Slashdot Mirror


User: einar2

einar2's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
124
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 124

  1. Re:Correlation on Former Military Personnel Claim Aliens Are Monitoring Our Nukes · · Score: 1

    No, radiation is not making you delusional.
    There is an interesting book by Gregori Medwedew, one of the engineers involved in building the reactor of Tchernobyl. He also visited the site during the clean up after the catastrophe. He went so far as entering the reactor building to check what actually went wrong. He describes nothing about delusions but claims that in high radiation zones the air has a metallic scent.

  2. Re:Missing the point... on Has Any Creative Work Failed Because of Piracy? · · Score: 1

    My project failed already in an early phase because community feedback hinted towards too much piracy to make it worthwhile.

    2008: Annoyed with the problems of MythTV, I thought about organizing an electronic TV guide for Europe. This is a real issue as there is no stable version in Europe. Fine. I checked with several TV stations about how to get their program data and what was the cost involved. I found a website for the German user community and looked for alternative solutions. When none came up, I polled who was willing to pay for an electronic TV guide which would solve the MythTV issues.
    The typical answer: "Sure I would pay for it. And as I could hand over the program data to the rest of the student home, it is cheap." The majority of answers was about how they could distribute my data to others! A rough estimation showed that there is no business case for me to develop such a program guide. Even worse, the investment necessary to buy (!) part of the data would be at risk.

    In 2008 my electronic program guide for MythTV died before I wrote the first line of code.

  3. Already fact in Europe on Proposed Law Would Require ID To Buy Prepaid Phones · · Score: 1

    Most countries in Europe already do this.
    Switzerland was one of the last and bent to the pressure as well.

  4. Bonus receiver's viewpoint on Open Source vs. Wall Street Bonuses · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It might be off topic but as most of you have not read the article, here we go anyway:

    I do work for a huge international bank and I do receive typically boni in the range of 4-6 monthly salaries.
    As a lot of you seem to have strange prejudices about people receiving a bonus at a bank, let me rectify your picture. I am not an investment banker. I hardly ever wear tie nor suit. As a senior IT architect, my job is to look into the long term maintainability of large scale software systems. As a consequence, short term profitability is not part of my job description.

    Funny enough, I do not feel motivated by receiving a bonus. Believe it or not but in the last years, I never cut corners to achieve my objectives. I kind of reach my goals anyway. At the bank I work, you do not receive a bonus for being extraordinarily good. You are entitled for a bonus if you did your job. And if I would fail reaching my targets, I could live without receiving a bonus. It feels more like extra money
    However, the idea that as an employee of a company I also participate in the profit of the company I think very good. Personally, I think must people criticizing such a system are just envious. Yet, I do agree that banks handing out boni in years where they do not make profit strike me as strange.
    Yeah, I took the money in 2009 anyway. Tell me that you would not have taken it...

  5. Re:people who do less useful work earn more on Open Source vs. Wall Street Bonuses · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In fact, --- this is just your opinion. There is a lot of work outside of your personal experience which might appear less useful to you because you have not thought about it yet. This is ok. Nobody knows about everything. The limitation of your viewpoint does not set a standard and should not let you judge other people's work.

    There are several jobs I would consider useful for society where it would be difficult to come up with "intrinsic motivation" (my opinion). For myself, I conclude that equaling the glamor of a job with its usefulness is highly flawed.

  6. Re:Close the loop holes on What the Top US Companies Pay In Taxes · · Score: 1

    Well, once you leave your country to live abroad (which I highly recommend; it widens the horizon), you will learn that as a US citizen, although living abroad, you are still taxed by the US.
    As I never cared about your constitution, I cannot tell you whether this is "unconstitutional" or not.

  7. Re:So, what now? on What the Top US Companies Pay In Taxes · · Score: 2

    Offtopic, but I think noteworthy: "Even the Europeans..."
    I am always a bit amused by this pattern of "us and the others" thinking. To me, this feels a bit old-fashioned. And if you need this small jabs against "the others" then this looks a bit small too. Sorry.

