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User: DoofusOfDeath

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  1. I think you misunderstood the point. I don't think anyone is saying that the father gets a permanent pass on that kind of logic.

    Rather, we're saying to ignore what he's saying for now, because the poor guy is out of his mind with a level of grief we'd wish on almost nobody.

  2. Re:Windows 10 Enterprise Buyer's Club? on Windows 10 For PCs Build 14997 Leaks Online (neowin.net) · · Score: 2

    you found nothing because people that want enterprise already have it, because its online, for free, with a nice activator to boot

    If I understand you correctly, you're referring to copies of W10E for which the user does not have a valid license.

    The users I mostly have in mind are the owners of small, law-abiding businesses based in the U.S. If I've understood you correctly, that solution would not be viable for these people.

  3. Windows 10 Enterprise Buyer's Club? on Windows 10 For PCs Build 14997 Leaks Online (neowin.net) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've heard that users of Windows 10 Enterprise can eliminate most of the nasty qualities found in Windows 10 Professional edition.

    I've also heard that the biggest barrier to obtaining Windows 10 Enterprise is that Microsoft will only sell licenses in very large (1000+?) quantities.

    If all of the above are true, has anyone looked into forming a Windows 10 Enterprise "Buyers Club"? I.e., we get 1000 would-be users of Windows 10 Enterprise, and form a purchasing block. The "organization" through which the licensing occurs would be that buyer's club.

    Perhaps my Google-Fu is weak, but I've found nothing on the web discussing this approach.

  4. Re:Sorry but on Java's Open Sourcing Still Controversial Ten Years Later (infoworld.com) · · Score: 1

    C# is MS only

    Mono, and .NET Core.

    That's technically correct. But FWIW, I the vast majority of the the C# jobs I've seen advertised are for a Windows environment. If we're talking about trending languages, it's a reasonable approximation to say C# / .Net is Windows-only.

  5. Re:My Apologies on Windows 10's Store Locks 'Call of Duty' Purchasers Into Windows-10-Only Battles (vice.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you paid for a PC game, and *DON'T* have a disc in your hand as a result, then you are just a plain old sucker. The app store model only works for smartphones, but PC owners DEMAND more. Tell these companies that you won't stand for crappy practices and limited availability. Tell them by not giving Microsoft's store ONE RED CENT!

    I disagree. My use of Steam over the last 7? 8? years has been nothing but a pleasure.

    The only downside I've ever had with Steam is that it lets me easily buy games from Sid Meiers, which for me are like a life-ruining crack addiction.

  6. Strange success criteria on Microsoft Claims Its Speech Transcription AI is Now Better Than Human Professionals (qz.com) · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Dialog windows: "Do you want to register for your FREE Windows 10 Upgrade?"

    Me (vocally): "No, no... of for the love of all that's sacred, NO!"

    Windows: "This may take a while. Please do not power down your computer ..."

  7. Apologies if I'm badly behind the discussion on UBI, but I'm curious about one aspect of its viability.

    One limiting factor in human reproduction rates is our ability to afford food, housing, and healthcare. To the extent that UBI would meet those needs, I would expect human populations to grow even further, until other limiting factors imposed an equilibrium.

    At that point, prices would rise, causing an unlimited inflationary bubble with the things UBI was meant to provide for. Because no matter what money games people play, you still have $X people competing for $F units of food and $L units of living space.

    Is there some reason people think this wouldn't be a serious problem with UBI?

  8. Touche.

  9. Funny, you don't sound all that happy to me.

  10. Re:Over 40 turned down by Google on More Software Engineers Over Age 40 May Join a Lawsuit Against Google (yahoo.com) · · Score: 1

    Exact same thing happened to me when I had a Google phone screen at age 41. I'm not sure what happened - it was the first time ever that I did that. My best guess is that I was wound too tightly because I was interviewing with Google.

    But could it have been age? I can't say no for sure. I've definitely seen some changes to how my mind performs at I get into my lower 40's. It hasn't necessarily been a net negative, but I'm certainly a little less sharp in some categories of mental function.

    I think many of us software developers share a fear that the ageism we face is partially valid.

  11. Pretty sure I know how it was done... on BuzzFeed Hacked By OurMine As Group Accuses Site of Publishing 'Fake News' (thedrum.com) · · Score: 4, Funny

    The hackers found one weird trick that webmasters don't want them to know!

  12. Assuming the 4 asian applicants and the 17 non-asian were all equally competent, I get a cumulative binomial distribution probability of choosing 4 asians out of the 21 applicants as 0.0036, which is more than one in 300. Where do they get this "approximately one in a billion" statement?

    I'm not sure DOJ hires a lot of mathematicians.

    In fact, over the last 8 years, they seem to have mostly acted like well-armed SJW's.

  13. I've usually found that getting my credit-card company involved gets the problem fixed quickly.

    For better or worse, the credit-card companies seem to (often) provide mafia-level protection against unreasonable sellers.

  14. Re:And thus the Internet of Things collapses on Woman Sues Sex Toy App For Secretly Capturing Sensitive Information (ctvnews.ca) · · Score: 2

    I apologize if my point was unclear. Please let me clarify:

    You had written:

    But you are right, working hard is not the key, the key is working SMART. The difference between low/middle/upper class isn't how hard you work.

