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User: darkshadow88

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  1. Re:textbook publishers use all kinds of BS to keep on Latvian Police Raid Teacher's Home for Uploading $4.00 Textbook · · Score: 4, Funny

    He didn't get no edumacation.

    What do you expect? He couldn't afford the textbooks!

  2. Re:Because youre a bunch of cowards on If Tech Is So Important, Why Are IT Wages Flat? · · Score: 1

    I wonder if you interviewed with the same place I did--it was, likewise, an advertising-related startup in Manhattan. I was interviewing for my first job out of grad school, and right after the phone interview (literally within an hour or two), I had the CEO of the company call me practically begging me to work for them. I saw the offer, which I thought looked alright (having not seen any other offers prior to that one), but then I got the offer from my current employer, which was nearly 50% higher. After I turned down the offer and mentioned that I was accepting the other offer, I got three further emails, exceeding the original offer by $10k, $15k, and then $20k (though still well below the other offer). So not only was the offer cheap, but they knowingly offered me WAY less than they were prepared to pay me, hoping I'd take the bait.

    And yes, the position looks to still be open. And not for a lack of qualified applicants--with the way they were fawning over me, I clearly had the right skill set for the job. But you're not going to get an algorithms engineer for cheap.

  3. Re:tech is a fairly broad category on If Tech Is So Important, Why Are IT Wages Flat? · · Score: 2

    s/alternative/irresponsible

    Just because you can't buy a house in a given area doesn't mean it makes sense to go blow all your money.

  4. Re:tech is a fairly broad category on If Tech Is So Important, Why Are IT Wages Flat? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Really, eating restaurant meals 3 times a day? That's part of your problem.

    I also make $125k and likewise, my take-home is about $6100. I spend even more on rent for a 1-bedroom than you, and my student loans are higher, and I do just fine:

    • $6100 take-home after taxes/insurance/401k
    • -$1800 rent
    • -$ 250 utilities (soon to be $190 once I'm sure I like the 100min/5GB $30 T-Mobile plan)
    • -$ 400 cost of living ($8 lunch each day, one $20 dinner a week, and about $150 in groceries a month)
    • -$ 900 student loans

    Leaves me $2750, much of which I can put toward paying off my loans faster, after which I'll start really focusing on saving. As for transportation, I walk to work. The central location is why my rent is so high, but I offset that by not having the expense of a vehicle. I get free public transit, but even if I paid for it, my transit trips would probably only cost me about $20/month. If I really want to drive somewhere, there's Zipcar.

    I grew up in a working poor family, so maybe I just know how to manage money better than some people. As it is, I feel guilty about my $8/day lunches when I could probably pack my own lunch for $1/day. That's ~$150/mo I could be saving, all without any real decrease in quality of life.

    And let me emphasize: that $2750 I'm left with is more than most people in this country gross. The median personal gross income in the U.S. as of 2005, among people over 18, was $24,062. Adjusting for inflation (I couldn't find current data), that's $28,500, or $2375 a month. Even if you look at the over 25 numbers (I'm under 25, btw, and I suspect you are, too), my spare cash after all my expenses still exceeds the median net income (though not quite the gross).

    TL;DR: We have more disposable income than more than half the people in this country gross. Even with your wasteful spending, you have $1555 a month left, which is far more disposable income than most people in this country have. You have no reason to complain.

  5. Re:Legal liability on App Auto-Tweets False Piracy Accusations · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is textbook libel.

    Or rather dictionary libel.

  6. Re:Math on Viacom and DirecTV Reach New Agreement · · Score: 1

    $600M is the amount of the increase. Viacom was already receiving about $3B from DirectTV.

  7. Re:It doesn't add up on Viacom and DirecTV Reach New Agreement · · Score: 1

    The increase was $600M vs $1B, not the total amount! This suggests that Viacom was already receiving about $3 billion per year, and that now they'll be getting $3.6B instead of $4B.

  8. Re:It's only 92% accurate ... on FDA Approves HIV Home-Use Test Kit · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... lest you guys start thinking that this kit is a heavenly sent, that you guys will be 100% protected ...

