Slashdot Mirror


User: TWX

TWX's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
7,648
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 7,648

  1. Re:Cashless can't happen, here is why ... on Predicting a Future Free of Dollar Bills · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yup. It's also common to get discounts for cash. Some places like pawn shops, used bookstores, junkyards, and other businesses will always offer discounts over published or listed prices for cash, and those discounts are often much steeper than just the cost to the merchant of a credit card transaction, and sometimes are quite a bit more than the choice by the merchant to under-report taxable transactions would account for too. I suspect that in part it's a matter of the business having the money now, as opposed to having to wait until the end of the month to get paid. Plus there's always a possibility of messing up a credit/debit transaction, which can result in having one's account (and all outstanding revenue) put on-hold until the processor chooses to release it.

    Credit/Debit works best for large companies where there's little to no haggling, and where the sheer volume of transactions allows that merchant to negotiate good terms with the processor, but they're still at the mercy of the processor as far as account and transaction fees are concerned, and then there's the other issue of security. Target, Neiman Marcus, and PF Changs are all going through that right now, and I don't doubt that it'll get worse as time goes on, and while "pin and chip" cards may help, I expect that someone will figure out how to steal through those too, and the cycle will just continue.

    And then there's the personal sale angle. I'm not going to take paypal or have the ability to process credit cards for a yard sale or some crap that I'm selling through the classifieds or craigslist. Given how I'm mainly just trying to recoup something in the process of a sale, adding more hoops or steps will just result in my not bothering to sell junk anymore.

  2. Re:Samsung's slowing sales... on Apple Gets Its First Batch of iPhone Chips From TSMC · · Score: 1

    You're incorrect. The maps that I just picked up indicated limited-access freeways, divided highways, two-lane highways, lesser paved roads, unpaved roads, and forest service trails. Different lines for each type.

  3. Re:Samsung's slowing sales... on Apple Gets Its First Batch of iPhone Chips From TSMC · · Score: 1

    I do actually! It cost less than two smartphones!

  4. Re:Lovelace? on The Lovelace Test Is Better Than the Turing Test At Detecting AI · · Score: 1

    Windows, you whore!

  5. Re:Samsung's slowing sales... on Apple Gets Its First Batch of iPhone Chips From TSMC · · Score: 1

    I wasn't saying that old smartphones were in any way comparable to modern ones. My point was that smartphone development has been occurring far longer than most people realize, and is in-parallel with PCs in that the performance characteristics of the device have outpaced the capabilities of the software and user experience to the point that there's not a whole lot of benefit in upgrading without an external reason to do so.

    And as to your analogy of GPS vs maps, I can use a map without any electrical power, and I can identify on the map, if it's a good one, which roads my low-ground-clearance car can traverse, versus which roads my 2wd small pickup can traverse, versus which "roads" I'll need a 4x4 or truck with significant ground clearance to use. Most of the time the latter aren't even noted on GPS systems.

  6. Re:Samsung's slowing sales... on Apple Gets Its First Batch of iPhone Chips From TSMC · · Score: 1

    Smartphones well predate the Apple and Blackberry options. Palm and Qualcomm developed the pdQ-series in the nineties and they were on sale by 1999 and were direct variants on the Palm Pilot series of personal organizers, which themselves date back to the early nineties, and had many of the components that a phone-based device would want like an address book, a calendar, a tasks list, a calculator, etc.

    And that's not even going into the other companies that built personal organizers around this same time.

  7. Samsung's slowing sales... on Apple Gets Its First Batch of iPhone Chips From TSMC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect that a good part of Samsung's slowing sales is consumers that are tired of spending more money all of the time to do the same thing. I've got a Galaxy SII. It does everything that I need it to do. It's paid for. I don't foresee any needs that a newer phone would fulfill, so short of a broken phone or a paradigm shift I don't see a need to shell out several hundred dollars to have essentially the same functionality.

    Geek-chic likes to talk about and to chase the latest gadgets, but the hype really isn't as widespread as reports would indicate, and even those that have chased the newest have often gotten tired of doing it without any real, tangible improvements.

