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User: the+grace+of+R'hllor

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Comments · 669

  1. Re:Social media on When Schools Overlook Introverts · · Score: 2

    You mean 'jibe'. Nothing of any significance has 'jived' since Barbara Billingsworth on the movie Airplane.

  2. Re:good on Europe Agrees To Agree With Everyone Except US What 5G Should Be · · Score: 1

    In the long list of things than can and do make your country increasingly irrelevant (although not there yet, by far), restricting access to high quality communications will definitely help. In the end, whether it's an oppressive regime or simple failure to invest doesn't matter.

  3. Re:Epix was one reason they were forced to stream. on Netflix Is Becoming Just Another TV Channel · · Score: 1

    The hell? The slowest cable connection offered in most of the Netherlands is 40Mbps. If my phone had just 160kbps I'd rightly complain to the phone company.

  4. Re:And all they wanted was a faster horse on F-35 Might Be Outperformed By Fourth-Generation Fighters · · Score: 2

    If all the other side has are planes that are capable of out-dogfighting the US planes, they'll endeavour to close with US planes quickly. Unless the F-35 can take down any and *all* comers at range, without fail, it's going to lose out to that tactic.

    An SU-27 costs $30 million, an F-35 about $148 million at the cheapest, and $248 million at the more expensive end. So as long as you produce enough pilots, you can field five to eight times as many planes for the same amount of money, and those planes are better at dogfights, and reasonably capable at long range as well.

  5. A solution in search of a problem on Samsung Wants To Bring Back the Flip Phone With Bendable Screens · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A problem we've solved already. Just use a hinge and two screens. Use code to stitch them into a logical entity. Bezels can be small, on one side.

    I have a feeling it's just patent-troll-defense.

  6. Re:I'm still shaking off the crappiest winter ever on 2014 Was Earth's Warmest Year On Record · · Score: 1

    What continent am I on? Europe. All of Europe had a record warm winter. As a point of interest, Europe's bigger than Florida, so we more than cancel each other out. Anecdotes aplenty.

    I'm 36 years old. I remember we used to get snow here in Holland, so we could sled. Barely happens these days. The last time we had an Elfstedentocht (Eleven Cities Tour, an ice skating marathon) was 1997, and before that 1986. The other years, we didn't have enough frost.

    It's entirely possible global climate change means Florida's going to be colder. I hope you enjoy skiing, at least until your state floods.

  7. Re:I've said it before on Robots Appear To Raise Productivity Without Causing Total Work Hours To Decline · · Score: 1

    Technology decreases certain classes of work. And a large portion of the population is capable -- either by experience, choice or simple capacity -- only of unskilled labor. When menial labor disappears, you have unemployed people who still need to live.

  8. Re:Why such short employment on Who Owns Your Overtime? · · Score: 1

    Alternative view: Places where employees are encouraged to change and grow over their decade(s) of employment are more innovative, yet more stable, than places that encourage drive-by work. New ideas only get implemented in a half-assed way if the person who promoted the idea is already two jobs further in his career.

  9. Re:UK needs to be run by corporations like America on Where Is Europe's Silicon Valley? · · Score: 1

    Seems to be working okay. My country (The Netherlands) is consistently in the top happy countries, definitely near the top healthy countries.

    You seem to be under the misapprehension that European countries are communist. We're not, but by and large we've heavily regulated and, in some cases, nationalized things that should not be run for profit, like health care. I'm still miffed that the train system was privatized. It's gone down-hill since then.

  10. Re:There are no ethics on Gates, Zuckerberg Promising Same Jobs To US Kids and Foreign H-1B Workers? · · Score: 1

    You can do anything you want to anyone, period. The difference is that being an unethical asshole has consequences in other areas. The deficiency lies with business.

  11. Re:Ability to multitask on Microsoft Study Finds Technology Hurting Attention Spans · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ever notice how, when you're driving and need to find your way, so you're peering at all the street signs, you turn the radio down? Most people can't do it with a high radio volume.

    Multitasking is a myth.

  12. Re:USA in good company... on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Gets Death Penalty In Boston Marathon Bombing · · Score: 1

    That might make you feel warm and fuzzy, but it's not actually true. US foreign policy is based on US interests.

    Ron Paul took a lot of flak years back for saying that the US is responsible for creating a climate that allowed Al Qaida to strike on 9/11 2001, but he was absolutely on the money.

    Media in the US, however, don't exactly report on what the US actually does. Just one of many parallels between the soviets and present day US (besides propaganda, this includes comprehensive spying on its own citizens, disappearing citizens and use of torture). This used to be something that would upset Americans.

