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User: MonoSynth

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  1. Re:but it's all bullshit on Solid-State Battery Startup Claims Breakthrough For Electric Vehicles (electrek.co) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You can charge your car in the 90+% of the time you don't use it.

    An EV is only useful if:
    1. You can charge it at home (or work) so it's on 100% when you start your day
    2. The range is enough for 95% of your daily needs

    In a couple of weeks I get a Nissan Leaf and I've been monitoring my current driving habits over the last months.
    I don't expect I'll need a fast charger more often than once every few months.

  2. Daylights Savings is like emoji on Daylight Saving Time Isn't Worth It, European Parliament Members Say (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Emoji forces single language software to support Unicode and DST forces single time zone software to support different time zones. And screw up badly.

    That's the only positive thing about DST that I can think of.

  3. We should pay more on Hello, Mobile Operators? This is Your Age of Disruption Calling (mckinsey.com) · · Score: 1

    We, as users, pay every month four our Internet, so that the Internet is ours. Every website is our guest. Please let it be this way.

    Unfortunately, most people only want to pay as little as possible. Either that, or there is a de-facto monopoly. In the first case, mantenance suffers to cut costs, in the second case thereâ(TM)s no reason to innovate.

    We should keep the Internet ours and prevent the likes of Facebook and Amazon from starting to subsidize/buy Internet providers to enable/incentivize them to upgrade their network. Because from that moment on itâ(TM)s more and more *their* Internet and before too long we will be the guests.

  4. Re: 120 fps .. someone FINALLY groks UI ! on Google's Upcoming 'Fuchsia' Smartphone OS Dumps Linux, Has a Wild New UI (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    s/NTSC/USA
    s/framerates/units

    (s/tests/rest)

  5. My current situation on Ask Slashdot: What Are Some Lies Programmers Tell Themselves? · · Score: 2

    "I fully understand the problem"

  6. Re:Totally not gloating on 'Dig Once' Bill Could Bring Fiber Internet To Much of the US (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    When did they start to prepare for fiber/broadband by installing empty conduits in Norway?

    The first time I saw them here in the Netherlands was in the mid to late '90s, in a 'rural' area (farmland, the nearest town with school & supermarket was 5km away, but that's about as rural as it gets round here).

    That's twenty years ago and as a result our broadband penetration is top notch. Fiber roll out is going fast too.

    If the USA wants to keep up, they'd better buy a time machine.

  7. Conversion typo on Norway Plans to Build the World's First Ship Tunnel (newatlas.com) · · Score: 4, Informative

    300 meters is 984 feet.

  8. Re:Pointless on Germany Unveils a Hydrogen-Powered Passenger Train (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    A lot of secondary railroads all over Europe are not electrified, and that's where these diesel-powered Lint-trains show up. So that's the target market for these trains, not the main railroads.

    And as said by others, there's a big problem with the fluctuations in energy output from wind and solar, especially in Germany. Instead of just throwing the energy away (like they do now), they could just as well use it to create hydrogen, even if it only has 50% efficiency.

    That's why they're targeting the German market with this train.

  9. Re: Alien Megastructures: on Comets Can't Explain Weird 'Alien Megastructure' Star After All (newscientist.com) · · Score: 1

    They're still hunting the dude on the European History Channel. I don't really understand why they keep going to Argentina and do the exact same thing there three times a week.

  10. Re:If it ain't broken... on BBC Turns Off CEEFAX Service After 38 Years · · Score: 1

    The Dutch language is well fitted for quirky creativeness. Last week they managed to announce the death of a pioneer in the field of bone marrow transplants in just 34 letters and one space :)

    http://www.spatiegebruik.nl/popup.php?id=3418 (4th headline)

  11. If it ain't broken... on BBC Turns Off CEEFAX Service After 38 Years · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's still alive and kicking here in the Netherlands, known as Teletekst. Every journalist wants to be on page 101.

