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User: dethkultur

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  1. Timex Sinclair 1000 on How Did You Learn How To Program? · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timex_Sinclair_1000

    2k of RAM. Not a typo. The user's manual started with "10 PRINT 20 GOTO 10" and ended with accessing memory with PEEK and POKE. Spent many, many hours with that thing from 12-13.

  2. Some meaty answers for you on Ask Slashdot: Working As an IT Contractor In a War Zone? · · Score: 1

    "Extremely easy" is hardly informative as said in the top comment... I think what you're asking for is how to find an opportunity, and work.

    Antarctica public opportunities are handled through here: http://www.usap.gov/

    They need IT people, but it is mostly infrastructure, WAN and LAN related work, and it's usually for 6 month or 1 year contracts. I applied many years back (when Raytheon handled all the contracting through polar.org) but got no response... I met someone later that had done a couple of tours there and he described it as that with something with as tight a community as Antarctica you need an "in", or network your ass off to get to one. It's an environment of trust in an extreme place, and most of the positions are filled by people that already have a relationship with a decision maker.

    Positions in dangerous places, if that's the adventure you're looking for, are nearly always managed by an NGO or government contractor responsible for all hiring, etc. So for Afghanistan, as a contractor, you'd probably look to something like SAIC, or even Blackwater/Xe, and once again, you need to network your way to a relationship with someone that could vouch that you're a sane person. These positions are in demand, and they don't lack for peeps through those channels. Again, nearly all infrastructure work. A clearance, if you have one, is a plus, and you'll be required to pass a secret clearance regardless. (which means, some people from the government will ask everything about your life, anything illegal or of bad character you've ever done, drug use, where you lived. The key here is be truthful - it's not necessarily an attempt to eliminate you from getting a clearance, but just to not let anybody blackmail you for skeletons in your closet. They'll ask some questions of your neighbors too, just to verify anything they suspect might be a lie.)

    For the rest, in a functioning, growing economy in Asia or South America or Russia vicinity, etc, there are headhunters/staffing firms much like in the US. Best bet is to go local as possible to the hungry, commission only recruiters, vs going through a big multi national. And like the US, don't just work through one, but half a dozen, as they all have knowledge of different opportunities. They do look for real world talent of all kinds, and you can probably bring a lot to the table with the experience you have in more mature environments.

  3. Etrade on US Banks That Offer Transaction History? · · Score: 1

    Etrade online banking stores and lets you access years of your own transaction data. Very, very good UI also, and they refund ATM fees. I've used them for around 5 years.

    Only drawback is that you need to mail in physical checks that you want to deposit. Wouldn't surprise me if they allowed you to deposit via camera phone pic soon though, like some other banks.

  4. Use a gmail account on Best Way To Archive Emails For Later Searching? · · Score: 1

    I did this myself, going back only 10 years though. It has been invaluable. Gmail gives you 7GB (with a little more every day), and the searching is top notch and instant.

    There are several apps out there to import mail into a gmail account, and it is pretty easy your email is still available via pop or imap (which I'm doubting)... for stuff in a pst file, what I ended up doing was adding the new gmail account into outlook, and then dragging and dropping emails 1000 at a time into the new account. (i also did this for a Groupwise mailbox from one old job) It's slow, but it works. In addition, it tags the mail for you with "Inbox" or "Sent", so you can easily retag it later. Once it is in there, it is a little gold mine to get whatever you need.

  5. Age thoughts... on Tech's Dark Secret, It's All About Age · · Score: 1

    I'm late to the post, so I doubt this will get read, but I'll share.

    When I've hired devs in the past (past 15 years or so) the question I ask is "what do you do on your own time?" It used to also be "tell me about your home computer set up" but not anymore. For that second question, if they said they had dial up AOL, fine, interview over. If they said they networked it themselves (before the days of wifi) and had a couple of versions of linux going, in addition to their own domain controller and desktop, then I wanted to hear more.

