Slashdot Mirror


User: drakaan

drakaan's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
1,295
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 1,295

  1. Re:Take back Slashdot on Slashdot and SourceForge Sold, Now Under New Management (bizx.info) · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Both anonymous posting and the lack of an edit button are things that help conversations on /. be what they are. You're either an idiot n00b who will be rapidly excoriated for your idiotic drivel, or you'll contribute something useful to the conversation. It's like a more-inclusive version of the Linux Kernel Mailing List with multiple Linuses (Linus? Linii?).

  2. Re:A professional IT organization? on Fury and Fear In Ohio As IT Jobs Go To India (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah, there were plenty of guys I worked with in the Army that got RIF'ed and ended up out on their respective asses, so I wouldn't get to comfy with the idea that there's no possible way you could get booted out of the USAF as long as you were doing a good job. Thank you, by the way, for serving. As a former serviceman, I do appreciate it.

    That said, I know many, many, many companies that have outsourced competent IT staff and realized after the fact (sometimes too late), that salary is not the only big factor to profitability with respect to skilled technical people.

    I'm not saying that lots of companies can't get away with outsourcing certain functions, and maybe I was being a bit testy when I said only level 0 and 1 helpdesk, but my point is that beyond a certain level of technical expertise, you're not going to do better by outsourcing.

    As someone in the managed services field who has tried to hire technical staff on a ridiculously low budget in the not-too-distant past, I can say that there are very real barriers beyond technical skill that come into play when dealing with clients. Language barriers are real and sometimes painful for both the overseas guy and the client to deal with. That adds friction to projects, which slows them down and can put you in a position where you're effectively paying more for less work as a result.

  3. A professional IT organization? on Fury and Fear In Ohio As IT Jobs Go To India (computerworld.com) · · Score: 2, Informative

    If by that, you mean "union", then I doubt it. You'd never get enough support from the folks that are still getting paid very well (like me, who lives in Ohio), and aren't being outsourced. There's no business case to do that for anything but level 0 and 1 helpdesk jobs, and not even all of those.

  4. Re:Slashdot on Another Wave of Publications Shut Down Online Comments · · Score: 1

    Not for nothing, but when you joined up, there were only 3000-odd users. There have been plenty of stories in the recent past with thousands of comments. I joined in (I think) 1999, and I'd say that some of the most pervasive trolling (GNAA, goatse, etc) is at an all time low.

    If you want your own slashdot with no anonymity, fire one up and run it. This one is still going surprisingly well.

  5. Re:The Fuck? on MEAN Vs. LAMP: Finding the Right Fit For Your Next Project · · Score: 1

    Ok, thanks for the clarification.

    NoSQL scenarios being what they are, there are obviously cases when they make sense and have advantages in terms of performance, but it's not always a win, especially if you don't know what you're doing or why.

    I don't know anyone who believes that SQL can do everything either, especially when dealing with extremely large datasets, but analytics and search on huge datasets are not the scenario that your typical dev who doesn't know whether or why to use LAMP or MEAN in the first place are going to be handling in their first outing. The advice being given for those noobs who don't know the relative strengths of each stack, especially in regards to databases.

  6. Re:The Fuck? on MEAN Vs. LAMP: Finding the Right Fit For Your Next Project · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not to be rude, but what the hell are you talking about?

    SQL engines are often slower than what? In what scenario? Operating on what hypothetical database schema with how many records spread across how many tables?

    SQL engines have problems with massive parallelism? Why? Which ones?

    How well do you *really* know SQL in general and the capabilities of different database engines in particular? I suspect you may know less than some people who know SQL *really* well (as opposed to *pretty* well).

    I apologize for the tenor of this post, but that portion off the article was ridiculous, and thus far all of the comments in support of it have demonstrated a similar lack of familiarity with actual databases, their operation, or performance tuning.

  7. Re:Face it America ... on Freedom of Information Requests Turn Up Creationist Materials In Schools · · Score: 1

    ...But to me, the fact that 42% (or even 30%) believe that Earth is 10,000 years old is already a major a catastrophe from an educational perspective, given that we're talking about a First World nation with mandatory education.

    I'm not saying you're wrong to consider it a problem. That doesn't change the fact that it's a minority opinion, and that self-identified religious people are becoming rarer in the USA.