  8. Re:Most humans couldn't pass that test on The Lovelace Test Is Better Than the Turing Test At Detecting AI · · Score: 2

    Has anyone really been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?

  9. AC and Turing Test on The Lovelace Test Is Better Than the Turing Test At Detecting AI · · Score: 1

    Sometimes I wonder if all of the ACs are simply one bot with the electronic equivalent of schizophrenia talking to itself...

  10. Re:Lovelace? on The Lovelace Test Is Better Than the Turing Test At Detecting AI · · Score: 1

    You could add to your solution. There's exactly one person that you could kill with a guarantee of facing no legal repercussions for the act...

  11. Re:Lovelace? on The Lovelace Test Is Better Than the Turing Test At Detecting AI · · Score: 4, Funny

    if a human cannot determine if they just got a hummer from a machine or another human?

    Gives a whole new meaning to, "My computer went down on me..."

  12. Weird question, but... on Ask Slashdot: Best Dedicated Low Power Embedded Dev System Choice? · · Score: 2

    ...why the extremely low power draw requirement? Seems like for a dev box you'd want some horsepower, though you'd want to test on a box that's like your expected production machine...

  13. Re:Not about jealousy, but ... on Dubai's Climate-Controlled Dome City Is a Dystopia Waiting To Happen · · Score: 2

    I'm fully expecting an economic collapse to hit Dubai eventually, and this air conditioned paradise will turn into a blast-furnace hellhole.

  14. Re:Cry Me A River on Normal Humans Effectively Excluded From Developing Software · · Score: 1

    Heh. I expect that the 'normal people' as referred to in the original article would find their use for the hammer in this analogy to be more on-par with their needs. They need to occasionally program something so that creation will do something for them.

    To your other point, I had to do some maintenance on some 10+ year old perl today on a legacy system. I used vim, and while I'd never worked in perl before it was enough like C that I was able to make do. The script just does some network monitoring and presents an up/down list on equipment and is only about 150 lines long and reads from a 1500-entry flat-file, but that I was able to just jump-in and work on it without experience and that it needs little more than mod_perl says a lot for basic, normal-people languages and development environments.

  15. Re:Cry Me A River on Normal Humans Effectively Excluded From Developing Software · · Score: 1

    The thing that bugs me the most is having to use node.js and ruby packages when there are Debian or Ubuntu packages for the same thing. I don't like it when there could be a situation with multiple, competing package managers writing the floor out from under each other.

    It also doesn't help that this solution was chosen because it's free, but the vendor that wrote it doesn't even offer paid support, they want you to use their cloud-based solution and this is the hook to get you addicted so that when it breaks, since there's no documentation worth referring to, one basically has to throw them money.

  16. Re:Cry Me A River on Normal Humans Effectively Excluded From Developing Software · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, to expand on your analogy, when nail guns were new, they were huge, heavy, hard to operate, and required investment in hoses, and for most jobsites, an expensive gas-powered air compressor. The nails were also much more expensive as they required special rolls/loaders, and those input mechanisms were completely proprietary. Even today, the good nail guns that will last for a long time are not cheap, the gas-powered air compressors are still expensive, and the and the nail rolls/loaders are often still proprietary. One can easily get $2000 into a system right now just to hammer-in nails.

    By contrast, a hammer, ranging between $5 at Harbor Freight Tools to $80 for a top-of-the-line deluxe framing hammer forged from olympus steel and quenched in the tears of angels will drive in almost any conventional nail that one needs, and unless abused will probably last as long as the owner will.


    I'm working with some web software at the moment. It's the kludgiest amalgomation of crap that I've seen in quite some time. It's got OS library dependencies, but they need to be newer than one stable distribution's version, but older than another stable distribution's version, so one has to use unsigned third-party repositories for those. Then for Ruby on Rails and for Node.js it needs two other sets of proprietary repositories, and it needs specific versions of packages from those repositories too, not default, and it installs some redundant packages that were already covered by OS in slightly different version. Then once you go to put it in it requires MySQL for some of the dependencies but the main program itself only runs on PostgreSQL, so you're stuck with two DBs running, one doing almost nothing but required to be there.

