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User: KavyBoy

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  1. Pity on Amazon Brings Alexa To Hotels (zdnet.com) · · Score: 1

    Pity, it didn't work anyway. Must have gotten wet somehow. Good thing it wasn't plugged in.

  2. Nope! on Amazon Alexa is Coming To Headphones, Smart Watches, Bathrooms and More (cnbc.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's hard to put into words how much I do not want this.

  3. Re:Maybe the driver believed it was enabled? on Elon Musk: Autopilot Feature Was Disabled In Pennsylvania Crash (latimes.com) · · Score: 2

    It's hard to not realize you've disabled it. First, there's a distinct two-tone chime. Second, if regenerative breaking is enabled at maximum (which I think most people do), the car slows down noticably unless you press the accelerator. And there's just a "feel" with the torque on the wheel or something. It's just hard to miss unless it's your first day using it or you're just not paying attention at all.

  4. Re:Not so ridiculous on Tesla Model S Owner Claims Vehicle Went Rogue Causing An Accident By Itself (hothardware.com) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How this works is that you press the park button twice to activate autopark (aka summon). This brings up on the center display an overhead representation of the car with arrows front and back that you can press to move the car forward or backward. The flaw is that forward is the default. You don't have to press it. The default should be "do nothing", making the driver confirm intent to autopark.
    The first time I saw this, I knew it would be trouble.

  5. Following the trend... on PostgreSQL 9.3 Will Feature UPDATEable Views · · Score: 5, Funny

    If we follow the trend of other products, I would expect to see this in the 9.4 release notes:
    * Removed "DISTINCT" and "GROUP BY". Usability studies show that most queries do not use them and new users find them confusing.
    * "SELECT *" queries now return additional entries from Amazon.
    * SQL language extensions to integrate Facebook and Twitter.
    * Column order, if not specified in "ORDER BY", is heuristically determined from previous queries.

    It's just great to see a release of anything that is actually better than the what it is replacing.

  6. Re:Reflections on Why Everyone Hates the IT Department · · Score: 1

    Dude, a little hostile there. You're a prime example of why this article even exists.

    1. Yep, Customs. Not US customs. I worked in a top secret area without a security clearance as a foreigner, so security was actually frightening. Believe me or not. Basically, there was no security *at all* on really important stuff, like terrorist watchlists. A USB drive in a locked datacenter was the last thing in the world to worry about in this case.

    2. I don't care if you store the thing over a sink with a 30 foot extension cord. You can kick it like a hacky sack for all I care. If we replace it weekly, that's fine.

    3. Everyone had root access, as I mentioned before. Permissions were scrapped long ago, so that we could all manage build our little ship in our little 40 GB bottle.

    4. Don't care about performance or reliability. Two developers couldn't even check out all the source at the same time, so if you had a day off, you're likely to find somebody deleted your home directory files just to have enough space to get a patch built. Zero reliability or performance already.

    As I stated before, had you actually taken the time to read (and I don't get that actually reading, listening, or contemplation are strong points with you) it's not like I actually would have installed anything without permission. But when IT says that 8 or so people have to share a single 40 GB drive and that anything else is impossible, you start with the "I can get you 1 TB for $100" as a starting point for discussion. Sounds like you don't get that and aren't interested in doing anything but shouting down the people you think you have control over.

    By the way, the head of the department did come around and asked my opinion. I stated what little I knew, and it got the ball rolling on an actual solution. The rest of the department apparently was too cowed be being called a moron or "shit monkey".

  7. Re:Reflections on Why Everyone Hates the IT Department · · Score: 1

    You explain the cost difference and why it exists. You explain why this may cause problems (stalls). You've thought through and explained the backup and concurrency issues. You present a second server as a viable option to this problem. You do not whine about how hard it would be or the paperwork involved. You are neither disrespectful or obstructive to the user.

    Armed with this information, the Arrogant User (aka Desperate and Frustrated User) has a solution path and an explanation. He can now work with you and take it up the management chain to get something done. After all, he can explain his needs better than you.

