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User: shmorhay

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  1. A solid history of American capitalism on Slashdot Asks: What Are Some Good Books You Read This Year? · · Score: 2

    The book "Capitalism in America" by Alan Greenspan and Adrian Wooldridge has been a pleasant surprise. Good overview of the railroad robber-baron era, enabling you to connect the dots to our present corporate data oligopolies. Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.

  2. San Diego libraries are now homeless shelters on Google-Funded Project Envisions Nation's Librarians Teaching Kids to Code (ala.org) · · Score: 4, Informative

    Librarians have enough to do. Libraries have become homeless shelters, and librarians have to deal with the demented and the despairing. In San Diego, the beautiful new downtown library now has roving security guards rousting the poor, especially those who dare to nod off. Same problem in the smaller branch libraries. Maybe a trip to visit and chat with some librarians would be in order. With all the cuts in hours and salaries, listen to them tell you what they need. Making them adjunct faculty could be a non-starter, given their already onerous workload.

  3. Labor arbitrage destroys US-based career paths on How the H-1B Visa Program Impacts America's Tech Workers (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    The economics term for this is "labor arbitrage" and it has gutted many high-tech companies with rich-kid executives treating workers as fungible resource pools of interchangeable servants. US hardware engineers and US software developers are replaced by hordes of low-paid overseas technicians, especially in what are perceived as support roles such as data management, specs documentation, and quality assurance testing. I can corroborate the truth of this from personal experience, from my time at both Hewlett-Packard and Qualcomm. Entire US departments disappeared in just a few days. Fortunately I continue to self-train in new technologies as a lifetime hobby, and so have managed to stay just ahead of the worst of it, for now.

  4. Intersect your coding with an interest like music on 'I Know How To Program, But I Don't Know What To Program' (devdungeon.com) · · Score: 2

    Once comfortable with your programming language of choice (for example, Python) seek out API libraries for the language that are geared to a second interest, such as graphics, user interfaces, math, maps, needlepoint patterns, or whatever. My limited knowledge of (but great interest in) music has been enhanced by digging through the PythonInMusic wiki, plus studying the excellent book (with associated code library) "Making Music with Computers" by Bill Manaris ISBN-13 9781439867914. Rummage around on the net to find the intersection of your personal area(s) of expertise or a nascent interest with your coding language. The things you find interesting outside of computers all generate some sort of data. Work with it.

  5. Re:Still plenty of sparky things to invent on US Predicts Zero Job Growth For Electrical Engineers (bls.gov) · · Score: 1

    Actually, I am counting on good old capitalist greed -- or, more politely, people voting with their dollars for projects they deem useful and significant -- per the SEC, "The final rules, Regulation Crowdfunding, permit individuals to invest in securities-based crowdfunding transactions subject to certain investment limits." http://www.sec.gov/news/pressr... National boundaries are becoming less of a barrier. Work where you want, invest where you will. If you like sparky things, there will be a way to convert them into sparkly things. Life is short, study hard. All else will follow.

  6. Still plenty of sparky things to invent on US Predicts Zero Job Growth For Electrical Engineers (bls.gov) · · Score: 1

    Given that we are in need of ever-better automotive electronics, solar energy devices, wind turbines, battery technology, smart buildings, power transmission, quantum computing, plus mechatronic and optoelectronic technologies yet to be developed, I suspect electrical and electronic engineering (EEE) knowledge and skills will remain important. The SEC in the US will soon be allowing folks who engage in crowdsourcing to also buy shares of stock in projects. Maker fairs are popping up everywhere. Sounding the death knell for growth in EEE jobs given the interest in EEE seems counterintuitive -- technolust for all, and all for technolust!

  7. Read "Introducing GitHub" by Bell and Beer 2014 on Ask Slashdot: Version Control For Non-Developers? · · Score: 1

    The 125-page book "Introducing GitHub" by Bell and Beer published by O'Reilly in November 2014 is a great introduction to version control and GitHub in particular for non-technical people. It is specifically aimed at an audience of project managers and product managers. ISBN 9781491949740. Well worth the twenty-five dollars, and the quiet weekend you will spend on it.

  8. MySQL GUI tools list on Ask Slashdot: Linux Database GUI Application Development? · · Score: 2, Informative

    Here is a Database Journal article from 2010 listing some useful MySQL GUI development tools that may provide some leads -- http://www.databasejournal.com...

