Slashdot Mirror


User: Belial6

Belial6's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
9,672
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 9,672

  1. Re:Please, don't tell them ... on South Carolina Student Arrested For "Killing Pet Dinosaur" · · Score: 1

    No, it is generally only women that are counted as Unicorns. As in, "Finding a hot young chick that want's to have sex with me at 45, and my wife at 43 is like finding a unicorn."

  2. Re:That's why slashdot is against tech immigration on Tech Looks To Obama To Save Them From 'Just Sort of OK' US Workers · · Score: 1

    You do a lot of writing with very little reading. As I said: " It is the same reason that you don't share your bank account with everyone."

    Now, if you really believe that arbitrary boarders are bullshit, I challenge you to post your bank account information and open up your finances to the rest of us. Otherwise, you are just a hypocrite that decided drawing an "arbitrary" line around your house is somehow better than drawing an "arbitrary" line around my country.

  3. Re:That's why slashdot is against tech immigration on Tech Looks To Obama To Save Them From 'Just Sort of OK' US Workers · · Score: 1

    There is nothing contradictory between the two, so there is no reason that the both systems couldn't be implemented.

  4. Re:That's why slashdot is against tech immigration on Tech Looks To Obama To Save Them From 'Just Sort of OK' US Workers · · Score: 2

    Because different countries have different economic, social, and legal systems in place. We have no say in how other economies work, so we have to have barriers that prevent damaging leakage. It is the same reason that you don't share your bank account with everyone.

  5. Re:That's why slashdot is against tech immigration on Tech Looks To Obama To Save Them From 'Just Sort of OK' US Workers · · Score: 1

    The solution I would propose is that for every H1B, a local must be hired for the same position to shadow the H1B as a training program. The law should require that the H1B and the local worker can only work at the same times, and that only one of them can produce anything for the company that gets use in a tangible way. The local worker and H1B would need to be paid the exact same wage.

    Given that the claim is that H1Bs for needed and intended to fill positions where there are no available qualified local workers, this would solve that problem by requiring local workers to be trained, and eventually removing the need for the H1B. It would remove the practice of hiring cheap foreign workers as a cost savings measure, and it would still allow the importing of highly skilled labor when it really was necessary.

  6. Re:That's why slashdot is against tech immigration on Tech Looks To Obama To Save Them From 'Just Sort of OK' US Workers · · Score: 1

    The "prevailing wage" argument is complete BS, and everyone knows it. It is a self referencing statistic. Of course you can't pay people less than you pay them.

  7. Re:What are they waiting for? on It's Easy To Hack Traffic Lights · · Score: 0

    Because the very nature of traffic lights make them insecure. It is physically impossible to secure traffic lights without placing an actual human guard at each corner.

  8. Re:Welcome to the Information Age! on It's Easy To Hack Traffic Lights · · Score: 0

    You can not secure the lights. It is simply impossible without placing security guards at every corner.

  9. Re:Welcome to the Information Age! on It's Easy To Hack Traffic Lights · · Score: 1

    This is just a "on a computer" issue. If I want traffic lights to behave badly, I could easily do it without connecting into the automation side of it. A few colored LED disks attached in front of the existing lights and I get the same effect with no hacking involved. It is like people worrying that their car's drive by wire breaking system will get hacked because they believe it is so much more likely than having their break line cut.

  10. Re:Why is this treated differently on Calif. Court Rules Businesses Must Reimburse Cell Phone Bills · · Score: 1

    That is a good point. It also is germane to telecommuting. The employer is in control of whether you commute or not, but the employee must pay for that commute. This leads to way more people commuting to jobs that have no need of a physical presence. Add on top of this the fact that the way our tax laws are set up, the only way to write off costs of telecommuting is if the telecommute is for the businesses benefit.

    Way better would be if laws were written (most likely in the tax code) which gave businesses an incentive to encourage employees who could telecommute to do just that. If even 20% of our work force could telecommute, it would create HUGE savings in our roadway costs. It would reduce our national gas usage significantly. It would improve the quality of lives of our populace. It would reduce congestion in cities. It would even benefit those that still had to go in to work, as it would reduce traffic and thus reduce their commute time and cost. It would also reduce housing price pressures in and around areas that required the physical presence, since 20% of the population would no longer be competing for those homes.

  11. Re:The memo you are about to see on Calif. Court Rules Businesses Must Reimburse Cell Phone Bills · · Score: 1

    Getting charged by usage is becoming less and less common. Plus, the time spent itemizing what is a business expense is work time. I find it hard to believe that it wouldn't cost employers more money to pay each employee to itemize their usage than it would be to just pay the unmetered internet cost.

  12. Re:The memo you are about to see on Calif. Court Rules Businesses Must Reimburse Cell Phone Bills · · Score: 1

    So, now you have to have a credit card specifically for business use. There is no way that I would hand over a copy of my personal shopping over to my employer.

  13. Re:Seriously? on Ask Slashdot: What Recliner For a Software Developer? · · Score: 1

    You know what they say... "A miserable, lonely, uncomfortable worker who is missing his family is a productive worker!"

