Slashdot Mirror


User: jlowery

jlowery's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
377
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 377

  1. Re:1500 out of 137000 seems comparatively small on Oracle's Surprise Unannounced Layoffs 'Clear-Cut Teams of Engineers' (ieee.org) · · Score: 1

    As the financial sector has shown, there's more money to be made shuffling virtual paper around than there is in actually making useful things.

  2. The universe was created yesterday. All your memories are implanted. You are a brain in a bottle.

  3. Re: Don't take them. on Programming Interview Questions Are Too Hard and Too Short (triplebyte.com) · · Score: 1

    I have worked for decades, for companies tiny and huge. I have a github account. I write articles about cutting edge techs. You give me some abstract problem to solve that has no bearing on what I do every day. You don't need me, I don't need you.

  4. My first reaction is "Why?" to these types of questions. I work for a small company now: they have things that need to be done. Coding in large enterprises tends to be "coding in the small", with little creativity required and everything spelled out for you.

  5. Re:It's as dead as COBOL on Ask Slashdot: How Dead Is Java? (jaxenter.com) · · Score: 1

    To be fair, Java is not as bad as COBOL. But I would rather be writing apps than designing elaborate type systems.

  6. Re:how dead? on Ask Slashdot: How Dead Is Java? (jaxenter.com) · · Score: 1

    If I poke it, does it not bleed?

  7. Re: Not as dead as ... on Ask Slashdot: How Dead Is Java? (jaxenter.com) · · Score: 1

    Anything other than machine instructions is not a programming language.

    Wuss.

  8. Re:Not dead on Ask Slashdot: How Dead Is Java? (jaxenter.com) · · Score: 1

    npm modules?

  9. It's as dead as COBOL on Ask Slashdot: How Dead Is Java? (jaxenter.com) · · Score: 2

    But not as dead as SNOBOL

  10. If this explains why I smooch cats... on Mind-Altering Cat Parasite Linked To Schizophrenia in Largest Study Yet (sciencealert.com) · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...then I'm no longer filled with self-loathing.

  11. I spent over a decade developing in Java, from v1.18 to v6+. The last project was a large Spring app for digital inventory.

    Java was never a good choice for web development, and the evidence of that was: J2EE + frameworks. J2EE was unmanageable without a framework, and the frameworks themselves were huge and burdensome. And compilation...bleh!

    JavaScript is quick and light for whipping up a web application. It's drawback is the lack of static types, but there is TypeScript if you want it (not perfect, but maybe useful). The other drawback is specific to npm: each module contains its own dependencies. That is both good and bad: good, in that you don't have version conflicts; bad in that there are so many libraries there's no hope you can verify the security of your site, especially for less popular modules.

  12. Re: No, it's psychological on Is a Lack of Data Holding Back Universal Basic Income Programs? (technologyreview.com) · · Score: 1

    Is the elimination of corporate welfare factored into this? Farm subsidies would seem to offer substantial savings. Out of work farmers would subsist on UBI.

  13. Re:Getting tired of this on Google Chrome's New UI is Ugly, And People Are Very Angry (zdnet.com) · · Score: 1

    It's what happens when marketing is allowed to drive technological change. "Oh, look! There $$$ to be made if we can convince everyone to switch paradigms! Let's all write articles about how neat it is!"

  14. Artificial General Intelligence is Nowhere Close To Being a Reality

    That's exactly what Deep Mind wants you to believe, pitiful humans!

  15. They stopped teaching alchemy in schools ages ago, and now look where we are.

  16. Re:Wha?? on Electron and the Decline of Native Apps (daringfireball.net) · · Score: 2

    I spent many years building cross-platform applications using this new-fangled thing called Java.

    Then, someone decided it would be great to build web applications in Java. Oh, and use XML as the communications protocol between server and clients. Oh, and transfer not just data, but objects over-the-wire. Then Spring came along to make things "simpler". Like hell.

    Node.js, JavaScript (TypeScript if you prefer) and now Electron are all bringing us back to cross-platform nirvana, only this time using the browser/server interface properly, without a bunch of ill-fitting preconceptions carried over from native desktop applications.

  17. Yeah, I recognize this approach on Controversial Spraying, Sun-Dimming Method Aims To Curb Global Warming (cbsnews.com) · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's called a hack. Rather than fix the root problem, just work around it. With enough hacks, you arrive at an unmaintainable legacy system. The you have to build a new one.

  18. I bet the executives made out on Telltale Games Hit With Major Layoffs As Part of a 'Majority Studio Closure' (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    How much money was spent on high-end salaries?

  19. Re:AMP sucks for users, who cares about pubs! on Only 1 in 3 Publishers Sees a Clear Traffic Boost From Google's AMP (chartbeat.com) · · Score: 1

    AMP is a no JavaScript solution (some scattered applause from the crowd). It's all "declarative", with some vendor-specific components (not sure if you can even write your own).

    For simple storefront pages, it might be worth the effort, but you're not going to be able to share a code base with a React/Angular site.

  20. Re:They requirements have increased a thousand fol on 'The Problem With Programming and How To Fix It' (alarmingdevelopment.org) · · Score: 1

    They=> The

    ugh. can't edit in /.

  21. They requirements have increased a thousand fold on 'The Problem With Programming and How To Fix It' (alarmingdevelopment.org) · · Score: 1

    Users demand more sophistication than the 80x40 character-based applications I first wrote starting out. Back then, I could churn out a working departmental application inside of a week, including data tables, using a 4GL.

    Who wants to go back to those days? Now we have internet instead of LANs, GUI, events, threads, all sorts of data stores, and layers of abstraction to manage it all. I don't see it getting any simpler.

  22. Re:Universal Income. on Slashdot Asks: Which is Better, a Basic Income or a Guaranteed Job? (timharford.com) · · Score: 1

    If some want to slide through life on a meager income, then most developed countries can support the drag. What adds wind to the sails, though, is the freedom for ambitious people to take risks, knowing they're not going to fall all the way to a deep pit should they fail.

  23. Re:As usual, they are decades late on Microsoft Is Making the Windows Command Line a Lot Better (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Amen, Brother. How on earth do they let such bad ideas percolate to the end user? I still haven't forgiven them for The Registry: want to change an operating system setting? Just remember this simple GUID: 229G-A17B-CC2E-82DD-E1AF-...

  24. It's later than you think. And still too early for Microsoft.

  25. Re:Bastard on The Rise of the Pointless Job (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    I will make the pointless observation that this was a truly pointless correction.