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User: dindi

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  1. Re:Bitcoins weakness on Bitcoin Currency Surpasses 20 National Currencies In Total Value · · Score: 1

    Completely wrong. The bitcoin network adjusts difficulty, so that every 10 minutes a new block is created. The reward for a block currently is 25BTC.

    If ASICS are out (Avalon ButterflyLabs), then they will take most of the generated coins. They won't make more. So you can start "mining" with a supercomputer and the only thing you will see is that you will take most of the rewards. The network will speed up (transaction verification), but it won't inflate the coin. Actually price will go up as it won't be easy to mine by your windows gaming machine stuffed full of GPUs.

    I am really new at this, but researching for a week. I don't think I am wrong, but if you think, please enlighten me!
    cheers

  2. You need the right attitude on Why Working Remotely Needs To Make a Comeback · · Score: 2

    You know those guys who start the day on youtube/facebook/ and only start to work when you nag them to death. If you don't they might do some "proof that I worked" BS at the end of the day? These are the guys who have to obey one rule and they cannot: be available between 9-5. Then you call, message, mail, call all numbers, all messengers, and the guy is no-where.

    I have seen a complete telecommuting department of 30+ people ordered permanently to the office because a couple of these assholes.

    That said: I work at 2 places at the same time. Since I don't have to prepare, make food (special diet, no take-out and soda machine for me), drive, socialise and all that, I can comfortably put 10 hours a day of coding/planning (infrastructure design, consulting with coders) on the table. I have an elliptical trainer and a garden. If my head is about to explode and I "only" have to read some specs or make a call, I walk/sit outside in the garden in natural light (tropics rule).

    Now that is the good part. At one place my colleagues just don't get it. Communication is freakin' impossible with them. Even though the policy: code when you want/can, be available in business hours (US eastern 8-4). Guys don't answer mails, forget if you Skype/call instead, not on Skype sometimes for hours without notice (and messing up everything the night before in the GIT repos). It is just a mess...

    So I think it is possible, it is good, but you simply have to screen the people and remove their rights if they fail to deliver/communicate.

    If you are in software development an need to participate in planning/design (not just e.g. work on tickets on a ready product), then probably it makes sense to go to the office once a week to do some joint brainstorming. Maybe more. Depending. When people talk tech in the elevator, at the cafeteria, smoking area, gym, or etc ... good things happen. Ideas are born. When you just have a Skype call without using any presentation tool (whiteboard), then you feel the difference: it is not as effective.
    The ADD ridden ones at least are (somewhat) forced to pay attention at meetings and at best can play with their phones, but if it is Skype, who knows what is on the other 4 screens. Worst experience : my colleague has his whole family screaming at the same time while we are having meetings. I am not talking a noise once in a while, or family arriving/leaving, but full time lunch serving and baby screaming all the way.

    Most hated office things: 1. Half the room is cold, half the room is hot. Always, everywhere. 2. Morning chatter of yesterday's game, movie, news .. etc - fine, just do it outside if you see someone trying to work. 3. Asshole on speakerphone or asshole on personal call, calling 10th place to get new tires.... 4. food smell.. New rule: next time I have to smell your packaged paprika bacon-pork skin chips I can throw up into your hair..... If you touch my screen with the finger, I get to chop it off with a blunt cheese-knife.

  3. Since 95 .. still nowhere on UK ISPs Respond To the Dangers of Using Carrier Grade NAT Instead of IPv6 · · Score: 1

    1995-ish I wanted to write my thesis on IPv6. I did a lot of research, tests, then decided on a different subject that was closer to my heart at the time. (had to skip a year because of work abroad)...

    2013: I am still on IPv4 and there is not even a hint that my ISP's employees even heard of it.

    I honestly don't get it. OS-es support it, devices support it, network devices support it, it is just not happening. The fastest evolving technology, the billion-chillion dollar web, and we are still sharing IPs and paying premium for a damn public IP ....

    How is that. Anyone care to share ?

  4. Re:Cycling and stretching. on Ask Slashdot: How To Stay Fit In the Office? · · Score: 1

    Not sure anything over 125cc uses cables as a form of actuating brakes. Even my clutch is hydraulic, and it is a 300 2 stroke :)

  5. Re:DIY on An Oven That Runs Android · · Score: 1

    The cost of an ESC(kind of)/dimmer device that can be safely controlled without burning themselves to ashes. If the oven already has some kind of timer (chances are good if it is an electric oven, especially if it has microwave) then probably it hasmind-bending proprietary crap running in it you would have to cut in half to interface to it.

