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User: American+AC+in+Paris

American+AC+in+Paris's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 1,442

  1. Re:LG G4 on Ask Slashdot: Best Big Battery Phone? · · Score: 1

    Apple ... realized that the vast majority of people did not buy spare batteries for laptops ...

    Bullshit. Gross gooey bullshit. Apple found it easier and more profitable for THEM to make the batteries non-replaceable. They relied on idiot fanbois to keep buying their shit anyway, and on regulators not to give a fuck about doing their job and keeping waste minimized by REQUIRING all batteries in all consumer goods to be replaceable.

    Sure, because even though swappable batteries are bigger, heavier, more expensive to make, compromise the strength of the laptop's chassis, require more moving parts, need to use contacts, and still need to be bought from the manufacturer at a stupid high premium (or at Joe's U-Test-Em Fly-By-Night Battery Emporium dot com, if you're feeling brave,) by GOD they're user-swappable, and THAT, my friends--THAT is the thing that REALLY. MATTERS.

    THERE OUGHTTA BE A LAW, I TELLS TA

  2. Re:Add-ons on Ask Slashdot: Best Big Battery Phone? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's interesting how, the same way we are going back to the old concept of mainframe with the cloud thing, we're also making our "mobile" phones wired again.

    I mean, if you think of a smartphone as a souped-up cell phone, then yeah, you're gonna be charging a whole lot more. Alternatively, if you think of a smartphone as a stripped-down Internet-connected laptop you can carry in your pocket, then not so much.

    A smartphone is only a phone these days in the sense that one (or honestly several) of umpteen different apps it has allows you to make telephone calls.

    Cell phones were never meant to be computing devices. They were mobile telephones with some truly horrid additional functionality bolted on top (the most successful of which was texting, which was simply horrid experience on a numeric keypad, T9 or no.)

    We're not re-wiring our mobile phones. We're stratifying our computing across devices, and relegating telephony--a formerly essential function that used to require a dedicated device--to the status of a supplemental application that we tend only to use on our more mobile computing devices, if at all.

  3. Add-ons on Ask Slashdot: Best Big Battery Phone? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Getcherself a battery-backup case/portable battery. Alternatively, invest in a few extra charge cables and scatter 'em about your domain.

    But then again, you're a power user. You know this already.

  4. Uh-huh on New Video Shows Shot Down Drone Hovered For Only 22 Seconds · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The shooter says he did not know if the drone was being operated by a paedophile, criminal or ISIS terrorist before he opened fire.

    Translation: I've been just itching to Stand My Ground, and this was the best opportunity I've been presented with so far, so.

  5. NYSE on Glitches: United Airlines Grounds All Flights, NYSE Suspends Trading · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Interestingly enough, trading--even of NYSE listings--seems to be continuing along just fine without the NYSE.

    It's almost enough to make people start to wonder aloud whether or not they're still relevant.

  6. Yes on Even the "Idea Person" Should Learn How To Code · · Score: 2

    This is a good idea; a deeper understanding of the various roles around you can only improve your own work.

    Similarly, coders should be able to:

    • Read (and write!) a project proposal
    • Successfully explain their work to a room full of non-technical people
    • Interpret a project plan and identify risk points
    • Understand an annual report
    • Grasp basic employment law

    Specialized skills are substantially enhanced by a broader understanding of the organization as a whole.

  7. Treadmill + board + trigger clamps = very good on Ask Slashdot: Have You Tried a Standing Desk? · · Score: 1

    Trigger clamped a plank of shelving to the handles of my treadmill. Works wonderfully as a comfortable standing desk; set to ~2 mph, I can walk at a gentle pace and still have perfectly good trackpad and keyboard control.

  8. Re:Goodness on North America Runs Out of IPv4 Addresses · · Score: 1

    Perhaps all of that was an attempt to motivate at least a lukewarm response to the obviously coming problem so people wouldn't end up running around with their hair on fire later.

    Oh I get that, I'm just saying that years of teeth-gnashing and arm-flailing has had pretty much the opposite of the desired effect.

    This has been pitched as a dire and urgent danger for ages. The IPv4 address exhaustion problem Wikipedia article is nearly nine years old, for crying out loud.

    This will get sorted out like pretty much every single other technical capacity issue gets sorted out: once the pain and cost of not acting becomes prohibitive, people will act, and it will cease to be an issue.

  9. However Shall We Figure This Out? on Volkswagen Factory Worker Killed By a Robot · · Score: 1

    This it perhaps the first severe accident of this kind in a western factory, and is sparkling debate about who is responsible for the accident, the man who was servicing the robot beyond its protection cage, or the robot's hardware/software developers who didn't put enough safety checks. Will this distinction be more and more important in the future, when robots will be more widespread?

    Folks, there exists an entire and oft maligned profession that is dedicated to figuring just this sort of thing out.

