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User: drsmithy

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  1. Re:It's more like a stunt to me on Tech Startup Buffer Publishes Every Employee's Salary, Right Up To the CEO · · Score: 1

    The government may not be run like a business, but when you're talking in micro terms of coworkers knowing the salaries of the people they work with, it's very similar.
    It's not even remotely similar.

    Businesses typically go out of their way to ensure workers do not know each others salaries. Indeed, in several places I have worked, the employment contract had clauses explicitly stating employees were not allowed to discuss salaries with anyone except HR (including their boss - most bosses below Chief-whatever did not know, and were not allowed to know, what their immediate reports earned).

    Coupled with the typical person's natural reluctance to discuss what they earn, and you have a system where hardly anyone who isn't running the business knows what anyone else earns.

    Most businesses aim to be the complete opposite of transparent when it comes to salaries. That sort of information would, after all, lend a tiny bit of power to employees.

  2. Re:Seems like result would be higher price on Govt. Watchdog Group Finds Apple Misled Aussies On Consumer Rights · · Score: 1

    Most manufacturers of expensive, premium products offer a longer than mandatory warranty. 8 years on a car, 5 years on my Panasonic TV, 3 years on my NEC laptop. One year says "we don't think it will even last the legal minimum 2 years" to me.
    Actually I have found the complete opposite to be true. Generally speaking, the more "premium" the product, the shorter the warranty.

    Exhibit A: Swiss watches.

    Fundamentally, however, this has nothing to do with "warranty" - at least not in a country with proper consumer protection laws - this is about having a formal means to pursue companies that sell faulty goods without having to go through the cost and hassle of an individual legal action.

  3. Re:More interested if he did $5k. on What Would It Cost To Build a Windows Version of the Pricey New Mac Pro? · · Score: 1

    The mind boggles as to how they managed to get by with every other Mac Pro, then.

  4. Re:Hard to believe on What Would It Cost To Build a Windows Version of the Pricey New Mac Pro? · · Score: 1

    But building a comparable Windows machine with parts available on the market through your favorite sources (ex. newegg) is not possible at any price. You can integrate components with equal or greater functionality, but how much system test is there? Who is going to root cause every blue screen? Trust me, more of those blue screens are hardware related than I would have believed years ago. Who is making sure the PSU can deliver the needed power for the various application loads, and that it is performing with margin? Who is doing thermal measurements, checking airflow and ensuring parts are being kept safely in their operating region? This is what Apple is doing that "justifies" the price. The double quotes are there because no other system's company out there is holding to any quality standard except Apple, and as long as that's the case, Apple can charge whatever it likes.
    All the major name manufacturers do the same in their enterprise-class workstation PCs (HP Z Series, Dell Precision, etc). The cases might not be as pretty, but they're doing the same level of QA.

  5. Re:Something something online sorting on Why Don't Open Source Databases Use GPUs? · · Score: 1

    Ah, I see, you're only using them as dumb SAS cards. I was a bit interested to see why you would be doing this if you were actually using them as RAID controllers.

    I do the same thing myself into my FreeBSD fileserver VM with a couple of Dell H310 controllers (reflashed with LSI firmware in IT-mode).

  6. Re:Something something online sorting on Why Don't Open Source Databases Use GPUs? · · Score: 1

    Hardware passthru, I already do this for RAID cards on my ESX setup.
    I'm kind of curious about the use case for this ?

  7. Re:Something something online sorting on Why Don't Open Source Databases Use GPUs? · · Score: 1

    Hell, even the hard drives are gaming, or are making their way there. SCSI was the only way to go, even though SATA overtook the performance long ago.
    Even old U320 SCSI drives have seek times ca. 2/3 those (and consequently higher IOPS) of the fastest SATA drives.

    Then they started putting 2.5" SAS drives in, which are laptop SATA drives with a bigger pricetag.
    You are utterly clueless.

    You've only got to hold an enterprise SAS drive and a consumer SATA laptop drive in each hand to know they have to be manufactured differently. Then again, you've probably never actually seen an enterprise SAS drive, let alone held one.

    This is before even starting to look at the different specifications - where can I buy a 15k RPM laptop SATA drive ? How am I going to get multiple paths and multiple controllers accessing the disk when SATA doesn't support such a thing ?

