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  1. Re:Don't bother - the money is poor and weather sh on New Zealand Will Give You a Free Trip If You Agree To a Job Interview (esquire.com) · · Score: 1

    Yes, but it's a great place to hide out if World War III breaks out.

  2. Re:Where's the warp drive? on Key Test For Skylon Spaceplane Engine Technology · · Score: 2

    You need to wait another 50 years or so for Zefram Cochrane to invent the warp drive.

  3. It's official on Sources Say Meg Whitman To Become HP CEO · · Score: 1

    It's official - NY Times reporting Meg Whitman was named to lead Hewlett-Packard

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/23/technology/whitman-expected-to-be-named-at-hp.html?ref=business

  4. Re:It's Called 'Experience'! on IT Graduates Not "Well-Trained, Ready-To-Go" · · Score: 1

    Computer science departments don't teach "experience." That's why a co-op or internship is more important than ever! I graduated nearly 25 years ago from college (when Pascal was used to teach programming, but nobody used it in the real world), and I had delayed my graduation one semester just so I could get in a 6 month co-op assignment at a nearby company. It was the best move I ever made since it gave me an edge over other CS grads when I was being considered for my first job out of college. Get your "experience" now before you graduate. Otherwise recruiters will screen you out quickly early in the hiring process using their usual shallow cookie-cutter approach of pattern matching skills. The real world mentality is: "Can you hit the ground running from Day 1? I don't have the time or money to train you." After you get the experience from your first job out of college, your degree won't be worth much as you re-enter the job market as a "experienced professional." A Masters Degree or Ph.D. is even worth less and are only considered in tiebreaker situations when hiring. Sorry, I wish it was not like this in the "real world" - so take this bit of wisdom with you now before you graduate.

  5. Kill Switch found in Egypt on Clinton Calls For "Ground Rules" Protecting Internet · · Score: 1

    On a related topic, the NYT has an article about how the Mubarak regime exploited Internet's weaknesses.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/16/technology/16internet.html

  6. Matt, I told you to stop playing around ... whoa! on Possible New Hominid Species Discovered, Thanks To Google Earth · · Score: 1

    This quote from Matthew Berger, son of Professor Lee Berger, was posted on Good Morning Silicon Valley today.

    http://blogs.siliconvalley.com/gmsv/2010/04/quoted-matt-i-told-you-to-stop-playing-around-while-were-whoa.html

    “I turned the rock over and I saw the clavicle sticking out — that’s the collar bone. I didn’t know what it was at first; I thought it was just an antelope. So I called my dad over and about five meters away he started swearing, and I was like ‘What did I do wrong?’ and he’s like, ‘Nothing, nothing — you found a hominid’.”

  7. Cable Freedom Is a Click Away on What's the Best Way To Get Web Content To My TV? · · Score: 1

    There was an interesting article in the NY Times a few months ago about this..

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/10/technology/personaltech/10basics.html

    The author mentions all the gadgets he had previously hooked up, but threw them aside and now has a Mac Mini, wireless mouse and a Microsoft Xbox hooked up to his television. He also mentiones Boxee, Hulu and Joost.com. There is also a picture of his wife operating a wireless mouse called the Loop.

  8. Yet another job interview question on The Perfect Way To Slice a Pizza · · Score: 1

    I can just see it now. Some pinhead manager is going to read about this and come to the conclusion that this pizza problem would make a great job interview question to weed out software engineer candidates.

  9. Re:Dupe! on Vermont City Almost Encased In a 1-Mile Dome · · Score: 1

    Springfield! D'oh!

  10. Re:As Red Green would say on The Duct Tape Programmer · · Score: 1

    He also said that duct tape is the handyman's secret weapon.

  11. Re:getting fired vs laid off on Why Developers Get Fired · · Score: 1

    I can relate to that.

    I worked for a startup. For the first nine months I was getting excellent feedback from the manager who hired me. Then there was a shakeup in management (company was in trouble) and my manager was forced out of the company. The new manager had very high standards and told us we were going to work "with our balls against the wall." My assignments changed as well as my job responsibilities and I have to learn different work quickly. I had a learning curve and could not fix bugs as fast as people who were junior to me (they were more familiar with this particular app than me and fix bugs all the time). I started to hate my job and hate my boss and began looking around for another job. Apparently, my boss had the same idea. I saw a job ad from my employer on Monster.com that had the same job description as mine, but at time I didn't realize he was looking to hiring someone to replace me. Three months passed and I got my review. It was far worse than I expected - I was shocked. Then two weeks later I was fired. The next day I heard my replacement started. I filed for my unemployment claim and my company challenged it at a hearing. At the hearing my boss wrote a written statement saying how I was not working up to "senior level" citing the lower number of bugs fixed compared to the junior programmers. I still got the unemployment!