    Back to "what do you do on your own time?" What I want to hear is "I code. I dabble with my own ideas or help out other people online." Or I want to hear about how they are dabbling with some weird new language, or open source project, or framework, or whatever, even if it had nothing to do with the job. What I want is that passion - that obsession that is so strong that they want to spend as many waking minutes as possible trying to figure out creative solutions, solve problems, and make a difference. Then, it's my job to point that in the right direction and make an environment where they can thrive, learn, and stretch themselves. I don't want a 9-5 developer. I don't even want someone that says they are an outdoors guy that hikes every chance they get. Yes, it makes you interesting, but not a great coder.

    And that's the issue, not age. Most people get past that single minded obsession. They decide (rightly so) that family is more important, kids are important, that they can and want ot leave work behind at the end of the day. That's wisdom and experience that comes with age. For a line job, I don't want that. I want the guy that will pull an all nighter and be thinking about how to fix something continually until he figures it out, and has no higher priority than writing elegant fucking code. Coding is not a job or a paycheck, its a lifestyle. Now I don't want a sweat shop, I want that person to feel like they are making a difference they can see and are getting rewarded for it, but nevertheless, that's the behavior I want, and I want that person to feel like they've landed their dream job. I know that one superstar alpha-coder can do the work of 10 ordinary ones, and I know how to spot them, and I don't want to settle.

    It's a fact of life that generally speaking, with age comes temperance. Not always, but mostly. Are you a 50 year old that can hang with that type of person? Then you'll have a job. If you want to come in and demand fixed hours, and communicate that life outside of work comes first to you, that a job is a paycheck and not a lifestyle for you, then this isn't the best line of work for you. For me it has nothing to do with age. I'm also a veteran and I think women should be allowed in the infantry if they want, but I also think they should meet all the physical requirements of carrying weight, long distance marches, hoisting weapons and the like. I'm fully aware that it will eliminate 99% of all women, but that's not unfair to me. Neither is it unfair that most "older" people aren't cut out to be an alpha coder.

  6. Re:Eh? on Internal Costs Per Gigabyte — What Do You Pay? · · Score: 1

    Before you go there... that .05/GB is what you pay, right? Let's use your personal life as an example

    So... add in the cost for the computer that will use those GBs, because you can't use it without the computer. Desktop, laptop, doesn't matter. ... add the cost of your wireless routers, and any switches, and wiring. ... if you paid yourself the market wage for setting up your home network, figure out the $$ cost. ... and in the monthly cost of the labor you spend to tinker with it/monitor it/reboot the router/etc ... add the cost on the mortgage that room is to your house, for each month. Add insurance, utilities, etc

    A GB is useless without all the other crap you need in your life to use it, including time. And that's not even including redundancy, offsite backup, policy burdens, warranties, software license costs, etc, which you may or may not want. You definitely don't want those things at the level a major company needs, because if your shit crashes, it's just you, and not lost sales that cost people their jobs permanently.

    It's expensive, and I imagine they roll that cost up so you don't get a 50 page itemized booklet of every single thing that makes a GB accessible.

  7. The right lesson is... on Reuse Code Or Code It Yourself? · · Score: 1

    "Now, I used to be told that good programmers write code and great programmers reuse code." is sort of right.... the correct lesson is: "Good programmers borrow, great programmers steal." Same lesson applies to marketers. And to poets (Robert Frost said it first, speaking about poets.) Oh, and to politicians, esp if your name is Joe Biden.

  8. root on Where Do Dummy Email Addresses Go? · · Score: 1

    I use root@localhost . If that gets rejected I use root@localhost.com

  9. IM to SMS on Downsides to Intrafamily IM? · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I use this all the time with my girlfriend... MSN, AIM, and YIM all have SMS gateways to their IM networks. Personally, I like MSNs the best (doesn't require a seperate sign in from SMS if you tie it to your regular IM account.)

    Lots of pros, pretty much combines the pros of IM (instant, and already integrated with your buddy list) with SMS (can get it anywhere). No cons yet though I can see plenty if your SO is the kind that uses it as a new anger communication channel.

    The meal coordination stories are classics of course... I know a guy that used this to make a quick IM bot for his office, listing all local menus and allowing eeveryone in his office to vote for what they wanted to eat that day. Cool stuff. (yes, I am the author of the project)

  10. This one is perfect for on How to Set Up a Gift Website? · · Score: 1

    I use it, its easy. No database even, all point and click and wysiwyg. CMSimple I'm a user, I use it on my IM Bot site.