    The rest of your post is equally misinformed rubbish. I don't know who you build "servers" for, but I pity them. There's a difference between being able to assemble decent server-grade hardware on a budget that precludes big-name vendors, and not understanding what server-grade hardware (or the philosophy behind it) actually is, and you are clearly the latter.

  8. Re:Good on Italy Approves 'Google Tax' On Internet Companies · · Score: 1

    I root for the team that provides sustainable wealth creation and jobs.
    Then you shouldn't be rooting for team corporatism, which has for the last 30-odd years been creating a system of completely unsustainable wealth creation and jobs.

    The period of most "sustainable wealth creation and jobs" in human history, was the few decades post-WW2, up until the late '70s when the neoliberals took over the western world.

  9. Re:Good on Italy Approves 'Google Tax' On Internet Companies · · Score: 1

    Any country can get some of that wealth and job creation for themselves by halting their confiscatory taxation policies.
    Define "confiscatory taxation policies".

  10. Re:Seems like result would be higher price on Govt. Watchdog Group Finds Apple Misled Aussies On Consumer Rights · · Score: 2

    They already build their products to last at least 2 years, otherwise they wouldn't have been offering extended warranties that cover out to 2 years.

  11. Re:Seems like result would be higher price on Govt. Watchdog Group Finds Apple Misled Aussies On Consumer Rights · · Score: 2

    This has nothing to do with warranties.

    This is about requiring manufacturers to take responsibility for selling faulty products.

    If someone sells me thousands of dollars worth of electronics and it fails after 12 months (or even a few years) of normal use, they've sold me a faulty product and should either repair or replace it. Even you free market extremists should be able to get your heads around that.

    I've pulled the "Consumer Protection Laws" card a couple of times already in the last few years, each time to have home appliances either repaired or replaced after they failed outside the warranty period. Two years and four years, respectively, are not acceptable lifetimes for a microwave and a washing machine.

  12. Re:Thank goodness on US Government Shutdown Ends · · Score: 1

    "Better" may not have been the right word. More convenient ? More expedient ? More choice ?

    Private health covers gets you into elective procedures quicker, gets you niceties like private rooms, and the like.

    I don't think the care in the private system is any better, though.

  13. Re:Thank goodness on US Government Shutdown Ends · · Score: 4, Informative

    Australians; we buy insurance to cover the free healthcare.
    Actually, we buy insurance to buy better healthcare than the free stuff.

  14. Re:Because Apple on Irish Government May Close Apple's Biggest Tax Loophole · · Score: 1

    But why would you have to pay taxes over something someone else has already taxed you on?
    Because you're benefiting from the services taxes provide in wherever-it-is you're living.

  15. Re:Because Apple on Irish Government May Close Apple's Biggest Tax Loophole · · Score: 1

    I have seen cases where tax rates go over 100%.
    For example...

  16. Re:How about on California Outlaws 'Revenge Porn' · · Score: 1

    Ah, you must be one of those people who thinks there shouldn't be any laws against fraud, since all parties had to agree to the transaction for it to progress.

  17. Re:Good news on Australia Elects Libertarian-Leaning Senator (By Accident) · · Score: 1

    Like Italy?
    No, like Switzerland.

  18. Re:No need for cameras. on EU Proposes To Fit Cars With Speed Limiters · · Score: 1

    How fast do you nuts drive? 70 mph (112 kph) is plenty fast enough. The speed limits should be set to what the majority of drivers on the road feel safe driving at. If 90% of the drivers think that 70 is plenty (and they drive at or under that regardless of the speed limit) -- then that should be the limit.
    It's actually the 85th percentile that has been found as the safest speed limit to set.
    For a multi-lane, divided, limited-access freeway, the 85th percentile tends to be around 130-140km/h. This is, not coincidentally, the speed you'll find most vehicles travelling on the unrestricted portions of the German Autobahns.

  19. Re:Lazyness on What's Causing the Rise In Obesity? Everything. · · Score: 1

    Man riding bike doens't burn more then he eats, doesn't lose weight. News at 11.
    I'm responding to people insisting all you need to do is add a little exercise. I added a fair bit of exercise (the cycling wasn't the only thing) and went basically nowhere.

