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User: Ensign+Nemo

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  1. I thought the whole point of devops was "Developers and Operations" working together? I see very little of that.

    I see way more "DevOps engineers" who act like they are most important part of the entire company. I've been in meetings with IT/DevOps directors and this attitude of "we should be in charge of everything and we know best" is pervasive even though it is abundantly clear they have never done development or anything outside of IT. I am not exaggerating either. I think I understand why there is so much disdain for IT.

    Devops has become IT with new shiny tools and massive chips on their shoulders. IT used to be "data janitors", which I also didn't like, to "engine driving things forward", which is just as stupid. ...

    "But: instead of realizing that their IT is the engine driving them forward,"

    This attitude has warped and become "We're the most important group of the company."

    IT is a piece of the puzzle. It's a piece that is an important as all the others and should have the same respect, but get over yourselves, you are not the engine driving things forward. You're a gear in the transmission; one of many.

  2. Re:software architects on Do Businesses Really Need to Hire CS Majors? (cio.com) · · Score: 1

    Almost all architects, in software and RTL, that I've worked with over the past couple decades, don't work with the implementers unless forced to. Software architect is a joke title. It has nothing to do with flexibility. it has to do with most of time their crap just doesn't work that well and the always forget something important.

    Most of the ones I've had the (mis)fortune of working with basically spend all their time in Excel or Matlab doing modeling. But they almost never prototype anything, so you can guess what very often happens. "But it works in the model."
    "Software architect" should be an entry level position because most of the crap they come up with needs to be reviewed by the implementers anyway.

  3. I think that it is the norm, at least in tech. I've talked to others, including an Indian who's been in the states for 20+ years and he confirmed it. ;(

    If an Indian gets into a management position (men at least, I'm not sure about Indian women), expect him to only hire other Indians under him (or all young, single females for those that are trying to build harems [yes, i've worked with one of those also. he was a complete jerk] ).

    Indian men being aggressive in their drive to climb the corporate ladder is very common but that's a separate, but related, discussion.
    Considering the soul-crushing competition in India due to population density, I can understand it and I would probably be the same if I were Indian.

    But I'm not, and the US is not India. We frown on white men who only hire other white men, why do Indian men get a pass? Shouldn't we be consistent?

    I feel kinda like a jerk for saying this stuff but it's honest and true.

  4. "removes employers as the best judge of the employee merits they need to succeed"

    You mean all those Indian managers, who once get a management spot, only hire other Indians? yea, it'd be a shame if they couldn't hire only other Indians.

    I'm sorry but I've personally seen this multiple times in multiple places and it's no longer funny. I've had to deal with the bugs and blame-game that comes from this favouritism so much it's downright aggravating.

    Yes, I know not all Indians are like this, and it's not just Indians, but there are enough that are, that's it's troubling.
    And this isn't even talking about the sweatshop problem that other posters have mentioned.

  5. Re:Oh, is it 4GL time again? on Microsoft Research Developing An AI To Put Coders Out of a Job (mspoweruser.com) · · Score: 1

    You laugh but this is what ASIC/FPGA developers are going through right now. I'm old enough to remember the 4GL attempts from the 90's. A couple of the tool vendors (looking at you especially, Xilinx) are pushing the living hell out of tools that let you drag and drop blocks together and voila. You are correct that it works as well as it did 30 years ago.

  6. Re:Better be ready to be beat up when layed off wo on Many CEOs Believe Technology Will Make People Largely Irrelevant (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    This.

    If current AI computer can beat a Go master, then it can likely outperform most existing CEOs (and CIOs, CTOs, CFOs, ...)

    Google? IBM? You guys up to the challenge?

  7. Re:I call bullshit. on BMW Traps A Car Thief By Remotely Locking His Doors (cnet.com) · · Score: 1

    BMW's doors are double pump. The first pump unlocks the second opens the door.
    I had a BWM a couple years ago. It was a 2010. Absolutely Everything in that car was electronic. The battery was going bad and I got locked in my car. After multiple tries, I finally just sat there for a few mins to wait for the battery to build enough of a charge back up that I could unlock it.

      I was trapped _IN_my own car!!!!

    I got rid of that car shortly thereafter. F! BMW. 'Safety feature' my ass! BMWs are fun to drive and they handle very well, but holy crap you are completely at their mercy.

