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User: akeeneye

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  1. Re:Spanish on Ask Slashdot: 2nd Spoken/Written Language For Software Developer? · · Score: 1

    I'm an American coder for a short while in Chermany living. I have found that not all Chermans are fluent in English. People with university educations perfect English speak. But I, in shops and other non-professional places (at least in Berlin), people with no English find. I was at that surprised. That said, it's amazing how much English has been incorporated both into the vocabulary and the culture. I am always advertising in English/Denglish seeing, and it strikes me as very odd that the Cherman culture would is so infected, linguistically, with an alien language. The Cherman people that I with speaking seem to think nothing of it though.

  2. Re:Benefits on Book Review: Sams Teach Yourself Node.js In 24 Hours · · Score: 1

    I've just started messing with Node, and so far it's fun, but it's nothing that lives up to what the fanboys who I know have implied. They seem to think it's got some kind of secret sauce to it that makes it unbelievably fast, completely stomping those Average Bargain Brand web frameworks that have been put together by ignorant clods who don't understand networking or application design. These fanboys are mostly JS devs from client-land who have taken some long drags on the Hype Pipe, and I suspect that many like them are behind all the Node noise. Mostly Node feels to me like an ultra-lightweight wrapper around my code. It makes me think of the minimalist Python frameworks I've assembled from parts like CherryPy and Genshi. The parent made a good analogy of it to a command line tool. I hadn't thought of it that way, but yeah. If you write your app code in CoffeeScript you'll be able to enjoy using a modern language with Node, or at least the illusion of one until it gets compiled.

  3. Re:God damn it on Congressional Committee Casts a Harsh Eye On Vaccination Science · · Score: 1

    You're right, that's what I should have said. I sit corrected.

  4. Re:God damn it on Congressional Committee Casts a Harsh Eye On Vaccination Science · · Score: 1
    Maybe not in the Congress, but thank the FSM for Bernie Sanders in the Senate.

    I used to have respect for Kucinich, too.

    Isn't there anyone in Congress who has the people's best interest at heart AND has a brain in their head?

    The two traits are so uncommon in Congress that I suppose it would be wishful thinking to imagine that there was any overlap.

  5. Re:Bitbucket on Half of GitHub Code Unsafe To Use (If You Want Open Source) · · Score: 2

    You're giving credence to a rant from 2008 by someone who doesn't even know how to turn off Apache directory indexing on his own user directory? FWIW, Bitbucket did a complete redesign of their site and released it on October: http://blog.bitbucket.org/2012/10/09/introducing-the-redesigned-bitbucket/ .

  6. Bitbucket on Half of GitHub Code Unsafe To Use (If You Want Open Source) · · Score: 3, Informative

    As is Bitbucket (bitbucket.org), with the added bonus that the private repos that you create there are free too.

  7. Re:My ex on Humans Evolving Faster Than Ever · · Score: 1

    He said he had a wife, which casts doubt on your speculations. Current Slashdot theory holds that participants ARE indeed wankers in the basement, WoW glowing on the screen, surrounded by greasy old pizza boxes and assorted filth. Relationships with the opposite hand would strain the theory (it would show initiative) but relationships with the opposite sex would shatter it, as there is no known mechanism for the introduction of mating females into such habitats. That said, it's possible that he became a Slashdotter post-marriage.

  8. The Scientific Center on In a Symbolic Shift, IBM's India Workforce Likely Exceeds That In US · · Score: 1

    During a co-op stint and also fresh from college I worked for a time at the IBM Cambridge Scientific Center in Kendall Sq. Back then, the Center had some sort of mission to interact with, assist, and leverage the local academic scene - MIT and Harvard students and researchers mostly. This posting makes me wonder if the company has now also given up on US universities and is spending its time, attention, and $ on Indian schools instead? It's amazing how far this company has fallen since back in the day (meaning prior to the mid-80s) when an IBM job was one that you had for life (there was a "no layoff policy") and one you could be reasonably proud of. In my numerous co-op gigs with them I learned more than I ever did at my (very good) engineering university. I suppose now that the kind of expertise and training that I was the beneficiary of is being provided only to overseas engineers.

