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User: bobaferret

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  1. Re:tl;dr on Are Bankers Paid Too Much? Are Technology CEOs? · · Score: 0

    The Superbowl?! that's that thing I can't stream over the internet where all of the cool commercials are? Whatever the hell a commercial is anyway... I keep looking for that series on Netflix and the torrents to no avail.

  2. Re:And don't forget. on New Home Automation? · · Score: 1

    In my new home, the Metal siding does just as good a job at keeping out the signals... Cell included

  3. Re:My thoughts on this. on Red Hat To Help Develop CentOS · · Score: 1

    I think Redhat has been a very good influence on and partner in the OSS movement for a long time. If I trust any company to get involved with CentOS and not dick around, but try to actually make it better, it's RedHat. Generally nice folks trying to make money and the world a better place. And not necessarily in that order.

  4. Re:Odd... on Red Hat To Help Develop CentOS · · Score: 1

    I too have done it and it really is that simple. We tend to do that when we're moving servers out of 'critical' production, and can no longer justify paying for support.

  5. Re:Cost for a diy on What Would It Cost To Build a Windows Version of the Pricey New Mac Pro? · · Score: 1

    My reseller cost on that is $3250. They aren't cheap even for us.

  6. Re:oh boy... on Mark Zuckerberg Gives $990 Million To Charity · · Score: 1

    I concur. I took my 12 year olds test. Just to see what it was like. It covered his school year quite well and was focused on the things the kids that age should be learning. It did lack some art and music sections, but was very strong in reasoning and analytical skills. And teaching to the test as far as I can tell, means making sure that you cover a number of basic subjects thoroughly. Esp. math and reading. Also kids with special needs have the scores factored out. Schools are required to provide IEPs for those kids. Also our public schools in Southern IL and elsewhere have AT programs where above average kids can be challenged and what not. At least around here the schools don't mind the tests too much and try and deal with all of the kids above and below average as well as they can. The tests and "teaching to them" seems to have a nice added effect, that when the child goes on to the next grade, the teacher knows what basic skills they'll have from the previous year.

  7. Re:Guns...Lots Of Guns on Affordable 3D Metal Printer Developed Based on RepRap · · Score: 1

    You do realize that the site you're recommending is financed by the koch brothers right? Not trying to stir things up, just an FYI. I can't support any movement that's back by large corporations asking for more deregulation. I think People need less regulation, not the corporations. I'm tired of living in a country that's on the brink of fascism.

    "Fascism should rightly be called Corporatism, as it is the merger of corporate and government power."
    -Benito Mussolini -

  8. Re:NIH syndrome on NYT: Healthcare.gov Project Chaos Due Partly To Unorthodox Database Choice · · Score: 1

    As someone who's built and runs a fairly large government website, I agree with you. Every year 3 months there are more legislative requirements and fields to deal with etc, permissions, changing points of interest, reporting etc. It's a complex moving target, with no one to have a dialog with. The governor will mandate one thing, while the house will do another, the feds another, and the supreme court another. 1/3 of the time all conflicting with each other. Then you layer that on top of 102 local government rules, and political agendas, and things start to get complicated, then make it real time. There of course is the lack of budget, due to cutbacks, but that just makes it fun.

    Most of the data exchanges between agencies are XML based. Check out IEPD's and NIEM for a sense of what folks are dealing with. You have to have a large amount of flexibility to collect and store the ever changing data that gets submitted to you. In a way that can be gone through later when someone out there decides that some piece of data is important, or indexable/searchable, yet you may end up in a situation where a large majority of your data providers won't/ can't even provide that data for months or years. They are all different/independent vendors with their own priorities and budgets. It's a glorious mess out there. We use a combination NoSQL and RDBMS to get it done.

    I've been surprised that healthcare.gov made it as far as they did. I don't think the marklogic call was a bad one though. I think what looks to be the hiring of a company without a lot of experience in the XML/NoSQL/NIEM arena was.

