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User: roc97007

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  1. Great, now do one more thing on Google+ Photos To Shut Down August 1 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now that we've split off Photos from Google+, let's split off the GPS support into a separate product, ok? Or maybe bundle it into Maps where it belongs? We could call it LATITUDE.

  2. Depends. on Ask Slashdot: How Often Do You Update Your OS? · · Score: 2

    It depends on whether a machine is one on which I do work for which I get paid, or not. My main workstation, which is the source of my income, warrants a very conservative update approach. I was very slow in leaving XP, and with a mature, stable Windows 7 environment, I'm in no hurry at all to adopt another version of Windows. Yeah, like everyone else I've seen the popups inviting me to upgrade to Windows 10. You first. I can't afford to be down while I figure out why things aren't working or figuring out where Microsoft hid certain buttons this time.

    I will sometimes install a new version on a spare machine just to see where technology is heading, and acquaint myself with what I will eventually have to deal with, but that's a lower priority. I'm not really interested in spending half my life doing upgrades and figuring out what broke.

  3. Re:Printer on How Will IT Workers' Roles Change in the Next Five Years? (Video) · · Score: 1

    Hm. That sounds like grounds to find a new server team.

  4. Re:Printer on How Will IT Workers' Roles Change in the Next Five Years? (Video) · · Score: 1

    Yes. Outsourced IT services is a double edged sword. On the one hand, a botched assignment can provide business possibilities for people who can do a better job. (Or, at very least, communicate better.) On the other hand, the botched work can instead be handed off to already snowed-under local personnel.

  5. Re:My own experience has been... on How Will IT Workers' Roles Change in the Next Five Years? (Video) · · Score: 2

    Yes. I wrote "cheapest" first, and then changed it to the more ...shall we say "businessly correct", "cost-effective".

    In our case, it's more likely that the data will be leaked to our competitors. Which raises a different question -- a *lot* of our company confidential data is now going through or being stored on "cloud" services. In some cases, those services are supplying both us and our largest competitors. At what point does it become, um, cost-effective to discretely sell a company's data to a competitor? I mean, it's all there, on the same server pool.

  6. Re:Printer on How Will IT Workers' Roles Change in the Next Five Years? (Video) · · Score: 1

    Good point. Locals are still going to be necessary.

  7. My own experience has been... on How Will IT Workers' Roles Change in the Next Five Years? (Video) · · Score: 2

    ...that the company will buy IT as a service from the most cost-effective supplier, most current IT personnel will be laid off (a few will be repurposed), and then users will discover shortly after cutover that calling the (now overseas) helpdesk has suddenly become an exercise in frustration, because of the language barrier and because the helpdesk person often knows less about computers and about the environment than the customer, because the business model dictates that you can pull people off the street, hand them a stack of procedures, and they become IT personnel. (This works as well as you imagine.)

    Management and team leaders will beg the remaining IT management not to make their users call the helpdesk, in vain.

    Due to lack of effective IT services and the necessity to actually get work done, little pools of IT start to pop up around the company. It starts as a file share on someone's PC, and then an off-the-books PC becoming a dedicated resource (there's a rogue EXSi server not three feet from me) and developers start to remember old admin and dba skills. After awhile, the company IT infrastructure is still used for no-brainer stuff like mail and large storage appliances and relatively static work like billing is still done on big, enterprise-class machines, but more and more anything that needs to be flexible, or resources that need to respond rapidly to user needs, are done surreptitiously, under the table, with the funds being disguised as other thing.

    Then, when development itself is outsourced, it's left to the "development managers" and "offshore interface personnel" to maintain the still-used local resources, plus, usually, additional personnel to try to find some use for the code produced by those offshore resources, who have no real context of what the code is being used for.

    (Parenthetically, the problem is not confined to IT. A company of which I have experience who has outsourced their accounting, still doesn't realize that after three years the offshore accountants still don't know the difference between California and Canada, and think the transaction must be correct if they don't get an error when they hit "return". The remaining 10% of retained accountants are kept busy correcting mistakes and doing the work over again.)

