Slashdot Mirror


User: neurovish

neurovish's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
564
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 564

  1. Re:Breaks / Brakes on Self-Driving Car Faces Off Against Pro On Thunderhill Racetrack · · Score: 1

    I could care less about that.

  2. Re:Very Cool... on Rasterman On The Impending Release of Enlightenment 17 · · Score: 1

    XFCE? ....
    Actually looking for the option, I did not find it...google gave me this page though, http://askubuntu.com/questions/15971/getting-visual-feedback-of-workspace-switch-in-xfce

    I know one of the window managers I've used frequently in the past would do that...I thought XFCE, but maybe it was a *box or Enlightenment. Middle click in xfce will show you workspace names, and you can change them.

  3. Re:Same security for all on Experts Warn About Security Flaws In Airline Boarding Passes · · Score: 1

    This was the first thing that came to mind. You don't need to go reading barcodes. Getting one of those tickets is like finding a dead and cooked in a box of cereal that you've already mostly eaten.

  4. Define "use" on Are Windows XP/7 Users Smarter Than a 3-Year-Old? · · Score: 1

    Is he able to configure the network? Setup some DNS entries, routes, proxies, wireless, etc. Install/uninstall software, maybe some user management? I'm sure it is really easy to turn it on and open a browser, but that isn't really accomplishing much. Yeah, I only read the summary...this is /.

    The biggest hurdle I've noticed with most users (well, ok, my parents) is "I don't want to break something", and that thought seems to paralyze them as soon as something unexpected pops up. A 3-year-old is probably not thinking about that.

  5. That sounds about normal on Google's Engineers Are Well Paid, Not Just Well Fed · · Score: 4, Interesting

    $128,336 in San Francisco equates to about $65k when cost of living is adjusted to the US average (specifically Raleigh, NC...it was the most average I could think of and is pretty close). I'm sure there is some flexibility in those numbers, but I don't know of anywhere in the bay area that isn't well above the national average.

  6. Re:Just too far out on A Day in Your Life, Fifteen Years From Now · · Score: 2

    Yes. The Apple Newton came out almost 20 years ago.

  7. Re:Just a cheap H1-B visa scam, "for the kids" my on Microsoft Calls For $5B Investment In U.S. Education · · Score: 1

    So what are some of these job postings where you can't find any Americans? I know more than a few who are qualified by your description, but who knows if they'll be weeded out before even talking to a real person at Microsoft with applicable domain knowledge.

  8. Re:Evil learning on Raspberry Pi For the Rest of Us · · Score: 1

    Unicycles and juggling.. thats all you modern hipster developers want..

    +1 insightful there. Kids these days.

  9. Re:You're confused. Calm down. Here's what you do: on Ask Slashdot: How Did You Become a Linux Professional? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, pretty much everything you said there except for the Debian part....who the hell runs Debian? Nothing big (Oracle, SAP, Websphere, etc) supports it, and there is nobody to hold accountable when things go wrong except for the admin (the people who write the checks really like to have that...and if you have customers that rely on your systems they will like that more). It is a better place to start than something like Ubuntu or SuSE, but most people use RHEL and CentOS.

  10. Luck on Ask Slashdot: How Did You Become a Linux Professional? · · Score: 1

    I started using Linux in high school with Slackware 3.0, and continued on using it as a desktop through college. After graduating during a recession with a degree in computer engineering, I couldn't find anybody willing to hire somebody with 0 experience. I ended up working as an office assitant doing mostly data entry for about a year at a local government office. Eventually there was a job opening for somebody who knows Linux in the IT department. Being in the government sector, they were rather prejudiced towards government employees, paid crap, and had a 15 page application that took a couple hours to fill out. I was also able to see who the hiring manager was, so I would stop by and bug him whenever I had documents to deliver to the office where IT was based. Eventually, about 6 or 7 months after I first applied I got the job. Fortunately for me, there was nobody who really knew enterprise Linux working there, so I was able to get in.

    On another path were a couple more guys in IT who ended up becoming Linux admins. One started out in desktop support and another started out on the helpdesk. The guy in desktop support worked in the same office as the (two) Linux admins, so we got to know him pretty well. He had used Linux a lot at home, ran it on his desktop at work, but mostly he was smart and capable of learning new things well as needed. 100 servers later and during a re-org, the powers that be were finally convinced that we needed another Linux admin, so we volunteered that guy. The helpdesk guy was another similar story. He worked far removed from us in the call center, but we still talked to them when calls came in and would stop by and visit every once inawhile. He would call from time to time just with his own questions about Linux, and would usually not ask the same question twice. When he did forward on a helpdesk call, he was one of the few people working there who did the basic troubleshooting they were supposed to do like pinging servers, checking credentials, user account lockouts, etc. If we got a ticket from him, then it was usually because something was really wrong or he didn't have the access rights needed for the fix. When one of the (now three) admins left, we told our boss that we wanted that guy to work with us.