  9. The Transparent Society by David Brin 1998 on Ask Slashdot: High-School Suitable Books On How Computers Affect Society? · · Score: 1

    David Brin's 1998 book "The Transparent Society" (ISBN 9780738201443) is cogent and still timely -- http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/transparent-society-david-brin/1100622841 and see also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Transparent_Society -- consider mentioning it as supplementary reading at least.

  10. Willpower is the key on Ask Slashdot: Am I Too Old To Retrain? · · Score: 1

    Bang away for ninety minutes a day upgrading your skillset. Make this a habit first thing in the morning. An extremely useful book is "Willpower" which discusses the daily depletion of will, and how to compensate for that, and enhance it -- http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/willpower-roy-f-baumeister/1100482735 Just as folks tend to sleep in ninety minute cycles, so too is studying best done in uninterrupted ninety minute chunks. Microsoft toolsets mutate often, but they share a common design philosophy, so if you know VB and an older edition of .NET you will be pleasantly surprised at how quickly you can "upgrade" to C# and the latest .NET. Forge the habit of an early morning hideout study period of ninety minutes with your laptop and a computer book, and work your way through tutorials. And whatever worked for you to get you to your current level of knowledge is probably still a valid approach. Remember too that you are over the biggest hurdle, which is understanding how the edit-build-run-repeat cycle works in your IDE (likely Visual Studio).

  11. Harwani's recent PyQT intro to Python programming on Ask Slashdot: Best Book For 11-Year-Old Who Wants To Teach Himself To Program? · · Score: 1

    B. M. Harwani just came out with a very nice introductory Python programming book that covers Python basics in the first part, and then focuses on using PyQT to build GUI applications that link to a MySQL database. This combination of Python, PyQT, and MySQL works well on Windows, Mac, and Linux. The full title is "Introduction to Python Programming and Developing GUI Applications with PyQT" by B.M. Harwani, Dec. 2011, ISBN-13: 9781435460973, 300 pages, $30 -- http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/introduction-to-python-programming-and-developing-gui-applications-with-pyqt-b-m-harwani/1103826486

  12. Naomi Klein's book No Logo is still relevant on Assessing Media Bias: Microsoft Vs. Everyone Else · · Score: 1

    Naomi Klein's book "No Logo" (ISBN-13: 9780312429270) is still relevant regarding corporate branding, and is a rollicking good read if you are an economics nerd: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/no-logo-naomi-klein/1102326802

  13. Zenna Henderson's Ingathering on Ask Slashdot: Good, Forgotten Fantasy & Science Fiction Novels? · · Score: 1

    Zenna Henderson's stories of The People were published as a single volume, titled "Ingathering", which I highly recommend. Trivia bit -- a 1972 made-for-TV movie was filmed of one of the stories starring William Shatner as the non-alien doctor who performs psi-augmented emergency surgery on a child, plus Kim Darby (of "True Grit" fame). But read the book first to immerse yourself in a delicate female perspective on alien contact. Deeply moving in many parts.

  14. Interview village elders on Ask Slashdot: Classroom Eco-Projects Suited To Alaska? · · Score: 1

    Bring along digital voice recorders such as those used for dictation, a couple of laptops, plus digital still cameras, possible a small and cheap digital video camera. Get your students to interview the village elders about THEIR knowledge, and post the results to the web on your return. After all, these folks are part of a culture that survives in a hostile world right next door to Mars. Let them show and tell YOU what arctic science is all about.

  15. The Radioactive Boy Scout on Swede Arrested For Building Nuclear Reactor · · Score: 1

    An interesting book on something similar done near Detroit a while back is "The Radioactive Boy Scout" by Ken Silverstein, 2005, ISBN-13 9780812966602, that details the adventures of a young lad working on his Boy Scout merit badge for Atomic Energy -- informative reading.

  16. SciVee.tv for videos, especially via its channels on How Do You Keep Up With Science Developments? · · Score: 2

    If you have a high-bandwidth connection, and are interested in browsing science-related videos, SciVee.TV provides some nice content -- http://www.scivee.tv/ at the top level, and for its channels go to http://www.scivee.tv/channels .