    ...Oh, they're bringing them all the time - just look at the regular bills related to abortion, for example...

    Poor example, in my opinion. I think there's room there to see abortion at a certain gestational age as a human-rights issue, but I get what you're saying. The climate change issue is nonreligious.

    Religious freedom laws (the right to refuse service to customers on the sole basis of their own personal beliefs) are something that's talked about, and that some more local governments have been trying to legislate, but without much success. It's also easy to see that such laws will face harsh criticism in federal court challenges to their constitutionality. Again, it's easy to point to the people doing outrageous things and scream about a problem, but don't mistake it for a country-wide one.

    I'm sure you're aware of the many fine counter-arguments to the points you are attempting to make as to why the electoral college is bad. I'm not going to spend time listing them unless you really want me to, so I'll just say that there's plenty of disagreement there, and leave it at that. The populace is every bit as disinclined to vote as it ever has been (and the graph of voter participation is pretty flat across the past century), so we get who the most interested parties vote for, whether that's good or bad. That doesn't mean that legislators are running roughshod over the populace, it means that most of the populace can't be bothered to spend 10 minutes voting.

  8. Re:Face it America ... on Freedom of Information Requests Turn Up Creationist Materials In Schools · · Score: 1

    As for question 1, yes. I'm reasonably sure that 42% is a minority, and I'm skeptical of that number being accurate. The sample size was 1028 people in all 50 states and the stated margin of error is +/- 4%. I do admit that I'm shocked that the number has remained at 40-47% since the question was first asked in 1987, especially with news of fewer and fewer people identifying as religious.

    As for question 2, there's a reason that we aren't seeing legislators bring forth new laws regarding religion (though I agree that there have been some very disturbing statements by some officials in key positions), and that is because they serve at the will of the People, a majority of whom would not stand for it. Despite punditry to the contrary, *we* (well, those of us who vote, call, email, and protest) are in charge. So, yes, again, I'm pretty sure.

  9. Re:Face it America ... on Freedom of Information Requests Turn Up Creationist Materials In Schools · · Score: 1

    ...Those of you who give +Points to people like drakaan, I have to ask, why do you do it? Is it because your opinion agrees with his on evolution? I don't care about that. Just keep in mind that cheerleading the Federal Courts running roughshod over Christian ideas may seem cool right now. But if they were to succeed in totally suppressing religious thought and freedoms, you won't have any freedoms left either. At that point, they will also take away your marijuana rights and all those other things you think are important. At that point, it will be impossible to give + points to anyone not "approved".

    I actually didn't give an opinion on evolution. I did make some comments about the USA not being populated by morons, and I pointed out that a previous law mandating that public schools teach Evolution was ruled unconstitutional by the federal courts, as it runs afoul of the First Amendment's establishment clause.

    A subset of Christians expressing their beliefs in a Creator being responsible for designing life (as an alternative to the theory of evolution) by way of formal instruction in federally-funded schools is at odds with the protections the First Amendment reserves for the People.

    If a private school (there are many of them...my neighbor's son goes to a pretty exclusive Catholic one with ties to Notre Dame) wants to teach ID to students, then there's no problem. The problem only exists when we're talking about public education.

    The federal courts aren't running roughshod over Christian ideas, in this case. One could argue that there are instances, specifically with regards to displaying religious symbols in public spaces, where they have done so, but this is not one of those cases. You are not being prohibited from expressing your religious beliefs by our government, and if you were, I'd fight like hell to prevent it, just as I would if any of your other constitutional rights were being infringed upon.

    You *are* being prevented from using a government institution to spread your ideas, which is as it should be for any religion.

  10. Re:Face it America ... on Freedom of Information Requests Turn Up Creationist Materials In Schools · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Entertaining, but incorrect.

    There is a vocal minority of people with faith-based beliefs that override reasoned thought. They are not in charge. There are a few elected politicians who are morons, and a larger swath of electorate who share those beliefs, but that's still a minority of the population. The USA has more than 50 states, territories, and outlying areas, each with their own local government structure.

    In Louisiana, a similar issue has been dealt with in the courts previously and the federal judiciary seems to have been reasonable enough in deciding that the law is unconstitutional.

    This newer law seems to have the same goal as the 1981 law, and will likely face similar challenges. The nation is not made up of morons. It actively recognizes and points them out, which sometimes makes it appear that way, though.

