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User: tverbeek

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  1. Re:Diversity is not a virtue on Tech Workforce Diversity At Facebook Similar To Google And Yahoo · · Score: 1

    "Diversity is not a virtue", said the straight white dude who fears he will lose his unearned position of privilege if diversity is valued in the workforce.

    "There is nothing worthwhile in diversity in and of itself," said the straight white dude who fears he will lose his unearned position of privilege because diversity in the workforce makes his character traits less valued.

    Of course you are right, straight white dude: diversity in the workforce doesn't do a whole lot to directly make things better for you. But there are other people in the world who matter too. As much as you do, even (if you can wrap your self-centered solipsistic little brain about that). It is a virtue, because it's worthwhile for them.

  2. Re:Families come first on Age Discrimination In the Tech Industry · · Score: 1

    "Older people have families, they come first."

    No, I don't. So they do not.

    But I'm almost 50, and I figure that I've successfully interviewed for my last tech job. That doesn't mean I'll never get hired for another job, but it does mean that I won't get another job through the hiring process that recruits younger techs. If I get one, it'll be through networking, through the still-good-old-boy system.

  3. Wayne Boring on Google Forks OpenSSL, Announces BoringSSL · · Score: 1

    I thought that BoringSSL was named in honor of classic Superman artist Wayne Boring.

  4. Re:Tonka Tough on Chinese-Built Cars Are Coming To the US Next Year · · Score: 1

    You can find some interesting examples of Chinese (non)reliability in the motorscooter industry. With no domestically-manufactured scooters on the US market, there's a range of imports sold here, from the top-price European bikes (e.g. Piaggio Vespa) at the top, Japanese (Honda, Yamaha) and Taiwanese (Genuine, SYM) in the middle, and P.R.Chinese (generics) at the bottom. Those "chinascoots" sell for mere hundreds of dollars, have a poor reputation for quality, and are sneered at by everyone who understands that.

    However, a few scooter manufacturers based elsewhere have tried opening plants (or using existing ones) in the PRC, and applying their own corporate quality-control standards to them, with rather good results (e.g. Piaggo's PRC-made Fly). You'd have to be both racist and ignorant of the iPhone to think that Chinese workers can't produce quality goods; like anyone else, they build to the specs that are given to them and standards that are expected of them. The difference is the legal environment in which they work. They don't have the environmental, human rights, or labor standards of their competitors in other countries, and that's why they cost less. (But give it time: I hear the US GOP has a plan to fix that.)

  5. Re:So says the richest man in the world... on Bill Gates To Stanford Grads: Don't (Only) Focus On Profit · · Score: 1

    So you've never heard of someone getting on in years, looking back, and telling younger people not to make the same mistakes they made?

    (Maybe someday it'll even happen to you.)

  6. I went to college with Dave Brat on House Majority Leader Defeated In Primary · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dear God.

    I used to know this guy. It took me a little while for it to register, but the goofy grin confirms it: this is the same doofus I went to college with. The college is a haven for Republican Calvinism (i.e. God chooses certain people to be successful), steeped in the worship of capitalism (God's invisible hand rewarding hard work). (The Amway/Blackwater dynasty are major donors.) I didn't know Dave well (sorry, no damaging stories to tell), but he was active in student government, and struck me as a classic empty suit: superficially charming with an upper-middle-class sense of entitlement. Not stupid, but not a deep thinker, the sort who doesn't question the values he was taught as a child... because they've always worked for him. (One of the key ways I differ from him.) I should've known he'd run for Congress someday.

    I'm sorry.

  7. Seriously? on US Secret Service Wants To Identify Snark · · Score: 1

    "We are not currently aware of any automated technology that could do that (detect sarcasm). No one is considered a leader in that..."

    Is he serious?

  8. Re:Internet at library on Comcast-Time Warner Deal May Hinge On Low-Cost Internet Plan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Have you ever tried to do this? Without your own car? Perhaps with a disability? Are you lucky enough to live in a city that has a library? How far is it to walk to it from where you live? Do you have cold winters there, or hot and humid summers? Is there public transportation that goes from near your house to the library? If so, how many buses does it take? What's the fare, and how much does that add up to if you do it once a day? How long does the ride take? Do you have someone to watch your kids while you do it, or do you bring them along? Did it even occur to you to consider any of these questions?

