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User: bb5ch39t

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Comments · 159

  1. young man ... on Ask Slashdot: Am I Too Old To Learn New Programming Languages? · · Score: 1

    I'm 58. Am I'm still learning "new" languages. In college, many years ago, I learned COBOL, Fortran, PL/I, S/370 assembler, APL, and SNOBOL. Over the years, I've added BASH shell scripting, Python, PHP, Java, JavaScript, ICON, Delphi, Turbo Pascal, Modula II, Erlang, Haskell. I'm not even bothering to mention Groovy and Scala as they are just basically Java variants. If I can learn new stuff, you can too. The hard part of programming is figuring out what is really required and attention to detail.

  2. I pity anyone monitoring me on Chief NSA Lawyer Hints That NSA May Be Tracking US Citizens · · Score: 1

    They will die of boredom. M-F - go to work/go home. Sat: go grocery shopping, go home. Sunday: go to church, go home. At home: surf Internet, mainly technology sites. This site is one of the "extremist" sites I go to. Damn, I'm boring.

  3. How a city can use the same tactics to raise money on Share Links, Become Extradited To the US · · Score: 1

    If someone in the UK can be brought to the US for violating an US law in the UK, then I suggest that all cities pass a law stating that the maximum speed limit on all public roads in their state be set at 30 MPH. That way, for instance, the city of Dallas can ticket all highway drivers in Ft. Worth for violating the law. PROFIT!!

  4. Re:Just Like Hearings About The Economic Collapse on Apple Discusses iOS Privacy Issues Before Congress · · Score: 1

    Perhaps "pillage" would be a more exact word.

  5. Re:Lunchbreaks on The Importance of Lunch · · Score: 1

    Agree. The head of the IT department had a grand idea: "Let's all take the afternoon off and go to the bowling alley." When response was anaemic, I was told he exploded in fury that his "kindness" was unappreciated. For me, this would have lengthened my work day and forced me to drive an extra 10 miles to get home. Not to mention that I have such bad arthritis that I can't pick up a bowling ball or even walk well any more (old fart, here).

  6. Lunch? on The Importance of Lunch · · Score: 1

    I don't usually eat lunch when I'm at work. I occasionally get a bag of cookies and a cola around noon. Not that I could. I'm just not hungry. The thought of actually driving somewhere during lunch hour is terrifying. "At least I'm not deliberately aiming for you!" is the attitude of most drivers around here. And $4.00/gallon gas doesn't help.

  7. Re:Too pricey. on The Tablet Debate: 3G Or Wi-Fi? · · Score: 1

    I agree. I have a WiFi-only Motorola XOOM. I use is mainly at home on my WiFi. I also take it to my doctor's office and the hospital. And they have free WiFi on their premises. As do most other places that I go. I don't need to use my tablet in my actual car, so 3G is an expensive and unnecessary option for me. If I do ever need it in a no-Wifi place with any regularity, I can buy a 3G mobile WiFi hotspot device from my cell provider. Or try to tether to my cell phone.

  8. Re:Good for US economy on MS Wants Laws To Block Products Made By Software Pirates · · Score: 1

    Remember the Coke vs. Coke Zero ads? OK, that was "in fun" and not serious.

  9. Re:Good for US economy on MS Wants Laws To Block Products Made By Software Pirates · · Score: 1
    A problem my boss talked about was a software product produced in Quebec. The technical spoke very poor English, being very fluent in French as you might expect. My boss doesn't speak French. Only English and Spanish (Mexican version). There was nobody in the office, other than in marketing, who spoke English well. Never did get the problem resolved due to this language barrier. Not their technician's fault. Not our fault. It was their marketing for selling the product in the US without bothering to tell us that support was in French only.

    My point: Your support people need to fluently speak the customer's language. Not the other way around. If I want to sell software in France, I'd better learn to speak French intelligibly. Likewise for Germany, Italy, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, ... . If I can't, I need to contract with somebody who can. Again, intelligibly. Not just some low cost provider who won't be a true partner with me.

  10. Re:This sucks on Why the AT&T and T-Mobile Merger Is Bad For Consumers · · Score: 2, Informative

    Same here. I deliberately did NOT go with ATT. I guess I should have gone with Sprint or Verizon.

  11. No. on Should Employees Buy Their Own Computers? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My machines belong to me. The stuff on them is mine, not the company's. And I don't want any confusion about that. I have VPN access from home to the corporate LAN. We also have a Windows "work at home" server which is accessible via MS's mstsc. I use that, not the VPN/LAN. I use Linux at home and rdesktop to access that server. Once on that server, I use mstsc to access my work desktop. Why? it makes my home machine safer. My home machine is more of a "dumb terminal" which cannot be infected by or infect anything at work. Or at least it is significantly less likely. I'm not aware of any virus which can spread over an mstsc link. Which means little, given my ignorance. My home system is behind a firewall/router, so hopefully it is too much trouble to crack. I don't need "impossible", just need "harder than average" to discourage most. Running Linux and no Windows also helps.

