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User: Mybrid

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  1. Leave your educated opinions in the comments... on Ask Slashdot: What's The Best CMS? · · Score: 1

    "I've built more than a few static websites (I use Sublime Text 3 or Atom, not some fancy-pants WYSIWYG doohickey) and am quite familiar with CSS, but databases not so much. "

    Are you the only one involved?

    There is HTML, Javascript, PHP, Java, Python, XML, SQL and a whole mess of other technology that is involved with web site programming.

    As a consultant I get asked this kinda quick question on a regular basis. There is no quick answer to this. The general answer is to take the time to understand the requirements, understand the technology, understand the tradeoffs, understand the staffing, understand the testing, understand security and then do a bake off of at least three solutions. If you are upgrading looking to scale out then does management really understand the financial commitment needed to replace and grow?

    Be a job little or small, do it right or not at all. Too many people are glib these days about the complexity of software applications and as such get themselves in a whole lot of trouble in the long run.

  2. rsync and LVM on Man Deletes His Entire Company With One Line of Bad Code (independent.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    LVM and rsync are your friend.

    The easiest way to backup physical is with rsync, LVM and snapshots. No rm required. None of my backup scripts have /bin/rm in them?

    If it is a VM just take a snapshot of the VM?

    Why would any backup script use "/bin/rm"?

    This sounds really fishy.

    Or really incompetent.

    Or both.

  3. If I have seen farther than others it is because I stood on the shoulders of Fire Giants.

    Borrow from one it is plagiarism. Borrow from a bunch of gamers it is a lot of unattributed fun, because who cares!

  4. Just curious about people skills on Google Has Toughest Interview Process For Developers, But Not the Worst (getvoip.com) · · Score: 1

    My interviewing process for developers focuses as much on people skills as technical skills. Unless all your developers are siloed then they will need to be able to communicate and work with others.

    For all the years we've been hearing about how tough the problem solving skills are for tech companies I have yet to hear how tough the interview is for people skills.

    Any company that only focuses on technical problem solving is going to be a disaster to manage.

  5. Getting nowhere on Emerging Technologies and the Future of Humanity (sagepub.com) · · Score: 1

    "The state of technological advancement today is such that we have guided missiles and misguided men."
    -Martin Luther King Jr.

  6. DevOps my understanding on DevOps: Threat or Menace? (Video) · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hi! Happy Tuesday

    My understanding is that DevOps was coined by a manager at Etsy who recruited developers for managing IOPs and other costs in the Amazon cloud via software designed to do just that. DevOps meant someone who was saavy enough to write system level code.

    Somewhere along the way this notion got morphed into being the system administrator and the developer.

    DevOps:
    1. Developers optimizing Amazon and other cloud environment costs by using application code specialized to manage system administration aspects of the cloud; including managing switches, spinning up VMs, etc.
    2. Developers with system administration responsibilities.

    The reality is that Etsy moved off of Amazon to an in-house data center and left us with a messy legacy of a term, DevOps. :-)

  7. Can't copyright titles on Anti-Piracy Firm Sends Out Wave of Takedown Notices For Using the Word 'Pixels' · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can't copyright titles and 'pixel' as a word is too generic to trademark. Ignore the take down.

    http://www.writersdigest.com/e...

    Q: Iâ(TM)ve been working on a book and the title is very importantâ"I use it as the URL for my blog, for a weekly column I write, etc., and I want people to identify it with me. Can I copyright a title so others canâ(TM)t use it? â"Anonymous

    A: Copyrights cover works fixed in a tangible format, but because titles are typically short, they donâ(TM)t fall under copyright protection. So no, you canâ(TM)t copyright a title to a book, song or movie. But you can trademark a title, which may give you the protection you seek.

    The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office states that a trademark protects words, phrases, symbols or designs identifying the source of the goods or services of one party and distinguishing them from those of others. Brand names like Pepsi, Xerox and Band-Aid are all protected. So is the Nike âoeswoosh.â But more relevant to us, book titles such as The Da Vinci Code and Harry Potter and the Sorcererâ(TM)s Stone are trademarked.