    There's even a web-interface and an iPhone app for it, which is a no-nonsense, clutter-free, low-bandwidth source of news, weather, stocks and sport results. I can't live without it :)

    http://teletekst.nos.nl/

    I must say that I rarely use it on my tv anymore. Which is kind of funny, because nowadays it's still trapped inside the low-tech interface of the 70s although it's mostly used on devices so advanced that even the big visionaries of that age couldn't even dream about it.

    Is it nostalgia? Or more like the Stockholm Syndrome? Or does it just hit a sweet spot of usability and simplicity?

  12. meh on Tesla Reveals Charging Station Sites In 3 US States · · Score: 5, Funny

    No wireless. Lame.

  13. What if... on Scrum/Agile Now Used To Manage Non-Tech Projects · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What if Agile is better suited for other tasks than software development? I think Agile is an elegant way of approaching some kinds of creativity, but it just doesn't seem to work for most aspects of software-development.

    Making radio shows is more of an iterative kind of creativity with lots of loosely-coupled ingredients where throwing away an item and replacing it with another won't destroy the whole format, so you can start off with a format, broadcast it, and add/remove items as you go.

    Software is completely different. You create it once and after the first release you have to support it for eternity. Every new addition adds another layer of complexity, you can't just remove a feature without breaking other things or add a feature without duplicating functionality. For every iteration you'll need an overview and a deep knowledge of the whole system.

  14. She's not anonymous on DNA Sequenced of Woman Who Lived To 115 · · Score: 1

    She's the oldest Dutch person ever:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hendrikje_van_Andel-Schipper

    The retirement home where she lived until her death is just a couple hundred meters away from where I work.

  15. Re:Good thing is... on Dutch To Introduce Net Neutrality By Law · · Score: 1

    [quote] but lets just wait how happy they will be when the telcos change strategy (e.g. higher fees and data caps) to get their investments back.

    With the current scheme, the users who still use sms pay for the too cheap data plans of others. And the majority with low/occasional data usage pay for the minority that use 2+GB per month. That's not very fair. Prices will rise, bandwith caps will be tightened, but I'd rather pay a fair price than being robbed by insane sms rates, roaming charges and blocked services.

  16. Re:Good thing is... on Dutch To Introduce Net Neutrality By Law · · Score: 2

    Correction:

    The law was initiated by the opposing left-wing parties (as I expected). The (CDA)minister is very supportive, but the two biggest parties both say that they will await EU research on the matter. So it's not done yet.

    The telco's are not happy.

  17. Good thing is... on Dutch To Introduce Net Neutrality By Law · · Score: 2

    This idea comes frome one of the most corporate-friendly governments the country has had in a long time. The three ruling parties are all right-wing:
    1. VVD: liberal, capitalist, pro privatization of state-run companies;
    2. CDA: christian democrats. They're the initiators of this law;
    3. PVV: anti-muslim, anti-immigration, populist. Not really part of the government, but they promised to agree on most things (except for their anti-Muslim stance).

    The opposing parties are labour, socialist, environmentalist, liberal and two small christian parties.

    I can't imagine why any of those parties would vote against this law (except for one or two small ones), so I would be very, very surprised if this law won't be passed.

  18. work pc = scrap heap on Should Employees Buy Their Own Computers? · · Score: 1

    Since work pc's mostly are more than one generation older than enthusiast's pc's, it might even be feasible to give your own written-off (and unsellable) hardware a second life at work. At home I upgraded my 22" Samsung monitor to a 24" monitor, while my boss still mandates a 19" screen (because 1280x1024 is the target resolution for our product). I brought my 22" screen and a cheap dual-head graphics board to work so now I have 22" for Visual Studio and 19" for Outlook/internet/testing/comparing. Works like a charm while only costing me about 25 euros (for the gpu), which is a lot cheaper than the hassle of getting a work-provided second monitor.

  19. So basically... on Russia Moves To Universal ID Card · · Score: 1

    ...if the government doesn't like you, all they have to do is dig into your activities to find something illegal and use that as a reason to disable your ID-card and transform you into a second-rate citizen?

    I'm sure they won't do this the first ten years, or at least until everyone is used to having a chip inside their bodies, but once the chip is the only way to be part of society, they can do whatever they want. And that's scary.

