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User: jelizondo

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Comments · 309

  1. Re:Affects all engineers... on How Silicon Valley CEOs Conspired To Suppress Engineers' Wages · · Score: -1

    Portland? As in Portland, Oregon?

    Jeez! I did not knew there was intelligent life out there! Much less a need for sysadmins!

    One learns something new everyday.

    .

    Sorry, I do apologize but it was too tempting a target to let it go by untouched...

  2. Re:'we won' isn't hubris on How Quickly Will the Latest Arms Race Accelerate? · · Score: 1

    Spoken like a true Roman!

    I mean Grek!

    Sorry, American!

    And this too shall pass...

  3. Re:Bye bye, aircraft carriers on How Quickly Will the Latest Arms Race Accelerate? · · Score: 1

    Just remember the H.M.S. Sheffield. Big boats are indeed sitting ducks, they don't move fast enough to evade an incoming missile / torpedo and are unable to shoot them down. They can't run and they can't hide.

  4. Re:In related news on Sun Not a Significant Driver of Climate Change · · Score: 1

    You're nitpicking. The Sun won't go supernova, but it will expand into a red giant; same result: the Earth (and its climate) will dissapear.

  5. Re:Are they really being hosed? on Spotify's Own Math Suggests Musicians Are Still Getting Hosed · · Score: 1

    Recent compared to what?

    Most civil laws (Ius Civile) were codified by the romans more than a thousand years ago and they did not have copyright or patents in the books.

    The University of Bologna was founded almost a thousand years ago (1088).

    The first hospital was founded about 1,300 years ago in Damascus.

    Now, world agreement on copyrights date back to 1996. Wow!

    300 years? Get off my lawn!

  6. Re:Are they really being hosed? on Spotify's Own Math Suggests Musicians Are Still Getting Hosed · · Score: 2

    You mean like every other profession?

    You don't get to be a great engineer, architect, doctor or dentist just by going to school. It takes talent, will, hard work, good luck and years of effort.

    Now, how many engineers or architecs (doctors or dentists) have a change to become millionaires like an artist or sportsman?

    Artists always think they are special and nobody else can even begin to understand how special they are... Well, try engineering for a while. You won't even make it past Calculus I, great special one!.

  7. Re:I think that's a wasted opportunity on Sebastian Thrun Pivots Udacity Toward Vocational Education · · Score: 1

    There are several points on which MOOCs are different from regular Universities:

    1) Typically, there are no formal requirements to enroll. If I want to take (say) CS 301 in a formal setting, I must have completed the previous courses. In a MOOC, I can try my hand and probably fail, but no one stops me from trying.

    2) Many people find the course title interesting and sign-up only to drop a few weeks later, when the material proves above their competence and/or interest.

    3) People who try MOOCs, in my opinion and I have no data to prove one way or another, have a job, family and other obligations which limit the amount of time they can put in. If the course is hard, then they fail, not because the course is bad, simply it requires more time than they thought.

    For example, I took a MOOC on Mathematics on Philosophy, both being subjects of interest to me. It turned that the mathematics were more diificult than I had expected as well as the philosophy. I concluded the course and learned quite a lot but I did not bother taking the exam, because I knew I would fail. But I did learn quite a lot of interesting things, even if you could count me as a failure regarding the stats on the course.

    The point of view of the academics or the promotors of the MOOC might be quite different from the POV of the people taking the course.

  8. Re:And all these computer parts in cars... on DRM To Be Used In Renault Electric Cars · · Score: 1

    Speaking from experience, back in 1983 Renault ceased operations in Mexico (now it's back) and a lot of owners were stranded with no parts, warranty or service.

    I would not buy a Renault even if it was the most awesome car available and the cheapest; once burned, twice shy.

    Yes, the French government will bail them out in France, but not everywhere else... Caveat emptor.

  9. re Another Revolution on UK Prime Minister Threatens To Block Further Snowden Revelations · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More than three hundred years after the Glorious Revolution, the U.K. has a freaking P.M. who thinks is an absolute monarch. Perhaps it is time for another revolution.