    Unlike copyright protection, which is granted the minute your work is written down, trademarks arenâ(TM)t handed out so freely. In fact, if the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office doesnâ(TM)t consider your title (or brand) a distinctive mark that is indisputably distinguishable from others, you will not be granted trademark protection. This is why you see so many books with the sameâ"or very similarâ"titles. Many of the terms are considered too generic or arbitrary to warrant protection.

    Trademarks are not only intended to protect the creator, but also the consumer. Trademarks keep others from confusing a well-known work on the bookstore shelves with others. For example, Harry Potter is such a popular, distinguishable character by J.K. Rowling that youâ(TM)d expect any title with his name in it to be written by her (or, at least, a book approved by her). Itâ(TM)s not only her work, but itâ(TM)s become her brand.

    So if you use the title of your book as the title of your blog, column, etc., it could be considered your brand identifier. And if you find success, you could qualify for trademark protection.

  8. To be clear on Belief In God Correlates With Better Mental Health Treatment Outcomes · · Score: 1

    Religion doesn't factor into preventing depression in the first place, but only helps one get better? God is a constant in all of this. Since these people believed in God before, after and during their depression then one is already getting a regular "dosage" of God? Belief in God did not change before or after treatment.

    I smell a rat. A rat that says, "oh well, it is not just the presence of God alone but God plus"

    drugs
    psychiatry

    To whit, religion only works because you are also taking anti-depressants, taking group therapy or paying lots of money to a quack.

    Religion and drugs. Surprise, surprise surprise.

    This sounds like the perfect premise for a Phillip K. Dick sci-fi book: take the conclusion of this article and have a book plot where preacher starts disseminating drugs as part of church service. "Scientific studies show that religion works best when coupled with anti-depressant drugs! Here, have a Xanax!"

    Sad part is that this may actually come to pass.

  9. Memo URL on Mayer Terminates Yahoo's Remote Employee Policy · · Score: 1

    YAMU
    Physically Together: Here's the Internal Yahoo No-Work-From-Home Memo for Remote Workers and Maybe More
    http://allthingsd.com/20130222/physically-together-heres-the-internal-yahoo-no-work-from-home-memo-which-extends-beyond-remote-workers/

  10. Got Outsourcing? on Mayer Terminates Yahoo's Remote Employee Policy · · Score: 1

    Got cognitive dissonance?

    The cognitive dissonance of juxtaposing management okay for outsourcing globally and management not okay for remote access domestically is simply stunning.

  11. Data Center on the Moon on Apollo Veteran: Skip Asteroid, Go To the Moon · · Score: 1

    Let's put a data center on the moon and get the whole world in on the project much as with the international space station.

  12. Re:Mr. Betteridge says... on Can Anyone Become a Programmer? · · Score: 1

    Well said. You made your point well. I'm going to be more long winded. LOL

    My counter would be, but almost anyone can cook.

    To the extent that programming correlates to following well known recipes like cooking then anyone can do it.

    Programming is such a nebulous word. Is a graphic artist who knows enough web technology to express graphics via CSS, Javascript, Photoshop, etc. a programmer?

    Lots of accounts who use Excel can write some fairly sophisticated macros. Are they programming?

    Personally I think the article asks the wrong question. The more germane question would be, 'Has the word "programming" become so muddled that it is time to expand the vernacular and come up with canonical classifications of programming?" To that I would answer yes.

    In the field of genomics there are "bioinformatic programmers", usually part biologist and part programmer. They don't write application programs per se as much as they write custom analysis of data using scientific algorithms. they are scientists who write code. And, oh, btw, they also have to package that analysis in a program. The application takes a back seat to the analysis.

    What is programming? The lack of clarity in definition is very similar situation to the words "software engineer" and "software developer".

  13. What objective? on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Fix the Linux Desktop? · · Score: 1

    What is the objective of wider adoption?

