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User: CyberDong

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Comments · 149

  1. Re:Yeah, but we're very productive on US Near Bottom In Life Expectancy In Developed World · · Score: 4, Informative

    Interesting read...

    The Swiss army has long been a militia trained and structured to rapidly respond against foreign aggression. Swiss males grow up expecting to undergo basic military training, usually at age 20 in the Rekrutenschule (German for "recruit school"), the initial boot camp, after which Swiss men remain part of the "militia" in reserve capacity until age 30 (age 34 for officers). Each such individual is required to keep his army-issued personal weapon (the 5.56x45mm Sig 550 rifle for enlisted personnel and/or the 9mm SIG-Sauer P220 semi-automatic pistol for officers, military police, medical and postal personnel) at home.

  2. All that's needed now... on Carrion Flies Used To Find New Species · · Score: 1

    ...is a tiny little Heimlich machine to get them to purge their meals. Wouldn't want any of the little critters to be harmed, or PETA will be railing against science again.

  3. Take a job in QA on Ask Slashdot: Advancing a Programming Career? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most developers tend to think that QA is for button pressers and failed programmers. However, having a couple of good programmers on the QA team can dramatically improve a product. If you're really a good programmer then you can take requirements and write GOOD tests. Also, as a programmer, you can deconstruct what the dev team has built, and look for ways to make it fail (i.e. the cases they failed to consider). If you understand the nuances of the language, you can better anticipate the edge cases that a lot of non-technical QA folks would miss.

    I've been down this path, and found that when a dev team knows there's someone who will call bullshit on their submissions (and can back it up), the code that's checked in tends to be better.

  4. Re:I LOVE AMERICA! on Patriot Act Clouds Picture For Tech · · Score: -1, Troll

    I used to be a necrophiliac too.... but one day the rotten bitch split on me, and it was over.

  5. Partial Solution... on Ask Slashdot: Best Tools To Aid When "On Call"? · · Score: 0

    I'm sure you could mod one of these to do the trick...

  6. Re:It's gigawatts pronounced oddly... on All-Electric DeLorean Car To Hit the Streets In 2013 · · Score: 1

    stupid preview... changing links and stuff... it's http://bttf.com/index2.php

  7. Re:It's gigawatts pronounced oddly... on All-Electric DeLorean Car To Hit the Streets In 2013 · · Score: 1

    According to BTTF.COM, it's jigowatts.

  8. Re:"So why aren't we doing it?" on Ask Slashdot: Could We Deal With the End of Time Zones? · · Score: 1

    LOFL!

  9. Solarigami on MIT Researchers Printing Solar Cells On Fold-able Sheets · · Score: 3, Funny

    The company that commercializes this tech will quickly fold.

  10. That does it! on EVE Online Players Rage, Protest Over Microtransactions · · Score: 2

    I'm quitting Eve. The first one who gives me 1 Tritanium can have all my stuff. I've set up a contract in-game -- search for "Tritanium".

  11. Re:"Cloud water" and "Debunks" on LulzSec Debunks UK Census Hack · · Score: 1

    I did proofread it.... Then I went back and added the "e" for effect.

  12. Re:"Cloud water" and "Debunks" on LulzSec Debunks UK Census Hack · · Score: 1

    But typoes are okay, right?

  13. Similar developments in Healthcare on AP Investigation Concludes US Nuke Regulators Weakening Safety Rules · · Score: 1

    Who'd have expected such prescience from The Onion?

  14. Bitcoin miner. on Ask Slashdot: Uses For a Small Office Server? · · Score: 1

    That machine could be adding to the company's bottom line instead of just being a depreciating asset.

  15. Re:Going back to 1998... on Duke Nukem Forever Goes Gold · · Score: 1

    Actually, I have it on good authority that 1998 is about right for that UID.

  16. Re: the world's largest public penetration test? on Sony Music Greece Falls To Hackers · · Score: 1

    Actually, I think it's Lisa Sparxxx at 919 guys.

  17. Re:unconventional mathematical notation on Hewlett Packard's Cult Calculator Turns 30 · · Score: 2

    Strange thing is these cost as much as they did when i bought mine 20 + years ago.. They should be cheaper now, so what is up with that?

    If you figure $61 based on a google search, and calculate the inflation-adjusted price then you see that it's only actually $35.71 in 1990 dollars. So they have become significantly cheaper.

  18. Re:PAF on Best Open Source Genealogy Software? · · Score: 1

    Excellent tutorial, now let's move on to the Oxford comma.

  19. Re:Oh My... on Smithsonian Celebrates 50 Years of COBOL · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Dear God, I'm old.

  20. Re:"Agile", no -- "agile", yes on A Decade of Agile Programming — Has It Delivered? · · Score: 1

    In my experience, the CYA document's biggest use is to provide a baseline for Change Requests (which are always billable) by a consulting company.

    "We built what you signed off on. Now pay us a bunch more money, and we'll turn it into what you actually need. Oh, and we'll update our documentation for an additional fee".

  21. "Agile", no -- "agile", yes on A Decade of Agile Programming — Has It Delivered? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've worked in 100% waterfall, and in good agile environments, and I've found the key is to keep things small-a "agile", not to concentrate on capital-a Agile. Some places embrace Agile as a process, and fill binders with process documentation around their Agile process - at which point it's no better than any other.

    I think the key to success is summed up in this line from T3FA:

    "Most teams are not adopting scrum, extreme programming, or another specific Agile approach, but are embracing agile as an ethos or philosophy and cherry-picking the best bits from many different process models to develop a formula unique to their own situation," according to the report.

  22. Re:Great Game on Review: Civilization V · · Score: 1

    There is an aspect of Religion in the Social Policy "Piety". Items such as "Mandate of Heaven" and "Theocracy" are in there, and they affect your civilization's happiness and culture.

  23. Re:Glory hound on Super Principia Mathematica · · Score: 4, Funny

    There is an identical review on Amazon that is attributed to the firm.

    But did you read the OTHER review on Amazon?

    "Super Principia Mathematica was better than my wedding, better than watching my first son born, better than the time I had sexual intercourse with an entire college cheerleading squad while high on peyote."

  24. Re:Quicksand... on The Rise and Fall of Quicksand In the Movies · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why... Quicksand footage is usually gritty and gripping!

  25. Re:Too close to the subject... on How Can I Make Testing Software More Stimulating? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At the risk of sounding pedantic, I'd suggest that you limit your email testing to either address you own, or else domains like "example.com" that are reserved for testing. Domains like asdf.com are routinely flooded with unsolicited email due to people using it as a bogus domain name. More importantly, by using real domain names while testing software, you risk inadvertently emailing sensitive data to somewhere it should not go!