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User: Grishnakh

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  1. Re:Cost bigger issue than sonic boom on Rockwell Collins To Develop Cockpit Display To Show Sonic Boom Over Land · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember that plane literally leaking fuel when it was on the ground.

  2. Re:Cost bigger issue than sonic boom on Rockwell Collins To Develop Cockpit Display To Show Sonic Boom Over Land · · Score: 1

    Probably not much, however, who wants to live someplace where they have to hear the boom of a massive lightning storm day in and day out? Thunderstorms are noisy, it's true, but for most people they're a fairly rare event.

  3. Re:Cost bigger issue than sonic boom on Rockwell Collins To Develop Cockpit Display To Show Sonic Boom Over Land · · Score: 1

    Hahaha, that's like the opposite of that patent office guy circa 1900 who said that everything that could be invented had already been invented.

  4. Re:Cost bigger issue than sonic boom on Rockwell Collins To Develop Cockpit Display To Show Sonic Boom Over Land · · Score: 2

    Some of the hysteria is probably because a very low-altitude plane flying supersonic can probably break windows, so people are worried about that. Of course, we're talking about higher-altitude planes here, so that isn't really justified.

    The other worry is probably the frequency of the booms. One boom a month isn't a big deal, but what if they decide to make a frequent flight path over your house in the suburbs or in the country? Now you've got sonic booms every day, throughout the day. No one wants that.

    They don't occur often over the continental USA because they're illegal (except for military planes), and these days because there's no supersonic passenger planes left. The Concorde was the only one, and it was limited to trans-Atlantic routes over water because of the restriction on sonic booms. I don't think it's unreasonable for people to be worried about something that isn't a problem now because of legality and current technological state; these things can and do change. Texting-and-driving 20 years ago wasn't a problem either, but now it is; it would have been helpful if someone had worried about it a little more. Drunken driving wasn't a problem 120 years ago, but again maybe someone should have worried about it and done something before it turned into a big societal problem.

    Personally, I don't even see why supersonic travel should exist for passengers. It uses insane amounts of fuel, and even if that problem is fixed, it's unlikely it'll ever be as fuel-efficient as subsonic flight. No one really needs to get around that fast. If you don't like 14-hour flights over the Pacific, then don't do them; stay at home instead, or choose a closer vacation destination. Maybe eventually we'll avoid this problem altogether with some kind of sub-orbital vehicle which is both fast and fuel-efficient, but I'm not holding my breath.

  5. Re:I was in the path of some low-level sonic event on Rockwell Collins To Develop Cockpit Display To Show Sonic Boom Over Land · · Score: 1

    It's probably muscle memory. I do something similar: many times when I try to type "ratio" I'll add an extra 'n' for "ration", which I of course then need to backspace over. And of course, auto spell checkers think it's just fine since it's still a valid word.

  6. Re:Fuck you. on Editor-in-Chief of the Next Web: Adblockers Are Immoral · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is why I actually don't have a problem with Google's text ads. You do a search on some terms, and alongside your search results you also get some ads based on those terms. This can be really helpful if you're looking for a product to solve a problem you have, and the ad shows you something which is exactly what you're looking for. I guess this is called "targeted advertisement".

    The mass-spam advertisement is the stuff that sucks, because I have to see it even when I'm not looking to buy something, and it can be for anything, not something that I specifically need.

  7. Re:Fuck you. on Editor-in-Chief of the Next Web: Adblockers Are Immoral · · Score: 1

    No thanks to Adblock Plus. That thing is a giant resource hog.

    I've switched to uBlock now; it's much better than ABP ever was.

  8. Re: Really? on MenuetOS, an Operating System Written Entirely In Assembly, Hits 1.0 · · Score: 1

    You'll get lousy performance since the translated code isn't written specifically for the new CPU. The whole reason for writing in assembly is to optimize the code for the CPU hardware.

  9. Re: Really? on MenuetOS, an Operating System Written Entirely In Assembly, Hits 1.0 · · Score: 1

    No, with assembly you have to rewrite everything for the new architecture, because it's so different. x86 assembly does not resemble ARM assembly at all.

    When the OS is written in C, you don't have this problem. Just look at the Linux kernel. Only small bits of it are in assembly, which of course are CPU- and arch-specific, but the rest is fully portable. Obviously, this means not making any assumptions along the way, like that your CPU is only 32 bits, but this isn't that hard to do. Recompiling the Linux kernel for an all-new CPU is not hard, you just have to change the arch-specific low-level things and you're done; all the scheduler, device driver, etc. code stays the same.

  10. Re:Floppy disk? on MenuetOS, an Operating System Written Entirely In Assembly, Hits 1.0 · · Score: 1

    there haven't been major advances in OS X or Windows for over a decade.