    But yes, a simple electric oven could be controlled with a few relays and a dimmer. I would be scared to automate my gas oven/burners though. It is OK that sometimes my lights turn on/off (crap X10 and some custom arduino code), but if my oven starts leaking gas .. well .. that is just creepy and bad :)

  6. Re:An excess of computers, wasting energy on An Oven That Runs Android · · Score: 1

    Actually, an atmega368 can comfortably run a serial 20x4 character lcd, a keypad, a serial (xbee) or ethernet, cost lest than $100 ... and you can put it on a motion sensor, so if the oven is off it turns on only when you are nearby.

    But being an electric oven it is a watt-hog anyway. I prefer an electric oven, but the top has to be gas. I would be a little worried to have my gas appliance on the net. Maybe even without the net it can silently kill you with a leak.

    But I agree with you and I don't get why they cannot put a microcontroller breakout. Then you could buy an ethernet, a USB or a serial module, or connect your own to the optoisolated ttl serial. Would make the devices maybe a few bucks more expensive...

     

  7. Re:The premise - are you kidding me? on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 1

    Forgot this: some people try to not touch your screen after you ask, but they might have a poor judgement on distances, or they do not regularly use their hands/fingers, or dunno what. So even the ones who know your "rule" sometimes touch when trying to touch... How in the hell this works in their heads is a mystery for me. ...

    At my last place I ended up taking everyone in our mini-conference rooms as I was sick of this behaviour. I worked there as a lead developer, so many people came to me with their ideas and issues and they were constantly poking at my 27 iMac. And that made me extremely pissed after some time :). I also removed every sitting opportunity/device (chairs, boxes, desks) from around my desk, so the only option was to go to a meeting room (effectively removing access noise from the developer room too)...

  8. Re:The premise - are you kidding me? on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 1

    Yep, they get all defensive and upset and they just don't get it.

    Surprisingly some technical people do it too. I worked with a guy for a few days once who was constantly chewing his nails (yuck). He would KNOCK on your laptop screen so hard the laptop moved, you could see the screen discolour, then you had this saliva-fingerprint magnifying various pixels. After I saw him doing this I NEVER showed anything to him on my laptop (even though it was a company laptop) and if I had to I connected an old CRT and kept my screen away from him.

    If it is a workplace computer, that sometimes you need to tolerate this, but when people touch my laptop (even the keys or my trackpad) I tend to clean the whole thing with an alcohol wipe in front of them. That sends the message and puts you on their shitlist :) but hey !!!! Go to a men's room and see how many guys don't bother to wash their hands :O after holding their junk ...

  9. Re:wrong premise on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 1

    When you have an iPad (especially a black one) and a macbook (especially the pro that has an edge like an ipad) you end up doing this after using the ipad for an extended period of time. Never happens on my macbook air (silver metallic edge and my white iPad) though :)

    My son (almost 4) tends to come at my macbook trying to tap on things. He is used to my old, black iPad and expects the screen to be touch :)

  10. Re:I don't want crap smeared on my screen on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 1

    But I don't eat crap and if I have it on my hand I take it off before eating!

    But yes... I completely agree, I HATE HATE HATE when people touch my screen. But then again, I clean my glasses every hour (yellow gunnars rule, no prescription here) and go nuts when my screens have smudges.

    It is the rainbow distorted group of pixels that's left after a sweaty finger. YUCK

  11. Re:The premise - are you kidding me? on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 2

    The disgusting ones with the fingerprints, food, boogers and what not.... Took me some time to accept that laptop screens (if you really carry them) get dirty, dusty, sometimes scratched and what not. Then it was even harder to digest that unless I am constantly cleaning my iPad screen it will have smudges that have all kinds of funky colours in sunlight....

    I have zero tolerance for dirty screens. In fact when working at an office I often end up with a sign on the top of my monitors : "Look! Please don't touch!" - where needed. Probably cultural, but some people just feel the need to touch your screen, knock-knock of your screen, and I just find it extremely disrespectful and disturbing. I don't want to be looking at the letter that has the rainbow distortion of your fingerprint smudge over it :( yuck....

  12. Re:Pain on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Why do we consider the monitor vertical to be the only way to position a monitor?"

    Because while sitting at a desk it is extremely not ergonomic to be staring down to your keyboard or anything flat on your desk. That is why your monitors (should be) eye level, vertical and facing you.

    Also that is why laptops are commonly complemented with external screens (also screen real estate), stands (so they cool better and they get into your eye-level zone) and external devices ( because a lot of laptops come with a crappy keyboard and a tiny touch pad - well, not MacBooks, but still I am typing on one with an external keyboard, 1080p screen and a touchpad )..

