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User: pngwen

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  1. A Missed Opportunity on 82-Year-Old Pope Francis Is 'First Pope To Write a Line of Code' (geekwire.com) · · Score: 1

    Had that line been: printf("por la paz\n"); instead of: setScreen("por la paz"); we would have had a line of Holy C!

    Perhaps there is still time. Has the Archbishop of Canterbury ever coded? As a confirmed Anglican, that would hold more sway with me anyhow! :-D

  2. Shuttered by the SEC on Ask Slashdot: Why Did You Quit Your Last Job? · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if this counts as quitting, but the last regular job I worked prior to the one I have now was for a financial conglomerate. Apparently, the guys over in investing had some very shady dealings and the company was shut down by the SEC. I helped wind down their websites and export all their data for the investigation, and then I went back to grad school.

    Honestly, I'm much happier as a professor. So in a way, I suppose I should thank securities fraud for my current career! :-D

  3. I, for one, am building a monster! on Ask Slashdot: Has Technology Created A Monster? (codinghorror.com) · · Score: 2

    Nearly 30 years ago, I wrote my first line of code. I knew then that I had stumbled across the thing with which I would destroy the world of men.

    In the intervening time I have flooded your inboxes, tracked your buying habits, sold you sub-prim adjustable rate mortgages, delivered you pornography, and helped states maintain your vital records. Now, I have stepped back and started teaching.

    I feed younglings to the beast!

  4. I have learned the hard way to never give notice. In your case, where your retirement funds may be adversly impacted, this is doubly true.

    Tell them the day after your 65th birthday that you are not coming back. You owe them nothing. They pay you for the labor you provide, and they would likely terminate you without notice should the need arise. With each payroll you are square with the house. No consideration beyond that should be given nor expected.

  5. Re:There are some, one is kinda viable (sort of) on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Alternatives To Android Or iOS? · · Score: 1

    Doesn't even have to be a smart phone. If you are wandering around with a StarTac folder in your pocket you still log in to cell towers as you go about your business.

  6. Re: There are some, one is kinda viable (sort of) on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Alternatives To Android Or iOS? · · Score: 1

    LINEAGE OS! I keep doing that! Legacy OS has been in brain longer. Lineage is the successor of Cyanogenmod. It is a completely Open Source build of android, and by default does not come with GAPPS.

  7. There are some, one is kinda viable (sort of) on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Alternatives To Android Or iOS? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Probably the most viable phone OS is Legacy OS, which is just an open source version of Android. You can install it, and provided you don't instal gapps, it is pretty secure. It also gives you complete control over your phone. Legacy OS + Fdroid gives you a FOSS solution that protects your privacy about as well as any OS for a tracking device can.

    There is also the openmoko stack from a few years ago. If you can get your hands on a Neo FreeRunner, they are an acceptable phone. You'll be on your own for software though, as that project is effectively dead.

    No matter what you do, you can't really trust a phone completely. The nature of the cell network means that any cellphone is a defacto tracking device. Your whereabouts are logged, and because you have shared them with a third party you have no expectation of privacy. They don't even require a warrant for law enforcement. Also, private citizens can simply purchase the location data from most providers. So keep that in mind. I carry a phone, but I am ready to stick it in a microwave and run from it at a moment's notice.

  8. And that is why.... on Ford Exec: 'We Know Everyone Who Breaks the Law' Thanks To Our GPS In Your Car · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I, an active professor and research scientist, drive a 1982 Dodge Ram Pickup. No tracking, no disconnect, easy to work on engine. I will keep this baby going for the rest of my life, and no company will be tracking my whereabouts. (So long as I remember to turn off my cell phone, which I usually do.)

  9. Casio FX-260 Solar on Ask Slashdot: Cheap Second Calculators For Tests? · · Score: 2

    I use a Casio FX-260 Solar for these sorts of things. It has all your basic scientific functions, plus a nice statistics package. It doesn't have complex numbers or base conversions though. Still, for $10.00, it's not half bad!

  10. Re:Don't poke the peons on 87-Year-Old World War II Veteran Takes On the TSA · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They did willingly sign up to work for the TSA. They have also witnessed and participated in violations of American's rights, and they remain at their posts. Therefore they are culpable as traitors to the cause of liberty. Should justice ever prevail, their heads will line the streets of our free cities!

  11. Cushiest Job Ever on NSA Posts Opening For "Civil Liberties & Privacy Officer" · · Score: 1

    All you do is just rubber stamp all the plans which cross your desk.

    Well, maybe you have to sort it into two piles. "Stuff we admit to" and "Stuff that will piss off the whole civilized world" Still, this would be very easy. It's the only job which will do less than a police departments internal investigation board!

  12. Re:That bad huh? on Marriages Spawned From Online Dating As Satisfying As From Traditional Dating · · Score: 1

    Ah, but with online dating, you have $30/mo plus the cost of the dates. I met my wife for free, but I certainly did not court her for free!

  13. That bad huh? on Marriages Spawned From Online Dating As Satisfying As From Traditional Dating · · Score: 5, Funny

    Good thing I did it the traditional / free way. I would have felt ripped off it was no better ;P

    (Note: I love my wife very much. I just have a twisted sense of humor.)

  14. It has for undergrad, not so much for the grads on Ask Slashdot: Is the Bar Being Lowered At Universities? · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am a college instructor, and I have been for about 7 years now. I'll be upgrading to professor soon, so I can tell you first hand that your observations are quite correct. The undergraduate education system of the USA is considered to be the laughing stock of the academic world. However, our graduate schools are perceived as the best in the world. The reason for this is the utter failure of our public primary schools.