  9. Re:Omni shifted from science to "scientism" on Omni Magazine To Reboot · · Score: 2

    Now you're talking! I miss all of the creativity that came out of "The Well" back then. Back when you had a "zine" that helped you choose what to wear, what brain enhancing drugs to take, where to stand on social issues, and how subvert the phone company. All in one randomly produced at various times throughout the year publication.

  10. Re:Too busy for a pipe dream! on Elon Musk Admits He Is Too Busy To Build Hyperloop · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Unions: The largest obstacle to autonomous trains. Esp in Spain. It the reason that will have autonomous cars before we have autonomous trucks. Imagine a world where the Teamsters no longer exist. Do you really think they're going to let that happen without hard a fight? Lord only knows what we're going to do with 3.5 million laid off workers, when there are already 11.5 million unemployed. It also looks like there are so few train operators in the us, that it may not be worth the money to do it automatically. In 2010 there were only 67,100 with little or no expected change in their numbers, so unless the safety issue comes to a head it probably won't change.

  11. Re:Sensationalist summary at all? on Building a Full-Auto Gauss Gun · · Score: 1

    you can 3d print metal FYI..

    http://www.3dsystems.com/3d-printers/production/spro-125-direct-metal#.UgKVbkBDtIM

    http://gpiprototype.com/services/metal-3d-printing.html

    Just some quick google search results on on the topic of "3d printer metal"

  12. Re:Diet and laziness on The Man Who Convinced Us We Needed Vitamin Supplements · · Score: 1

    The proper term here is "Opertunivore" w/ vegetarian leanings...

  13. Java Coding Style on Interviews: Ask James Gosling About Java and Ocean Exploring Robots · · Score: 1

    Having had to read through some of your older code recently, StreamTokenizer.java, it smacks of a terse 'C' style of coding. I love the way it uses byte arrays and bit masks to do it's tokenizing very efficiently. It's wonderfully subtle, but a PITA the read compared to more recent Java coding styles, that use longer more readable variable names etc. At times I wondered if it was the result of an all nighter/quick hack. I'm curious if you like/influenced the way Java's coding style has developed over the years.

  14. Re:I go into the bookstore on Nook Failure, Lack of Foot Traffic Could Spell Doom For Barnes & Noble · · Score: 1

    I got Bruce Campbell to sign my chainsaw.... that took some work, but I felt it was worth it...

  15. Re:I've lived it - you haven't on The Security Risks of HTML5 Development · · Score: 1

    wikipedia says: Poverty is the state of one who lacks a certain amount of material possessions or money.[1] Absolute poverty or destitution refers to the deprivation of basic human needs. Wealth is the abundance of valuable resources or material possessions.

    I think you have a choice in how you define an economic class, by income, spending, net worth, or some combination thereof. I'm willing to say that I define wealth by income. If you earn 1 million dollars a year, and have annual debt load of 1 million dollars. A financial high amperage as it were, and zero net worth I'd still call you rich/wealthy. I also believe that at some point you have to draw a line. Apparently my line is at least when you earn 5 times what the average person earns, if not less.

  16. Re:I've lived it - you haven't on The Security Risks of HTML5 Development · · Score: 1

    There's a lot of things Obama doesn't have the stomach for anymore... I haven't been talking about Family income, just single person income, and tax rates. Our concept of "Rich" has changed so much in the last 10 - 15 years because the "extremely rich" have moved the mark so far beyond what we can even imagine. The top 5% of of income in the US starts at $167,000. That's below the 175K mark, I willing to accept that anyone in the top 5% of income should be considered as "rich" According to one accepted definition, the middle class is the middle 66% of income earners. I'm pretty sure that 5% fits into the 11% that is the top third of the top 33% that is the upper class. This is of course a definition of the rich that is only based on Income and not on Influence. There may be a line here though as only 4% of the US population are millionaires. Unless of course you're saying that a millionaire isn't rich. Chances are that if your income is $175,000 a year you're going to be a millionaire, and therefore rich. If not, then you've got deeper problems. Did you know that 6% of the american population considers themselves rich?