    Off with his head!

  10. re No. More. Money. on Web Literacy Standard Announced By Mozilla · · Score: 1

    Dear Mozilla:

    I have been sending money your way because I thought it was used to develop Firefox and Thunderbird and other useful code; but for this shite, I rather keep my money.

    What's next? The Al Gore achievement award?

    Jeez!

  11. Re:NSA doing its job on NSA Hacked Email Account of Mexican President · · Score: 2

    It is not legal, but I doubt we will see any U.S. agent being extradited to Mexico, even for crimes considered as such by both countries.

    First the U.S. got angry because a known drug lord was released from prison in Mexico on a technicality. Caro Quintero was accused of murdering a U.S. agent (Kiki Camarena) and running drugs to the U.S.

    Then, three U.S. agents came forward declaring to a national magazine (Proceso) that the guy supposedly killed by Caro Quintero, was actually executed by U.S. intelligence agents.

    This on top of the Fast and Furious operation from a couple of years ago, on which the U.S government supplied guns and asault weapons to drug lords in Mexico.

    One has to wonder, exactly on which side is the U.S. government?

  12. Re:Deep down.. on Ask Slashdot: Why Isn't There More Public Outrage About NSA Revelations? · · Score: 1

    Thank you for your reply.

    It's actually the structure of our government itself. We've been fucked by our own Constitution! But this is not so obvious to anyone...

    We agree, it is always about politics. Reiterating, public policy determines institutions (structure of our government itself) and institutions determine if and how wealth is distributed...

    You seem to want to disagree even with yourself, just for the sake of debate.

  13. Re:Deep down.. on Ask Slashdot: Why Isn't There More Public Outrage About NSA Revelations? · · Score: 1

    I always find your posts interesting. Certainly you get marked "Troll" many times and sometimes you do deserve it, but I like posts that make me think and consider some other point of view, which you do most of the time.

    I suggest you read Why Nations Fail if you haven't already.

    It is always about politics because public policy determines what kind of institutions a country gets and the institutions determine if wealth is created and distributed or just accumulated by a few.

    Look around the world and it seems that a conspiracy is going on: everywhere the richer are getting richer and the poor, poorer.

    And you are correct, liberties and rights are less important than food or getting healthcare for our children, so we sacrifice liberty for a piece of bread or a couple of medical pills.

    But worse, you're right again: let people face starvation and they become docile sheep, ready to be slaughtered...

  14. Re:Tell me when the subsidie run out on Germany Produces Record-Breaking 5.1 Terawatt Hours of Solar Energy In One Month · · Score: 1

    Look at it closely: you will see that you get renewable power plants producing renewable power!

    Why stop at simple renewable power when you can get renewable, renewable power?

    And it is self-sustaining every renewable power plant that dies, engenders a new one!

    This schema actually enriches everyone(1)!

    NOTICE FOR SARCASM-CHALLENGED PEOPLE: ABOVE POST CONTAINS SARCASM. READ AT YOUR OWN RISK.

    (1) Everyone on the racket, that is. You complain because you're from New York or not part of the racket. People from New York complain, even if they are part of the racket.

  15. Re:Do people still show room? on Red Hat CEO: Bring On the Clones · · Score: 2

    Entirely your fault, you should always disconnect cables before handling them; otherwise there is a risk of shock...

  16. Re:Why not move? on Inside the Decision To Shut Down Silent Mail · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By your UID you should be old enough to remember Cayman Islands. Great place, white sandy beaches and a English-backed government.

    When the US Government (thru the OECD) decided that the 400+ banks in Cayman were laundering money, the Cayman government caved in and signed a treaty to provide OECD member states with access to bank information.

    Bear in mind, laundering money back then wasn't about financing terrorist organizations, it was about US citizens not paying taxes.

    More recently, the Swiss turned over data on US citizens who have (had?) Swiss bank accounts.

    Sorry, Antigua won't stand up to the US. No more than Cayman or the Swiss did.