    Sometimes no matter what you do - especially if you are in a high pressure startup environment with a bad boss that is determined to get rid of no matter what - you're still a dead man walking. I still don't think taking these steps described in the article could have saved my job. I was never put on probation and was never given a chance to improve. The whole experience of being fired and having my ex-boss fight to keep me from getting unemployment benefits was traumatic. It took several more successful jobs since then to regain my confidence and realize that I really don't suck as a programmer. A few years after I was fired, the company went bankrupt and my boss eventually lost his job. What goes around comes around.

  12. Re:Jumped the gun? on IBM Tries To Patent Offshoring · · Score: 1

    IBM is now withdrawing the patent application.

    http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090331/BIZ/903310326

    Maybe IBM got scolded by Lou Dobbs. :-)

  13. Re:Expecting Too Much of Human Memory on US Adults Fail Basic Science Literacy · · Score: 1

    I can't remember things that I learned 20-30 years ago in school. Even when I was a student, the mantra was "Learn - Test - Forget" (repeat as neccessary).

    "Every time I learn something new it pushes some old stuff out of my brain." - Homer Simpson.

  14. Re:Who Are You Gonna Hire? on Without Jobs, Will Open Source Suffer? · · Score: 1

    // age discrimination corrollary

    if (Engineer_B > 40) {
        reject();
    }

  15. Re:Gray Hoverman antenna on Rabbit Ears To Stage a Comeback Thanks To DTV · · Score: 1

    Last month, Make Television on PBS showed how to make one of those Hoverman antennas using coat hangers, a pipe and some pieces of wood. Here's the video.

    http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2009/01/maker_workshop_dtv_antenna_steadyca.html

    Here are some GPL'd antenna designs I also found on a different site.

    http://www.digitalhome.ca/ota/superantenna/design.htm

  16. Re:Not for me! on Rabbit Ears To Stage a Comeback Thanks To DTV · · Score: 1

    I predict that after the DTV transition, many folks living in fringe reception areas will find their existing (indoor or outdoor) antennas aren't good enough for Digital TV. Digital signals either come in with a perfect picture or no picture at all (cliff effect). People living 50+ miles away who used to get snowy reception with analog will now get no reception with digital. If they are lucky enough to receive any digital stations, they certainly won't get as many Digital TV channels as analog TV channels. Centris predicts 9 million households could have DTV reception issues. I happen to be one of those households with DTV reception problems. I'm located 65 miles north of the Empire State Building (where NY TV signals originate) with an existing UHF/VHF rooftop antenna setup that can pull in all seven of the VHF analog TV stations and one UHF analog station. Some channels have better reception than others (less snow). When I got my digital converter box and hooked it up, I couldn't pick up any Digital TV channels from New York, probably due to the hilly terrain that blocks line of sight signals. This makes UHF reception difficult. I don't buy the argument that rabbit ears can suddenly provide digital-perfect pictures as well as many more channels. It all depends on your distance from the transmitter, the terrain between your home and the broadcast tower, and what kind of antenna you have and where it is mounted. And if you live in a fringe reception area your chances of getting over the air digital reception worsen as you get beyond 50 miles. Cable companies might actually pick up more customers in these fringe areas after the digital transition. As for me, I already signed up for cable.

  17. Re:ibm is historically a hudson valley company on IBM Hides the Bodies, Eyes US Government Billions · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile where are these laid off IBMers going to work? I grew up in the Mid-Hudson Valley. Poughkeepsie, Kingston and East Fishkill are historically one-company towns. This is not Silicon Valley where you can lose your job, walk across the street and get a job interview at another company. My Dad worked at IBM for 32 years until he retired, but I couldn't even last two years there (this is not your father's IBM anymore). There were no comparable jobs at comparable pay in the area, so I have to relocate to another state to find work.