    I should probably add that my weight had been stable for quite some time (years) beforehand. Ie: I wasn't gaining any weight.

    Don't eat process sugar, don't eat more the 25g of fat per day. Write down everything you eat.
    You will loose weight.

    Possibly, but at a significant cost to lifestyle and personal comfort.

    I've tried carefully controlling food intake at every point before. Firstly, it's a massive pain in the arse. Secondly, it left me feeling very hungry almost all the time, which was quite uncomfortable.

    feat/famine isn't good for you,. t also doesn't work long term.
    We'll see. The evidence seems to suggest it will, plus it seems to carry other health benefits as well.

    I'm confident my "normal" exercise and eating regime will allow me to sustain any somewhat healthy weight I reach. That has certainly been my experience over the last five-odd years. It's the losing it to get to that point that's been the problem.

  20. Re:Lazyness on What's Causing the Rise In Obesity? Everything. · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I went from nearly no exercise to cycling 25km (~16 miles) 6 days a week.
    The effect on my weight over a few months was negligible (the effect on my fitness, however, was significant - eg: resting HR from mid 80s to high 50s).

    Then I somewhat limited my caloric intake (mainly by cutting back on beer and cheese) and dropped 15kg (30lb) in six months.

    I got stuck at105kg (230lb) for about 2 years, despite upping my cycling to ~35km 6 days/week. I struggled to limit my caloric intake further because I ended up feeling ravenously hungry all the time.

    So now I'm trying a "feast/famine" system where I can eat "normally" 5 days a week, and eat very little (500 kcal or less) two days a week. Over the last six weeks that's shaved off another couple of kg, plus I only have to feel hungry all day twice a week - it's much more manageable because I can align those "hungry" days with the days I end up stuck in back to back meetings (and thus have limited access to snacking opportunities).

  21. Re:They'll gladly pay on Microsoft Will Squeeze Datacenters On Price of Windows Server · · Score: 1

    Windows Server is notoriously poor at recognizing the existence of the non-Windows devices that make up 80% of endpoint sales these days.
    What ?
    Most non-Windows end devices are things like tablets and phones, that either a) interact over HTTP (server OS irrelevant) or b) interact with custom server applications (server OS irrelevant).

  22. Re:Of course! And you never need more than 640K RA on Hybrid Hard Drives Just Need 8GB of NAND · · Score: 1

    Depends on the brand really. Both performance and quality vary widely. For some use cases, the performance of an SSD might not even beat a cheap spinny disk.
    I imagine you need a fairly strange corner case where a "cheap spinny disk" is faster than a typical SSD.

  23. Re:Gizmodo on Apple Isn't the Next Microsoft (and That's a Good Thing) · · Score: 1

    In the grandest /. tradition, I have of course not properly RTFA.

    However, if the author thinks the most interesting "innovation" in Vista was "frosted glass", then he has no credibility on the topic whatsoever. Vista was a massive overhaul of Windows, with most of the effort (and changes) spent under the hood.

    The irony here is that the author seems to be both criticising eye-candy UI effects, while simultaneously peddling the notion that the "innovation" that matters happens in the UI, rather than in the guts of the OS.

  24. Re:Rupert Murdoch can die in a hole already. on Rupert Murdoch Wants To Destroy Australia's National Broadband Network · · Score: 1

    That the vote would tend to reward mediocrity should be beyond questioning.
    It's easily questioned. Further, the claim was not that mediocrity would be rewarded, but that "the valuable employees would be under-rewarded".
    Putting the union in charge of the business is the fastest way to lose any competitive edge - to stop responding to the needs of the customer and focus 100% on your own employees.
    This is what's called a false dichotomy.
    You might believe the most talented employees would not leave (or become lazy) and take part in the egalitarian utopia "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need".
    This is what's called a straw man.
    I believe a bunch of people working together with a common interest will be prepared to reasonably reward those who have contributed more. Seems to work OK in Germany, after all.

  25. Re:Rupert Murdoch can die in a hole already. on Rupert Murdoch Wants To Destroy Australia's National Broadband Network · · Score: 1

    At every iteration of this decision the most valuable employees would be under-rewarded compared to their contribution so they will leave to a different, "capitalist" company.
    "Citation needed".