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User: fair_n_hite_451

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Comments · 177

  1. I'm sure I have no idea....

  2. As a non-American, I would vote "No" on Ask Slashdot: Should I Let My Kids Become American Citizens? · · Score: 1

    You've outlined the pros and cons pretty well - the cons are all financial and concrete ... the pros are emotional and insubstantial. Your Belgian children (Flemish?) have no ties to the US of A - they won't feel that connection simply because they are citizens of a country they've never been to.

  3. Prepare to watch snopes.com plummet to obscurity on Google Wants To Rank Websites Based On Facts Not Links · · Score: 1

    How will this new ranking system assess pages which contain lies strictly for the purpose of debunking them?

  4. Oh, fuck me, this old story again? on The Programmers Who Want To Get Rid of Software Estimates · · Score: 1

    This post gets repeated about once a year here.

    News Flash Developer types -- you are never going to see this in your lifetime. Estimates are a fact of life. Deal with it.

    If you are in an organization that has a problem with turning WAG estimates into hard deadlines and then bitching when the inevitable unfolding of the project changes the situation is a large way, then protect yourself by learning to speak to the project managers in their own language.

    Define some rough "degrees of certainty" around your estimating, and guidlines to the degree of accuracy you feel.

    Class "0" (when the project is in the approval stages) +200% / -50%
    Class "1" (when the requirements have been documented) +100% / -25%
    Class "2" (when the work packages have been built out) +50 / -10%

    ... or whatever your particular organization and SDLC model supports. And then, when asked to provide an estimate, communicate clearly as to which class of estimate you are providing. This isn't rocket science.

  5. someone call Anonymous on When It Comes To Spy Gear, Many Police Ignore Public Records Laws · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that getting and releasing this data requires a hack of the Harris Corporation.

    And that it would do a whole lot more social good than the "high school quarterback rapist of the week" that tends to be their high profile targets. While those scumbags are good targets, and certainly deserve to be brought to justice when there is some sort of cover-up or injustice involved, in the end ... they are small potatoes, local targets whose impact is extermely limited in scope.

    The Harris Corporation is a partner in the systematic stripping of rights of all citizens by it's so called protectors. THAT's data that needs to be free. Find it, steal it, release it into the world so that apps can be developed which can combat it. If you want to be a SJW ... at least pick a target that will do some good.

  6. Re:Neil Degrasse Tyson: Keeping it real on Slashdot Asks: The Beanies Return; Who Deserves Recognition for 2014? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Thirded. He's one of only two I would have nominated (Musk being the other) who have done much to advance the issues of science being "cool".

  7. Re:Elon! (Or is it eLon?) on Slashdot Asks: The Beanies Return; Who Deserves Recognition for 2014? · · Score: 2

    Seconded. Demonstrably making science cooler by making money at it. Fighting the good fight against protectionist industries.

  8. Re:War of government against people? on America 'Has Become a War Zone' · · Score: 1

    And yet Canada - geographically the largest part of North America - is nearly universally known as a punchline for being unfailingly polite.

    As someone said above, the so called "logic" being thrown around this thread is appalling.

  9. Re:Science Writers: Stop Causing Us Intellectual P on Strange New World Discovered: The "Mega Earth" · · Score: 1

    (so yes, paper would auto-ignite there).

     
    Ah, home sweet home.

  10. Re:Nonsense on Ask Slashdot: System Administrator Vs Change Advisory Board · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Go directly to your Change Manager (not the CAB, but the person who is invested in the day-to-day management and running of the process).
    Utter the following sentence "I wish to get regular patching of Windows Servers defined as a standard change, what do I need to do?"
    Follow those instructions.

    It might seem like more beauracracy for the first run through, but it'll be smooth and seamless after that. As a Change Manager for years, I can tell you that the people in that position are far more worried about project managers trying to push through craptastic updates at the last second than they are with competant domain support people. They'd love to get you off their radar just as much as you want to be off the CAB's radar.

  11. I can also weigh in from experience on Ask Slashdot: When Is a Better Career Opportunity Worth a Pay Cut? · · Score: 1

    About 10 years ago I left a fairly established consulting gig with a company that was winding down operations / being acquired.

    Had to make a decision to move to the new company & stay in the same becoming-boring job or strike out again and search out the small internet startup / potentially rich-making / more exciting and hugely more risky gigs.