  9. Re:Apartheid on Saudi Arabia Implements Electronic Tracking System For Women · · Score: 1

    OT, but one need only walk through an old cemetery in New England (and in the Old no doubt) to observe how many people lived deep into geezerhood. It's not at all uncommon to see gravestones with something like (b1724 - d1810) etched on them. It initially struck me as counter-intuitive, after all, these people had far less of the "medical science" that would have saved them from dying from routing ailments and injuries. I speculate, but maybe, just maybe, the relative lack of food additives as well as limited industrial (and I'm not referring to city life here) and auto pollution lead to overall better health? Also, perhaps, a relative lack of mental stress caused by, among other things, the modern rat race of life and wage-slavery, helped the otherwise-healthy to achieve long lifespans?

  10. Capsized on Sandy Island, the Undiscovered Country · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking that, due to overpopulation, it simply capsized and sunk. Like Guam might. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=bs23CjIWMgA#t=76s

  11. Re:Put badge in microwave for 10 seconds. on Student Refusing RFID Badge Now Fights Expulsion Order · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yes. In Washington state, and probably others, when you get your chipped "Enhanced Driver's License", the DOL issues it along with a "tinfoil" sleeve to keep it in when you're not producing it to display to The Authorities. Aside: I've yet to find a US/Canada border crossing that can read the chips. They always swipe the EDLs through what I assume is a magcard reader. Now that could just be a charade of some sort and they're actually reading the chips, but that seems somewhat unlikely, and, well, tinfoil-hattish. When asked, one of the US interrogators said that the smaller crossings didn't get all the high-tech goodies such as the readers and had to do things the old-fashioned way.

  12. Emanating as this does from the WSJ on How Free Speech Died On Campus · · Score: 0, Troll

    ... I'm not surprised to see the carping about how the right-wing is allegedly being oppressed on college campuses. But it also makes me wonder to what extent Christian schools tolerate free speech. The Wikipedia page for Liberty U describes how the school "un-recognized" the Democratic student group for being ideologically unfit.

  13. Re:I thought metric solved these issues on Fukushima Ocean Radiation Won't Quit · · Score: 1

    I passed through last summer. There's a primitive civilization there that probably deserves more study by anthropologists. The members worship a subset of their ancestors, referred to by them as "cowboys", and they build impressive monuments that they call "wind turbines" in "farms" that cover vast areas of land.

  14. Re:Signal isn't chaning, the noise floor is on Ask Slashdot: Why Does Wireless Gear Degrade Over Time? · · Score: 1

    My WRT54G - the model that runs a Linux kernel - died about a week ago too. New-ish, but out of warrantee of course. I had DD-WRT on it from the beginning and it's been fine. I'd thought these models were tanks, but now I think I'll just save money and get a disposable AP/router that runs Tomato or DD-WRT. To be fair, I'd had the Linksys stacked on top of a Q1000 (I think) DSL box so if the Linksys had overheating issues to begin with, that may have sealed its fate. I wonder if using a mineral oil bath for cooling the AP would degrade the signal?

  15. Ask the jellyfish on How Long Do You Want To Live? · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immortal_jellyfish Impressive, but I'm not sure if I'd want to keep going back to my sexually immature, colonial stage over and over and over again.

  16. Re:Blade Runner flashbacks on Grumman Building Football Field-Sized Robotic Surveillance Blimp · · Score: 1

    Blade Runner, that's what *immediately* leapt to my mind too. I wonder if these things will have giant display ads on the sides? "Sponsored by the Exxon Corporation" maybe.