    That's because the field has become mature, and there's little improvement to be made. For kernel-level and system-level stuff, all these concepts were mostly invented ages ago. Even the UI stuff was pretty stable by the early 2000s. So now some groups are trying to reinvent the wheel with all-new UI paradigms, as seen with Gnome3 and Windows' Metro UI, usually by trying to tie mobile and desktop UIs together, and the results have been horrifically bad.

    Maturity is something we see in most technological fields: there's a whole lot of innovation early on, then people settle on one or two standard ways of doing things, then they stick with that for a long time, only making very small incremental improvements. Just look at aviation: they invented all kinds of weird-looking aircraft in the first few decades there, but what changes have there been to aircraft in the last 40 years or so? It's all been in the electronics, navigation, etc., not in the aerodynamics. Airplanes look almost exactly like they did 50 years ago, but with some relatively minor optimizations. Same goes for, say, laundry machines. A modern washing machine isn't much different from one 40 years ago, but now it has electronics which allow it to be more efficient with water and power and do a better job washing, but the overall design is pretty much the same, with two basic designs: a vertical-axis tub with an agitator, or a horizontal-axis tub (originally much more popular in Europe, but has gained popularity in the US in the past 15 years).

  11. Re: Really? on MenuetOS, an Operating System Written Entirely In Assembly, Hits 1.0 · · Score: 2

    The problem with this is that smaller, cheaper, and less power-hungry hardware these days has an entirely different architecture, called "ARM". (I think MIPS is also alive and kicking, being used in many embedded applications as well as ARM.) This shows why writing stuff in assembly is generally a bad idea: you can't port it to another architecture.

  12. Re:Well you want offensive ? on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 0

    Wrong. Obama was indeed pretty short on merit, as was Reagan (a former B-list actor of all things). Just being a governor doesn't mean you'll be a good president; there's lots of shitty governors, and Bush II was one of those. Chris Christy is another great modern-day example of a shitty governor.

    Unfortunately, the voters (in both parties) are lousy at picking candidates in the Primaries.

  13. Re:Well you want offensive ? on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 1

    1. Just because meritocracy is real doesn't mean changes happen instantly.

    Yeah, that's called inertia. In a real meritocracy, there'd be no inertia: people would dump the underperformer as soon as something better is available. But that's not what happened with the American car companies: they hung on for a very long time because of inertia, and as a result they're still here now. In a true meritocracy, they would have mostly disappeared in the early 80s, when Japanese cars had eclipsed them in every way, except probably for the full-size truck market (where Japanese makers didn't actually compete until later). In a mostly-meritocratic-system, with some inertia, the American carmakers would have died out by the early 90s. It wasn't until the late 2000s when the Americans really finally caught up.

    2. Maybe their meritocratic skill is in navigating politics and unions, not car making.

    Well the Japanese had far better cars on the market for decades, and didn't seem to have problems with unions or politics. Again, inertia, not meritocracy. If (as you might contend) unions were dragging down the American automakers, then in a true meritocracy they should have gone out of business in the 80s because of this. Instead, inertia kept them afloat, despite their problems with unions. Remember, this is a business: they make cars, and sell them to the general public. In a meritocratic market, the business with the superior product and customer service is the one which is the most profitable, and others go out of business. That's obviously not what happened with the American automakers; their cars in the 70s-90s were utter shit. And not only were they shit, but there were far superior alternatives on the market, at competitive prices. In a meritocracy, they should have gone under. It's that simple. Ergo, there's no meritocracy, just a huge amount of inertia (plus a big bailout in the late 2000s).

  14. Re:Well you want offensive ? on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 1

    Yep, inertia is a powerful thing.

    Here's another example for you: If meritocracy were a real thing, GM and Chrysler would have gone out of business in the 1980s (probably Ford too).

    If meritocracy were a real thing, Bush would never have been President.

    If meritocracy were a real thing, Justin Bieber would never have amounted to anything more than one of countless Youtube uploaders that no one cares about.

  15. Re:New bands? on What Happens To Our Musical Taste As We Age? · · Score: 1

    It also explains why the current generation embraces the music of their parents, a.k.a "Classic Rock", rather than rejecting it - as did every prior generation. (Remember when your parents' music used to sound "old fashioned" or "corny?")

    I think this is an extremely important point, and something these theorists have ignored. I've been to a bunch of classic rock concerts in the last 6 years or so, and it's really struck me how wide an age range I see in the audience. I see middle-aged parents with their teenaged kids there frequently, watching bands like Styx and Foreigner. This is simply something you would never have seen in the 70s or 80s: teenagers then had zero interest in music from the 50s. I sure as hell never saw anything like this when I was younger and going to concerts in the 90s. But these days we've had Guitar Hero and lots of kids getting into this music; things are really different, and I think a lot of it is changes in the music industry since the rise of the internet. The subject I believe is far more complex than some theories about peoples' tastes changing as they age.

  16. Re:New bands? on What Happens To Our Musical Taste As We Age? · · Score: 1

    That said, I've come to appreciate music from the 1920s - 1950s, which predates me by a generation or two. Oh, and of course, there's also Classic Classical. That goes back several generations further.