  20. it matters a lot on Does Typing Speed Really Matter For Programmers? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Touch typists generally use more verbose variable names and more comments, because it's much more natural for them to type a lot of words. This makes their code a lot more readable, which saves money in the end since a *lot* of the cost of software is in maintenance and the only performance factor that really counts is not cpu cycles, memory usage or bandwith utilization, but euros, dollars, rupees, yens or whatever your legal tender is. The programmer's time is (one of) the most costly aspect(s) of software development. A crufty codebase is much easier to read and maintian with comments *really* explaining fixes and variable names explaining what they're used for. I see so much code with comments like '// Issue #24654' or variable names like 'i' or 'j' in functions that span more than 50 lines (or whatever fits in one screen).

    Of course there's more than typing speed involved in making maintainable code and I'm sure there are non touch typists who force themselves to make their code readable, but being able to type fast without thinking helps a lot.

  21. Files are dead. on Dropbox 1.0 Finally Released · · Score: 1

    This tool only seems to work with files. If I examine my own computer use, I see that I don't use files directly anymore. I edit/manage my photos with Aperture, it doesn't matter to me where they are on my hard drive. I manage and play music in iTunes. I'm happy to let it manage the files, because it's a pita to manage a huge music collection by hand. At work I work with Visual Studio and TFS. Yes, I know what my local working folder is, but I don't have to. Whenever I need to edit a document, the fastest way is to open the word processor and open the file via 'Recent Files'. I rarely need to access the files directly or know where they are.

    Besides, I don't want the same format on every device. I don't want a 16MB RAW file on my phone, just because I used the same file in Aperture.
    Just because I made a document in Word, doesn't mean I want to have the word document on-the-go, when I just have it there for review and an e-reader optimized version is a lot easier.
    I rip my cd's in Apple Lossless or iTunes Plus, because that's how it works and I have lots of hdd space. On my netbook, those files are way too big and everybody knows how much of a pita iTunes on a slow Windows box is. At the moment, I have to manually manage a shadow library with 160 kbit mp3's.
    And what about contacts? Bookmarks? I don't want those things as files in a certain format, I want to use the appropriate program to access that information.

    Wouldn't it be nice to have a library with source files on DropBox Online and a set of filters to generate the right libraries, protocols and formats for use on your devices?

  22. Re:UI Upgrade? on MS Hypes Win7 Tablets For CES — Again · · Score: 1

    It's the lack of Tablet centric apps.

    And that's the problem. Your tablet is as useful as the apps it runs. Apple understands this. They even did this on the original Mac, where they didn't give developers the tools to port DOS apps, but forced them to rethink the UI for the new interface.

    To me, it doesn't matter what OS it runs under the hood, they just have to force developers to add a Tablet View (with specific tablet-oriented controls) to their Visual Studio apps. They should also replace the windows shell with a tablet-friendly shell, but that's secondary because you don't spend that much time in the OS.

  23. Re:Really? on Which Language To Learn? · · Score: 1

    Where I work (as a lowly code monkey) we have 2+MLOCs of Delphi code (migrating to C#/WPF atm) and whenever we get new people, it's a good first test to see how fast they become used to Delphi's Object Pascal and the shitty and buggy IDE (Delphi.Net 2007). Most people need a week or two for that. And then a year to get used to our internal framework.

  24. Perfect security? on UK-Developed 'DNA Spray' Marks Dutch Thieves With Trackable Water · · Score: 1

    And again, here's the typical 'It's perfect because nobody robbed us yet' argument. If only a few percent of the stores are equiped with this 'DNA spray', I'm pretty sure that the criminals will target the other 95+% of the stores with more traditional security measures.

    We'll only know if this works if a significant percentage of the jewelries and retail stores in the neighbourhood are equiped with this. Criminals are creative, but above all they're lazy, just like us developers :P

  25. Re:Level of Perfection on Ex-Apple CEO John Sculley Dishes On Steve Jobs · · Score: 1

    10.0 was a public beta, 10.1 was a toy, 10.2 wasn't worth anything without the Classic environment. The first really serious version of OS X was 10.3, released in october 2003, six years after Steve came back.