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User: spatley

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Comments · 98

  1. Well, I've been to one world fair, a picnic, and a on Transformer-Style Scooter Lets You Ride Your Briefcase To Work · · Score: 1

    and that's the stupidest thing I ever heard.

  2. Re: Odd on Why Nissan Is Talking To Tesla Model S Owners · · Score: 1

    And no matter what temperature a room is, it's always room temperature.

  3. Re: Citation Needed on Google Co-Opts Whale-Watching Boat To Ferry Employees · · Score: 1

    Eh, Mercer Island has been ironically referred to as "poverty rock" since the 60's. It had always been a luxury neighborhood. Try houses in Columbia City that were 25k in 1974 and now list for 600.

  4. Re:That is shit. on Mobile Banking Apps For iOS Woefully Insecure · · Score: 2

    E: (all of the above)

  5. Re:Vulnerable? on The Windows Flaw That Cracks Amazon Web Services · · Score: 1

    You lost me at http://slashdot.org/topic/bi
    Dear Slashdot, stop creating your own content. You suck at it.

  6. Am I the only one on Why My Team Went With DynamoDB Over MongoDB · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    that is getting sick of this content-free, slashdot echo chamber, clickcrack stuff. Hey Slashdot, why do you need whole nuther site to post original articles? And why do those articles make such a deafening sucking sound?
    Problem is that I would be interested in a reasoned look at MongoDB v Dynamo but my experience with http://slashdot.org/topic/bi/ is not to waste my time by reading TFA.

  7. Re:Whadda? on Book Review: To Save Everything, Click Here · · Score: 1

    Nobody on Slashdot or otherwise will see a kitchen with lasers that show you how to cut fish. The idea is idiotic. The response about the quality of cooking instructions on deh interwebs is surprisingly even more idiotic.

  8. Re:Has anybody said on Japan Grounds Fleet of Boeing 787s After Emergency Landing · · Score: 1

    whoosh

  9. as usual: xkcd on Ask Slashdot: How To React To Coworker Who Says My Code Is Bad? · · Score: 3, Funny

    just show him this http://xkcd.com/844/

  10. Re:The problem never seems to be the guns.... on Smart Guns To Stop Mass Killings · · Score: 1

    or butterflies and rainbows!
    no, wait! we will fill them with hugs and kisses!

  11. the answer is "I don't know" on Ask Slashdot: Interviewing Your Boss? · · Score: 1

    The trick to managing technical people is knowing what you don't know and allowing technical experts do their job without infuriating them with stupid questions.
    -- ask some technical questions, make sure at least a few the candidate will not know the answer to. If they fake it rather than saying "I don't know" PASS
    -- give a situation to deal with (the server is down) and ask "what do you want me to do?" if it is anything other than "fix it and let me know the details only after you are done" PASS

  12. Re:The truth... on Experts Warn About Security Flaws In Airline Boarding Passes · · Score: 1

    amen brother

  13. Re:Hourly on Ask Slashdot: How Often Do You Push To Production? · · Score: 1

    Minutely, as soon as the feature compiles.

    We are hoping to go to real-time and have developers update Ruby scripts directly on the production server as this will save us the expense of a test environment, but that is going to require porting all our Java code to Ruby. We tried to use jRuby but that is going the wrong direction, so we are starting a new open source project for JOR (java on ruby).

  14. Re:The Problem on Google Glass, Augmented Reality Spells Data Headaches · · Score: 2

    Excellent, a universal cross compatible standard for everyone!
    http://xkcd.com/927/

  15. Re:1 (one) tip for you on Ask Slashdot: Security Digests For the Home Network Admin? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Even better: use octopress http://octopress.org/ and do commenting with disqus. And then run the smallest webserver you can find and turn everything else off. The best security is the simplest security.