    Actually, Classical music, while nice and relaxing to listen to at times, also frequently bores me. For pre-20th-century music, Classical is just too new for me, and I prefer Baroque. The songs are more interesting and complex, and I like the harpsichord a lot.

  17. Re:Allowing your mind to close. on What Happens To Our Musical Taste As We Age? · · Score: 3, Informative

    Glad I'm in my 40's and I'm not weighed down by a mortgage, several kids, a shitty job and an impending divorce. I mean, seriously, what a fuck up way to look at life.

    Like it or not, that's reality for lots of middle-aged people. How many people really, really love coming to the office day in, day out, and putting up with the same corporate BS? And at least 50% of marriages end in divorce, so it's not like that's unusual either.

  18. Re:Allowing your mind to close. on What Happens To Our Musical Taste As We Age? · · Score: 1

    Maybe for some people that stuff is true, but I never liked most of the music that my peers did. I went to college in the early/mid 90s, and I hated the music of that time. I quickly developed an appreciation for metal (mostly from the 80s), and later got into 70s rock. In fact, I've been learning to appreciate older stuff as I've gotten older, and I've never liked anything from the 90s on (unless it was 80s bands continuing to make music). I seemed to mostly come by this stuff on my own, though for a brief time in college I had a couple of friends who shared my musical tastes.

    I also think it's wrong to ignore environmental factors: the music being made now really is different from that from decades past. They didn't have Autotune back then, and things were really different in the pre-Napster and pre-internet days.

  19. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    Thanks! That sounds great. I have such a situation like that, and there's a break afterwards, but I got a job after that so it wasn't long-term unemployment, so the "period off" and "personal projects" thing sounds great, and in fact, is exactly what I did in that time as I was working on a side business.

  20. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    I used to have a bunch of mercury fillings. None of them lasted 30 years; they all had to be replaced. The resin fillings I have now are well over 5 years old, more like 10-15 years. The best part is they look exactly like teeth; I can't even distinguish most of them. One of them is actually not really a "filling", but fills in a chipped tooth. It's strong enough to stay on the end of my front incisor, and is completely indistinguishable from real tooth. Try that with amalgam.

    You sound like someone pining for cars with points.

  21. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    Surely you can attach in some way a printer to a digital X-ray machine?

    There's no such thing as a "digital x-ray machine". Do you also go to one of these horrible old-school dentists? They have a computer next to the chair, and instead of bite-wing film they use a small sensor that goes in your mouth, and has a cord with a USB connector on the end which plugs into the computer. Their software (one big name is "Dentrix") then does the capture and saves the images. There's two big advantages: the digital sensor requires about 1/10 of the x-ray energy as the old film, so you don't get such a big radiation dose, and the images are all digitally archived, so it's trivial for the dentist to bring them up and refer to them, and also to send them to other dentists in case you move and have to change dentists.

  22. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    Reason for leaving should NEVER be stated on a CV.

    Yeah, I already knew that. The problem is that many jobs require you to fill out an employment application and for each job, they demand a reason for leaving that position.

    If it was the case that your boss was a wanker and you had to get out, spin it into something like "I had spent a decent length of time there and I believe I accomplished all that I was going to. I felt that it was the right time for me to look for new opportunities and hence here I am. In particular I am keen to work on (whatever they just told you about)."

    Nothing there is a lie. If your boss was a jerk you probably weren't going to go any further in that role.

    Sounds good. What if it's a job in the past, and you now have a gap after that job? What would be a good excuse there? TIA

  23. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    Reason for leaving: My boss was an absolute cock and one day I had enough and I quit with no notice.

    For some reason people don't seem to think this will raise questions about them.

    That's really weird that that many applicants don't realize that. I would think that's common sense.

    However, since you seem like a good one to ask, what should an applicant do in that situation, when a reason for leaving is demanded and that's their actual reason? Obviously they can't write the text above, but what's a better way to word it?

  24. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    My experience is that often in technical spaces people can be very unaware of how certain things may portray them. People put photos on their CV, they put their marital status, how many kids they have, where the attend church, whole paragraphs about their hobbies, all sorts of weird things. Quite often the more techie they are the weirder the stuff they put on their CV.

    Huh? Are you serious? I thought it was common knowledge that you don't put all that crap on your resume, and in fact that it's illegal for employers to ask. At least, that's how it is here in the US; you may not be US-based since you keep using the term "CV"; usually we only use that for academic positions. And, if you're not American, I wonder if that's a big culture difference; maybe techies here have much more disdain for AOL than people elsewhere.

  25. Re:So? on Does Using an AOL Email Address Suggest You're a Tech Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    I guess you don't work in tech recruitment. It's one thing if some HR drone or whatever has an AOL email address, but it's entirely another if it's someone who claims to be up-to-date with programming or IT technologies.