  13. Re: The Death of Punishment on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Gets Death Penalty In Boston Marathon Bombing · · Score: 1

    And we're still at lower rates now. So killing prisoners doesn't influence murder rates. Why do it then? Shits and giggles?

  14. Money? on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Gets Death Penalty In Boston Marathon Bombing · · Score: 1

    So... money? You'd kill a person for money.

    How much of society's money would you be willing to have someone killed for? Ten million? A thousand? Somewhere in between, perhaps.

  15. Re: The Death of Punishment on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Gets Death Penalty In Boston Marathon Bombing · · Score: 1

    How's that working out for you? Murder rate in the US is higher than (almost?) any western country that has abolished the death penalty.

  16. Re:USA in good company... on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Gets Death Penalty In Boston Marathon Bombing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not really interested in what they think.

    Which is the problem with United States foreign policy expressed in seven words, right there...

  17. Re:Right conclusion, wrong reasoning. on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 1

    Acceptance testing involves testing the newly built functionality in the entire system. A product owner should signal any integration issues. Test and review is also a bit broader than just testing the code in question; if a problem is spotted with adjacent functionality, fix it.

    That said, full-on systems testing is lacking, and we don't do any regression checks at the moment. We'll get to regression sprints before long, with this project, I think.

  18. Re:Right conclusion, wrong reasoning. on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 1

    My agile workflow involves development work until Dev Done, then I hang up a rest-and-review task. Once another developer has checked my work for functionality and improvements, it goes into acceptance. Once there, the Product Owner has to test it for functionality and accept it or reject it (if it doesn't conform to the specs). Only then is the task considered 'done' for the sprint. So five stages a task will go through.

    How does that skimp on testing? It's leaps and bounds more useful testing than any waterfall project. Waterfall skips the test-and-review, and once you do get to testing, you're doing the entire system, meaning you miss huge chunks of it.

  19. Re:Agile. on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 5, Informative

    The hell? My daily standup is 2-4 minutes. Restrospective takes 15-30 minutes, subsequent planning takes another 30-45. We do weekly sprints, so you're looking at an average worst-case of averaging 19 minutes a day. Boo-fucking-hoo.

    If your standups take 2 hours, then screw that. Tell them what you did, what you're going to do, and what's blocking you. If someone wants to have a long discussion, sit back down and go to work, because the standup is apparently over. If anyone complains, tell them to take a course in scrum.

  20. Re:Facebook isn't. But Slashdot is. on Is Facebook Keeping You In a Political Bubble? · · Score: 2

    Unarmed lone black youths who viciously attack groups of armed police officers. In repeated situations. If you really think your police force is justified in executing unarmed young people. Liberal as Slashdot may be, this is a civil rights issue. If it does not get resolved, you *will* get lynching of cops, only it won't be unarmed lone black youths at that point.

  21. Re:No, but your own choices are. on Is Facebook Keeping You In a Political Bubble? · · Score: 2

    From what I read in American media, the liberal stance is "Too much income inequality is bad". ie, if enough people have too little to live on, because too much wealth accumulates to the wealthy, that's bad. You get revolutions that way, and no one wants that. Liberals tend to believe wealth gap is too large, and needs to be shrunk. Not obliterated in some communist's wet dream, but shrunk. The only straw man I see is what you just wrote about the liberal stance.

    Disclaimer: I'm Dutch. Our liberals are our right-wingers, and our left-wingers are actual socialists, the Socialist Party.

  22. Re:Dude, my mom's on Woo Woo on Is Facebook Keeping You In a Political Bubble? · · Score: 2

    but i (hopefully) i expect a (honest) criticism

    You must be new here.

  23. Re:Yes... on JavaScript Devs: Is It Still Worth Learning jQuery? · · Score: 1

    Good luck trying to check your app's dashboard and tweak some settings while out of the office on your 'fucking' desktop.

  24. Re:Crippling exploit in 3...2...1.... on Tesla To Announce Battery-Based Energy Storage For Homes · · Score: 1

    By the battery controller he means the bit of electronics that actually controls the battery. If built correctly, it will not be able to harm the battery, regardless of the commands sent to it.

    The control software telling the electronics to switch to battery power in the middle of the night, though, could happen.

  25. Re:Baptists are already writing this week's sermon on 3.46-Billion-Year-Old 'Fossils' Were Not Created By Life Forms · · Score: 1

    I do believe you missed the entirely appropriate Futurama reference, good sir.