    I would want you as my IT person.

  8. Re:Reflections on Why Everyone Hates the IT Department · · Score: 1

    What part of having the entire qa, dev, and prod environments all sharing the same 40 GB not fill you with dread? 40 GB. Really, I'm not making that up, and this was a government agency. (Customs) They would rather have us doing "rm -rf" all over the place, as root, on the same filesystem that hosts prod. But that's preferable to you than just plugging in an external drive for scratch data?

    Perhaps I just don't fully appreciate the complexity, but I have added an external drives and I didn't once have to repartition an array. 10 minutes was being generous. We didn't need a "set of drives", just something with more data storage than an iPod. I still haven't heard a reason why this would be so disastrous to even try - it does not fill me with dread. It never will. I guess I'm not as cool as you.

    The fact that IT would just disdain a "shit monkey" and not even offer up a counter solution is *exactly* why IT departments are hated. It's not like I was going to break into the data center and start plugging in hardware. People like me only offer advice because we are desperate to get *anything* done. We don't really expect you to do what we say, and we expect with your uber-knowledge that you can offer up a better solution. Maybe prod you along and have you explain what you're really going to do to help and how long it would take. I can tell you would have provided nothing but excuses and obstruction, though, with that attitude. Good job!

    The company I work for now, we all love IT. They fix things, they improve things. They say "no" at the right times, which is rare, and offer solutions instead of excuses. Night and day.

    By the way, at Customs, the system fell over once while I was on contract there and the whole country briefly went to paper records for all ports and airports for all passengers and cargo, essentially shutting down the entire nation for the morning. But hey, at least there's no drive connected to the USB port, that might have caused real problems. Just keep using those 40 GB!

  9. Re:Reflections on Why Everyone Hates the IT Department · · Score: 1

    Here's my take on it, from somebody who really *did* have to share 40GB of space.

    Arrogant User : "Our build server just keeps filling up. It's only got 40GB, you know."

    IT: Would you please take a look and see if there's anything you can delete first? How about this directory that is for a 5 day old version of the product?

    AU: No. We can't even do two builds at the same time, and all of qa, dev, and even prod shares the same space. We just need some space to even keep working. See, Fry's has them for $100.

    IT: So Frys sells Ultra320 SCSI disks for $100?

    AU: No, I never mentioned that.

    IT: Yeah, except that your build server takes Ultra320 drives.

    AU: So, just buy and external drive and plug it into a USB. I know the old server has them.

    IT: We asked for the budget for a new server 2 years ago, and upper management denied the request, saying that spending thousands of dollars on hardware and a dozen or more man-hours migrating to the new hardware...wasn't justified.

    AU: And they were probably right. You know what, I'll pony up the $100 and be back before lunch.

    IT: That's nice. If we install it, it a)might not work properly since it hasn't been certified by the vendor and b)the vendor provides us with 4-hour turnaround, 24x7x365 support, but only for authorized parts bought from them. If your drive fails, they won't replace it, and we'll be blamed by management if we can't replace it fast enough and a failure occurs.

    AU: Those are acceptable risks versus being stopped dead for hours every day. I'll buy a couple, then.

    IT: Did we mention that if the drive fails in a year or two, it's unlikely we'll find a replacement? The vendor guarantees parts availability for these drives, or compatible parts, for several years.

    AU: I said I'll buy two. Plus, I'm sure the $/GB will be even cheaper in a year or two.

    IT: You also didn't think that if we can't find the exact replacement, we're rolling the dice, because different manufacturers have slightly different ideas of what "300GB" is. If other drives are smaller than your "300GB" drive by just one block, we can't use it to replace the drive, because it's in a mirror.

    AU: So? We just need space. Forget about the mirroring stuff. Just plug in the damned USB.

    IT: Great. Are you also going to pay for someone to come in during off-hours and do the swap, and then re-partition the drives? We're talking several hours of someone having to be in the office after-hours. That means overtime.

    AU: I'll do it Sunday morning, right after the backups run. That'll be, what, 10 minutes?

