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  1. Re:In the workflow? on Ask Slashdot: Non-Coders, Why Aren't You Contributing To Open Source? · · Score: 1

    Additionally, everywhere that I've worked has been fine about changing the agreement to state that only stuff I work on during work hours belongs to them. Anything I do on my own time is my own. If they want you bad enough, they'll change the agreement. If they're not willing to do that, are you sure it's a place you really want to work?

  2. Re:Of course you can! on Ask Slashdot: IT Career Path After 35? · · Score: 1

    But if you're north of 35, look at your local state agencies, no one would blink an eye at a 40-something applying for a job.

    I've actually looked into public service work a few times, but one thing that I see quite commonly (in my state, anyway) is that skills are extremely undervalued in terms of salary. It's tough to justify going from a position making $90-100K to a comparable one making only $65K, although there are often benefits like pensions that can offset that somewhat.

  3. Re:Find a job you love on Ask Slashdot: IT Career Path After 35? · · Score: 2

    Another example is that really through no fault of my own I had to swap employers several times in a relatively short amount of time, I know I could explain it well in an interview but it raises flags if you're just glancing through my CV. So now I'm planning to stay with my current employer to build credibility that I can commit and won't just head for greener pastures in less than a year.

    Same situation here. Where I am now, I'm one of the youngest devs at 47, and the majority of the rest of the dev team have been there in excess of 20 years. The environment is a little stagnant technically (although they're making a good-faith effort to bring things into a more modern setting) and the job is kind of a "it's time to make the donuts" kind of gig for me, but my boss and all of my co-workers are really easy to get along with and geeky enough to want to learn new things. They're also very forthcoming about the vast amount of institutional knowledge they all have, and everyone is happy to answer questions about anything at all. I have a much better degree of job security now, and I continue to keep abreast of new developments in the industry and do plenty of work with more timely and relevant tech on my own time so as not to get stale myself.

    The key thing is just to never stop learning, even if it's outside the scope of your current employment. There are far too many people in the development field that don't take an active interest in what they do for a living. For me, learning new things is mostly its own reward, but having competency with a wide breadth of relevant skills sure helps a lot when you're looking for a new job.

  4. Re:I wonder.... on Music Publishers Sue Cox Communications Over Piracy · · Score: 4, Informative

    I know the lawyers have a legal term for this kind of bad faith, but I've no idea what it is right now.

    I think you're probably thinking of barratry, although strictly speaking what Rightscorp is doing seems more along the lines of simple extortion.

  5. Re: haven't been following... on Behind Apple's Sapphire Screen Debacle · · Score: 2

    Most if not all carbides will readily scratch sapphire, although in fairness you're not going to encounter many of them unless you work in a machine shop.

  6. Re:Duh ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    Actually, on the basis of the production of an unwinnable war, we could go back to 1971 when Nixon declared the "war on drugs". This has been the justification of any number of bad policy (seizure laws and practices in particular), although generally more in the context of law enforcement than the military itself.

  7. Re:He still plead guilty to something ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    But your problem is you disagree with the voting community not that they aren't accountable to it.

    It's not a difference of opinion with the voting community. It's that that prosecutors and law enforcement officers are generally not elected positions, and thus any "accountability" to the public is arm's length at best. The district attorney himself may be elected, but his staff certainly is not. As I said before, what we have now is what you're already suggesting, and it *doesn't work*. Cops can cost their departments hundreds of thousands of dollars in civil judgments, and they continue working as they did before even in the presence of overwhelming public support to have them removed. Prosecutors run roughshod over the rights of people, and it takes a huge media interest and the efforts of wealthy people to get merely the most egregious examples dealt with. The Duke lacrosse case showed that quite clearly. You get exactly as much justice as you can afford, and no more in these situations. Often the public is not even aware of what's going on, so is it okay for individuals to be financially ruined or carry around an undeserved criminal record just because the voters didn't make a big stink about it?

  8. Re:He still plead guilty to something ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    That's not good enough. That's the way the system works now, and what we have now provably doesn't do enough to curb the abuses often seen in either group. Both groups need to be personally accountable for their actions, beyond the lip service to accountability that they already have, but for all practical purposes doesn't exist.

  9. Re:Government abuse unpunished. on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    It all stems from the fact that the government never actually is held responsible for its mistakes.

    I would argue that it's not the government itself, but the guilty people within the government that should be held accountable. If a cop beats someone up, the department/city gets sued and pays, not the cop himself. Nothing's going to change until those individuals that are willing to go outside the law have some real skin in the game.

  10. Re:Duh ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 2

    IMNSHO, that's about when everything took a major wrong turn, with the neo-cons coming to the forefront.

    I think you can pin it down even more accurately to on or about September 12, 2001, when the American public collectively lost their critical thinking skills and bought into practically everything the government told them.

  11. Re:He still plead guilty to something ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    An easy fix to that is to discard plea deals from the evaluation. How many *court cases* you've won, not how many pleas have you forced. It still doesn't fix all of the problems inherent in the current system, though.