    This test kit is only 92% accurate

    While 8% does not seem to be a big number, it still matters in this case for AIDS is still incurable

    The test's accuracy is much higher than 92%. The test has 92% recall (it will correctly detect 92% of the true positives). In determining the accuracy, you need to take into account all the people who don't have HIV (which it will correctly detect 99.98% of the time). Based on the CDC's numbers, about 1 in 250 people in the U.S. have HIV, so the accuracy of this test would be (249/250)*99.98% + (1/250)*92% = 99.95%. The precision here (the probability that a positive returned by the test is a true positive) is the probability of a true positive detection over the total probability of a positive test result, or (1/250)*92% / ((1/250)*92% + (249/250)*0.02%) = 95%. In other words, if the test says you have HIV, there's a 95% chance it's correct. Doing the same for a negative result, you'll find that a negative result is correct 99.6% of the time.

    Your point that the test fails to correctly detect 8% of the true positives is a reasonable one, but accuracy is not the metric you should be using to evaluate. To better illustrate why accuracy is a terrible metric to use, consider a test that always returns "no". Since 99.6% of people do not have HIV, the test is 99.6% accurate, yet totally useless (0% recall and undefined precision due to no positive results). Precision and recall are what you should care about.

    TL;DR:

    • Accuracy: 99.95%
    • Precision (positive): 95%
    • Precision (negative): 99.6%
    • Recall: 92%
  9. Re:I can't decide... on Artist's Catcopter Causes a Stir · · Score: 5, Funny

    If one cannot give a corpse a higher purpose, then it's best to leave it alone.

    The catcopter does give the corpse a higher purpose--about 5 feet in the picture and probably much higher if taken outside.

  10. Re:What's the useful limit? on 60TB Disk Drives Could Be a Reality In 2016 · · Score: 1

    You're kidding, right? By my reckoning, that's 25 years of high bitrate MP3s.

    Now, ripping to FLAC I can understand... But, if you don't have a hojillion dollar speaker system, I can also understand not ripping to FLAC.

    Your reckoning is way off. 500GB would be about 145 days of 320kbps MP3s.

  11. Re:serves 'em right on Doctors "Fire" Vaccine Refusers · · Score: 1

    Are there schools that ban unvaccinated children from attending? I think that'd be a more effective way than kicking them out off the doctors list.

    I believe most do (at least in the U.S.), unless there is a valid medical reason for not having a vaccination.

  12. Re:Bandwidth costs on AT&T Caps Netflix Streaming Costs At $68K/Yr · · Score: 1

    Actually, the wear and tear on a road is proportional to the fourth power of axle weight. Thus, if, as you say, the number of axles is directly proportional to the weight of the vehicle, the axle weight would be the same no matter how many axles there are, and thus the wear and tear on the road would be the same.

    Now, assuming that your premise is wrong and larger vehicles really do have more weight per axle, the analogy is still terrible. A doubling of axle weight causes 16x the wear on a road, whereas the doubling of data usage does not cause any damage to or "wear" on the network. If you're worried about bandwidth hogs, the right thing to do is throttle them when a node is congested. Some people will complain about throttling, too, but those people need to recognize that wireless spectrum is a limited resource that needs to be carefully managed to keep the service usable for everybody. Smart throttling (which is already being done to some extent) should obviate the need for usage caps, as the "bandwidth hog" problem will solve itself. When a person tries to download 5GB in the middle of the afternoon, it will get throttled so that other users can have the bandwidth to check their email and stream Pandora. At 3 AM, when the network is not congested, that download would complete quickly, as few other people are using the network.

    You can't have it both ways, though. To throttle people when the network is congested and still charge them for data usage is pure greed. The throttling alone manages the network sufficiently to guarantee reliability for the other users, and does not require excessive charges to restrict users' usage of the service.

  13. Re:There is no denying the Earth is getting hotter on 2011 Was the 9th Hottest Year On Record · · Score: 1

    That's because of La Niña, which results in cooler temperatures. Despite being the 9th hottest year overall, 2011 was the hottest La Niña year on record.

  14. Re:The article asks "Why?" on EU Scientists Working On Laser To Rip a Hole In Spacetime · · Score: 2

    and admittedly it will eat giga-watts of electricity)

    Well, yes, it's 200 petawatts, but the amount of energy is less than that of an incandescent lightbulb running for an hour. 200 quadrillion watts * 1 trillionth of a second * (1hr/3600s) * (1 kWh/1000 Wh) = .05556 kWh (in other words, the amount of energy used by about 56 watts over the course of an hour).

  15. Re:New Pro-Consumer Regulation on Sprint Customers Face 5GB Hotspot Data Cap, As of Oct. 2 · · Score: 1

    I don't see anybody falsely advertising unlimited data. In the case of T-Mobile, your speed goes down once you reach a threshold, but it's still not limited (that said, the speed once you cross that threshold is pretty terrible). If we're going to make new regulations, we should be regulating a minimum acceptable bitrate for unlimited data. An unlimited service at 1kbps would be unlimited, but I think we can all agree that it wouldn't be usable. T-Mobile's throttling falls into the "just barely usable" category.