  16. Re:Compatibility on Ask Slashdot: What's Your Beef With Windows Phone? · · Score: 1

    I agree, I have an iPhone and my wife has a WP7
    I love my iphone, but it is expensive and slow (granted it is an iphone 3g)
    The WP7 phone was less than half the price of iPhone, has snappy performance, and the social integration is the best out there.
    There are lots of things that it does not do, the app marketplace is years behind, and it is locked down as tight as iPhone.
    This phone is very good at what it set out to do and is in no rational perspective a failure.

  17. Re:The appropriate response to this comment. on Statisticians Investigate Political Bias On Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    you just blew my mind
    best troll ever

  18. Re:Finally! on Judge to Oracle: A High Schooler Could Write rangeCheck · · Score: 1

    hell I would be happy if software developers could write maintainable code!
    (ducks)

  19. Re:Good news! on C/C++ Back On Top of the Programming Heap? · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...since you can get ten times as much done in a single line of perl.

    Yes and you will be the only human on earth that knows what it does.

  20. Re:Not bloody likely on Software Engineering Is a Dead-End Career, Says Bloomberg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I started at 30 during dot-com, am well into my 40's now and feel like my opportunities are only beginning. My salary is 4x what I made 10 years ago and I am seeing tsunamis of opportunity. This is a great industry, and a great industry to grow and to work in over the long haul. Don't let anybody tell you different. Put this FUD in your FUD-bucket with all the FUD that Bloomberg spews day after day.

  21. re: ageist on Software Engineering Is a Dead-End Career, Says Bloomberg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they want a newbie that knows a lot of abstract book-learnin and bangs his head against the wall for a week on a problem that I can solve in 10 minutes let them continue the illusion that they are saving money.
    I will be over here doing great work, advocating the high value practices of the industry, and getting higher and higher salaries from smart employers.
    For that matter, forget even thinking about those longer hours and just pay your coders by the line. That will get you ahead.

  22. You will do great on Ask Slashdot: Re-Entering the Job Market As a Software Engineer? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    PHP, Ajax, Java, apps? You are on the subjects that are hot hot hot in most tech segments. Your experience with customers and the business side of things is a real asset and will be considered a major plus for any reasonable employer. You will not be suited for all possible coding jobs, but nobody is. Age is only considered a determent because people think that you will be stuck up and set in your ways. Show that you are flexible and hungry for new challenges. If you are looking in Seattle, SF, New York or other comparable market you will find a home. Maybe not tomorrow, but soon enough. Concentrate on your strengths, be awesome, be passionate and the world is your oyster.

    Buy a whiteboard and google for interview questions and write code in dry-erase every day. Once you get in the interview chair you will be ready.
    And best of luck to you.

  23. Re:1km^2 on MIT Working On Industrial-Scale Graphene Printing Press · · Score: 2

    Ugh, the level to which this has been mis-quoted shows a lack of understanding by the TPM authors bordering on idiocy.

    The previously made sheet of graphene was cited to be 76 centimeters square. but the original article http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/News/2010/June/20061001.asp notes that the sheet was 76 Centimeters on the diagonal which would be 54 centimeters on a side if it was a perfect square: 2916 square centimeters.

    So if we were to use their own retarded logic system, the claim of attempting a sheet that was one kilometer square, that would actually mean one kilometer on the diagonal. so a centimeter wide and just under a kilometer long would suffice to satisfy the claim.

  24. Re:cracked, not hacked on The Register Hacked · · Score: 1

    I know we all get it. A hacker is not a criminal, a hacker is one who likes to tinker and break new ground by using tools for things other than they were intended. Kevin Mitnick was not a hacker, Nikola Tesla was a hacker. I agree the distinction is important. But guess what, we lost that fight.

    The best thing we can do today is to come up with another word that means what hacker used to mean.

    How about bit wrangler? Or just come up with something yourself and start using it and let the best jargon win. But hacker has been lost to us, it is no longer our word. You dig?

  25. Re:They don't believe it themselves on Google Asks 'Who Cares Where Your Data Is?' · · Score: 1

    And who pays put in the event of collecting that 1M guarantee? Seagate? Probably not.