  17. Re:I've lived it - you haven't on The Security Risks of HTML5 Development · · Score: 1

    My argument is at the 175K mark. That's 14,583 dollars a month. We'll subtract out your 50% tax burden to get $7291 dollars a month. We'll assume you're paying $3,166/month to pay off your $250,000 debt in 10 years, leaving you $4125/month or $49,508 after taxes. Median income in the US is $32,000 - pre tax, or at a 25% tax rate, $24,000 aka $2,000/ month. That's $2125 a month more than the average person, for 10 years after you get a job, more than enough to get a decent place to live and a couple of cars. Given that the tax rate for 175, is actually only 33% you'd get an extra $2479/month to spend on top of that $4125. So, no I don't have any sympathy for someone bringing in that much money.

    At the 90K level on the other hand, It's going to be fairly rough compared to the average middle class family, and I empathize. You're still going to have it better than a third of americans though. Not seeing your spouse for nights at a time is rough and i applaud you for making it through together.

    Have you ever been required to work 36 hour shifts without any sleep? No
    Yes, and don't forget you have it better than active duty deployed military. Same crappy hours plus gunfire, and their pay will never be that good.

  18. Re:Lawyers and doctors are not self employed on The Security Risks of HTML5 Development · · Score: 2

    I'm sorry... are you saying $175,000/ year isn't a FUCK TON of money? boo fucking hoo; 60 - 80 hours a week? Welcome to minimum wage just trying to get by while supporting a family. FIX YOUR PERSPECTIVE!

    </rant>

  19. Re:Typical Oracle - Enterprise sheds tear on Java 6 EOL'd By Oracle · · Score: 1

    I maintain around a million lines of Java code and have never had this problem either. A lot of it is refection heavy, gets run on OSX, Windows, and Linux and has thousands of daily users. GUI, Web and Back End. Point release specific? The only time I ever have trouble is when I try to use a newer feature on an older JDK, or I try to compile down with a new feature. Perhaps there's some JNI code out there, but that sort of defeats the purpose most of the time. I couldn't agree more that you have to try to make a java app version specific. I don't do Applets or Webstart, so maybe there's something there.. After some lite Googling I wasn't able to find a specific example either.

  20. Re:GIT sucks on windows on Subversion 1.8 Released But Will You Still Use Git? · · Score: 1

    We've found that Smart GIT/HG works really well for our GUI repo needs.

  21. Re:My solution for fixing Windows 8 on A Serious Proposal To Fix Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    I've got to disagree. Installing DR-DOS 7 and QEMU is really a much better option.. Although now that I think about it, that's almost the same as Windows 8. You can only see one app at time right? hmmmm...

  22. Re:Privacy in public? on Congress Demands Answers From Google Over Google Glass Privacy Concerns · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Here's what might be a more useful link: The Photographer’s Right

  23. Re:Privacy in public? on Congress Demands Answers From Google Over Google Glass Privacy Concerns · · Score: 2

    You are correct. I actually carry around paper work in my camera bag for when I get hassled by the police or security guards, that spells out my rights. The ACLU has a page about it, and I don't see why google glass would be any different.

  24. according to my math... on NTSB Recommends Lower Drunk Driving Threshold Nationwide: 0.05 BAC · · Score: 1

    According to my math enforcing a .05 BAC might upset the Inebriati. I'd recommend against it....

  25. Re:so... on Biometric Database Plans Hidden In Immigration Bill · · Score: 1

    And there are many people out there who think you can't have a democratic form of government without anonymity. Who'd those campaign contributions come from? Who was that lobbyist? Who actually voted for this and left this hanging chad? Can they please tell us their intention? The debate is apparently still open on both sides of the argument, and is very dependent on the circumstances. Some would also argue that we don't even actually have a democracy now, and that it's more a fascist state.

    "Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power."
    --Benito Mussolini