    Think of it this way. The average high school graduate in the US can only read on a 6th grade reading level. They come to me, a scholar in the field of Computer Science, and I have to try to teach them complex mathematical ideas that are only truly expressible in a new language. I have a couple of options. I can either dumb down my course to give them a chance, or I can maintain my integrity and demand that they come up to speed. The answer is that I have to do a mixture of them. If I taught as I was supposed to, my student success rate would plummet and my perception scores would be low, hence I would be fired. However, if I make the course too easy, I've polluted my own field in the next generation. Instead, I try to ramp them up with basic skills, but push them just to the edge of what their minds can actually handle. I also try to encourage them in other areas of study outside my own. Most of my students consider me a very tough but fair instructor, and most are grateful for my help. However, I do fail a larger percentage of my students than other instructors. Most have gone the field pollution route.

    This is a serious problem in our society. One thing we could do to fix it is stop pushing college so hard. Many of my kids would be better served in a tradeschool than a university, and yet they are pressured to come to me. They waist 4 years of their lives, learn nothing usable, and then end up back where they started.

    Oh, and one last thought. About the perception of the rest of the world. If you have a Bachelor's degree, that basically brings you up to par with the high school graduates in other countries. That also brings you up to the level your grandparents in the US had when they finished High School. We need to stop the degradation of the primary schools, but we never will. No child left behind has basically ensured that all future generations of Americans will be too stupid to find their a**hole with both hands.

  15. My distros date me a little... on Ask Slashdot: What Distros Have You Used, In What Order? · · Score: 1

    Yggdrasil -> Slackware -> Redhat (for an hour)->
    Debian -> Slackware -> Gentoo -> Knoppix -> Ubuntu ->
    Gentoo (Forever!)

    UNIX wise, I've owned HP-UX machines, 1 AIX server,
    FreeBSD, OpenBSD, then NetBSD

    Prior to Yggdrasil, I had a cross compiled linux from scratch sort of setup. Ah, those were good days!

  16. I have a weird view... on Ask Slashdot: How Many of You Actually Use Math? · · Score: 1

    I'm a theoretical computer scientist who slings code for fun. I question the validity of teaching programming as part of computer science. Sadly, that battle was fought, and lost by my side, way back in the early 70's!

  17. Full disclosure is the most ethical path. on Ask Slashdot: To Hack Or Not To Hack? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The most ethical thing you can do is fully disclose the hack to the media, and to as many websites as possible. This will force the developers to either fix the problem or let the company go down in flames. If you keep it secret, innocent pepole will be harmed when their information is leaked by the faulty code. If you could hack it, others can too. They may be less altruistic about what they find.

    Write to 2600, call your local media, write to your newspaper, post the info here, go to the forums, and take the word to the street!

  18. wrong distro on Installing Linux On a 386 Laptop · · Score: 1

    Shoulda used gentoo. If gcc can compile for it, gentoo can do it! Plus it would have been a hack too, as all gentoo boxen are hacks!

    And yes, I run gentoo on all my machines and have done so since 2003. (My first gentoo box was in 2002, the rest of my machines were converted a year later.)

  19. Re:How do I go back to the previous version? on Slashdot Launches Re-Design · · Score: 1

    I say we implement a program which scrapes all of slashdot's content and presents it in the old format. Add a couple of ads in there and maybe we could make a buck or two off it.

    Honestly though, I believe that all the code these "designers" created really amounts to a lengthy suicide note for slashdot. I've been here since 1997, and I won't be here much longer.

  20. Major suckage on Slashdot Launches Re-Design · · Score: 1

    One thing I loved about slashdot was the simple theme. No floating themes, no waisted screen real estate. Whether I was on a small screen or a 20" monitor it always worked. This design, however, is poor on all screens. It is annoying and wasteful.

    I have been a loyal reader for 13.5 years. I found slashdot mere months after its founding. If you do not undo these changes, I will no longer come here for news. I cannot abide this atrocity. I will tell my students henceforth to avoid this site, and i will actively campaign against it. Change back to something reasonable, and I will continue to evangelize this site to the geeks of tomorrow.

    The choice, sadly, is yours.

    -Bob, the once loyal

  21. Re:Horrible Idea on Underwear Invention Protects Privacy At Airport · · Score: 1

    So then basically they feel they are entitled to take away other's civil liberties for their own gains? Maybe hanging isn't too extreme after all!

  22. Re:Horrible Idea on Underwear Invention Protects Privacy At Airport · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm all for frustrating TSA agents. Those people are traitors to the cause of liberty. 200 years ago, they would have all been hanged. I think frustrating them is a little less extreme, don't you?

  23. The Best Answer on Which Language To Learn? · · Score: 1

    Befunge, FTW!

  24. Who would have thought.... on Users Sue Google, Facebook, Zynga Over Privacy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Who would have thought that posting something to a vast world wide network could result in many people seeing it? It's getting so you can't shout out your front door without people hearing you. You also can't post secrets on billboards without them being read by passers by. What is the world coming to?

  25. George should be suspicious! on The Time Travel Paradoxes of Back To the Future · · Score: 1

    Lorraine was known to have a crush on Calvin (Marty) back in 1955. Calvin vanishes, George and Lorraine get married and then Loraine gives birth to a child that looks a lot like her high school crush. I know I'd start asking some questions if I were George!