    "You have to be careful if you are not sure where you are going because you might not get there."
    -Yogi Berra

    Every since I could dual-boot I have always used both Windows and Linux. Now using both Windows and Linux is much easier with VMs.

    Tools are tools and I use Linux and Windows where they most benefit me. To that end I've never used Apple because there is nothing compelling for me on Apple. There have been only two applications I'm aware of on Apple that might convince me to run the Apple OS:
    1. Pro Tools
    2. Final Cut

    Adoption of Linux desktop is lacking a clear objective. I use Linux when it benefits me and Windows the same. Running both is trivial for those who are tech savvy. If you are not tech savvy you probably don't need Linux. Given the advent of smart phones and touch pads then the real question is not the future adoption of Linux Desktop but the future of the desktop in general.

  14. Re:Someone please bring a better story to big scre on Star Trek Luminaries Behind the Fastest Funded Film Project On Kickstarter · · Score: 1

    +1, Mod up! Make sticky! and all that!

    Well said! The should also make Lord of Light!

  15. Re:alarmist and overgeneralized? yes. but also tru on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    I like your perspective. I wonder if you would care to comment on the female technological craze:

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/08/vibrator-sales-sex-toys-women_n_1501352.html

    Business is booming -- for the sex toy industry. It seems that erotic accessories are poised to become some of the world’s most popular gadgets, right up there with smartphones. The Daily Mail reported that UK sales of sex toys are projected to soar above £250 million this year (approximately 403 million dollars). And as of May 2011, consumers were spending an estimated $500 million a year on these products in North America, according to Scientific American.

    Are vibrators becoming too much of a good thing for women? It might help explain why both men and women in this country are content to stay in their respective
    corners and not come out swinging. Your take on women having no partners struck me as rather odd, as if women were helpless. They most certainly are not. On the other hand, if Steely Dan is satisfying them then that is more believable to my way of thinking.

    The other thing to consider is that historicial marriage was based upon men subjugating women. That's not the case today but courtship rules have not kept up with the times. I'm just pointing out a systemic deficiency that both men and women are up against. In the words of Zoey to Captain Reynolds on Firefly, "Are you enjoying your own like bio-slave?" is no longer an option.

  16. Re:You can't blame games and porn on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    Well met. You should also factor in lifespan into your paradigm. Getting married at 16 was the norm until very recently in man's history precisely because that age represented the best years for reproduction for lifespans of 30 years. Today? Who gets married at 16? Till death do you part means 70 years of marriage? It is expected that everyone is socially awkward when they are young when people traditionally looked for mates...as opposed to midlife these days.

  17. Re:That is what annoys me most about things like t on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    Well said and well met.

    Technology is redefining norms. The problem with psychologists today is that comparative behavior requires comparing past and present and not starting with an assumption that norms of behavior are in flux.

    If norms and social values are changing rapidly then what? There are some behaviorists out their who recognize this is the case. For example, the cell phone is making a huge impact on speech. Research is being done on language o help us better understand how to use cell phones appropriately. This type of attitude is not being conducted with respect to video games.

    As technology gets adapted there are bound to be miss-steps in integrating technology into the human experience, obviously. The problem with modern psychology is the same problem with conservatives in general. That is both groups typically start with the assumption that the only "good" norm is a past, understood and proven "norm" and taking risks, making changes to achieve some new state of human experience is never a consideration. In that world then video games can only be destructive because video games did not exist in the past and these folk fit the facts to their negative bias. While evolution may take millions of years environment changes do not and anyone who is up on the cognitive sciences is well aware of the roll that environment plays in child development. The technology cat is already out of the bag and modern psychologists need to get with the cognitive science program and help us figure out what to do about it productively rather than focus on wholesale condemnation of that which they despise and do not yet understand. Video games will be with us as long as technology is. Get over it. Psychologists would be better served helping companies like Blizzard produce a healthier environment.

  18. Re:Well, if they're going to generalize, I am too on Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation? · · Score: 1

    "Their lives are certainly likely to be more interesting, and their odds of landing a partner increases."