  14. Re:First things first... on Ask Slashdot: What Recliner For a Software Developer? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In the spirit of keeping it simple... A few years ago, I took a month long road trip with my family. We rented a mini-van and she would drive during the long streatches of nothing while I worked from the back. After the first day in, it became apparent that the laptop on my lap wasn't cutting it. So, we stopped at a K-mart and I bought a big wood cutting board. It worked awesome. It was flat so It packed pretty well. It was very sturdy. It had the groove around the edge designed for catching liquids that worked very well for keeping pens and whatnot from sliding off the edge. Plus, when we would get to a stop, I could lift it up and set it on the seat next to me without having to rearrange anything. That way when we were done looking at the sights, I could get back in the car and get started back to work without any setup.

    All in all, it was the best lap board I have ever used. To this day, my son still uses it when he wants to use his laptop while sitting on the couch. Storage consists of putting in the small space between the end of the couch and the wall.

  15. Re:This strikes me as spectacularly unhealthy. on Ask Slashdot: What Recliner For a Software Developer? · · Score: 2

    Different people need different environments to concentrate, and different families provide different environments to those people. I can say for myself, I concentrate better when there is human voice chatter around me. Voices that I don't have to respond too. Other people work better with quite music. Some with blaring death metal, and then there are those that need absolute quite. The absolute quite folks seem to be the ones that have the hardest time understanding that not everyone is like them.

  16. Re:Bullshit on Web Trolls Winning As Incivility Increases · · Score: 1

    The difference with online bullying is that it is much harder to stop. Kids bullied at school know the bullies and at least in theory can get support from teachers and parents. People bullied in the workplace can make a formal complaint. Online they often don't even know who is bullying them, and the sites are often slow to react to reports or unable to take any effective action.

    At least that is the way it is supposed to work in theory.
    In practice, not so much.

  17. Re:Not Government on Web Trolls Winning As Incivility Increases · · Score: 1

    I think there is a lot of that. It must be comforting to think that trolls are the worst humanity has to offer.

  18. Re:suggestion on Web Trolls Winning As Incivility Increases · · Score: 1

    Jezebel.com IS a trolling site. That is the point of its existence. The same as non-online troll media like Fox.

  19. Re:Bullshit on Web Trolls Winning As Incivility Increases · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Exactly.

    The fact that "online" is tacked on to the end is the give away that Phillips is talking out of her ass. Just like every other "on a computer" makes it new and unique claim, online trolling is just more of the same. We all know people who do it every day in real life. We have national personalities like Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, Howard Stern, and Jerry Springer. Heck, the entire Fox network is dedicated to trolling. People think that Fox is a right wing network. They only think that because they are being successfully trolled.

  20. Re:Get it right, pls. on Writer: Internet Comments Belong On Personal Blogs, Not News Sites · · Score: 1

    Wow. Just amazing.

  21. Re:Get it right, pls. on Writer: Internet Comments Belong On Personal Blogs, Not News Sites · · Score: 1

    Bingo. Given that Jezabel's female editors have posted stories about how they criminally commit domestic abuse, and invite their female audience to join in on the fun of laughing at each other's stories about the readers criminal domestic abuse, clearly the subject of abuse is not beneath them.

    http://jezebel.com/294383/have...

  22. Re:Jezebel? on Writer: Internet Comments Belong On Personal Blogs, Not News Sites · · Score: 2

    Jezebel intentionally took the name of a religious figure who was know for fabricating false accusations against a man, leading to that mans execution. The name is also know for being a whore.

    The name is specifically chosen to shock and invite scorn on women who choose to associate themselves with the site. That was the intent of the sites creators. Saying that Jezebel is awesome and has fantastic stories about the crap that women have to put up with is like saying that the site www.marquidesade.com is awesome and has fantastic stories about the crap that men have to put up with.

    The fact that Jezebel invites bad behavior doesn't excuse the bad behavior by the gif posters, but that just means you have two groups behaving badly. It isn't an either/or situation.

  23. Re:Jezebel? on Writer: Internet Comments Belong On Personal Blogs, Not News Sites · · Score: 1

    Well, according to Jezebel, Jezebel IS a blog. So, it seems down right impossible for it to be more credible than a blog.

  24. Re:Why no 1 Tb version? on Solid State Drives Break the 50 Cents Per GiB Barrier, OCZ ARC 100 Launched · · Score: 1

    His point still stands. 240Gb is big enough for some people, but they have to be mindful of disk usage. That is wasted effort. For me, a 512Gb drive would still be a pain. 750Gb is where I would become really usable, comfortable, but 1Tb would be the point were I could function without having to really think about my disk usage.

    It should be trivial for the manufacturers to make 1Tb drives.

  25. Re:Going to need MUCH better firewalls on Study: Firmware Plagued By Poor Encryption and Backdoors · · Score: 1

    Honestly, the answer is that the devices should just not be directly accessable at all from the internet. There should be a server that is secured, and the devices should be accessed by the server.

    Paring could be done via NFC. A small 'Key' passed over the 'pairing' pad of the server and any devices could sync them all to the same cert. If for some reason it is believed the cert is compromised a new $1 'Key' can reset every device and the server to a new cert.

    Simpler than the wifi and bluetooth models, and for the most part, there is only one device that has to have complex iron clad security.