    IT: And you're going to justify the downtime to repartition on the build server to management, especially given that there's a release in a few weeks? If the drive swap-out goes badly, will you shoulder the blame for the delay which will strain relationships with our distributors and customers, and screw up profit projections by shifting sales more into the next quarter? And, will you shoulder the blame for 12 developers sitting twiddling their thumbs for 2 days while we rebuild the server?

    AU: No, I'll just plug it in. No need to make this more complicated than it is. If it doesn't work, I unplug it and we forget about it. I'm sure your overwhelmingly-solid failsafes are more than adequate to handle the 0.00001% chance that this causes a problem. And by the way, we're pretty much sitting around idle anyway since we're all looking for files to delete and waiting for builds to finish.

    IT: And you're going to fill out the change request forms?

    AI: That's your job, right? I mean, that's *exactly* what you do get paid for.

    IT: Yes, the change request forms your boss demanded we complete after we had an upgrade to your development environment server go badly, causing an unexpected 4 hour outage. Upper management agreed and we now have to document everything, have rollback plans, and get sign-offs from upper management and the manager of affected groups, which includes your manager.

    AU

  10. Re:Awesome on British "X-files" Released to Public · · Score: 1
  11. Re:Papers please on National ID Cards Mandated in the US, If You're Under 50 · · Score: 1

    I just got my invitation to apply for residency! Woot!

    I hope it helps later if the nieces and nephews need a place to go to later.

  12. Re:moderation on The Obesity Epidemic — Is Medicine Scientific? · · Score: 1

    I completely agree.

    I'm currently doing everything right. I'm tracking my nutrient and calorie intake. I'm exercising. It's all spot on perfect for my age and weight. A month into this and the only difference is that I'm physically and psychologically miserable. I've dropped at most 5 pounds, and none of it seems to be fat. For that I've spent the past month hungry, exhausted, and nearly narcoleptic.

    Perhaps I just need to keep on with it longer, but right not the conventional advice isn't working at all.

  13. Re:ego != good_open_minded_programmer on Programmer's Language-Aware Spell Checker? · · Score: 5, Funny

    From the GP's website when view without Flash:
    We're the do-anything team that specialises in imaginging new ways for you to reach your audience.

    The word "pwned" doesn't spell check correctly either, but it is applicable.

  14. Been around a while on Top off Your Parking Meter with a Cell Call · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wellington, NZ implemented this a while back. I knew one of the IT guys involved. They were happy to get paid for doing the work, but they were sure it wouldn't be a success. After all, who would pay extra for this? Much to his surprise, it's been very successful.

  15. Re:Monarch on Review: Monarch Computer's Nemesis FX-57 7800 SLI Gaming · · Score: 3, Informative

    My Monarch system took an addition month for tech support to fix. Anything stressing the GPU would cause an instant lockup. I had to update all the firmware myself - it was months out of date. So much for the updates and burn-in. I really wished I had just put it together myself from Newegg. It would have been faster and the returns, if any, would have been easier.

  16. I'm done with this crap on Toshiba HD-DVD Player Planned to Enforce HDMI · · Score: 1

    I simply can't be bothered to worry about this stuff any more. I'm taking my ball and going home. I can live without the TV, movies, and music that the big labels produce. I don't want to have to understand the HDCP, DVI, or whatever specs. I don't want to do research when buying new hardware to ensure that it has not been crippled due to copy protection. This isn't a boycott on my part, and I'm not making some kind of big statement about standing up to Hollywood. It's just that it's gotten all too complex and stupid for something so simple - watching a program. The payoff is just not there for me personally. Maybe once the dust settles I'll have another look to see if the end result is favorable. I would LIKE to be able to watch movies or TV occasionally, after all. In the mean time, though, I am exercising my freedom to walk away.

  17. Re:Of course it isn't dead! on DECnet Isn't Dead · · Score: 1

    I could have understood a few calls here and there, like you said. In this case, though, a double-digit percentage of an entire country's phone calls were being dropped daily, and would have been down for a minute of so. That county didn't have the best infrastructure to begin with so it probably got lost as background noise.
    When it came to the billing engines, though, that was a different story.