  9. poor adults not eligible on Comcast-Time Warner Deal May Hinge On Low-Cost Internet Plan · · Score: 1

    This "Internet Essentials" program might help some poor people, but it's only available to people with children (eligible for school lunch programs). It's a typical example of how we consider children who live in poverty to be "innocent victims", but adults who can't work due to disability or lack of jobs are treated as if they were unworthy of assistance. In this case, internet access could make a huge difference for them in terms of quality of life and/or additional cost savings (giving access to low-entry-price services, such as VOIP and Netflix instead of POTS and CATV), or the ability to effectively try to re-enter the workforce (incredibly difficult without in-home internet access).

  10. not so bad on Four Weeks Without Soap Or Shampoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've gone 10 days without washing (other than water), on a wilderness backpacking trip. Despite the fact that I was sweating a lot every day, at the end of the expedition I didn't feel as "dirty" as I would've expected. I think we could find a happy medium between our modern antibacterial-soap fetish and ye olde annual bath.

  11. Re:Even a stopped clock is right... on Rand Paul Starts New Drone War In Congress · · Score: 1

    The stopped-clock metaphor is rather apt in this case. Rand Paul's hands are stuck in one position ("the federal government is wrong"), and from time to time that position is correct.

  12. Re:..and streamed video doesn't come with awful DR on Sony Warns Demand For Blu-Ray Diminishing Faster Than Expected · · Score: 1

    Complaining about DRM right after a snarky comment about how old-fashioned it is to want your own copy of a movie was the best laugh I've had all day. Because the only people who complain about DRM on video discs are people who want their own copies. Meanwhile, the oh-so-modren approach of streaming movies from cloud services is wrapped up in all sorts of DRM, as well as the certainty that you'll lose access to them one way or another down the line (the main legitimate argument against DRM).

  13. It ain't broke on Did the Ignition Key Just Die? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This line of thinking – mechanical keys are not perfect and sometimes don't work properly, therefore we must replace them with something else – fails to take into consideration that whatever we replace it with will also not be perfect and will also sometimes not work properly, especially in new and unexpected ways that we are not prepared for. Fact is, the mechanical ignition key is a pretty well-debugged piece of technology. It isn't fundamentally broken, and doesn't need to be "fixed" by throwing it out and hastily replacing it with something else, especially something without a century of usage behind it.

    I'll be honest: I'm an old-fashioned person who liked having the ability to shut off a computer by physically opening the circuit that powered it (i.e. flipping a big crimson switch). As a tech, I get frustrated with equipment that has a "power button" that really only serves to put the device in low-power standby mode, such that turning it "off" and back "on" doesn't reinitialize it (requiring me to instead pull the power cable from the wall ... which only works if it doesn't have a battery). The "open the pod bay doors, Hal" approach doesn't give me warm fuzzies, mostly due to experience with the real world where new technology routinely fails to live up to the naïve expectations of the young and/or credulous.

  14. Not Retconning on Star Wars: Episode VII Cast Officially Announced · · Score: 1

    I would say that Episodes I-III, which went back and revised/reinvented the backstory of the original trilogy, would be The Mother Of All Retcon Films before Episode VII would be.* Since that's what "retcon" actually means.

    These upcoming films are simply a partial reboot, wiping out one semi-official post-RotJ continuity, and replacing it with an all-new all-different one.

    *Actually there are other, better candidates, but let's confine ourselves to the Star Wars universe here.

  15. How is this surprising? on Lucasfilm Announces Break With Star Wars Expanded Universe · · Score: 1

    This should come as no surprise to anyone who understands how the world works. Spin-off works have never been binding on any franchise flagship. Sure, the Star Trek films and TV series have been free to pick up bits of continuity from the novels or comics, but they've freely ignored them when it suited the purposes of the story they were telling. Marvel Comics can take what they want from the films (e.g. Phil Coulson), but they're still going to ignore them and tell their own stories. Episodes I-III already contradicted the Expanded Universe; why in a galaxy far, far away would anyone expect Episodes VII and later not to do so? Expecting the writers of these films to read and accommodate the metric tonne of professional fanfic (however good it is, however authorized it is) that comprises the EU is totally unrealistic.