  17. Re:Knight really this screwed up... on Algorithmic Trading Glitch Costs Firm $440 Million · · Score: 1

    I was thinking that with the tight market for developers in NYC, rather than getting fired the devs might get fat bonuses for having limited the losses to "only" $440M. But your scenario makes a lot of sense too. With a bailout _everyone_ in the company could have gotten a bonus. So maybe they need higher quality shitty developers there -- experienced architects who can deliver not just fuck-ups, but fully-redundant clustered-fucks designed for scalable failure. If the money's good they'll have my CV by morning.

  18. Re:Private property equalling theft on US Navy Admiral Questions Expensive Stealth Platforms · · Score: 1
    There's a reward for doing so, the same reward the workers get - the capital owners get to make a living. Just like the workers. Except they don't have to work in the same way as the workers, they have to mind their spreadsheets instead.

    But in (our Western version of) Capitalism, those with capital lay (a bogus) claim to ALL the surplus value created, and this is what's wrong with it in my mind. Surplus value: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surplus_value

    In terms of risk, I think it's notable that in a great many occupations, the laborer (ditch digger, data-entry person, letter carrier ..) takes some, if not substantial risk to his or her health, up to and including death, in the course of producing the aforementioned surplus value. It seems to me that they deserve every bit as much compensation for personal health and life risks arising from the production of surplus value as the capital-owners do for risking money. Perhaps more - you can always get more money but you can't get more life.

  19. Re:Gotta love politicans on Senate Bill Raises Possibility of Withdrawl From ITER As Science Cuts Loom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, military spending should be cut back drastically. Endless pork for the military, endless, war, and demands for domestic spending cuts "because the government's broke" and "because we can't afford these programs" don't add up. And now this, cutting fusion research funding, something that could end oil dependence, while giving oil companies billions of dollars in subsidies every year. Which politicians are in the pockets of defense contractors and oil companies? Pretty much all of them.

  20. Re:Funny how there's no list this time. on Nearly Half a Million Yahoo Passwords Leaked [Updated] · · Score: 1

    Just google "yahoo-disclosure.txt"

  21. Likewise, what I'd like to hear is for a hetero marriage advocate to explain why gay marriage should be illegal yet hetero marriage should be legal. "Tradition" doesn't cut it any more than "we've always done things this way" is a valid argument in other contexts. "Only a man and a woman can reproduce" is a worthless argument because they can reproduce outside of marriage too. If gays need to prove that they're entitled to legal recognition (rights, marriage) then heteros need to prove the same thing.

  22. Re:Surprisingly? No. on Firefox Notably Improved In Tom's Hardware's Latest Browser Showdown · · Score: 1
    Caveat: I have no detailed knowledge of the Chrome architecture. That said:
    1. I rather doubt that the tab processes are forks of the entire browser. I expect that that the main process execs tab processes as needed. On my system I see one big (virtual mem) chromium-browser process and a number of much smaller child processes of that.
    2. Shared memory. All of the tab processes should be sharing their code pages at minimum. Kernel geeks, correct me if I'm wrong on that.

    So no, the resident memory usage of Chrome is not going to be sizeof(Chrome main process) * number_of_tabs_open.

  23. Re:First Thetan! on Church of Scientology Enlisting Followers In Censorship · · Score: 1

    "used sandwiches"? I know how that's going to come out, all brown and squishy and reeking. But you're right, that's the foundation of most religions.

  24. Re:Other options? on Mozilla Downshifting Development of Thunderbird E-Mail Client · · Score: 1

    Opera. The mail client is part of the web browser.

  25. Re:Traffic reducing? on Ford Predicts Self-Driving, Traffic-Reducing Cars By 2017 · · Score: 5, Funny

    And I won't give up my right to stomp on my brakes in freeway traffic at the slightest, most innocuous change in my driving environment. Drops of rain on the windshield when there weren't any before, a piece of re-tread off by the guard-rail, a looming curve ahead while the road was heretofore straight. Stomp, stomp, stomp. I hope these jokers aren't going to leave out the rubberneck-at-the-accident-across-the-highway-median programming and force me to root the damn thing if I want to preserve my right as an American to create a traffic jam out of nothing.