    So, you can bug the hiring manager so that he recognizes you and be one of the only people working someplace who can spell linux, or you can get a crap IT job, get to know the *nix admins well, ask them the right questions, and have a track record of knowing how to think logically and do some complex problem solving.

  11. Re:virtualze on mainframe on Ask Slashdot: What Type of Asset Would You Not Virtualize? · · Score: 1

    Mainframe pricing is generally out of reach for most people who don't already have a mainframe. My zVM environment is ridiculously over-provisioned at the moment, so I can't really say what works well and what doesn't on it, but the largest bottleneck seems to be CPU cycles and certainly not I/O. That is kind of the opposite what you usually see on x86 VMs. It looks like databases will run pretty well here, and if the application runs on the mainframe or within zVM as well, then you get a free 6gbit network to use...I haven't been able to saturate that yet.

  12. Re:Depends on your expected ROI on Ask Slashdot: What Type of Asset Would You Not Virtualize? · · Score: 1

    Wow...somebody drank the Cisco blade Kool-Aid. What is your opinion of them?

  13. Re:Watches are not about telling time on Ask Slashdot: Wrist Watch For the Tech Minded · · Score: 1

    I once had a concierge at a 5 star hotel tell me he could always figure out a customer by observing two things: his shoes and his watch.

    The watch is to men what the handbag and shoes are to women. It is the ultimate fashion accessory. It can be a sign of status like a Rolex. It can be a sign of one's interests like a Bell & Ross. It can be a sign of ones appreciation for artisan watch craft like a Breguet. The question when buying a watch is not what features does it have. Do you really think anyone spends 100K on a Breguet because it tells accurate time? It is a very traditional status symbol of style so find the one that says what you want to say and enhances you personal brand.

    That is why I bought a Grand Seiko and a pair of Koronya shoes. I figure with these two nailed, I can go just about anywhere in bermuda shorts and a white t-shirt.

  14. Re:More on In Your Face, Critics! Red Hat Passes $1 Billion In Revenue · · Score: 1

    There is an "updates only" version, it is $350 / yr for a 2 socket server. Until about a year ago, this was the basic subscription that included web/email support.

  15. Re:Don't even have to... on Ask Slashdot: Mirrorless, Interchangeable Lens Camera Advice? · · Score: 1

    Nobody bitched, because nobody carried them. To be fair, that's partly because nobody could afford to take 300 photos in a weekend - film & processing costs were too high. These days 300 photos costs an hour in Lightroom tagging the 290 that you want to delete again.

    Check flickr, facebook, twitpics.. how many of those photographs were taken with SLRs (digital or film)?

    Those photos will also be around forever, and there are rather more of them..

    Of the top 5 cameras on flickr, 4 of them are DSLRs, and the top "camera" is the iPhone.

  16. Re:I am planning to move to NC on US Senator Proposes Bill To Eliminate Overtime For IT Workers · · Score: 1

    The place where I used to work (local government) did that. For the most part, the people who had the skills to get jobs elsewhere went and did just that. The employer of course does not care at all, and probably doesn't even realize what they did.

  17. Re:Failing of VMware? on VMware, a Falling Giant? · · Score: 1

    Some of the pain points of VMWare:

    number of vCPUs, vMemory per VM
    vSphere 5 now lets you have up to 32 vCPUs and 1024GB in a VM, which is good. vSphere4, which most people still, have is limited to only 8/256 per VM.

    why are you virtualizing something with more than 8 cpus and 256G ram? Maybe I missed a memo somewhere, but that sure sounds like something you're going to want to run on its own hardware

  18. Re:Pigeonholed? on Is the Maker Movement Making It Cool For Kids To Be Nerds? · · Score: 1

    As Lisa says, obesity is a function of diet, not activity level. Control your carbs (below 100g will decrease your weight), and eat plenty of natural meat, animal fat, and vegetables (healthy carbs) with some fruit, and you will find the right balance of nutrition.

    Or it is a function of activity level, diet, genetics, environment, and culture. We just aren't really sure what that function looks like. Has there been *any* widely accepted "this is why people are fat" kinds of science that has not been refuted by another "this is why people are fat" kinds of science? It isn't simple, and there is not a magic remedy. It is certainly possible to decrease weight by controlling carbs, but that is not the only way, and it is certainly widely possible to lose weight and be healthy without being in ketosis. Look at societies where the staple food is carbs. How are they not fatter than we are if carbs are what makes you fat?