    Tablets are great when you are on your sofa, lying down on the grass in the garden or in the hammock. Hey, even the toilet or the bus. As soon as you have to type long mail or document or write code: you are screwed with a virtual keyboard.

  13. Re:This is a rare breed of human. on Anti-GMO Activist Recants · · Score: 1

    Fortunately: there are still a lot of people who bring home-made food to work on most days, lots of produce bought at local markets. Farmers are not stupid (not even "simple people). Many of them are college educated guys who can find out about the damage these crops cause (if not health, environment - google "green deserts"). They are (at least at the organic fair) a new breed of farmers who sell you books and would give you their business cards that show they are agricultural engineers.

    Unfortunately the markets are not all organic and not all farmers understand or care. Large companies do not care. It also became a trend to go out to eat for every lunch and Mc, BK, KFC are packed at lunch hour on weekends while many typical restaurants are empty (some are greasy, heavy, sugary, but still "real food"... and supporting local...

    Also just like the school of medicine denying natural cures and promote "cut or medicate" practices, most schools treat organic growing as woodoo that only cuts it on a small scale (if at all). There is a group of hip looking quiet group of young people selling a bunch of different organic veggies. Turns out they started growing organic on university property and now they got a lot of space. If their experiment succeeds, the university is going to add organic growing to the curriculum. I don't know too much details, but as far as I understand they income helps the school and I think they keep some of the profit (or reduces tuition) - not sure about this.

    I think farmers really understand, that as far as they sell healthy stuff to their clients they will come back longer. Corporations do not care because the share holders are the same guys who make $$ on the shitty food, booze, cigarettes, then healthcare and prison for profit when things go south. Farmers also know, that if they sell directly (and in Costa Rica they do not have to give an invoice like in e.g. Hungary) to clients they make a nice profit and they sell nice, fresh stuff. As soon as it is on store shelves or import, it is early harvest, then possibly some "harmless" chemical wash that keeps the stuff fresh for days on the shelves.... plus larger quantities are required, profits go, then you have to produce large quantities. Fertilisation, land overuse ... etc. etc :)

    Anyway, if people tried to buy local, eat fresh and at least reduce animal based, we could feed the planet just fine. Hell, vertical hydroponic gardens are not science fiction, if land is an issue, you can go many stories up.

  14. Re:hardware vs software on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 1

    I think you mis the point. With this breakout board (yes it is just a pcb with labels) you can easily pop this into a proto-board. That's it.

    If you wanted it in production, yes, you would probably use your method, or use an actual shield (shield as in "arduino shield" - an extension board that pops on (mates with the) top of the Raspberry PI with whatever components on.

    Keep in mind, that I use these as a hobby. E.g. I would prototype something on a protoboard with jumper wires and components, then grab the whole thing and put it on an empty board (what's the name, it is like a protoboard (white thing with 2 sides and +- rails), but a PCB with holes and you make traces with your soldering iron). I do not (want to ) etch my own PCBs. I rather throw more hardware at a problem and then concentrate on writing the arduino/java/whatever code.

    So e.g. I would grab this PCB, and permanently solder it into a project (maybe with just 4-5 connectors connected to something). Wasteful? Yes. Time saving? Yes. I just simply feel, that on the hobby level my time is better used writing code rather than making professional electronics projects.

    Hope this makes sense :)

    You know, it is the same: you can get an AVR 368 for 2 dollars (or so) then build a project. Or you can spend 20-25 for an arduino, get a shield, and focus on coding. Maybe you then do the AVR + components, or just pop the arduino + shield in a box and use it like that (that way you can also easily re-purpose a shield, arduino, or anything because it is modular (some things are connected by headers that mate other shields easily)...

    Just my opinion. When I have too much time on my hand I promise I start to etch my own boards :)

  15. Re:This is a rare breed of human. on Anti-GMO Activist Recants · · Score: 1

    Well to start with, the ex-president (also recipient of the nobel peace price) has serious interest (share/ownership) in a company called Pipasa.
    They keep chicken in the typical windowless, lightless tubes. I am not aware of the conditions of the animals there, but I know how it generally goes in one of those from various documentaries.

    I am not actually sure if there is a subsidy though. I think people simply want to eat a lot of meat and they are brainwashed to think that they need a lot of dairy. Also AFAIK it is relatively easy to chop down all the trees on large properties and just have cows there rather than do something useful with the land.

    What I know is Monsanto is trying to get back here with their "frankencorn" and that growers are really freaking out. Apparently someone is paid well @ the government.