    A good send up, I say. My compliments. This sentence strikes me as rather interesting. I might rewrite it as:

    "There lives are certainly likely to be more interesting from someone who doesn't game's perspective and their odds of landing a partner outside of gaming increases thusly."

    I read somewhere that more women now play WoW than men, although the demographics are out of sync I think.

    The key here is "interesting". I think psychologists and the world at large tend lump games like WoW into the same mindless bucket as watching TV or porn when in fact the complexity of the game-play, the interesting factor, is really one's choice. The mythology in a game like WoW represents thousands of names and places to get to know. The maps are rich. The PVE encounters are in the hundreds. Your toon can be as mindless as you like to as complex as you need. I like complex where I'm constantly tweaking macros and remapping the keyboard. I also use a lot of plugins. I also "tank" which requires far more sophistication than the other roles unless one is in a guild or doing PvP. Speaking of PvP, the other thing psychologists dismiss with online gaming is that "guilds" are key to holding people for the long run. Guilds typically use "Vent", a group chat, and viola people are talking to each other.

    Only time will tell if video gaming becomes a norm such that those who do not game are deemed less interesting. As long as technology keeps trending the way it is I know where I'd put my money.

  19. The Language Instinct on All Languages Linked To Common Source · · Score: 1

    If you are not an expert but would like more understanding on this topic, then I'd recommend Steven Pinker's, The Language Instinct.

    http://www.amazon.com/Language-Instinct-How-Mind-Creates/dp/0060976519

    One of his books discusses a series of experiments where babies were shown to be able to understand all phonemes but by the age of six-months only the phonemes of the parent's language are available. They did experiments with both adults and babies.

    Also, Pinker talks about a group of people with no history that linguists have posited to once exist based upon common roots in modern languages that trace back to a period in history and then stop. Kind of a missing language link of people if you will. Not sure how that fits in here.

  20. Re:Raiding on Greg 'Ghostcrawler' Street, Lead Systems Designer For World of Warcraft · · Score: 1

    You all seem to be missing Greg's point. Greg was claiming that "We've got a lot of players into raiding now."

    Maybe what I should have countered with was "prove it".

    Link the RAID achievements vs. the number of level 80s and show us that level 80s who play on average 10 hours a week have lots of raid achievements.

    "You can "know the fights" by looking them up on wowpedia.org or youtube. Or tankspot. Or bosskillers. Or a half dozen other sites."

    "I want to raid but I'm not sure how," or "It's too hard." "

    Your statement is directly at odds with Greg's.

    Here's how hard it is for me to use video.

    1.) As tank I've had to use ALL of the sites you've listed to "know how." No one site works.
    2.) Many of the videos are out of date.
    3.) Videos are for a class you are not playing. Good luck trying to tank a fight as a warrior when the video is paladin.
    4.) Videos have characters far better geared.
    5.) Most of the videos have the UI so tweaked and custom rigged it makes them difficult to understand and they require watching repeated times.

    So I disagree with him saying that users don't feel the "know how is hard". It is hard, especially for tanks.

    And I'm still surprised at how many players do not have Deadly Boss Mod set.

    If a player has to spend 30 minutes to an hour scouring the web to "know how", maybe it has been two months since that raid, then this directly contradicts Greg's statement that "I want to raid but I'm not sure how," or "It's too hard."

    Why do you think the tank ratio is so low? Because it's too hard.

  21. Re:Raiding on Greg 'Ghostcrawler' Street, Lead Systems Designer For World of Warcraft · · Score: 1

    ". Average gearscore is about 5.3k."

    I'm curious as to how you got this number?

  22. Raiding on Greg 'Ghostcrawler' Street, Lead Systems Designer For World of Warcraft · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Greg Street: We've got a lot of players into raiding now. I don't encounter too many players these days who say, "I want to raid but I'm not sure how," or "It's too hard." "

    Seriously? You can't even get into an Ice Crown raid unless your gear score is 5K and most people are going to want you to already know the fights.