    And no, it will not take a aircraft carrier and its group off the coast. It will only take a call from some senior D.C. politicians before they cave in.

  17. Re:Easy solution: move your mail server to Russia on Inside the Decision To Shut Down Silent Mail · · Score: 1

    Right on bro!

    Never ever search for Guantanamo, Extraordinary Rendition or any such terms! You might find the truth and truth is bad for you.

    Yes, it is much better to stay informed, as you say, about the terrible, terrible crimes commited in Eurasia and Eastasia.

    Long live Big Brother!

  18. Re: American hi-tech has a significant ethics prob on Inside the Decision To Shut Down Silent Mail · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How do you think tons of drugs from Mexico and Colombia get into the US every day?

    The Overlords want you to think that it is all due to corrupt policemen and politicians south of the border, but how does it get in and then gets distributed?

    Same answer, corrupt policemen and politicians. But they want the market for themselves, so yes, you try to do it on your own, you're a terrorist!

  19. Re:Easy solution: move your mail server to Russia on Inside the Decision To Shut Down Silent Mail · · Score: 1

    to pay off (or get cozy)

    Of course in the good ol' US of A, you don't pay off, you just have to get cozy with Obama & The Gang, otherwise they sick the IRS, the FBI or the NSA on you.

    Big difference!

  20. Re:Too much time on his hands on Man Builds Fully-Functional Boeing 737 Flight Simulator In His Son's Bedroom · · Score: 1

    to have sex to even have a son

    A likely question from uncultured Americans!

    menage a trois is a peculiarly French custom. (accents omitted on account of /. horrible unicode support.) The man doesn't need time, he just needs a partner.

  21. Re:wrong on A Case For Unilateral US Nuclear Warhead Reductions · · Score: 1, Informative

    Mt. St. Helens did not affect weather because the blast was horizontal, if you remember the news there was a hole in the side of the volcano and later the whole north side colapsed. Also there was less sulphur dioxide expelled (1.5 million tons) versus 25 million tons of Pinatubo. (see below)

    Now, Pinatubo did have a global effect. PBS writes: In 1991, Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines produced ten times as much ash as Mount St. Helens and released more than 25 million tons of sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere. The resulting cloud - which formed a wide band around the planet within about a month - resulted in an overall cooling of the global surface temperature by about 1 degree Fahrenheit.

    As you point out, Toba did have a greater global effect, but because it coincided with other fenomena, such as a solar minimum and several previous volcanic eruptions not by sheer magnitude alone.

    Now, let's try exploding several nuclear bombs in different parts of the world and see what the effects are... If taking some classes in physics was enough for us to accurately predict the effects, we would be Lords of the Universe and not meek, tree-climbing monkeys. So I vote we dismantle the damn things and to hell with experimenting...

  22. re Already done on Clinkle Wants To Become Your Wallet · · Score: 2

    Sorry for the link in Spanish, but one of the banks I use in Mexico already offers an option to pay using my celular instead of my debit/credit card. (Clic on Pago Movil)

    I can go to many stores (20,000 according to the bank) and simply clic on an app and the bill is settled electronically.

    Another example is token authentication, which is used by all banks for Internet banking in Mexico but is rare (o was until about a year ago) in the US.

    Why are U.S. banks so backward?

  23. Re:Obama calls it like he sees it on Obama Reveals Climate Change Plan · · Score: 1

    on who's party is being gored.

    Hey! Leave Al out of it

    He's against Global Warming and he invented the intertubes!

    ducks...running away

  24. Re:Mostly Harmless on Amazon Vows To Fight Government Requests For Data · · Score: 1

    Mr. Slippery joins the discussion about lube and sex goats; I'm sure there is good joke material there but I'm too tired to explore it.

    Please forgive me and just ROL like I made a good joke...

  25. Re:Mostly Harmless on Amazon Vows To Fight Government Requests For Data · · Score: 1

    Well, well, well...

    Now that we know about the lube, pray tell us, where you can get an inflatable sex goat...

    tsk, tsk, tsk, children need to learn to keep their traps shut, lest they embarrass themselves.