  16. Re:Stop this BS on Sprint Customers Face 5GB Hotspot Data Cap, As of Oct. 2 · · Score: 1

    You're making the all-too-common error of conflating "unlimited" and "infinite". "Unlimited" means the provider is not imposing a limit on how much you can use, but you are still constrained by the infrastructure involved--in your Netflix (Qwikster) example, that constraint would be the postal system. In the case of streaming, the constraint is the (e.g.) 720 hours in a 30-day month (you obviously can't watch 5,000,000 hours of content in 720 hours). In the case of Internet service, that constraint is the speed of your connection (there's only so much data you can download given your provisioned bitrate, congestion on the network, and your network interface).

    If, no matter how much you use, the provider will not cut you off or tell you that you used too much, then you're getting unlimited. If you want infinite, you'll need to make the speed of light infinite. In this universe, c is the limit, no matter what you do.

    I leave you with a Fawlty Towers quotation:

    Basil: "The sky's the limit!"
    Sybyl: "22 rooms is the limit."

  17. Re:Stop this BS on Sprint Customers Face 5GB Hotspot Data Cap, As of Oct. 2 · · Score: 1

    You read that sign wrong. What it said was "2GB of high-speed data". They (T-Mobile, clearly) don't limit how much you can use, but once you cross 2GB, you will be dropped to 2G speeds.

  18. Re:Of course not on RMS: 'Is Android Really Free Software?' · · Score: 1

    They should have done what they did with Chrome, calling the fully open-source project Chromium. That way, there are two different brand names and it's clear which devices are certified. Call the open-source project something other than Android, and let those who use it advertise something to the effect of "compatible with Android apps", making it clear that it's not Android.

  19. Re:Of course not on RMS: 'Is Android Really Free Software?' · · Score: 1

    GP is talking about the old-style iPods, not iPod Touches. I used the Rockbox firmware on my iPod back in the day, but to my knowledge there are no alternate OSes for the iPhone or iPod Touch.

  20. Re:Here we go on RMS: 'Is Android Really Free Software?' · · Score: 1

    I assume GP meant "never had significant market share in North America". Not once have I ever seen a Symbian phone in person.

  21. Re:Here we go on RMS: 'Is Android Really Free Software?' · · Score: 1

    In practice an Android phone with a locked bootloader (and running a closed-source Android version) is as closed as an iPhone.

    No. First off, all versions of Android that run on phones are open-source. Even on tablets, though, where Honeycomb is not open-source, you're free to run whatever apps you want without having to get anyone's approval. On the iPad, you can't (without jailbreaking). That, to me (and I think to many others as well), is the most important distinction.

  22. Re:You must own it. on Ask Slashdot: Where Can I Buy Legal Game ROMs? · · Score: 1

    This is not true (in the US). The only copies you can have are ones you make yourself; downloaded copies are still illegal.

    Not like you're going to get caught.

  23. Re:Content provider or aggregator? on Google Acquires Zagat · · Score: 1

    What business is Google in? Indexing content or providing content?

    They are in the advertising business which is supported, to a great extent, by search. Indexing content and providing content are two complementary approaches to delivering quality search. Recently, we've seen much more federated search on Google--in other words, combining results from different resources. For instance, a search for Apple will give you results from the web index mixed in with results from image search and product search.

    An example where one of the elements is content that Google provides rather than indexes is Maps. Sure, Google could index web pages that have maps on them (and they do), but the user experience is far superior when the search engine can just provide the content you want without the need to perform extra clicks

    The researchers and engineers are concerned primarily with making the user experience as satisfying as possible, and providing relevant content is part of that. If the users are happy, they'll keep coming back, thereby generating ad impressions and making money for Google.

  24. Re:Not highly confident in Zagat ratings on Google Acquires Zagat · · Score: 1

    If you haven't seen it already, this exposé on the BBB is worth watching: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yo8kfV9kONw

  25. Re:Our Court System favors only Lawyers on Court Renders $3 Judgment Against Spamhaus · · Score: 2

    In the US, you don't have to pay the winner's attorney's fees unless the judge specifically orders it. In this case, he did not. I also doubt that Spamhaus spent very much defending themselves in this case--the default judgment was because they didn't show up, and they went on to appeal the damages.