  8. Colin Power used a personal yahoo.com (or AOL) account. He did NOT setup his own email server.

  9. Re:Systemd on slashdot on New Year's Resolutions For *nix SysAdmins (cyberciti.biz) · · Score: 1

    "Without something like systemd, Linux cannot be enterprise ready."

    You are a complete and utter dumbass. You don't even know how much you don't know. Why don't you actually listen to some of the greybeards, instead of shouting them down because you know better.

    Do you realize how many mission critical enterprise systems run on Linux, and have since well before systemd was even thought of? You understand how massively large some of those systems are?

    Pull your head out of your ass and get some perspective.

    I don't hate systemd but dumbass comments like yours make me think systemd might actually be the colossal mistake that so many people are screaming it is. You jackasses think that those old greybeards have no idea how business works, what's actually important or how to do 'real' computer things. F*cking arrogant jerks.

  10. Re:It's not dead. on Windows 8 Even Less Popular Than Vista · · Score: 1

    I'll agree with your first sentence but for completely different reasons. Also, i pretty much disagree with everything else. While Windows 7 is much better than 98 or 2000, I think it's not much better than XP. At work I got a memory upgrade on my Win7 machine from 8GB to 32GB and my quad-core computer slowed down noticably. IT is confused and there's nothing special on that computer. (These are competent guys, not outsourced-help desk folks 8000 miles away who just follow scripts.) My only guess is that Win7 has a memory 'sweet spot' and performance suffers if not in that sweet spot. I've had win7 blue screen twice on me and apps mysteriously hang for a few seconds very regularly. The machine is not heavily loaded and IO isn't excessive. It's extremely annoying. I'm not a fan of Win7 at all. But it's what the corporate IT dictates so I use it. IE has gotten better, but honestly I still prefer firefox as I think it performs better.

    Even now, in day to day usage, a Windows box, cannot handle the load that a linux box can. Granted you did say non-technical, but I've seen non-techinical people load a box pretty well, so I don't consider them the same thing.

    Linux will never be big on the desktop for entirely different reasons. Vista proved it and Win8 will reinforce that.

    Linux devs don't care about the actual desktop. They care about reinventing plumbing...all the damn time. They will spend weeks or months debating and arguing about "python vs perl" rather than "Hmmm, is a button that does X useful?) Actually, the usability people seem to have a disproportionate say in things now. "We have 3 menu items, what functionalty can we deem 'too confusing' and therefore rip out of the app so we don't need a menu.?
    I'm hoping this usability is like when fonts first came out in the 90s. People went overboard for about 5 years before sanity returned. I'm wanting to believe that in a couple more years the usability folks will have gotten all this crap out of their system and return from the land of whatthefuckistan.

    Printing and CUPS were miles ahead of what Microsoft, or Apple provided, but they sat on their heels and it stagnated. MS and Apple both caught up and passed it. (Apple has done great things with CUPS, but Linux devs and vendors haven't done anything.)

    Lennart Poettering is a good example of the normal mentality of Linux devs. They'll work on something they think is cool, then when it starts to get usable, ~70% done, they get bored and move on to something new, leaving it to others to maintain or die on the vine.

    Sound is still a joke compared to Apple or MS. Pulseaudio for all it's warts is/was at least something. A common audio. Excellent goal(!!!) and it got some traction. But Lennart got 80% there and decided to go work on something else, it almost immediately stagnated and stalled out. (Yes, I still check the forums periodically. I'm comfortable saying there's not much work on that 20% being done.)

    systemd is a pain in the ass compared to the old init scripts. If for no other reason, that it's very different and a lot of distros don't have backward compatibility, IE, simple init scripts that call systemd commands. Then he moved onto that stupid binary logfile crap rather than using the little used and semi-broken functionality in syslog to accomplish the same damn goal. syslogd, syslog-ng, gsyslog (forgot the name of the 3rd syslog variant). all little tweaks trying to accomplish slightly different goals because every g*dd*mn linux dev wants to rewrite a common tool because they know better, or will do it better without certain mistakes.

    network-manager (lots of work on wierd edge cases, but little work into normal common things and you have to go through dbus commands to do anything), wicd (because enough people hate network-manager)
    gnome-2, gnome-3, unity, mate, for Christ's sake.
    printing still sucks butt on KDE. It's still behind where it was on kde3. ;(