    Anyway, the point being, some IT people don't choose to fade away, they go underground. They find that users can be very thankful of a helpful person who can communicate well and has knowledge of the company and what the user is trying to accomplish. Who isn't following a script but genuinely trying to help, with the expertise to do so. I have a title that sounds like a different job, but I'm still doing admin and customer support. When I'm not at my regular job, I have a side business providing home support for people who are tired of "I am being here for helping you turn it off and back on again".

    So yeah, I guess IT has changed.

  8. That's a good answer. What I meant, though, was why would NASA bother to fake a mission to Pluto?

  9. Re:Amazon on Gun-Firing Drone Raises Some Eyebrows · · Score: 1

    I was thinking more Robot Wars, only the robots fly.

  10. Re:Freedom! on Gun-Firing Drone Raises Some Eyebrows · · Score: 1

    (Or a former basketball player...)

  11. wait a minute on Gun-Firing Drone Raises Some Eyebrows · · Score: 1

    Wasn't this the plot of iZombie, like, three weeks ago? At very least, this is old news.

  12. But but.... WHY??

  13. um, what? on Neil Young Says His Music Is Too Good For Streaming Services · · Score: 1

    Ok, I like a lot of Neil Young's songs, but ... in my experience the quality of the streaming service is mostly the device producing the music, not the amount of information in the stream itself. In other words, if you're playing it on the mono iphone speaker, yeah it'll sound crappy. Plug in a set of trendy white buds... yeah still crappy. (Who thought ear buds were a high quality musical experience?) Plug in a decent set of over-ear headphones... and, assuming your bandwidth isn't being extremely "shaped", well that's pretty ok.

    Besides, if he's really into music quality, why did he allow his music to be published on commercial CDs at all? The sound quality of a CD is ok, but not stellar.

  14. Re:Your post doesn't conform to their prejudice on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    > So you think it is far more appropriate for them to have to develop a nonstandard plug rather than trust in the honesty and decency of the citizens of the UK?

    Wait, we ARE talking about charging an iphone?

  15. Re:Your post doesn't conform to their prejudice on Man Arrested After Charging iPhone On London Overground Train · · Score: 1

    Besides, the security guard or whatever she was needs some validation in her life, and making a stink about a few shillings of electricity and seeing the perp arrested probably made her feel all warm and fuzzy on the walk home to her studio flat and 13 cats.

  16. Re:A better solution on "Happy Birthday" Hits Sour Notes When It Comes To Song's Free Use · · Score: 2

    I'd say that "happy birthday to you" (written in 1893) sorta qualifies as a dinosaur.

  17. Re:A better solution on "Happy Birthday" Hits Sour Notes When It Comes To Song's Free Use · · Score: 2

    As anyone who has climbed out of their parents' basement in the last 20 years knows, restaurants are using "happy happy birthday, happy happy birthday" sung to The Lone Ranger theme (or William Tell overture if you're being pedantic) for some years now. Life finds a way.

  18. yes, that makes sense on Ask Slashdot: If Public Transport Was Free, Would You Leave Your Car At Home? · · Score: 1

    > but not by the 20% the city had projected. Instead, they grew by a modest 3%

    In my area (pacific northwest) whenever there's a new mass transit shiny object, the projected ridership increase is usually off by about 90%. (This new rail line will increase ridership by 22,000!!!! (Actual increase about 2,800)) This is in line with that. I'd ask, how is this in line with previous projections for transit projects for that area?

    > What happened is that more pedestrians and bike users started to use public transit instead of walking and cycling. But car users continue to drive to work.

    Likely reason is that most people walking or cycling are in an arrangement (location of home and work, condition of commute) where walking and cycling makes sense. And the people driving to work are doing so because for their circumstances it's the only practical solution.

