yeah, right. And my home or billing address is writen on my credit card, riight? Any way you look at it, there is some major data being shared between corps where there is no clear communication that it will happen beforehand.
Uhm, no? Credit is not credit card. If I purchase anything on my credit card my only agreement is with my bank/fsp - as far as the merchant is concerned he is paid off (almost) immediately. Of course there are those "Read our T&C" notices next to the tills...
Oh, cmoon - give the guy some slack. Last I heard his annual salary was $1. And you thought you are having hard time feeding your family for $30 a week? No wonder he lacks meat.
Make it more interesting. There is remote monitoring software and then there is remote monitoring software. There is basically no way to make sure that only authorised agents access monitoring hooks. And that is ignoring the fact that for it to be useful it relies on no bad cookies in the IT dept.
All in all - can it turn camera on remotely too? God knows what those juicy 6th graders do in their bedrooms;)
I am a mobile developer. So far all android related has been going exactly the way I expected when 6 months ago I said to colleague 'meh, whey will fuck it up.' They have, at least for me as developer. First device is a [nice, but still] clumsy brick for fanboys. Main selling point is that it is open and something instead of being easy to use and cool. Target audience is exactly the same idiots that used to buy HTC windows mobile shit (and not use even 1% of what they could do with them, while still feeling somehow superior to a fckn nokia 6310i, in example). And guess what - it is actually made by HTC too (what essentially guarantees that it will disintegrate within 6-9 months). Yes, it is a nice platform. Yes, it had a lot of promise. No, open model does not work if you want to create consumer market. No, there is zero chance that after start like this there will be any real hit device for the platform. Yes, iPhone is better. Yes, googles' app store will fail to take off exactly thanks to the fact that it is still not clear who the customer will be.
Yanking good drive out of a production machine to see whether raid works is one of the first things you SHOULD do. Basic risk management and verifying how far your comfort zone of things running actually go. Well, certainly better than waiting for it to crash big time and receiving an apology from vendor - "Oh, we fixed that particular issue in the latest product. Do you want to upgrade?"
You are looking for the wrong thing here. What if you would define what exactly in your experience shows that senior members work out better and work out from there?
- Experience and attitude matters. Certainly. There are different kinds of experience and different kinds of attitude. Define what are you looking for.
- People that are not uptight on proving themselves when they are not yet ready for are important, certainly. Balanced work/home relationship - important. Look for signs, not assume things based on age.
- Candidate that will freely and meaningfully discuss his favorite or most missed features from tools he supposedly knows - priceless.
Big numbers! Soo - this works out as what, around 0.3% of the construction budget so far? Or about 3% of their yearly operating budget? All in all it sounds to be about equal to paying $2.50 for a spare power cable for the $800 pc you just bought.
I am surprised it didn't cost more - I suspect that replacing coolant takes quite a significant part in that sum.
Make it even simpler - a bad-ass TV, a console or two [or three, althou wii is... not as interesting in long run - had my personal in the office for a while] and a fixed budget for games that team can wote on how to spend on. No Strings Attached. If you have a slack moment at 11AM - fine, have a 30 minute break at GT with half the office guiding you trought the line. If you have a spare minute at 4:30pm - brilliant, show us how your tekken skills are doing. And then, maybe, get back to your desk for that all-nighter making sure your T/SQL is perfect. Any condition implies distrust. Any distrust clearly spells out: "so what that there is a deadline tomorrow noon, they don't trust me to know what I do, so I stick to 8 hours". Small things (from a budgeting perspective - bad-ass setup is what - 1/10th of small-sized teams' payroll?) goes a long way. Do not fuck it up by conditions. If you are in any sense concerned that it will be abused - you have already failed. Badly.
Uhm? G-Mail invites were one of most brilliant marketing ideas seen in the 21st century. I am quite certain it had quite little to do with actual beta status and a fair bit with raising perceived value of the service. You were _cool_ if you had invites to share.
Removing cover from HDDs, rinsing with water and letting it to dry should be just fine. I wouldn't use it in long term, but for modern hard disks there is quite a good chance to get them up to speed enough so that data can be copied over. No pressurized air and stuff thou - and be extremely careful not to disturb any alignment of internal stuff.
Any technology where there is an upper tier of security automaticaly implies to user that lower tiers are just as fine. Hence firefox decision that only upper tier goes thru okay.
Required in china almost... almost implies that the actual manufacturers/designers will at least need to be able to _find_ their source code. Believe me, it will matter quite a lot.
yeah, right. And my home or billing address is writen on my credit card, riight?
Any way you look at it, there is some major data being shared between corps where there is no clear communication that it will happen beforehand.
Uhm, no? Credit is not credit card. If I purchase anything on my credit card my only agreement is with my bank/fsp - as far as the merchant is concerned he is paid off (almost) immediately.
Of course there are those "Read our T&C" notices next to the tills...
Oh, cmoon - give the guy some slack. Last I heard his annual salary was $1. And you thought you are having hard time feeding your family for $30 a week? No wonder he lacks meat.
