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User: JSombra

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  1. This smells of lazy calculations on UK Government Spending £6,000 Per Computer Every Year To Maintain Desktops · · Score: 1

    As they don't provide any information how they arrived at the £6000 figure going to assume they did it the lazy mans way:

    Total IT Costs/PCs = cost per desktop

    While i have no doubt the government overpays (actually worked the sector and seen some of the prices they pay, just makes me want to cry because of the sheer stupidty) anyone with half a brain knows calculating costs that way is not only pointless but downright unhelpful

  2. Re:No... on Windows: Not Doomed Yet · · Score: 1

    "Touch screen laptops will become a lot more popular eventually"

    Touch screen laptops will do even worse than desktop touch screens. If you are in a physical position (in bed, laying down on the sofa so forth) where you can comfortably use a laptop touch screen, you are most likely not doing serious productivity work and would be better suited to be using a tablet. If you are doing serious productivity work you are most likely to be sitting at a desk/table and then you face same reason the desktop touch screens don't do well.

    If anything, the whole concept of laptops is heading toward extinction, net-books are already dead (nearly everyone has stopped making them), laptops will be soon be such a very tiny niche market that we would not be far off off the truth calling them dead as well

  3. Re:nope on Windows: Not Doomed Yet · · Score: 2

    It was more the other way around, MS did well in the consumer market because most users were familiar with their products at work. PC's were expensive investments for majority of individuals until the mid to late 90's, but not out of reach of enterprises,/p>

  4. Re:Shrug... on Windows: Not Doomed Yet · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's problem is not their developers or engineers, it's their management and the internal politics they play

    For example, forced metro on the desktop (and server ffs) was very obviously a management (most likely sales) decision (hell beta versions had the option to turn it off in the registry, until everyone found out about that and MS removed it). No developer in their right mind would have forced on users something like, especially in the first version of the interface. It reaks of the "bright idea" of some sales guy who's most advanced use of IT is powerpoint presentation he got his PA to do for him. And there are countless other less obvious examples of this thinking

    MS really needs to get another IT guy with some business sense back in charge and get rid of Ballmer the sales guy

    But in the meantime is MS going anywhere? No a chance as for their business customers there really is no viable alternative. Apple have no real interest in catering for the business customers needs and linux does not have a big enough support infrastructure nor enough off the shelf software for the users. And lets not get into rewriting all the in house stuff for a different OS

  5. Re:Too little too late on Windows 8.1 May Restore Boot-To-Desktop, Start Button · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Except it did not work,it actually backfired and many warned them it would.

    Windows 8 on phones and tablets is actually pretty good, but the negativity/bad press generated by windows 8 on the pc has spilled over and affected peoples view of the phones and tablets.

    If they had not forced metro on the pc and left it optional, not only would windows 8 pc sales have done a lot better, but also probably the phone and tablet sales would have been better as well.

  6. Re:life-long updates on Ask Slashdot: What Is a Reasonable Way To Deter Piracy? · · Score: 2

    All of those are would to company's with a physical presence (thus probably heavily invested financially) in your legal jurisdiction and thus subject to actually getting caught and going to jail.

    While shit does happen it is far less likely to happen than on some random online web could be anywhere in the world (aka somewhere with little effective police presence) and who could have invested just a few bucks to set up "shop". Random small vendor online should be viewed as the same as using your cc in the worst, most corrupt country in the world, something you do very cautiously. Basic risk management.

  7. Re:I'm a developer in Vancouver... on EA CEO's Departure Might Be Good For the Company · · Score: 2

    Most game developers expect that around crunch time, problem with EA is it was "crunch time" 24-7 365 days a year. That's not due to nature of industry or even bad planning, that's planning to intentionally screw over staff for profit (especially as they generally avoided paying OT as well)

  8. Hand over the knowledge/skills for the project.. on Ask Slashdot: How To (or How NOT To) Train Your Job Replacement? · · Score: 1

    You train them on the system and the clients business (assume you should have good idea of that), if he is capable of learning such then all is fine and dandy and your job as contractor is done and done well.

    If he not capable of learning to do the job due to basic lack of fundamentals/programming skills you inform the client of such and leave them to figure out what to do. You do not teach him to "program" under any circumstances as training in such from you would probably cost the client more than sending him back to school/hiring someone more qualified. If they have gone so "cheap" that they have hired someone totally unqualified that is the hiring managers problem, not yours.