  18. Re:Of course it isn't dead! on DECnet Isn't Dead · · Score: 2, Informative

    I worked support for a large telecom. I started a bug report and after a couple of days of working on it to no avail, I asked how urgent this was. They said it happened about once a day and each time a few thousand calls were dropped. But no big deal, it wasn't TOO urgent, and I could get to it when I wanted. I was stunned.

  19. Re:Marketers on Marketers Back "Cookies Are Good For You" Campaign · · Score: 1

    I found that too many sites that I needed didn't work. I would allow www.mybank.com, thinking that it would allow me to to online banking. Nope, I also needed to allow secure.mybank.com or whatever.
    Now I browse with cookies on so that everything works. I can later inspect what cookies I needed (secure.mybank.com) and what ones I don't (advertising.com). It's not that I have some howard hughes-like obsession with keeping cookies off my hard drive - I just don't want certain people tracking me.

  20. Marketers on Marketers Back "Cookies Are Good For You" Campaign · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If marketers want to to keep cookies, then that's all the proof I need to delete them. If these are the people who brought us popups, popunders, flash adds, etc., then screw 'em. I will block their efforts at very turn.
    I keep cookies enabled by default, but delete them regularly, adding the sites to my "block" list. It's sort of a hobby to see how many sites I can collect.

  21. Re:My requirements before I buy a (H)DTV on FCC Speeds Up Digital TV Signal Deadlines · · Score: 1

    No doubt, that's how it works. Thanks, Wal-Mart. But even a craptacular item should be expected to last a reasonable amount of time. I've had too many item that I thought should have a warning sticker "Not intended for actual use" - breaks the first time.
    I would be happy to buy Brand A, but I'm starting to think that true quality is impossible to find these days. More often, I find Brand C: craptastic TV, useless features, and still $500.

  22. Re:My requirements before I buy a (H)DTV on FCC Speeds Up Digital TV Signal Deadlines · · Score: 1

    Why shouldn't a new set last for 11 years? Because it's cheap we should just expect that it breaks right away? No, because it's cheap I might expect less quality and fewer features, but the damned thing had better work and keep working. The poster's original set DID last for 11 years, so it is reasonable to expect similar performance for a similar price.
    I can see it now - in 11 more years a low-priced TV will last about two weeks, and you'll still excuse it because, well, at that price...

  23. Re:Insulting to officials? on Chimp Can Hack Diebold Electronic Voting System · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, that's the perfect answer! We COULD live in a democracy where we discuss our situation and work on ways to improve it for ouselves and others. Or, we just be happy with whatever happens to us and suggest that those who do not roll over and take it just go away and stop bugging us.
    I never got the "If you don't like it, leave" mentality. If you don't like it, it's your responsibility to do something about it, whatever "it" is. Posting on Slashdot may be not be effective, but at least it exercises our freedom of speech. Suggesting that if somebody is not happy then they don't deserve to speak up is just asinine.

  24. Re:Myth busting on India Becoming a Major Hub for Western Job Seekers · · Score: 1

    Actually, the company I work for just hired a black American, so you can't use that argument. One tester is Indian, and one is Chinese, and I'm white so I think we have the bases covered on race considering the size of the company. Or course that's just one place, but race isn't a big deal in NZ as far as I can tell.

  25. Re:Myth busting on India Becoming a Major Hub for Western Job Seekers · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sorry, you're wrong on almost all counts. I know because I've done it. I showed up in New Zealand on vacation and had a job offer two weeks later. I went to immigration and walked out with a two-year work visa. I don't even have an IT degree. My wife is here full-term on a work visa that allows her to stay as long as I'm here. A year into it and I'm sitting in my own house in NZ right now. I can apply for long-term residency and probably get it.
    Now, it wasn't a cake walk, but it was FAR from difficult. I work with a 20-year-old American that's here same as me, so it's not like I'm a special case. No huge sums of work experince and cash are required.