And without gradual exposure they will miss the point that 99% of ready-to-download shit is compromised by default. Better block SMTP :D
Make it more interesting. There is remote monitoring software and then there is remote monitoring software. There is basically no way to make sure that only authorised agents access monitoring hooks. And that is ignoring the fact that for it to be useful it relies on no bad cookies in the IT dept.
All in all - can it turn camera on remotely too? God knows what those juicy 6th graders do in their bedrooms ;)
Brilliant advice, except for the fact that two worst examples in your post involves nothing more than FUCKING READING! Were you off by a year?
I am a mobile developer. So far all android related has been going exactly the way I expected when 6 months ago I said to colleague 'meh, whey will fuck it up.'
They have, at least for me as developer. First device is a [nice, but still] clumsy brick for fanboys. Main selling point is that it is open and something instead of being easy to use and cool. Target audience is exactly the same idiots that used to buy HTC windows mobile shit (and not use even 1% of what they could do with them, while still feeling somehow superior to a fckn nokia 6310i, in example). And guess what - it is actually made by HTC too (what essentially guarantees that it will disintegrate within 6-9 months).
Yes, it is a nice platform. Yes, it had a lot of promise. No, open model does not work if you want to create consumer market. No, there is zero chance that after start like this there will be any real hit device for the platform. Yes, iPhone is better. Yes, googles' app store will fail to take off exactly thanks to the fact that it is still not clear who the customer will be.
Yanking good drive out of a production machine to see whether raid works is one of the first things you SHOULD do. Basic risk management and verifying how far your comfort zone of things running actually go.
Well, certainly better than waiting for it to crash big time and receiving an apology from vendor - "Oh, we fixed that particular issue in the latest product. Do you want to upgrade?"
You are looking for the wrong thing here. What if you would define what exactly in your experience shows that senior members work out better and work out from there?
- Experience and attitude matters. Certainly. There are different kinds of experience and different kinds of attitude. Define what are you looking for.
- People that are not uptight on proving themselves when they are not yet ready for are important, certainly. Balanced work/home relationship - important. Look for signs, not assume things based on age.
- Candidate that will freely and meaningfully discuss his favorite or most missed features from tools he supposedly knows - priceless.
Big numbers! Soo - this works out as what, around 0.3% of the construction budget so far? Or about 3% of their yearly operating budget?
All in all it sounds to be about equal to paying $2.50 for a spare power cable for the $800 pc you just bought.
I am surprised it didn't cost more - I suspect that replacing coolant takes quite a significant part in that sum.
President-elect is pretty reasonable to get a .gov domain. See it as being somewhat similar to .net...
You might be interested to read Feymans challenger report. Or his notes on that. 1:100 has always been the optimistic chance.
Make it even simpler - a bad-ass TV, a console or two [or three, althou wii is ... not as interesting in long run - had my personal in the office for a while] and a fixed budget for games that team can wote on how to spend on. No Strings Attached.
If you have a slack moment at 11AM - fine, have a 30 minute break at GT with half the office guiding you trought the line. If you have a spare minute at 4:30pm - brilliant, show us how your tekken skills are doing. And then, maybe, get back to your desk for that all-nighter making sure your T/SQL is perfect.
Any condition implies distrust. Any distrust clearly spells out: "so what that there is a deadline tomorrow noon, they don't trust me to know what I do, so I stick to 8 hours".
Small things (from a budgeting perspective - bad-ass setup is what - 1/10th of small-sized teams' payroll?) goes a long way. Do not fuck it up by conditions. If you are in any sense concerned that it will be abused - you have already failed. Badly.
Uhm? G-Mail invites were one of most brilliant marketing ideas seen in the 21st century. I am quite certain it had quite little to do with actual beta status and a fair bit with raising perceived value of the service. You were _cool_ if you had invites to share.
Nibbles?
Well, to be fair, Knuth might have some objections to being called a "computer programmer".
Dell XPS as being extremely well built and solid??! You really have quite low standards there...
Removing cover from HDDs, rinsing with water and letting it to dry should be just fine. I wouldn't use it in long term, but for modern hard disks there is quite a good chance to get them up to speed enough so that data can be copied over. No pressurized air and stuff thou - and be extremely careful not to disturb any alignment of internal stuff.
Any technology where there is an upper tier of security automaticaly implies to user that lower tiers are just as fine. Hence firefox decision that only upper tier goes thru okay.
Frankly that was exactly the question that came to my mind there... ;)
Bullshit. He is not being pressurized into being a dick, he simply is, if he accepts.
There is no such thing as 'unless tempted' trust.
Required in china almost... almost implies that the actual manufacturers/designers will at least need to be able to _find_ their source code. Believe me, it will matter quite a lot.
base three, probably.
Just invoke the magic word !TERRORIST!. Easy.
You get a clean drive (wiped, that is), you blacklist the seller. Simple as that.