  11. Re:How hard will this break Corp Intranet apps? on Microsoft Is Confident In Security of Edge Browser · · Score: 4, Informative

    If only I had mod points. I write .net web apps all the time, and for businesses, and I test in IE *last* because first and foremost, I want it to work in the future, which means for mostly-standards-compliant browsers. Writing IE-specific code is an extremely bad plan. Not all browsers are running on windows desktops or laptops.

  12. Re:Why the hate for VB on Swift Tops List of Most-Loved Languages and Tech · · Score: 1

    I'm not arguing that VB is good, but that's a pretty trivial example of what makes it bad. Here's a discussion of where DIM came from: http://stackoverflow.com/quest... You used to be able to just say "variablename = value" without a dim statement. That's improved in the current syntax for VB.Net. If you want an example or two of what makes VB bad look at some of the legacy VB6 and classic ASP code hanging around out there. PHP has some (most) of the same problems.

  13. Re:Why the hate for VB on Swift Tops List of Most-Loved Languages and Tech · · Score: 1

    You get a compiler error from doing what? I wasn't giving a code example, I was noting that scalar variables occupy space in memory and have to be able to be referenced, hence they have a dimension.

    What's your unmentioned better way of looking at it?

  14. Re:Why the hate for VB on Swift Tops List of Most-Loved Languages and Tech · · Score: 1

    Actually, all variables have a dimension. Think of your "myObject" as having dimensions of [1].

  15. Re:So, more free advertising on IT Consultant Talks About 'Negotiating for Nerds' (Video) · · Score: 1

    Great. Now, since I didn't immediately recognize where it was from, I'm going to have to spend the next month or two re-reading all of my Heinlein books.

  16. Not being PHP on Ask Slashdot: What Makes Some Code Particularly Good? · · Score: 1, Funny

    Not being PHP would have to be in my top two list for what makes good code. Not being Visual Basic would be #1.

  17. Re:Does this mean Groklaw will come back? on Not Quite Dead: SCO Linux Suit Against IBM Stirs In Utah · · Score: 2

    Oh, how I wish that would happen.

  18. of course it was on $7.4 Million Blurred Lines Verdict Likely To Alter Music Business · · Score: 3, Informative
  19. Also Time Travelers Strictly Cash on Some of the Greatest Science Fiction Novels Are Fix-Ups · · Score: 1

    One of many excellent sci-fi books by Spider Robinson.

  20. Re:They do what they're paid to do... on House Republicans Roll Out Legislation To Overturn New Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, after my follow-up email pointint out the idiocy of the reply I got, a staffer sent me a *real* email asking if I'd like to call and talk to him about it. Not that it means that they're really listening, but at least they have enough sense to not just ignore it completely. Meh.

  21. Re:They do what they're paid to do... on House Republicans Roll Out Legislation To Overturn New Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    Thanks, Representative Latta. I didn't realize that I was being an idiot. Obviously I'm just dumb.

  22. Re:They do what they're paid to do... on House Republicans Roll Out Legislation To Overturn New Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Worse...I requested a response, which I just got. It begins:

    Thank you for contacting me to voice your opposition to the recently released regulations by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Having recently been elected to my second term in Congress, Iâ(TM)m honored to be able to represent the people of Ohioâ(TM)s 14th Congressional District...

  23. Re:They do what they're paid to do... on House Republicans Roll Out Legislation To Overturn New Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...which is why I emailed Rep. Latta (co-sponsor) and Rep Joyce (my rep from Ohio) and let them know that I vote, I elected one of them, and I don't support any action to reverse the FCC's recent reclassification.

    I know I don't represent big bags of money, but I do directly represent a ballot. I let both of them know that I am a US Army veteran, a long-time IT professional, and a proponent of net neutrality and classifying internet service under Title II.

  24. Re:Look Out in the Tent! on Republicans Back Down, FCC To Enforce Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    I don't know whether they are or aren't, but that's a tangential issue. What is it that you're concerned the government will be able to do that they don't or can't do currently if internet service is classified under Title II?

  25. Re:Look Out in the Tent! on Republicans Back Down, FCC To Enforce Net Neutrality Rules · · Score: 1

    ...because thinking that Title II should apply to data and not just POTS means you're short-sighted?