    If by "raiding" he means the Dungeon Tool, he's probably right there, but other than that forget it.

    It is nigh impossible to reasonably PUG a raid.

  23. Obligatory Howard Reference on Robotic Hands Grip Without Fingers · · Score: 1

    Howard's Mom, 'Howard, I'm going to the store. Which peas should I get to go with the brisket!"

    Howard, "Not NOW Mom! I'm BUSY!"

    Howard's, Mom, "Just what's so IMPORTANT Mr. Smarty Pants that you have to spend all day playing video games in your room. Should you be in school?"

    Howard, "I'm NOT in School Ma!, I work at the University, and for your information I'm not playing games, I conducting very delicate research on the latest robotic technology. Now will you PLEASE leave me alone!"

  24. Bolivia on $1 Trillion In Minerals Found In Afghanistan · · Score: 1

    Bolivia is one of the poorest country in the worlds with a recent history of mineral and oil resources, politics, and how little of the money provides economic wealth to the people of Bolivia. Instead Bolivia has children under the age of 11 going into mines because of their size.

    http://www.greenleft.org.au/node/44181

    Bassey is from Nigeria. Both Bolivia, whose radical government hosted the conference, and Nigeria are poor countries that have suffered from the curse of having carbon resources extracted by Western multinationals at the cost of terrible environmental destruction and social dislocation. At Cochabamba, Bolivia's President Evo Morales, said the profit-driven extraction of resources had to end if the world was to avoid catastrophic climate change. For that to happen, the private ownership of resources had to end -- and capitalism with it. This is a hard path for carbon-resource-dependent Third World countries like Bolivia and Nigeria, but is far easier for a rich, developed country like Australia. And the best way to manage the transition away from environmentally destructive mining is for the industry to be in public hands.

  25. Re: Classic Issue on Violent Video Games Only Affect Some People · · Score: 1

    Well said.

    "All in all it may be best not even to worry about things like video games as we can be certain that the run away cause of all crime comes back to drugs. Get rid of drugs and 90% or more of all crime will vanish."

    While I'd choose a different oversimplification, historically poverty has a higher correlation to crime than does drugs, still your intuition is dead on. This is identical in spirit to Amdhal's law of optimization where optimizing 90% of only 1% of a performance problem is still only optimizing 0.9%, not 90%. Which can be more simply stated as "make the common case fast."

    Expanding on your discussion then, today when a person has allergies or medical dispensations of a drastic order they wear bracelets proclaiming said characteristic to aid medical treatment. Should people who are known to have bad reactions to "blank" be encouraged or required to publicly proclaim them? We have decided this is the case with convicted pedophiles, and yet not other criminal tendencies? Pedophilia is considered some kind of uncurable, genetic-like defect but other criminal behavior is not? Why not? Like you say, Society has not handled this well. We have moved beyond the moral notion that "if you do the crime, you do the time" to a new notion that "if you do a crime behavior, forever that behavior." Is that really right and desired, I wonder?

    The question facing us in the information age is do we have the courage to learn to use personal information? Such as to undergo gene testing and the like, mistakes and all, so as to help ourselves and others act accordingly? What if gene and other testing uncovers someone has never acted on a tendency, but fits some pedophile-like tendency profile? The medical industry is working towards requiring everyone to succumb to gene testing at birth to better afford efficacy in treatment with drugs, radiation therapy, etc. I believe someday soon the science will be able to tell if someone will have an addiction to certain drugs using genetics. Wouldn't we be better served as a society to let people know apriori if they will likely have adverse reactions to drugs or other environments? At some point a bracelet listing drug reactions would be impractical.

    One can definitely see both sides of the power argument: efficacy vs. abuse of information.

    Power always cuts both ways and can be used for better or naught. Do we have the courage to learn to use the information we now, or will soon, have? Or do we just continue to deny? We have the "courage" to make weapons of mass destruction...but how 'bout the courage to use mass personal information of efficacy?

    Interesting debate, and I'd second your sentiment that "Society has not responded well to this type of situation."