    But everyone wants to keep rewritin

  11. Microsoft completely focused on being 'cool'... on Windows 8 Even Less Popular Than Vista · · Score: 2

    You mentioned hip and trendy. I've noticed that Microsoft is still trying to be cool. Watching their commercials and ads and comparing them against Apple, Android and even google's chrome. Microsoft seems to really, desparately want to be 'cool', but their definition of cool is the one that teenagers and early-20 year old men have. Maybe the XBOX division has a lot of influence in the company. Apple and Android commercials, at least the ones I see, are useful things you can do with their devices, and coolness is there but it's well done and comes across and supporting and not the focus, the usage is the focus. Microsoft shoves it in your face that they are cool, and usage is secondary. To me, it comes across as desperate and crying for attention. It's very offputting.

  12. Re:Agile Manifesto on New Analyst Report Calls Agile a Scam, Says It's An Easy Out For Lazy Devs · · Score: 1

    Wow, that site is the granddaddy of buzzword bingo. Created for PHBs by PHBs.

  13. Re:jury trials cost more money on How To Crash the US Justice System: Demand a Trial · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The tea party may have originally been about reducing government size, power and daily involvment of the federal government but I'm not sure that's been the case for a long time. My ex-boss was a tea party guy; hard core. After listening to him many, many times I can very definitively tell you he is more anti-liberal than anti-big government. He worships Glen Beck, thinks Obama is a socialist anti-Christ in cohoots with Soros, out to destroy America, and that all of our problems started when the US took prayer out of school. I was at the airport with him one time and some random guy came up, shook his hand and they started talking. (He was wearing one of those pro-tea party shirts.) They weren't talking about how to solve big government; they were just circle jerking about how liberals are the cause of all of our problems and how we should go back to daily religion (Christian only because "the US is a Christian nation") in every aspect of our lives. He's not an idiot mind you, I like the guy, but guys like Beck and other conservatives have zeroed in on the natural fears that most people have and convinced them to not even talk or listen to any other opinions. It's not about making America great, it's only about beating the liberals no matter the cost.

        I have yet to see anything that actually shows tea party people are about smaller government more than drinking the "liberals are what's wrong with America" cool-aid than anything else.

  14. Ubuntu and Redhat are hiring on Ask Slashdot: Where Are the Open Source Jobs? · · Score: 1

    Check them out. I've heard that they are both looking. One of the devs at RedHat told me they are actively looking, especially on graphics stuff.

  15. is the IT economy really that bad? on Ask Slashdot: Where Are the Open Source Jobs? · · Score: 1

    Where I live, pretty much if you want an IT job you can have one. Other software fields are the same. Most people I know have very little problem finding a job or getting a different one. Maybe we're in a weird bubble though I'm not convinced of that. I have friends all over the US that say they have little trouble finding software jobs.
        Most of them aren't open source though. However there are some.

  16. Re:Fresher skills? on President By Day, High-Tech Headhunter By Night · · Score: 1

    Considering someone has patented 'Method of swinging on a swing': patent: 6,368,227), single-click, etc. It's safe to say having a patent no longer means anything regarding your technical skills.

    Sorry to nitpick. I agree with your premise that experience counts, I just hate when someone thinks patents actually mean anything. Luckily, one bad example does not negate your point.

  17. Re:Old is gold? on President By Day, High-Tech Headhunter By Night · · Score: 1

    Bull. There are no new ideas. The details may change, (language, processor, ...) but the over all concepts don't. I just had this discussion with my wife and friends a couple weeks ago. They're doing pretty much the same thing they did 10 years ago. Half of IT (and software and harware) is ooohhhhh shiny new language. Let's rewrite stuff. Don't kid yourself, there really are very, very few new concepts. Experience matters.

  18. Re:IT's time to rework colleges and universities on Do Online Educational Badges Threaten Conventional Education Models? · · Score: 1

    This! 100 times, this!

  19. Re:Industrial Espionage. on Russia, Europe Seek Divorce From U.S. Tech Vendors · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I lived there for a while, went to Uni there, am married to a Chinese person and have many Chinese friends, both here and in China. I'm very comfortable saying that Chinese people do not innovate very well. In general, creativity and innovation are not traits that are encouraged in Chinese society. The culture encourages conformity and the like. In school, they study very, VERY hard but it's route memorization not creativity. They are much better at copying others' ideas than coming up with their own. That's not US marketing speaking, that's my own observations.