  12. Re:And Windows is? on Is Linux At the End of Its Life Cycle? · · Score: 1

    maybe so. But that's one reason I like Linux for my desktop. It makes me a smaller target. Even though, in my heart of hearts, I believe that a "as distributed" good Linux distro is more resistant than a "standard" MS version of Windows (with no add on security, virus scanners, et al). But, in this case, both sides simply are opinion because a true test (i.e. using real hackers attacking a real user's system) is simply not possible.

  13. Re:wrong OS? on Desktop Linux Is Dead · · Score: 1

    Though I personally prefer my Linux/KDE to my Mac Mini, I have a friend who __used to be__ a Windows partisan. Until he was forced to get a Mac laptop. Now he is in love with the Mac instead of Windows. It is a nice system. And nowhere near as vulnerable as an average Windows system.

  14. Re:Hmm on Microsoft Patents OS Shutdown · · Score: 1

    Which is why I like sudo /sbin/halt . On Linux, of course. That says: "I'm god and you're dead!"

  15. Re:That kind of thinking... on Parallel Programming For the Arduino · · Score: 3, Funny

    I agree with you. In the extreme, it might lead to gas pedals sticking in computer controlled cars. Oh, wait, that's already been done.

  16. Re:Consider the source - Gartner on Time To Dump XP? · · Score: 1

    did you mean "bullish projection" or "bullshit projection"???

  17. Re:Comparing the damages. on RIAA Says LimeWire Owes $1.5 Trillion · · Score: 2, Funny

    NO, NO, NO. BP does not owe anybody anything. The residents of the states owe BP for the oil that their land is illegally impeding from being delivered to Europe via a non standard shipping method!

  18. Re:All languages suck on Programming Clojure · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I f you don't like Java's multithreading, give Erlang a look. An interesting functional programming language.

  19. Re:*sigh* on Programming Clojure · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, I've heard of Clojure. I have even read this book and enjoyed it. But I am a bit of a dilettante when it comes to programming languages. I've read a good number of the books from Pragmatic and like them. I especially like that they are PDF and DRM-free. Of course, each book is unique in that it is water marked on each page with my name. I've not used the language myself for anything other than "playing around". I also like Groovy and Scala, which are also JVM based languages which makes it easy to inter-operate with them.

  20. Re:Oopsies! on Crunch Time For IRS Data Centers · · Score: 1
    The worst way to manage your money is to spend like mad with no correlation to income.

    Wait a minute! Doesn't the US Government have a "business method" patent on this?

  21. Re:Hercules is a z/Arch emulator... on IBM Breaks Open Source Patent Pledge · · Score: 1

    Yes. Patents apply to some of the z architecture. You cannot make "something" (either hardware or software) which implement the patented architecture, regardless of how you implement it.

  22. Re:Wake up and smell the stock market people... on IBM Breaks Open Source Patent Pledge · · Score: 1

    Every company which is in business to make a profit can turn "evil". Especially when they become "owned" by people who care only about money, with no sense of ethics. Good is defined as "anything which increases my store of money". Bad is defined as "anything which decreases my store of money". IOW, most people are simply greedy and selfish.

  23. Re:Standards only matter when they are actually us on Standards Expert — "Microsoft Fails the Standards Test" · · Score: 1

    I get such things (docx and xlsx) from our CEO's executive assistant. I don't think our CEO even knows what a computer is.

  24. Re:Is This News ? on Standards Expert — "Microsoft Fails the Standards Test" · · Score: 1

    Very true. Hum, my ISP does a lot of restrictions to try to stop problems such as spam and botnets. So, why is it that they only support Windows? It would be more consistent to support everything except Windows.

  25. Re:and this is new news why? on Standards Expert — "Microsoft Fails the Standards Test" · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I am a Linux-only user. And I somewhat agree with you. If somebody has a requirement that only Windows succeeds in fulfilling, then use Windows. As a person who desires to run Linux, I make sure that my purchases are supported by Linux. If a vendor decides to not support Linux (and proprietary software on Linux is OK by me), then they lose my business. Whether that is of relevance to them is up to them. It is not up to me. I've never understood any "fanboyz" of any flavor (Linux, *BSD, Windows, or MAC). Use what does the job.

    Oh, and "Linux" did not "fail". The vendor decided to not support Linux. The vendor decided not to publish the tech details so that others could support their hardware. Nobody "failed". The vendor did exactly as they desired: To lock their customers into their software. And the vendor decided to only support Windows as a simple economic decision.