    This isn't some big unsolved existential question. It's a fairly dry exercise in interpreting and applying precedent in new ways. Humans are actually reasonably good at sorting out how to deal with the legalities of new things.

  10. Goodness on North America Runs Out of IPv4 Addresses · · Score: 1

    Hey, maybe this is a Serious Thing.

    It's tough to tell, though, as we've been OMG RUNNING OUT OF IPv4 ADDRESSES REAL SOON NOW for the past decade and a half, give or take.

  11. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. on Commodore PC Still Controls Heat and A/C At 19 Michigan Public Schools · · Score: 1

    You cut $200 off your utility bill in a few weeks with a new thermostat...

    My conclusion is that you could not figure out how to turn in on an went without any sort of heat or AC for several weeks.

    Haha, yes! I am that stupid! No wonder I was sweating buckets and passing out all summer!

  12. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. on Commodore PC Still Controls Heat and A/C At 19 Michigan Public Schools · · Score: 1

    GP is probably Al Gore incognito. Heating or cooling his mansion could easily use that much energy.

    Bwahahaha! Oh, man, that's fresh.

    Al Gore. Heh.

  13. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. on Commodore PC Still Controls Heat and A/C At 19 Michigan Public Schools · · Score: 1

    the new unit had pretty much paid for itself within a few weeks

    Woah. You saved $200 on heating costs in a few weeks? Just your savings represents about 2 months of heating costs for me, during the winter. What, exactly, was your old thermostat doing? Did you have to use cash money to light the pilot light?

    In this case, it was A/C. Like I said, the house was old: it had a very old, inefficient central A/C unit at the time (which we also replaced, once we could afford to.) It wasn't a big house, but it was a drafty house, so it didn't exactly hold its temperature all that well.

    So instead of having a house that basically always kept itself cool (I'm somewhat forgetful and distracted, especially first thing in the morning; my wife and I rarely thought/remembered to crank the temp when leaving for the day), the new thermostat always remembered to turn off for half the day--and the hottest half, at that. The fact that it was a stupid-hot, stupid-humid Maryland summer counted for something, too.

  14. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. on Commodore PC Still Controls Heat and A/C At 19 Michigan Public Schools · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Pi plus some student programmers - should be done for $1500. Which begs the question - if it still works, why replace it?

    In my old house, there was an analog thermostat.

    This thermostat came with the house, probably cost $20, and worked just fine.

    Me, being the foolhardy spendthrift I am, dropped TEN TIMES that on a fancy-shmancy programmable thing with all sorts of stupid, complicated bits inside.

    As it turns out, my previous model--while perfectly functional--was really quite inefficient, and the new unit had pretty much paid for itself within a few weeks.

    Doing things properly can save tons of money.

  15. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. on Commodore PC Still Controls Heat and A/C At 19 Michigan Public Schools · · Score: 1

    So less than 2 dozen schools need to spend upwards of $2 million dollars to... control the HVAC?

    Really?

    That is the bigger issue, IMHO...

    Well, if the new system ends up saving them more than $2 million over its lifespan (hardly a stretch of the imagination, given the cost of heating and cooling large buildings,) wouldn't they be fools to not have done this already?

  16. Re:And what if he's right? on Nobel Prize-Winning Scientist Criticizes Role of Women In Labs · · Score: 1

    "Just deal with it like grownups" is a cop-out philosophy of managers not wanting to do their jobs

    No, its a simple matter of: The company is paying for your time right now. How you spend your own time, and with whom you spend it is your own affair, but on company time, it is not acceptable to be actively engaged in anything other than business. Acting like an adult means recognizing that your rights to become emotionally involved with any consenting adult caries with it the companies right to not suffer economic loss when you are incapable of keeping your private affairs private.

    I have a friend who runs his own (quite successful) company here in Baltimore. I'm going to point you to a recent blog post of his regarding version 2.0 of the company handbook. It's a fast read, is well written, and provides a very concrete, real-world example of why I so strongly disagree with the "just be professional" sentiment.

  17. Re:And what if he's right? on Nobel Prize-Winning Scientist Criticizes Role of Women In Labs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The fix is for people to deal with it, like grown-ups. Office romances happen across the entire working population. If people are idiots there's fallout. So far the world has survived, and nothing needs to be done to fix this.

    Significant enough numbers of grown-ups are sufficiently unable to act like grownups that yeah, the rest of us really do need to fix it.

    More importantly, this is not new. Interpersonal struggles and conflict are as old as humanity itself, and we've discovered, as a species, that we really do benefit from having rules, laws, guidelines, and social norms to help us navigate these choppy waters.

    "Just deal with it like grownups" is a cop-out philosophy of managers not wanting to do their jobs and employees not wanting to grow beyond what they already are. "Just deal with it like grownups" means nothing more than "I don't like dealing with the strife and drama that is the human condition, therefore I'll pretend that MY employees/co-workers are somehow magically above all that."