  16. Re:You can avoid facebook data miners... on Facebook Data Miner Will Shock You · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that mom lives in Grand Rapids. I've seen it in ads.

  17. Re:The actual website on Facebook Data Miner Will Shock You · · Score: 1

    Basically it parrots back to you the information you just gave it access to from your Facebook profile, does some simple statistical calculations from your posts, adds some horoscope-style comments about your personality (I think mine was based on the fact that "craft beer" is one of my Likes), then generates a list of the kinds of dumb passwords that people come up with, based on their birth year, interests, whatever (3dward1970).
     
    I wish I made as much money as it thinks I do.

  18. missing the point? on Mathematicians Devise Typefaces Based On Problems of Computational Geometry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Traditionally, typeface designers have considered legibility and aesthetics in their work (in addition to typesetting limitations). Apparently those factors are optional now as well.

    OK, these are interesting intellectual exercises. But don't try to sell them as examples of typeface design, because that's a creative discipline that goes beyond mathematical questions of "can it be done?"

  19. Re:The sad part here... on Nokia Had a Production-Ready Web Tablet 13 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I saw the low UID, which is why I wondered how you could be online and yet so unaware of what so many people were doing on the Web in 2000. Sure, it was mostly dial-up or bad DSL, but it was hardly just "hardcore geeks". They were e-mailing and chatting and looking at (still-image) porn and shopping and selling garbage on eBay, and talking about what a bust Y2K had been. There was that whole "dot-com bubble" that everyone was talking about (but not calling it a "bubble" yet because it was still the latest Big Thing). The following September, I distinctly recall everyone at my office flocking to news web sites trying to learn what was happening in New York on a Tuesday morning. So I have to figure that you were too preoccupied doing stuff with the geekier parts of the internet to notice that yes: the Web was already kind of a a big thing in 2000.

  20. Re:The sad part here... on Nokia Had a Production-Ready Web Tablet 13 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    And EPOC worked in devices with great battery life. Mine would go much longer on a set of AAs than I do with my iPhone.

  21. Re:The sad part here... on Nokia Had a Production-Ready Web Tablet 13 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    Was the web on its own interesting enough in 2000 to make this a killer device?

    Yes, it was. Were you still wading on CompuServ and Usenet or something at the time? :)

    Also, what OS does it run, can it do anything but surf the web?

    EPOC could do lots more than surf the web; it had apps for all the obvious personal-assistant functions (calendar, notes, to-do, contacts) and had a decent ecosystem of third-party apps. It powered the Psion PDAs (clamshells with decent thumb keyboards and stylus input), and was head-and-shoulders bettter than PalmOS or WinCE (its contemporaries) in terms of stability and ability to run on low-power hardware. I nursed one of the later Psions along for years after they were discontinued, until the iPhone came along and there was finally another pocket computer worth switching too. The devices' main weakness (other than nonexistent marketing) was the state of mobile connectivity in their day: slow-n-crappy cellular data, hard-to-find local wireless, and dial-up.

  22. Re:I always thought... on Fruit Flies, Fighter Jets Use Similar Evasive Tactics When Attacked · · Score: 1

    Time flies like an arrow.
    Fruit flies like a banana.

  23. Re:Why? on MariaDB 10 Released, Now With NoSQL Support · · Score: 1

    "Why do you want to run a SQL server that has NO SQL support??"

    That was certainly my first question.

  24. Kaiju on Wal-Mart Sues Visa For $5 Billion For Rigging Card Swipe Fees · · Score: 1

    So which of these is Godzilla, and which is Gamera?

  25. Justice Revenge on Time Dilation Drug Could Let Heinous Criminals Serve 1,000 Year Sentences · · Score: 1

    This isn't about greater justice. It's about greater revenge. Not the same thing.