  17. Filetype is Computable Document Format on Wolfram Launches Computational Document Format · · Score: 1

    The filetype is Computable Document Format, per the Wolfram website, not Computational.

  18. Knowledgebase toolsets on How Do You Document Technical Procedures? · · Score: 1

    Having been a technical writer in the computer industry for over twenty years, I can tell you from experience that the best approach is to (1) set up a wiki for technical folks to contribute content and simultaneously (2) use a professional technical writer to build and maintain a knowledgebase drawn from that wiki content and code comments, plus their own interviews, research, diagramming, and writing.

    Do not try to solve this problem using traditional desktop publishing tools, except as a short-term stop-gap measure. Find a technical writer who understands both relational database and XML technology, and put them to work using their preferred toolset.

    Some knowledgebase toolset notes follow.

    Adobe RoboHelp Server 8 can be the delivery mechanism for an enterprise-wide knowledgebase and RoboHelp 8 can be the authoring environment --

    http://www.adobe.com/products/robohelp/

    http://www.adobe.com/products/robohelpserver/

    with various additional authoring and diagramming tools serving as content creation editors, especially to cope with producing documents needed urgently, albeit in desktop publishing mode.

    While RoboHelp got its start as a Windows online help editor, it has, like the gawky teenager next door, grown into an impressive adult over the past few years.

    A competing product you (and your technical writer) should also look at is Macap Flare, which was developed by a group of software developers who spun off from RoboHelp a while back.

    (RoboHelp had been successively owned by Blue Sky, eHelp, Macromedia, and now Adobe, with the all the personal stress such corporate buy-outs, and the resulting rebranding code-churn, can induce.)

    Madcap Flare is also part of a knowledgebase-creation toolset that will soon have its own content management server as a delivery and workflow mechanism --

    http://www.madcapsoftware.com/products/flare/

    http://www.madcapsoftware.com/products/teamserver/

    The Altova XMLSpy toolset is also worth evaluating --

    http://www.altova.com/solutions_center.html

    Don't expect your techies to spend their time in Altova, Flare, RoboHelp (or whatever), since their time is much better spent writing code and comments and any descriptions they can generate, in tools they already know and love, such as wikis and their favorite IDEs.

    But do expect your technical writer to follow along and clean things up in a high-end knowledgebase toolset, and, eventually, to set up a workflow process for copyediting and approving new and updated material, but in as unobtrusive a manner as possible.

    Also be aware that your knowledgebase will likely need to be translated into multiple languages, with the advice and assistance of localization specialists.

    It sounds like your technical writer will be doing catch-up -- it has typically taken me about 18 months to get things under control and flowing smoothly in any company that neglected to hire a technical writer from the beginning, all the while jamming out whatever documents were needed for product delivery using standard desktop publishing tools.

    This is not a life to envy, or for the faint of heart, but it can be an adventure for the truly dedicated. Bringing order out of chaos with your keyboard can be a rush.

  19. Re:Exploratorium Cookbooks on Physics Experiments To Inspire Undergraduates? · · Score: 3, Informative

    To save you some digging, here are the direct links for buying each of the volumes directly from the Exploratorium itself (these show up when you search that website) -- http://store.exploratorium.edu/browse.cfm/4,622.html and http://store.exploratorium.edu/browse.cfm/4,775.html and http://store.exploratorium.edu/browse.cfm/4,760.html and for all three as a [discounted] full set (for $350) -- http://store.exploratorium.edu/browse.cfm/4,19.html These may be overkill for your immediate needs, but if you are ever tasked with starting your own hands-on science museum, the Exploratorium folks have very kindly documented their approach.

  20. Exploratorium Cookbooks on Physics Experiments To Inspire Undergraduates? · · Score: 2, Informative

    The San Francisco Exploratorium, an interactive, hands-on science museum, published a three-volume set of instructions for creating useful and educational (and sturdy) projects for children and adults to manipulate and study, although these are now hard to find, and expensive. Search the used books website http://www.abebooks.com/ for "Exploratorium Cookbook" (and grab any copies you can) and see also the Exploratorium website at http://www.exploratorium.edu/ . See also the very recently published book "Laboratory Experiments in College Physics" by C. Bernard and C. Epp, published in December 2008 (ISBN 978-0471002512) available on http://www.amazon.com./