Slashdot Mirror


User: dward90

dward90's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
141
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 141

  1. Re:I dunno... on Ask Slashdot: Are Timed Coding Tests Valuable? · · Score: 3, Informative

    While you're absolutely correct that a fizzbuzz test is not a good way to determine if you *want* to hire someone, I think you're missing the point of these kind of exercises. It's purpose is to weed out candidates who are a complete waste of time. Trivially simple programming tests don't tell you if a person is a good developer. A passed test means basically nothing. However, a failed test means that to spend any time interviewing that candidate is a complete waste.

    Note that I'm talking about really simple stuff, with no real time limit and not caring about bullshit syntax (You forgot a semi-colon! Go home!). I would never expect an experienced developer to code out complex sorting or search algorithms from memory. Those tests, for sure, don't tell you anything.

  2. Bingo! on Third 2012 US Presidential Debate Tonight: Discuss Here · · Score: 3, Informative

    Somehow, I don't suspect we'll see anything different than we saw in the first two: heated exchange of cliches and platitudes, punctuated with awkward smiles. Enjoy it while you can.

    Play logical fallacy bingo! It also makes a great drinking game.

  3. Re:Paradoxical on Quantum Experiment Shows Effect Before Cause · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure how serious you are, but I'll point out the problem at the risk of killing the joke. The issue is in step 2. Photons travel at the speed of light (by definition). Because we cannot send information faster than the speed of light, the photons arrive at Victor strictly before any message from Alice and Bob.

  4. Re:This seems a bit one-sided... on Internet Responds To Racist Article, Gets Author Fired · · Score: 1

    >>>avoid conversation with unknown [...] people.

    This is a wiser way of life (IMHO).

    So....never make a friend outside your own family? You can develop meaningful relationships based on a certain level of trust. You can (and should) trust that any person who engages in a civil conversation will not shoot you without provocation. You should not, however, give that person your SSN or credit card information. There's a difference, and isolationism and skepticism of every other human on the planet will not allow you to function properly in society.

  5. Re:Simple solution... on Tennessee Passes Bill That Allows "Teaching the Controversy" of Evolution · · Score: 1

    Name a single set of global average temperature and global average CO2 observations, past, present or future, that would falsify Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming.

    You clearly have your mind made up about this, but I'll respond anyway.

    A set of temperatures taken over a long period of time (say 50 years) that show a statistically significant decrease in average global temperature in addition to a significant increase in average global CO2 levels over the previous 50 years would falsify this hypothesis. It's really not that complicated. It falsifies global warming at least as much as finding a modern fossil dated to a time when it shouldn't exist falsifies evolution.

    You might be making some sort of argument that science can't actually make large scale predictions about the future based on past data, which is a giant sweeping argument about the philosophy of science that I doubt you're trying to get at that here. I'll leave that possibility alone, but if that's what you're talking about, you can go argue about those meaningless definitions with someone else.

  6. Re:Simple solution... on Tennessee Passes Bill That Allows "Teaching the Controversy" of Evolution · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Global warming certainly qualifies by any realistic definition of a hypothesis. You might disagree with the hypothesis, but it's at least as falsifiable as Evolution.

    Contributed to, at least in part, by human activity, a steady increase in global average temperature will have negative effects on the environment and human society at large.

    It's possible that you're talking about some ridiculous exaggeration of that ("OMG we're all gonna burn up in flames because Tom's car only gets 12 MPG!!"), but GW is a pretty clear statement that has plenty of measurable criteria. You can be pedantic and demand exact definitions for human contribution, temperature increase, and whether negative effects are caused by the former, but all are still clearly testable.

    It's most definitely science. Much of the disagreement about it comes on disputing the validity of data acquired and how it's interpreted. However, the fact that data is being acquired and interpreted, and the fact that it is under scrutiny, is what makes the entire process scientific and worthwhile in the first place.

  7. Re:LOL ... on Users Spend More Time On Myspace Than Google+ · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Google isn't going to let its foray into the most profitable market... possibly ever (sales of personal information of others), just fade off into obscurity.

    Can you provide a single example where Google has ever sold personal information to any third party ever? I get that privacy is important and Google might be pushing the boundaries on it, but spreading FUD like this isn't helping your cause.

  8. Re:Lot's of possibilities on James Randi's Latest Debunking Operation · · Score: 2

    Do you actually know any Mormans? Their religion in strange, but so is all of Christianity. They are no more "pseudo" religion than any other religion I've encountered, and the vast majority a better people than the average asshole.

  9. Re:We did it in Holland on Obama Pushes For Cheaper Pennies · · Score: 1

    I'm an American, and I think getting rid of pennies entirely would be a great idea. Until we can convince everyone of that, though, making them cheaper to produce seems like the right move

  10. Re:Android phone on The Google+ Name Game Continues · · Score: 1

    My android phone uses my main account, so I'm not sure what you're talking about there (unless you're just saying that you wanted an account on your phone not tied to you). And my girlfriend just got an iphone, and you absolutely do have to have an apple account to use it (at least we couldn't find a way around it).

  11. Re:Google Inflating User Amount on The Google+ Name Game Continues · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Going to invalidate my mod points (I already modded you informative) just to give a clarification:

    I tested this out myself, and it's true that it takes you to a page to create your google plus account, and does not give you the option to skip. This is terrible design.
    However, if you just leave the bloody page, you have a google account without g+.