  8. Re:So, what now? on What the Top US Companies Pay In Taxes · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This is because taxation is not the only factor to decide where to build your new shiny factory. Often there are limited tax exemptions if you create jobs. Other important factors for market entry are the legal environment and the "social peace".
    Two examples:
    • DuPont once stopped selling some chemicals necessary for artificial joints in the US. The product was great. However, legal risk compared to the profit to be made on this component did not justify selling the product in the US market.
    • Compared to Italy, Switzerland is a higher cost country. Higher salaries, higher material cost, higher rents. Yet, at the Italian-Swiss border, there are some Italian companies built on the Swiss side of the border. Industrial action is hardly known in Switzerland. Working time per week is longer. In the end, you have a more stable environment for production. This can justify the higher prices for production.

    In the end, countries are competing with each other for corporations.

  9. Re:What's going on? on Switzerland Passes Violent Games Ban · · Score: 1

    Xenophobia is difficult to measure. And as I grew up as a foreigner in Switzerland, I do not think that the country is "an embarrassment for all of western Europe".
    Four different languages are spoken inside the country without causing much of a problem. There are not many other countries accomplishing this.
    Most information at the townhall is available in several languages. E.g you can make the driving license in English.
    In Switzerland, there are about 20% of foreigners. And this seems to work without issues. We do not have the racism of Italy or ghettos like France.

    Show me other countries with a similar level of integration...

  10. Re:What's going on? on Switzerland Passes Violent Games Ban · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, the Swiss always had an opinion about everything. However, we think our laws apply only in Switzerland. We do not think that we have to improve the rest of the world. So, maybe our opinion is not so known outside of Switzerland as the opinion of other countries sometimes is...

    Disclaimer: Yeah I am biased.

  11. Re:Soon a new US law on EU Overturns Agreement With US On Banking Data · · Score: 1

    If you consider the difficulties involved in the transfer of 1 mio USD you might see why it is expensive.
    Clue: trust between business partners, cost distributed for the effort involved, every partner may go out of business at any moment

  12. Re:Soon a new US law on EU Overturns Agreement With US On Banking Data · · Score: 1

    It is a bit different. Due to the SEPA (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_Euro_Payments_Area) agreements, money transfers got cheaper inside the SEPA area, but they are not for free.
    Money transfers do cost money and they are suprisingly complicated for a bank. Worst case, a customer wants to transfer money to a bank with which the bank has no business relation. Then the bank has no accounts with the other bank which complicates things. Often such transfers are routed through half a dozen financial institutes to find a relation to the target bank. Nobody is doing this for free. Charging you 20 USD for such a service is a fair price.

    Disclaimer: I work for a bank.

  13. Re:Will SWIFT stay in Europe? on EU Overturns Agreement With US On Banking Data · · Score: 1

    Switzerland is not sharing bank information with other countries; expect for defined cases of legal help. However, the crime which is the base for such a legal help request must be respected in Switzerland as well.

    Disclaimer, I am Swiss and I work for a Swiss bank

  14. Re:Huh? on EU Overturns Agreement With US On Banking Data · · Score: 1

    I am even more sorry, I do not see why that excuses my own government monitoring the financial transactions of people, companies and financial institutions in my country.

  15. Re:Brilliant! on US Grants Home Schooling German Family Political Asylum · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well, there are a lot of "1st world countries", but some are firster.

    And it is always a bit difficult to find a metric for comparing the quality of countries. Myself, I like crime rate http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_mur_percap-crime-murders-per-capita and teenage pregnancy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_incidence_of_teenage_pregnancy

  16. Being refugee light (TM)? on Emigrating To a Freer Country? · · Score: 1

    So, you want to leave your country because the grass is greener somewhere else? You think at becoming a "refugee light" (0% oppression, maximum comfort)?