  19. No. Well, maybe, depending on other things on Ask Slashdot: If Public Transport Was Free, Would You Leave Your Car At Home? · · Score: 1

    "free" isn't the whole story. Transit is already heavily subsidized; the monetary cost to riders is down in the noise. (At least, in my area, YMMV and all that.) The biggest issue I have with transit is that the rail is a significant distance from me on both ends (amounting to over 1/3 of the total distance) and feeder lines are... let's face it, dismal. I'm assuming that what is being searched for is a way to increase ridership. There are things wrong with mass transit, at least as implemented in my area, that are totally unrelated to cost; it'd be best to concentrate on some of them.

    I go to the local citizens participation board meetings, and Transit is often there giving presentations and meet/greets. When I raise the issue of park and ride security, they wax lyrical about the security systems in place ... to protect Transit equipment. When asked about the park and riders themselves, they shrug and say that's local law enforcement's job.

    And maybe that's true, but I think I've seen a cop car swing through the transit mall maybe twice in the last couple of years. It doesn't exactly make me want to recommend park and ride to daughter working swing shift.

    It didn't take long to realize that waiting for the feeder busses is a lost cause. So that leaves park and ride, which only covers the distance at one end. (Unless you work it like a friend of mine, who bought an old beater car to park at the park and ride on the *other* end, so he has cars at both ends. It works for him.)

    So yeah, like a lot of things, if mass transit was timely and convenient, I'd use it, sure why not? I have no love for being trapped in my for wheeled cage in traffic. But as currently set up, mass transit is not convenient, takes significant extra time out of the day, (due to the rail not really going where I need to go, and feeder lines being few and inconsistent). And, being in IT with the hours that sometimes entails, I have somewhat of a bad feeling about being in a near-deserted transit mall after dark.

  20. Re:Reasons I'm not a judge. on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 2

    what the check to see if he is still in cell and not just a fake head each 2 hours all night long.

    ...the test being, prod the head with a nightstick until it makes a noise.

  21. Re:Reasons I'm not a judge. on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At very least, they could "swat" him at random times of the night while he's in youth custody. Kick in door, flash bangs, guns, wrestled to ground, all the usual. Except perhaps for the accidental shootings from overexcited police. Or maybe some of those too, if non-lethal, so he could understand the possible ramifications of his actions.

  22. Not to mention... on Vancouver Area Teen Sentenced To 16 Months For Swatting · · Score: 2

    ...You know all those accomplishments in the online world? They're NOT REAL. That's why it's On Line.

    I don't know all of the details, but 16 months seems like a slap on the wrist for a "prank" that can get people killed. Like, you know, in real life. For ever. No do-overs, no saved games.

  23. Re:GRR on Han Solo To Get His Own Star Wars Movie Prequel · · Score: 1

    > Lucas can't write dialog. He got help with that for Empire and Jedi, but by the time the prequels were being written and filmed, people were too awed by his earlier success to be willing to actually *remind* him that he needed help writing dialog.

    This is absolutely true, but I'm not sure I agree with your other assertions. Casting: Hayden Christensen. Jake Lloyd. Must I go on? Plot: Trade agreements. Senate sub-committees. Dialog: "Yippee".

    So yeah, we agree on the dialog. And we agree on *why* the dialog sucked. And why, say, one of the actors, or crew, didn't step in and say "Hey, George. Nobody speaks like this." But I can't agree that this was the only issue.

  24. Re:Kessel Run on Han Solo To Get His Own Star Wars Movie Prequel · · Score: 2

    it's a shame they never made a sequel to Highlander.

    Yes! That too.

  25. Re:Question on Han Solo To Get His Own Star Wars Movie Prequel · · Score: 1

    Except for maybe an easter egg of JarJar's bones bleaching in the sun.

    Or Jar Jar's corpse being served up to Jabba the Hut like a roast pig.

    Would have to be a flashback, but ok.