    I go weekly to the organic market and talk to people who are really into these topics. You can hear outrageous things sometime :(

  16. Re:hardware vs software on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 1

    well, add the breakout board and the time to etch it and if you only want a few (3 in my case) it is a better use of my time to work for the 24 bucks, and spend the hours on coding the project. Of course your mileage might vary. If you just need the cable, then yes, it is a lot cheaper. BTW if you have a case with a slot (hole for the cable) you might want the cable, connector be just the perfect height/width .... I am happy with them :)

  17. Re:This is a rare breed of human. on Anti-GMO Activist Recants · · Score: 1

    I moved to Costa Rica a while ago and the size of farms with nothing but grass and cows (or other animals - I hate the term livestock) is completely frightening. Fertile volcanic soil could grow a lot of things with or without a greenhouse. Using old land use rotation techniques you could use this land without damaging fertilisation. With tropical greenhouses (just a net, no glass, mostly against strong rain, strong sun and insects/birds) you could grow organic or minimal pesticides.

    Still, vegetables are expensive, meat and dairy is cheap. They cause most of the health damage (OK, sugar/corn is there too) and they take up a LOT of resources. The environmental impact is horrendous.

    OK .. just agreeing with your comment here :)

  18. Re:This is a rare breed of human. on Anti-GMO Activist Recants · · Score: 1

    It is like when you mention you are a vegan, suddenly everyone is a nutritionist and asks where your proteins are coming from.

    The proteins come from plants. Where do the cow's proteins come from? Hunting?

    Even if meat (in moderation) might have been ideal for us 30 years ago, with current levels of antibiotics and other crap fed to animals you should be staying away from dairy, eggs and meat altogether. People eat too much dairy, too much meat and eggs and whatever they call vegetables is mostly storage ripened crap carefully ruined by cooking.

    Vegan for 4+ years, vegetarian for 20+. My weight while on meat: 100kg, my weight without meat but a lot of diary: 90kg. Currently : 75kg ... ideal blood pressure, no sign of heart disease. On 0 medication at 41 years (for the last 23 years, since I stopped eating meat).....

    Now on the GMOs : there is a trend among people who care about their diet a bit more (organic food, high % raw) to not buy food from the US. At lest not corn or soy products. Many even avoid organic because of fear of cross pollination. Then there is a problem : everything has soy and corn in it. Even coke and candy (corn syrup, soy lecithin), so from Snickers to M&M a lot of surprising things will have to be labelled as GMO. MANY companies will not like that, so they can either make a non-GMO version, start losing customers, or completely buy organic.

    I know people who started a seed bank. And not the crazy kind you see on "end of the world preparing" shows, completely normal educated, thinking people who see, that soon you will have to grow your own if you don't want GMO. They are talking about fine-filtered air green houses....

    Anyway ... all I wanted to say: vegetable based diet will keep you healthy, give you proteins and everything, but you have to be careful to get all your nutrients, possibly take some supplements (B12 is the most common recommendation)......

    Isn't the problem simply, that people are so addicted to good tasting deep-fried-sugar-grease-carb dishes that they rather die a horrible death than change their diet?

  19. Android on a "server" on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 2

    I once got an Android phone. I didn't do my research and I expected that I would have a normal Linux with root access, some decent package manager and that I could access most everything from the command line, and of course a graphical interface that has all the things on it. I imagined, that I could dial with a script, read sensors, or do IP over USB and other neat tricks easily just like I do with a linux box. I was so freaking wrong.

    Now we are comparing a USB stick that has this limited crap on it to a full blown Debian server. I go with the Debian for the servers and back to my iPhone that at least has a neat developer tool (yeah, need to pay $100 a year to develop my own utils on the phone .... big deal, Xcode saves me enough time to justify that $100)....
    I by the way run a little java app for automation on the PI. They have arduinos hanging on them doing most of the actual switching/sensing/human IO. It is a perfect architecture because I am allowed to use all the Unix/Linux services that OS has to offer without programming too much micro controllers but taking advantage of both words. I figured that an Arduino with ethernet shield is $70 while the PI is $35. An arduino + pi is $65. A little more juice is used but less coding of basic stuff, more time for logic and you still have a snappy micro controller one i2c or serial pin away.

  20. Re:hardware vs software on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, there is an exposed populated header (pins). You can buy a breadboard compatible breakout board that comes with a cable. One version is the cobbler kit http://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit-pi-cobbler-kit/overview for 7.95.

    You CAN connect 3.3v electronics without this kit (e.g. you can connect an Arduino pro to i2c or serial and double your pins adding PWM, AD inputs and so on.

