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User: jafac

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Comments · 9,345

  1. Re:Other than trading on Robots Help Manufacturing Recover Without Adding Jobs · · Score: 1

    condoms

  2. Re:no problem on NYC Police Comm'r: Privacy Is 'Off the Table' After Boston Bombs · · Score: 1

    Where we really need cameras are inside the nation's trading floors, boardrooms, and executive offices. /Libor

  3. Re:Who watches the watchers.... on NYC Police Comm'r: Privacy Is 'Off the Table' After Boston Bombs · · Score: 1

    . . . or citizens will be glad to provide their footage to 4chan, in which case, Anonymous will take it from there.

  4. Re:Specialty Software on Some Windows XP Users Can't Afford To Upgrade · · Score: 1

    Windows is certified, but also, RedHat Linux is certified.

  5. Re:Overloaded on Boston Officials Did Not Shut Down Cell Network After Marathon Bombing · · Score: 1

    tell you what. . .

    Been through TWO medium-sized California Earthquakes. Both of them knocked out cell service for >6hrs. One interrupted a call-in-progress.

  6. Re:Worth it? on Trader Pleads Guilty To Illegal Purchase of Nearly $1B In Apple Stock · · Score: 1

    The problem with these perversities, is that when it IS so easy for someone to get away with shit in bankruptcy, this triggers financial problems for their creditors; who had to eat that shit. It causes a chain reaction. So - while I am not really happy with the 2005 re-write of the bankruptcy code, in general - I think that there are plenty of cases where it didn't go far enough.

  7. Re:The Real Problem on Organic Pollutants Poison the Roof of the World · · Score: 1

    this

  8. Re:We did it! on AMD Says There Will Be No DirectX 12 — Ever · · Score: 3, Funny

    naw. DirectX is TOTALLY cross-platform man! It works on Windows XP, it works on Windows Vista, It works on Windows 7, it works on Windows 8, it works on X-Box, X-Box 360 - and it's gonna be the premier platform for the greatest games coming out on the hottest new platform, the X-Box 720. You guys just don't know what you're talking about and if your'e not developing in DirectX (TM), you're really missing the boat, and I feel sorry for you, because you're going to be left behind in the great new future that's ahead of us all in the world of Microsoft(TM) 3D(TM) Game(TM) Programming(TM). I am not even joking(TM).

  9. Re:Loaded language? on Browser Choice May Affect Your Job Prospects · · Score: 1

    TL;DR Life isn't fair.

  10. Re:And if you run Lynx on Browser Choice May Affect Your Job Prospects · · Score: 1

    This may sound kind of deranged, but my current employer asked me to down-format my resume to straight ascii text. I was kind of shocked. Then, at the interview, I was chided for wearing a tie. Fucking California.

  11. Re:Let me guess - in 20 years? on Fusion Rocket Could Take Us To Mars · · Score: 1

    you're not factoring-in relativity. Fusion will be available in 20 years, unless you approach the speed of light, using a fusion drive, in which case, time slows down, and fusion will be available at some point further in the future.

  12. Re:Depends on the subject on Getting a Literature Ph.D. Will Make You Into a Horrible Person · · Score: 1

    what factory? Where are these magical factories of which you speak?

  13. Re:This is a warning many need to hear on Getting a Literature Ph.D. Will Make You Into a Horrible Person · · Score: 1

    god I wish they'd legalize that shit you're smoking. because it's Friday afternoon man.

  14. Re:Not surprised on Getting a Literature Ph.D. Will Make You Into a Horrible Person · · Score: 1

    this

  15. Re:Beauty of a Hydrogen economy on Big Advance In Hydrogen Production Could Change Alternative Energy Landscape · · Score: 1

    meh. I've been saying this for 30 years. What ARE we waiting for?

  16. Re:So? on Nuclear Power Prevents More Deaths Than It Causes · · Score: 1

    the problem with that 250k year halflife is that the stuff gets PHYSICALLY hot as it's stored. Like, hot enought that it sets stuff on fire. And the decay byproducts are short-lived; some of them are some pretty nasty short-term gasses.

    So they have to be kept sealed, and cooled under water for many months at first. (in some cases, many years).

    They have a method of "dry cask" storage - for waste that has cooled somewhat. But you STILL can't get an unprotected human being anywhere near it without lethally dosing your maintenance workers, and setting work-equipment or storage containers on fire. You maybe have animals (birds, bugs) flying near the stuff and picking up byproduct contamination, and carrying it away. (this is happening at Hanford, in Washington State). The spent fuel's in this state for hundreds, maybe thousands of years. No human civilzation has yet lasted that long - we're going to figure out how to manage that?

  17. Re:good thing Hansen is leaving NASA on Nuclear Power Prevents More Deaths Than It Causes · · Score: 1

    I would think that a NASA dude would be advocating for solar-placed PV arrays. Or at the very least, some form of space-based nuclear waste disposal (like "Space 1999") - I agree that we need to get away from a carbon-based energy infrastructure. But nuclear isn't a good answer. So says all the Cesium-137 particles all over my property from Fukushima 2 years ago, and for the next 28 or so years. Thanks a lot, TEPCO.