    The fact that you transitioned from talking about "the good life" to talking about "low/middle/upper class", makes me think that you were implicitly equating living the "good life" with attaining membership in one of those [economic] classes. That was my main point.

    But I see also that I thought you were directly equating one's level of effort with which economic class one attains. I realize now that that was not your point at all. My apologies.

  15. Any any case, this case will shake up the legal situation and set things vibrating!

    You can expect some tingling legal issues arousing in the near future that are sure to give us all satisfaction.

    All puns aside, I think the SCOTUS and U.S. Congress have shown a shocking degree of unwillingness in protecting the public from unscrupulous click-wrap EULA's and other onerous contracts. Nothing gives me particular hope that this will change in the near future. My guess is that it won't change until if/when some kind of revolution occurs which interrupts the influence corporations have over politics.

  16. Re:And thus the Internet of Things collapses on Woman Sues Sex Toy App For Secretly Capturing Sensitive Information (ctvnews.ca) · · Score: 1

    I know a SJW like you hates America, but that isn't what America is about. The American dream is not to get rich, but to have a good life. But you are right, working hard is not the key, the key is working SMART. The difference between low/middle/upper class isn't how hard you work. In fact, the lower classes work much harder than the upper ones.

    It's interesting that you define the "good life" in terms of economic prosperity and/or how hard one works towards that end.

  17. Re:already done on We Risk Programming Inequality into Our DNA (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    it should make you happy that three times more children have peanut allergies now than in 1997

    Nah, they're just faking it because they don't like the taste of vomit.

  18. Re:already done on We Risk Programming Inequality into Our DNA (vice.com) · · Score: 2

    Peanuts taste like vomit. I demand flavour equity.

    Seriously? When your mutation gives you delicious vomit??? Ingrate.

  19. Re:How does it contradict? on Apple May Bring Back Billions In Profits To The U.S. (siliconbeat.com) · · Score: 1

    Obviously Cook is planning that taxes are lower for corporations next year, or that Apple will get a break for bringing back the taxes - either condition would meet his statement that Apple would not re-patriate because taxes are too high.

    What large-corperation loving candidate is very likely to win the election and be in office next year to make that happen, hmm...

    Both of them?

  20. Sticking to the caps? on Amazon Is Testing a 30-Hour, 75% Salary Workweek (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 2

    I've heard that Amazon.com is a sweatshop.

    If "40 hours/week" workers work much more than that, wouldn't we expect the same for "30 hours/week" workers?

  21. Re:There's a better fix for this... on Latest Windows 10 Update Breaks PowerShell (infoworld.com) · · Score: 1

    The MS hate here is silly, Windows has issues, but so does Linux, neither are perfect...

    Another two imperfect things: Adolf Hitler and Mother Theresa.

  22. Re:Disable, then VM or Mac on Ask Slashdot: How Will You Handle Microsoft's New 'Cumulative' Windows Updates? (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    So what were you doing up until now? Reading each KB article? Vetting each update on a test system? I dont' really see that based on you response, so how on earth does THIS cumulative update model really change anything for YOU exactly?!!

    Yes, that is approximately what I've been doing. Specifically, I've been leaving automatic updates disabled. Periodically I look for writeups about the current list of known-evil KB's, and allow the rest to get applied.

    The cumulative updates prevent me from selectively installing only the updates I want.

  23. Re:Disable, then VM or Mac on Ask Slashdot: How Will You Handle Microsoft's New 'Cumulative' Windows Updates? (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    So, what exactly is your plan?

    I'm still considering my options.

    Some people have recommended backing up the entire OS using non-free backup software designed for that very task. That would reduce my exposure to the risk of Microsoft pushing a bad update, and I might actually end up going that route.

    OTOH, it doesn't help with the fact that Microsoft will undoubtedly be bundling spyware together with security patches starting in October. Running Windows in a VM would give me a relatively easy and cheap way to prevent Windows from phoning home. But as I mentioned elsewhere, it means having Windows as a guest VM, and that might make my color-calibration life more difficult.

  24. Re: Disable, then VM or Mac on Ask Slashdot: How Will You Handle Microsoft's New 'Cumulative' Windows Updates? (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    Given the option, which OS would you rather use Photoshop on? Mac, linux, or windows 10?

    Linux, hands down.

    However, I still need to sort out the issue of monitor color calibration. The color-correction pipeline can be surprisingly complicated, because images, Photoshop/Lightroom, and Windows / OS X / Linux(?) are all ready to specify their own transforms. And I'm looking at adding yet another wrapper (Linux as a VM host OS) around that as well.

    I can probably make it all work, it's just going to take some time and effort.

    On the bright side, at least the color-calibration hardware is supported on Linux.

  25. Re:Disable, then VM or Mac on Ask Slashdot: How Will You Handle Microsoft's New 'Cumulative' Windows Updates? (slashdot.org) · · Score: 2

    Its like you've never heard of backups. .

    We actually do have a pretty decent backup regimen for the photographs themselves, including online, nearline, and offsite tiers. The photographs are irreplaceable.

    However, Windows is not my day-job OS, and I need to be economical with the time, energy, and number of neurons I spend babysitting that OS. I can institute such a backup policy if necessary, but the more Microsoft makes it necessary, that more likely I am to just switch to a platform that's more reliable and is easier to rebuild.