    This is sickening. This will make it almost impossible to do OS updates, and will cause all manner of problems if those third-party repositories ever go away, or if the developers for them stop maintaining those specific versions. It's dangerous and stupid to do this.

  17. Re:Kind of like supermarket loyalty schemes on Here Comes the Panopticon: Insurance Companies · · Score: 1

    One can draw an analogy between this and supermarket club cards, where you *can* buy groceries without one, but, it is 25% more expensive.

    Yes, an I'm sure that Oliver Clozoff of 1060 W Addison St, Chicago appreciates all of the junk mail from Kroger and Safeway.

  18. Re:Car Insurance Companies Too! on Here Comes the Panopticon: Insurance Companies · · Score: 2

    I'm glad that my cars are pre-OBD-II.

    But really, it comes down to that they can raise your rates when they want to for any or no reason. The only thing stopping them is competition from others that want the same revenue source.

  19. Re:Kidnapping. on US Arrests Son of Russian MP In Maldives For Hacking · · Score: 2

    When I had heard that the Russians were calling this kidnapping, I was doubtful -- but now, not so sure. We really do exact our justice anywhere we want to, don't we?

    What happened to extradition treaties and such? When did it become "stuff them in a van and drive!"?

    i expect that the United States already had notified Maldives and gotten approval for extradition, long before he was arrested. After all, they indicted him in 2011, so they had plenty of time to determine his whereabouts and travel patterns. They might have anticipated that he would go through Maldives, so they arranged a hearing with their government to seek his extradition on his arrival on their soil. When he landed they intercepted him, arrested him, and the US government took custody.

    Had this been, "stuff him in a van and drive," I doubt that it would have even been reported, or that it would have been reported so quickly, or that they'd have said something while he's only as far as Guam as opposed to back to the mainland US.

  20. What kind of bizarro world are you living in?

  21. Re:GPS on Mars? on ESA Shows Off Quadcopter Landing Concept For Mars Rovers · · Score: 1

    Yes, and I don't think that its choice of name or acronym is terribly good either.

  22. Re:GPS on Mars? on ESA Shows Off Quadcopter Landing Concept For Mars Rovers · · Score: 1

    Cumbersome. Zeus is short. Ares is short. Cronus is short. Even Posiedon is only three syllables, but Aphrodite at four is getting a little long and doesn't roll off the tongue the same way.

  23. Re:nice work on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 1

    Well, there can be an argument for 'futurists' to attempt to come up with better ways to do things without a definitive need or even much of a want, but there still needs to be an actual benefit to the change. This windowless cockpit idea has few positives compared to the current status quo, and as airline accidents have demonstrated, has plenty of negatives.

    If they want some fancy augmented reality system for pilots, then perhaps the motion-tracked helmet idea that the military is working on for fighter pilots makes more sense. Something that can be worn that can give the pilot the outside-the-visible-light-spectrum data that a pilot could benefit from, but could be removed when the thing stops working to go back to VFR.

  24. Re:GPS on Mars? on ESA Shows Off Quadcopter Landing Concept For Mars Rovers · · Score: 1

    I think they should name them something besides GPS. Maybe Ares Positioning System so that it could just be called Ares.

    Though such a Roman->Greek naming scheme might not work so well for Venus...

  25. Re:YALC on ESA Shows Off Quadcopter Landing Concept For Mars Rovers · · Score: 1

    First, this isn't NASA or the United States at all. Second, there well could be applications for differing landing systems for different applications, both for from-orbit landings and for terrain-to-terrain hops to traverse large amounts of territory or to bypass obstructions or other impassable terrain.

    If the ESA will pay for it then I don't really care that much. The idea sounds a little silly given the atmospheric density on Mars, but if they can make something work or can learn and use this knowledge to work on something else that works well, all the better.