correctly on The Bursting Social Media Advertising Bubble · · Score: 2

    I have clients who have basically thrown their money into a facebook toilet; and I also have clients who have reaped huge benefits. The key for the ones where it worked was that they knew exactly who their customers were and very carefully measured the results and could then compare the value they got from facebook as compared to all other media including billboards. Facebook was the hands down winner and was more than 100x cheaper than things like radio on a per customer generated basis. On a side note billboards were far less effective but the best of the traditional media.

    But that only applied for a few narrow products. I don't think it would work very well for a high commitment product such as a car. I would not be surprised if the car companies have tried facebook and spent more in advertising per customer generated than they got back in profit per car. For instance I would recommend facebook for a TV show on tonight, and as a reminder to listen to some radio show. But it would require highly targeted advertising. So for Game of Thrones it probably isn't too hard for them to nail GOT watchers on Facebook with pinpoint accuracy and to make sure the ads were even episode specific. But for NBC to remind people to just watch NBC in general, probably a waste of money.

    So basically I would dismiss anyone who makes any generalizations about social media advertising as either being good or bad. It is a very specific tool that is very good for a narrow range of jobs.

  21. Re:Perjury anyone? on Emails Show Feds Asking Florida Cops To Deceive Judges About Surveillance Tech · · Score: 1

    But they were saying confidential informant, not electronic spy gizmo.

  22. Perjury anyone? on Emails Show Feds Asking Florida Cops To Deceive Judges About Surveillance Tech · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perjury anyone? Shouldn't there be a whole bus load of policemen going to jail? I am fairly certain that any of us would be going to jail if we deliberately falsified documents going to a judge for something as serious as a search warrant.

    This would be an excellent exercise in eliminating a whole swath of police who don't respect our rights. I would also hope that they put them in general population so that they can encounter first hand the monsters that their injustices have created.

  23. My childhood heros on Teaching College Is No Longer a Middle Class Job · · Score: 1

    Quite a few of my parent's friends and my relatives were professors of this and that. I thought they were the coolest people ever. They were so much more interesting to talk to and came very close to inspiring me to an academic life (the path not chosen for me). But in all those cases they fit that classic profile of having enough money to have the Volvo, the good house, and quite a bit of travel.

    But if they had been forced to live like grad students I can certainly say that I would have been far less inspired to follow in their footsteps. While I didn't take that path, how many people who would are being dissuaded now?

    I have a simple view as to what the problem is. Science money has two serious political problems. One is that it takes longer than an election cycle to create result, which themselves are often not initially sexy (think of how unimpressive the initial quantum discoveries were, but how much impact they eventually had). Also science often involves giving money to groups of already employed scientists who then spend the money in a myriad of different ways. Whereas giving money to a military contractor provides a bunch of fairly blue collar jobs and loads of kickbacks from the companies.

    But even worse this creates a feedback circuit. If you are a math whiz and are looking at your various options then business school should be a snap. Then you can follow in the footsteps of the Ferrari driving cool kids on Wall Street. If this actually works you will inspire another generation of whiz kids to follow you. But quite simply few nations can build greatness from banking. There needs to be something to bank.

    Basically if you go to most schools (especially impoverished ones) and ask the kids what route would you recommend for becoming really successful they will first say sports star, then rapper or other entertainer, and then things like banker, doctor, or lawyer. But engineer, scientist, inventor, or even building a manufacturing business just won't be on those kids minds.

    This is well emphasized when you look at the classic map of top paid collage official in various states and it is almost always a sports coach.

    The crazy thing is that a few schools have managed to master that connection with turning students/professors into businessmen and they are mindbogglingly successful. Not that money should be the only motive for science at least if there is some there it will inspire generation after generation of people who will propel civilization forward.

  24. But often the dealers are all owned by one family on NADA Is Terrified of Tesla · · Score: 1

    In many communities you will find that the major dealers for a given brand are owned by the same family. So you cross town for a better price and oddly enough it is identical.

  25. Toooooo Slooooow on Android Needs a Simulator, Not an Emulator · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have a bonkers fast machine with SSD, gobs of memory, CPUs on fire, etc. Yet running the android emulator is go off and make a sandwich time.

    I do 100% of my testing on actual devices which is not at all how I work with iOS. With iOS I only occasionally test my code on an actual device as there are occasional differences between the simulator and the actual devices.

    Also the android is all about settings, settings settings, instead of asking me if I have a keyboard, GPS, etc. What I would like is a list of the most popular phones. Then I could try out my code on those very phones. Also it would be great if someone had a problem with my app on a specific phone and I was able to quickly select that phone and try out my code.

    I get a feeling that the emulator was not so much aimed at developers of apps but aimed at hardware and OS developers who need this magically perfect emulation. Whereas the iOS Simulator is quite clearly aimed at people who are developing apps. Which oddly enough would be 99.999% of the potential audience.