  12. Re:He still plead guilty to something ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    For a justice system to function guilty people need to have reason to confess their guilt and engage in a process of reconciliation with the community.

    This would need to apply to law enforcement and the prosecution as well. Not going to happen here.

  13. Re:He still plead guilty to something ... on Hacker Threatened With 44 Felony Charges Escapes With Misdemeanor · · Score: 1

    If the crime you're charged with carries a maximum month sentence, you should be out on bail after the month automatically.

    If you're still in jail after a month waiting for trial on a charge that only carries a 30 day sentence, you've got a good argument for a Sixth Amendment civil rights case IMO.

  14. Why I read this article on Clarificiation on the IP Address Security in Dropbox Case · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have little respect for Bennett's excessive, often not carefully considered, and mostly useless prose, so I don't come to Bennett threads to actually read what spews forth from his keyboard. I read them because I find the new and different ways he gets panned by the Slashdot readership to be entertaining. He's like the Slashdot Punching Bag - you punch him, and he invariably swings back again a little later for more.

  15. Re:This is your big draw? on Clarificiation on the IP Address Security in Dropbox Case · · Score: 1

    Does the Spock in your universe have a beard?

    Closest thing to useful info associated with one of Bennett's posts. Spock's Beard is an awesome band.

  16. Re:Oh no, you di'nt go there... compulsion... on Jackie Chan Discs Help Boost Solar Panel Efficiency · · Score: 1

    Soffit! Soffit right now. Vent someplace else!

  17. Re:LOL on How Intel and Micron May Finally Kill the Hard Disk Drive · · Score: 1

    This is true for a lot of stuff. Buying a Fender electric guitar? You can get one made in the U.S., or Mexico, or Japan, or China, all priced/featured differently and of varying quality.

  18. Re:Aerial or underground ? on Ask Slashdot: Why Is the Power Grid So Crummy In So Many Places? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Conversely, where I live everything is buried. We lose power for a second or two almost daily, with at least one outage longer than a minute per month.

  19. Re:LOL on How Intel and Micron May Finally Kill the Hard Disk Drive · · Score: 1

    They break unbelievably fast in comparison to any other brand I've tried.

    Some people have problems with Seagate. Some have issues with WD. The Seagates in my soon-to-be-replaced colo box both have 50K+ hours on them, and the SMART logs are still clean as a whistle. I have standbys just in case though. ;-)

  20. Re:What people want... on In a Self-Driving Future, We May Not Even Want To Own Cars · · Score: 2

    It would sure cut a lot of commuting if all a person needed to do to get to work was to take the elevator.

    Probably would cut out a lot of time off too - "Dave, I know it's your day off, but can you come upstairs real quick to look at this server issue?"

  21. Re:Flawed Premise on In a Self-Driving Future, We May Not Even Want To Own Cars · · Score: 1

    for the same reasons that automatic transmissions last longer than manual trannies

    Unless you know how to properly drive a car with a standard. Standards have far fewer points of failure, and the part that most often is replaced is the clutch, and that usually fails because people ride it or otherwise find a way to burn it up through improper use. Clutch repairs are something I can do in my driveway and are reasonably inexpensive. Practically anything involving an automatic (aside from changing fluid/filter) involves taking it to a shop, and often ends up costing thousands of dollars. There's a reason you don't often see tractor-trailers with automatics, and they can go hundreds of thousands of miles before needing transmission service.

  22. Re:Cars are just part of what's on the road on In a Self-Driving Future, We May Not Even Want To Own Cars · · Score: 1

    The trucks and vans can be self driving too.

    Self-driving trucks will entail a *far* more comprehensive level of automation than cars. Just getting a tractor-trailer to make a successful turn at a tight, busy intersection will be an interesting problem to solve.

  23. Re:In a Self-Driving Future--- on In a Self-Driving Future, We May Not Even Want To Own Cars · · Score: 1

    Sure frustrated drivers will force their way into the fast lane and jam up traffic (as they do now), but the cars will record the reckless driving, likely by a few 'angles', eventually, it'll become a citation to do it.

    It's already against the law to do this (in most places in the U.S., anyway), and I see the police ignore it all the time even when it's happening right in front of them. If they spent half the time on enforcing left-lane and improper turn laws as they do on speeding, they'd have full coffers and much smoother-flowing traffic to boot. Probably would also have a downtick in accidents too.

  24. NDAs on Judge Unseals 500+ Stingray Records · · Score: 3, Informative

    Regarding the NDAs that have been signed with Harris and the government not to disclose information regarding the Stingray devices - I was under the impression that a civil contract could not override state or federal law, and any such clauses requiring such are non-enforceable. These judges need to be finding every single one of the officers and prosecutors in contempt when they present "but we're under an NDA" as an argument in a court of law.

  25. Re:To America? Yes. To the GOP? No. on Does Being First Still Matter In America? · · Score: 1

    The Federal government was to provide for the common defense, and currency, primarily.

    And arbitrating disputes between the States, and regulating interstate commerce, which sadly has become a catchall to let them do practically anything they want.