  19. Break out the Checkbook on How Can I Justify Using Red Hat When CentOS Exists? · · Score: 1

    Support is only one reason to go RHEL over CentOS, and only a minor one IMO. Sometimes it makes sense to go CentOS, sometimes it makes sense to go RHEL, and sometimes it makes sense to run both. CentOS is really good and may be all that you need. I wouldn't hesitate to run it over RHEL in smaller shops.

    So, here is why you would want to pay for RedHat instead of CentOS
    - You really need the support. If you don't have deep linux knowledge, this might be for you. I have contacted Red Hat support about 5 or 6 times in the past 5 years. It was only really necessary once or twice and the other times were more like "I'm trying to get X to do Y. Am I wasting my time because it just doens't work that way?" kinds of questions.

    - You need the big company on a sheet of paper. If you're running software like Oracle or Websphere and their support offerings are dependent on an "approved platform".

    - Your customers. Are your customers and the customers you would like to have swayed by your infrastructure running on Red Hat? If they can turn around and bleed you, then do you want to be the one wholly responsible? CentOS has very little responsibility to you as a customer, however Red Hat does.

    - Who do you trust? Last I knew, the CentOS project is actually really small. There are a few key players who hold the keys to the kingdom, and the project is dependent on them. If the CentOS project decided to turn around and evaporate tomorrow, or start throwing backdoors into everything, then they will lose credibility and respect from the community. Red Hat has $millions and future $billions on the line. Their continued success is more than just a personal matter to their CEO and board.

    - ...which leads to, who is going to be around tomorrow. See above, CentOS isn't a huge team (which may have changed by now).

    - Testing. Red Hat has the resources to test extensively. CentOS does not, but they also don't really need to test to the same extent since Red Hat has already done it.

    - You own a lot of Red Hat stock. This mostly only applies if you're the CIO or a VP.

  20. Re:Ballmer said it all on Ballmer: We're Lucky Microsoft Didn't Buy Yahoo · · Score: 1

    From 2009:

    "This really is a win-win agreement both for Microsoft and for Yahoo," said Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer. "Consumers will get better products, and it will help the industry as a whole to prosper through our shared vision and shared values."

    Steve Ballmer's just happy he dodged a bullet. If it were up to him he would've gone full steam ahead on this deal. To me, this is just further evidence that he's bumbling about in the CEO position and needs to be replaced.

    Microsoft's failed bid for yahoo was the beginning of the....not going anywhere...for the company. Look at their share price from that time. The day that they announced a bid for yahoo, the stock accelerated a decline from which it has only marginally recovered. Right now, MSFT trades at the same levels it has for the past decade. Since 2002, the only time it has traded about $30/share regularly was right before the attempt to buy yahoo. The market knew it was a horrible decision, but Balmer did not.

  21. Re:Yahoo? on Ballmer: We're Lucky Microsoft Didn't Buy Yahoo · · Score: 2

    yahoo auctions is the defacto auction site in Japan. Flickr is still at the top for photography (real photography, not "look at my funny cat" type shots). Finance.yahoo.com is also one of the better financial aggregator type sites out there.

  22. Re:RIM is in Danger on Android Phones Get Dual Accounts · · Score: 1

    Apparently everyone missed that RIM is already doing this: http://us.blackberry.com/apps-software/business/server/full/balance.jsp

    They're taking a bit of a beating right now but I have to say, if I want to actually type quickly and accurately I won't be using my Android, I'd rather do it on a BB. I can type about twice as fast when there's a real, well designed, keyboard.

    RIM has the momentum against them though. Businesses have a desire to move away from RIM, but have no options with similar security. This feature will provide similar security and be one of the last hurdles for the switch.

  23. Re:why not encrypt everything? on Android Phones Get Dual Accounts · · Score: 1

    From TFS, the important bit is "under the control of company IT bosses". We looked at using Android phones, but stopped because the apps are a lot more wild-west, and locking out all apps would not sell the idea to the C-levels. With this approach, the business controls the emails and business side of things, which I'm going to jump to the conclusion that also means they can disallow applications from seeing that data and completely lock out applications from that zone. You still get to install all your twitter and myspace apps, but the company can still regulate their email data and don't have to worry about running afoul of HIPAA or whatever.

  24. Re:The Stock Market is a Joke on Apple Too Big For the Dow Jones Industrial Average · · Score: 1

    Invest in the dow now, and you will make money in 20 years.

    Well, maybe 30.

  25. PEBCAK on Stopping the Horror of 'Reply All' · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or you could try not being an asshole at work and keeping all of your correspondence in line with how you should present yourself. It is not the software vendor's fault if you are a moron or never evolved socially past middle school.