Slashdot Mirror


User: aes123

aes123's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
6
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 6

  1. Is anyone surprised by this? on Supreme Court Says Gov't Employee Texts Not Private · · Score: 1

    Anyone with an employer provided phone who thinks that there's anything private on that phone is living in a fantasy land. How this got to the SUPREME COURT is completely beyond me.

  2. Re:Paging Mr. Vader - something slipping through on IT Workers To Get Fewer Perks, No Free Coffee · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hate to break it to you, but employees are one of the stakeholders at a company. Contrary to popular belief, a company's sole responsibility is NOT to its shareholders; a company needs to properly balance its responsibilities to it shareholders, employees, and customers. Employees are not ONLY an expense; very often, they are also the reason that a company has a profit to worry about in the first place. If a company spends .1% of its revenue on employee perks like coffee and it earns them 1% in productivity, that sounds like a fantastic return. Focusing on expenses only is back ass-wards, shortsighted, and often counterproductive.

  3. Re:why 520 days?! on Volunteers Wanted For Simulated 520-Day Mars Trip · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah! They were talking about a simulated one-way trip. At the end of the experiment, all of the volunteers will be suffocated or killed in a fire.

  4. Re:Personal Life on Apple's Obsession With Secrecy Grows Stronger · · Score: 1

    Apple is in the business of golden eggs. There aren't that many geese that will do.
    If you buy the argument that Jobs is a unique asset, which many people apparently do, then his health is a perfectly valid concern to Apple shareholders. Just continuing to run after he croaks isn't good enough. They have to continue to innovate and set trends.

  5. Good for them! on Mozilla Mulls Dropping Firefox For Win2K, Early XP · · Score: 1

    Hopefully that will free up testing and dev resources to focus on stability and performance in the new codebase. Supporting operating systems that MS doesn't even support any longer would have been a drain on thier resources with limited gain. If they can weather the storm of initial criticism, they'll be happy they did it now. With luck, they'll then find more problems that pop up more common systems before they hit the wild.

  6. Re:Are they breaking compatibility for its own sak on Mozilla Mulls Dropping Firefox For Win2K, Early XP · · Score: 2

    They're not breaking compatibility, they're dropping it. That's a big distiction. There's likely very few places where this will result in concrete code changes. However, it will remove two substantial branches from thier test plan, which should free up resources for testing Firefox on Win7 and new Linux distros. If you must continue to use XP, then carry on using FF3.0 or FF3.5. If, after Moz has dropped security enhancements to the versions that they support on your system, you still have a compelling reason to continue using the old OS, you're so far in the minority that supporting you doesn't make sense for any company to pay attention to you. You'll just have to do your computing in a clean room...