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User: nha

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Comments · 18

  1. Calling this a Win for Tech and Law Enforcement on US Spending Bill Contains CLOUD Act, a Win For Tech and Law Enforcement (axios.com) · · Score: 1

    is like saying that cancer is a win for the medical industrial complex.

  2. Many of my ideas are also ignored until they are rephrased by (other) men. Of course, that could also mean that I didn't make a very persuasive argument. Or it could be the fact that a second person is also stating the idea now gives it momentum. In the rush to claim victimhood, sometimes the obvious innocent explanation gets ignored.

  3. VP talks out of both sides of his mouth on Google Engineer's Leaked 'Gender Diversity' Essay Draws Massive Response (medium.com) · · Score: 1

    The VP's statement is a caricature of self-contradiction. He wants challenging discussion, just so long as it doesn't challenge any of his PC assumptions. Step over the (undefined) line, and you're fired; no warning or nothing. With management like that, who needs enemies?

  4. Think what you like about vaccines. on Time To Remove 'Philosophical' Exemption From Vaccine Requirements? · · Score: 1

    The issue here is whether parents should have control over the lives of their own children.

    In Japan, parents do everything they can to ensure that their children catch all the usual childhood diseases. The resulting immunity is better than what vaccines provide. Japan is an advanced industrial nation, and I presume that Japanese parents love their children too.

    "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." -- Benjamin Frankilin

  5. Harmful injections required. on Time To Remove 'Philosophical' Exemption From Vaccine Requirements? · · Score: 1

    According to the article: "They are free to continue believing vaccines are harmful, even as the entire medical and scientific communities try in vain to tell them otherwise. But they should not be free to endanger the lives of everyone else with their views."

    That says that I should be required to inject myself with vaccines which I consider harmful. How goofy is that? With a few minutes searching the internet you'll see that there's plenty of doctors and researchers who consider vaccines dubious at best, especially for children.

  6. Life is risky on Time To Remove 'Philosophical' Exemption From Vaccine Requirements? · · Score: 1

    Get used to it. Requiring everyone to be injected so you might maybe be safer? That's a No Go. Adding insult to injury, those injections contain known poisons, are of questionable effectiveness, and there exists a substantial body of evidence pointing to collateral damage such as autism.

    http://www.collective-evolutio...

    http://www.greenmedinfo.com/bl...

  7. Whistleblowing considered harmful on Whistleblowers Enter the Post-Snowden Era · · Score: 1

    AFAIK all the information released by Snowden is about official NSA programs that have been approved by legions of higher-ups. It is obviously a loser to go to one of those higher-ups to claim that such a program is illegal. Whistleblowing within the organization only makes sense when it involves actions by some rogue person(s) that goes against organization policy. Telling your boss that what he does is illegal, will just get you into trouble.

  8. It's the same everywhere on Ask Slashdot: Why Are Tech Job Requirements So Specific? · · Score: 1

    I look at job descriptions from all over the world, and it's the same everywhere. For short-term contracting gigs, it usually makes sense. For a permanent employee, it doesn't. Smarter would be to simply describe the tasks of the position, and let the candidates figure out for themselves if they can hack it. Problem is, this basically means that HR can't even pretend to contribute anything meaningful to the process. Ergo, it won't happen.

  9. Let me get this straight, on NYC Police Comm'r: Privacy Is 'Off the Table' After Boston Bombs · · Score: 1

    these are the same police who claim that it is illegal for a citizen to make a private video recording of police doing their public job in a public place?

  10. Two more fun failures on When Computers Go Wrong · · Score: 1

    1) Some new naval warship on its shakedown cruise had to be towed back to San Diego because its Microsoft OS bluescreened.

    2) When NASA's shuttle engines were being tested, two of them blew up on the test stand. Some programmer neglected to factor in the fact that a large butterfly valve takes time to close. He issued the command to start closing at the time it should have been completely closed, and boom!, no more engine.

  11. Re:Obama is not the Great Leader that many wish hi on Obama Says Offshoring Fears Are Unwarranted · · Score: 1

    "For the past 30 years every Republican president has increased the debt while every Democrat has decreased it."

    Sounds good, but a closer look at the cited page shows that in the last 30 years there has only been one Democratic president, and we all know Clinton was just lucky to have presided over the superbubble. Furthermore, for six of his eight years both the House and Senate had Republican majorities. Remember, the President cannot spend a dime -- only Congress can do that.

    Going back to the beginning of the table in 1945, the results are more mixed.

  12. Re:Classic "skills" FUD on Why Microsoft Is So Scared of OpenOffice · · Score: 1

    The other major deficiency is the huge list of bugs. Try working on anything non-trivial and you'll quickly come up with problems.

  13. The proof is in the pudding on HP Explains Why Printer Ink Is So Expensive · · Score: 1

    The only thing you have to know is that the manufacturers purposely make it difficult to refill their cartridges. This proves that their ink is simply way overpriced, and all the marketing hot air in the world will not explain away that fact.

  14. Re:"Finished" software on Michael Meeks Says OO.o Project is "Profoundly Sick" · · Score: 1

    I recently built a trivial database application using Base. I stumbled over more bugs than you can shake a stick at, especially with report builder. Despite the bugs, report builder is still better than the catatonic alternative. And no matter how I screw up my SQL, I always get the same, utterly unhelpful, error message. If OO were anywhere close to being done experienced people wouldn't have to redesign simple projects to work around bugs.

  15. Re:Paper??? on The State of Electronic Voting In the 2008 US Elections · · Score: 1

    Paper and pencil works great in Canada and Germany because nobody cares enough to try to steal an election. If anyone bothered to try, they'd find all sorts of ways to beat the system. Any system involving people can be subverted.

    In 2000 Europeans had a great time claiming that Americans are incapable of doing something as simple as counting votes. This is like the ugly girl who boasts that SHE never has any problems with men.

  16. Sounds like an updated Transputer to me on Cell Workstations in 2005 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Over 20 years ago InMos invented the transputer, a high-performance CPU with 4 high-speed on-chip channels. They invented OCCAM, a language optimized for parallel processing, just for it. It went approximately nowhere, at enormous expense.

    OTOH, with Sony and IBM behind it, this one is bound to at least get embedded a lot. I don't see much future for it beyond that.

  17. Read this... on Berkeley Researchers Analyze Florida Voting Patterns · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://politics.slashdot.org/politics/04/11/19/175 4249.shtml?tid=226&tid=126&tid=103

    before deciding that machines are evil and paper trails are the answer. The article shows how the vote appears to have been manipulated only in the counties using paper ballots. This makes sense because election officials and workers are much more likely to be able to grok ballot box stuffing and other such low-tech techniques.

  18. smart != right on Greenspun on Managing Software Engineers · · Score: 1

    Philip is obviously smart, but he makes the same mistake that he decries, namely assuming that his intelligence necessarily leads him to correct conclusions. If history is any guide, smart doesn't correlate with right nearly as nicely as he assumes. As for the 70-hour week, it is a well-known fact that Einstein needed 14 hours of sleep a day. This left him with a mere 70 hours of waking time per week, some of which was obviously not work. Would Philip look for ways to terminate somebody of his calibre?