    The local government officials were blind and took IBM for granted. One former county executive was fond of saying: "Sure, we have a one-horse town, but our horse is a thoroughbred." When the first IBM layoffs came in the 1990s, there was devastating effect on local communities. After the 1993 layoffs and the eventual closing of the Kingston plant, there was a mass exodus of technical professionals out of the area. Contractors and subcontractors that depended on IBM went out of business. Real estate prices took a nose dive. The only jobs left were in the growing big box retail and service industry along Route 9. Programmers and engineers who stayed in the area ended up underemployed and had to learn the phrase "Would you like fries with that?" at their new job.

    If IBM ever pulled up roots completely from the Mid-Hudson Valley, then the area would be nothing but a bedroom community for New York City (based on recent growth in Metro North commuter rail riders, that could become reality sooner than you think). I would love to see the area become more diversified in terms of jobs and companies, but I don't think the Mid-Hudson Valley will ever become a tech hub. I would encourage the laid off IBMers to not leave the area and try some good old fashioned entrepreurship. C'mon all you retired and laid off IBMers, why not get together and come up with a great idea for an invention and start your own company! That's the Silicon Valley way - Intel was founded by former employees of Fairchild Semiconductor. The best way to screw your former employer is to compete against them! And if your startup becomes successful, you'll generate new jobs for the local economy and eventually there will be less dependence on Big Blue for jobs.

         

  18. Re:Just get a better antenna! on Complaints Pour In After Digital TV Test · · Score: 1

    You can also try SPLAT! (which stands for Signal Propagation, Loss And Terrain). You can download SPLAT! from KD2DB's Web page, at http://www.qsl.net/kd2bd/splat.html. It's licensed under the GPL, Version 2.

  19. Re:Just get a better antenna! on Complaints Pour In After Digital TV Test · · Score: 1

    TVFool (www.tvfool.com) is better than antennaweb.org because it uses the Longley-Rice Propagation Model. However, before you go out and buy a bigger antenna, try to improve your existing rooftop antenna setup. I'm located 70 miles north of New York City with a 25 year old UHF/VHF antenna setup that can still pull in most of the major analog stations. When I got my converter box and hooked it up, I couldn't pick up any DTV channels from New York, so I know that feeling of frustration. After adding a mast mounted preamp and replacing the old 300 ohm twin-lead wire with 75 ohm RG6 coaxial cable, I can now pick up one DTV station from New York (WNYW). Not much better, but after checking the TVFool site I discovered that I'm also 70 miles south of the TV antenna farm outside Albany NY. Aiming the antenna north resulted in picking up three TV stations from Albany where the terrain is more favorable between my house and the Albany antenna farm. There's lot of trial an error to get DTV signals, so get everything tweaked and working before winter. The last thing you want to do is climb up on a icy roof in February when you discover that your digital signals aren't coming in.

    HDTVExpert.com has some helpful articles:

    http://www.hdtvexpert.com/pages_c/DTV_transition08.html

    http://www.hdtvexpert.com/pages_b/ReceptionOnTheFringe.html

  20. Re:Renewable energy comer in many forms on Hobbyist Renewable Energy? · · Score: 1

    Forget the whales, build a fusion reactor: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusor

    If a high school kid can do it, so can you!

    http://49chevy.blogs.com/fusor/2007/11/from-farmville-.html

  21. The Science of Star Trek on Scientists Build New Type of Photon Gun · · Score: 2, Funny

    And nobody yet has made a witty remark about photon torpedoes being next?

  22. Re:My source is South Park on Gamers Divorced From Reality? · · Score: 1

    Mr. Mackie says: "Ummmmm .... video games are baaaaaaad, m'kay?"

  23. Re:This was of very little worth on Mac OS X Security Competition Ends in 30 Minutes · · Score: 1

    How about trying to hack Mac OS 9? It has no command line interface at all. Then again, nobody is interested and nobody cares about that. Unpopular OSes are the least attractive targets, which may be a good reason to keep an older Mac running OS 9 hooked up to the network instead.

  24. NY Times Review on MacBook Pro Reviewed · · Score: 5, Informative

    David Pogue has his review of the new Apple MacBook Pro in the New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/02/technology/circu its/02pogue.html

  25. Re:More important than anything else... on Hot Tech Skills For 2006? · · Score: 1

    That also seems to be the main points in a book I am currently reading called "My Job Went to India: 52 Ways to Save Your Job".

    Book: http://www.pragmaticprogrammer.com/titles/mjwti/
    Author's Blog: http://www.chadfowler.com/