    Well, although I think this is absolutely justified, you are free to move around, be aware that in most cultures you will not be welcome. You might have a look how your own society treats immigrants. This is what you can expect abroad.
    Yes, you might find a job and you shall be able to make a living. Do not expect to meet friends, do not expect to be invited to our BBQs

  17. Re:And the Swiss sue back! on Red Hat Challenges Swiss Government Over Microsoft Monopoly · · Score: 1

    We are not member of the EU. There are treaties but they do not force Swiss authorities to do a public bidding. In Switzerland, such regulations are often depending on the county ("Kanton"), which makes it very local. However, the decision to go unchallenged with Microsoft raised a few eyebrows. In a country with a direct democracy, this is not a good thing for the government. Media coverage was not huge but for such a technical issue surprisingly good.
    I am confident that this will not happen again.

  18. Re:Silent Hill 2 on When Does Gore Get In the Way of Gameplay? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually, you learn this in a hospital. If you hit the artery of the patient you can repaint the ceiling. There is enough pressure to squirt up to the ceiling.

  19. Re:can't you turn Gore off? on When Does Gore Get In the Way of Gameplay? · · Score: 1

    SoF Payback was a class on its own. The gore was beyond the pale and it was highly politically incorrect. There was one setting were the streets were littered with body parts of Arabs.
    The SoF series always had an unbelievable image of the world. I remember one game which started in Praha. Rainy streets, MG nests and everybody is your enemy. I gave them the benefit of doubt and I assumed that they intentionally went over the top.
    I do hope that even cellar dwellers in Texas know that Czechia is different...

  20. Re:Why We Don't Need Paperless Statements... on April Fools Sees Fake Extra Millions For Users of Brokerage Site · · Score: 1

    You think in technology and not in applicability.

    Just because it is technically feasible (worms are timestamped, but never mind...) does not mean that you can do it. To stick to your paranoid example: a manager (business) would have to make the decision to cheat a customer. Then, around one dozen techies are involved to execute this. Now, we are in a banking environment. People are used to control each other. Let us assume YOU are the manager making this decision. Knowing the corp. culture, knowing that there is infrastructure for whistleblowers, would you bet you career on all people involved to play along?

    Sorry, but your idea about the paperless customer statements is unreasonable. Against the believes of the tin foil hatters, banks do stick to the law ;-)

  21. Re:Why We Don't Need Paperless Statements... on April Fools Sees Fake Extra Millions For Users of Brokerage Site · · Score: 1

    Sorry but this is rubbish.

    The customer statements contain nothing which is not stored in internal audit logs. And these are signed and stored on WORMS. Sorry, to bust your paranoia bubble.

    Having the customer download the statement is based on the normal security infrastructure which was setup for ebanking anyway (cheap). Sending secured email is rather difficult (expensive).

    Yes, I work for a bank.

  22. Re:Reliability. on Microsoft Windows, On a Mainframe · · Score: 1

    Ah, mainframe myth number one: reliability.

    Every company I have worked for so far is rebooting (doing an IPL) their mainframe(s) once a week.

    This is because having a rock solid system is meaningless when you put shitty homebuilt software on top. Yet, all these companies were buying into the marketing garbage from IBM. They paid premium fee for an attribute which evaporates when you actually use the mainframe.

  23. Re:Unusual Word Sizes on Microsoft Windows, On a Mainframe · · Score: 1

    "little understanding of computing history"
    How I love these smartasses.

    There are still mainframes out there which are using byte sizes of 9 bits. IBM is not the only mainframe producer...

  24. Bullshit on Nuclear Subs 'Collide In Ocean' · · Score: 1

    I am not a specialist about military matters. However, this sounds like a load of bullshit.

    Wikipedia claims that France (founding nato member) left because the French went for military independence. After becoming a nuclear power in 1960, France saw themselves not adequately represented in the NATO.
    So, it looks less like "the French leaking secrets" and more like "the Americans not being able to share power".

    Being Swiss and neutral, guess which version sound more credible to me...

  25. Re:And Michael Looked Back on Comrade, You Are So Not Getting a Dell · · Score: 1

    "... and now that oil prices have fallen..."

    Where do you live? Yes, due to the economical crisis capital was removed and some speculative prices fell. However, do you seriously believe that energy prices will fall?