    "Hand over" is about handing over the the necessary knowledge/skills for that particular project to someone qualified, not about training someone in the basics of design/development

  9. Nothing lasts forever on Will the Desktop PC Live Forever? · · Score: 1

    Forever? No. But some type of "desktop" will always exist until someone comes up with a better alternative for production based computing than the the mouse and keyboard and currently no one has. It's not about the the actual PC but rather the tools that humans use to interact with it and while touch screen/tablets have their uses (consumption) they are poor for production *Quotes around desktop because there will most likely come a time, at least in corp environment where the hardware, aka actual computer, will not be anywhere near the desk but rather some kind virtualized pc getting directly beamed to a screen with a just a receiver chip in it and at a later date the same even in the home environment

  10. Re:So what do you make? on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 1

    Well America. Maybe if you pay your "IT experts" decent wages and offer them decent benefits like the rest of the world does people would be willing to work there.

    Europe (especially UK), while still a lot better better paying than the US is not really that far behind them on the downwards slope on rates of pay and the visa/outsourcing problems. The 'benefits' though remain better across the board, but that's generally a national things rather than sector specific

    Wait wait... Educate the rest of us... You told us the USA offer, but for comparison, let us know what you're currently getting....

    Don't know about him, but last time i looked (development) i would have to take about 10-20% paycut for an increase of working hours of about 40% if i worked again in the US. 'Benefits' are not much of concern in Europe as the US. But rates have been pretty stagnant/on the decline overall since about 2001 when inflation is taken into consideration

  11. Re:Two part problem on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 1

    you don't create gold from thin air.

    We do nearly the exact opposite, we save the company's gold (unless it's an IT company...then we do make gold out of thin air)

    Hell most large company's today, could not even exist without IT no matter how many staff they hired

  12. Re:Salaries on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 2

    This is the standard trite response. But it isn't that simple. Businesses can't just pay everyone arbitrarily high salaries and stay in business. Sometimes if a job can't be filled at a certain salary level, it is better to eliminate the position than to pay more.

    There is nothing arbitrary about it, it's basic supply and demand. If there's a skill shortage the price goes up. If it goes up enough supply will increase (people training for and moving to that sector) which will either stabilize or bring down prices again

    The problem is, these so called capitalists/free marketers don't like the market when it costs them and try to circumvent it, either by paying off politicians for tax cuts to make offshoreing more viable or by either abusing existing visa regulation so they can import cheap labor or once again paying off politicians to change the regulations to suit themselves

    Which in turn reduces prices locally, which means less people enter the market, which starts to once again generate a skills shortage, but instead of market forces being allowed to play out, for the capitalists it's back once again to the politicians with money in hand

    Down the road we are going there will soon be no one left locally with the skills because they have been undercut so much that they will better off working at McDonald's flipping burgers

  13. Re:Salaries on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 1

    Networks and development are two totally different skill sets/job roles as different as night and day,rare to find someone who even wants to do both never mind have the actual skills (and if they do it's because they left one role in pursuit of the other and doubtful they would want to go backwards career wise to doing both), so no wonder you are having difficulties. The security clearance just makes it even worse

    I would imagine most of the CV's you are getting are from people who want to make the career transition and thus are blagging half their skill set, so either you are going to need to break it into two roles or accept someone learning on the job.

    Though what you are asking for, someone with skill sets from multiple roles is a pretty common requirement that i see , normally because the last guy in the job did that. What you forget is the last guy left, most likely because he used you to transition his career already and you are now advertising a spec for a transitional role while demanding a skill set on par with those who already completed the transition.

    Company's need to stop hiring just based on what the skill-set of the last guy was but rather look back at what his role was originally and what it is now and compare the two and decide if the job as it is now should be broken up into various roles

  14. Re:Salaries on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 1

    They should, but those "job creators" pay a lot of money to politicians not to be subject to market forces when it suits them

  15. Re:This is what happens with kings/queens on Microsoft Wrongly Gives Britain the Day Off · · Score: 3, Informative

    Being from a certain family means you can just change holidays at will? Fuck that.

    Except "they" did not change the day or declare the jubilee a bank holiday, Government did (Labour if i remember correctly). Queen has no authority in creating laws or policy's beyond rubber stamping government policy's. Hell if they even try to talk publicly (or get caught trying to influence privately) about policy's/laws they would like changed/implemented they get lamblasted so in some ways they have less rights that the average citizen

  16. Re:Clarify on MPAA Agent Poses As Homebuyer To Catch Pirates · · Score: 2

    FWIW I don't think the case is likely to get terribly far. Similar cases against similar sites have failed in the past, but I don't know how bad the UK justice system is so I cannot say.