  18. Re:It takes 20+ years to build a nuclear plant on Nuclear Power Prevents More Deaths Than It Causes · · Score: 1

    yeah - you guys store your nuclear waste THERE, then.

  19. Re:It takes 20+ years to build a nuclear plant on Nuclear Power Prevents More Deaths Than It Causes · · Score: 1

    That's right. My brother-in-law Wayne, can actually build a working reactor in 3 and a half years, if you just cut all the bullshit red-tape. Give him a call.

  20. Re:Is there an app bubble? on Ask Slashdot: Preparing For the 'App Bubble' To Pop? · · Score: 1

    This - THIS; holy fuck listen to this guy.
    I was there. I remember. "The end of business cycles." "P/E ratios don't mean anything anymore." and the ever popular: "the end of history."

    Companies were given money for the sake of being vehicles for investors' pump-n-dump schemes.

      I think that's happening today too. (though - I seriously can't tell what the fuck is going on with Facebook. They are trying so hard to piss-off their user base and give every competitor every opportunity to eat their lunch - and their monopoly remains resilient for some insane god damned reason.)

  21. Re:Steve Jobs on Steve Jobs' First Boss: 'Very Few Companies Would Hire Steve, Even Today' · · Score: 1

    The "out of town coup" is a very typical Silicon Valley dirty-trick.

    It was done (successfully) at my startup. It was after a merger, in 1996, when my company was bought by another company (a competitor), but as part of the deal, our CEO was placed in-charge. It had been a heavily leveraged deal.

    It's been long enough, and this company doesn't exist anymore, so I'll name names.
    Seagate Software. (They were later bought by Veritas, later bought by Symantec).

      (we had gotten a lot of options - and the buy-out made even junior-level employees rather wealthy) - About a year after. . . some managers from the other company arranged a deal with an Asian distributor, and sent our CEO to China for a 2 week trip. Their product had had a very bad quarter, and they had missed a delivery for a major upgrade. (we later found out that this was intentional; their project manager took ownership of a couple of major bugs, and sat on them, on purpose). While our CEO was gone to China, they got the board to vote on his ouster. (it turned out to be a completely bogus trip - there was no deal, just a guy at the distributor willing to waste our CEO's time and keep him busy and out of contact for 2 weeks). Fuckers showed up at our office on Monday morning, handing us all big fat layoff packages, (some of us got retention and relocation deals), and they basically pushed a plan to close our branch office.

    By the time the CEO and his allies knew what the fuck was going on, all of the major talent at our branch fucked-off, took their severance, stock deals, and got other jobs.

    The sad thing was, it was our customer base that really got fucked over. People paid REAL money for our software back then.

    Later - I heard that this was a pretty common trick in takeovers and leveraged buyouts. The sleazebags who ran the other company weren't even technical people - they were financiers. They made a fuckton of money, the technology all got shut down, the engineers went elsewhere. They took that money and used it for other IPO buyouts later.

    By the time 4 or 6 years passed, we're into 2000, 2001, 2002, and that's where you started to see a real squeeze in our industry, and old-school players like Sun, DEC, and HP were feeling the heat from these shenanigans. A whole fuckton of people who used to innovate and work with technology for a living, pretty
    much either retired, or found something else to do for a living. They called it an "industry consolidation". We also have not really seen much in the way of innovation since then, either. Unless you count iPads and "cloud computing".

    Dirty fuckers who had nothing at all to do with technology.

    Yeah, we needed money to do all this stuff. But the guys who make the money available, are basically the devil.

  22. Re:He's Dead Jim on Steve Jobs' First Boss: 'Very Few Companies Would Hire Steve, Even Today' · · Score: 1

    They seem to get a lot of mileage out of this Jesus guy.

  23. Re:In all fairness with this economy. on Steve Jobs' First Boss: 'Very Few Companies Would Hire Steve, Even Today' · · Score: 1

    Yeah - basically, if you could turn-on a computer, you were "golden". Bushnell's trying to take credit for being "the genius who hired Steve Jobs" when really - things were different back then, and standards were just plain lower. Steve Jobs was a one in a million lucky shot, and there's no way that their "cultivating" could have intentionally discovered or created some genius.

    I agree that a lot of typical corporate culture DOES stifle creativity, and there are probably a lot of great ideas out there stuck inside people who are chained into cubicles and dead-end jobs. But to use a gardening analogy: if you scatter fertilizer over a huge field, all you're going to get is a bunch of crappy weeds.

  24. Not a joke on Linus Torvalds To Head Windows 9 Project · · Score: 1

    This is all part of the "fellatio competition" that Torvalds was talking about. (with regard to the UEFI encryption).

  25. Re:solar panel on pack on Bosch Finds Solar Business Unprofitable, Exits · · Score: 1

    this was my experience as well.

    Larger surface area would work, but if you're on the move, in semi-shaded woodland, you're not going to get enough to charge an ipod in an 8 hr day of hiking.