  12. Re:same old same old on Ask Slashdot: Which Candidates For Geek Issues? · · Score: 1

    This is a very well-reasoned approach to the issue that would largely solve the problem. However, it does not coincide with the reality of country in which we live. "Marriage" is defined by governments and has been since the inception of the nation. Changing it now would be next to impossible, as you would literally have to "abolish marriage" in the process, which neither party would allow you to do. I agree with your ideal, I just wish that it was possible to get there.

  13. Re:same old same old on Ask Slashdot: Which Candidates For Geek Issues? · · Score: 2

    While I can see an argument for Democrats heavily favoring culture and entertainment, can you please cite any examples in recent memory where Democrats act in the interest of financial services any more than Republicans? The current democratic president has created an entire oversight body to attempt to reign in the corruption rampant in that industry, and Republicans in congress have blocked it from becoming fully operational until the looming recess appointment of its director.

  14. Re:Self-fulfilled research on Apple Increases Dominance of Mobile Shopping · · Score: 1

    Legitimate question: are you exaggerating? Average household income in the U.S. 31,000 dollars (in 2007). The countries I see with 1/6th of that are Turkey and Mexico. Are you from either?

  15. Re:$100M really? on Star Wars: the Old Republic Launches · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Napkin math:

    200 employees (random guess, but my gut says that's a low number)
    x $75k per year (another random guess, but I don't think it's absurd)
    x 5 years in development
    = 75 million. Add in marketing, management, and server costs, and you might be there.

    Oh, and don't forget license fees. I won't speculate on what Lucas is charging them, but I bet it's mindboggling.

  16. Re:WoW 2.0 on Star Wars: the Old Republic Launches · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't understand who you're talking to. It's the best leveling experience I've ever experienced in an MMO. Sure, it's not a completely new genre. If you were looking for something that doesn't play like an MMO, then you were looking in the wrong place. You can downplay the effect that the conversations and story have all you want, but it doesn't change the fact that those elements make leveling feel extremely different from World of Warcraft (unless you spacebar every conversation, in which case you're missing the point of the game).

    What you seem to be saying is that you don't enjoy MMOs. That's a valid opinion, but it's not a valid criticism for this game.

  17. Re:Stop and think on India To Cut Out Animal Dissection · · Score: 1

    There aren't a shortage of animals to dissect, I'll give you that. There is, however, a shortage of time and money. Lab quality preserved animals are not cheap, and doing a dissection lab takes a lot more time and effort from professors and their assistants than alternatives.

  18. Stop and think on India To Cut Out Animal Dissection · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please, before responding with an idiotic "But how will my doctor know what they are doing?!?!", think about this for more than 2 seconds. The vast majority of students in undergraduate biology classes will never in their lives have to cut open and dissect another animal of any kind, and the knowledge they gain from it could easily be gained by simulation. For the very small minority of students who will require surgical or dissection skills (doctors at vets), there is ample time to get them that specialized experience in their respective graduate programs. This is a good change to focus resources where they will be the most useful.

  19. Re:the pro in pro sports on NFL: National Football Luddites? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Please cite examples of this. I think you're factually incorrect. There might be a small number (single digits) of players in all of American professional sports who act the way you are describing. The vast majority act (shockingly) *professional*. They say things like "We've worked hard and we're going to try to get better every day. I'm happy to do what I do for a living." I would put my foot in mouth and consider myself humbled if you could cite one example of a players acting like "a bunch of prima donnas" without finding a dozen where they act like (again, shocking) professionals.

  20. Re:It should be illegal..... on 24-Year-Old Asks Facebook For His Data, Gets 1,200 PDFs · · Score: 1, Funny

    Self reply, your you're there their they're etc.

  21. Re:It should be illegal..... on 24-Year-Old Asks Facebook For His Data, Gets 1,200 PDFs · · Score: 3

    I promise you that their TOS doesn't say they will delete shit when you tell them to. I get you're point, but you're being a colossal douche about it. Please calm down.

  22. Re:Minecraft influence on Miyamoto Steps Down As Nintendo Game Design Head · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the response. I'd say that the substantive "beta" product is definitely new concept, at least for budget titles. "Indy" has been around a while and modding has been around forever, so I'd it will be interesting to see how much the "beta" aspect of Minecraft matters in the long run. We saw recently that "Version 1.0" didn't mean much, so the release model has essentially been "Release when playable, continue development indefinitely". Have any other games since Minecraft tried this? Have they been successful? I don't know of any offhand, but I haven't had the time to get into the Indy market as much as I would like to.

  23. Re:Minecraft influence on Miyamoto Steps Down As Nintendo Game Design Head · · Score: 1

    Dear community,

    I can't think of a better place to ask this question, so I'll stick it down here where it will likely be buried. I'm not attempting to feed the trolls or anything, sorry.

    Is there a report/ban request process on slashdot? I looked around briefly but can't find one. Obviously looking through the troll's post history, having them on the site is a waste of time and server space. Is this the kind of thing that karma and filtering are supposed to take care of, or is there a separate system to remove posters like this specifically?

  24. Re:When you need a license to practice free speech on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    This is a random person on the internet without any evidence of her claims or history of journalistic integrity.
    You should be required to provide at least *one* of these things before you can ruin someone's life or business.

  25. Re:What is a journalist? on Bloggers Not Journalists, Federal Judge Rules · · Score: 1

    It's not necessarily that she doesn't meet all the qualifications. The fact is, she doesn't meet *any* of them. Fact checking, disclosure of conflicts of interest, and adherence to standards are the most important. I'd agree with the fact that most TV pundits don't strictly qualify. However, most of the actual "News" pieces of cable networks do qualify, at least to a reasonable extent. Keep in mind that the "News" on stations like CNN or Fox are neither the majority of the time nor viewership of those networks.