    I chose the latter.

    End up getting screwed on the IPO on both of them (one went private instead of public and screwed everyone but the founder), one reneged on the handshake deal I had with the president (since he left before the IPO happened - he'd been outsted by the founder). With my kids getting a bit older, I then went and hid out at a big company where the money was stable for 6 years to trade on benefits instead of income potential. However, I wouldn't trade the experience of working for those small, nimble outfits for anything because I've carried the "of course we can change that - what's to stop us?" attitude that you build up in that environment everywhere I've been since.

    It's made me a better consultant, no doubt.

    Someone above questioned where you are in life and that to me is a huge factor. Are you married? Do you have children? Are you the sole breadwinner in your family? What financial obligations are going to be there whether you are working or not (like a mortgage or retirement savings)?

    The choice between a small company where you can make a difference every day and decisions are made in the president's office in an afternoon (but "the money" can vanish overnight) and a large company where it feels like you are trying to steer the Titanic (but the money will be there all day every day) is somewhat about what makes you tick. Are you an adreneline junky? Are you risk averse? How about the other people who are counting on you? (if there are any)

  12. Re:"As addictive as drugs" on No, Oreos Aren't As Addictive As Cocaine · · Score: 1

    Perhaps this was the actual experiment. "Postulate the different take-up rates of a poorly configured fake science experiment. Measure the difference in the overall takeup rate between media classed as "Left Wing" and media classed as "Right Wing".

  13. Re:short answer on Ask Slashdot: As a Programmer/Geek, Should I Learn Business? · · Score: 5, Funny

    Slightly longer answer:

    yeeeessssss.

  14. Re:Double standards? on David Cameron Wants the Guardian Investigated Over Snowden Files · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who the fuck is Emmanual Assange?

    See, that whole "unperson" thing is already working...

  15. What is that in Celcius?

    ... very hot...

  16. You rang?

  17. Re:woosh on "451" Error Will Tell Users When Governments Are Blocking Websites · · Score: 1

    Well, I made the connection... ;-)

  18. Re:1 2 3 4 I declare flame war on UCSD Lecturer Releases Geotagging Application For "Dangerous Guns and Owners" · · Score: 1

    It's disgraceful that the general public is so eager to watch porn, but is so unwilling to actually teach sex education to it's youth.

    FTFY

  19. Re:It must be the work of teh terrorists. on Computer Failure Disrupts British Air Traffic Control Systems · · Score: 1

    That book. So good, so chilling...

  20. Re:Probably on Can a Court Order You To Delete a Facebook Account? · · Score: 1

    I was going to threaten him with that same punishment, but then figured out that my dog sled was frozen to the igloo driveway ... so I'll sit here on my chesterfield and steam politely instead.

  21. Re:Moon Prism Power, Make Up on Ask Slashdot: What Would Your 'I've Got To Disappear' Plan Look Like? · · Score: 1

    Hey, I know you ... you're that 300 pound guy from the last Comic-con.

  22. Re:Obligatory George Carlin on Dozens of Reported Plagiarism Incidents On Coursera's Free Online Courses · · Score: 2

    I'm confused. If big business owners "have us by the balls" and "have bought and paid for the Senate, etc" then why do they also need to "spend billions of dollars every year lobbying". Are you saying that's just theatre to keep people from noticing?

  23. Re:I see a lot of negative posts on this on The Rapid Rise of License Plate Readers · · Score: 1

    You've obviously never had your license plate swapped by thieves with a stolen car similar to yours. Contrary to popular belief, all criminals aren't stupid. 1 - steal car 2 - drive directly to mass transit parking lot in middle of the work day 3 - cruise around to find similar looking vehicle 4 - swap license plates. I have no idea how long I drove around with "stolen car" plates on my vehicle, but I can just imagine what would have happened had I been pulled over because I was flagged by some license plate reader. Wouldn't that be fun to have the cops storming my house because my car was parked in my driveway....

  24. . What is the proper way to apologize for smearing rape victims?

    Volunteering for a Rape Crisis Hotline?

  25. Re:Jenny McCarthy's page already has it's rebuttal on Famous British Autism Study an 'Elaborate Fraud' · · Score: 1

    When will they stop?

    When we slashdot them off of the internet?


    Done.