    Lastly, if you think that the world has survived without people having done anything to fix this, well, you haven't been paying any attention at all.

  18. Re:They still sell those? on Opening Fixed-Code Garage Doors With a Toy In 10 Seconds · · Score: 1

    Still plenty of openers from the 80's and 90's out there chugging away, and most homeowners aren't going to fix something that ain't broke. And while yes, a 10-second skeleton opener is "broke", that's still longer than it takes a practiced hand to pop a door or window open. Many folks are comfortable enough relying on the fact that doing either of these things lands you in very hot water with the local authorities that they're not too worried about not having reinforced locks and barred windows.

  19. Re:Android to iDevice on The Tricky Road Ahead For Android Gets Even Trickier · · Score: 1

    ...a $350 Android phone is a high-end device--or, at best, at the upper end of mid-range. Roughly 60% of Android phones retail for $200 or less. (http://www.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=prUS25037214). The $350 price point lands right near the top quintile of all Android phones. By contrast, there does not exist a low-end iPhone for sale at retail. That's a conscious decision on Apple's part, and matches their overall M.O.

    Your phone is not one of the low-end phones that give such a bad user experience. Your phone is quite nice--and quite expensive--compared to the fleet of Android devices as a whole.

  20. Re:Android to iDevice on The Tricky Road Ahead For Android Gets Even Trickier · · Score: 1

    ...well, that's sort of one of the features of Android. It's open, and it's run-on-what-have-you, so it should hardly be surprising that a significant chunk of the install base is running on cheap, low-end devices. It's a big part of the reason Android has such a large market share compared to iOS.

    If Google can't pull low-end Android users onto high-end devices instead of iDevices, well, that's partly a failure of marketing, and partly the natural challenge of living in such a diverse world of devices. If a significant chunk of your market share consists of budget devices with bad user experiences that are targeted to non-technical users, you can hardly be surprised when those users clump the OS in with the phone itself.

  21. Re:Two quick fixes to mass replicate on Elon Musk Establishes a Grade School · · Score: 1

    Sure, plenty of kids and teens would not get educated, but they're probably not get anything now either. You can't make a student that won't learn educated anymore than you can make a morbidly obese person who refuses to eat right healthy. Sometimes society is better off with such people being allowed to make themselves into warnings for others.

    Setting aside the sheer depravity of this argument, we have ample historical context for what happens when society cuts off the neediest. France, Haiti, Cuba, China, Russia, Algeria, Egypt, India, Scotland, The Phillipines, Mexico--just to name a few places where social and political inequality have driven massive, bloody revolts.

    Wealth and political power calcify with the already wealthy and powerful. The middle and working classes slowly lose what wealth they have through attrition. Poverty becomes a virtually inescapable sink of destitution. Eventually, enough people end up having quite literally nothing to lose that you get vicious, deadly, destructive revolutions that take generations to recover from.

    If you insist on taking a "pragmatic" view of not even bothering to -try- to improve the lives of the impoverished, try to at least understand the historical ramifications of what you're arguing for.

  22. Re:Sudden? on ESA Satellite Shows Sudden Ice Loss In Southern Antarctic Peninsula · · Score: 1, Redundant

    It's not the country, It's the drooling morons that we have running the country.

    We get the politicians we deserve.

  23. Re:Schizo on Battle To Regulate Ridesharing Moves Through States · · Score: 2

    Then Uber comes along and creates a way to share a ride and the driver benefits a little bit as well.

    Uber drivers aren't sharing a damned thing. They're charging for a service. That's called doing business, and if you want to do business, you need to follow certain rules, just like anything else in life. You can't just jump up and say "nuh-uh, this is sharing!" when you're really requiring people to pay you before you "share" anything.

    If I open a gas station and call it a "fuel sharing service", does that mean that I get to bypass all those pesky rules and regulations for making sure my tanks don't leak into the ground? Or that I don't need to spend all that extraneous money to install safety cutoff switches (like anyone ever -uses- those, amirite?)

  24. Re:This is ridiculous! on Battle To Regulate Ridesharing Moves Through States · · Score: 3, Funny

    Forget it, he's on a roll.

  25. "Ridesharing" on Battle To Regulate Ridesharing Moves Through States · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If y'all are still telling yourselves that services like Uber and Lyft are "rideshares", you're not paying attention, and haven't been for a long time.

    Ridesharing suggests that people are sharing a ride from point A to point B--that is, they're both going that way, and thus are going to slug together to save gas/cost.

    Uber and Lyft are effectively taxi services that uses an app instead of a dispatcher. The driver seeks out a fare, starts the timer, drives the fare to their destination, and then seeks out another fare.

    The driver is not "sharing" anything, nor is the passenger. This is a taxi service.