  21. Re:ASSembled in America? on Apple CEO Tim Cook On Apple's US Manufacturing Move · · Score: 1

    Nooo, the sites seem to : "Select your region:" North America, South America, Europe, etc :)

  22. Re:ASSembled in America? on Apple CEO Tim Cook On Apple's US Manufacturing Move · · Score: 1

    So you are the one making those region drop-downs that are missing the region where a couple of us live: Central America.

      Central America consists of seven countries: Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama.

    You can sometimes read "Central America and Panama". So according to some here Panama is not officially Central America.

  23. win-win on Apple CEO Tim Cook On Apple's US Manufacturing Move · · Score: 1

    Whether they create low paying factory jobs or high paying engineering jobs they are doing you guys (in the U.S.) a favour: they create jobs. And this is something you need right now.

    So yes, I own more Apple devices than I probably need, I think their products are great for work and leisure, and probably I am a "fanboy" or "iSheep", but I have to say, that any American (U.S. American) who criticizes this move is a total moron.

    Is this a marketing move? Maybe a touch of it. But from a company who provides good products, being virtually the ONLY company caring for producing more environmentally friendly products (unibody vs pvc and many others) I can imagine that they care for their own country a tidbit.

    PS: I would tax the CRAP out of companies who outsource everything in favour of higher profits. You should support your own country's people where ever you are.
    Just my 2c ...

  24. No devs in prod on Ask Slashdot: Should Developers Install Their Software Themselves? · · Score: 1

    No. At any decent shop developers do not even have access to production.

    You develop your X hours in the morning (or whenever your contract says so) at a development environment. At smaller shops then the developers or testing engineers move it to the testing environment. (with sufficient documentation on what should go where). At bigger shops it is "middleware ops" who do this after a change request is approved at the change meeting (if the company somewhat follows ITIL).

    Then the product is tested by comparing the wannabe you developed to the specification. Testing can be by testers/qa/customer/whoever else. Really depends on the house.

    If the product is functionally OK, it is moved to staging/performance testing (one or two environments). These environments are EXACTLY the same as production in an ideal case, the performance testing many times is an environment with both worse and better hardware then production (or something you can throttle/bottleneck artificially).

    After that it is production. Production should never be touched by developers (only in extremely small shops where you design, develop, deploy maintain ... errr .. and answer the door and help customers ... and clean the floor sometimes)....

    We developed a product that was released early, we had lots of bugs. Our "tech dept" (kinda like middleware, but not too clever) cannot support it, because it is "all too new complicated technologies" they refuse to learn. The owners do not understand these matters very well (being old and not too much into IT), so the problem escalated, that not only our entire environment (small: 5 DBs around 20-25 linux servers (Apache, MQ, APE, some JAVA console apps, and 10 client stations that run some of our web interfaces for intranet) had to be supported by my small team of 5 guys.

    Voicing my opinion that our 5 developers should probably not be forced to start setting our clients' environments up too while still finishing the product - an argument you don't want to be part of - got me dizzy today morning, with a high heart rate, sweating and slightly slurred speech. I decided that no money or company is worth ruining your health and when someone expects you to do their job you should either suck it up and do it or stand up and walk. I stood up, packed my stuff and left. Now I am sitting home and wondering what now ....

    If your company is starting to push your developers into doing tasks they should not do, they should be informed of the correct procedures and pointed to the dangers of letting a developer deal with systems. Yeah, I also did 10+ years of network and UNIX/Linux before got back into development, so there are some (a lot) of us who can do it - but we should not, unless it is an emergency of some sort.

    FYI we have 22.000 + registered users with 5-10K concurrent. Not an environment 5 developers should cobble together then install their crap on.

    Once you let the "emergencies" in, they become the norm and you might have to design, develop, deploy and then even troubleshoot, since now they know you can do it. And then there is no going back, you are doomed. Like me. Hopefully not shaking for 10 hours and not out of a job with a family where the 2nd baby is on the way......

    OTOH ... it depends a little on the product. An .exe or .jar or .app can be easily given a 3 step install with roll-back. A PHP site with 10.000 files is a little different. For a long time I helped our sysadmins with a replication script I wrote in Curses/shell with rsync doing the heavy lifting. They demanded the source (I had a good reason to keep it back) so I gave it after agreeing, that this was just "nice of me" and that they should be doing the scripts while I develop with my team. They ran the first replication test in the middle of our afternoon rush. A new customer with 10 sites was down for 18 hours. It took 5 of my guys 5 hours to fi

  25. Re:0_o on California Wants Genetically Modified Foods To Be Labelled · · Score: 1

    yeah ... this is the question that should pop in everyone's head as the first thing .....