  11. No secret. on Getting Back Into Shape While At The Office? · · Score: 1
    It's not rocket science - eat less if you want to lose weight, or burn more calories. A good start would be to park your car at the far end of the parking lot.


    And then eat a salad for lunch, or bring one in.


    The truth hurts, and the truth is there's no easy way to get in shape, it takes some sweat, some time and it takes some work. If your job is to sit in front of a computer all day, here's a newsflash - you aren't going to get exercise at the same time. Get over that and you won't have any problems.


    If it helps do something way out of the ordinary that invloves your brain more than counting reps. Try some boxing or try some jiu-jitsu (hey if you are going to learn to fight learn something that works in the real world). Take some scuba classes. Try some easy mountain climbing. Volunteer for habitat for humanity in the sun. Start training for a half-marathon (it's easier than you think to get started). Just get the message that there's no easy way out.

  12. Done already... on Quakeworld Physics Captured in Quake3 · · Score: 3, Informative
    In the competitive community, Promode is the standard for Q3 nowadays, and it has had the QW-like physics in from the start (which was shortly after vannilla Q3). Check it out, thousands of demos of the top players from all over the world at Challenge-TV.

    If you have Q3 and are looking for a good place to start, try the Promode demos from Daler (who is in France right now competing), krg (finland), or old-skool QW legend FienD. Warning though - watch one of these demos and your jaw may hit the floor, and you'll definitely be watching 10 more before you can stop.

    And kudos to my Aussie bud Hoony, who has been sheperding this mod for 4 years now...

  13. Direct Connect on Snag the Red Hat 9 ISOs, via Cash or BitTorrent · · Score: 4, Informative

    When will this crowd catch on to Direct Connect? Talk about non-leeching - in some hubs you have to share a minimum of 60 GB+ just to join. Yes that means those hubs average over 60GB/user. Nothing else even comes close.

  14. Bigger on North America's Largest LAN Party · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Quakecon, gets more, has for a couple of years now.

    And as for grrl gamers showing up, yes there will be plenty I assure you. Some hot ones too. Only maybe 1 out of 50 of participants will be female based on the big lans I've been to, but they do show up (usually as a gf, or MOM even, but there are some female clans out there.)

  15. All kinds of problems on Lessig's Challenge: Are You Up To It? · · Score: 1

    I just see all sorts of problems with this.. what does the middle "F" stand for in EFF anyway? I never thought "free" software was just about shifting your income from one source to another (or even worse, doubling your current expenses), but making software free. Hmmmm if this sort of pressure is a trend maybe it is the beginning of a split in this here movement.

  16. Here you go on Re-Tooling Your Skills for the Future? · · Score: 1

    Just look at trends and Gartner et. al. reports for what is becoming much, much more important over time. - BI: OLAP, ETL and BI clients are going to be huge. Large companies are finally finding ways to deal with too much data, and BI is the way they do it. Practically every BI vendor is busting the seams in new sales. And hardly anyone understands a thing about these areas. - Open source: believe the hype, every large company in the country is looking into the advantages of saving big money with Linux, and pratically everyday you see a new article about a company that became a MySQL believer. - Security: just ask the guys the read 2600. As systems become more complex, so will the skills required to secure them. And here's some things I'd shy away from: Big Iron: Sure, Solaris certs are a guaranteed job, but every survey that comes out shows they are turning into a Novell as alternatives get cheaper and better. Java: Another batch of false promises exposed. Seems like once a week a major web company decides to go with PHP over anything Java. Companies that are run by their vendors still bring in Java apps, but for every one of those there's another throwing it all out for .NET or something else. It isn't the growth area it used to be. - Web Services: Oh yes, it will be important to know, but within a few years it won't be something to seperate you from the crowd. Understaning them will be a basic skill.

  17. Re:Nothing New on Use Linux to Reduce Your Power Bill · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I also think it is worth pointing out that the author is employed by the company (http://www.obvius.com/) that sells the reviewed product....