    It's more of a question of how bad the UK AND the US justice system is, as recent cases have proven, if the US does not get what they want out of the UK justice system, they can and will demand extradition and it will be granted due to the stupid one sided treaty. So even if the UK system finds them innocent (or refuses to hear the case) they will still face a few month's/years in a US jail awaiting trial in the US and with all the costs that entails

  17. Re:It's already gone on Foxconn CEO Fuels iTV Rumors · · Score: 1

    Little chance of them even trying, ITV have a pretty large legal team themselves with international experience (as ITV channel as well as it's programs are rebroadcast in many country's in the world) in both copyright and trademark. It will be either Apple TV or something like iTele. Though either way i will not be a customer.

  18. Re:Widespread interest on Google+ Unblocked In China; President Obama's Page Flooded With Comments · · Score: 1

    Place Europe on a map? Aiming a bit high there for them i think, would settle for them recognising that Europe is not a country

  19. Re:Subscription price? on Ask Slashdot: Does Europe Have Better Magazines Than the US? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It can be a bit cheaper if you subscribe but not much. Simple fact is unlike with the US the subscription model for magazines never really took off in the UK no matter how hard they tried. UK consumer did not like making the commitment when they could walk down the street and buy the magazine when it suited them

    Which could explain the difference in quality in the magazines between counties, in many ways magazines in the US are trying compete at a brand subscription level (it's where the bulk of their sales are done) , aka give you good enough "deal" to to entice you to subscribe and then do just enough to make sure you are not motivated enough to cancel the subscription (considerably easier that trying to motivate you to actively renew, hence why they all automatically renew) where as magazines in the UK have not only compete with their competitors mag right next to theirs every day but also convince the consumer it's worth buying....with every single issue

    Couple of bad issues (uninteresting cover/main articles) would cause barely a blip on US magazines revenues as majority of their customers are subscriptions where as for UK mag it could mean closure

  20. Re:Microsoft is a has-been on Europe Accuses Google of Monopoly Abuse · · Score: 2

    The desktop will still be relevant in the workplace for a at least a decade or two if not more

  21. Re:it's dead jim? on Star Trek Online Going Free-To-Play In January · · Score: 1

    Generally, yes it true, though sometimes the F2P model seems to work. Number one thing a MMO's need is community, even if the game is currently profitable if the players feel there are to few playing (the whole "Massively Multiplayer" aka people to do things with) the game is doomed. Change that impression though and even with what many consider a low amount of players game can run profitably for years (See Ultima online) What many who try the F2P model and still go under rather quickly fail to realize, more people does not equal a community, actually an influx of F2P players can destroy a games existing communities

  22. Re:I don't get Apple on No PDFs, No Co-editing On Underwhelming Apple iCloud · · Score: 1

    Doesn't Apple think that people use their phones for anything but listening to music and looking at photos? Oh yeah, there are all sorts of apps, but how does anyone who works for a living get business related stuff on and off the phone?

    Oh apple knows people use there phones (and their other products) for other things besides music and photo's...but here is the important thing for any apple product user to remember...,

    Apple do not and never will care about business users and their needs/requirements

    Any use you get from your apple product for your business is an unintentional side effect, not the result of apple intentionally trying to meet a business users needs

    Want to do actual work? Then buy a work tool not an expensive toy/gadget (Little helper...if it's by Apple it's not a work tool...they don't make things like that)

  23. Surprised no one asked yet... on PETA To Launch Pornography Website · · Score: 1

    The really important question...will it have a beastiality section/category?

  24. Re:Just the start on Microsoft Taking Apple's Walled Garden Approach For Metro Apps · · Score: 1

    Sure they will but would say it will be about 7 to 10 years before the current api's are completely depreciated...and that in IT is a LONG time

  25. Re:just to make your point: on Windows 8 Roundup · · Score: 2

    " I am not an expert on OS economics but I think the pushing of win8 is just some haste. It has been less than two years since win7 has become main version of windows on the market. Also I don't think that win8 does provide changes enough to justify a dedicated release"

    The rush to bring out Win8 has little to nothing to do with desktop/laptop users or their wants/needs and everything to do with tablets (and to lesser degree touch screens). Just desktop users get to suffer because MS want a common platform/experience across desktop/tablet/phone