  20. Re:The US Military on US Sentinel Drone Fooled Into Landing With GPS Spoofing · · Score: 1

    God, I feel sick even typing this but I'll bite.
        No, I don't think we, the US, could go in and kill every many, woman and child in afghanistan. There are 29 million afghanis. You'd have to kill everyone the entire population within a very short timeframe, and not just the easy pickings in the cities. I'm gonna say, no, unless you get them to line up for target practice, it is _NOT PHYSICALLY POSSIBLE_ for the US to wipe out the entire population of afghanistan. This is just ligistics.

  21. Re:Exactly right on US Bans Loud Commercials · · Score: 1

    Whereas without regulations, everything is happy-happy koombaya land?

    Note: I'm not disagreeing with you, but not having regulations doesn't work either.

  22. Re:about freakin time on US Bans Loud Commercials · · Score: 1

    If this article has any bearing in reality, then no. The courts will say this infringes advertisers' freedom of speech and will be struck down.

    Article summary: Freedom of speech is becoming a large stick with which corporations and let-the-market-decide type folks can beat everyone into submission.

  23. Re:Keynesian? on Krugman On Bitcoin and the Gold Standard · · Score: 1

    Are you German, do you live in Germany, do you speak/read German and can follow the news? If yes to any of those, I will listen to what you say. If not, then, well, you are welcome to your opinion. While I don't outright dismiss it, austerity is not high on my list of guesses on Germany's economic situation. And let's be honest, we're all guessing.

    No, Germany is doing well because of all the exports to China.

    Note: I speak and read German. I've had this conversation with German friends of mine who currently live in Germany so I dont' feel I'm completely the economic equivalent of a 72 hour journalist. (A 72 hr journalist is someone who goes somewhere for 3 days and thinks he understands everything about the place. )

    I would not put 'austerity' and 'China' in the same sentence. The Chinese government is spending money like a sailor on a 3 day leave at port. The amount of money their spending on infrastructure along is embarrassing. Highways, bridges, dams, ...

    Also, China's move to a market economy can be more aptly described as 'Ooooh, capitalism brings in lots of cash. Let's do that but with 'Chinese characteristics' (read: capitalistic but not democratic.)

    Also note: I speak and read Chinese as well and lived there. I've also had this conversation with Chinese people in China.

  24. Linux Airlines on Old Arguments May Cost Linux the Desktop · · Score: 2

    Disgruntled employees of all the other OS airlines decide to start their own airline. They build the planes, ticket counters, and pave the runways themselves. They charge a small fee to cover the cost of printing the ticket, but you can also download and print the ticket yourself. When you board the plane, you are given a seat, four bolts, a wrench and a copy of the seat-HOWTO.html. Once settled, the fully adjustable seat is very comfortable, the plane leaves and arrives on time without a single problem, the in-flight meal is wonderful. You try to tell customers of the other airlines about the great trip, but all they can say is, "You had to do what with the seat?"

    However, I believe this more accurately sums up one of the big problems with linux:
    Disgruntled employees of all the other OS airlines decide to start their own airline. They build the planes, ticket counters, and pave the runways themselves. They charge a small fee to cover the cost of printing the ticket, but you can also download and print the ticket yourself. When you board the plane, you are given a seat, four bolts, a wrench and a copy of the seat-HOWTO.html. Half of the passengers however decide that they dont like the #10 bolts used to fasten the chair down and that since Linux is all about choice they're going to improve the bolts. So they whip out their tap and die sets and proceed to 'do things their way'. They then proceed to tell everyone around them how good their bolts are. Half of the plane doesn't care because 'it's just a goddamn bolt' and the other half insists on doing it their own way because 'they can'. They then split up into 50 camps each with a slightly different bolt thread or length. The plane can't take off until all the chairs are fastened, so the plane never actually leaves the terminal. All the other airlines' passengers laugh as they take off because LinuxAir travelers insist on debating the same stupid shit over and over and over and over ...

  25. Re:10 years without innovation on IBM Donates Symphony Code To Apache Software Foundation · · Score: 3, Insightful

    +1

    Remember when the argument was:
    "But a person only uses 20% of MS Office features"
    "But everybody uses a different 20%."

    Bullocks. Push people on what features they actually use. Most people really do use the roughly the same 20%. The vast majority of people I've talked with and seen what they do, Office 97 is just fine.